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BROCKEN , a See also: mountain of See also: Germany, in Prussian See also: Saxony, the highest point (3733 ft.) of the Harz
.
It is a huge, See also: bare, granite-strewn, dome-shaped mass and, owing to its being the greatest See also: elevation in See also: north Germany, commands magnificent views in all directions
.
From it See also: Magdeburg and the Elbe, the towers of See also: Leipzig and the Thuringian See also: forest are distinctly visible in clear weather
.
See also: Access to the See also: summit is attained by a mountain railway (12 m.) from Dreiannen-Hohne, a station on the normal gauge See also: line See also: Wernigerode-See also: Nordhausen, and by two See also: carriage roads from the Bodetal and See also: Ilsenburg respectively
.
In the folk-See also: lore of north Germany the Brocken holds an important place, and to it cling many legends
.
Long after See also: Christianity had penetrated to these regions, the Brocken remained a place of See also: heathen worship
.
Annually, on See also: Walpurgis See also: night (1st of May), curious See also: rites were here enacted, which, condemned by the priests of the Christian See also: church, led to the belief that the devil and witches here held their orgies
.
Even to this
See also: day, this superstition possesses the minds of many country See also: people around, who believe the mountain to be haunted on this night
.
In literature
it is represented by the famous "Brocken scene " in Goethe's See also: Faust
.
See Jacobs, Der Brocken in Geschichte and See also: Sage (See also: Halle, 1878) ; and Prohle, Brockensagen (Magdeburg, 1888)
.
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