
The book opens with a reverent portrait of Fuji‑yama, the mountain that has long been the heart of Japanese pilgrimage and poetry. Through lyrical passages it conveys how the volcano’s ever‑changing silhouette—shrouded in mist one day, gilded by sunrise the next—has inspired countless prayers and verses that bind the nation’s spirit to its peaks. The author weaves folklore, ancient rites, and the quiet awe of travelers who seek the crater’s sanctuary, setting a tone that feels both scholarly and deeply personal.
From this cultural foundation the narrative shifts to a European couple’s own plan to ascend Fuji in late summer. Their journey begins in bustling Yokohama, where cramped train compartments and unfamiliar customs hint at the challenges ahead. As they load their modest baggage and watch the landscape transform from sweltering heat to alpine chill, the story promises a vivid encounter with the mountain’s majesty and the delicate balance between outsider curiosity and native devotion.
Full title
De beklimming van den Fuji-yama De Aarde en haar Volken, 1907
Language
nl
Duration
~58 minutes (56K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/
Release date
2006-10-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Known today mainly for a vivid travel narrative about climbing Japan’s Mount Fuji, this Dutch-language writer left behind a small but intriguing footprint in early travel literature.
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