
A vivid portrait of a 17th‑century household emerges from the pages of this family chronicle. Young Els, a sixteen‑year‑old sister, is tasked by her older brother Fritz to record their lives in a diary, and her straightforward voice captures the rhythms of daily existence—poverty, a bustling print shop, and the constant presence of siblings and neighbors. Through her eyes we glimpse the modest world of a printing family, the cramped quarters where paper piles and old books form a backdrop to their conversations, and the subtle tensions as Fritz prepares to leave for university.
The narrative weaves together personal reflections with glimpses of the broader religious upheaval of the Reformation, anchoring intimate moments to the era’s larger currents. As Els struggles to find her own thoughts amid the demands of her brother’s ambitions, the reader is drawn into a tender exploration of memory, duty, and the quiet resilience of a family navigating change.
Full title
Schönberg-Cotta perheen aikakirjat Luonne- ja tapakuvaelma uskonpuhdistuksen ajoilta
Language
fi
Duration
~17 hours (1027K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2007-12-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1828–1896
Best known for the beloved hymn “Is Your All on the Altar?”, she was a Victorian English writer whose books joined storytelling, history, and Christian reflection. Her work was widely read in the nineteenth century and often aimed to make faith feel personal and practical.
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