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In the gentle spring of early‑nineteenth‑century Weimar, a narrator wanders through narrow alleys, sun‑dappled gardens and bustling market stalls, recalling a time when the modest town suddenly swelled with ambition and whispered curiosities. The prose captures the season’s fresh bloom and the light, breezy chatter of citizens who relish every odd tale that drifts through their streets.
At the heart of the collection are the “Ratsmädel,” young women of the town council who become entangled with a lingering specter said to be the late Duchess Amalie. Their encounters blend mischievous humor with a touch of the supernatural, as townsfolk react with a mix of earnest belief and amused skepticism. The stories portray a community that delights in gossip, treats the uncanny with both seriousness and a wink, and finds comfort in the rhythm of everyday life.
The narrative’s tone is warm and conversational, offering listeners a vivid portrait of Weimar’s social fabric, its quirky characters, and the playful interplay between folklore and the ordinary.
Language
de
Duration
~4 hours (278K characters)
Series
Engelhorns Allgemeine Romanbibliothek, Dreizehnter Jahrgang, Band 12
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-02-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1859–1940
Best known for vivid, sharp-eyed fiction about women’s lives and the world around them, this German writer won early fame with her Weimar stories and went on to publish novels and novellas that often pushed against the limits placed on women in her time.
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