
A nameless narrator drifts through the rain‑slick streets of a bleak, industrial city, his cramped attic room furnished only with a tattered newspaper and a single red rocking chair. The opening paints a vivid portrait of hunger, cold, and the relentless clang of a clock that marks his endless waiting. Through his eyes the city feels both oppressive and oddly beautiful, a place where even the sky seems to promise a brief, weightless respite.
He spends his days scanning faded advertisements for any hint of work, only to be rebuffed time and again—whether because of his worn clothes, his glasses, or simply bad luck. The narrative captures his internal monologue, a mixture of sardonic humor and weary resignation, as he oscillates between fleeting hopes and crushing defeats. Yet amidst the hardship, he clings to the ritual of writing, submitting articles that occasionally earn him a modest five‑korona reward.
The prose balances stark realism with lyrical observation, turning mundane details—a cracked furnace, a distant smoldering forge—into symbols of his struggle. Listeners will be drawn into his world of perpetual searching, feeling the weight of each unanswered door while sensing the stubborn spark that keeps him reaching for a better tomorrow.
Language
hu
Duration
~5 hours (329K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Budapest: Népszava-Könyvkereskedés, 1928.
Credits
Albert László from page images generously made available by the Hungarian Electronic Library
Release date
2024-01-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1859–1952
A Nobel Prize-winning Norwegian novelist, he helped reshape modern fiction with intense, inward-looking books such as Hunger and the later classic Growth of the Soil. His legacy is powerful and complicated, with major literary influence alongside deep controversy over his support for Nazi Germany.
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