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قراءة كتاب The Young Carpenters of Freiberg A Tale of the Thirty Years' War

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The Young Carpenters of Freiberg
A Tale of the Thirty Years' War

The Young Carpenters of Freiberg A Tale of the Thirty Years' War

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Young Carpenters of Freiberg, by Anonymous, Translated by J. Latchmore

Title: The Young Carpenters of Freiberg

A Tale of the Thirty Years' War

Author: Anonymous

Release Date: August 21, 2006 [eBook #19097]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUNG CARPENTERS OF FREIBERG***



E-text prepared by Al Haines







'She seized the robber unexpectedly by the legs, and and tipped him head first into the mighty chest.'

[Frontispiece: 'She seized the robber unexpectedly by the legs,
and tipped him head first into the mighty chest.']



THE YOUNG CARPENTERS
OF FREIBERG.


A TALE OF THE THIRTY YEARS' WAR.




Translated from the German by
J. LATCHMORE, JUN.




EDINBURGH:
WILLIAM OLIPHANT & CO.
1880.




CONTENTS.





ILLUSTRATIONS


'She seized the robber unexpectedly by the legs, and tipped him
head first into the mighty chest.' . . . . . . Frontispiece

Conrad recognized an old comrade, John Hillner.

Promise me that I shall have an honourable burial; and let
the lads say, "A good journey to thee, old comrade!"

Nothing but the moustache on the pale face indicated the
warlike calling of the man who now addressed Conrad.




THE YOUNG CARPENTERS
OF FREIBERG.


CHAPTER I.

THE MILLER'S WIFE OF ERBISDORF.

The ancient and free mountain city of Freiberg lies only about five-and-twenty miles south-west of Dresden, yet has a far more severe climate than the Saxon capital—a fact that may be understood if we remember that the road which leads from Dresden to Freiberg is up hill almost all the way. The Saxon Erzgebirge must not be pictured as a chain of separate mountains, with peaks rising one behind the other and closing in the horizon. Hills and valleys lie mingled, assuming such long, wave-like forms that in some parts of the district it is difficult to fancy oneself in a mountain-land at all. Immediately around Freiberg the landscape takes the form of a wide table-land, which has an upward slope only on the south-west of the city, so that from a short distance but little is seen of the town save the tops of its towers and a confused glimpse of house-roofs. In former days it was the residence of the Duke of Saxony, and before the Thirty Years' War contained 32,000 inhabitants, a number which has now dwindled to 19,000. Its ancient fortifications, which of late years have been rapidly giving place to modern improvements, consisted of a double line of walls, guarded by towers, pierced by strongly-fortified gates, and surrounded by a deep and wide moat. The ramparts were built of quarried stone, which, though much harder than sandstone, was far more difficult to bind together with mortar. In view of this fact, we may well be surprised that a place so weakly fortified was able for two long months to withstand the vehement siege operations of the whole Swedish army—an army so brave and so highly trained in the art of war, that it had subdued many far stronger fortresses. Yet so it was: how the thing came about, and what an important part young Conrad, the carpenter's apprentice, played in these great events, will be found

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