<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>Away with these!—True Wisdom's world will be</p>
<p>Within its own creation, or in thine,</p>
<p>Maternal Nature! for who teems like thee</p>
<p>Thus on the banks of thy majestic Rhine?</p>
<p>There Harold gazes on a work divine,</p>
<p>A blending of all beauties, streams, and dells—</p>
<p>Fruit, foliage, crag, wood, cornfield, mountain, vine,</p>
<p>And chiefless castles breathing stern farewells,</p>
<p>From grey but leafy walls, where ruin greenly dwells.</p>
<p class="i7"><i>Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto III.</i></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>When Arthur Philipson left his father, to go on
board the bark which was to waft him across the
Rhine, he took but few precautions for his own
subsistence, during a separation of which he calculated
the duration to be very brief. Some necessary
change of raiment, and a very few pieces of
gold, were all which he thought it needful to
withdraw from the general stock; the rest of the
baggage and money he left with the sumpter-horse,
which he concluded his father might need,
in order to sustain his character as an English
trader. Having embarked with his horse and his
slender appointments on board a fishing-skiff, she
instantly raised her temporary mast, spread a sail
across the yard, and, supported by the force of the
wind against the downward power of the current,
moved across the river obliquely in the direction
of Kirch-hoff, which, as we have said, lies somewhat
lower on the river than Hans-Kapelle.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</SPAN></span>
Their passage was so favourable that they reached
the opposite side in a few minutes, but not until
Arthur, whose eye and thoughts were on the left
bank, had seen his father depart from the Chapel
of the Ferry, accompanied by two horsemen, whom
he readily concluded to be the guide Bartholomew,
and some chance traveller who had joined him;
but the second of whom was in truth the Black
Priest of St. Paul's, as has been already mentioned.</p>
<p>This augmentation of his father's company was,
he could not but think, likely to be attended with
an increase of his safety, since it was not probable
he would suffer a companion to be forced upon
him, and one of his own choosing might be a protection,
in case his guide should prove treacherous.
At any rate, he had to rejoice that he had seen his
father depart in safety from the spot where they
had reason to apprehend some danger awaited
him. He resolved, therefore, to make no stay at
Kirch-hoff, but to pursue his way, as fast as possible,
towards Strasburg, and rest, when darkness
compelled him to stop, in one of the <i>dorfs</i>, or villages,
which were situated on the German side
of the Rhine. At Strasburg, he trusted, with the
sanguine spirit of youth, he might again be able
to rejoin his father; and if he could not altogether
subdue his anxiety on their separation, he fondly
nourished the hope that he might meet him in
safety. After some short refreshment and repose
afforded to his horse, he lost no time in proceeding
on his journey down the eastern bank of the broad
river.</p>
<p>He was now upon the most interesting side of
the Rhine, walled in and repelled as the river is
on that shore by the most romantic cliffs, now
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</SPAN></span>
mantled with vegetation of the richest hue, tinged
with all the variegated colours of autumn; now
surmounted by fortresses, over whose gates were
displayed the pennons of their proud owners; or
studded with hamlets, where the richness of the
soil supplied to the poor labourer the food of which
the oppressive hand of his superior threatened
altogether to deprive him. Every stream which
here contributes its waters to the Rhine winds
through its own tributary dell, and each valley
possesses a varying and separate character, some
rich with pastures, cornfields, and vineyards, some
frowning with crags and precipices, and other
romantic beauties.</p>
<p>The principles of taste were not then explained
or analysed as they have been since, in countries
where leisure has been found for this investigation.
But the feelings arising from so rich a landscape
as is displayed by the valley of the Rhine
must have been the same in every bosom, from the
period when our Englishman took his solitary
journey through it, in doubt and danger, till that
in which it heard the indignant Childe Harold bid
a proud farewell to his native country, in the vain
search of a land in which his heart might throb
less fiercely.</p>
<p>Arthur enjoyed this scene, although the fading
daylight began to remind him that, alone as he
was, and travelling with a very valuable charge, it
would be matter of prudence to look out for some
place of rest during the night. Just as he had
formed the resolution of inquiring at the next
habitation he should pass, which way he should
follow for this purpose, the road he pursued descended
into a beautiful amphitheatre filled with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</SPAN></span>
large trees, which protected from the heats of
summer the delicate and tender herbage of the
pasture. A large brook flowed through it, and
joined the Rhine. At a short mile up the brook
its waters made a crescent round a steep craggy
eminence, crowned with flanking walls, and Gothic
towers and turrets, enclosing a feudal castle of
the first order. A part of the savannah that has
been mentioned had been irregularly cultivated for
wheat, which had grown a plentiful crop. It was
gathered in, but the patches of deep yellow stubble
contrasted with the green of the undisturbed
pasture land, and with the seared and dark-red
foliage of the broad oaks which stretched their
arms athwart the level space. There a lad, in a
rustic dress, was employed in the task of netting
a brood of partridges with the assistance of a
trained spaniel; while a young woman, who had
the air rather of a domestic in some family of
rank than that of an ordinary villager, sat on the
stump of a decayed tree, to watch the progress of
the amusement. The spaniel, whose duty it was
to drive the partridges under the net, was perceptibly
disturbed at the approach of the traveller;
his attention was divided, and he was obviously
in danger of marring the sport, by barking and
putting up the covey, when the maiden quitted
her seat, and, advancing towards Philipson, requested
him, for courtesy, to pass at a greater distance,
and not interfere with their amusement.</p>
<p>The traveller willingly complied with her
request.</p>
<p>"I will ride, fair damsel," he said, "at whatever
distance you please. And allow me, in guerdon,
to ask, whether there is convent, castle, or good
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</SPAN></span>
man's house, where a stranger, who is belated and
weary, might receive a night's hospitality?"</p>
<p>The girl, whose face he had not yet distinctly
seen, seemed to suppress some desire to laugh, as
she replied, "Hath not yon castle, think you,"
pointing to the distant towers, "some corner which
might accommodate a stranger in such extremity?"</p>
<p>"Space enough, certainly," said Arthur; "but
perhaps little inclination to grant it."</p>
<p>"I myself," said the girl, "being one, and a
formidable part of the garrison, will be answerable
for your reception. But as you parley with me
in such hostile fashion, it is according to martial
order that I should put down my visor."</p>
<p>So saying, she concealed her face under one of
those riding-masks which at that period women
often wore when they went abroad, whether for
protecting their complexion or screening themselves
from intrusive observation. But ere she
could accomplish this operation Arthur had detected
the merry countenance of Annette Veilchen, a girl
who, though her attendance on Anne of Geierstein
was in a menial capacity, was held in high estimation
at Geierstein. She was a bold wench, unaccustomed
to the distinctions of rank, which were
little regarded in the simplicity of the Helvetian
hills, and she was ready to laugh, jest, and flirt
with the young men of the Landamman's family.
This attracted no attention, the mountain manners
making little distinction between the degrees of
attendant and mistress, further than that the mistress
was a young woman who required help, and
the maiden one who was in a situation to offer and
afford it. This kind of familiarity would perhaps
have been dangerous in other lands, but the simplicity
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</SPAN></span>
of Swiss manners, and the turn of Annette's
disposition, which was resolute and sensible,
though rather bold and free, when compared to
the manners of more civilised countries, kept
all intercourse betwixt her and the young men
of the family in the strict path of honour and
innocence.</p>
<p>Arthur himself had paid considerable attention
to Annette, being naturally, from his feelings
towards Anne of Geierstein, heartily desirous to
possess the good graces of her attendant; a point
which was easily gained by the attentions of a
handsome young man, and the generosity with
which he heaped upon her small presents of articles
of dress or ornament, which the damsel,
however faithful, could find no heart to refuse.</p>
<p>The assurance that he was in Anne's neighbourhood,
and that he was likely to pass the night
under the same roof, both of which circumstances
were intimated by the girl's presence and language,
sent the blood in a hastier current through
Arthur's veins; for though, since he had crossed
the river, he had sometimes nourished hopes of
again seeing her who had made so strong an impression
on his imagination, yet his understanding
had as often told him how slight was the chance
of their meeting, and it was even now chilled by
the reflection that it could be followed only by the
pain of a sudden and final separation. He yielded
himself, however, to the prospect of promised
pleasure, without attempting to ascertain what
was to be its duration or its consequence. Desirous,
in the meantime, to hear as much of Anne's
circumstances as Annette chose to tell, he resolved
not to let that merry maiden perceive that she was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</SPAN></span>
known by him, until she chose of her own accord
to lay aside her mystery.</p>
<p>While these thoughts passed rapidly through
his imagination, Annette bade the lad drop his
nets, and directed him that, having taken two of
the best-fed partridges from the covey, and carried
them into the kitchen, he was to set the rest at
liberty.</p>
<p>"I must provide supper," said she to the
traveller, "since I am bringing home unexpected
company."</p>
<p>Arthur earnestly expressed his hope that his
experiencing the hospitality of the castle would occasion
no trouble to the inmates, and received satisfactory
assurances upon the subject of his scruples.</p>
<p>"I would not willingly be the cause of inconvenience
to your mistress," pursued the traveller.</p>
<p>"Look you there," said Annette Veilchen, "I
have said nothing of master or mistress, and this
poor forlorn traveller has already concluded in his
own mind that he is to be harboured in a lady's
bower!"</p>
<p>"Why, did you not tell me," said Arthur, somewhat
confused at his blunder, "that you were the
person of second importance in the place? A
damsel, I judged, could only be an officer under a
female governor."</p>
<p>"I do not see the justice of the conclusion,"
replied the maiden. "I have known ladies bear
offices of trust in lords' families; nay, and over
the lords themselves."</p>
<p>"Am I to understand, fair damsel, that you
hold so predominant a situation in the castle
which we are now approaching, and of which I
pray you to tell me the name?"
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The name of the castle is Arnheim," said
Annette.</p>
<p>"Your garrison must be a large one," said
Arthur, looking at the extensive building, "if
you are able to man such a labyrinth of walls
and towers."</p>
<p>"In that point," said Annette, "I must needs
own we are very deficient. At present, we rather
hide in the castle than inhabit it; and yet it
is well enough defended by the reports which
frighten every other person who might disturb its
seclusion."</p>
<p>"And yet you yourselves dare to reside in it?"
said the Englishman, recollecting the tale which
had been told by Rudolph Donnerhugel, concerning
the character of the Barons of Arnheim, and
the final catastrophe of the family.</p>
<p>"Perhaps," replied his guide, "we are too intimate
with the cause of such fears to feel ourselves
strongly oppressed with them—perhaps we have
means of encountering the supposed terrors proper
to ourselves—perhaps, and it is not the least
likely conjecture, we have no choice of a better
place of refuge. Such seems to be your own fate
at present, sir, for the tops of the distant hills are
gradually losing the lights of the evening; and if
you rest not in Arnheim, well contented or not,
you are likely to find no safe lodging for many a
mile."</p>
<p>As she thus spoke she separated from Arthur,
taking, with the fowler who attended her, a very
steep but short footpath, which ascended straight
up to the site of the castle; at the same time
motioning to the young Englishman to follow a
horse-track, which, more circuitous, led to the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</SPAN></span>
same point, and, though less direct, was considerably
more easy.</p>
<p>He soon stood before the south front of Arnheim
Castle, which was a much larger building than he
had conceived, either from Rudolph's description
or from the distant view. It had been erected
at many different periods, and a considerable part
of the edifice was less in the strict Gothic than
in what has been termed the Saracenic style,
in which the imagination of the architect is
more florid than that which is usually indulged in
the North—rich in minarets, cupolas, and similar
approximations to Oriental structures. This
singular building bore a general appearance of
desolation and desertion, but Rudolph had been
misinformed when he declared that it had become
ruinous. On the contrary, it had been maintained
with considerable care; and when it fell into the
hands of the Emperor, although no garrison was
maintained within its precincts, care was taken to
keep the building in repair; and though the prejudices
of the country people prevented any one from
passing the night within the fearful walls, yet it
was regularly visited from time to time by a person
having commission from the Imperial Chancery
to that effect. The occupation of the domain
around the castle was a valuable compensation for
this official person's labour, and he took care not
to endanger the loss of it by neglecting his duty.
Of late this officer had been withdrawn, and now
it appeared that the young Baroness of Arnheim
had found refuge in the deserted towers of her
ancestors.</p>
<p>The Swiss damsel did not leave the youthful
traveller time to study particularly the exterior of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</SPAN></span>
the castle, or to construe the meaning of emblems
and mottoes, seemingly of an Oriental character,
with which the outside was inscribed, and which
expressed in various modes, more or less directly,
the attachment of the builders of this extensive
pile to the learning of the Eastern sages. Ere he
had time to take more than a general survey of
the place, the voice of the Swiss maiden called
him to an angle of the wall in which there was a
projection, whence a long plank extended over a
dry moat, and was connected with a window in
which Annette was standing.</p>
<p>"You have forgotten your Swiss lessons already,"
said she, observing that Arthur went rather
timidly about crossing the temporary and precarious
drawbridge.</p>
<p>The reflection that Anne, her mistress, might
make the same observation, recalled the young
traveller to the necessary degree of composure.
He passed over the plank with the same <i>sang froid</i>
with which he had learned to brave the far more
terrific bridge beneath the ruinous castle of Geierstein.
He had no sooner entered the window than
Annette, taking off her mask, bade him welcome
to Germany, and to old friends with new names.</p>
<p>"Anne of Geierstein," she said, "is no more;
but you will presently see the Lady Baroness of
Arnheim, who is extremely like her; and I, who
was Annette Veilchen in Switzerland, the servant
to a damsel who was not esteemed much greater
than myself, am now the young Baroness's waiting-woman,
and make everybody of less quality
stand back."</p>
<p>"If, in such circumstances," said young Philipson,
"you have the influence due to your consequence,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</SPAN></span>
let me beseech of you to tell the Baroness,
since we must now call her so, that my present
intrusion on her is occasioned by my ignorance."</p>
<p>"Away, away!" said the girl, laughing. "I
know better what to say in your behalf. You are
not the first poor man and pedlar that has got the
graces of a great lady; but I warrant you it was
not by making humble apologies, and talking of
unintentional intrusion. I will tell her of love,
which all the Rhine cannot quench, and which
has driven you hither, leaving you no other choice
than to come or to perish!"</p>
<p>"Nay, but Annette, Annette"——</p>
<p>"Fie on you for a fool,—make a shorter name
of it,—cry Anne, Anne! and there will be more
prospect of your being answered."</p>
<p>So saying, the wild girl ran out of the room,
delighted, as a mountaineer of her description was
likely to be, with the thought of having done as
she would desire to be done by, in her benevolent
exertions to bring two lovers together, when on
the eve of inevitable separation.</p>
<p>In this self-approving disposition, Annette sped
up a narrow turnpike stair to a closet, or dressing-room,
where her young mistress was seated, and
exclaimed, with open mouth,—"Anne of Gei——,
I mean my Lady Baroness, they are come—they
are come!"</p>
<p>"The Philipsons?" said Anne, almost breathless
as she asked the question.</p>
<p>"Yes—no—" answered the girl; "that is, yes,—for
the best of them is come, and that is
Arthur."</p>
<p>"What meanest thou, girl? Is not Seignor
Philipson, the father, along with his son?"
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Not he, indeed," answered Veilchen, "nor did
I ever think of asking about him. He was no
friend of mine, nor of any one else, save the old
Landamman; and well met they were for a couple
of wiseacres, with eternal proverbs in their mouths,
and care upon their brows."</p>
<p>"Unkind, inconsiderate girl, what hast thou
done?" said Anne of Geierstein. "Did I not
warn and charge thee to bring them both hither?
and you have brought the young man alone to a
place where we are nearly in solitude! What will
he—what can he think of me?"</p>
<p>"Why, what should I have done?" said
Annette, remaining firm in her argument. "He
was alone, and should I have sent him down to
the <i>dorf</i> to be murdered by the Rhinegrave's Lanzknechts?
All is fish, I trow, that comes to their
net; and how is he to get through this country,
so beset with wandering soldiers, robber barons (I
beg your ladyship's pardon), and roguish Italians,
flocking to the Duke of Burgundy's standard?—Not
to mention the greatest terror of all, that is
never in one shape or other absent from one's eye
or thought."</p>
<p>"Hush, hush, girl! add not utter madness to
the excess of folly; but let us think what is to be
done. For our sake, for his own, this unfortunate
young man must leave this castle instantly."</p>
<p>"You must take the message yourself, then,
Anne—I beg pardon, most noble Baroness;—it
may be very fit for a lady of high birth to send
such a message, which, indeed, I have heard the
Minne-singers tell in their romances; but I am
sure it is not a meet one for me, or any frank-hearted
Swiss girl, to carry. No more foolery;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</SPAN></span>
but remember, if you were born Baroness of Arnheim,
you have been bred and brought up in the
bosom of the Swiss hills, and should conduct
yourself like an honest and well-meaning damsel."</p>
<p>"And in what does your wisdom reprehend my
folly, good Mademoiselle Annette?" replied the
Baroness.</p>
<p>"Ay, marry! now our noble blood stirs in our
veins. But remember, gentle my lady, that it
was a bargain between us, when I left yonder
noble mountains, and the free air that blows over
them, to coop myself up in this land of prisons
and slaves, that I should speak my mind to you as
freely as I did when our heads lay on the same
pillow."</p>
<p>"Speak, then," said Anne, studiously averting
her face as she prepared to listen; "but beware
that you say nothing which it is unfit for me to
hear."</p>
<p>"I will speak nature and common-sense; and if
your noble ears are not made fit to hear and understand
these, the fault lies in them, and not in my
tongue. Look you, you have saved this youth
from two great dangers—one at the earth-shoot at
Geierstein, the other this very day, when his life
was beset. A handsome young man he is, well
spoken, and well qualified to gain deservedly a
lady's favour. Before you saw him, the Swiss
youth were at least not odious to you. You danced
with them,—you jested with them,—you were
the general object of their admiration,—and, as
you well know, you might have had your choice
through the Canton—Why, I think it possible a
little urgency might have brought you to think of
Rudolph Donnerhugel as your mate."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Never, wench, never!" exclaimed Anne.</p>
<p>"Be not so very positive, my lady. Had he
recommended himself to the uncle in the first
place, I think, in my poor sentiment, he might at
some lucky moment have carried the niece. But
since we have known this young Englishman, it
has been little less than contemning, despising,
and something like hating, all the men whom you
could endure well enough before."</p>
<p>"Well, well," said Anne, "I will detest and
hate thee more than any of them, unless you bring
your matters to an end."</p>
<p>"Softly, noble lady, fair and easy go far. All
this argues you love the young man, and let those
say that you are wrong who think there is anything
wonderful in the matter. There is much
to justify you, and nothing that I know against
it."</p>
<p>"What, foolish girl! Remember my birth forbids
me to love a mean man—my condition to
love a poor man—my father's commands to love
one whose addresses are without his consent—above
all, my maidenly pride forbids me fixing my
affections on one who cares not for me—nay, perhaps,
is prejudiced against me by appearances."</p>
<p>"Here is a fine homily!" said Annette; "but
I can clear every point of it as easily as Father
Francis does his text in a holiday sermon. Your
birth is a silly dream, which you have only learned
to value within these two or three days, when,
having come to German soil, some of the old German
weed, usually called family pride, has begun
to germinate in your heart. Think of such folly
as you thought when you lived at Geierstein—that
is, during all the rational part of your life,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</SPAN></span>
and this great terrible prejudice will sink into
nothing. By condition, I conceive you mean
estate. But Philipson's father, who is the most
free-hearted of men, will surely give his son as
many zechins as will stock a mountain farm. You
have firewood for the cutting, and land for the
occupying, since you are surely entitled to part of
Geierstein, and gladly will your uncle put you in
possession of it. You can manage the dairy,
Arthur can shoot, hunt, fish, plough, harrow, and
reap."</p>
<p>Anne of Geierstein shook her head, as if she
greatly doubted her lover's skill in the last of the
accomplishments enumerated.</p>
<p>"Well, well, he can learn, then," said Annette
Veilchen; "and you will only live the harder the
first year or so. Besides, Sigismund Biederman
will aid him willingly, and he is a very horse at
labour; and I know another besides, who is a
friend"——</p>
<p>"Of thine own, I warrant," quoth the young
Baroness.</p>
<p>"Marry, it is my poor friend Louis Sprenger;
and I'll never be so false-hearted as to deny my
bachelor."</p>
<p>"Well, well, but what is to be the end of all
this?" said the Baroness, impatiently.</p>
<p>"The end of it, in my opinion," said Annette,
"is very simple. Here are priests and prayer-books
within a mile—go down to the parlour,
speak your mind to your lover, or hear him speak
his mind to you; join hands, go quietly back to
Geierstein in the character of man and wife, and
get everything ready to receive your uncle on his
return. This is the way that a plain Swiss
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</SPAN></span>
wench would cut off the romance of a German
Baroness"——</p>
<p>"And break the heart of her father," said the
young lady, with a sigh.</p>
<p>"It is more tough than you are aware of," replied
Annette. "He hath not lived without you
so long but that he will be able to spare you for
the rest of his life, a great deal more easily than
you, with all your new-fangled ideas of quality,
will be able to endure his schemes of wealth and
ambition, which will aim at making you the wife
of some illustrious Count, like De Hagenbach,
whom we saw not long since make such an edifying
end, to the great example of all Robber-Chivalry
upon the Rhine."</p>
<p>"Thy plan is naught, wench; a childish vision
of a girl who never knew more of life than she has
heard told over her milking-pail. Remember that
my uncle entertains the highest ideas of family
discipline, and that to act contrary to my father's
will would destroy us in his good opinion. Why
else am I here? Wherefore has he resigned his
guardianship? And why am I obliged to change
the habits that are dear to me, and assume the
manners of a people that are strange, and therefore
unpleasing to me?"</p>
<p>"Your uncle," said Annette firmly, "is Landamman
of the Canton of Unterwalden; respects
its freedom, and is the sworn protector of its laws,
of which, when you, a denizen of the Confederacy,
claim the protection, he cannot refuse it to you."</p>
<p>"Even then," said the young Baroness, "I
should forfeit his good opinion, his more than
paternal affection; but it is needless to dwell upon
this. Know, that although I could have loved
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</SPAN></span>
the young man, whom I will not deny to be as
amiable as your partiality paints him—know,"—she
hesitated for a moment,—"that he has never
spoken a word to me on such a subject as you,
without knowing either his sentiments or mine,
would intrude on my consideration."</p>
<p>"Is it possible?" answered Annette. "I
thought—I believed, though I have never pressed
on your confidence—that you must—attached as
you were to each other—have spoken together,
like true maid and true bachelor, before now. I
have done wrong, when I thought to do for the
best.—Is it possible!—such things have been
heard of even in our canton—is it possible he can
have harboured so unutterably base purposes, as
that Martin of Brisach, who made love to Adela
of the Sundgau, enticed her to folly—the thing,
though almost incredible, is true—fled—fled
from the country and boasted of his villany, till
her cousin Raymund silenced for ever his infamous
triumph, by beating his brains out with his club,
even in the very street of the villain's native
town? By the Holy Mother of Einsiedlen! could
I suspect this Englishman of meditating such
treason, I would saw the plank across the moat
till a fly's weight would break it, and it should be
at six fathom deep that he should abye the perfidy
which dared to meditate dishonour against an
adopted daughter of Switzerland!"</p>
<p>As Annette Veilchen spoke, all the fire of her
mountain courage flashed from her eyes, and she
listened reluctantly while Anne of Geierstein endeavoured
to obliterate the dangerous impression
which her former words had impressed on her
simple but faithful attendant.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"On my word"—she said,—"on my soul—you
do Arthur Philipson injustice—foul injustice, in
intimating such a suspicion;—his conduct towards
me has ever been upright and honourable—a
friend to a friend—a brother to a sister—could
not, in all he has done and said, have been more
respectful, more anxiously affectionate, more undeviatingly
candid. In our frequent interviews
and intercourse he has indeed seemed very kind—very
attached. But had I been disposed—at
times I may have been too much so—to listen to
him with endurance,"—the young lady here put
her hand on her forehead, but the tears streamed
through her slender fingers,—"he has never spoken
of any love—any preference;—if he indeed entertains
any, some obstacle, insurmountable on his
part, has interfered to prevent him."</p>
<p>"Obstacle?" replied the Swiss damsel. "Ay,
doubtless—some childish bashfulness—some foolish
idea about your birth being so high above his
own—some dream of modesty pushed to extremity,
which considers as impenetrable the ice of a
spring frost. This delusion may be broken by a
moment's encouragement, and I will take the task
on myself, to spare your blushes, my dearest
Anne."</p>
<p>"No, no; for Heaven's sake, no, Veilchen!"
answered the Baroness, to whom Annette had so
long been a companion and confidant, rather than
a domestic. "You cannot anticipate the nature of
the obstacles which may prevent his thinking on
what you are so desirous to promote. Hear me—My
early education, and the instructions of my
kind uncle, have taught me to know something
more of foreigners and their fashions than I ever
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</SPAN></span>
could have learned in our happy retirement of
Geierstein; I am well-nigh convinced that these
Philipsons are of rank, as they are of manners and
bearing, far superior to the occupation which they
appear to hold. The father is a man of deep observation,
of high thought and pretension, and lavish
of gifts, far beyond what consists with the utmost
liberality of a trader."</p>
<p>"That is true," said Annette. "I will say for
myself, that the silver chain he gave me weighs
against ten silver crowns, and the cross which
Arthur added to it, the day after the long ride we
had together up towards Mount Pilatus, is worth,
they tell me, as much more. There is not the
like of it in the Cantons. Well, what then? They
are rich, so are you. So much the better."</p>
<p>"Alas! Annette, they are not only rich, but
noble. I am persuaded of this; for I have observed
often, that even the father retreated, with
an air of quiet and dignified contempt, from discussions
with Donnerhugel and others, who, in
our plain way, wished to fasten a dispute upon
him. And when a rude observation or blunt
pleasantry was pointed at the son, his eye flashed,
his cheek coloured, and it was only a glance from
his father which induced him to repress the retort
of no friendly character which rose to his lips."</p>
<p>"You have been a close observer," said Annette.
"All this may be true, but I noted it not. But
what then, I say once more? If Arthur has some
fine noble name in his own country, are not you
yourself Baroness of Arnheim? And I will
frankly allow it as something of worth, if it
smooths the way to a match, where I think you
must look for happiness—I hope so, else I
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</SPAN></span>
am sure it should have no encouragement from
me."</p>
<p>"I do believe so, my faithful Veilchen; but,
alas! how can you, in the state of natural freedom
in which you have been bred, know, or even
dream, of the various restraints which this gilded
or golden chain of rank and nobility hangs upon
those whom it fetters and encumbers, I fear, as
much as it decorates? In every country, the distinction
of rank binds men to certain duties. It
may carry with it restrictions, which may prevent
alliances in foreign countries—it often may prevent
them from consulting their inclinations,
when they wed in their own. It leads to alliances
in which the heart is never consulted, to treaties
of marriage, which are often formed when the
parties are in the cradle, or in leading strings, but
which are not the less binding on them in honour
and faith. Such may exist in the present case.
These alliances are often blended and mixed up
with state policy; and if the interest of England,
or what he deems such, should have occasioned
the elder Philipson to form such an engagement,
Arthur would break his own heart—the heart of
any one else—rather than make false his father's
word."</p>
<p>"The more shame to them that formed such an
engagement!" said Annette. "Well, they talk of
England being a free country; but if they can bar
young men and women of the natural privilege to
call their hands and hearts their own, I would as
soon be a German serf.—Well, lady, you are wise,
and I am ignorant. But what is to be done? I
have brought this young man here, expecting, God
knows, a happier issue to your meeting. But it
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</SPAN></span>
is clear you cannot marry him without his asking
you. Now, although I confess that, if I could
think him willing to forfeit the hand of the fairest
maid of the Cantons, either from want of manly
courage to ask it, or from regard to some ridiculous
engagement, formed betwixt his father and
some other nobleman of their island of noblemen,
I would not in either case grudge him a ducking
in the moat; yet it is another question, whether
we should send him down to be murdered among
those cut-throats of the Rhinegrave; and unless
we do so, I know not how to get rid of him."</p>
<p>"Then let the boy William give attendance on
him here, and do you see to his accommodation.
It is best we do not meet."</p>
<p>"I will," said Annette; "yet what am I to say
for you? Unhappily, I let him know that you
were here."</p>
<p>"Alas, imprudent girl! Yet why should I
blame thee," said Anne of Geierstein, "when the
imprudence has been so great on my own side? It
is myself, who, suffering my imagination to rest
too long upon this young man and his merits,
have led me into this entanglement. But I will
show thee that I can overcome this folly, and I
will not seek in my own error a cause for evading
the duties of hospitality. Go, Veilchen, get some
refreshment ready. Thou shalt sup with us, and
thou must not leave us. Thou shalt see me behave
as becomes both a German lady and a Swiss
maiden. Get me first a candle, however, my girl,
for I must wash these tell-tales, my eyes, and
arrange my dress."</p>
<p>To Annette this whole explanation had been one
scene of astonishment, for, in the simple ideas of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</SPAN></span>
love and courtship in which she had been brought
up amid the Swiss mountains, she had expected
that the two lovers would have taken the first
opportunity of the absence of their natural guardians,
and have united themselves for ever; and
she had even arranged a little secondary plot, in
which she herself and Martin Sprenger, her faithful
bachelor, were to reside with the young couple
as friends and dependants. Silenced, therefore,
but not satisfied, by the objections of her young
mistress, the zealous Annette retreated murmuring
to herself,—"That little hint about her dress is
the only natural and sensible word she has said
in my hearing. Please God, I will return and help
her in the twinkling of an eye. That dressing my
mistress is the only part of a waiting-lady's life
that I have the least fancy for—it seems so natural
for one pretty maiden to set off another—in
faith we are but learning to dress ourselves at
another time."</p>
<p>And with this sage remark Annette Veilchen
tripped down stairs.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</SPAN></span></p>
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