Mrs. Alec-Tweedie
Through Finland in Carts
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4057664625830
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I OUR FIRST PEEP AT FINLAND
CHAPTER II A FINNISH COUNTRY-HOUSE
CHAPTER IV A NIGHT IN A MONASTERY
CHAPTER V SORDAVALA, OR A MUSICAL FESTIVAL
CHAPTER VI "KALEVALA," AN EPIC POEM
CHAPTER VII MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
CHAPTER VIII IMATRA'S ROARING CATARACT
CHAPTER XIII THE LIFE OF A TREE
CHAPTER XIV THROUGH SAVOLAX IN CARTS
CHAPTER XVI A "TORP" AND "TORPPARI" WEDDING
CHAPTER XVIII DESCENDING THE RAPIDS
CHAPTER XX A FASHIONABLE WATERING-PLACE.
QUESTIONS OF NATIONALITY AND POLITICS IN 1912
THE NELSON LIBRARY OF NOTABLE BOOKS.
NELSON LIBRARY OF NOTABLE BOOKS
PREFACE
When I was first approached by Messrs. Nelson and Sons for permission to publish Through Finland in Carts in their shilling series, I felt surprised. So many books and papers have jostled one another along my path since my first journey to Finland, I had almost forgotten the volume.
Turning to an old notebook, I see it was published in 1897 at sixteen shillings. It appeared in a second edition. The demand still continued, so a third edition, entirely revised and reprinted, was published at a cheaper rate. Others followed, and it now appears on the market at the reduced price of one shilling. Cheapness generally means deterioration of goods, but cheapness in books spells popularity.
Since the last revise appeared, a few years ago, I had not opened the pages of this volume; and strange though it may seem, I took it up to correct with almost as much novelty as if it had been a new book by some one else. An author lives with his work. He sees every page, every paragraph, by day and by night. He cannot get away from it, it haunts him; yet once the bark is launched on the waters of Fate, other things fill his mind, and in a year or two he forgets which book contains some special reference, or describes some particular thought. This is not imagination but fact. The slate of memory would become too full and confused were such not the case.
Finland has been progressing, and yet in the main Finland remains the same. It is steeped in tradition and romance. There are more trains, more hotels, larger towns; but that bright little land is still bravely fighting her own battles, still forging ahead; small, contented, well educated, self-reliant, and full of hopes for the future.
Finland has Home Rule under Russia, and her Parliament was the first to admit women members.
For those interested in the political position of Finland, an appendix, which has been brought up to date in every way possible, will be found at the end of this volume.
E. ALEC TWEEDIE.
London, Easter 1913.
THROUGH FINLAND IN CARTS
CHAPTER I
OUR FIRST PEEP AT FINLAND
It is worth the journey to Finland to enjoy a bath; then and not till then does one know what it is to be really clean.
Finland is famous for its baths and its beauties; its sky effects and its waterways; its quaint customs and its poetry; its people and their pluck. Finland will repay a visit.
Foreign