<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>Upon the mountain's heathery side,</p>
<p class="i1">The day's last lustre shone,</p>
<p>And rich with many a radiant hue,</p>
<p class="i1">Gleam'd gaily on the Rhone.</p>
<p class="i16"><span class="smcap">Southey.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The English merchant was now much consulted by
the Swiss Commissioners in all their motions. He
exhorted them to proceed with all despatch on
their journey, so as to carry to the Duke their own
account of the affair of Brisach, and thus anticipate
all rumours less favourable to their conduct on the
occasion. For this purpose Philipson recommended
that the Deputies, dismissing their escort, whose
arms and numbers might give umbrage and suspicion,
while they were too few for defence, should
themselves proceed by rapid journeys on horseback
towards Dijon, or wherever the Duke might chance
to be for the time.</p>
<p>This proposal was, however, formally resisted
by the very person who had hitherto been the most
ductile of the party, and the willing echo of the
Landamman's pleasure. On the present occasion,
notwithstanding that Arnold Biederman declared
the advice of Philipson excellent, Nicholas Bonstetten
stood in absolute and insurmountable opposition;
because, having hitherto trusted to his
own limbs for transporting himself to and fro on
all occasions, he could by no means be persuaded
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_317" id="Page_317">317</SPAN></span>
to commit himself to the discretion of a horse.
As he was found obstinately positive on this
subject, it was finally determined that the two
Englishmen should press forward on their journey,
with such speed as they might, and that the
elder of them should make the Duke acquainted
with so much as to the capture of La Ferette
as he had himself witnessed of the matter. The
particulars which had attended the death of De
Hagenbach, the Landamman assured him, would
be sent to the Duke by a person of confidence,
whose attestation on the subject could not be
doubted.</p>
<p>This course was adopted, as Philipson expressed
his confidence of getting an early and private audience
with his grace of Burgundy.</p>
<p>"My best intercession," he said, "you have a
good right to reckon upon; and no one can bear
more direct testimony than I can to the ungovernable
cruelty and rapacity of De Hagenbach, of
which I had so nearly been the victim. But of
his trial and execution I neither know nor can tell
anything; and as Duke Charles is sure to demand
why execution was done upon his officer without
an appeal to his own tribunal, it will be well
that you either provide me with such facts as you
have to state, or send forward, at least, as speedily
as possible, the evidence which you have to lay
before him on that most weighty branch of the
subject."</p>
<p>The proposal of the merchant created some visible
embarrassment on the countenance of the
Swiss, and it was with obvious hesitation that
Arnold Biederman, having led him aside, addressed
him in a whisper—
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_318" id="Page_318">318</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"My good friend," he said, "mysteries are in
general like the hateful mists which disfigure the
noblest features of nature; yet, like mists, they
will sometimes intervene when we most desire
their absence, when we most desire to be plain and
explicit. The manner of De Hagenbach's death
you saw—we will take care that the Duke is
informed of the authority by which it was inflicted.
This is all that I can at present tell you
on the subject; and let me add, that the less you
speak of it with any one, you will be the more
likely to escape inconvenience."</p>
<p>"Worthy Landamman," said the Englishman,
"I also am by nature, and from the habits of my
country, a hater of mysteries. Yet, such is my
firm confidence in your truth and honour, that you
shall be my guide in these dark and secret transactions,
even as amongst the mists and precipices
of your native land, and I rest contented in either
case to place unlimited confidence in your sagacity.
Let me only recommend that your explanation with
Charles be instant, as well as clear and candid.
Such being the case, I trust my poor interest with
the Duke may be reckoned for something in your
favour. Here then we part, but, as I trust, soon
to meet again."</p>
<p>The elder Philipson now rejoined his son, whom
he directed to hire horses, together with a guide,
to conduct them with all speed to the presence of
the Duke of Burgundy. By various inquiries in
the town, and especially among the soldiers of the
slain De Hagenbach, they at length learned that
Charles had been of late occupied in taking possession
of Lorraine, and, being now suspicious of
unfriendly dispositions on the part of the Emperor
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_319" id="Page_319">319</SPAN></span>
of Germany, as well as of Sigismund Duke of
Austria, had drawn a considerable part of his army
together near Strasburg, in order to be prepared
against any attempt of these princes, or of the
Free Imperial Cities, which might interfere with
his course of conquest. The Duke of Burgundy,
at this period, well deserved his peculiar epithet
of the Bold, since, surrounded by enemies, like
one of the nobler animals of the chase, he yet
astounded, by his stern and daring countenance,
not only the princes and states we have mentioned,
but even the King of France, equally powerful,
and far more politic, than himself.</p>
<p>To his camp, therefore, the English travellers
bent their way, each full of such deep and melancholy
reflection as, perhaps, prevented his bestowing
much attention on the other's state of mind.
They rode as men deeply immersed in their own
thoughts, and with less intercourse than had been
usual betwixt them on their former journeys.
The nobleness of the elder Philipson's nature, and
his respect for the Landamman's probity, joined
with gratitude for his hospitality, had prevented
him from separating his cause from that of the
Swiss deputies, nor did he now repent his generosity
in adhering to them. But when he recollected
the nature and importance of the personal
affairs which he himself had to despatch with a
proud, imperious, and irritable prince, he could
not but regret the circumstances which had involved
his own particular mission, of so much
consequence to himself and his friends, with that
of persons likely to be so highly obnoxious to the
Duke as Arnold Biederman and his companions;
and, however grateful for the hospitality of Geierstein,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_320" id="Page_320">320</SPAN></span>
he regretted, nevertheless, the circumstances
which had obliged him to accept of it.</p>
<p>The thoughts of Arthur were no less anxious.
He found himself anew separated from the object
to which his thoughts were, almost against his
own will, constantly returning. And this second
separation had taken place after he had incurred
an additional load of gratitude, and found new as
well as more mysterious food for his ardent imagination.
How was he to reconcile the character
and attributes of Anne of Geierstein, whom he
had known so gentle, candid, pure, and simple,
with those of the daughter of a sage, and of an
elementary spirit, to whom night was as day, and
an impervious dungeon the same as the open portico
of a temple? Could they be identified as the
same being? or, while strictly alike in shape and
lineament, was the one a tenant of the earth, the
other only a phantom, permitted to show itself
among those of a nature in which she did not partake?
Above all, must he never see her more, or
receive from her own lips an explanation of the
mysteries which were so awfully entwined with
his recollections of her? Such were the questions
which occupied the mind of the younger traveller,
and prevented him from interrupting, or even
observing, the reverie in which his father was
plunged.</p>
<p>Had either of the travellers been disposed to
derive amusement from the country through which
their road lay, the vicinity of the Rhine was well
qualified to afford it. The ground on the left bank
of that noble river is indeed rather flat and tame;
and the mountains of Alsace, a ridge of which
sweeps along its course, do not approach so near as
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_321" id="Page_321">321</SPAN></span>
greatly to vary the level surface of the valley
which divides them from its shores. But the
broad stream itself, hurrying forward with dizzy
rapidity, and rushing around the islets by which
its course is interrupted, is one of the most
majestic spectacles in nature. The right bank is
dignified at once, and adorned, by the numerous
eminences covered with wood, and interspersed
with valleys, which constitute the district so well
known by the name of the Black Forest, to which
superstition attached so many terrors, and credulity
such a variety of legends. Terrors, indeed,
it had, of a real and existing character. The old
castles, seen from time to time on the banks of the
river itself, or on the ravines and large brooks
which flow into it, were then no picturesque ruins,
rendered interesting by the stories which were told
about their former inhabitants, but constituted the
real and apparently impregnable strongholds of
that Robber-chivalry whom we have already frequently
mentioned, and of whom, since Goethe,
an author born to arouse the slumbering fame of
his country, has dramatised the story of Goetz of
Berlichingen, we have had so many spirit-stirring
tales. The danger attending the vicinity of these
fortresses was only known on the right, or German
bank of the Rhine, for the breadth and depth of
that noble stream effectually prevented any foray
of their inhabitants from reaching Alsace. The
former was in possession of the Cities or Free
Towns of the Empire, and thus the feudal tyranny
of the German lords was chiefly exerted at the
expense of their own countrymen, who, irritated
and exhausted with their rapine and oppression,
were compelled to erect barriers against it, of a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_322" id="Page_322">322</SPAN></span>
nature as interesting and extraordinary as were
the wrongs from which they endeavoured to protect
themselves.</p>
<p>But the left bank of the river, over great part of
which Charles of Burgundy exercised his authority,
under various characters, was under the
regular protection of the ordinary magistrates, who
were supported in the discharge of their duty by
large bands of mercenary soldiers. These were
maintained by Charles out of his private revenue;
he, as well as his rival Louis, and other princes of
the period, having discovered that the feudal system
gave an inconvenient degree of independence
to their vassals, and thinking, of course, that it
was better to substitute in its place a standing
army, consisting of Free Companies, or soldiers by
profession. Italy furnished most of these bands,
which composed the strength of Charles's army,
at least the part of it in which he most trusted.</p>
<p>Our travellers, therefore, pursued their way by
the banks of the river, in as great a degree of security
as could well be enjoyed in that violent and
distracted time, until at length the father, after
having eyed for some time the person whom Arthur
had hired to be their guide, suddenly asked of his
son who or what the man was. Arthur replied
that he had been too eager to get a person who
knew the road, and was willing to show it, to be
very particular in inquiring into his station or
occupation; but that he thought, from the man's
appearance, he must be one of those itinerant
ecclesiastics, who travel through the country with
relics, pardons, and other religious trinkets, and
were in general but slightly respected, excepting
by the lower orders, on whom these vendors of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_323" id="Page_323">323</SPAN></span>
superstitious wares were often accused of practising
gross deceptions.</p>
<p>The man's appearance was rather that of a
lay devotee, or palmer, bound on his pilgrimage
to different shrines, than of a mendicant friar,
or questionary. He wore the hat, scrip, staff,
and coarse dalmatic, somewhat like the military
cloak of the modern hussar, which were used by
such persons on their religious peregrinations. St.
Peter's keys, rudely shaped out of some scarlet rag
of cloth, appeared on the back of his mantle,
placed, as heralds say, saltire wise. This devotee
seemed a man of fifty and upwards, well-made,
and stout for his age, with a cast of countenance
which, though not positively ugly, was far from
being well-favoured. There was shrewdness, and
an alert expression in his eye and actions, which
made some occasional contrast with the sanctimonious
demeanour of the character he now bore.
This difference betwixt his dress and physiognomy
was by no means uncommon among persons of his
description, many of whom embraced this mode of
life, rather to indulge roving and idle habits, than
from any religious call.</p>
<p>"Who art thou, good fellow?" said the elder
Philipson; "and by what name am I to call thee
while we are fellow-travellers?"</p>
<p>"Bartholomew, sir," said the man; "Brother
Bartholomew—I might say Bartholomæus, but it
does not become a poor lay brother like me to
aspire to the honour of a learned termination."</p>
<p>"And whither does thy journey tend, good
Brother Bartholomew?"</p>
<p>"In whichever direction your worship chooses
to travel, and to require my services as guide,"
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_324" id="Page_324">324</SPAN></span>
answered the palmer; "always premising, you
allow me leisure for my devotions at such holy
stations as we pass on our route."</p>
<p>"That is, thine own journey hath no professed
or pressing object or end?" said the Englishman.</p>
<p>"None, as your worship says, peculiar," said
the itinerant; "or I might rather say, that my
journey, good sir, embraces so many objects, that
it is matter of indifference to me which of them I
accomplish first. My vow binds me for four years
to travel from one shrine, or holy place, to another;
but I am not directly tied to visit them by any
precise rule of rotation."</p>
<p>"That is to say, thy vow of pilgrimage does not
prevent thee from hiring thyself to wait upon
travellers as their guide," replied Philipson.</p>
<p>"If I can unite the devotion I owe to the blessed
saints whose shrines I visit, with a service rendered
to a wandering fellow-creature who desires
to be directed upon his journey, I do maintain,"
replied Bartholomew, "that the objects are easily
to be reconciled to each other."</p>
<p>"Especially as a little worldly profit may tend
to cement the two duties together, if otherwise
incompatible," said Philipson.</p>
<p>"It pleases your honour to say so," replied the
pilgrim; "but you yourself may, if you will,
derive from my good company something more
than the mere knowledge of the road in which you
propose to travel. I can make your journey more
edifying by legends of the blessed saints whose
holy relics I have visited, and pleasing, by the
story of the wonderful things which I have seen
and heard in my travels. I can impart to you an
opportunity of providing yourself with his Holiness's
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325">325</SPAN></span>
pardon, not only for the sins which you
have committed, but also granting you indulgence
for future errors."</p>
<p>"These things are highly available doubtless,"
replied the merchant; "but, good Bartholomew,
when I desire to speak of them, I apply to my
father confessor, to whom I have been uniformly
regular in committing the charge of my conscience,
and who must be, therefore, well acquainted with
my state of mind, and best accustomed to prescribe
what its case may require."</p>
<p>"Nevertheless," said Bartholomew, "I trust your
worship is too religious a man, and too sound a
Catholic, to pass any hallowed station without
endeavouring to obtain some share of the benefits
which it is the means of dispensing to those who
are ready and willing to deserve them. More
especially as all men, of whatever trade and degree,
hold respect to the holy saint who patroniseth his
own mystery; so I hope you, being a merchant,
will not pass the Chapel of Our Lady of the Ferry,
without making some fitting orison."</p>
<p>"Friend Bartholomew," said Philipson, "I have
not heard of the shrine which you recommend to
me; and, as my business is pressing, it were better
worth my while to make a pilgrimage hither on
purpose to make mine homage at a fitter season,
than to delay my journey at present. This, God
willing, I will not fail to do, so that I may
be held excused for delaying my reverence till
I can pay it more respectfully, and at greater
leisure."</p>
<p>"May it please you not to be wroth," said the
guide, "if I say that your behaviour in this matter
is like that of a fool, who, finding a treasure by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326">326</SPAN></span>
the road-side, omits to put it in his bosom and
carry it along with him, proposing to return from
a distance on a future day, of express purpose to
fetch it."</p>
<p>Philipson, something astonished at the man's
pertinacity, was about to answer hastily and
angrily, but was prevented by the arrival of three
strangers, who rode hastily up from behind them.</p>
<p>The foremost of these was a young female, most
elegantly attired, and mounted upon a Spanish
jennet, which she reined with singular grace and
dexterity. She wore on her right hand such a
glove as that which was used to carry hawks, and
had a merlin perched upon it. Her head was
covered with a montero cap, and, as was frequently
the custom at the period, she wore on her face a
kind of black silk vizard, which effectually concealed
her features. Notwithstanding this disguise,
Arthur Philipson's heart sprang high at the
appearance of these strangers, for he was at once
certain he recognised the matchless form of the
Swiss maiden by whom his mind was so anxiously
occupied. Her attendants were a falconer with
his hunting-pole, and a female, both apparently
her domestics. The elder Philipson, who had no
such accuracy of recollection as his son manifested
upon the occasion, saw in the fair stranger only
some dame or damsel of eminence engaged in the
amusement of hawking, and, in return to a brief
salutation, merely asked her, with suitable courtesy,
as the case demanded, whether she had spent
the morning in good sport.</p>
<p>"Indifferent, good friend," said the lady. "I
dare not fly my hawk so near the broad river, lest
he should soar to the other side, and so I might
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327">327</SPAN></span>
lose my companion. But I reckon on finding
better game when I have crossed to the other side
of the ferry, which we are now approaching."</p>
<p>"Then your ladyship," said Bartholomew, "will
hear mass in Hans' Chapel, and pray for your
success?"</p>
<p>"I were a heathen to pass the holy place without
doing so," replied the damsel.</p>
<p>"That, noble damsel, touches the point we were
but now talking of," said the guide Bartholomew;
"for know, fair mistress, that I cannot persuade
this worthy gentleman how deeply the success of
his enterprise is dependent upon his obtaining the
blessing of Our Lady of the Ferry."</p>
<p>"The good man," said the young maiden, seriously,
and even severely, "must know little of
the Rhine. I will explain to the gentleman the
propriety of following your advice."</p>
<p>She then rode close to young Philipson, and
spoke in Swiss, for she had hitherto used the German
language, "Do not start, but hear me!" and
the voice was that of Anne of Geierstein. "Do
not, I say, be surprised—or at least show not your
wonder—you are beset by dangers. On this road,
especially, your business is known—your lives
are laid in wait for. Cross over the river at
the Ferry of the Chapel, or Hans' Ferry, as it is
usually termed."</p>
<p>Here the guide drew so near to them that it
was impossible for her to continue the conversation
without being overheard. At that same moment
a woodcock sprang from some bushes, and the
young lady threw off her merlin in pursuit.</p>
<p>"Sa ho—sa ho—wo ha!" hollowed the falconer,
in a note which made the thicket ring
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328">328</SPAN></span>
again; and away he rode in pursuit. The elder
Philipson and the guide himself followed the
chase eagerly with their eyes, so attractive was the
love of that brave sport to men of all ranks. But
the voice of the maiden was a lure, which would
have summoned Arthur's attention from matters
more deeply interesting.</p>
<p>"Cross the Rhine," she again repeated, "at the
Ferry to Kirch-hoff, on the other side of the river.
Take your lodgings at the Golden Fleece, where
you will find a guide to Strasburg. I must stay
here no longer."</p>
<p>So saying, the damsel raised herself in her
saddle, struck her horse lightly with the loose reins,
and the mettled animal, already impatient at her
delay, and the eager burst of its companions, flew
forward at such a pace, as if he had meant to
emulate the flight of the hawk, and of the prey
he pursued. The lady and her attendants soon
vanished from the sight of the travellers.</p>
<p>A deep silence for some time ensued, during
which Arthur studied how to communicate the
warning he had received, without awakening the
suspicions of their guide. But the old man broke
silence himself, saying to Bartholomew, "Put
your horse into more motion, I pray you, and ride
onward a few yards; I would have some private
conference with my son."</p>
<p>The guide obeyed, and, as if with the purpose
of showing a mind too profoundly occupied by
heavenly matters to admit a thought concerning
those of this transitory world, he thundered forth
a hymn in praise of St. Wendelin the Shepherd,
in a strain so discordant as startled every bird
from every bush by which they passed. There
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_329" id="Page_329">329</SPAN></span>
was never a more unmelodious melody, whether
sacred or profane, than that under protection of
which the elder Philipson thus conferred with
his son.</p>
<p>"Arthur," he said, "I am much convinced that
this howling hypocritical vagrant has some plot
upon us; and I had well-nigh determined that
the best mode to baffle it would be to consult my
own opinion, and not his, as to our places of repose,
and the direction of our journey."</p>
<p>"Your judgment is correct, as usual," said his
son. "I am well convinced of yonder man's
treachery, from a whisper in which that maiden
informed me that we ought to take the road to
Strasburg, by the eastern side of the river, and for
that purpose cross over to a place called Kirch-hoff,
on the opposite bank."</p>
<p>"Do you advise this, Arthur?" replied his
father.</p>
<p>"I will pledge my life for the faith of this
young person," replied his son.</p>
<p>"What!" said his father, "because she sits her
palfrey fairly, and shows a faultless shape? Such
is the reasoning of a boy—and yet my own old
and cautious heart feels inclined to trust her.
If our secret is known in this land, there are
doubtless many who may be disposed to think they
have an interest in barring my access to the Duke
of Burgundy, even by the most violent means; and
well you know that I should on my side hold my
life equally cheap, could I discharge mine errand
at the price of laying it down. I tell thee,
Arthur, that my mind reproaches me for taking
hitherto over little care of insuring the discharge
of my commission, owing to the natural desire I
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330">330</SPAN></span>
had to keep thee in my company. There now lie
before us two ways, both perilous and uncertain,
by which we may reach the Duke's Court. We
may follow this guide, and take the chance of his
fidelity, or we may adopt the hint of yonder
damsel-errant, and cross over to the other side of
the Rhine, and again repass the river at Strasburg.
Both roads are perhaps equally perilous. I feel it
my duty to diminish the risk of the miscarriage of
my commission, by sending thee across to the
right bank, while I pursue my proposed course
upon the left. Thus, if one of us be intercepted,
the other may escape, and the important commission
which he bears may be duly executed."</p>
<p>"Alas, my father!" said Arthur, "how is it
possible for me to obey you, when by doing so I
must leave you alone, to incur so many dangers,
to struggle with so many difficulties, in which my
aid might be at least willing, though it could only
be weak? Whatever befall us in these delicate
and dangerous circumstances, let us at least meet
it in company."</p>
<p>"Arthur, my beloved son," said his father, "in
parting from thee I am splitting mine own heart
in twain; but the same duty which commands us
to expose our bodies to death, as peremptorily
orders us not to spare our most tender affections.
We must part."</p>
<p>"Oh, then," replied his son, eagerly, "let me
at least prevail in one point. Do thou, my father,
cross the Rhine, and let me prosecute the journey
by the route originally proposed."</p>
<p>"And why, I pray you," answered the merchant,
"should I go one of these roads in preference to
the other?"
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331">331</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Because," said Arthur eagerly. "I would warrant
yonder maiden's faith with my life."</p>
<p>"Again, young man?" said his father. "And
wherefore so confident in that young maiden's
faith? Is it merely from the confidence which
youth reposes in that which is fair and pleasing,
or have you had further acquaintance with
her than the late brief conversation with her
admitted?"</p>
<p>"Can I give you an answer?" replied his son.
"We have been long absent from lands of knights
and ladies, and is it not natural that we should
give to those who remind us of the honoured ties
of chivalry and gentle blood, the instinctive credence
which we refuse to such a poor wretch as this
itinerant mountebank, who gains his existence by
cheating, with false relics and forged legends, the
poor peasants amongst whom he travels?"</p>
<p>"It is a vain imagination, Arthur," said his
father; "not unbefitting, indeed, an aspirant to
the honours of chivalry, who draws his ideas of
life and its occurrences from the romances of the
minstrels, but too visionary for a youth who has
seen, as thou hast, how the business of this world
is conducted. I tell thee, and thou wilt learn to
know I say truth, that around the homely board
of our host the Landamman were ranged truer
tongues, and more faithful hearts, than the <i>cour
plénière</i> of a monarch has to boast. Alas! the
manly spirit of ancient faith and honour has fled
even from the breast of kings and knights, where,
as John of France said, it ought to continue to
reside a constant inhabitant, if banished from all
the rest of the world."</p>
<p>"Be that as it may, dearest father," replied the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332">332</SPAN></span>
younger Philipson, "I pray you to be persuaded
by me; and if we must part company, let it be by
your taking the right bank of the Rhine, since I
am persuaded it is the safest route."</p>
<p>"And if it be the safest," said his father, with
a voice of tender reproach, "is that a reason why
I should spare my own almost exhausted thread of
life, and expose thine, my dear son, which has but
begun its course?"</p>
<p>"Nay, father," answered the son with animation,
"in speaking thus you do not consider the
difference of our importance to the execution of
the purpose which you have so long entertained,
and which seems now so nigh being accomplished.
Think how imperfectly I might be able to discharge
it, without knowledge of the Duke's person,
or credentials to gain his confidence. I might
indeed repeat your words, but the circumstances
would be wanting to attract the necessary faith,
and of consequence, your scheme, for the success of
which you have lived, and now are willing to run
the risk of death, would miscarry along with me."</p>
<p>"You cannot shake my resolution," said the
elder Philipson, "or persuade me that my life is
of more importance than yours. You only remind
me that it is you, and not I, who ought to be the
bearer of this token to the Duke of Burgundy.
Should you be successful in reaching his court or
camp, your possession of these gems will be needful
to attach credit to your mission; a purpose for
which they would be less necessary to me, who
can refer to other circumstances under which I
might claim credence, if it should please Heaven
to leave me alone to acquit myself of this important
commission, which, may Our Lady, in her
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333">333</SPAN></span>
mercy, forefend! Understand, therefore, that,
should an opportunity occur by which you can
make your way to the opposite side of the Rhine,
you are to direct your journey so as again to cross
to this bank at Strasburg, where you will inquire
for news of me at the Flying Stag, a hostelry in
that city, which you will easily discover. If you
hear no tidings of me at that place, you will
proceed to the Duke, and deliver to him this
important packet."</p>
<p>Here he put into his son's hand, with as much
privacy as possible, the case containing the diamond
necklace.</p>
<p>"What else your duty calls on you to do," continued
the elder Philipson, "you well know; only
I conjure you, let no vain inquiries after my fate
interfere with the great duty you have there to
discharge. In the meantime, prepare to bid me
a sudden farewell, with a heart as bold and confident
as when you went before me, and courageously
led the way amid the rocks and storms of
Switzerland. Heaven was above us then, as it is
over us now. Adieu, my beloved Arthur! Should
I wait till the moment of separation, there may be
but short time to speak the fatal word, and no eye
save thine own must see the tear which I now
wipe away."</p>
<p>The painful feeling which accompanied this
anticipation of their parting was so sincere on
Arthur's part, as well as that of his father, that
it did not at first occur to the former, as a source
of consolation, that it seemed likely he might be
placed under the guidance of the singular female,
the memory of whom haunted him. True it was,
that the beauty of Anne of Geierstein, as well as
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334">334</SPAN></span>
the striking circumstances in which she had exhibited
herself, had on that very morning been the
principal occupation of his mind; but they were
now chased from it by the predominant recollection,
that he was about to be separated in a
moment of danger from a father so well deserving
of his highest esteem and his fondest affection.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, that father dashed from his eye the
tear which his devoted stoicism could not suppress,
and, as if afraid of softening his resolution
by indulging his parental fondness, he recalled
the pious Bartholomew, to demand of him how far
they were from the Chapel of the Ferry.</p>
<p>"Little more than a mile," was the reply; and
when the Englishman required further information
concerning the cause of its erection, he was informed,
that an old boatman and fisherman, named
Hans, had long dwelt at the place, who gained a
precarious livelihood by transporting travellers and
merchants from one bank of the river to the other.
The misfortune, however, of losing first one boat
and then a second, in the deep and mighty stream,
with the dread inspired in travellers by the repetition
of such accidents, began to render his profession
an uncertain one. Being a good Catholic,
the old man's distress took a devotional turn. He
began to look back on his former life, and consider
by what crimes he had deserved the misfortunes
which darkened the evening of his days. His
remorse was chiefly excited by the recollection
that he had, on one occasion, when the passage
was peculiarly stormy, refused to discharge his
duty as a ferryman, in order to transport to the
other shore a priest, who bore along with him an
image of the Virgin, destined for the village of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335">335</SPAN></span>
Kirch-hoff, on the opposite or right bank of the
Rhine. For this fault Hans submitted to severe
penance, as he was now disposed to consider as
culpable his doubt of the Virgin's power of protecting
herself, her priest, and the bark employed
in her service; besides which, the offering of a
large share of his worldly goods to the church of
Kirch-hoff expressed the truth of the old man's
repentance. Neither did he ever again permit
himself to interpose any delay in the journey of
men of holy Church; but all ranks of the clergy,
from the mitred prelate to the barefooted friar,
might at any time of day or night have commanded
the services of him and his boat.</p>
<p>While prosecuting so laudable a course of life,
it became at length the lot of Hans to find, on the
banks of the Rhine, a small image of the Virgin,
thrown by the waves, which appeared to him
exactly to resemble that which he had formerly
ungraciously refused to carry across, when under
charge of the sacristan of Kirch-hoff. He placed
it in the most conspicuous part of his hut, and
poured out his soul before it in devotion, anxiously
inquiring for some signal by which he might discover
whether he was to consider the arrival of
her holy image as a pledge that his offences were
forgiven. In the visions of the night, his prayers
were answered, and Our Lady, assuming the form
of the image, stood by his bedside, for the purpose
of telling him wherefore she had come hither.</p>
<p>"My trusty servant," she said, "men of Belial
have burned my dwelling at Kirch-hoff, spoiled
my chapel, and thrown the sacred image which
represents me into the swoln Rhine, which swept
me downward. Now, I have resolved to dwell no
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336">336</SPAN></span>
longer in the neighbourhood of the profane doers
of this deed, or of the cowardly vassals who dared
not prevent it. I am, therefore, compelled to
remove my habitation, and, in despite of the
opposing current, I determined to take the shore
on this side, being resolved to fix my abode with
thee, my faithful servant, that the land in which
thou dwellest may be blessed, as well as thou and
thy household."</p>
<p>As the vision spoke, she seemed to wring from
her tresses the water in which they had been
steeped, while her disordered dress and fatigued
appearance was that of one who has been buffeting
with the waves.</p>
<p>Next morning brought intelligence that, in one
of the numerous feuds of that fierce period, Kirch-hoff
had been sacked, the church destroyed, and
the church treasury plundered.</p>
<p>In consequence of the fisherman's vision being
thus remarkably confirmed, Hans entirely renounced
his profession; and, leaving it to younger
men to supply his place as ferryman, he converted
his hut into a rustic chapel, and he himself,
taking orders, attended upon the shrine as a hermit,
or daily chaplain. The figure was supposed
to work miracles, and the ferry became renowned
from its being under the protection of the Holy
Image of Our Lady, and her no less holy servant.</p>
<p>When Bartholomew had concluded his account
of the Ferry and its Chapel, the travellers had
arrived at the place itself.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337">337</SPAN></span></p>
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