The Wandering of a Little Soul (Czech: Putování dušičky) is a violin concerto by the Czech composer Leoš Janáček. The work is also known in English as "Pilgrimage of a Little Soul", "Pilgrimage of a Dear Soul" or simply as "Pilgrimage of the Soul". Nevertheless, the English title adopted in the complete critical edition of the composer's works is "The Wandering of a Little Soul".
Janáček started to write the concerto in 1926, during his visit to England. The work remained unfinished, and today there are three sources containing the body of the composition. None of the manuscripts is dated. The sketched material of the concerto is concentrated in one movement only (12–15 min. duration). The score has a few remarks: p. 29 – inscription "in a human being", p. 30 – "the dear soul inborn in every human being", p. 40 – "eagle", p. 49 – "without the soul until the end", p. 64 – "instruments die out".
In 1927 Janáček abandoned the idea of the concerto and used some of its material in the opera From the House of the Dead, particularly in the suite. In 1928, the year of his death, Janáček composed also incidental music to Schluck und Jau, a play by the German dramatist Gerhart Hauptmann, which contains violin solos closely related to motives known from The Wandering of a Little Soul.
Miloš Štědroň and Leoš Faltus completed the composition in 1988. The first performance took place on September 29, 1988 in the Janáček Theatre in Brno, with Jan Stanovský on violin, Petr Vronský conducted the State Philharmonic of Brno.
Even though the concerto remained unfinished, it contains several interesting examples of Janáček’s mature style.
Putování dušičky. Ricostituzione critica. Partitura. Editio Supraphon 1997. H 7738