Vitsa-Matti : Tosiperäinen kertomus by Heikki Meriläinen
"Vitsa-Matti : Tosiperäinen kertomus" by Heikki Meriläinen is a novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Matti, the pampered only son of a wealthy farm, whose parents forbid his match with the poor but capable Sohviija, driving him into a wandering life that ends in his becoming the district flogger. Rooted in rural Finnish life and billed as a “true story,” it explores class pride, authority, and the cost of
survival. Readers can expect a stark, morally knotty tale where love, shame, and power collide—and where Matti’s bond with Sohviija endures in complicated ways. The opening centers on Matti’s courtship of Sohviija, his parents’ fierce opposition, and the painful breakup that follows, after which he feigns madness, disappears, and lives for years as an unrecognizable beggar. Returning incognito, he learns the old flogger has died and secures that post, soon administering a brutal public whipping to a notorious thief, which cements his reputation. Years later he regularly brings money and clothes to the now-widowed Sohviija and her children, hinting that they would have been happier together. A failed harvest then traps Sohviija in a predatory “lease” that lets a grasping farmer seize her only cow; she steals it back, Matti secretly funds her, and the scene ends as the farmer arrives with the authorities to reclaim the animal. (This is an automatically generated summary.)