
The novel opens on a summer evening where the sea and sky perform a quiet, ever‑shifting dance, its waves whispering secrets that only the wind seems to understand. Through vivid, poetic language the author paints a coastline where cliffs lean against forests and the horizon blurs between past and present. This lyrical prologue sets the tone for a story that weaves history and legend together.
We are then carried to the fledgling settlement on the Baltic coast of the fourteenth century, a harsh outpost of fishermen and serfs living under the thumb of a demanding count. In a cramped timber hut the young Claus—later known as Störtebecker—takes his first steps, already marked by the wary warning of the local vogt to “mind the cross‑beam.” As the tide of his modest life begins to rise, the narrative hints at the restless spirit that will drive him beyond the ordinary world of the sea.
Language
de
Duration
~13 hours (772K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Norbert H. Langkau, Heike Leichsenring and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2012-11-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1866–1931
A German novelist, dramatist, critic, and screenwriter, he moved through several corners of the literary world before film was even finding its shape. His work and career connect late 19th-century journalism, the Berlin theater scene, and the early days of screenwriting.
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