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<h1> Sintram and His Companions </h1>
<h2> by Friedrich de la Motte Fouque </h2>
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<h3> CHAPTER 1 </h3>
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<p>In the high castle of Drontheim many knights sat assembled to hold council
for the weal of the realm; and joyously they caroused together till
midnight around the huge stone table in the vaulted hall. A rising storm
drove the snow wildly against the rattling windows; all the oak doors
groaned, the massive locks shook, the castle-clock slowly and heavily
struck the hour of one. Then a boy, pale as death, with disordered hair
and closed eyes, rushed into the hall, uttering a wild scream of terror.
He stopped beside the richly carved seat of the mighty Biorn, clung to the
glittering knight with both his hands, and shrieked in a piercing voice,
"Knight and father! father and knight! Death and another are closely
pursuing me!"</p>
<p>An awful stillness lay like ice on the whole assembly, save that the boy
screamed ever the fearful words. But one of Biorn's numerous retainers, an
old esquire, known by the name of Rolf the Good, advanced towards the
terrified child, took him in his arms, and half chanted this prayer: "O
Father, help Thy servant! I believe, and yet I cannot believe." The boy,
as if in a dream, at once loosened his hold of the knight; and the good
Rolf bore him from the hall unresisting, yet still shedding hot tears and
murmuring confused sounds.</p>
<p>The lords and knights looked at one another much amazed, until the mighty
Biorn said, wildly and fiercely laughing, "Marvel not at that strange boy.
He is my only son; and has been thus since he was five years old: he is
now twelve. I am therefore accustomed to see him so; though, at the first,
I too was disquieted by it. The attack comes upon him only once in the
year, and always at this same time. But forgive me for having spent so
many words on my poor Sintram, and let us pass on to some worthier subject
for our discourse."</p>
<p>Again there was silence for a while; then whisperingly and doubtfully
single voices strove to renew their broken-off discourse, but without
success. Two of the youngest and most joyous began a roundelay; but the
storm howled and raged so wildly without, that this too was soon
interrupted. And now they all sat silent and motionless in the lofty hall;
the lamp flickered sadly under the vaulted roof; the whole party of
knights looked like pale, lifeless images dressed up in gigantic armour.</p>
<p>Then arose the chaplain of the castle of Drontheim, the only priest among
the knightly throng, and said, "Dear Lord Biorn, our eyes and thoughts
have all been directed to you and your son in a wonderful manner; but so
it has been ordered by the providence of God. You perceive that we cannot
withdraw them; and you would do well to tell us exactly what you know
concerning the fearful state of the boy. Perchance, the solemn tale, which
I expect from you, might do good to this disturbed assembly."</p>
<p>Biorn cast a look of displeasure on the priest, and answered, "Sir
chaplain, you have more share in the history than either you or I could
desire. Excuse me, if I am unwilling to trouble these light- hearted
warriors with so rueful a tale."</p>
<p>But the chaplain approached nearer to the knight, and said, in a firm yet
very mild tone, "Dear lord, hitherto it rested with you alone to relate,
or not to relate it; but now that you have so strangely hinted at the
share which I have had in your son's calamity, I must positively demand
that you will repeat word for word how everything came to pass. My honour
will have it so, and that will weigh with you as much as with me."</p>
<p>In stern compliance Biorn bowed his haughty head, and began the following
narration. "This time seven years I was keeping the Christmas feast with
my assembled followers. We have many venerable old customs which have
descended to us by inheritance from our great forefathers; as, for
instance, that of placing a gilded boar's head on the table, and making
thereon knightly vows of daring and wondrous deeds. Our chaplain here, who
used then frequently to visit me, was never a friend to keeping up such
traditions of the ancient heathen world. Such men as he were not much in
favour in those olden times."</p>
<p>"My excellent predecessors," interrupted the chaplain, "belonged more to
God than to the world, and with Him they were in favour. Thus they
converted your ancestors; and if I can in like manner be of service to
you, even your jeering will not vex me."</p>
<p>With looks yet darker, and a somewhat angry shudder, the knight resumed:
"Yes, yes; I know all your promises and threats of an invisible Power, and
how they are meant persuade us to part more readily with whatever of this
world's goods we may possess. Once, ah, truly, once I too had such!
Strange!—Sometimes it seems to me as though ages had passed over
since then, and as if I were alone the survivor, so fearfully has
everything changed. But now I bethink me, that the greater part of this
noble company knew me in my happiness, and have seen my wife, my lovely
Verena."</p>
<p>He pressed his hands on his eyes, and it seemed as though he wept. The
storm had ceased; the soft light of the moon shone through the windows,
and her beams played on his wild features. Suddenly he started up, so that
his heavy armour rattled with a fearful sound, and he cried out in a
thundering voice, "Shall I turn monk, as she has become a nun? No, crafty
priest; your webs are too thin to catch flies of my sort."</p>
<p>"I have nothing to do with webs," said the chaplain. "In all openness and
sincerity have I put heaven and hell before you during the space of six
years; and you gave full consent to the step which the holy Verena took.
But what all that has to do with your son's sufferings I know not, and I
wait for your narration."</p>
<p>"You may wait long enough," said Biorn, with a sneer. "Sooner shall—"</p>
<p>"Swear not!" said the chaplain in a loud commanding tone, and his eyes
flashed almost fearfully.</p>
<p>"Hurra!" cried Biorn, in wild affright; "hurra! Death and his companion
are loose!" and he dashed madly out of the chamber and down the steps. The
rough and fearful notes of his horn were heard summoning his retainers;
and presently afterwards the clatter of horses' feet on the frozen
court-yard gave token of their departure. The knights retired, silent and
shuddering; while the chaplain remained alone at the huge stone table,
praying.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Chapter2" id="Chapter2"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER 2 </h3>
<p>After some time the good Rolf returned with slow and soft steps, and
started with surprise at finding the hall deserted. The chamber where he
had been occupied in quieting and soothing the unhappy child was in so
distant a part of the castle that he had heard nothing of the knight's
hasty departure. The chaplain related to him all that had passed, and then
said, "But, my good Rolf, I much wish to ask you concerning those strange
words with which you seemed to lull poor Sintram to rest. They sounded
like sacred words, and no doubt they are; but I could not understand them.
'I believe, and yet I cannot believe.'"</p>
<p>"Reverend sir," answered Rolf, "I remember that from my earliest years no
history in the Gospels has taken such hold of me as that of the child
possessed with a devil, which the disciples were not able to cast out; but
when our Saviour came down from the mountain where He had been
transfigured, He broke the bonds wherewith the evil spirit had held the
miserable child bound. I always felt as if I must have known and loved
that boy, and been his play-fellow in his happy days; and when I grew
older, then the distress of the father on account of his lunatic son lay
heavy at my heart. It must surely have all been a foreboding of our poor
young Lord Sintram, whom I love as if he were my own child; and now the
words of the weeping father in the Gospel often come into my mind,—'Lord,
I believe; help Thou my unbelief;' and something similar I may very likely
have repeated to-day as a chant or a prayer. Reverend father, when I
consider how one dreadful imprecation of the father has kept its withering
hold on the son, all seems dark before me; but, God be praised! my faith
and my hope remain above."</p>
<p>"Good Rolf," said the priest, "I cannot clearly understand what you say
about the unhappy Sintram; for I do not know when and how this affliction
came upon him. If no oath or solemn promise bind you to secrecy, will you
make known to me all that is connected with it?"</p>
<p>"Most willingly," replied Rolf. "I have long desired to have an
opportunity of so doing; but you have been almost always separated from
us. I dare not now leave the sleeping boy any longer alone; and to-morrow,
at the earliest dawn, I must take him to his father. Will you come with
me, dear sir, to our poor Sintram?"</p>
<p>The chaplain at once took up the small lamp which Rolf had brought with
him, and they set off together through the long vaulted passages. In the
small distant chamber they found the poor boy fast asleep. The light of
the lamp fell strangely on his very pale face. The chaplain stood gazing
at him for some time, and at length said: "Certainly from his birth his
features were always sharp and strongly marked, but now they are almost
fearfully so for such a child; and yet no one can help having a kindly
feeling towards him, whether he will or not."</p>
<p>"Most true, dear sir," answered Rolf. And it was evident how his whole
heart rejoiced at any word which betokened affection for his beloved young
lord. Thereupon he placed the lamp where its light could not disturb the
boy, and seating himself close by the priest, he began to speak in the
following terms:—"During that Christmas feast of which my lord was
talking to you, he and his followers discoursed much concerning the German
merchants, and the best means of keeping down the increasing pride and
power of the trading-towns. At length Biorn laid his impious hand on the
golden boar's head, and swore to put to death without mercy every German
trader whom fate, in what way soever, might bring alive into his power.
The gentle Verena turned pale, and would have interposed—but it was
too late, the bloody word was uttered. And immediately afterwards, as
though the great enemy of souls were determined at once to secure with
fresh bonds the vassal thus devoted to him, a warder came into the hall to
announce that two citizens of a trading-town in Germany, an old man and
his son, had been shipwrecked on this coast, and were now within the
gates, asking hospitality of the lord of the castle. The knight could not
refrain from shuddering; but he thought himself bound by his rash vow and
by that accursed heathenish golden boar. We, his retainers, were commanded
to assemble in the castle-yard, armed with sharp spears, which were to be
hurled at the defenceless strangers at the first signal made to us. For
the first, and I trust the last time in my life, I said 'No' to the
commands of my lord; and that I said in a loud voice, and with the
heartiest determination. The Almighty, who alone knows whom He will accept
and whom He will reject, armed me with resolution and strength. And Biorn
might perceive whence the refusal of his faithful old servant arose, and
that it was worthy of respect. He said to me, half in anger and half in
scorn: 'Go up to my wife's apartments; her attendants are running to and
fro, perhaps she is ill. Go up, Rolf the Good, I say to thee, and so women
shall be with women.' I thought to myself, 'Jeer on, then;' and I went
silently the way that he had pointed out to me. On the stairs there met me
two strange and right fearful beings, whom I had never seen before; and I
know not how they got into the castle. One of them was a great tall man,
frightfully pallid and thin; the other was a dwarf-like man, with a most
hideous countenance and features. Indeed, when I collected my thoughts and
looked carefully at him, it appeared to me—"</p>
<p>Low moanings and convulsive movements of the boy here interrupted the
narrative. Rolf and his chaplain hastened to his bedside, and perceived
that his countenance wore an expression of fearful agony, and that he was
struggling in vain to open his eyes. The priest made the Sign of the Cross
over him, and immediately peace seemed to be restored, and his sleep again
became quiet: they both returned softly to their seats.</p>
<p>"You see," said Rolf, "that it will not do to describe more closely those
two awful beings. Suffice it to say, that they went down into the
court-yard, and that I proceeded to my lady's apartments. I found the
gentle Verena almost fainting with terror and overwhelming anxiety, and I
hastened to restore her with some of those remedies which I was able to
apply by my skill, through God's gift and the healing virtues of herbs and
minerals. But scarcely had she recovered her senses, when, with that calm
holy power which, as you know, is hers, she desired me to conduct her down
to the court-yard, saying that she must either put a stop to the fearful
doings of this night, or herself fall a sacrifice. Our way took us by the
little bed of the sleeping Sintram. Alas! hot tears fell from my eyes to
see how evenly his gentle breath then came and went, and how sweetly he
smiled in his peaceful slumbers."</p>
<p>The old man put his hands to his eyes, and wept bitterly; but soon he
resumed his sad story. "As we approached the lowest window of the
staircase, we could hear distinctly the voice of the elder merchant; and
on looking out, the light of the torches showed me his noble features, as
well as the bright youthful countenance of his son. 'I take Almighty God
to witness,' cried he, 'that I had no evil thought against this house! But
surely I must have fallen unawares amongst heathens; it cannot be that I
am in a Christian knight's castle; and if you are indeed heathens, then
kill us at once. And thou, my beloved son, be patient and of good courage;
in heaven we shall learn wherefore it could not be otherwise.' I thought I
could see those two fearful ones amidst the throng of retainers. The pale
one had a huge curved sword in his hand, the little one held a spear
notched in a strange fashion. Verena tore open the window, and cried in
silvery tones through the wild night, 'My dearest lord and husband, for
the sake of your only child, have pity on those harmless men! Save them
from death, and resist the temptation of the evil spirit.' The knight
answered in his fierce wrath—but I cannot repeat his words. He
staked his child on the desperate cast; he called Death and the Devil to
see that he kept his word:—but hush! the boy is again moaning. Let
me bring the dark tale quickly to a close. Biorn commanded his followers
to strike, casting on them those fierce looks which have gained him the
title of Biorn of the Fiery Eyes; while at the same time the two frightful
strangers bestirred themselves very busily. Then Verena called out, with
piercing anguish, 'Help, O God, my Saviour!' Those two dreadful figures
disappeared; and the knight and his retainers, as if seized with
blindness, rushed wildly one against the other, but without doing injury
to themselves, or yet being able to strike the merchants, who ran so close
a risk. They bowed reverently towards Verena, and with calm thanksgivings
departed through the castle- gates, which at that moment had been burst
open by a violent gust of wind, and now gave a free passage to any who
would go forth. The lady and I were yet standing bewildered on the stairs,
when I fancied I saw the two fearful forms glide close by me, but
mist-like and unreal. Verena called to me: 'Rolf, did you see a tall pale
man, and a little hideous one with him, pass just now up the staircase?' I
flew after them; and found, alas, the poor boy in the same state in which
you saw him a few hours ago. Ever since, the attack has come on him
regularly at this time, and he is in all respects fearfully changed. The
lady of the castle did not fail to discern the avenging hand of Heaven in
this calamity; and as the knight, her husband, instead of repenting, ever
became more truly Biorn of the Fiery Eyes, she resolved, in the walls of a
cloister, by unremitting prayer, to obtain mercy in time and eternity for
herself and her unhappy child."</p>
<p>Rolf was silent; and the chaplain, after some thought, said: "I now
understand why, six years ago, Biorn confessed his guilt to me in general
words, and consented that his wife should take the veil. Some faint
compunction must then have stirred within him, and perhaps may stir him
yet. At any rate it was impossible that so tender a flower as Verena could
remain longer in so rough keeping. But who is there now to watch over and
protect our poor Sintram?"</p>
<p>"The prayer of his mother," answered Rolf. "Reverend sir, when the first
dawn of day appears, as it does now, and when the morning breeze whispers
through the glancing window, they ever bring to my mind the soft beaming
eyes of my lady, and I again seem to hear the sweet tones of her voice.
The holy Verena is, next to God, our chief aid."</p>
<p>"And let us add our devout supplications to the Lord," said the chaplain;
and he and Rolf knelt in silent and earnest prayer by the bed of the pale
sufferer, who began to smile in his dreams.</p>
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