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<h1> THE WITCH OF PRAGUE </h1>
<h2> A FANTASTIC TALE <br/> <br/> By F. Marion Crawford </h2>
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<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII </SPAN></p>
</blockquote>
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<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN> <br/> <br/></p>
<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<p>A great multitude of people filled the church, crowded together in the old
black pews, standing closely thronged in the nave and aisles, pressing
shoulder to shoulder even in the two chapels on the right and left of the
apse, a vast gathering of pale men and women whose eyes were sad and in
whose faces was written the history of their nation. The mighty shafts and
pilasters of the Gothic edifice rose like the stems of giant trees in a
primeval forest from a dusky undergrowth, spreading out and uniting their
stony branches far above in the upper gloom. From the clerestory windows
of the nave an uncertain light descended halfway to the depths and seemed
to float upon the darkness below as oil upon the water of a well. Over the
western entrance the huge fantastic organ bristled with blackened pipes
and dusty gilded ornaments of colossal size, like some enormous kingly
crown long forgotten in the lumber room of the universe, tarnished and
overlaid with the dust of ages. Eastwards, before the rail which separated
the high altar from the people, wax torches, so thick that a man might not
span one of them with both his hands, were set up at irregular intervals,
some taller, some shorter, burning with steady, golden flames, each one
surrounded with heavy funeral wreaths, and each having a tablet below it,
whereon were set forth in the Bohemian idiom, the names, titles, and
qualities of him or her in whose memory it was lighted. Innumerable lamps
and tapers before the side altars and under the strange canopied shrines
at the bases of the pillars, struggled ineffectually with the gloom,
shedding but a few sickly yellow rays upon the pallid faces of the persons
nearest to their light.</p>
<p>Suddenly the heavy vibration of a single pedal note burst from the organ
upon the breathing silence, long drawn out, rich, voluminous, and
imposing. Presently, upon the massive bass, great chords grew up,
succeeding each other in a simple modulation, rising then with the blare
of trumpets and the simultaneous crash of mixtures, fifteenths and coupled
pedals to a deafening peal, then subsiding quickly again and terminating
in one long sustained common chord. And now, as the celebrant bowed at the
lowest step before the high altar, the voices of the innumerable
congregation joined the harmony of the organ, ringing up to the groined
roof in an ancient Slavonic melody, melancholy and beautiful, and rendered
yet more unlike all other music by the undefinable character of the
Bohemian language, in which tones softer than those of the softest
southern tongue alternate so oddly with rough gutturals and strident
sibilants.</p>
<p>The Wanderer stood in the midst of the throng, erect, taller than the men
near him, holding his head high, so that a little of the light from the
memorial torches reached his thoughtful, manly face, making the noble and
passionate features to stand out clearly, while losing its power of
illumination in the dark beard and among the shadows of his hair. His was
a face such as Rembrandt would have painted, seen under the light that
Rembrandt loved best; for the expression seemed to overcome the
surrounding gloom by its own luminous quality, while the deep gray eyes
were made almost black by the wide expansion of the pupils; the dusky
brows clearly defined the boundary in the face between passion and
thought, and the pale forehead, by its slight recession into the shade
from its middle prominence, proclaimed the man of heart, the man of faith,
the man of devotion, as well as the intuitive nature of the delicately
sensitive mind and the quick, elastic qualities of the man’s finely
organized, but nervous bodily constitution. The long white fingers of one
hand stirred restlessly, twitching at the fur of his broad lapel which was
turned back across his chest, and from time to time he drew a deep breath
and sighed, not painfully, but wearily and hopelessly, as a man sighs who
knows that his happiness is long past and that his liberation from the
burden of life is yet far off in the future.</p>
<p>The celebrant reached the reading of the Gospel and the men and women in
the pews rose to their feet. Still the singing of the long-drawn-out
stanzas of the hymn continued with unflagging devotion, and still the deep
accompaniment of the ancient organ sustained the mighty chorus of voices.
The Gospel over, the people sank into their seats again, not standing, as
is the custom in some countries, until the Creed had been said. Here and
there, indeed, a woman, perhaps a stranger in the country, remained upon
her feet, noticeable among the many figures seated in the pews. The
Wanderer, familiar with many lands and many varying traditions of worship,
unconsciously noted these exceptions, looking with a vague curiosity from
one to the other. Then, all at once, his tall frame shivered from head to
foot, and his fingers convulsively grasped the yielding sable on which
they lay.</p>
<p>She was there, the woman he had sought so long, whose face he had not
found in the cities and dwellings of the living, neither her grave in the
silent communities of the dead. There, before the uncouth monument of dark
red marble beneath which Tycho Brahe rests in peace, there she stood; not
as he had seen her last on that day when his senses had left him in the
delirium of his sickness, not in the freshness of her bloom and of her
dark loveliness, but changed as he had dreamed in evil dreams that death
would have power to change her. The warm olive of her cheek was turned to
the hue of wax, the soft shadows beneath her velvet eyes were deepened and
hardened, her expression, once yielding and changing under the breath of
thought and feeling as a field of flowers when the west wind blows, was
now set, as though for ever, in a death-like fixity. The delicate features
were drawn and pinched, the nostrils contracted, the colourless lips
straightened out of the lines of beauty into the mould of a lifeless mask.
It was the face of a dead woman, but it was her face still, and the
Wanderer knew it well; in the kingdom of his soul the whole resistless
commonwealth of the emotions revolted together to dethrone death’s regent—sorrow,
while the thrice-tempered springs of passion, bent but not broken, stirred
suddenly in the palace of his body and shook the strong foundations of his
being.</p>
<p>During the seconds that followed, his eyes were riveted upon the beloved
head. Then, as the Creed ended, the vision sank down and was lost to his
sight. She was seated now, and the broad sea of humanity hid her from him,
though he raised himself the full height of his stature in the effort to
distinguish even the least part of her head-dress. To move from his place
was all but impossible, though the fierce longing to be near her bade him
trample even upon the shoulders of the throng to reach her, as men have
done more than once to save themselves from death by fire in crowded
places. Still the singing of the hymn continued, and would continue, as he
knew, until the moment of the Elevation. He strained his hearing to catch
the sounds that came from the quarter where she sat. In a chorus of a
thousand singers he fancied that he could have distinguished the tender,
heart-stirring vibration of her tones. Never woman sang, never could woman
sing again, as she had once sung, though her voice had been as soft as it
had been sweet, and tuned to vibrate in the heart rather than in the ear.
As the strains rose and fell, the Wanderer bowed his head and closed his
eyes, listening, through the maze of sounds, for the silvery ring of her
magic note. Something he heard at last, something that sent a thrill from
his ear to his heart, unless indeed his heart itself were making music for
his ears to hear. The impression reached him fitfully, often interrupted
and lost, but as often renewing itself and reawakening in the listener the
certainty of recognition which he had felt at the sight of the singer’s
face.</p>
<p>He who loves with his whole soul has a knowledge and a learning which
surpass the wisdom of those who spend their lives in the study of things
living or long dead, or never animate. They, indeed, can construct the
figure of a flower from the dried web of a single leaf, or by the
examination of a dusty seed, and they can set up the scheme of life of a
shadowy mammoth out of a fragment of its skeleton, or tell the story of
hill and valley from the contemplation of a handful of earth or of a
broken pebble. Often they are right, sometimes they are driven deeper and
deeper into error by the complicated imperfections of their own science.
But he who loves greatly possesses in his intuition the capacities of all
instruments of observation which man has invented and applied to his use.
The lenses of his eyes can magnify the infinitesimal detail to the
dimensions of common things, and bring objects to his vision from
immeasurable distances; the labyrinth of his ear can choose and
distinguish amidst the harmonies and the discords of the world, muffling
in its tortuous passages the reverberation of ordinary sounds while
multiplying a hundredfold the faint tones of the one beloved voice. His
whole body and his whole intelligence form together an instrument of
exquisite sensibility whereby the perceptions of his inmost soul are
hourly tortured, delighted, caught up into ecstasy, torn and crushed by
jealousy and fear, or plunged into the frigid waters of despair.</p>
<p>The melancholy hymn resounded through the vast church, but though the
Wanderer stretched the faculty of hearing to the utmost, he could no
longer find the note he sought amongst the vibrations of the dank and
heavy air. Then an irresistible longing came upon him to turn and force
his way through the dense throng of men and women, to reach the aisle and
press past the huge pillar till he could slip between the tombstone of the
astronomer and the row of back wooden seats. Once there, he should see her
face to face.</p>
<p>He turned, indeed, as he stood, and he tried to move a few steps. On all
sides curious looks were directed upon him, but no one offered to make
way, and still the monotonous singing continued until he felt himself
deafened, as he faced the great congregation.</p>
<p>“I am ill,” he said in a low voice to those nearest to him. “Pray let me
pass!”</p>
<p>His face was white, indeed, and those who heard his words believed him. A
mild old man raised his sad blue eyes, gazed at him, and while trying to
draw back, gently shook his head. A pale woman, whose sickly features were
half veiled in the folds of a torn black shawl, moved as far as she could,
shrinking as the very poor and miserable shrink when they are expected to
make way before the rich and the strong. A lad of fifteen stood upon
tiptoe to make himself even slighter than he was and thus to widen the
way, and the Wanderer found himself, after repeated efforts, as much as
two steps distant from his former position. He was still trying to divide
the crowd when the music suddenly ceased, and the tones of the organ died
away far up under the western window. It was the moment of the Elevation,
and the first silvery tinkling of the bell, the people swayed a little,
all those who were able kneeling, and those whose movements were impeded
by the press of worshippers bending towards the altar as a field of grain
before the gale. The Wanderer turned again and bowed himself with the
rest, devoutly and humbly, with half-closed eyes, as he strove to collect
and control his thoughts in the presence of the chief mystery of his
Faith. Three times the tiny bell was rung, a pause followed, and thrice
again the clear jingle of the metal broke the solemn stillness. Then once
more the people stirred, and the soft sound of their simultaneous motion
was like a mighty sigh breathed up from the secret vaults and the deep
foundations of the ancient church; again the pedal note of the organ
boomed through the nave and aisles, and again the thousands of human
voices took up the strain of song.</p>
<p>The Wanderer glanced about him, measuring the distance he must traverse to
reach the monument of the Danish astronomer and confronting it with the
short time which now remained before the end of the Mass. He saw that in
such a throng he would have no chance of gaining the position he wished to
occupy in less than half an hour, and he had not but a scant ten minutes
at his disposal. He gave up the attempt therefore, determining that when
the celebration should be over he would move forward with the crowd,
trusting to his superior stature and energy to keep him within sight of
the woman he sought, until both he and she could meet, either just within
or just without the narrow entrance of the church.</p>
<p>Very soon the moment of action came. The singing died away, the
benediction was given, the second Gospel was read, the priest and the
people repeated the Bohemian prayers, and all was over. The countless
heads began to move onward, the shuffling of innumerable feet sent heavy,
tuneless echoes through vaulted space, broken every moment by the sharp,
painful cough of a suffering child whom no one could see in the multitude,
or by the dull thud of some heavy foot striking against the wooden seats
in the press. The Wanderer moved forward with the rest. Reaching the
entrance of the pew where she had sat he was kept back during a few
seconds by the half dozen men and women who were forcing their way out of
it before him. But at the farthest end, a figure clothed in black was
still kneeling. A moment more and he might enter the pew and be at her
side. One of the other women dropped something before she was out of the
narrow space, and stooped, fumbling and searching in the darkness. At the
minute, the slight, girlish figure rose swiftly and passed like a shadow
before the heavy marble monument. The Wanderer saw that the pew was open
at the other end, and without heeding the woman who stood in his way, he
sprang upon the low seat, passed her, stepped to the floor upon the other
side and was out in the aisle in a moment. Many persons had already left
the church and the space was comparatively free.</p>
<p>She was before him, gliding quickly toward the door. Ere he could reach
her, he saw her touch the thick ice which filled the marble basin, cross
herself hurriedly and pass out. But he had seen her face again, and he
knew that he was not mistaken. The thin, waxen features were as those of
the dead, but they were hers, nevertheless. In an instant he could be by
her side. But again his progress was momentarily impeded by a number of
persons who were entering the building hastily to attend the next Mass.
Scarcely ten seconds later he was out in the narrow and dismal passage
which winds between the north side of the Teyn Kirche and the buildings
behind the Kinsky Palace. The vast buttresses and towers cast deep shadows
below them, and the blackened houses opposite absorb what remains of the
uncertain winter’s daylight. To the left of the church a low arch spans
the lane, affording a covered communication between the north aisle and
the sacristy. To the right the open space is somewhat broader, and three
dark archways give access to as many passages, leading in radiating
directions and under the old houses to the streets beyond.</p>
<p>The Wanderer stood upon the steps, beneath the rich stone carvings which
set forth the Crucifixion over the door of the church, and his quick eyes
scanned everything within sight. To the left, no figure resembling the one
he sought was to be seen, but on the right, he fancied that among a score
of persons now rapidly dispersing he could distinguish just within one of
the archways a moving shadow, black against the blackness. In an instant
he had crossed the way and was hurrying through the gloom. Already far
before him, but visible and, as he believed, unmistakable, the shade was
speeding onward, light as mist, noiseless as thought, but yet clearly to
be seen and followed. He cried aloud, as he ran,</p>
<p>“Beatrice! Beatrice!”</p>
<p>His strong voice echoed along the dank walls and out into the court
beyond. It was intensely cold, and the still air carried the sound clearly
to the distance. She must have heard him, she must have known his voice,
but as she crossed the open place, and the gray light fell upon her, he
could see that she did not raise her bent head nor slacken her speed.</p>
<p>He ran on, sure of overtaking her in the passage she had now entered, for
she seemed to be only walking, while he was pursuing her at a headlong
pace. But in the narrow tunnel, when he reached it, she was not, though at
the farther end he imagined that the fold of a black garment was just
disappearing. He emerged into the street, in which he could now see in
both directions to a distance of fifty yards or more. He was alone. The
rusty iron shutters of the little shops were all barred and fastened, and
every door within the range of his vision was closed. He stood still in
surprise and listened. There was no sound to be heard, not the grating of
a lock, nor the tinkling of a bell, nor the fall of a footstep.</p>
<p>He did not pause long, for he made up his mind as to what he should do in
the flash of a moment’s intuition. It was physically impossible that she
should have disappeared into any one of the houses which had their
entrances within the dark tunnel he had just traversed. Apart from the
presumptive impossibility of her being lodged in such a quarter, there was
the self-evident fact that he must have heard the door opened and closed.
Secondly, she could not have turned to the right, for in that direction
the street was straight and without any lateral exit, so that he must have
seen her. Therefore she must have gone to the left, since on that side
there was a narrow alley leading out of the lane, at some distance from
the point where he was now standing—too far, indeed, for her to have
reached it unnoticed, unless, as was possible, he had been greatly
deceived in the distance which had lately separated her from him.</p>
<p>Without further hesitation, he turned to the left. He found no one in the
way, for it was not yet noon, and at that hour the people were either at
their prayers or at their Sunday morning’s potations, and the place was as
deserted as a disused cemetery. Still he hastened onward, never pausing
for breath, till he found himself all at once in the great Ring. He knew
the city well, but in his race he had bestowed no attention upon the
familiar windings and turnings, thinking only of overtaking the fleeting
vision, no matter how, no matter where. Now, on a sudden, the great,
irregular square opened before him, flanked on the one side by the
fantastic spires of the Teyn Church, and the blackened front of the huge
Kinsky Palace, on the other by the half-modern Town Hall with its ancient
tower, its beautiful porch, and the graceful oriel which forms the apse of
the chapel in the second story.</p>
<p>One of the city watchmen, muffled in his military overcoat, and
conspicuous by the great bunch of dark feathers that drooped from his
black hat, was standing idly at the corner from which the Wanderer
emerged. The latter thought of inquiring whether the man had seen a lady
pass, but the fellow’s vacant stare convinced him that no questioning
would elicit a satisfactory answer. Moreover, as he looked across the
square he caught sight of a retreating figure dressed in black, already at
such a distance as to make positive recognition impossible. In his haste
he found no time to convince himself that no living woman could have thus
outrun him, and he instantly resumed his pursuit, gaining rapidly upon her
he was following. But it is not an easy matter to overtake even a woman,
when she has an advantage of a couple of hundred yards, and when the race
is a short one. He passed the ancient astronomical clock, just as the
little bell was striking the third quarter after eleven, but he did not
raise his head to watch the sad-faced apostles as they presented their
stiff figures in succession at the two square windows. When the blackened
cock under the small Gothic arch above flapped his wooden wings and
uttered his melancholy crow, the Wanderer was already at the corner of the
little Ring, and he could see the object of his pursuit disappearing
before him into the Karlsgasse. He noticed uneasily that the resemblance
between the woman he was following and the object of his loving search
seemed now to diminish, as in a bad dream, as the distance between himself
and her decreased. But he held resolutely on, nearing her at every step,
round a sharp corner to the right, then to the left, to the right again,
and once more in the opposite direction, always, as he knew, approaching
the old stone bridge. He was not a dozen paces behind her as she turned
quickly a third time to the right, round the wall of the ancient house
which faces the little square over against the enormous buildings
comprising the Clementine Jesuit monastery and the astronomical
observatory. As he sprang past the corner he saw the heavy door just
closing and heard the sharp resounding clang of its iron fastening. The
lady had disappeared, and he felt sure that she had gone through that
entrance.</p>
<p>He knew the house well, for it is distinguished from all others in Prague,
both by its shape and its oddly ornamented, unnaturally narrow front. It
is built in the figure of an irregular triangle, the blunt apex of one
angle facing the little square, the sides being erected on the one hand
along the Karlsgasse and on the other upon a narrow alley which leads away
towards the Jews’ quarter. Overhanging passages are built out over this
dim lane, as though to facilitate the interior communications of the
dwelling, and in the shadow beneath them there is a small door studded
with iron nails which is invariably shut. The main entrance takes in all
the scant breadth of the truncated angle which looks towards the
monastery. Immediately over it is a great window, above that another, and,
highest of all, under the pointed gable, a round and unglazed aperture,
within which there is inky darkness. The windows of the first and second
stories are flanked by huge figures of saints, standing forth in strangely
contorted attitudes, black with the dust of ages, black as all old Prague
is black, with the smoke of the brown Bohemian coal, with the dark and
unctuous mists of many autumns, with the cruel, petrifying frosts of ten
score winters.</p>
<p>He who knew the cities of men as few have known them, knew also this
house. Many a time had he paused before it by day and by night, wondering
who lived within its massive, irregular walls, behind those uncouth,
barbarously sculptured saints who kept their interminable watch high up by
the lozenged windows. He would know now. Since she whom he sought had
entered, he would enter too; and in some corner of that dwelling which had
long possessed a mysterious attraction for his eyes, he would find at last
that being who held power over his heart, that Beatrice whom he had
learned to think of as dead, while still believing that somewhere she must
be yet alive, that dear lady whom, dead or living, he loved beyond all
others, with a great love, passing words.</p>
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