
A Dutch traveler finds his world broadened when he follows his Finnish partner back to her homeland, embarking on a modest vessel that slices through the calm Baltic Sea. On board, he mingles with a group of Finns returning home, sharing lively conversations that contrast the conservative heart of Central Europe with the more relaxed North. Their multilingual chatter—Dutch, German, occasional Swedish or Finnish—offers a warm, inclusive glimpse into a culture eager to explain itself to an outsider.
The narrator is struck by Finland’s forward‑thinking attitude toward education and gender equality; young women routinely complete their studies and enter the workforce, a norm that feels both natural and admirable. Evenings on the deck turn convivial, with gentle songs sung in a lilting, unfamiliar tongue while the sunset paints the water a perfect mirror and the moon rises like a silver disc on the horizon.
As the ship nears the coastline, a pale line appears, soon revealing the silhouette of Helsinki with its gleaming copper‑capped Russian church. The arrival promises further discoveries of a city that blends Nordic serenity with imperial grandeur.
Full title
Indrukken van Finland De Aarde en haar Volken, 1906
Language
nl
Duration
~54 minutes (52K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the PG Distributed Proofreaders Team
Release date
2004-10-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1879–1956
A Dutch travel writer and journalist, she is best remembered for lively, observant books that brought places like Finland closer to her readers. Her work mixes curiosity, social detail, and a clear eye for everyday life.
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