
audiobook
by Henriette Roland Holst-Van der Schalk
A tentative spring dawn finds the narrator poised on a slippery plank over a quiet ditch, hesitating before the journey that will carry her toward Russia. The decision feels both whimsical and inevitable, a quiet resolve that propels her past a bustling Rotterdam passport office and onto a dimly lit workers’ house at a German border town. The early chapters capture the uneasy mix of bureaucracy and longing, as she navigates visa refusals, restless crowds, and the oppressive heat of Berlin’s stone streets.
Along the way, vivid snapshots of the landscape and its people emerge: war‑scarred veterans hunched by storefronts, a blind organist coaxing melodies from a tiny instrument, and the relentless rhythm of trains echoing over the city’s bridges. These encounters blend melancholy with a stubborn optimism, hinting at the complex tapestry of life awaiting in the Soviet Union. The narrator’s keen eye turns ordinary moments into striking reflections on perseverance, curiosity, and the subtle shadows that accompany any great voyage.
Language
nl
Duration
~4 hours (284K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by André Engels and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2009-08-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1869–1952
A major Dutch poet and essayist, she brought lyric intensity and fierce political conviction to everything she wrote. Her work moved between intimate poetry, social criticism, and a lifelong search for justice.
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