
On a windswept island in the Gulf of Finland, the landscape rolls from a shallow bay to a meadow that curves like a horse’s shoe, then climbs steeply toward the interior. A modest house sits on the edge of this terrain, its yard populated by a lazy striped cat and the occasional clatter of tools. As evening settles, a young girl darts out of the shadows, grabs a battered book, and settles on a bench to read, dreaming of something beyond the ordinary.
She is soon confronted by the stern, hard‑faced woman who runs the household, demanding that the girl learn to sew and finish the work she has left unfinished. The girl’s defiant spirit flickers, and she responds with a mixture of irritation and curiosity, pulling a stone from the ground as if to prove her own strength. Through these small but charged exchanges, the novel opens a portrait of a restless youth navigating duty, family expectations, and a yearning for a brighter, perhaps unexpected, future.
Language
fi
Duration
~7 hours (419K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-12-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1875–1924
A Finnish writer and social reformer, she brought together fiction, journalism, and activism in work shaped by the temperance and women’s movements. Writing under the name Marja Salmela, she is remembered as part of the lively public debates of early 20th-century Finland.
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