
In a biting January of 1841, the streets of Antwerp are cloaked in a harsh, glittering frost. Amid the clatter of hail against shutters, a well‑dressed young woman named Annah strides through the bustling market lane, her silk coat and feathered hat a stark contrast to the shivering laborers and impoverished families she passes. When she meets her friend Adela, the two women exchange a fervent dialogue about the suffering they witness—hunger, cold, disease—and the moral impulse to intervene.
The narrative follows Annah as she steps from the comfort of her own doorway into the cramped, dim rooms of the city’s poorest households. Listeners will be drawn into a vivid portrait of 19th‑century social inequality, feeling the tension between charitable intention and the stark reality of destitution. The story invites reflection on compassion, duty, and the delicate balance between aid and patronage, all set against the crisp, unforgiving winter backdrop.
Language
nl
Duration
~34 minutes (33K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1812–1883
A pioneering Flemish novelist, he helped bring Dutch-language literature to a broad public in 19th-century Belgium. His best-known work, The Lion of Flanders, became a lasting symbol of Flemish cultural pride.
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