<h2>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class="GutSmall">SNOW-WREATHS WHEN ’TIS THAW</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Ermentrude</span> had by no means
recovered the ground she had lost, before the winter set in; and
blinding snow came drifting down day and night, rendering the
whole view, above and below, one expanse of white, only broken by
the peaks of rock which were too steep to sustain the snow.
The waterfall lengthened its icicles daily, and the whole court
was heaped with snow, up even to the top of the high steps to the
hall; and thus, Christina was told, would it continue all the
winter. What had previously seemed to her a strangely
door-like window above the porch now became the only mode of
egress, when the barons went out bear or wolf-hunting, or the
younger took his crossbow and hound to provide the wild-fowl,
which, under Christina’s skilful hands, would tempt the
feeble appetite of Ermentrude when she was utterly unable to
touch the salted meats and sausages of the household.</p>
<p>In spite of all endeavours to guard the windows and keep up
the fire, the cold withered the poor child like a fading leaf,
and she needed more and more of tenderness and amusement to
distract her attention from her ailments. Christina’s
resources were unfailing. Out of the softer pine and birch
woods provided for the fire, she carved a set of draughtsmen, and
made a board by ruling squares on the end of a settle, and
painting the alternate ones with a compound of oil and
charcoal. Even the old Baron was delighted with this
contrivance, and the pleasure it gave his daughter. He
remembered playing at draughts in that portion of his youth which
had been a shade more polished, and he felt as if the game were
making Ermentrude more hike a lady. Christina was
encouraged to proceed with a set of chessmen, and the shaping of
their characteristic heads under her dexterous fingers was
watched by Ermentrude like something magical. Indeed, the
young lady entertained the belief that there was no limit to her
attendant’s knowledge or capacity.</p>
<p>Truly there was a greater brightness and clearness beginning
to dawn even upon poor little Ermentrude’s own dull
mind. She took more interest in everything: songs were not
solely lullabies, but she cared to talk them over; tales to which
she would once have been incapable of paying attention were
eagerly sought after; and, above all, the spiritual vacancy that
her mind had hitherto presented was beginning to be filled
up. Christina had brought her own books—a library of
extraordinary extent for a maiden of the fifteenth century, but
which she owed to her uncle’s connexion with the arts of
wood-cutting and printing. A Vulgate from Dr.
Faustus’s own press, a mass book and breviary, Thomas
à Kempis’s <i>Imitation</i> and the <i>Nuremburg
Chronicle</i> all in Latin, and the poetry of the gentle
Minnesinger and bird lover, Walther von Vogelweide, in the
vernacular: these were her stock, which Hausfrau Johanna had
viewed as a foolish encumbrance, and Hugh Sorel would never have
transported to the castle unless they had been so well concealed
in Christina’s kirtles that he had taken them for parts of
her wardrobe.</p>
<p>Most precious were they now, when, out of the reach of all
teaching save her own, she had to infuse into the sinking
girl’s mind the great mysteries of life and death, that so
she might not leave the world without more hope or faith than her
heathen forefathers. For that Ermentrude would live
Christina had never hoped, since that fleeting improvement had
been cut short by the fever of the wine-cup; the look, voice, and
tone had become so completely the same as those of Regina
Grundt’s little sister who had pined and died. She
knew she could not cure, but she could, she felt she could,
comfort, cheer, and soften, and she no longer repined at her
enforced sojourn at Adlerstein. She heartily loved her
charge, and could not bear to think how desolate Ermentrude would
be without her. And now the poor girl had become responsive
to her care. She was infinitely softened in manner, and
treated her parents with forms of respect new to them; she had
learnt even to thank old Ursel, dropped her imperious tone, and
struggled with her petulance; and, towards her brother, the
domineering, uncouth adherence was becoming real, tender
affection; while the dependent, reverent love she bestowed upon
Christina was touching and endearing in the extreme.</p>
<p>Freiherr von Adlerstein saw the change, and congratulated
himself on the effect of having a town-bred bower woman; nay,
spoke of the advantage it would be to his daughter, if he could
persuade himself to make the submission to the Kaiser which the
late improvements decided on at the Diet were rendering more and
more inevitable. <i>Now</i> how happy would be the winner
of his gentle Ermentrude!</p>
<p>Freiherrinn von Adlerstein thought the alteration the mere
change from child to woman, and felt insulted by the supposition
that any one might not have been proud to match with a daughter
of Adlerstein, be she what she might. As to submission to
the Kaiser, that was mere folly and weakness—kaisers,
kings, dukes, and counts had broken their teeth against the rock
of Adlerstein before now! What had come over her husband
and her son to make them cravens?</p>
<p>For Freiherr Eberhard was more strongly convinced than was his
father of the untenableness of their present position. Hugh
Sorel’s reports of what he heard at Ulm had shown that the
league that had been discussed at Regensburg was far more
formidable than anything that had ever previously threatened
Schloss Adlerstein, and that if the Graf von Schlangenwald joined
in the coalition, there would be private malice to direct its
efforts against the Adlerstein family. Feud-letters or
challenges had been made unlawful for ten years, and was not
Adlerstein at feud with the world?</p>
<p>Nor did Eberhard look on the submission with the sullen rage
and grief that his father felt in bringing himself to such a
declension from the pride of his ancestors. What the young
Baron heard up stairs was awakening in him a sense of the
poorness and narrowness of his present life. Ermentrude
never spared him what interested her; and, partly from her lips,
partly through her appeals to her attendant, he had learnt that
life had better things to offer than independence on these bare
rocks, and that homage might open the way to higher and worthier
exploits than preying upon overturned waggons.</p>
<p>Dietrich of Berne and his two ancestors, whose lengthy legend
Christina could sing in a low, soft recitative, were revelations
to him of what she meant by a true knight—the lion in war,
the lamb in peace; the quaint oft-repeated portraits, and still
quainter cities, of the Chronicle, with her explanations and
translations, opened his mind to aspirations for intercourse with
his fellows, for an honourable name, and for esteem in its degree
such as was paid to Sir Parzival, to Karl the Great, or to Rodolf
of Hapsburgh, once a mountain lord like himself. Nay, as
Ermentrude said, stroking his cheek, and smoothing the flaxen
beard, that somehow had become much less rough and tangled than
it used to be, “Some day wilt thou be another Good Freiherr
Eberhard, whom all the country-side loved, and who gave bread at
the castle-gate to all that hungered.”</p>
<p>Her brother believed nothing of her slow declension in
strength, ascribing all the change he saw to the bitter cold, and
seeing but little even of that alteration, though he spent many
hours in her room, holding her in his arms, amusing her, or
talking to her and to Christina. All Christina’s fear
of him was gone. As long as there was no liquor in the
house, and he was his true self, she felt him to be a kind
friend, bound to her by strong sympathy in the love and care for
his sister. She could talk almost as freely before him as
when alone with her young lady; and as Ermentrude’s
religious feelings grew stronger, and were freely expressed to
him, surely his attention was not merely kindness and patience
with the sufferer.</p>
<p>The girl’s soul ripened rapidly under the new influences
during her bodily decay; and, as the days lengthened, and the
stern hold of winter relaxed upon the mountains, Christina looked
with strange admiration upon the expression that had dawned upon
the features once so vacant and dull, and listened with the more
depth of reverence to the sweet words of faith, hope and love,
because she felt that a higher, deeper teaching than she could
give must have come to mould the spirit for the new world to
which it was hastening.</p>
<blockquote><p>“Like an army defeated,<br/>
The snow had retreated,”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>out of the valley, whose rich green shone smiling round the
pool into which the Debateable Ford spread. The waterfall
had burst its icy bonds, and dashed down with redoubled voice,
roaring rather than babbling. Blue and pink
hepaticas—or, as Christina called them,
liver-krauts—had pushed up their starry heads, and had even
been gathered by Sir Eberhard, and laid on his sister’s
pillow. The dark peaks of rock came out all glistening with
moisture, and the snow only retained possession of the deep
hollows and crevices, into which however its retreat was far more
graceful than when, in the city, it was trodden by horse and man,
and soiled with smoke.</p>
<p>Christina dreaded indeed that the roads should be open, but
she could not love the snow; it spoke to her of dreariness,
savagery, and captivity, and she watched the dwindling stripes
with satisfaction, and hailed the fall of the petty avalanches
from one Eagle’s Step to another as her forefathers might
have rejoiced in the defeat of the Frost giants.</p>
<p>But Ermentrude had a love for the white sheet that lay
covering a gorge running up from the ravine. She watched
its diminution day by day with a fancy that she was melting away
with it; and indeed it was on the very day that a succession of
drifting showers had left the sheet alone, and separated it from
the masses of white above, that it first fully dawned upon the
rest of the family that, for the little daughter of the house,
spring was only bringing languor and sinking instead of
recovery.</p>
<p>Then it was that Sir Eberhard first really listened to her
entreaty that she might not die without a priest, and comforted
her by passing his word to her that, if—he would not say
when—the time drew near, he would bring her one of the
priests who had only come from St. Ruprecht’s cloister on
great days, by a sort of sufferance, to say mass at the Blessed
Friedmund’s hermitage chapel.</p>
<p>The time was slow in coming. Easter had passed with
Ermentrude far too ill for Christina to make the effort she had
intended of going to the church, even if she could get no escort
but old Ursel—the sheet of snow had dwindled to a mere
wreath—the ford looked blue in the sunshine—the
cascade tinkled merrily down its rock—mountain primroses
peeped out, when, as Father Norbert came forth from saying his
ill-attended Pentecostal mass, and was parting with the infirm
peasant hermit, a tall figure strode up the pass, and, as the
villagers fell back to make way, stood before the startled
priest, and said, in a voice choked with grief, “Come with
me.”</p>
<p>“Who needs me?” began the astonished monk.</p>
<p>“Follow him not, father!” whispered the
hermit. “It is the young Freiherr.—Oh have
mercy on him, gracious sir; he has done your noble lordships no
wrong.”</p>
<p>“I mean him no ill,” replied Eberhard, clearing
his voice with difficulty; “I would but have him do his
office. Art thou afraid, priest?”</p>
<p>“Who needs my office?” demanded Father
Norbert. “Show me fit cause, and what should I
dread? Wherefore dost thou seek me?”</p>
<p>“For my sister,” replied Eberhard, his voice
thickening again. “My little sister lies at the point
of death, and I have sworn to her that a priest she shall
have. Wilt thou come, or shall I drag thee down the
pass?”</p>
<p>“I come, I come with all my heart, sir knight,”
was the ready response. “A few moments and I am at
your bidding.”</p>
<p>He stepped back into the hermit’s cave, whence a stair
led up to the chapel. The anchorite followed him,
whispering—“Good father, escape! There will be
full time ere he misses you. The north door leads to the
Gemsbock’s Pass; it is open now.”</p>
<p>“Why should I baulk him? Why should I deny my
office to the dying?” said Norbert.</p>
<p>“Alas! holy father, thou art new to this country, and
know’st not these men of blood! It is a snare to make
the convent ransom thee, if not worse. The Freiherrinn is a
fiend for malice, and the Freiherr is excommunicate.”</p>
<p>“I know it, my son,” said Norbert; “but
wherefore should their child perish unassoilzied?”</p>
<p>“Art coming, priest?” shouted Eberhard, from his
stand at the mouth of the cave.</p>
<p>And, as Norbert at once appeared with the pyx and other
appliances that he had gone to fetch, the Freiherr held out his
hand with an offer to “carry his gear for him;” and,
when the monk refused, with an inward shudder at entrusting a
sacred charge to such unhallowed hands, replied, “You will
have work enow for both hands ere the castle is
reached.”</p>
<p>But Father Norbert was by birth a sturdy Switzer, and thought
little of these Swabian Alps; and he climbed after his guide
through the most rugged passages of Eberhard’s shortest and
most perpendicular cut without a moment’s hesitation, and
with agility worthy of a chamois. The young baron turned
for a moment, when the level of the castle had been gained,
perhaps to see whether he were following, but at the same time
came to a sudden, speechless pause.</p>
<p>On the white masses of vapour that floated on the opposite
side of the mountain was traced a gigantic shadowy outline of a
hermit, with head bent eagerly forward, and arm outstretched.</p>
<p>The monk crossed himself. Eberhard stood still for a
moment, and then said, hoarsely,—“The Blessed
Friedmund! He is come for her;” then strode on
towards the postern gate, followed by Brother Norbert, a good
deal reassured both as to the genuineness of the young
Baron’s message and the probable condition of the object of
his journey, since the patron saint of her race was evidently on
the watch to speed her departing spirit.</p>
<p>Sir Eberhard led the way up the turret stairs to the open
door, and the monk entered the death-chamber. The elder
Baron sat near the fire in the large wooden chair, half turned
towards his daughter, as one who must needs be present, but with
his face buried in his hands, unable to endure the
spectacle. Nearer was the tall form of his wife, standing
near the foot of the bed, her stern, harsh features somewhat
softened by the feelings of the moment. Ursel waited at
hand, with tears running down her furrowed cheeks.</p>
<p>For such as these Father Norbert was prepared; but he little
expected to meet so pure and sweet a gaze of reverential welcome
as beamed on him from the soft, dark eyes of the little
white-checked maiden who sat on the bed, holding the sufferer in
her arms. Still less had he anticipated the serene
blessedness that sat on the wasted features of the dying girl,
and all the anguish of labouring breath.</p>
<p>She smiled a smile of joy, held up her hand, and thanked her
brother. Her father scarcely lifted his head, her mother
made a rigid curtsey, and with a grim look of sorrow coming over
her features, laid her hand over the old Baron’s
shoulder. “Come away, Herr Vater,” she said;
“he is going to hear her confession, and make her too holy
for the like of us to touch.”</p>
<p>The old man rose up, and stepped towards his child.
Ermentrude held out her arms to him, and murmured—</p>
<p>“Father, father, pardon me; I would have been a better
daughter if I had only known—” He gathered her
in his arms; he was quite past speaking; and they only heard his
heavy breathing, and one more whisper from
Ermentrude—“And oh! father, one day wilt thou seek to
be absolved?” Whether he answered or not they knew
not; he only gave her repeated kisses, and laid her down on her
pillows, then rushed to the door, and the passionate sobs of the
strong man’s uncontrolled nature might be heard upon the
stair. The parting with the others was not necessarily so
complete, as they were not, like him, under censure of the
Church; but Kunigunde leant down to kiss her; and, in return to
her repetition of her entreaty for pardon, replied, “Thou
hast it, child, if it will ease thy mind; but it is all along of
these new fancies that ever an Adlerstein thought of
pardon. There, there, I blame thee not, poor maid; it thou
wert to die, it may be even best as it is. Now must I to
thy father; he is troubled enough about this gear.”</p>
<p>But when Eberhard moved towards his sister, she turned to the
priest, and said, imploringly, “Not far, not far! Oh!
let them,” pointing to Eberhard and Christina, “let
them not be quite out of sight!”</p>
<p>“Out of hearing is all that is needed, daughter,”
replied the priest; and Ermentrude looked content as Christina
moved towards the empty north turret, where, with the door open,
she was in full view, and Eberhard followed her thither. It
was indeed fully out of earshot of the child’s faint,
gasping confession. Gravely and sadly both stood
there. Christina looked up the hillside for the
snow-wreath. The May sunshine had dissolved it; the green
pass lay sparkling without a vestige of its white coating.
Her eyes full of tears, she pointed the spot out to
Eberhard. He understood; but, leaning towards her, told,
under his breath, of the phantom he had seen. Her eyes
expanded with awe of the supernatural. “It was the
Blessed Friedmund,” said Eberhard. “Never hath
he so greeted one of our race since the pious Freiherrinn
Hildegarde. Maiden, hast thou brought us back a
blessing?”</p>
<p>“Ah! well may she be blessed—well may the saints
stoop to greet her,” murmured Christina, with strangled
voice, scarcely able to control her sobs.</p>
<p>Father Norbert came towards them. The simple confession
had been heard, and he sought the aid of Christina in performing
the last rites of the Church.</p>
<p>“Maiden,” he said to her, “thou hast done a
great and blessed work, such as many a priest might envy
thee.”</p>
<p>Eberhard was not excluded during the final services by which
the soul was to be dismissed from its earthly
dwelling-place. True, he comprehended little of their
import, and nothing of the words, but he gazed meekly, with
uncovered head, and a bewildered look of sadness, while Christina
made her responses and took her part with full intelligence and
deep fervour, sorrowing indeed for the companion who had become
so dear to her, but deeply thankful for the spiritual consolation
that had come at last. Ermentrude lay calm, and, as it
were, already rapt into a higher world, lighting up at the German
portions of the service, and not wholly devoid of comprehension
of the spirit even of the Latin, as indeed she had come to the
border of the region where human tongues and languages are no
more.</p>
<p>She was all but gone when the rite of extreme unction was
completed, and they could only stand round her, Eberhard,
Christina, Ursel, and the old Baroness, who had returned again,
watching the last flutterings of the breath, the window thrown
wide open that nothing might impede the passage of the soul to
the blue vault above.</p>
<p>The priest spoke the beautiful commendation, “Depart, O
Christian soul.” There was a faint gesture in the
midst for Christina to lift her in her arms—a sign to bend
down and kiss her brow—but her last look was for her
brother, her last murmur, “Come after me; be the Good Baron
Ebbo.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />