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@@ -1,37 +1,4 @@
-Project Gutenberg's Our Little German Cousin, by Mary Hazelton Wade
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Our Little German Cousin
-
-Author: Mary Hazelton Wade
-
-Illustrator: L. J. Bridgman
-
-Release Date: September 28, 2013 [EBook #43832]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR LITTLE GERMAN COUSIN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Emmy, Beth Baran and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43832 ***
[Transcriber's Note: Bold text is surrounded by =equal signs= and
italic text is surrounded by _underscores_.]
@@ -2476,7 +2443,7 @@ The story tells of a young lad in Colonial times who endeavored to
carry out the high ideals of the knights of olden days.
-_By OUIDA (Louise de la Ramee)_
+_By OUIDA (Louise de la Ramée)_
=A Dog of Flanders:= A CHRISTMAS STORY.
@@ -2751,361 +2718,4 @@ Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
End of Project Gutenberg's Our Little German Cousin, by Mary Hazelton Wade
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR LITTLE GERMAN COUSIN ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43832 ***
diff --git a/43832-8.txt b/43832-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index a8141a0..0000000
--- a/43832-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3111 +0,0 @@
-Project Gutenberg's Our Little German Cousin, by Mary Hazelton Wade
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Our Little German Cousin
-
-Author: Mary Hazelton Wade
-
-Illustrator: L. J. Bridgman
-
-Release Date: September 28, 2013 [EBook #43832]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR LITTLE GERMAN COUSIN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Emmy, Beth Baran and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Transcriber's Note: Bold text is surrounded by =equal signs= and
-italic text is surrounded by _underscores_.]
-
-
-
-Our Little German Cousin
-
-
-
-
-THE
-
-Little Cousin Series
-
-(TRADE MARK)
-
- Each volume illustrated with six or more full-page plates in
- tint. Cloth, 12mo, with decorative cover,
- per volume, 60 cents
-
-LIST OF TITLES
-
-BY MARY HAZELTON WADE
-
-(unless otherwise indicated)
-
- =Our Little African Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Alaskan Cousin=
- By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
-
- =Our Little Arabian Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little Armenian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Brazilian Cousin=
- By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
-
- =Our Little Brown Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Canadian Cousin=
- By Elizabeth R. Macdonald
-
- =Our Little Chinese Cousin=
- By Isaac Taylor Headland
-
- =Our Little Cuban Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Dutch Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little English Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little Eskimo Cousin=
-
- =Our Little French Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little German Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Hawaiian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Hindu Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little Indian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Irish Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Italian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Japanese Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Jewish Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Korean Cousin=
- By H. Lee M. Pike
-
- =Our Little Mexican Cousin=
- By Edward C. Butler
-
- =Our Little Norwegian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Panama Cousin=
- By H. Lee M. Pike
-
- =Our Little Philippine Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Porto Rican Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Russian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Scotch Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little Siamese Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Spanish Cousin=
- By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
-
- =Our Little Swedish Cousin=
- By Claire M. Coburn
-
- =Our Little Swiss Cousin=
-
-
- (_In Preparation_)
-
- =Our Little Australian Cousin=
-
-
- L. C. PAGE & COMPANY
- New England Building, Boston, Mass.
-
-[Illustration: BERTHA.]
-
-
-
-
-Our Little German Cousin
-
- By
- Mary Hazelton Wade
-
- _Illustrated, by_
- L. J. Bridgman
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Boston
- L. C. Page & Company
- _PUBLISHERS_
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1904_
- BY L. C. PAGE & COMPANY
- (INCORPORATED)
-
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
- THE LITTLE COUSIN SERIES
- (_Trade Mark_)
-
-
- Published June, 1904
- Fifth Impression, October, 1907
-
-
- Colonial Press
- Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
- Boston, Mass., U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
-Preface
-
-
-WHEN the word Germany comes to our minds, we think at once of ruined
-castles, fairies, music, and soldiers. Why is it?
-
-First, as to the castles. Here and there along the banks of the River
-Rhine, as well as elsewhere throughout the country, the traveller is
-constantly finding himself near some massive stone ruin. It seems ever
-ready to tell stories of long ago,--of brave knights who defended its
-walls, of beautiful princesses saved from harm, of sturdy boys and
-sweet-faced girls who once played in its gardens. For Germany is the
-home of an ancient and brave people, who have often been called upon to
-face powerful enemies.
-
-Next, as to the fairies. It seems as though the dark forests of
-Germany, the quiet valleys, and the banks of the beautiful rivers,
-were the natural homes of the fairy-folk, the gnomes and the elves, the
-water-sprites and the sylphs. Our German cousins listen with wonder and
-delight to the legends of fearful giants and enchanted castles, and
-many of the stories they know so well have been translated into other
-languages for their cousins of distant lands, who are as fond of them
-as the blue-eyed children of Germany.
-
-As to the music, it seems as though every boy and girl in the whole
-country drew in the spirit of song with the air they breathe. They sing
-with a love of what they are singing, they play as though the tune were
-a part of their very selves. Some of the finest musicians have been
-Germans, and their gifts to the world have been bountiful.
-
-As for soldiers, we know that every man in Germany must stand ready to
-defend his country. He must serve his time in drilling and training
-for war. He is a necessary part of that Fatherland he loves so dearly.
-
-Our fair-haired German cousins are busy workers and hard students.
-They must learn quite early in life that they have duties as well as
-pleasures, and the duties cannot be set aside or forgotten. But they
-love games and holidays as dearly as the children of our own land.
-
-
-
-
-Contents
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. CHRISTMAS 1
- II. TOY-MAKING 10
- III. THE WICKED BISHOP 23
- IV. THE COFFEE-PARTY 40
- V. THE BEAUTIFUL CASTLE 48
- VI. THE GREAT FREDERICK 60
- VII. THE BRAVE PRINCESS 71
- VIII. WHAT THE WAVES BRING 83
- IX. THE MAGIC SWORD 94
-
-
-
-
-List of Illustrations
-
-
- PAGE
- BERTHA _Frontispiece_
- BERTHA'S FATHER AND MOTHER 11
- THE RATS' TOWER 28
- COURTYARD OF HEIDELBERG CASTLE 52
- STATUE OF FREDERICK THE GREAT 63
- BERTHA'S HOME 83
-
-
-
-
-Our Little German Cousin
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-CHRISTMAS
-
-
-"DON'T look! There, now it's done!" cried Bertha.
-
-It was two nights before Christmas. Bertha was in the big living-room
-with her mother and older sister. Each sat as close as possible to the
-candle-light, and was busily working on something in her lap.
-
-But, strange to say, they did not face each other. They were sitting
-back to back.
-
-"What an unsociable way to work," we think. "Is that the way Germans
-spend the evenings together?"
-
-No, indeed. But Christmas was near at hand, and the air was brimful of
-secrets.
-
-Bertha would not let her mother discover what she was working for her,
-for all the world. And the little girl's mother was preparing surprises
-for each of the children. All together, the greatest fun of the year
-was getting ready for Christmas.
-
-"Mother, you will make some of those lovely cakes this year, won't
-you?" asked Bertha's sister Gretchen.
-
-"Certainly, my child. It would not be Christmas without them. Early
-to-morrow morning, you and Bertha must shell and chop the nuts. I will
-use the freshest eggs and will beat the dough as long as my arms will
-let me."
-
-"Did you always know how to make those cakes, mamma?" asked Bertha.
-
-"My good mother taught me when I was about your age, my dear. You may
-watch me to-morrow, and perhaps you will learn how to make them. It is
-never too early to begin to learn to cook."
-
-"When the city girls get through school, they go away from home and
-study housekeeping don't they?" asked Gretchen.
-
-"Yes, and many girls who don't live in cities. But I hardly think you
-will ever be sent away. We are busy people here in our little village,
-and you will have to be contented with learning what your mother can
-teach you.
-
-"I shall be satisfied with that, I know. But listen! I can hear father
-and Hans coming."
-
-"Then put up your work, children, and set the supper-table."
-
-The girls jumped up and hurriedly put the presents away. It did not
-take long to set the supper-table, for the meals in this little home
-were very simple, and supper was the simplest of all. A large plate of
-black bread and a pitcher of sour milk were brought by the mother, and
-the family gathered around the table.
-
-The bread wasn't really black, of course. It was dark brown and very
-coarse. It was made of rye meal. Bertha and Gretchen had never seen any
-white bread in their lives, for they had never yet been far away from
-their own little village. Neither had their brother Hans.
-
-They were happy, healthy children. They all had blue eyes, rosy cheeks,
-and fair hair, like their father and mother.
-
-"You don't know what I've got for you, Hans," said Bertha, laughing and
-showing a sweet little dimple in her chin.
-
-Hans bent down and kissed her. He never could resist that dimple, and
-Bertha was his favourite sister.
-
-"I don't know what it is, but I do know that it must be something
-nice," said her brother.
-
-When the supper-table had been cleared, the mother and girls took
-out their sewing again, while Hans worked at some wood-carving. The
-father took an old violin from its case and began to play some of the
-beautiful airs of Germany.
-
-When he came to the "Watch on the Rhine," the mother's work dropped
-from her hands as she and the children joined in the song that stirs
-every German heart.
-
-"Oh, dear! it seems as though Christmas Eve never would come," sighed
-Bertha, as she settled herself for sleep beside her sister.
-
-It was quite a cold night, but they were cosy and warm. Why shouldn't
-they be? They were covered with a down feather bed. Their mother had
-the same kind of cover on her own bed, and so had Hans.
-
-But Christmas Eve did come at last, although it seemed so far off to
-Bertha the night before. Hans and his father brought in the bough of a
-yew-tree, and it was set up in the living-room.
-
-The decorating came next. Tiny candles were fastened on all the twigs.
-Sweetmeats and nuts were hung from the branches.
-
-"How beautiful! How beautiful!" exclaimed the children when it was all
-trimmed, and they walked around it with admiring eyes.
-
-None of the presents were placed on the tree, for that is not the
-fashion in Germany. Each little gift had been tied up in paper and
-marked with the name of the one for whom it was intended.
-
-When everything was ready, there was a moment of quiet while the
-candles were being lighted. Then Bertha's father began to give out the
-presents, and there was a great deal of laughing and joking as the
-bundles were opened.
-
-There was a new red skirt for Bertha. Her mother had made it, for she
-knew the child was fond of pretty dresses. Besides this, she had a pair
-of warm woollen mittens which Gretchen had knit for her. Hans had made
-and carved a doll's cradle for each of the girls.
-
-Everybody was happy and contented. They sang songs and cracked nuts and
-ate the Christmas cakes to their hearts' content.
-
-"I think I like the ones shaped like gnomes the best," said Hans. "They
-have such comical little faces. Do you know, every time I go out in the
-forest, it seems as though I might meet a party of gnomes hunting for
-gold."
-
-"I like the animal cakes best," said Bertha. "The deer are such
-graceful creatures, and I like to bite off the horns and legs, one at a
-time."
-
-"A long time ago," said their father, "they used to celebrate Christmas
-a little different from the way we now do. The presents were all
-carried to a man in the village who dressed himself in a white robe,
-and a big wig made of flax. He covered his face with a mask, and then
-went from house to house. The grown people received him with great
-honours. He called for the children and gave them the presents their
-parents had brought to him.
-
-"But these presents were all given according to the way the children
-had behaved during the year. If they had been good and tried hard,
-they had the gifts they deserved. But if they had been naughty and
-disobedient, it was not a happy time for them."
-
-"I don't believe the children were very fond of him," cried Hans. "They
-must have been too much afraid of him."
-
-"That is true," said his father. "But now, let us play some games.
-Christmas comes but once a year, and you have all been good children."
-
-The room soon rang with the shouts of Hans and his sisters. They played
-"Blind Man's Buff" and other games. Their father took part in all of
-them as though he were a boy again. The good mother looked on with
-pleasant smiles.
-
-Bedtime came only too soon. But just before the children said good
-night, the father took Hans one side and talked seriously yet lovingly
-with him. He told the boy of the faults he must still fight against. He
-spoke also of the improvement he had made during the year.
-
-At the same time the mother gave words of kind advice to her little
-daughters. She told them to keep up good courage; to be busy and
-patient in the year to come.
-
-"My dear little girls," she whispered, as she kissed them, "I love
-to see you happy in your play. But the good Lord who cares for us
-has given us all some work to do in this world. Be faithful in doing
-yours."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-TOY-MAKING
-
-
-"WAKE up, Bertha. Come, Gretchen. You will have to hurry, for it is
-quite late," called their mother. It was one morning about a week after
-Christmas.
-
-[Illustration: BERTHA'S FATHER AND MOTHER.]
-
-"Oh dear, I am so sleepy, and my bed is nice and warm," thought Bertha.
-
-But she jumped up and rubbed her eyes and began to dress, without
-waiting to be called a second time. Her mother was kind and loving, but
-she had taught her children to obey without a question.
-
-Both little girls had long, thick hair. It must be combed and brushed
-and braided with great care. Each one helped the other. They were soon
-dressed, and ran down-stairs.
-
-As soon as the breakfast was over and the room made tidy, every one in
-the family sat down to work. Bertha's father was a toy-maker. He had
-made wooden images of Santa Claus all his life. His wife and children
-helped him.
-
-When Bertha was only five years old, she began to carve the legs of
-these Santa Claus dolls. It was a queer sight to see the little girl's
-chubby fingers at their work. Now that she was nine years old, she
-still carved legs for Santa Claus in her spare moments.
-
-Gretchen always made arms, while Hans worked on a still different part
-of the bodies. The father and mother carved the heads and finished the
-little images that afterward gave such delight to children in other
-lands.
-
-Bertha lives in the Black Forest. That name makes you think at once of
-a dark and gloomy place. The woods on the hills are dark, to be sure,
-but the valleys nestling between are bright and cheerful when the sun
-shines down and pours its light upon them.
-
-Bertha's village is in just such a valley. The church stands on the
-slope above the little homes. It seems to say, "Look upward, my
-children, to the blue heavens, and do not fear, even when the mists
-fill the valley and the storm is raging over your heads."
-
-All the people in the village seem happy and contented. They work hard,
-and their pay is small, but there are no beggars among them.
-
-Toys are made in almost every house. Every one in a family works on the
-same kind of toy, just as it is in Bertha's home.
-
-The people think: "It would be foolish to spend one's time in learning
-new things. The longer a person works at making one kind of toy, the
-faster he can make them, and he can earn more money."
-
-One of Bertha's neighbours makes nothing but Noah's Arks. Another
-makes toy tables, and still another dolls' chairs.
-
-Bertha often visits a little friend who helps her father make
-cuckoo-clocks. Did you ever see one of these curious clocks? As each
-hour comes around, a little bird comes outside the case. Then it flaps
-its wings and sings "cuckoo" in a soft, sweet voice as many times as
-there are strokes to the hour. It is great fun to watch for the little
-bird and hear its soft notes.
-
-Perhaps you wonder what makes the bird come out at just the right time.
-It is done by certain machinery inside the clock. But, however it is,
-old people as well as children seem to enjoy the cuckoo-clocks of
-Germany.
-
-"Some day, when you are older, you shall go to the fair at Easter
-time," Bertha's father has promised her.
-
-"Is that at Leipsic, where our Santa Claus images go?" asked his little
-daughter.
-
-"Yes, my dear, and toys from many other parts of our country. There
-you will see music-boxes and dolls' pianos and carts and trumpets and
-engines and ships. These all come from the mining-towns.
-
-"But I know what my little Bertha would care for most. She would best
-like to see the beautiful wax dolls that come from Sonneberg."
-
-"Yes, indeed," cried Bertha. "The dear, lovely dollies with yellow
-hair like mine. I would love every one of them. I wish I could go to
-Sonneberg just to see the dolls."
-
-"I wonder what makes the wax stick on," said Gretchen, who came into
-the room while her father and Bertha were talking.
-
-"After the heads have been moulded into shape, they are dipped into
-pans of boiling wax," her father told her. "The cheap dolls are dipped
-only once, but the expensive ones have several baths before they are
-finished. The more wax that is put on, the handsomer the dolls are.
-
-"Then comes the painting. One girl does nothing but paint the lips.
-Another one does the cheeks. Still another, the eyebrows. Even then
-Miss Dolly looks like a bald-headed baby till her wig is fastened in
-its place."
-
-"I like the yellow hair best," said Bertha. "But it isn't real, is it,
-papa?"
-
-"I suppose you mean to ask, 'Did it ever grow on people's heads?' my
-dear. No. It is the wool of a kind of goat. But the black hair is real
-hair. Most dolls, however, wear light wigs. People usually prefer them."
-
-"Do little girls in Sonneberg help make the dolls, just as Bertha and I
-help you on the Santa Claus images?" asked Gretchen.
-
-"Certainly. They fill the bodies with sawdust, and do other easy
-things. But they go to school, too, just as you and Bertha do. Lessons
-must not be slighted."
-
-"If I had to help make dolls, just as I do these images," said Gretchen
-to her sister as their father went out and left the children together,
-"I don't believe I'd care for the handsomest one in the whole toy fair.
-I'd be sick of the very sight of them."
-
-"Look at the time, Bertha. See, we must stop our work and start for
-school," exclaimed Gretchen.
-
-It was only seven o'clock in the morning, but school would begin in
-half an hour. These little German girls had to study longer and harder
-than their American cousins. They spent at least an hour a day more in
-their schoolrooms.
-
-As they trudged along the road, they passed a little stream which came
-trickling down the hillside.
-
-"I wonder if there is any story about that brook," said Bertha.
-"There's a story about almost everything in our dear old country, I'm
-sure."
-
-"You have heard father tell about the stream flowing down the side of
-the Kandel, haven't you?" asked Gretchen.
-
-"Yes, I think so. But I don't remember it very well. What is the story,
-Gretchen?"
-
-"You know the Kandel is one of the highest peaks in the Black Forest.
-You've seen it, Bertha."
-
-"Yes, of course, but tell the story, Gretchen."
-
-"Well, then, once upon a time there was a poor little boy who had no
-father or mother. He had to tend cattle on the side of the Kandel. At
-that time there was a deep lake at the summit of the mountain. But the
-lake had no outlet.
-
-"The people who lived in the valley below often said, 'Dear me! how
-glad we should be if we could only have plenty of fresh water. But no
-stream flows near us. If we could only bring some of the water down
-from the lake!'
-
-"They were afraid, however, to make a channel out of the lake. The
-water might rush down with such force as to destroy their village. They
-feared to disturb it.
-
-"Now, it came to pass that the Evil One had it in his heart to destroy
-these people. He thought he could do it very easily if the rocky wall
-on the side of the lake could be broken down. There was only one way in
-which this could be done. An innocent boy must be found and got to do
-it.
-
-"It was a long time before such an one could be found. But at last
-the Evil One came across an orphan boy who tended cattle on the
-mountainside. The poor little fellow was on his way home. He was
-feeling very sad, for he was thinking of his ragged clothes and his
-scant food.
-
-"'Ah ha!' cried the Evil One to himself, 'here is the very boy.'
-
-"He changed himself at once so he had the form and dress of a hunter,
-and stepped up to the lad with a pleasant smile.
-
-"'Poor little fellow! What is the matter? And what can I do for you?'
-he said, in his most winning manner.
-
-"The boy thought he had found a friend, and told his story.
-
-"'Do not grieve any longer. There is plenty of gold and silver in these
-very mountains. I will show you how to become rich,' said the Evil One.
-'Meet me here early to-morrow morning and bring a good strong team with
-you. I will help you get the gold.'
-
-"The boy went home with a glad heart. You may be sure he did not
-oversleep the next morning. Before it was light, he had harnessed
-four oxen belonging to his master, and started for the summit of the
-mountain.
-
-"The hunter, who was waiting for him, had already fastened a metal ring
-around the wall that held in the waters of the lake.
-
-"'Fasten the oxen to that ring,' commanded the hunter, 'and the rock
-will split open.'
-
-"Somehow or other, the boy did not feel pleased at what he was told to
-do. Yet he obeyed, and started the oxen. But as he did so, he cried,
-'Do this in the name of God!'
-
-"At that very instant the sky grew black as night, the thunder rolled
-and the lightning flashed. And not only this, for at the same time the
-mountain shook and rumbled as though a mighty force were tearing it
-apart."
-
-"What became of the poor boy?" asked Bertha.
-
-"He fell senseless to the ground, while the oxen in their fright rushed
-headlong down the mountainside. But you needn't get excited, Bertha, no
-harm was done. The boy was saved as well as the village, because he
-had pulled in the name of God.
-
-"The rock did not split entirely. It broke apart just enough to let out
-a tiny stream of water, which began to flow down the mountainside.
-
-"When the boy came to his senses, the sky was clear and beautiful once
-more. The sun was shining brightly, and the hunter was nowhere to be
-seen. But the stream of water was running down the mountainside.
-
-"A few minutes afterward, the boy's master came hurrying up the slope.
-He was frightened by the dreadful sounds he had heard. But when he saw
-the waterfall, he was filled with delight.
-
-"'Every one in the village will rejoice,' he exclaimed, 'for now we
-shall never want for water.'
-
-"Then the little boy took courage and told the story of his meeting the
-hunter and what he had done.
-
-"'It is well you did it in the name of the Lord,' cried his master. 'If
-you had not, our village would have been destroyed, and every one of us
-would have been drowned.'"
-
-"See! the children are going into the schoolhouse, Gretchen. We must
-not be late. Let's run," said Bertha.
-
-The two little girls stopped talking, and hurried so fast that they
-entered the schoolhouse and were sitting in their seats in good order
-before the schoolmaster struck his bell.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE WICKED BISHOP
-
-
-"THE Rhine is the loveliest river in the world. I know it must be,"
-said Bertha.
-
-"Of course it is," answered her brother. "I've seen it, and I ought to
-know. And father thinks so, too. He says it is not only beautiful, but
-it is also bound into the whole history of our country. Think of the
-battles that have been fought on its shores, and the great generals who
-have crossed it!"
-
-"Yes, and the castles, Hans! Think of the legends father and mother
-have told us about the beautiful princesses who have lived in the
-castles, and the brave knights who have fought for them! I shall be
-perfectly happy if I can ever sail down the Rhine and see the noted
-places on its shores."
-
-"The schoolmaster has taught you all about the war with France, hasn't
-he, Bertha?"
-
-"Of course. And it really seemed at one time as if France would make us
-Germans agree to have the Rhine divide the two countries. Just as if
-we would be willing to let the French own one shore of our beautiful
-river. I should say not!"
-
-Bertha's cheeks grew rosier than usual at the thought of such a thing.
-She talked faster than German children usually do, for they are rather
-slow in their speech.
-
-"We do not own all of the river, little sister, as it is. The baby
-Rhine sleeps in an icy cradle in the mountains of Switzerland. Then it
-makes its way through our country, but before it reaches the sea it
-flows through the low lands of Holland."
-
-"I know all that, Hans. But we own the best of the Rhine, anyway. I am
-perfectly satisfied."
-
-"I wish I knew all the legends about the river. There are enough of
-them to fill many books. Did you ever hear about the Rats' Tower
-opposite the town of Bingen, Bertha?"
-
-"What a funny name for a tower! No. Is there a story about it, Hans?"
-
-"Yes, one of the boys was telling it to me yesterday while we were
-getting wood in the forest. It is a good story, although my friend said
-he wasn't sure it is true."
-
-"What is the story?"
-
-"It is about a very wicked bishop who was a miser. It happened one time
-that the harvests were poor and grain was scarce. The cruel bishop
-bought all the grain he could get and locked it up. He intended to sell
-it for a high price, and in this way to become very rich.
-
-"As the days went by, the food became scarcer and scarcer. The people
-began to sicken and die of hunger. They had but one thought: they must
-get something to eat for their children and themselves.
-
-"They knew of the stores of grain held by the bishop. They went to him
-and begged for some of it, but he paid no attention to their prayers.
-Then they demanded that he open the doors of the storehouse and let
-them have the grain. It was of no use.
-
-"At last, they gathered together, and said:
-
-"'We will break down the door if you do not give it to us.'
-
-"'Come to-morrow,' answered the bishop. 'Bring your friends with you.
-You shall have all the grain you desire.'
-
-"The morrow came. Crowds gathered in front of the granary. The bishop
-unlocked the door, saying:
-
-"'Go inside and help yourselves freely.'
-
-"The people rushed in. Then what do you think the cruel bishop did? He
-ordered his servants to lock the door and set the place on fire!
-
-"The air was soon filled with the screams of the burning people. But
-the bishop only laughed and danced. He said to his servants:
-
-"'Do you hear the rats squeaking inside the granary?'
-
-"The next day came. There were only ashes in place of the great
-storehouse. There seemed to be no life about the town, for the people
-were all dead.
-
-"Suddenly there was a great scurrying, as a tremendous swarm of rats
-came rushing out of the ashes. On they came, more and more of them.
-They filled the streets, and even made their way into the palace.
-
-"The wicked bishop was filled with fear. He fled from the place and
-hurried away over the fields. But the swarm of rats came rushing after
-him. He came to Bingen, where he hoped to be safe within its walls.
-Somehow or other, the rats made their way inside.
-
-[Illustration: THE RATS' TOWER.]
-
-"There was now only one hope of safety. The bishop fled to a tower
-standing in the middle of the Rhine. But it was of no use! The rats
-swam the river and made their way up the sides of the tower. Their
-sharp teeth gnawed holes through the doors and windows. They entered in
-and came to the room where the bishop was hiding."
-
-"Wicked fellow! They killed and ate him as he deserved, didn't they?"
-asked Bertha.
-
-"There wasn't much left of him in a few minutes. But the tower still
-stands, and you can see it if you ever go to Bingen, although it is a
-crumbling old pile now."
-
-"Rats' Tower is a good name for it. But I would rather hear about
-enchanted princesses and brave knights than wicked old bishops. Tell me
-another story, Hans."
-
-"Oh, I can't. Listen! I hear some one coming. Who can it be?"
-
-Hans jumped up and ran to the door, just in time to meet his Uncle
-Fritz, who lived in Strasburg.
-
-The children loved him dearly. He was a young man about twenty-one
-years old. He came home to this little village in the Black Forest only
-about once a year. He had so much to tell and was so kind and cheerful,
-every one was glad to see him.
-
-"Uncle Fritz! Uncle Fritz! We are so glad you've come," exclaimed
-Bertha, putting her arms around his neck. "And we are going to have
-something that you like for dinner."
-
-"I can guess what it is. Sauerkraut and boiled pork. There is no other
-sauerkraut in Germany as good as that your mother makes, I do believe.
-I'm hungry enough to eat the whole dishful and not leave any for you
-children. Now what do you say to my coming? Don't you wish I had
-stayed in Strasburg?"
-
-"Oh, no, no, Uncle Fritz. We would rather see you than anybody else,"
-cried Hans. "And here comes mother. She will be just as glad as we are."
-
-That evening, after Hans had shown his uncle around the village, and he
-had called on his old friends, he settled himself in the chimney-corner
-with the children about him.
-
-"Talk to us about Strasburg, Uncle Fritz," begged Gretchen.
-
-"Please tell us about the storks," said Bertha. "Are there great
-numbers of the birds in the city, and do they build their nests on the
-chimneys?"
-
-"Yes, you can see plenty of storks flying overhead if you will come
-back with me," said Uncle Fritz, laughingly. "They seem to know the
-people love them. If a stork makes his home about any one's house, it
-is a sign of good fortune to the people who live there.
-
-"'It will surely come,' they say to themselves, 'and the storks will
-bring it.' Do you wonder the people like the birds so much?"
-
-"I read a story about a mother stork," said Bertha, thoughtfully. "She
-had a family of baby birds. They were not big enough to leave their
-nest, when a fire broke out in the chimney where it was built. Poor
-mother bird! She could have saved herself. But she would not leave
-her babies. So she stayed with them and they were all burned to death
-together."
-
-"I know the story. That happened right in Strasburg," said her uncle.
-
-"Please tell us about the beautiful cathedral with its tall tower,"
-said Hans. "Sometime, uncle, I am going to Strasburg, if I have to
-walk there, and then I shall want to spend a whole day in front of the
-wonderful clock."
-
-"You'd better have a lunch with you, Hans, and then you will not get
-hungry. But really, my dear little nephew, I hope the time will soon
-come when you can pay me a long visit. As for the clock, you will have
-to stay in front of it all night as well as all day, if you are to see
-all it can show you."
-
-"I know about cuckoo-clocks, of course," said Gretchen, "but the little
-bird is the only figure that comes out on those. There are ever so many
-different figures on the Strasburg clock, aren't there, Uncle Fritz?"
-
-"A great, great many. Angels strike the hours. A different god or
-goddess appears for each day in the week. Then, at noon and at
-midnight, Jesus and his twelve apostles come out through a door and
-march about on a platform.
-
-"You can imagine what the size of the clock must be when I tell you
-that the figures are as large as people. When the procession of the
-apostles appears, a gilded cock on the top of the tower flaps its
-wings and crows.
-
-"I cannot begin to tell you all about it. It is as good as a play, and,
-as I told Hans, he would have to stay many hours near it to see all the
-sights."
-
-"I should think a strong man would be needed to wind it up," said his
-nephew.
-
-"The best part of it is that it does not need to be wound every day,"
-replied Uncle Fritz. "They say it will run for years without being
-touched. Of course, travellers are coming to Strasburg all the time.
-They wish to see the clock, but they also come to see the cathedral
-itself. It is a very grand building, and, as you know, the spire is the
-tallest one in all Europe.
-
-"Then there is so much beautiful carving! And there are such fine
-statues. Oh, children, you must certainly come to Strasburg before
-long and see the cathedral of which all Germany is so proud."
-
-"Strasburg was for a time the home of our greatest poet," said Bertha.
-"I want to go there to see where he lived."
-
-The child was very fond of poetry, even though she was a little country
-girl. Her father had a book containing some of Goethe's ballads, and
-she loved to lie under the trees in the pleasant summer-time and repeat
-some of these poems.
-
-"They are just like music," she would say to herself.
-
-"A marble slab has been set up in the old Fish Market to mark the spot
-where Goethe lived," said Uncle Fritz. "They say he loved the grand
-cathedral of the city, and it helped him to become a great writer when
-he was a young student there. I suppose its beauty awakened his own
-beautiful thoughts."
-
-The children became quiet as they thought of their country and the men
-who had made her so strong and great,--the poets, and the musicians,
-and the brave soldiers who had defended her from her enemies.
-
-Uncle Fritz was the first one to speak.
-
-"I will tell you a story of Strasburg," he said. "It is about something
-that happened there a long time ago. You know, the city isn't on the
-Rhine itself, but it is on a little stream flowing into the greater
-river.
-
-"Well, once upon a time the people of Zurich, in Switzerland, asked the
-people of Strasburg to join with them in a bond of friendship. Each
-should help the other in times of danger. The people of Strasburg did
-not think much of the idea. They said among themselves: 'What good can
-the little town of Zurich do us? And, besides, it is too far away.' So
-they sent back word that they did not care to make such a bond. They
-were scarcely polite in their message, either.
-
-"When they heard the reply, the men of Zurich were quite angry. They
-were almost ready to fight. But the youngest one of their councillors
-said:
-
-"'We will force them to eat their own words. Indeed, they shall be made
-to give us a different answer. And it will come soon, too, if you will
-only leave the matter with me.'
-
-"'Do as you please,' said the other councillors. They went back to
-their own houses, while the young man hurried home, rushed out into the
-kitchen and picked out the largest kettle there.
-
-"'Wife, cook as much oatmeal as this pot will hold,' he commanded.
-
-"The woman wondered what in the world her husband could be thinking of.
-But she lost no time in guessing. She ordered her servants to make a
-big fire, while she herself stirred and cooked the great kettleful of
-oatmeal.
-
-"In the meanwhile, her husband hurried down to the pier, and got his
-swiftest boat ready for a trip down the river. Then he gathered the
-best rowers in the town.
-
-"'Come with me,' he said to two of them, when everything had been made
-ready for a trip. They hastened home with him, as he commanded.
-
-"'Is the oatmeal ready?' he cried, rushing breathless into the kitchen.
-
-"His wife had just finished her work. The men lifted the kettle from
-the fire and ran with it to the waiting boat. It was placed in the
-stern and the oarsmen sprang to their places.
-
-"'Pull, men! Pull with all the strength you have, and we will go to
-Strasburg in time to show those stupid people that, if it should be
-necessary, we live near enough to them to give them a hot supper.'
-
-"How the men worked! They rowed as they had never rowed before.
-
-"They passed one village after another. Still they moved onward without
-stopping, till they found themselves at the pier of Strasburg.
-
-"The councillor jumped out of the boat, telling two of his men
-to follow with the great pot of oatmeal. He led the way to the
-council-house, where he burst in with his strange present.
-
-"'I bring you a warm answer to your cold words,' he told the surprised
-councillors. He spoke truly, for the pot was still steaming. How amused
-they all were!
-
-"'What a clever fellow he is,' they said among themselves. 'Surely we
-will agree to make the bond with Zurich, if it holds many men like him.'
-
-"The bond was quickly signed and then, with laughter and good-will, the
-councillors gathered around the kettle with spoons and ate every bit of
-the oatmeal.
-
-"'It is excellent,' they all cried. And indeed it was still hot enough
-to burn the mouths of those who were not careful."
-
-"Good! Good!" cried the children, and they laughed heartily, even
-though it was a joke against their own people.
-
-Their father and mother had also listened to the story and enjoyed it
-as much as the children.
-
-"Another story, please, dear Uncle Fritz," they begged.
-
-But their father pointed to the clock. "Too late, too late, my dears,"
-he said. "If you sit up any longer, your mother will have to call you
-more than once in the morning. So, away to your beds, every one of
-you."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE COFFEE-PARTY
-
-
-"HOW would you like to be a wood-cutter, Hans?"
-
-"I think it would be great sport. I like to hear the thud of the axe as
-it comes down on the trunk. Then it is always an exciting time as the
-tree begins to bend and fall to the ground. Somehow, it seems like a
-person. I can't help pitying it, either."
-
-Hans had come over to the next village on an errand for his father. A
-big sawmill had been built on the side of the stream, and all the men
-in the place were kept busy cutting down trees in the Black Forest, or
-working in the sawmill.
-
-After the logs had been cut the right length, they were bound into
-rafts, and floated down the little stream to the Rhine.
-
-"The rafts themselves seem alive," said Hans to his friend. "You men
-know just how to bind the logs together with those willow bands, so
-they twist and turn about like living creatures as they move down the
-stream."
-
-"I have travelled on a raft all the way from here to Cologne," answered
-the wood-cutter. "The one who steers must be skilful, for he needs to
-be very careful. You know the rafts grow larger all the time, don't
-you, Hans?"
-
-"Oh, yes. As the river becomes wider, the smaller ones are bound
-together. But is it true that the men sometimes take their families
-along with them?"
-
-"Certainly. They set up tents, or little huts, on the rafts, so their
-wives and children can have a comfortable place to eat and sleep. Then,
-too, if it rains, they can be sheltered from the storm."
-
-"I'd like to go with you sometime. You pass close to Strasburg, and I
-could stop and visit Uncle Fritz. Wouldn't it be fun!"
-
-"Hans! Hans!" called a girl's voice just then.
-
-"I don't see her, but I know that's Bertha. She came over to the
-village with me this afternoon. One of her friends has a coffee-party
-and she invited us to it. So, good-bye."
-
-"Good-bye, my lad. Come and see me again. Perhaps I can manage sometime
-to take you with me on a trip down the river."
-
-"Thank you ever so much."
-
-Hans hurried away, and was soon entering the house of a little friend
-who was celebrating her birthday with a coffee-party.
-
-There were several other children there. They were all dressed in their
-best clothes and looked very neat and nice. The boys wore long trousers
-and straight jackets. They looked like little old men. The girls had
-bright-coloured skirts and their white waists were fresh and stiff.
-
-Their shoes were coarse and heavy, and made a good deal of noise as the
-children played the different games. But they were all so plump and
-rosy, it was good to look at them.
-
-"They are a pretty sight," said one of the neighbours, as she poured
-out the coffee.
-
-"They deserve to have a good time," said another woman with a kind,
-motherly face. "They will soon grow up, and then they will have to work
-hard to get a living."
-
-The coffee and cakes were a great treat to these village children. They
-did not get such a feast every day in the year. Their mothers made
-cakes only for festivals and holidays, and coffee was seldom seen on
-their tables oftener than once a week.
-
-In the great cities and fine castles, where the rich people of Germany
-had their homes, they could eat sweet dainties and drink coffee as
-often as they liked. But in the villages of the Black Forest, it was
-quite different.
-
-"Good night, good night," said Hans and Bertha, as they left their
-friends and trudged off on a path through the woods. It was the
-shortest way home, and they knew their mother must be looking for them
-by this time.
-
-It was just sunset, but the children could not see the beautiful
-colours of the evening sky, after they had gone a short distance into
-the thick woods.
-
-"Do you suppose there are any bears around?" whispered Bertha.
-
-The trees looked very black. It seemed to the little girl as though she
-kept seeing the shadow of some big animal hiding behind them.
-
-"No, indeed," answered Hans, quite scornfully. "Too many people go
-along this path for bears to be willing to stay around here. You would
-have to go farther up into the forest to find them. But look quickly,
-Bertha. Do you see that rabbit jumping along? Isn't he a big fellow?"
-
-"See! Hans, he has noticed us. There he goes as fast as his legs can
-carry him."
-
-By this time, the children had reached the top of a hill. The trees
-grew very thick and close. On one side a torrent came rushing down over
-the rocks and stones. It seemed to say:
-
-"I cannot stop for any one. But come with me, come with me, and I will
-take you to the beautiful Rhine. I will show you the way to pretty
-bridges, and great stone castles, and rare old cities. Oh, this is a
-wonderful world, and you children of the Black Forest have a great deal
-to see yet."
-
-"I love to listen to running water," said Bertha. "It always has a
-story to tell us."
-
-"Do you see that light over there, away off in the distance?" asked
-Hans. "It comes from a charcoal-pit. I can hear the voices of the men
-at their work."
-
-"I shouldn't like to stay out in the dark woods all the time and make
-charcoal," answered his sister. "I should get lonesome and long for the
-sunlight."
-
-"It isn't very easy work, either," said Hans. "After the trees have
-been cut down, the pits have to be made with the greatest care, and the
-wood must be burned just so slowly to change it into charcoal. I once
-spent a day in the forest with some charcoal-burners. They told such
-good stories that night came before I had thought of it."
-
-"I can see the village ahead of us," said Bertha, joyfully.
-
-A few minutes afterward, the children were running up the stone steps
-of their own home.
-
-"We had such a good time," Hans told his mother, while Bertha went
-to Gretchen and gave her some cakes she had brought her from the
-coffee-party.
-
-"I'm so sorry you couldn't go," she told her sister.
-
-"Perhaps I can next time," answered Gretchen. "But, of course, we could
-not all leave mother when she had so much work to do. So I just kept
-busy and tried to forget all about it."
-
-"You dear, good Gretchen! I'm going to try to be as patient and helpful
-as you are," said Bertha, kissing her sister.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE BEAUTIFUL CASTLE
-
-
-"FATHER'S coming, father's coming," cried Bertha, as she ran down the
-steps and out into the street.
-
-Her father had been away for two days, and Hans had gone with him. They
-had been to Heidelberg. Bertha and Gretchen had never yet visited that
-city, although it was not more than twenty miles away.
-
-"Oh, dear, I don't know where to begin," Hans told the girls that
-evening.
-
-"Of course, I liked to watch the students better than anything else.
-The town seems full of them. They all study in the university, of
-course, but they are on the streets a good deal. They seem to have a
-fine time of it. Every one carries a small cane with a button on the
-end of it. They wear their little caps down over their foreheads on one
-side."
-
-"What colour do they have for their caps, Hans?" asked Gretchen.
-
-"All colours, I believe. Some are red, some blue, some yellow, some
-green. Oh, I can't tell you how many different kinds there are. But
-they were bright and pretty, and made the streets look as though it
-must be a festival day."
-
-"I have heard that the students fight a good many duels. Is that so,
-Hans?"
-
-"If you should see them, you would certainly think so. Many of the
-fellows are real handsome, but their faces are scarred more often than
-not.
-
-"'The more scars I can show, the braver people will think I am.' That
-is what the students seem to think. They get up duels with each other
-on the smallest excuse. When they fight, they always try to strike the
-face. Father says their duelling is good practice. It really helps to
-make them brave. If I were a student, I should want to fight duels,
-too."
-
-Bertha shuddered. Duelling was quite the fashion in German
-universities, but the little girl was very tender-hearted. She could
-not bear to think of her brother having his face cut up by the sword of
-any one in the world.
-
-"What do you think, girls?" Hans went on. "Father had to go to the
-part of the town nearest the castle. He said he should be busy for
-several hours, and I could do what I liked. So I climbed up the hill to
-the castle, and wandered all around it. I saw a number of English and
-American people there. I suppose they had come to Heidelberg on purpose
-to see those buildings.
-
-"'Isn't it beautiful!' I heard them exclaim again and again. And I saw
-a boy about my own age writing things about it in a note-book. He
-told his mother he was going to say it was the most beautiful ruin in
-Germany. He was an American boy, but he spoke our language. I suppose
-he was just learning it, for he made ever so many mistakes. I could
-hardly tell what he was trying to say."
-
-"What did his mother answer?" asked Bertha.
-
-"She nodded her head, and then pointed out some of the finest carvings
-and statues. But she and her son moved away from me before long, and
-then I found myself near some children of our country. They must
-have been rich, for they were dressed quite grandly. Their governess
-was with them. She told them to notice how many different kinds of
-buildings there were, some of them richly carved, and some quite plain.
-'You will find here palaces, towers, and fortresses, all together,' she
-said. 'For, in the old days, it was not only a grand home, but it was
-also a strong fortress.'"
-
-[Illustration: COURTYARD OF HEIDELBERG CASTLE.]
-
-"You know father told us it was not built all at once," said Gretchen.
-"Different parts were added during four hundred years."
-
-"Yes, and he said it had been stormed by the enemy, and burned and
-plundered," added Bertha. "It has been in the hands of those horrid
-Frenchmen several different times. Did you see the blown-up tower,
-Hans?"
-
-"Of course I did. Half of it, you know, fell into the moat during one
-of the sieges, but linden-trees have grown about it, and it makes a
-shady nook in which to rest one's self."
-
-"You did not go inside of the castle, did you, Hans?" asked Gretchen.
-
-"No. It looked so big and gloomy, I stayed outside in the pretty
-gardens. I climbed over some of the moss-grown stairs, though, and I
-kept discovering something I hadn't seen before. Here and there were
-old fountains and marble statues, all gray with age."
-
-"They say that under the castle are great, dark dungeons," said Bertha,
-shivering at the thought.
-
-"What would a castle be without dungeons?" replied her brother. "Of
-course there are dungeons. And there are also hidden, underground
-passages through which the people inside could escape in times of war
-and siege."
-
-"Oh, Hans! did you see the Heidelberg Tun?" asked Gretchen.
-
-Now, the Heidelberg Tun is the largest wine-cask in the whole world.
-People say that it holds forty-nine thousand gallons. Just think of it!
-But it has not been filled for more than a hundred years.
-
-"No, I didn't see it," replied Hans. "It is down in the cellar, and I
-didn't want to go there without father. I heard some of the visitors
-telling about the marks of the Frenchmen's hatchets on its sides. One
-of the times they captured the castle, they tried to break open the
-tun. They thought it was full of wine. But they did not succeed in
-hacking through its tough sides."
-
-"Good! Good!" cried his sisters. They had little love for France and
-her people.
-
-That evening, after Hans had finished telling the girls about his
-visit, their father told them the legend of Count Frederick, a brave
-and daring man who once lived in Heidelberg Castle.
-
-Count Frederick was so brave and successful that he was called
-"Frederick the Victorious."
-
-Once upon a time he was attacked by the knights and bishops of the
-Rhine, who had banded together against him. When he found what great
-numbers of soldiers were attacking his castle, Count Frederick was not
-frightened in the least. He armed his men with sharp daggers, and
-marched boldly out against his foes.
-
-They attacked the horses first of all. The daggers made short work, and
-the knights were soon brought to the ground. Their armour was so heavy
-that it was an easy matter then to make them prisoners and take them
-into the castle.
-
-But Frederick treated them most kindly. He ordered a great banquet to
-be prepared, and invited his prisoners to gather around the board,
-where all sorts of good things were served.
-
-One thing only was lacking. There was no bread. The guests thought it
-was because the servants had forgotten it, and one of them dared to
-ask for a piece. Count Frederick at once turned toward his steward and
-ordered the bread to be brought. Now his master had privately talked
-with the steward and had told him what words to use at this time.
-
-"I am very sorry," said the steward, "but there is no bread."
-
-"You must bake some at once," ordered his master.
-
-"But we have no flour," was the answer.
-
-"You must grind some, then," was the command.
-
-"We cannot do so, for we have no grain."
-
-"Then see that some is threshed immediately."
-
-"That is impossible, for the harvests have been burned down," replied
-the steward.
-
-"You can at least sow grain, that we may have new harvests as soon as
-possible."
-
-"We cannot even do that, for our enemies have burned down all the
-buildings where the grain was stored for seed-time."
-
-Frederick now turned to his visitors, and told them they must eat their
-meat without bread. But that was not all. He told them they must give
-him enough money to build new houses and barns to take the places of
-those they had destroyed, and also to buy new seed for grain.
-
-"It is wrong," he said, sternly, "to carry on war against those who
-are helpless, and to take away their seeds and tools from the poor
-peasants."
-
-It was a sensible speech. It made the knights ashamed of the way they
-had been carrying on war in the country, and they left the castle wiser
-and better men.
-
-All this happened long, long ago, before Germany could be called
-one country, for the different parts of the land were ruled over by
-different people and in different ways.
-
-This same Count Frederick, their father told them, had great love for
-the poor. When he was still quite young, he made a vow. He said, "I
-will never marry a woman of noble family."
-
-Not long after this, he fell in love with a princess. But he could not
-ask her to marry him on account of the vow he had made.
-
-He was so unhappy that he went into the army. He did not wish to live,
-and hoped he would soon meet death.
-
-But the fair princess loved Frederick as deeply as he loved her, and as
-soon as she learned of the vow he had made, she made up her mind what
-to do.
-
-She put on the dress of a poor singing-girl, and left her grand home.
-She followed Frederick from place to place. They met face to face one
-beautiful evening. Then it was that the princess told her lover she had
-given up her rank and title for his sake.
-
-How joyful she made him as he listened to her story! You may be sure
-they were soon married, and the young couple went to live in Heidelberg
-Castle, where they were as happy and as merry as the day is long.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE GREAT FREDERICK
-
-
-"I DECLARE, Hans, I should think you would get tired of playing war,"
-said Bertha. She was sitting under the trees rocking her doll. She was
-playing it was a baby.
-
-Hans had just come home after an afternoon of sport with his boy
-friends. But all they had done, Bertha declared, was to play war and
-soldiers. She had watched them from her own yard.
-
-"Tired of it! What a silly idea, Bertha. It won't be many years before
-I shall be a real soldier. Just picture me then! I shall have a
-uniform, and march to music. I don't know where I may go, either. Who
-knows to what part of the world the emperor will send his soldiers at
-that time?"
-
-"I know where you would like to go in our own country," said Bertha.
-
-"To Berlin, of course. What a grand city it must be! Father has been
-there. Our schoolmaster was there while he served his time as a
-soldier. At this very moment, it almost seems as though I could hear
-the jingling of the officers' swords as they move along the streets.
-The regiments are drilled every day, and I don't know how often the
-soldiers have sham battles."
-
-Hans jumped up from his seat under the tree and began to march up and
-down as though he were a soldier already.
-
-"Attention, battalion! Forward, march!" Bertha called after him. But
-she was laughing as she spoke. She could not help it, Hans looked so
-serious. At the same time she couldn't help envying her brother a
-little, and wishing she were a boy, too. It must be so grand to be
-a soldier and be ready to fight for the emperor who ruled over her
-country.
-
-[Illustration: STATUE OF FREDERICK THE GREAT.]
-
-"The schoolmaster told us boys yesterday about the grand palace at
-Berlin. The emperor lives in it when he is in the city," said Hans,
-wheeling around suddenly and stopping in front of Bertha.
-
-"I think you must have caught my thoughts," said the little girl, "for
-the emperor was in my mind when you began to speak."
-
-"Well, never mind that. Do you wish to hear about the palace?"
-
-"Of course I do, Hans."
-
-"The schoolmaster says it has six hundred rooms. Just think of it!
-And one of them, called the White Room, is furnished so grandly that
-2,400,000 marks were spent on it. You can't imagine it, Bertha, of
-course. I can't, either."
-
-A German mark is worth about twenty-four cents of American money, so
-the furnishing of the room Hans spoke of must have cost about $600,000.
-It was a large sum, and it is no wonder the boy said he could hardly
-imagine so much money.
-
-"There are hundreds of halls in the palace," Hans went on. "Some
-of their walls are painted and others are hung with elegant silk
-draperies. The floors are polished so they shine like mirrors. Then
-the pictures and the armour, Bertha! It almost seemed as though I were
-there while the schoolmaster was describing them."
-
-"I never expect to see such lovely things," said his sober little
-sister. "But perhaps I shall go to Berlin some day, Hans. Then I can
-see the statue of Frederick the Great, at any rate."
-
-"It stands opposite the palace," said her brother, "and cost more than
-any other bronze statue in the world."
-
-"How did you learn that, Hans?"
-
-"The schoolmaster told us so. He said, too, that it ought to stir the
-blood of every true German to look at it. There the great Frederick
-sits on horseback, wearing the robe in which he was crowned, and
-looking out from under his cocked hat with his bright, sharp eyes. That
-statue alone is enough to make the soldiers who march past it ready to
-give their lives for their country."
-
-"He lived when the different kingdoms were separated from each other,
-and there was no one ruler over all of them. I know that," said Bertha.
-
-"Yes, he was the King of Prussia. And he fought the Seven Years' War
-with France and came out victorious. Hardly any one thought he could
-succeed, for there was so much against him. But he was brave and
-determined. Those two things were worth everything else."
-
-"That wasn't the only war he won, either, Hans."
-
-"No, but it must have been the greatest. Did you know, Bertha, that he
-was unhappy when he was young? His father was so strict that he tried
-to run away from Germany with two of his friends. The king found out
-what they meant to do. One of the friends was put to death, and the
-other managed to escape."
-
-"What did his father do to Frederick?" Bertha's eyes were full of pity
-for a prince who was so unhappy as to wish to run away.
-
-"The king ordered his son to be put to death. But I suppose he was
-angry at the time, for he changed his mind before the sentence was
-carried out, and forgave him."
-
-"I wonder how kings and emperors live," said Bertha, slowly. It seemed
-as though everything must be different with them from what it was with
-other people.
-
-"I'll tell you about Frederick, if you wish to listen."
-
-"Of course I do, Hans."
-
-"In the first place, he didn't care anything about fine clothes, even
-if he was a king and was born in the grand palace at Berlin. His coat
-was often very shabby.
-
-"In the next place, he slept only about four hours out of the whole
-twenty-four for a good many years. He got up at three o'clock on summer
-mornings, and in the winter-time he was always dressed by five, at the
-very latest.
-
-"While his hair-dresser was at work, he opened his most important
-letters. After that, he attended to other business affairs of the
-country. These things were done before eating or drinking. But when
-they had been attended to, the king went into his writing-room and
-drank a number of glasses of cold water. As he wrote, he sipped coffee
-and ate a little fruit from time to time.
-
-"He loved music very dearly, and sometimes rested from his work and
-played on his flute.
-
-"Dinner was the only regular meal of the day. It was served at twelve
-o'clock, and lasted three or four hours. There was a bill of fare, and
-the names of the cooks were given as well as the dishes they prepared."
-
-"Did the king ever let them know whether he was pleased or not with
-their cooking?" asked Bertha.
-
-"Yes. He marked the dishes he liked best with a cross. He enjoyed his
-dinner, and generally had a number of friends to eat with him. There
-was much joking, and there were many clever speeches.
-
-"When the meal was over, the king played on his flute a short time, and
-then attended to more business."
-
-"Did he work till bedtime, Hans?"
-
-"Oh, no. In the evening there was a concert or lecture, or something
-like that. But, all the same, the king was a hardworking man, even in
-times of peace."
-
-"He loved his people dearly, father once told me," said Bertha. "He
-said he understood his subjects and they understood him."
-
-"Yes, and that reminds me of a story the schoolmaster told. King
-Frederick was once riding through the street when he saw a crowd of
-people gathered together. He said to his groom, 'Go and see what is the
-matter.' The man came back and told the king that the people were all
-looking at a caricature of Frederick himself. A caricature, you know,
-is a comical portrait.
-
-"Perhaps you think the king was angry when he heard this. Not at all.
-He said, 'Go and hang the picture lower down, so they will not have to
-stretch their necks to see it.'
-
-"The crowd heard the words. 'Hurrah for the king!' they cried. At the
-same time, they began to tear the picture into pieces."
-
-"Frederick the Great could appreciate a joke," said Bertha. "I should
-think the people must have loved him."
-
-"He had some fine buildings put up in his lifetime," Hans went on. "A
-new palace was built in Berlin, besides another one the king called
-'Sans Souci.' Those are French words meaning, 'Without a Care.' He
-called the place by that name because he said he was free-hearted and
-untroubled while he stayed there.
-
-"I've told you these things because you are a girl. But I'll tell you
-what I like to think of best of all. It's the stories of the wars in
-which he fought and in which he showed such wonderful courage. So,
-hurrah for Frederick the Great, King of Prussia!"
-
-Hans made a salute as though he stood in the presence of the great
-king. Then he started for the wood-pile, where he was soon sawing logs
-with as much energy as if he were fighting against the enemies of his
-country.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE BRAVE PRINCESS
-
-
-"LISTEN, children! That must be the song of a nightingale. How sweet it
-is!"
-
-It was a lovely Sunday afternoon. Every one in the family had been to
-church in the morning, and come home to a good dinner of bean soup and
-potato salad. Then the father had said:
-
-"Let us take a long walk over the fields and through the woods. The
-world is beautiful to-day. We can enjoy it best by leaving the house
-behind us."
-
-Some of the neighbours joined the merry party. The men smoked their
-pipes, while the women chatted together and the children frolicked
-about them and picked wild flowers.
-
-How many sweet smells there were in the fields! How gaily the birds
-sang! The air seemed full of peace and joy.
-
-They all wandered on till they came to a cascade flowing down over some
-high rocks. Trees grew close to the waterfall, and bent over it as
-though to hide it from curious eyes. It was a pretty spot.
-
-"Let us sit down at the foot of this cascade," said Bertha's father.
-"It is a pleasant place to rest."
-
-Every one liked the plan. Bertha nestled close to her father's side.
-
-"Tell us a story. Please do," she said.
-
-"Ask neighbour Abel. He knows many a legend of just such places as
-this. He has lived in the Hartz Mountains, and they are filled with
-fairy stories."
-
-The rest of the party heard what was said.
-
-"Neighbour Abel! A story, a story," they cried.
-
-Of course the kind-hearted German could not refuse such a general
-request. Besides, he liked to tell stories. Taking his long pipe out of
-his mouth, he laid it down on the ground beside him. Then he cleared
-his throat and began to speak.
-
-"Look above you, friends. Do you see that mark on the rocky platform
-overhead? I noticed it as soon as I got here. It made me think of a
-wild spot in the Hartz Mountains where there is just such a mark. The
-people call it 'The Horse's Hoof-print.' I will tell you how they
-explain its coming there.
-
-"Once upon a time there was a beautiful princess. Her name was
-Brunhilda, and she lived in Bohemia. She lived a gay and happy life,
-like most young princesses, till one day a handsome prince arrived at
-her father's palace. He was the son of the king of the Hartz country.
-
-"Of course, you can all guess what happened. The prince fell in love
-with the princess, and she returned his love. The day was set for the
-wedding, and the young prince went home to prepare for the great event.
-
-"But he had been gone only a short time when a powerful giant arrived
-at Brunhilda's home. He came from the far north. His name was Bodo.
-
-"He asked for the princess in marriage, but her heart had already been
-given away. She did not care for the giant, even though he gave her the
-most elegant presents,--a beautiful white horse, jewels set in gold,
-and chains of amber.
-
-"'I dare not refuse the giant,' said Brunhilda's father. 'He is very
-powerful, and we must not make him angry. You must marry him, my
-daughter, in three days.'
-
-"The poor maiden wept bitterly. It seemed as though her heart would
-break. But she was a clever girl, and she soon dried her tears and
-began to think of some plan by which she might yet be free. She began
-to smile upon the giant and treat him with great kindness.
-
-"'I should like to try the beautiful horse you brought me,' she said
-to him. He was much pleased. The horse was brought to the door. The
-princess mounted him and rode for a time up and down in front of the
-palace.
-
-"The very next day was that set apart for the wedding. The castle was
-filled with guests who feasted and made merry. The giant entered into
-everything with a will. He laughed till the floors and walls shook.
-Little did he think what was taking place. For the princess slipped out
-of the castle when no one was watching, hurried into the stable, and
-leaped upon the back of her swift white horse.
-
-"'Lower the drawbridge instantly,' she called to the guard. She passed
-over it, and away she flew like the wind.
-
-"You were too late, too late, O giant, when you discovered that
-Brunhilda was missing.
-
-"He flew out of the castle, and on the back of his own fiery black
-horse he dashed after the runaway princess.
-
-"On they went! On, on, without stopping. Over the plains, up and down
-the hillsides, through the villages. The sun set and darkness fell upon
-the world, but there was never a moment's rest for the maiden on the
-white horse or the giant lover on his black steed.
-
-"Sometimes in the darkness sparks were struck off from the horses'
-hoofs as they passed over rough and rocky places. These sparks always
-showed the princess ahead and slowly increasing the distance between
-herself and her pursuer.
-
-"When the morning light first appeared, the maiden could see the summit
-of the Brocken ahead of her. It was the home of her lover. Her heart
-leaped within her. If she could only reach it she would be safe.
-
-"But alas! her horse suddenly stood still. He would not move. He had
-reached the edge of a precipice. There it lay, separating the princess
-from love and safety.
-
-"The brave girl had not a moment to lose. The giant was fast drawing
-near. She wheeled her horse around; then, striking his sides a sharp
-blow with her whip, she urged him to leap across the precipice.
-
-"The spring must be strong and sure. It was a matter of life and death.
-The chasm was deep. If the horse should fail to strike the other side
-securely, it meant a horrible end to beast and rider.
-
-"But he did not fail. The feet of the brave steed came firmly down upon
-the rocky platform. So heavily did they fall that the imprint of a hoof
-was left upon the rock.
-
-"The princess was now safe. It would be an easy matter for her to
-reach her lover's side.
-
-"As for the giant, he tried to follow Brunhilda across the chasm. But
-he was too heavy and his horse failed to reach the mark. The two sank
-together to the bottom of the precipice."
-
-Every one thanked the story-teller, and begged him to tell more of the
-Hartz Mountains, where he had spent his boyhood days. The children were
-delighted when he spoke of the gnomes, in whom he believed when he was
-a child.
-
-"Every time I went out in the dark woods," he said, "I was on the
-lookout for these funny little fairies of the underground world. I
-wanted to see them, but at the same time I was afraid I should meet
-them.
-
-"I remember one time that my mother sent me on an errand through the
-woods at twilight. I was in the thickest part of the woods, when I
-heard a sound that sent a shiver down my back.
-
-"'It is a witch, or some other dreadful being,' I said to myself.
-'Nothing else could make a sound like that.' My teeth chattered. My
-legs shook so, I could hardly move. Somehow or other, I managed to keep
-on. It seemed as though hours passed before I saw the lights of the
-village. Yet I suppose it was not more than fifteen minutes.
-
-"When I was once more safe inside my own home, I told my father and
-mother about my fright.
-
-"'It was no witch, my child,' said my father. 'The sound you describe
-was probably the cry of a wildcat. I thank Heaven that you are safe. A
-wildcat is not a very pleasant creature to meet in a lonely place.'
-
-"After that, I was never sent away from the village after dark.
-
-"My boy friends and I often came across badgers and deer, and sometimes
-foxes made their way into the village in search of poultry, but I never
-came nearer to meeting a wildcat than the time of which I have just
-told you."
-
-"What work did you do out of school hours?" asked Hans. The boy was
-thinking of the toys he had to carve.
-
-"My mother raised canary-birds, and I used to help her a great deal.
-Nearly every woman in the village was busy at the same work. What
-concerts we did have in those days! Mother tended every young bird she
-raised with the greatest care. Would it become a good singer and bring
-a fair price? We waited anxiously for the first notes, and then watched
-to see how the voices gained in strength and sweetness.
-
-"It was a pleasant life, and I was very happy among the birds in our
-little village. Would you like to hear a song I used to sing at that
-time? It is all about the birds and bees and flowers."
-
-"Do sing it for us," cried every one.
-
-Herr Abel had a good voice and they listened with pleasure to his song.
-This is the first stanza:
-
- "I have been on the mountain
- That the song-birds love best.
- They were sitting, were flitting,
- They were building their nest.
- They were sitting, were flitting,
- They were building their nest."
-
-[Illustration: BERTHA'S HOME.]
-
-After he had finished, he told about the mines in which some of his
-friends worked. It was a hard life, with no bright sunlight to cheer
-the men in those deep, dark caverns underground.
-
-"Of course you all know that the deepest mine in the world is in the
-Hartz Mountains."
-
-His friends nodded their heads, while Hans whispered to Bertha, "I
-should like to go down in that mine just for the sake of saying I have
-been as far into the earth as any living person."
-
-"The sun is setting, and there is a chill in the air," said Bertha's
-father. "Let us go home."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-WHAT THE WAVES BRING
-
-
-BERTHA'S mother had just come in from a hard morning's work in the
-fields. She had been helping her husband weed the garden.
-
-She spent a great deal of time outdoors in the summer-time, as many
-German peasant women do. They do a large share of the work in ploughing
-the grain-fields and harvesting the crops. They are much stronger than
-their American cousins.
-
-"Supper is all ready and waiting for you," said Bertha.
-
-The little girl had prepared a dish of sweet fruit soup which her
-mother had taught her to make.
-
-"It is very good," said her father when he had tasted it. "My little
-Bertha is getting to be quite a housekeeper."
-
-"Indeed, it is very good," said her mother. "You learned your lesson
-well, my child."
-
-Bertha was quite abashed by so much praise. She looked down upon her
-plate and did not lift her eyes again till Gretchen began to tell of a
-new amber bracelet which had just been given to one of the neighbours.
-
-"It is beautiful," said Gretchen, quite excitedly. "The beads are such
-a clear, lovely yellow. They look so pretty on Frau Braun's neck, I
-don't wonder she is greatly pleased with her present."
-
-"Who sent it to her?" asked her mother.
-
-"Her brother in Cologne. He is doing well at his trade, and so
-he bought this necklace at a fair and sent it to his sister as a
-remembrance. He wrote her a letter all about the sights in Cologne, and
-asked Frau Braun to come and visit him and his wife.
-
-"He promised her in the letter that if she would come, he would take
-her to see the grand Cologne cathedral. He said thousands of strangers
-visit it every year, because every one knows it is one of the most
-beautiful buildings in all Europe.
-
-"Then he said she should also see the Church of Saint Ursula, where the
-bones of the eleven thousand maidens can still be seen in their glass
-cases."
-
-"Do you know the story of St. Ursula, Gretchen?" asked her father.
-
-"Yes, indeed, sir. Ursula was the daughter of an English king. She was
-about to be married, but she said that before the wedding she would go
-to Rome on a pilgrimage.
-
-"Eleven thousand young girls went with the princess. On her way home
-she was married, but when the wedding party had got as far as Cologne,
-they were attacked by the savage Huns. Every one was killed,--Ursula,
-her husband, and the eleven thousand maidens. The church was afterward
-built in her memory. Ursula was made a saint by the Pope, and the bones
-of the young girls were preserved in glass cases in the church."
-
-"Did Frau Braun tell of anything else her brother wrote?" asked her
-mother.
-
-"He spoke of the bridge of boats across the river, and said she would
-enjoy watching it open and shut to let the steamers and big rafts pass
-through. And he told of the Cologne water that is sold in so many of
-the shops. It is hard to tell which makes the town most famous, the
-great cathedral or the Cologne water."
-
-"Father, how was the bridge of boats made?" asked Bertha.
-
-"The boats were moored in a line across the river. Planks were then
-laid across the tops and fastened upon them. Vessels cannot pass under
-a bridge of this kind, so it has to be opened from time to time. They
-say it is always interesting to see this done."
-
-"Yes, Frau Braun said she would rather see the bridge of boats than
-anything else in the city. She has already begun to plan how she can
-save up enough money to make the trip."
-
-"I will go over there to-morrow to see he new necklace," said Bertha.
-"But what is amber, father?"
-
-"If you should go to the northern part of Germany, Bertha, you would
-see great numbers of men, women, and children, busy on the shores of
-the ocean. The work is greatest in the rough days of autumn, when a
-strong wind is blowing from the northeast.
-
-"Then the men dress themselves as though they were going out into a
-storm. They arm themselves with nets and plunge into the waves, which
-are bringing treasure to the shore. It is the beautiful amber we admire
-so much.
-
-"The women and children are waiting on the sands, and as the men bring
-in their nets, the contents are given into their hands. They separate
-the precious lumps of amber from the weeds to which they are clinging."
-
-Their father stopped to fill his pipe, and the children thought he had
-come to the end of the story.
-
-"But you haven't told us yet what amber is," said Bertha.
-
-"Be patient, my little one, and you shall hear," replied her father,
-patting her head. "As yet, I have not half told the story. But I will
-answer your question at once.
-
-"A long time ago, longer than you can imagine, Bertha, forests were
-growing along the shores of the Baltic Sea. There was a great deal of
-gum in the trees of these forests. It oozed out of the trees in the
-same manner as gum from the spruce-tree and resin from the pine.
-
-"Storms arose, and beds of sand and clay drifted over the forests. They
-were buried away for thousands of years, it may be. But the motion of
-the sea washes up pieces of the gum, which is of light weight.
-
-"The gum has become changed while buried in the earth such a long, long
-time. Wise men use the word 'fossilized' when they speak of what has
-happened to it. The now beautiful, changed gum is called amber.
-
-"There are different ways of getting it. I told you how it comes
-drifting in on the waves when the winds are high and the water is
-rough. But on the pleasant summer days, when the sea is smooth and
-calm, the men go out a little way from the shore in boats. They float
-about, looking earnestly over the sides of the boats to the bottom of
-the sea.
-
-"All at once, they see something. Down go their long hooks through the
-water. A moment afterward, they begin to tow a tangle of stones and
-seaweed to the shore. As soon as they land, they begin to sort out the
-great mass. Perhaps they will rejoice in finding large pieces of amber
-in the collection.
-
-"There is still another way of getting amber. I know Hans will be most
-interested in what I am going to say now. It has more of danger in it,
-and boys like to hear anything in the way of adventure."
-
-Hans looked up and smiled. His father knew him well. He was a daring
-lad. He was always longing for the time when he should grow up and be a
-soldier, and possibly take part in some war.
-
-"Children," their father went on, "you have all heard of divers and of
-their dangerous work under the sea. Gretchen was telling me the other
-day about her geography lesson, and of the pearl-divers along the
-shores of India. I did not tell her then that some men spend their
-lives diving for amber on the shores of our own country.
-
-"They wear rubber suits and helmets and air-chests of sheet iron."
-
-"How can they see where they are going?" asked Bertha.
-
-"There are glass openings in their helmets, and they can look through
-these. They go out in boats. The crew generally consists of six men.
-Two of them are divers, and four men have charge of the air-pumps.
-These pumps force fresh air down through tubes fastened to the helmet
-of each diver. Besides these men there is an overseer who has charge of
-everything.
-
-"Sometimes the divers stay for hours on the bed of the sea, and work
-away at the amber tangles."
-
-"But suppose anything happens to the air-tubes and the men fail to get
-as much air as they need?" said Hans. "Is there any way of letting
-those in the boat know they are in trouble? And, besides that, how do
-the others know when it is time to raise the divers with their precious
-loads?"
-
-"There is a safety-rope reaching from the boat to the men. When they
-pull this rope it is a sign that they wish to be drawn up. But I have
-told you as much about amber now as you will be able to remember."
-
-"Are you very tired, father dear?" said Bertha, in her most coaxing
-tone.
-
-"Why should I be tired? What do you wish to ask me? Come, speak out
-plainly, little one."
-
-"You tell such lovely fairy-tales, papa, I was just wishing for one.
-See! The moon is just rising above the tree-tops. It is the very time
-for stories of the wonderful beings."
-
-Her father smiled. "It shall be as you wish, Bertha. It is hard to
-refuse you when you look at me that way. Come, children, let us sit in
-the doorway. Goodwife, put down your work and join us while I tell the
-story of Siegfried, the old hero of Germany."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE MAGIC SWORD
-
-
-FAR away in the long ago there lived a mighty king with his goodwife
-and his brave son, Siegfried. Their home was at Xanten, where the river
-Rhine flows lazily along.
-
-The young prince was carefully taught. But when his education was
-nearly finished, his father said:
-
-"Siegfried, there is a mighty smith named Mimer. It will be well for
-you to learn all you can of him in regard to the making of arms."
-
-So Siegfried went to work at the trade of a smith. It was not long
-before he excelled his teacher. This pleased Mimer, who spent many
-spare hours with his pupil, telling him stories of the olden times.
-
-After awhile, he took Siegfried into his confidence. He said:
-
-"There is a powerful knight in Burgundy who has challenged every smith
-of my country to make a weapon strong enough to pierce his coat of mail.
-
-"I long to try," Mimer went on, "but I am now old and have not strength
-enough to use the heavy hammer."
-
-At these words Siegfried jumped up in great excitement.
-
-"I will make the sword, dear master," he cried. "Be of good cheer. It
-shall be strong enough to cut the knight's armour in two."
-
-Early the next morning, Siegfried began his work. For seven days and
-seven nights the constant ringing of his hammer could be heard. At
-the end of that time Siegfried came to his master with a sword of the
-finest steel in his right hand.
-
-Mimer looked it all over. He then held it in a stream of running water
-in which he had thrown a fine thread. The water carried the thread
-against the edge of the sword, where it was cut in two.
-
-"It is without a fault," cried Mimer with delight.
-
-"I can do better than that," answered Siegfried, and he took the sword
-and broke it into pieces.
-
-Again he set to work. For seven more days and seven more nights he was
-busy at his forge. At the end of that time he brought a polished sword
-to his master.
-
-Mimer looked it over with the greatest care and made ready to test it.
-
-He threw the fleeces of twelve sheep into the stream. The current
-carried them on its bosom to Siegfried's sword. Instantly, each piece
-was divided as it met the blade. Mimer shouted aloud in his joy.
-
-"Balmung" (for that was the name Siegfried gave the sword) "is the
-finest weapon man ever made," he cried.
-
-Siegfried was now prepared to meet the proud knight of Burgundy.
-
-The very first thrust of the sword, Balmung, did the work. The head and
-shoulders of the giant were severed from the rest of the body. They
-rolled down the hillside and fell into the Rhine, where they can be
-seen even now, when the water is clear. At least, so runs the story.
-The trunk remained on the hilltop and was turned to stone.
-
-Soon after this Mimer found that Siegfried longed to see the world
-and make himself famous. So he bound the sword Balmung to the young
-prince's side, and told him to seek a certain person, who would give
-him a fine war-horse.
-
-Siegfried went to this man, from whom he obtained a matchless steed.
-In fact it had descended from the great god Odin's magic horse.
-Siegfried, you can see, must have lived in a time when men believed in
-gods and other wonderful beings.
-
-He was now all ready for his adventures, but before starting out, Mimer
-told him of a great treasure of gold guarded by a fearful serpent. This
-treasure was spread out over a plain called the Glittering Heath. No
-man had yet been able to take it, because of its terrible guardian.
-
-Siegfried was not in the least frightened by the stories he heard of
-the monster. He started out on his dangerous errand with a heart full
-of courage.
-
-At last, he drew near the plain. He could see it on the other side of
-the Rhine, from the hilltop where he was standing. With no one to help
-him, not even taking his magic horse with him, he hurried down the
-hillside and sprang into a boat on the shore.
-
-An old man had charge of the boat, and as he rowed Siegfried across,
-he gave him good advice. This old man, as it happened, was the god
-Odin, who loved Siegfried and wished to see him succeed.
-
-"Dig a deep trench along the path the serpent has worn on his way
-to the river when in search of water," said the old boatman. "Hide
-yourself in the trench, and, as the serpent passes along, you must
-thrust your sword deep into his body."
-
-It was good advice. Siegfried did as Odin directed him. He went to work
-on the trench at once. It was soon finished, and then the young prince,
-sword in hand, was lying in watch for the dread monster.
-
-He did not have long to wait. He soon heard the sound of rolling
-stones. Then came a loud hiss, and immediately afterward he felt the
-serpent's fiery breath on his cheek.
-
-And now the serpent rolled over into the ditch, and Siegfried was
-covered by the folds of his huge body. He did not fear or falter. He
-thrust Balmung, his wonderful sword, deep into the monster's body. The
-blood poured forth in such torrents that the ditch began to fill fast.
-
-It was a time of great danger for Siegfried. He would have been drowned
-if the serpent in his death-agony had not rolled over on one side and
-given him a chance to free himself.
-
-In a moment more he was standing, safe and sound, by the side of the
-ditch. His bath in the serpent's blood had given him a great blessing.
-Hereafter it would be impossible for any one to wound him except in one
-tiny place on his shoulder. A leaf had fallen on this spot, and the
-blood had not touched it.
-
-"What did Siegfried do with the golden treasure?" asked Hans, when his
-father had reached this point in the story.
-
-"He had not sought it for himself, but for Mimer's sake. All he cared
-for was the power of killing the serpent."
-
-As soon as this was done, Mimer drew near and showed himself ungrateful
-and untrue. He was so afraid Siegfried would claim some of the treasure
-that he secretly drew Balmung from out the serpent's body, and made
-ready to thrust it into Siegfried.
-
-But at that very moment his foot slipped in the monster's blood, and he
-fell upon the sword and was instantly killed.
-
-Siegfried was filled with horror when he saw what had happened. He
-sprang upon his horse's back and fled as fast as possible from the
-dreadful scene.
-
-"What happened to Siegfried after that? Did he have any more
-adventures?" asked Bertha.
-
-"Yes, indeed. There were enough to fill a book. But there is one in
-particular you girls would like to hear. It is about a beautiful
-princess whom he freed from a spell which had been cast upon her."
-
-"What was her name, papa?" asked Gretchen.
-
-"Brunhild, the Queen of Isenland. She had been stung by the thorn of
-sleep."
-
-Odin, the great god, had said, "Brunhild shall not awake till some
-hero is brave enough to fight his way through the flames which shall
-constantly surround the palace. He must then go to the side of the
-sleeping maiden and break the charm by a kiss upon her forehead."
-
-When Siegfried, in his wanderings, heard the story of Brunhild, he
-said, "I will make my way through the flames and will myself rescue the
-fair princess."
-
-He leaped upon the back of his magic steed, and together they fought
-their way through the fire that surrounded the palace of the sleeping
-beauty. He reached the gates in safety. There was no sign of life about
-the place. Every one was wrapped in a deep sleep.
-
-Siegfried made his way to the room of the enchanted princess. Ah! there
-she lay, still and beautiful, with no knowledge of what was going on
-around her.
-
-The young knight knelt by her side. Leaning over her, he pressed a kiss
-upon her forehead. She moved slightly; then, opening her blue eyes, she
-smiled sweetly upon her deliverer.
-
-At the same moment every one else in the palace woke up and went on
-with whatever had been interrupted when sleep overcame them.
-
-Siegfried remained for six months with the fair Brunhild and her court.
-Every day was given up to music and feasting, games and songs. Time
-passed like a beautiful dream. No one knows how long the young knight
-might have enjoyed this happy life if Odin had not sent two birds,
-Thought and Memory, to remind him there were other things for him yet
-to do.
-
-He did not stop to bid Brunhild farewell, but leaped upon his horse's
-back and rode away in search of new adventures.
-
-"Dear me, children," exclaimed their father, looking at the clock, "it
-is long past the time you should be in your soft, warm beds."
-
-"Papa, do you know what day to-morrow is?" whispered Bertha, as she
-kissed him good night.
-
-"My darling child's birthday. It is ten years to-morrow since your eyes
-first looked upon the sunlight. They have been ten happy years to us
-all, though our lives are full of work. What do you say to that, my
-little one?"
-
-"Very happy, papa dear. You and mother are so kind! I ought to be good
-as well as happy."
-
-"She is a faithful child," said her mother, after Bertha had left the
-room. "That is why I have a little surprise ready for to-morrow. I have
-baked a large birthday cake and shall ask her little friends to share
-it with her.
-
-"Her aunt has finished the new dress I bought for her, and I have made
-two white aprons, besides. She will be a happy child when she sees her
-presents."
-
-The mother closed her eyes and made a silent prayer to the All-Father
-that Bertha's life should be as joyful as her tenth birthday gave
-promise of being.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-THE LITTLE COUSIN SERIES
-
-
-The most delightful and interesting accounts possible of child life in
-other lands, filled with quaint sayings, doings, and adventures.
-
-Each one vol., 12mo, decorative cover, cloth, with six or more
-full-page illustrations in color.
-
- Price per volume 0.60
-
-_By MARY HAZELTON WADE (unless otherwise indicated)_
-
- =Our Little African Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Alaskan Cousin=
- By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
-
- =Our Little Arabian Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little Armenian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Brown Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Canadian Cousin=
- By Elizabeth R. Macdonald
-
- =Our Little Chinese Cousin=
- By Isaac Taylor Headland
-
- =Our Little Cuban Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Dutch Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little English Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little Eskimo Cousin=
-
- =Our Little French Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little German Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Hawaiian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Hindu Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little Indian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Irish Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Italian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Japanese Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Jewish Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Korean Cousin=
- By H. Lee M. Pike
-
- =Our Little Mexican Cousin=
- By Edward C. Butler
-
- =Our Little Norwegian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Panama Cousin=
- By H. Lee M. Pike
-
- =Our Little Philippine Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Porto Rican Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Russian Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Scotch Cousin=
- By Blanche McManus
-
- =Our Little Siamese Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Spanish Cousin=
- By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
-
- =Our Little Swedish Cousin=
- By Claire M. Coburn
-
- =Our Little Swiss Cousin=
-
- =Our Little Turkish Cousin=
-
-
-
-
-THE GOLDENROD LIBRARY
-
-
-The Goldenrod Library contains stories which appeal alike both to
-children and to their parents and guardians.
-
-Each volume is well illustrated from drawings by competent artists,
-which, together with their handsomely decorated uniform binding,
-showing the goldenrod, usually considered the emblem of America, is a
-feature of their manufacture.
-
- Each one volume, small 12mo, illustrated 0.35
-
-
-LIST OF TITLES
-
- =Aunt Nabby's Children.= By Frances Hodges White.
- =Child's Dream of a Star, The.= By Charles Dickens.
- =Flight of Rosy Dawn, The.= By Pauline Bradford Mackie.
- =Findelkind.= By Ouida.
- =Fairy of the Rhone, The.= By A. Comyns Carr.
- =Gatty and I.= By Frances E. Crompton.
- =Helena's Wonderworld.= By Frances Hodges White.
- =Jerry's Reward.= By Evelyn Snead Barnett.
- =La Belle Nivernaise.= By Alphonse Daudet.
- =Little King Davie.= By Nellie Hellis.
- =Little Peterkin Vandike.= By Charles Stuart Pratt.
- =Little Professor, The.= By Ida Horton Cash.
- =Peggy's Trial.= By Mary Knight Potter.
- =Prince Yellowtop.= By Kate Whiting Patch.
- =Provence Rose, A.= By Ouida.
- =Seventh Daughter, A.= By Grace Wickham Curran.
- =Sleeping Beauty, The.= By Martha Baker Dunn.
- =Small, Small Child, A.= By E. Livingston Prescott.
- =Susanne.= By Frances J. Delano.
- =Water People, The.= By Charles Lee Sleight.
- =Young Archer, The.= By Charles E. Brimblecom.
-
-
-
-
-COSY CORNER SERIES
-
-
- It is the intention of the publishers that this
- series shall contain only the very highest and purest
- literature,--stories that shall not only appeal to the
- children themselves, but be appreciated by all those
- who feel with them in their joys and sorrows.
-
- The numerous illustrations in each book are by
- well-known artists, and each volume has a separate
- attractive cover design.
-
- Each 1 vol., 16mo, cloth 0.50
-
-
-_By ANNIE FELLOWS JOHNSTON_
-
-
-=The Little Colonel.= (Trade Mark.)
-
-The scene of this story is laid in Kentucky. Its heroine is a small
-girl, who is known as the Little Colonel, on account of her fancied
-resemblance to an old-school Southern gentleman, whose fine estate and
-old family are famous in the region.
-
-
-=The Giant Scissors.=
-
-This is the story of Joyce and of her adventures in France. Joyce is a
-great friend of the Little Colonel, and in later volumes shares with
-her the delightful experiences of the "House Party" and the "Holidays."
-
-
-=Two Little Knights of Kentucky.=
-
-WHO WERE THE LITTLE COLONEL'S NEIGHBORS.
-
-In this volume the Little Colonel returns to us like an old friend, but
-with added grace and charm. She is not, however, the central figure of
-the story, that place being taken by the "two little knights."
-
-
-=Mildred's Inheritance.=
-
-A delightful little story of a lonely English girl who comes to America
-and is befriended by a sympathetic American family who are attracted by
-her beautiful speaking voice. By means of this one gift she is enabled
-to help a school-girl who has temporarily lost the use of her eyes, and
-thus finally her life becomes a busy, happy one.
-
-
-=Cicely and Other Stories for Girls.=
-
-The readers of Mrs. Johnston's charming juveniles will be glad to learn
-of the issue of this volume for young people.
-
-
-=Aunt 'Liza's Hero and Other Stories.=
-
-A collection of six bright little stories, which will appeal to all
-boys and most girls.
-
-
-=Big Brother.=
-
-A story of two boys. The devotion and care of Steven, himself a small
-boy, for his baby brother, is the theme of the simple tale.
-
-
-=Ole Mammy's Torment.=
-
-"Ole Mammy's Torment" has been fitly called "a classic of Southern
-life." It relates the haps and mishaps of a small negro lad, and tells
-how he was led by love and kindness to a knowledge of the right.
-
-
-=The Story of Dago.=
-
-In this story Mrs. Johnston relates the story of Dago, a pet monkey,
-owned jointly by two brothers. Dago tells his own story, and the
-account of his haps and mishaps is both interesting and amusing.
-
-
-=The Quilt That Jack Built.=
-
-A pleasant little story of a boy's labor of love, and how it changed
-the course of his life many years after it was accomplished.
-
-
-=Flip's Islands of Providence.=
-
-A story of a boy's life battle, his early defeat, and his final
-triumph, well worth the reading.
-
-
-_By EDITH ROBINSON_
-
-
-=A Little Puritan's First Christmas.=
-
-A Story of Colonial times in Boston, telling how Christmas was invented
-by Betty Sewall, a typical child of the Puritans, aided by her brother
-Sam.
-
-
-=A Little Daughter of Liberty.=
-
-The author introduces this story as follows:
-
-"One ride is memorable in the early history of the American Revolution,
-the well-known ride of Paul Revere. Equally deserving of commendation
-is another ride,--the ride of Anthony Severn,--which was no less
-historic in its action or memorable in its consequences."
-
-
-=A Loyal Little Maid.=
-
-A delightful and interesting story of Revolutionary days, in which the
-child heroine, Betsey Schuyler, renders important services to George
-Washington.
-
-
-=A Little Puritan Rebel.=
-
-This is an historical tale of a real girl, during the time when the
-gallant Sir Harry Vane was governor of Massachusetts.
-
-
-=A Little Puritan Pioneer.=
-
-The scene of this story is laid in the Puritan settlement at
-Charlestown.
-
-
-=A Little Puritan Bound Girl.=
-
-A story of Boston in Puritan days, which is of great interest to
-youthful readers.
-
-
-=A Little Puritan Cavalier.=
-
-The story of a "Little Puritan Cavalier" who tried with all his boyish
-enthusiasm to emulate the spirit and ideals of the dead Crusaders.
-
-
-=A Puritan Knight Errant.=
-
-The story tells of a young lad in Colonial times who endeavored to
-carry out the high ideals of the knights of olden days.
-
-
-_By OUIDA (Louise de la Ramée)_
-
-
-=A Dog of Flanders:= A CHRISTMAS STORY.
-
-Too well and favorably known to require description.
-
-
-=The Nurnberg Stove.=
-
-This beautiful story has never before been published at a popular price.
-
-
-_By FRANCES MARGARET FOX_
-
-
-=The Little Giant's Neighbours.=
-
-A charming nature story of a "little giant" whose neighbours were the
-creatures of the field and garden.
-
-
-=Farmer Brown and the Birds.=
-
-A little story which teaches children that the birds are man's best
-friends.
-
-
-=Betty of Old Mackinaw.=
-
-A charming story of child-life, appealing especially to the little
-readers who like stories of "real people."
-
-
-=Brother Billy.=
-
-The story of Betty's brother, and some further adventures of Betty
-herself.
-
-
-=Mother Nature's Little Ones.=
-
-Curious little sketches describing the early lifetime, or "childhood,"
-of the little creatures out-of-doors.
-
-
-=How Christmas Came to the Mulvaneys.=
-
-A bright, lifelike little story of a family of poor children, with an
-unlimited capacity for fun and mischief. The wonderful never-to-be
-forgotten Christmas that came to them is the climax of a series of
-exciting incidents.
-
-
-_By MISS MULOCK_
-
-
-=The Little Lame Prince.=
-
-A delightful story of a little boy who has many adventures by means of
-the magic gifts of his fairy godmother.
-
-
-=Adventures of a Brownie.=
-
-The story of a household elf who torments the cook and gardener, but is
-a constant joy and delight to the children who love and trust him.
-
-
-=His Little Mother.=
-
-Miss Mulock's short stories for children are a constant source of
-delight to them, and "His Little Mother," in this new and attractive
-dress, will be welcomed by hosts of youthful readers.
-
-
-=Little Sunshine's Holiday.=
-
-An attractive story of a summer outing. "Little Sunshine" is another
-of those beautiful child-characters for which Miss Mulock is so justly
-famous.
-
-
-_By MARSHALL SAUNDERS_
-
-
-=For His Country.=
-
-A sweet and graceful story of a little boy who loved his country;
-written with that charm which has endeared Miss Saunders to hosts of
-readers.
-
-
-=Nita, the Story of an Irish Setter.=
-
-In this touching little book, Miss Saunders shows how dear to her heart
-are all of God's dumb creatures.
-
-
-=Alpatok, the Story of an Eskimo Dog.=
-
-Alpatok, an Eskimo dog from the far north, was stolen from his master
-and left to starve in a strange city, but was befriended and cared for,
-until he was able to return to his owner. Miss Saunders's story is
-based on truth, and the pictures in the book of "Alpatok" are based on
-a photograph of the real Eskimo dog who had such a strange experience.
-
-
-_By WILL ALLEN DROMGOOLE_
-
-
-=The Farrier's Dog and His Fellow.=
-
-This story, written by the gifted young Southern woman, will appeal to
-all that is best in the natures of the many admirers of her graceful
-and piquant style.
-
-
-=The Fortunes of the Fellow.=
-
-Those who read and enjoyed the pathos and charm of "The Farrier's Dog
-and His Fellow" will welcome the further account of the adventures of
-Baydaw and the Fellow at the home of the kindly smith.
-
-
-=The Best of Friends.=
-
-This continues the experiences of the Farrier's dog and his Fellow,
-written in Miss Dromgoole's well-known charming style.
-
-
-=Down in Dixie.=
-
-A fascinating story for boys and girls, of a family of Alabama children
-who move to Florida and grow up in the South.
-
-
-_By MARIAN W. WILDMAN_
-
-
-=Loyalty Island.=
-
-An account of the adventures of four children and their pet dog on
-an island, and how they cleared their brother from the suspicion of
-dishonesty.
-
-
-=Theodore and Theodora.=
-
-This is a story of the exploits and mishaps of two mischievous twins,
-and continues the adventures of the interesting group of children in
-"Loyalty Island."
-
-
-_By CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS_
-
-
-=The Cruise of the Yacht Dido.=
-
-The story of two boys who turned their yacht into a fishing boat to
-earn money to pay for a college course, and of their adventures while
-exploring in search of hidden treasure.
-
-
-=The Young Acadian.=
-
-The story of a young lad of Acadia who rescued a little English girl
-from the hands of savages.
-
-
- =The Lord of the Air.=
- THE STORY OF THE EAGLE
-
-
- =The King of the Mamozekel.=
- THE STORY OF THE MOOSE
-
-
- =The Watchers of the Camp-fire.=
- THE STORY OF THE PANTHER
-
-
- =The Haunter of the Pine Gloom.=
- THE STORY OF THE LYNX
-
-
- =The Return to the Trails.=
- THE STORY OF THE BEAR
-
-
- =The Little People of the Sycamore.=
- THE STORY OF THE RACCOON
-
-
-_By OTHER AUTHORS_
-
-
-=The Great Scoop.=
-
-_By MOLLY ELLIOT SEAWELL_
-
-A capital tale of newspaper life in a big city, and of a bright,
-enterprising, likable youngster employed thereon.
-
-
-=John Whopper.=
-
-The late Bishop Clark's popular story of the boy who fell through the
-earth and came out in China, with a new introduction by Bishop Potter.
-
-
-=The Dole Twins.=
-
-_By KATE UPSON CLARK_
-
-The adventures of two little people who tried to earn money to buy
-crutches for a lame aunt. An excellent description of child-life about
-1812, which will greatly interest and amuse the children of to-day,
-whose life is widely different.
-
-
-=Larry Hudson's Ambition.=
-
-_By JAMES OTIS_, author of "Toby Tyler," etc.
-
-Larry Hudson is a typical American boy, whose hard work and enterprise
-gain him his ambition,--an education and a start in the world.
-
-
-=The Little Christmas Shoe.=
-
-_By JANE P. SCOTT WOODRUFF_
-
-A touching story of Yule-tide.
-
-
-=Wee Dorothy.=
-
-_By LAURA UPDEGRAFF_
-
-A story of two orphan children, the tender devotion of the eldest,
-a boy, for his sister being its theme and setting. With a bit of
-sadness at the beginning, the story is otherwise bright and sunny, and
-altogether wholesome in every way.
-
-
-=The King of the Golden River:= A LEGEND OF STIRIA.
-
-_By JOHN RUSKIN_
-
-Written fifty years or more ago, and not originally intended for
-publication, this little fairy-tale soon became known and made a place
-for itself.
-
-
-=A Child's Garden of Verses.=
-
-_By R. L. STEVENSON_
-
-Mr. Stevenson's little volume is too well known to need description. It
-will be heartily welcomed in this new and attractive edition.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Note:
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Our Little German Cousin, by Mary Hazelton Wade
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The Project Gutenberg eBook of Our Little German Cousin, by Mary Hazelton Wade.
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-Title: Our Little German Cousin
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-Author: Mary Hazelton Wade
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<div class="figcenter" style="width: 532px;">
<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="532" height="800" alt="Cover" />
@@ -3500,7 +3460,7 @@ of olden days.</p>
-<div class='adauthor'><i>By OUIDA</i> (<i>Louise de la Ramée</i>)</div>
+<div class='adauthor'><i>By OUIDA</i> (<i>Louise de la Ramée</i>)</div>
<div class='adtitle2'>A Dog of Flanders: <span class="smcap">A Christmas Story</span>.</div>
@@ -3800,383 +3760,6 @@ need description.</p>
Obvious punctuation errors repaired.</div>
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
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