What do petofi's three most famous poems describe?
Petofi wrote many lyric poems and eight long narrative poems in his life, among which three are the most famous: Hammer in the Country (1844), Warriors of Janas (translated by brave John, 1844) and The Apostle (1848). The sledgehammer in the country satirizes the exaggerated and artificial style in the romantic epic, and shows the hatred and contempt for the aristocratic landlord class. Janas Warrior is a long narrative poem. In order to pursue a happy life and love, the hero, Ionos, experienced the torture of poverty, the darkness of the long night and the rough waves of the sea, overcame the threats of the giant country and the dark country, and finally found a happy pastoral land, the spring of life and a loyal lover, Luska, in the fairy country. Petofi yearned for a better world and warmly praised the working people. He endowed the folklore with new colors and life, and created a romantic hero and world. This long poem became a force to inspire people's struggle and progress in the first half of the19th century. The apostle is the poet's later work. This is a long revolutionary poem with a political program. It describes the life of a revolutionary with lofty ideals who was executed for failing to murder the king. The Apostle is a glorious epic that reflects the Hungarian people's struggle for freedom and marks the peak of the poet's poetry creation. Sylvester, the hero, is a hero who works for the welfare of the people and the first representative of bourgeois radicals in Hungarian literature. The Believer shows that the author was influenced by utopian socialists Fourier and Owen.