A vivid, firsthand memoir of a Swiss boy’s wandering years through Germany and beyond.
This section follows the narrator’s youthful travels, showing how poverty, hospitality, and cultural contrasts shaped his early years. The voice is direct and grounded in real places, people, and daily life.
The account mixes travel scenes with intimate moments of need, learning, and surprising kindness. It offers a window into 16th‑century itineraries, social dynamics, and the hardships of begging, shelter, and food as the narrator moves from town to town with his bacchants and guardians.
- Glimpses of life in Zurich, Ulm, Munich, and other places, with real people and everyday concerns.
- contrasts between German, French, and Italian hospitality and customs.
- Firsthand experiences of hunger, begging, and the uneasy balance of safety and need.
- Relational dynamics, including treatment by guardians, hosts, and strangers.
Ideal for readers of travel memoirs and historical sketches who want a concrete, personal view of the German Renaissance world.