
THE
PRISONER OF GLATZ
High
on the cliff, outlined against a somber sky, the fortress of Glatz stood
frowning down. At the foot of the precipice the river Neisse rushed in
cataracts and rapids, foaming over jagged rocks, boiling its way to quiet
pools far below. The Count of Montague stood at a window high on the
forbidding wall of the fortress. With dark, intense eyes he watched the angry
river as he had every day for months. For hours he stood there, his hands on
the bars.
How
long could a man bear the loneliness, he wondered. How long before his mind
would snap? How long before he would lose track of time, even forget who he
was? Not a human face had he seen; not a human voice had he heard. He dared
not let his mind wander, must not think of home and loved ones. In that way
lay madness.
He
turned back into the bare little room and paced with restless feet. For the
first time in months he went to the old oak table and picked up the only book
in the room. Until then he had sworn he would never read it. Religion was not
for him. He had no regrets for the life he had led or for the plotting that
brought him here. His only regret was his failure.
Even
the attempted murder of the king did not trouble his conscience. If only he
had foreseen everything, if only he had not miscalculated, he would have had
riches and honor instead of a lonely fortress and hopeless despair.
But
anything was better than his emptiness, his loneliness. Perhaps even the
despised Book, could stave off insanity a little longer. So for the first time
in his life he held a Bible in his hands and opened its pages.
For
days and for weeks he read. Slowly his bitter despair and skepticism changed
to i merest: Still he read. Strange new thoughts tormented him. New feelings
haunted him. Yet he returned to the Book with a fascination he couldn't
understand.
One
dark night he found himself once more 'by the window. Outside a November gale
howled round the fortress. The rain fell as if the Deluge had returned. The
river, far below, was a raging torrent, its terrible roar joining the
screaming of the winds.
The
count paced with a fierce restlessness. After a time he lay on the narrow cot
and tried to sleep, but the storm within was as terrible as that outside.'
Finally, with a despairing cry, he threw himself to the floor and wept. For
the first time he saw himself a sinner. He saw the ugliness, the treachery,
the selfishness of his life. Now he wished he could live it over again. This
time he would give himself to God.
Getting
to his feet, he took the Bible in his hands. Opening it, his eye fell on this
passage: "Call upon me in the day of trouble: I will deliver thee, and
thou shalt glorify me."
He
fell to his knees and cried to God. Tears of genuine repentance washed away
the sorrow and despair. The Sun of righteousness had broken through the clouds
of guilt. The storm might rage without, but peace had finally come to the
prisoner of Glatz.
That
night many miles away in his palace in Berlin, King Frederick William III was
extremely ill. The court physician tiptoed in and out but could bring no
relief to the tortured monarch. Servants hovered near. His wife, Louisa, sat
by his bed trying to soothe away his pain. Nothing could avail. Helpless and
exhausted, he turned his face to the wall and prayed, pleading for even an
hour of sleep.
Shortly
the king fell into peaceful slumber. When he awoke, he found his faithful wife
still watching by his bed. "Louisa, my dear," he said, "God has
been very merciful to me. He has given me the favor I asked of Him. Now I wish
to do something to show my gratitude. Who in my kingdom has injured me the
most?"
"The
Count of Montague," his wife answered.
"You
are right. Let him be pardoned."
So
it was that before the day broke over Berlin a messenger left, bearing the
forgiveness of the king to the prisoner of Glatz. The God who heard his cry
and gave him freedom from his guilt and sin, extended to him also that which
he did not ask pardon and release.

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