<h2>CHAPTER I<br/> <span class="GutSmall">MASTER GOTTFRIED’S WORKSHOP</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> upper lattices of a tall,
narrow window were open, and admitted the view, of first some
richly-tinted vine leaves and purpling grapes, then, in dazzling
freshness of new white stone, the lacework fabric of a half-built
minster spire, with a mason’s crane on the summit, bending
as though craving for a further supply of materials; and beyond,
peeping through every crevice of the exquisite open fretwork, was
the intensely blue sky of early autumn.</p>
<p>The lower longer panes of the window were closed, and the
glass, divided into circles and quarrels, made the scene less
distinct; but still the huge stone tower was traceable, and,
farther off, the slope of a gently-rising hill, clothed with
vineyards blushing into autumn richness. Below, the view
was closed by the gray wall of a court-yard, laden with
fruit-trees in full bearing, and inclosing paved paths that
radiated from a central fountain, and left spaces between, where
a few summer flowers still lingered, and the remains of others
showed what their past glory had been.</p>
<p>The interior of the room was wainscoted, the floor paved with
bright red and cream-coloured tiles, and the tall stove in one
corner decorated with the same. The eastern end of the
apartment was adorned with an exquisite small group carved in
oak, representing the carpenter’s shop at Nazareth, with
the Holy Child instructed by Joseph in the use of tools, and the
Mother sitting with her book, “pondering these things in
her heart.” All around were blocks of wood and
carvings in varying states of progress—some scarcely shaped
out, and others in perfect completion. And the subjects
were equally various. Here was an adoring angel with folded
wings, clasped hands, and rapt face; here a majestic head of an
apostle or prophet; here a lovely virgin saint, seeming to play
smilingly with the instrument of her martyrdom; here a grotesque
<i>miserere</i> group, illustrating a fairy tale, or caricaturing
a popular fable here a beauteous festoon of flowers and fruit,
emulating nature in all save colour; and on the work-table
itself, growing under the master’s hand, was a long wreath,
entirely composed of leaves and seed-vessels in their quaint and
beauteous forms—the heart-shaped shepherd’s purse,
the mask-like skull-cap, and the crowned urn of the
henbane. The starred cap of the poppy was actually being
shaped under the tool, copied from a green capsule, surmounted
with purple velvety rays, which, together with its rough and wavy
leaf, was held in the hand of a young maiden who knelt by the
table, watching the work with eager interest.</p>
<p>She was not a beautiful girl—not one of those whose
“bright eyes rain influence, and judge the
prize.” She was too small, too slight, too retiring
for such a position. If there was something lily-like in
her drooping grace, it was not the queen-lily of the garden that
she resembled, but the retiring lily of the valley—so
purely, transparently white was her skin, scarcely tinted by a
roseate blush on the cheek, so tender and modest the whole effect
of her slender figure, and the soft, downcast, pensive brown
eyes, utterly dissimilar in hue from those of all her friends and
kindred, except perhaps the bright, quick ones of her uncle, the
master-carver. Otherwise, his portly form, open visage, and
good-natured stateliness, as well as his furred cap and gold
chain, were thoroughly those of the German burgomaster of the
fifteenth century; but those glittering black eyes had not ceased
to betray their French, or rather Walloon, origin, though for
several generations back the family had been settled at
Ulm. Perhaps, too, it was Walloon quickness and readiness
of wit that had made them, so soon as they became affiliated, so
prominent in all the councils of the good free city, and so noted
for excellence in art and learning. Indeed the present head
of the family, Master Gottfried Sorel, was so much esteemed for
his learning that he had once had serious thoughts of terming
himself Magister Gothofredus Oxalicus, and might have carried it
out but for the very decided objections of his wife, Dame
Johanna, and his little niece, Christina, to being dubbed by any
such surname.</p>
<p>Master Gottfried had had a scapegrace younger brother named
Hugh, who had scorned both books and tools, had been the plague
of the workshop, and, instead of coming back from his wandering
year of improvement, had joined a band of roving
Lanzknechts. No more had been heard of him for a dozen or
fifteen years, when he suddenly arrived at the paternal mansion
at Ulm, half dead with intermittent fever, and with a young,
broken-hearted, and nearly expiring wife, his spoil in his
Italian campaigns. His rude affection had utterly failed to
console her for her desolated home and slaughtered kindred, and
it had so soon turned to brutality that, when brought to
comparative peace and rest in his brother’s home, there was
nothing left for the poor Italian but to lie down and die,
commending her babe in broken German to Hausfrau Johanna, and
blessing Master Gottfried for his flowing Latin assurances that
the child should be to them even as the little maiden who was
lying in the God’s acre upon the hillside.</p>
<p>And verily the little Christina had been a precious gift to
the bereaved couple. Her father had no sooner recovered
than he returned to his roving life, and, except for a report
that he had been seen among the retainers of one of the robber
barons of the Swabian Alps, nothing had been heard of him; and
Master Gottfried only hoped to be spared the actual pain and
scandal of knowing when his eyes were blinded and his head swept
off at a blow, or when he was tumbled headlong into a moat,
suspended from a tree, or broken on the wheel: a choice of fates
that was sure sooner or later to befall him. Meantime, both
the burgomeister and burgomeisterinn did their utmost to forget
that the gentle little girl was not their own; they set all their
hopes and joys on her, and, making her supply the place at once
of son and daughter, they bred her up in all the refinements and
accomplishments in which the free citizens of Germany took the
lead in the middle and latter part of the fifteenth
century. To aid her aunt in all house-wifely arts, to
prepare dainty food and varied liquors, and to spin, weave, and
broider, was only a part of Christina’s training; her uncle
likewise set great store by her sweet Italian voice, and caused
her to be carefully taught to sing and play on the lute, and he
likewise delighted in hearing her read aloud to him from the
hereditary store of MSS. and from the dark volumes that began to
proceed from the press. Nay, Master Gottfried had made
experiments in printing and wood-engraving on his own account,
and had found no head so intelligent, no hand so desirous to aid
him, as his little Christina’s, who, in all that needed
taste and skill rather than strength, was worth all his prentices
and journeymen together. Some fine bold wood-cuts had been
produced by their joint efforts; but these less important
occupations had of late been set aside by the engrossing interest
of the interior fittings of the great “Dome Kirk,”
which for nearly a century had been rising by the united
exertions of the burghers, without any assistance from
without. The foundation had been laid in 1377; and at
length, in the year of grace 1472, the crown of the apse had been
closed in, and matters were so forward that Master
Gottfried’s stall work was already in requisition for the
choir.</p>
<p>“Three cubits more,” he reckoned.
“Child, hast thou found me fruits enough for the completing
of this border?”</p>
<p>“O yes, mine uncle. I have the wild rosehip, and
the flat shield of the moonwort, and a pea-pod, and more whose
names I know not. But should they all be seed and
fruit?”</p>
<p>“Yea, truly, my Stina, for this wreath shall speak of
the goodly fruits of a completed life.”</p>
<p>“Even as that which you carved in spring told of the
blossom and fair promise of youth,” returned the
maiden. “Methinks the one is the most beautiful, as
it ought to be;” then, after a little pause, and some
reckoning, “I have scarce seed-pods enough in store, uncle;
might we not seek some rarer shapes in the herb-garden of Master
Gerhard, the physician? He, too, might tell me the names of
some of these.”</p>
<p>“True, child; or we might ride into the country beyond
the walls, and seek them. What, little one, wouldst thou
not?”</p>
<p>“So we go not far,” faltered Christina,
colouring.</p>
<p>“Ha, thou hast not forgotten the fright thy companions
had from the Schlangenwald reitern when gathering Maydew?
Fear not, little coward; if we go beyond the suburbs we will take
Hans and Peter with their halberts. But I believe thy silly
little heart can scarce be free for enjoyment if it can fancy a
Reiter within a dozen leagues of thee.”</p>
<p>“At your side I would not fear. That is, I would
not vex thee by my folly, and I might forget it,” replied
Christina, looking down.</p>
<p>“My gentle child!” the old man said
approvingly. “Moreover, if our good Raiser has his
way, we shall soon be free of the reitern of Schlangenwald, and
Adlerstein, and all the rest of the mouse-trap barons. He
is hoping to form a league of us free imperial cities with all
the more reasonable and honest nobles, to preserve the peace of
the country. Even now a letter from him was read in the
Town Hall to that effect; and, when all are united against them,
my lords-mousers must needs become pledged to the league, or go
down before it.”</p>
<p>“Ah! that will be well,” cried Christina.
“Then will our wagons be no longer set upon at the
Debateable Ford by Schlangenwald or Adlerstein; and our wares
will come safely, and there will be wealth enough to raise our
spire! O uncle, what a day of joy will that be when Our
Lady’s great statue will be set on the summit!”</p>
<p>“A day that I shall scarce see, and it will be well if
thou dost,” returned her uncle, “unless the hearts of
the burghers of Ulm return to the liberality of their fathers,
who devised that spire! But what trampling do I
hear?”</p>
<p>There was indeed a sudden confusion in the house, and, before
the uncle and niece could rise, the door was opened by a
prosperous apple-faced dame, exclaiming in a hasty whisper,
“Housefather, O Housefather, there are a troop of reitern
at the door, dismounting already;” and, as the master came
forward, brushing from his furred vest the shavings and dust of
his work, she added in a more furtive, startled accent,
“and, if I mistake not, one is thy brother!”</p>
<p>“He is welcome,” replied Master Gottfried, in his
cheery fearless voice; “he brought us a choice gift last
time he came; and it may be he is ready to seek peace among us
after his wanderings. Come hither, Christina, my little
one; it is well to be abashed, but thou art not a child who need
fear to meet a father.”</p>
<p>Christina’s extreme timidity, however, made her pale and
crimson by turns, perhaps by the infection of anxiety from her
aunt, who could not conceal a certain dissatisfaction and alarm,
as the maiden, led on either side by her adopted parents, thus
advanced from the little studio into a handsomely-carved wooden
gallery, projecting into a great wainscoated room, with a broad
carved stair leading down into it. Down this stair the
three proceeded, and reached the stone hall that lay beyond it,
just as there entered from the trellised porch, that covered the
steps into the street, a thin wiry man, in a worn and greasy buff
suit, guarded on the breast and arms with rusty steel, and a
battered helmet with the vizor up, disclosing a weather-beaten
bronzed face, with somewhat wild dark eyes, and a huge grizzled
moustache forming a straight line over his lips. Altogether
he was a complete model of the lawless Reiter or Lanzknecht, the
terror of Swabia, and the bugbear of Christina’s
imagination. The poor child’s heart died within her
as she perceived the mutual recognition between her uncle and the
new comer; and, while Master Gottfried held out his hands with a
cordial greeting of “Welcome, home, brother Hugh,”
she trembled from head to foot, as she sank on her knees, and
murmured, “Your blessing, honoured father.”</p>
<p>“Ha? What, this is my girl? What says
she? My blessing, eh? There then, thou hast it,
child, such as I have to give, though they’ll tell thee at
Adlerstein that I am more wont to give the other sort of
blessing! Now, give me a kiss, girl, and let me see
thee! How now!” as he folded her in his rough arms;
“thou art a mere feather, as slight as our sick Jungfrau
herself.” And then, regarding her, as she stood
drooping, “Thou art not half the woman thy mother
was—she was stately and straight as a column, and tall
withal.”</p>
<p>“True!” replied Hausfrau Johanna, in a marked
tone; “but both she and her poor babe had been so harassed
and wasted with long journeys and hardships, that with all our
care of our Christina, she has never been strong or
well-grown. The marvel is that she lived at all.”</p>
<p>“Our Christina is not beautiful, we know,” added
her uncle, reassuringly taking her hand; “but she is a good
and meek maiden.”</p>
<p>“Well, well,” returned the Lanzknecht, “she
will answer the purpose well enough, or better than if she were
fair enough to set all our fellows together by the ears for
her. Camilla, I say—no, what’s her name,
Christina?—put up thy gear and be ready to start with me
to-morrow morning for Adlerstein.”</p>
<p>“For Adlerstein?” re-echoed the housemother, in a
tone of horrified dismay; and Christina would have dropped on the
floor but for her uncle’s sustaining hand, and the cheering
glance with which he met her imploring look.</p>
<p>“Let us come up to the gallery, and understand what you
desire, brother,” said Master Gottfried, gravely.
“Fill the cup of greeting, Hans. Your followers shall
be entertained in the hall,” he added.</p>
<p>“Ay, ay,” quoth Hugh, “I will show you
reason over a goblet of the old Rosenburg. Is it all gone
yet, brother Goetz? No? I reckon there would not be
the scouring of a glass left of it in a week if it were at
Adlerstein.”</p>
<p>So saying, the trooper crossed the lower room, which contained
a huge tiled baking oven, various brilliantly-burnished cooking
utensils, and a great carved cupboard like a wooden bedstead,
and, passing the door of the bathroom, clanked up the oaken
stairs to the gallery, the reception-room of the house. It
had tapestry hangings to the wall, and cushions both to the
carved chairs and deep windows, which looked out into the street,
the whole storey projecting into close proximity with the
corresponding apartment of the Syndic Moritz, the goldsmith on
the opposite side. An oaken table stood in the centre, and
the gallery was adorned with a dresser, displaying not only
bright pewter, but goblets and drinking cups of
beautifully-shaped and coloured glass, and saltcellars, tankards,
&c. of gold and silver.</p>
<p>“Just as it was in the old man’s time,” said
the soldier, throwing himself into the housefather’s
chair. “A handful of Lanzknechts would make short
work with your pots and pans, good sister Johanna.”</p>
<p>“Heaven forbid!” said poor Johanna under her
breath. “Much good they do you, up in a row there,
making you a slave to furbishing them. There’s more
sense in a chair like this—that does rest a man’s
bones. Here, Camilla, girl, unlace my helmet! What,
know’st not how? What is a woman made for but to let
a soldier free of his trappings? Thou hast done it!
There! Now my boots,” stretching out his legs.</p>
<p>“Hans shall draw off your boots, fair brother,”
began the dame; but poor Christina, the more anxious to
propitiate him in little things, because of the horror and dread
with which his main purpose inspired her, was already on her
knees, pulling with her small quivering hands at the long
steel-guarded boot—a task to which she would have been
utterly inadequate, but for some lazy assistance from her
father’s other foot. She further brought a pair of
her uncle’s furred slippers, while Reiter Hugh proceeded to
dangle one of the boots in the air, expatiating on its frail
condition, and expressing his intention of getting a new pair
from Master Matthias, the sutor, ere he should leave Ulm on the
morrow. Then, again, came the dreaded subject; his daughter
must go with him.</p>
<p>“What would you with Christina, brother?” gravely
asked Master Gottfried, seating himself on the opposite side of
the stove, while out of sight the frightened girl herself knelt
on the floor, her head on her aunt’s knees, trying to
derive comfort from Dame Johanna’s clasping hands, and
vehement murmurs that they would not let their child be taken
from them. Alas! these assurances were little in accordance
with Hugh’s rough reply, “And what is it to you what
I do with mine own?”</p>
<p>“Only this, that, having bred her up as my child and
intended heiress, I might have some voice.”</p>
<p>“Oh! in choosing her mate! Some mincing artificer,
I trow, fiddling away with wood and wire to make gauds for the
fair-day! Hast got him here? If I like him, and she
likes him, I’ll bring her back when her work is
done.”</p>
<p>“There is no such person as yet in the case,” said
Gottfried. “Christina is not yet seventeen, and I
would take my time to find an honest, pious burgher, who will
value this precious jewel of mine.”</p>
<p>“And let her polish his flagons to the end of her
days,” laughed Hugh grimly, but manifestly somewhat
influenced by the notion of his brother’s wealth.
“What, hast no child of thine own?” he added.</p>
<p>“None, save in Paradise,” answered Gottfried,
crossing himself. “And thus, if Christina should
remain with me, and be such as I would have her, then, brother,
my wealth, after myself and my good housewife, shall be hers,
with due provision for thee, if thou shouldst weary of thy wild
life. Otherwise,” he added, looking down, and
speaking in an under tone, “my poor savings should go to
the completion of the Dome Kirk.”</p>
<p>“And who told thee, Goetz, that I would do ought with
the girl that should hinder her from being the very same fat,
sourkrout-cooking, pewter-scrubbing housewife of thy mind’s
eye?”</p>
<p>“I have heard nothing of thy designs as yet, brother
Hugh, save that thou wouldst take her to Adlerstein, which men
greatly belie if it be not a nest of robbers.”</p>
<p>“Aha! thou hast heard of Adlerstein! We have made
the backs of your jolly merchants tingle as well as they could
through their well-lined doublets! Ulm knows of Adlerstein,
and the Debateable Ford!”</p>
<p>“It knows little to its credit,” said Gottfried,
gravely; “and it knows also that the Emperor is about to
make a combination against all the Swabian robber-holds, and that
such as join not in it will fare the worse.”</p>
<p>“Let Kaiser Fritz catch his bear ere he sells its
hide! He has never tried to mount the Eagle’s
Ladder! Why, man, Adlerstein might be held against five
hundred men by sister Johanna with her rock and spindle!
’Tis a free barony, Master Gottfried, I tell thee—has
never sworn allegiance to Kaiser or Duke of Swabia either!
Freiherr Eberhard is as much a king on his own rock as Kaiser
Fritz ever was of the Romans, and more too, for I never could
find out that they thought much of our king at Rome; and, as to
gainsaying our old Freiherr, one might as well leap over the
abyss at once.”</p>
<p>“Yes, those old free barons are pitiless tyrants,”
said Gottfried, “and I scarce think I can understand thee
aright when I hear thee say thou wouldst carry thy daughter to
such an abode.”</p>
<p>“It is the Freiherr’s command,” returned
Hugh. “Look you, they have had wondrous ill-luck with
their children; the Freiherrinn Kunigunde has had a dozen at
least, and only two are alive, my young Freiherr and my young
Lady Ermentrude; and no wonder, you would say, if you could see
the gracious Freiherrinn, for surely Dame Holda made a blunder
when she fished her out of the fountain woman instead of
man. She is Adlerstein herself by birth, married her
cousin, and is prouder and more dour than our old Freiherr
himself—fitter far to handle shield than swaddled
babe. And now our Jungfrau has fallen into a pining waste,
that ’tis a pity to see how her cheeks have fallen away,
and how she mopes and fades. Now, the old Freiherr and her
brother, they both dote on her, and would do anything for
her. They thought she was bewitched, so we took old Mother
Ilsebill and tried her with the ordeal of water; but, look you,
she sank as innocent as a puppy dog, and Ursel was at fault to
fix on any one else. Then one day, when I looked into the
chamber, I saw the poor maiden sitting, with her head hanging
down, as if ’twas too heavy for her, on a high-backed
chair, no rest for her feet, and the wind blowing keen all round
her, and nothing to taste but scorched beef, or black bread and
sour wine, and her mother rating her for foolish fancies that
gave trouble. And, when my young Freiherr was bemoaning
himself that we could not hear of a Jew physician passing our way
to catch and bring up to cure her, I said to him at last that no
doctor could do for her what gentle tendance and nursing would,
for what the poor maiden needed was to be cosseted and laid down
softly, and fed with broths and possets, and all that women know
how to do with one another. A proper scowl and hard words I
got from my gracious Lady, for wanting to put burgher softness
into an Adlerstein; but my old lord and his son opened on the
scent at once. ‘Thou hast a daughter?’ quoth
the Freiherr. ‘So please your gracious
lordship,’ quoth I; ‘that is, if she still lives, for
I left her a puny infant.’ ‘Well,’ said
my lord, ‘if thou wilt bring her here, and her care
restores my daughter to health and strength, then will I make
thee my body squire, with a right to a fourth part of all the
spoil, and feed for two horses in my stable.’ And
young Freiherr Eberhard gave his word upon it.”</p>
<p>Gottfried suggested that a sick nurse was the person required
rather than a child like Christina; but, as Hugh truly observed,
no nurse would voluntarily go to Adlerstein, and it was no use to
wait for the hopes of capturing one by raid or foray. His
daughter was at his own disposal, and her services would be
repaid by personal advantages to himself which he was not
disposed to forego; in effect these were the only means that the
baron had of requiting any attendance upon his daughter.</p>
<p>The citizens of old Germany had the strongest and most
stringent ideas of parental authority, and regarded daughters as
absolute chattels of their father; and Master Gottfried Sorel,
though he alone had done the part of a parent to his niece, felt
entirely unable to withstand the nearer claim, except by
representations; and these fell utterly disregarded, as in truth
every counsel had hitherto done, upon the ears of Reiter Hugh,
ever since he had emerged from his swaddling clothes. The
plentiful supper, full cup of wine, the confections, the soft
chair, together perhaps with his brother’s grave speech,
soon, however, had the effect of sending him into a doze, whence
he started to accept civilly the proposal of being installed in
the stranger’s room, where he was speedily snoring between
two feather beds.</p>
<p>Then there could be freedom of speech in the gallery, where
the uncle and aunt held anxious counsel over the poor little
dark-tressed head that still lay upon good Johanna’s
knees. The dame was indignant and resolute: “Take the
child back with him into a very nest of robbers!—her own
innocent dove whom they had shielded from all evil like a very
nun in a cloister! She should as soon think of yielding her
up to be borne off by the great Satan himself with his horns and
hoofs.”</p>
<p>“Hugh is her father, housewife,” said the
master-carver.</p>
<p>“The right of parents is with those that have done the
duty of parents,” returned Johanna. “What said
the kid in the fable to the goat that claimed her from the sheep
that bred her up? I am ashamed of you, housefather, for not
better loving your own niece.”</p>
<p>“Heaven knows how I love her,” said Gottfried, as
the sweet face was raised up to him with a look acquitting him of
the charge, and he bent to smooth back the silken hair, and kiss
the ivory brow; “but Heaven also knows that I see no means
of withholding her from one whose claim is closer than my
own—none save one; and to that even thou, housemother,
wouldst not have me resort.”</p>
<p>“What is it?” asked the dame, sharply, yet with
some fear.</p>
<p>“To denounce him to the burgomasters as one of the
Adlerstein retainers who robbed Philipp der Schmidt, and have him
fast laid by the heels.”</p>
<p>Christina shuddered, and Dame Johanna herself recoiled; but
presently exclaimed, “Nay, you could not do that, good man,
but wherefore not threaten him therewith? Stand at his
bedside in early dawn, and tell him that, if he be not off ere
daylight with both his cut-throats, the halberdiers will be upon
him.”</p>
<p>“Threaten what I neither could nor would perform,
mother? That were a shrewish resource.”</p>
<p>“Yet would it save the child,” muttered
Johanna. But, in the meantime, Christina was rising from
the floor, and stood before them with loose hair, tearful eyes,
and wet, flushed cheeks. “It must be thus,” she
said, in a low, but not unsteady voice. “I can bear
it better since I have heard of the poor young lady, sick and
with none to care for her. I will go with my father; it is
my duty. I will do my best; but oh! uncle, so work with him
that he may bring me back again.”</p>
<p>“This from thee, Stina!” exclaimed her aunt;
“from thee who art sick for fear of a
lanzknecht!”</p>
<p>“The saints will be with me, and you will pray for
me,” said Christina, still trembling.</p>
<p>“I tell thee, child, thou knowst not what these vile
dens are. Heaven forfend thou shouldst!” exclaimed
her aunt. “Go only to Father Balthazar, housefather,
and see if he doth not call it a sending of a lamb among
wolves.”</p>
<p>“Mind’st thou the carving I did for Father
Balthazar’s own oratory?” replied Master
Gottfried.</p>
<p>“I talk not of carving! I talk of our
child!” said the dame, petulantly.</p>
<p>“<i>Ut agnus inter lupos</i>,” softly said
Gottfried, looking tenderly, though sadly, at his niece, who not
only understood the quotation, but well remembered the carving of
the cross-marked lamb going forth from its fold among the howling
wolves.</p>
<p>“Alas! I am not an apostle,” said she.</p>
<p>“Nay, but, in the path of duty, ’tis the same hand
that sends thee forth,” answered her uncle, “and the
same will guard thee.”</p>
<p>“Duty, indeed!” exclaimed Johanna. “As
if any duty could lead that silly helpless child among that herd
of evil men, and women yet worse, with a good-for-nothing father,
who would sell her for a good horse to the first dissolute Junker
who fell in his way.”</p>
<p>“I will take care that he knows it is worth his while to
restore her safe to us. Nor do I think so ill of Hugh as
thou dost, mother. And, for the rest, Heaven and the saints
and her own discretion must be her guard till she shall return to
us.”</p>
<p>“How can Heaven be expected to protect her when you are
flying in its face by not taking counsel with Father
Balthazar?”</p>
<p>“That shalt thou do,” replied Gottfried, readily,
secure that Father Balthazar would see the matter in the same
light as himself, and tranquillize the good woman. It was
not yet so late but that a servant could be despatched with a
request that Father Balthazar, who lived not many houses off in
the same street, would favour the Burgomeisterinn Sorel by coming
to speak with her. In a few minutes he appeared,—an
aged man, with a sensible face, of the fresh pure bloom preserved
by a temperate life. He was a secular parish-priest, and,
as well as his friend Master Gottfried, held greatly by the views
left by the famous Strasburg preacher, Master John Tauler.
After the good housemother had, in strong terms, laid the case
before him, she expected a trenchant decision on her own side,
but, to her surprise and disappointment, he declared that Master
Gottfried was right, and that, unless Hugh Sorel demanded
anything absolutely sinful of his daughter, it was needful that
she should submit. He repeated, in stronger terms, the
assurance that she would be protected in the endeavour to do
right, and the Divine promises which he quoted from the Latin
Scriptures gave some comfort to the niece, who understood them,
while they impressed the aunt, who did not. There was
always the hope that, whether the young lady died or recovered,
the conclusion of her illness would be the term of
Christina’s stay at Adlerstein, and with this trust Johanna
must content herself. The priest took leave, after
appointing with Christina to meet her in the confessional early
in the morning before mass; and half the night was spent by the
aunt and niece in preparing Christina’s wardrobe for her
sudden journey.</p>
<p>Many a tear was shed over the tokens of the little services
she was wont to render, her half-done works, and pleasant studies
so suddenly broken off, and all the time Hausfrau Johanna was
running on with a lecture on the diligent preservation of her
maiden discretion, with plentiful warnings against swaggering
men-at-arms, drunken lanzknechts, and, above all, against young
barons, who most assuredly could mean no good by any burgher
maiden. The good aunt blessed the saints that her Stina was
likely only to be lovely in affectionate home eyes; but, for that
matter, idle men, shut up in a castle, with nothing but mischief
to think of, would be dangerous to Little Three Eyes herself, and
Christina had best never stir a yard from her lady’s chair,
when forced to meet them. All this was interspersed with
motherly advice how to treat the sick lady, and receipts for
cordials and possets; for Johanna began to regard the case as a
sort of second-hand one of her own. Nay, she even turned it
over in her mind whether she should not offer herself as the Lady
Ermentrude’s sick-nurse, as being a less dangerous
commodity than her little niece: but fears for the well-being of
the master-carver, and his Wirthschaft, and still more the notion
of gossip Gertrude Grundt hearing that she had ridden off with a
wild lanzknecht, made her at once reject the plan, without even
mentioning it to her husband or his niece.</p>
<p>By the time Hugh Sorel rolled out from between his feather
beds, and was about to don his greasy buff, a handsome new suit,
finished point device, and a pair of huge boots to correspond,
had been laid by his bedside.</p>
<p>“Ho, ho! Master Goetz,” said he, as he
stumbled into the Stube, “I see thy game. Thou
wouldst make it worth my while to visit the father-house at
Ulm?”</p>
<p>“It shall be worth thy while, indeed, if thou bringest
me back my white dove,” was Gottfried’s answer.</p>
<p>“And how if I bring her back with a strapping reiter
son-in-law?” laughed Hugh. “What welcome should
the fellow receive?”</p>
<p>“That would depend on what he might be,” replied
Gottfried; and Hugh, his love of tormenting a little allayed by
satisfaction in his buff suit, and by an eye to a heavy purse
that lay by his brother’s hand on the table, added,
“Little fear of that. Our fellows would look for
lustier brides than yon little pale face. ’Tis whiter
than ever this morning,—but no tears. That is my
brave girl.”</p>
<p>“Yes, father, I am ready to do your bidding,”
replied Christina, meekly.</p>
<p>“That is well, child. Mark me, no tears. Thy
mother wept day and night, and, when she had wept out her tears,
she was sullen, when I would have been friendly towards
her. It was the worse for her. But, so long as thou
art good daughter to me, thou shalt find me good father to
thee;” and for a moment there was a kindliness in his eye
which made it sufficiently like that of his brother to give some
consolation to the shrinking heart that he was rending from all
it loved; and she steadied her voice for another gentle
profession of obedience, for which she felt strengthened by the
morning’s orisons.</p>
<p>“Well said, child. Now canst sit on old
Nibelung’s croup? His back-bone is somewhat sharper
than if he had battened in a citizen’s stall; but, if thine
aunt can find thee some sort of pillion, I’ll promise thee
the best ride thou hast had since we came from Innspruck, ere
thou canst remember.”</p>
<p>“Christina has her own mule,” replied her uncle,
“without troubling Nibelung to carry double.”</p>
<p>“Ho! her own! An overfed burgomaster sort of a
beast, that will turn restive at the first sight of the
Eagle’s Ladder! However, he may carry her so far,
and, if we cannot get him up the mountain, I shall know what to
do with him,” he muttered to himself.</p>
<p>But Hugh, like many a gentleman after him, was recusant at the
sight of his daughter’s luggage; and yet it only loaded one
sumpter mule, besides forming a few bundles which could be easily
bestowed upon the saddles of his two knappen, while her lute hung
by a silken string on her arm. Both she and her aunt
thought she had been extremely moderate; but his cry was, What
could she want with so much? Her mother had never been
allowed more than would go into a pair of saddle-bags; and his
own Jungfrau—she had never seen so much gear together in
her life; he would be laughed to scorn for his presumption in
bringing such a fine lady into the castle; it would be well if
Freiherr Eberhard’s bride brought half as much.</p>
<p>Still he had a certain pride in it—he was, after all, by
birth and breeding a burgher—and there had been evidently a
softening and civilizing influence in the night spent beneath his
paternal roof, and old habits, and perhaps likewise in the
submission he had met with from his daughter. The
attendants, too, who had been pleased with their quarters,
readily undertook to carry their share of the burthen, and,
though he growled and muttered a little, he at length was won
over to consent, chiefly, as it seemed, by Christina’s
obliging readiness to leave behind the bundle that contained her
holiday kirtle.</p>
<p>He had been spared all needless irritation. Before his
waking, Christina had been at the priest’s cell, and had
received his last blessings and counsels, and she had, on the way
back, exchanged her farewells and tears with her two dearest
friends, Barbara Schmidt, and Regina Grundt, confiding to the
former her cage of doves, and to the latter the myrtle, which,
like every German maiden, she cherished in her window, to supply
her future bridal wreath. Now pale as death, but so
resolutely composed as to be almost disappointing to her
demonstrative aunt, she quietly went through her home partings;
while Hausfrau Johanna adjured her father by all that was sacred
to be a true guardian and protector of the child, and he could
not forbear from a few tormenting auguries about the lanzknecht
son-in-law. Their effect was to make the good dame more
passionate in her embraces and admonitions to Christina to take
care of herself. She would have a mass said every day that
Heaven might have a care of her!</p>
<p>Master Gottfried was going to ride as far as the confines of
the free city’s territory, and his round, sleek,
cream-coloured palfrey, used to ambling in civic processions, was
as great a contrast to raw-boned, wild-eyed Nibelung, all dappled
with misty grey, as was the stately, substantial burgher to his
lean, hungry-looking brother, or Dame Johanna’s dignified,
curled, white poodle, which was forcibly withheld from following
Christina, to the coarse-bristled, wolfish-looking hound who
glared at the household pet with angry and contemptuous eyes, and
made poor Christina’s heart throb with terror whenever it
bounded near her.</p>
<p>Close to her uncle she kept, as beneath the trellised porches
that came down from the projecting gables of the burghers’
houses many a well-known face gazed and nodded, as they took
their way through the crooked streets, many a beggar or poor
widow waved her a blessing. Out into the market-place, with
its clear fountain adorned with arches and statues, past the
rising Dome Kirk, where the swarms of workmen unbonneted to the
master-carver, and the reiter paused with an irreverent sneer at
the small progress made since he could first remember the
building. How poor little Christina’s soul clung to
every cusp of the lacework spire, every arch of the window, each
of which she had hailed as an achievement! The tears had
well-nigh blinded her in a gush of feeling that came on her
unawares, and her mule had his own way as he carried her under
the arch of the tall and beautifully-sculptured bridge tower, and
over the noble bridge across the Danube.</p>
<p>Her uncle spoke much, low and earnestly, to his brother.
She knew it was in commendation of her to his care, and an
endeavour to impress him with a sense of the kind of protection
she would require, and she kept out of earshot. It was
enough for her to see her uncle still, and feel that his
tenderness was with her, and around her. But at last he
drew his rein. “And now, my little one, the daughter
of my heart, I must bid thee farewell,” he said.</p>
<p>Christina could not be restrained from springing from her
mule, and kneeling on the grass to receive his blessing, her face
hidden in her hands, that her father might not see her tears.</p>
<p>“The good God bless thee, my child,” said
Gottfried, who seldom invoked the saints; “bless thee, and
bring thee back in His own good time. Thou hast been a good
child to us; be so to thine own father. Do thy work, and
come back to us again.”</p>
<p>The tears rained down his cheeks, as Christina’s head
lay on his bosom, and then with a last kiss he lifted her again
on her mule, mounted his horse, and turned back to the city, with
his servant.</p>
<p>Hugh was merciful enough to let his daughter gaze long after
the retreating figure ere he summoned her on. All day they
rode, at first through meadow lands and then through more broken,
open ground, where at mid-day they halted, and dined upon the
plentiful fare with which the housemother had provided them, over
which Hugh smacked his lips, and owned that they did live well in
the old town! Could Christina make such sausages?</p>
<p>“Not as well as my aunt.”</p>
<p>“Well, do thy best, and thou wilt win favour with the
baron.”</p>
<p>The evening began to advance, and Christina was very weary, as
the purple mountains that she had long watched with a mixture of
fear and hope began to look more distinct, and the ground was
often in abrupt ascents. Her father, without giving space
for complaints, hurried her on. He must reach the
Debateable Ford ere dark. It was, however, twilight when
they came to an open space, where, at the foot of thickly
forest-clad rising ground, lay an expanse of turf and rich grass,
through which a stream made its way, standing in a wide tranquil
pool as if to rest after its rough course from the
mountains. Above rose, like a dark wall, crag upon crag,
peak on peak, in purple masses, blending with the sky; and Hugh,
pointing upwards to a turreted point, apparently close above
their heads, where a star of light was burning, told her that
there was Adlerstein, and this was the Debateable Ford.</p>
<p>In fact, as he explained, while splashing through the shallow
expanse, the stream had changed its course. It was the
boundary between the lands of Schlangenwald and Adlerstein, but
it had within the last sixty years burst forth in a flood, and
had then declined to return to its own bed, but had flowed in a
fresh channel to the right of the former one. The
Freiherren von Adlerstein claimed the ground to the old channel,
the Graffen von Schlangenwald held that the river was the
landmark; and the dispute had a greater importance than seemed
explained from the worth of the rushy space of ground in
question, for this was the passage of the Italian merchants on
their way from Constance, and every load that was overthrown in
the river was regarded as the lawful prey of the noble on whose
banks the catastrophe befell.</p>
<p>Any freight of goods was anxiously watched by both nobles, and
it was not their fault if no disaster befell the
travellers. Hugh talked of the Schlangenwald marauders with
the bitterness of a deadly feud, but manifestly did not breathe
freely till his whole convoy were safe across both the wet and
the dry channel.</p>
<p>Christina supposed they should now ascend to the castle; but
her father laughed, saying that the castle was not such a step
off as she fancied, and that they must have daylight for the
Eagle’s Stairs. He led the way through the trees, up
ground that she thought mountain already, and finally arrived at
a miserable little hut, which served the purpose of an inn.</p>
<p>He was received there with much obsequiousness, and was
plainly a great authority there. Christina, weary and
frightened, descended from her mule, and was put under the
protection of a wild, rough-looking peasant woman, who stared at
her like something from another world, but at length showed her a
nook behind a mud partition, where she could spread her mantle,
and at least lie down, and tell her beads unseen, if she could
not sleep in the stifling, smoky atmosphere, amid the sounds of
carousal among her father and his fellows.</p>
<p>The great hound came up and smelt to her. His outline
was so-wolfish, that she had nearly screamed: but, more in terror
at the men who might have helped her than even at the beast, she
tried to smooth him with her trembling hand, whispered his name
of “Festhold,” and found him licking her hand, and
wagging his long rough tail. And he finally lay down at her
feet, as though to protect her.</p>
<p>“Is it a sign that good angels will not let me be
hurt?” she thought, and, wearied out, she slept.</p>
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