Henriëtte Goverdina Anna Roland Holst-van der Schalk (born Dec. 24, 1869, Noordwijk aan Zee, Neth.—died Nov. 21, 1952, Amsterdam) was a Dutch poet and active Socialist whose work deals with the humanitarian concerns that informed her politics.
She was a lawyer’s daughter. In 1896 she married the painter Richard Nicolaas Roland Holst (1868–1938), himself a talented prose writer. Influenced by the English poet and reformer William Morris, she became a Socialist. Her volumes of poetry De nieuwe geboort (1902; “The New Birth”) and Opwaartsche wegen (1907; “Upward Ways”) reflect her political ideals. In her drama Thomas More (published 1912), dedicated to the German Marxist leader Karl Kautsky, she depicted the last days of the great Humanist, whom she regarded as having anticipated her own ideals for mankind.
She soon became internationally famous in left-wing circles. She at first eulogized the Russian Revolution, but after visiting Russia in 1925, she expressed her disappointment in Soviet Communism in her poems in Heldensage (1927; “Heroic Saga”). She withdrew from active politics but in her later work remained loyal to her ideals, and her pacifist and anticolonial sentiment attracted much attention. She also wrote biographies of such figures as Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1912), Leo Tolstoy (1930), Romain Rolland (1946), and Mahatma Gandhi (1947).