Project Gutenberg
2025-06-09
Public domain in the USA.
116
Jókai, Mór
1825
1904
Jokai, Maurus
Jokai, Mor
Forradalom alatt irt művek
$aBudapest :$bRévai Testvérek, $c1912.
Előszó -- Életképek -- Nyilt szavak honunk fiatalságához -- Nőszabadság -- A napok hangulata -- Szomorú idők -- Délibáb -- A forradalom költészete -- Congrév-rakéták pillanatnyi fényül, némely sötétebb helyekre -- Szegény király -- Nem szeretem a sápadt arczokat -- Keserű hangok -- A forradalmak metempsychosisa -- Diplomaticus barometrumok -- A Pesti Hirlap programmja -- A Közlönyből -- Esti Lapok -- Esti Lapok -- Mi lesz belőlünk? -- Miért küzdünk? -- Pro memoria -- Mikor megyünk vissza Pestre? -- Martius 15. -- Windischgrätz dühödik -- Orosz interventió -- Szerkesztői nyilatkozat -- Habsburgház -- 1848-iki törvény -- Politikai horoscop -- Klapka levele -- Pesti levelek -- Charivari -- Esti Lapok -- A gyémántos miniszter -- Utóhang -- A kiadó megjegyzése.
Albert László from page images generously made available by the Hungarian Electronic Library
Forradalom alatt irt művek by Mór Jókai is a collection of political journalism, essays, and literary sketches written in the mid-19th century. Drawing on pieces composed during the Hungarian Revolution, it captures the exhilaration of March 15 in Pest, the push for press freedom and the Twelve Points, the birth of the National Guard, and the evolving mood from hopeful unity to grim resolve. The volume blends reportage, manifestos, and lyrical prose to portray a nation awakening to citizenship and responsibility. The opening of this collection begins with a reflective preface in which the author explains why he is gathering and curating his scarce, revolutionary-era writings: to preserve the voice and moods of 1848–1849 while discarding pieces unworthy in tone. He recounts personal ruptures and upheavals (a break with a close poet-friend, marriage, a house fire, taking up arms, then turning to edit a daily paper) before the text shifts into on-the-ground accounts of March 15: the proclamation of demands, the printing of them without censorship, the freeing of a political prisoner, and the orderly formation of a citizen guard. Subsequent short pieces exhort the youth to discipline and unity, call on women to inspire and sustain the cause, rebuke royal delay, and frame the revolution as a life-giving dawn rather than bloodshed. There are also literary preludes and meditations—on past calamities, national symbols, and the ethics of nobility and “the people”—that chart the period’s rapid swing from euphoria to sober, principled steadfastness. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
20250504134306jkai
1912
hu
Reading ease score: 65.6 (8th & 9th grade). Neither easy nor difficult to read.
hu
Hungarian literature
PH
Text
Category: Essays, Letters & Speeches
Category: History - European
Category: History - Modern (1750+)
Category: Politics
Category: Journalism/Media/Writing
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