<h3>Luther's Childhood.</h3>
<p><b>1. Luther in the House of His Parents.</b> When
Savonarola breathed his last in the Market Place at Florence,
God had already chosen His servant who was to
destroy the tyranny of the Pope. The swan, prophesied
by Huss, appeared. For on November 10, 1483, a son had
been born to poor peasants in Eisleben, at the foot of the
Hartz Mountains. Already on the following day he was
baptized, and received the name Martin, in honor of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
saint to whom this day was sacred. His parents were
Hans and Margaret Luther. They came from the village
Moehra, having emigrated to Eisleben. When Martin was
six months old they moved to the neighboring town Mansfeld,
where his father hoped to support his family by working
in the mines. Luther said of his ancestors: "I am
the son of a peasant; my father, my grandfather, and my
great-grandfather were all industrious peasants. Later on
my father moved to Mansfeld, where he worked in the
mines." Again he said: "My parents, at first, were very
poor. My father was a poor miner, and my mother often
carried the wood upon her back in order to raise us children.
They endured many hardships for our sake."</p>
<p>The child was a great joy to its parents, and they loved
it dearly. The father would often step to the cradle and
pray loud and fervently that God would grant grace to his
son that, mindful of his name, he might become a true
Luther and live a pure and sincere life. From earliest
childhood both parents trained their boy to fear God and
love all that is good. Parental discipline, however, was
most severe, and tended to make Luther a very timid
child. In later years he said: "My father once chastised
me so severely that I fled from him and avoided him until
he won me to himself again." And of his mother he said:
"For the sake of an insignificant nut my mother once
whipped me till the blood came. But their intentions
were the best." Luther at all times gratefully acknowledged
this.</p>
<p><b>2. Luther at School.</b> Little Martin was not yet five
years of age when, followed by the prayers of his parents,
he was brought to the school at Mansfeld. This school
was situated upon a hillside, in the upper part of the city,
and quite a distance from the boy's home. In inclement
weather, when the road was bad, he was often carried
there by his father or by Nicolas Oemler. Here he zealously<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
learned the Ten Commandments, the Creed, and the
Lord's Prayer; he was also instructed in reading, writing,
and the principles of Latin grammar. The school even
surpassed his home in the severity of its discipline. The
schoolmaster was one of those incapable men that treated
his children as hangmen and bailiffs treat their prisoners.
In one forenoon Luther received fifteen whippings. Such
tyrannical treatment filled him and his fellow pupils with
fear and timidity.</p>
<p>The religious instruction which he received also served
to intimidate and terrify him. He scarcely learned more
than popish superstition and idolatry. True, at Christmas
time the church sang: "A Child so fair is born for us to-day,"
but instead of the glad tidings: "Unto you is born
this day in the city of David a Savior," hell-fire was
preached in the school. Luther says: "From youth I was
trained to turn pale at the very mention of Christ's name,
for I was instructed to regard Him as a severe and angry
judge. We were all taught that we had to atone for our
own sins, and because we could not do this we were
directed to the saints in heaven and advised to invoke
dear Mother Mary to pacify the wrath of Christ and obtain
mercy for us."</p>
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<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
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