
A rugged mountain overlook becomes a bustling theater of humanity, where a desperate stranger clings to a sheer rock ledge while vendors, tourists, and policemen swarm the base below. Ladders and ropes have failed, and the crowd’s chatter—selling souvenirs, placing bets, arguing over space—creates a chaotic chorus that drowns out the man’s faint pleas. Among the onlookers are travelers from every corner of Europe, each with their own quirks, and a stern, military‑styled woman who refuses to give up the perfect view. The scene feels both absurd and urgent, turning a simple rescue into a spectacle of competing interests.
Against this noisy backdrop, the story quietly probes what it means to love one’s neighbor when the neighbor is a stranger teetering on the edge. As the crowd’s indifference, curiosity, and occasional kindness collide, listeners are invited to consider how compassion can surface—or disappear—amid the clamor of everyday life. The first act sets the stage for a thoughtful exploration of empathy, responsibility, and the strange ways people connect when faced with another’s peril.
Language
en
Duration
~42 minutes (40K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. This book was produced from images made available by the Blue Mountain Project, Princeton University.
Release date
2020-08-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1871–1919
A major voice in early 20th-century Russian literature, this novelist, short-story writer, and dramatist became known for dark, psychologically charged stories about fear, suffering, and the strain of modern life. His work bridges realism and symbolism, giving even brief tales an intense, haunted energy.
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