
RUUKIN JALOISSA
HENKILÖT:
In the quiet outskirts of a 19th‑century Finnish factory town, daily life unfolds around the cramped, smoky kitchen of Vallinkorva’s household. The room is filled with the clatter of pots, the glow of a wood‑stove, and a chorus of voices—young Lyyli washing dishes, a restless boy fumbling with tobacco, and the weary Kaisa, the housewife, trying to keep the household together. Around them gather a colorful cast: the stern farm‑owner Vallinkorva, his boisterous companions Puhos and Huuhka, and a handful of laborers who drift in and out, each with their own hopes and grievances. The opening scene captures the ordinary yet fragile rhythm of a community bound by work, family, and the ever‑present tension between poverty and aspiration.
As the characters exchange sharp jokes, shared drinks, and fleeting moments of tenderness, the narrative hints at deeper conflicts that will test loyalties and ambitions. The factory’s looming presence is felt in whispered conversations about money, land, and the future of the village, while personal dramas—unspoken romances, hidden resentments, and the struggle for dignity—begin to surface. Listeners are invited into a world where every cup of coffee and every sip of spirits carries the weight of survival, setting the stage for a story that explores both the harshness and the humanity of life on the edge of industrial change.
Language
fi
Duration
~2 hours (124K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-12-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1863
A sharp-eyed Finnish writer and journalist, he was also an early labor movement organizer whose work mixed politics, satire, and plainspoken social criticism. His life stretched from southwest Finland to the Finnish socialist communities of North America.
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