
audiobook
by Hermann Löns
Anmerkungen zur Transkription
Der letzte Hansbur
Der Bullerborn.
Adebarstag.
Der Beifinger.
Das Hausbuch.
Das Osterfeuer.
Im Ruhhorn.
Die Grenze.
Am Toten Ort.
The author chose to tell the story entirely in the speech and thought patterns of the Lüneburg Heath’s inhabitants, weaving the local Low‑German flavor into every line. This decision creates a vivid, almost tactile sense of place, where the rhythm of the language mirrors the rolling moors and the quiet perseverance of the farming community. Even readers unfamiliar with the dialect are guided gently by brief explanations that appear at the book’s close, making the regional voice accessible without losing its authenticity.
The tale opens beside the Bullerborn, a clear spring watched over by a solitary stork, and quickly introduces a modest farmstead where a new baby is cradled in his mother’s arms. The farmer and his wife move through their chores with a mix of tenderness and quiet humor, their lives intertwined with the land, the weather, and the ever‑present birdsong. As daylight spreads over the heath, the simple yet profound rhythms of rural life begin to unfold, promising a portrait of perseverance, family, and the timeless bond between people and their landscape.
Language
de
Duration
~3 hours (202K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2016-03-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1866–1914
Best known as the “Poet of the Heath,” this German writer brought the landscapes, wildlife, and rural life of northern Germany vividly onto the page. His work blends journalism, nature writing, and fiction, and it kept a deep connection to the Lüneburg Heath throughout his career.
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