"Aamukellot" by Adolf Schmitthenner is a historical novella written in the early 20th century. Set in a Renaissance German town under Elector Ottheinrich, it follows a young stranger, Sabinus, who kills a court servant in a quarrel at a dance and is condemned to be shot at dawn. The tale centers on Veronika, a compassionate local girl, and the Elector himself as conscience, mercy, and public justice collide around the fate of
the condemned youth. The opening of the story shows a crowd escorting the wounded, captured Sabinus through town, where Ottheinrich intervenes, has his bonds loosened, questions him about the fatal brawl over Veronika, and fixes the execution to the end of the morning bells. That night Veronika, desperate to save him, secretly enters the church, climbs the tower, removes one bell’s clapper and muffles another, then at dawn keeps the third bell ringing without pause so the signal to shoot never comes, throwing the town into panic over “bewitched” bells. Seeing both the girl’s courage and a way to temper justice with mercy, Ottheinrich slips into the tower, restores the bells with Veronika, and quietly arranges Sabinus’s release and flight to fight honorably in Hungary, while his aide prepares horses, clothes, money, and a letter of introduction. The section closes with the Elector’s private rescue plan in motion and a promise to Veronika that, if Sabinus returns with honor, he will seek her hand on the young man’s behalf. (This is an automatically generated summary.)