"Stick to the raft" by Mrs. George Gladstone is a religious children''s novel written in the late 19th century. It is a moral tale set along the Saale in Bavaria, following Hans Richter, a woodcutter’s son whose dying father’s counsel—“stick to the raft”—becomes both rafting advice and a Christian motto. Taken in by the toll-master Karl Schmidt at Kösen, Hans faces grief, poverty, workplace trials at the weir, and a simmering rivalry
with the miller’s son Robert and his scheming friend Paul, as faith, honesty, and courage are tested. The opening of the story introduces the Fichtel Mountains, Hans’s devout father and his deathbed charge, and Hans’s move to Kösen to help guide rafts over the weir under the stern-but-kind toll-master, Karl, and his gentle, invalid mother. Hans adopts “Stick to the Raft” as a call to cling to Christ while working the river; he is provoked by Robert and the malicious Paul, briefly loses his temper over a petty prank, and is lovingly corrected. As Hans trains for the town’s shooting festival, a visit to Naumburg’s cherry feast—and a lesson on the martyr John Huss—frame the book’s theme of patient endurance; there Paul secretly injures Hans with a squib, sidelining him from the competition. Robert wins amid guilt, Hans bears his setback with grace, and an elderly sausage-seller who overheard Paul’s plot arrives at the toll-house, intent on setting the wrong right. (This is an automatically generated summary.)