
audiobook
by Anonymous
[Frontispiece: 'She seized the robber unexpectedly by the legs, and tipped him head first into the mighty chest.']
THE YOUNG CARPENTERS OF FREIBERG.
A TALE OF THE THIRTY YEARS' WAR.
Translated from the German by J. LATCHMORE, JUN.
ILLUSTRATIONS
'She seized the robber unexpectedly by the legs, and tipped him head first into the mighty chest.'...... Frontispiece - Conrad recognized an old comrade, John Hillner. - Promise me that I shall have an honourable burial; and let the lads say, "A good journey to thee, old comrade!" - Nothing but the moustache on the pale face indicated the warlike calling of the man who now addressed Conrad.
THE YOUNG CARPENTERS OF FREIBERG.
CHAPTER I. - THE MILLER'S WIFE OF ERBISDORF.
CHAPTER II. - THE FAMILY AT HOME.
CHAPTER III. - PRIVATE RIGHTS MUST GIVE PLACE TO PUBLIC NECESSITIES.
In the shadow of the Ore Mountains, the town of Freiberg clings to its crumbling walls while the Thirty Years’ War rages beyond its gates. Amid the looming siege, a young carpenter’s apprentice named Conrad Schmidt wanders the cobbled streets, his hands already stained with the work of his trade. When he arrives at the city gate hauling a tiny, sorrowful coffin, his simple question about a local tragedy sparks a vivid tale of soldiers, deceit, and an unexpected act of bravery that ripples through the community.
Through Conrad’s eyes, listeners hear the gritty chatter of guards, the desperate pleas of a miller’s wife, and the clever, sudden turn that saves a family’s treasures from a roving marauder. These early encounters set the stage for a young man whose modest skills will soon prove pivotal as the siege tightens, drawing him into the larger currents of war and loyalty that shape the fate of Freiberg.
Full title
The Young Carpenters of Freiberg A Tale of the Thirty Years' War A Tale of the Thirty Years' War
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (185K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-08-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Some of the world’s most enduring books come from writers whose names were never recorded or never revealed. “Anonymous” on a title page can mean many different things: a lost identity, a deliberate choice, or a work shaped by tradition over time.
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