Herman Heijermans (1864-1924) was convinced that he lived in an
"overgangs- 1 tijdperk," a transitional period. As a young man in the
eighteen nineties, he rejected those values and life styles which he
felt belonged to the past period dominated by the bourgeoisie, and
sought out situations and a profession which would attune him to the
future when, he hoped, the proletariat would 2 be in power. He left the
conservative business milieu of Rotterdam in 1892 and went to Amsterdam-
then teeming with radical ideas. At first, Heijermans was attracted to a
group of poets, de tachtigers, who were claiming to have enlivened the
stale tradition of Dutch poetry by discovering language and beauty in a
totally new way; but soon he felt them to be elitist. Then, in 1895, he
became a member of the newly founded Dutch Social Democratic Workers
Party. He alienated himself from the literary circles by claiming that
art should be socialistic and by rejecting the class separation between
artists and workers. He felt himself to be one with the proletariat and,
through them, with "The New Life" and "The New Humanity. " Stimulated by
the ongoing theater revival, which he interpreted as an attempt to
challenge the bourgeois smugness and moral self-righteousness, he had
started to write plays before becoming interested in the Socialist
Party.