<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br/> <span class="GutSmall">THE DOUBLE-HEADED EAGLE</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">One</span> summer evening, when shooting
at a bird on a pole was in full exercise in the tilt-yard, the
sports were interrupted by a message from the Provost that a
harbinger had brought tidings that the Imperial court was within
a day’s journey.</p>
<p>All was preparation. Fresh sand had to be strewn on the
arena. New tapestry hangings were to deck the galleries,
the houses and balconies to be brave with drapery, the fountain
in the market-place was to play Rhine wine, all Ulm was astir to
do honour to itself and to the Kaisar, and Ebbo stood amid all
the bustle, drawing lines in the sand with the stock of his
arblast, subject to all that oppressive self-magnification so
frequent in early youth, and which made it seem to him as if the
Kaisar and the King of the Romans were coming to Ulm with the
mere purpose of destroying his independence, and as if the eyes
of all Germany were watching for his humiliation.</p>
<p>“See! see!” suddenly exclaimed Friedel;
“look! there is something among the tracery of the Dome
Kirk Tower. Is it man or bird?”</p>
<p>“Bird, folly! Thou couldst see no bird less than
an eagle from hence,” said Ebbo. “No doubt they
are about to hoist a banner.”</p>
<p>“That is not their wont,” returned Sir
Kasimir.</p>
<p>“I see him,” interrupted Ebbo. “Nay,
but he is a bold climber! We went up to that stage, close
to the balcony, but there’s no footing beyond but crockets
and canopies.”</p>
<p>“And a bit of rotten scaffold,” added
Friedel. “Perhaps he is a builder going to examine
it! Up higher, higher!”</p>
<p>“A builder!” said Ebbo; “a man with a head
and foot like that should be a chamois hunter! Shouldst
thou deem it worse than the Red Eyrie, Friedel?”</p>
<p>“Yea, truly! The depth beneath is plainer!
There would be no climbing there without—”</p>
<p>“Without what, cousin?” asked Wildschloss.</p>
<p>“Without great cause,” said Friedel.
“It is fearful! He is like a fly against the
sky.”</p>
<p>“Beaten again!” muttered Ebbo; “I did think
that none of these town-bred fellows could surpass us when it
came to a giddy height! Who can he be?”</p>
<p>“Look! look!” burst out Friedel. “The
saints protect him! He is on that narrowest topmost
ledge—measuring; his heel is over the parapet—half
his foot!”</p>
<p>“Holding on by the rotten scaffold pole! St.
Barbara be his speed; but he is a brave man!” shouted
Ebbo. “Oh! the pole has broken.”</p>
<p>“Heaven forefend!” cried Wildschloss, with despair
on his face unseen by the boys, for Friedel had hidden his eyes,
and Ebbo was straining his with the intense gaze of horror.
He had carried his glance downwards, following the 380 feet fall
that must be the lot of the adventurer. Then looking up
again he shouted, “I see him! I see him! Praise
to St. Barbara! He is safe! He has caught by the
upright stone work.”</p>
<p>“Where? where? Show me!” cried Wildschloss,
grasping Ebbo’s arm.</p>
<p>“There! clinging to that upright bit of tracery,
stretching his foot out to yonder crocket.”</p>
<p>“I cannot see. Mine eyes swim and dazzle,”
said Wildschloss. “Merciful heavens! is this another
tempting of Providence? How is it with him now,
Ebbo?”</p>
<p>“Swarming down another slender bit of the stone
network. It must be easy now to one who could keep head and
hand steady in such a shock.”</p>
<p>“There!” added Friedel, after a breathless space,
“he is on the lower parapet, whence begins the stair.
Do you know him, sir? Who is he?”</p>
<p>“Either a Venetian mountebank,” said Wildschloss,
“or else there is only one man I know of either so
foolhardy or so steady of head.”</p>
<p>“Be he who he may,” said Ebbo, “he is the
bravest man that ever I beheld. Who is he, Sir
Kasimir?”</p>
<p>“An eagle of higher flight than ours, no doubt,”
said Wildschloss. “But come; we shall reach the Dome
Kirk by the time the climber has wound his way down the turret
stairs, and we shall see what like he is.”</p>
<p>Their coming was well timed, for a small door at the foot of
the tower was just opening to give exit to a very tall knight, in
one of those short Spanish cloaks the collar of which could be
raised so as to conceal the face. He looked to the right
and left, and had one hand raised to put up the collar when he
recognized Sir Kasimir, and, holding out both hands, exclaimed,
“Ha, Adlerstein! well met! I looked to see thee
here. No unbonneting; I am not come yet. I am at
Strasburg, with the Kaisar and the Archduke, and am not here till
we ride in, in purple and in pall by the time the good folk have
hung out their arras, and donned their gold chains, and conned
their speeches, and mounted their mules.”</p>
<p>“Well that their speeches are not over the lykewake of
his kingly kaisarly highness,” gravely returned Sir
Kasimir.</p>
<p>“Ha! Thou sawest? I came out here to avoid
the gaping throng, who don’t know what a hunter can
do. I have been in worse case in the Tyrol.
Snowdrifts are worse footing than stone vine leaves.”</p>
<p>“Where abides your highness?” asked
Wildschloss.</p>
<p>“I ride back again to the halting-place for the night,
and meet my father in time to do my part in the pageant. I
was sick of the addresses, and, moreover, the purse-proud
Flemings have made such a stiff little fop of my poor boy that I
am ashamed to look at him, or hear his French accent. So I
rode off to get a view of this notable Dom in peace, ere it be
bedizened in holiday garb; and one can’t stir without all
the Chapter waddling after one.”</p>
<p>“Your highness has found means of distancing
them.”</p>
<p>“Why, truly, the Prior would scarce delight in the view
from yonder parapet,” laughed his highness.
“Ha! Adlerstein, where didst get such a perfect pair
of pages? I would I could match my hounds as
well.”</p>
<p>“They are no pages of mine, so please you,” said
the knight; “rather this is the head of my name. Let
me present to your kingly highness the Freiherr von
Adlerstein.”</p>
<p>“Thou dost not thyself distinguish between them!”
said Maximilian, as Friedmund stepped back, putting forward
Eberhard, whose bright, lively smile of interest and admiration
had been the cause of his cousin’s mistake. They
would have doffed their caps and bent the knee, but were hastily
checked by Maximilian. “No, no, Junkern, I shall owe
you no thanks for bringing all the street on
me!—that’s enough. Reserve the rest for Kaisar
Fritz.” Then, familiarly taking Sir Kasimir’s
arm, he walked on, saying, “I remember now. Thou
wentest after an inheritance from the old Mouser of the
Debateable Ford, and wert ousted by a couple of lusty boys sprung
of a peasant wedlock.”</p>
<p>“Nay, my lord, of a burgher lady, fair as she is wise
and virtuous; who, spite of all hindrances, has bred up these
youths in all good and noble nurture.”</p>
<p>“Is this so?” said the king, turning sharp round
on the twins. “Are ye minded to quit freebooting, and
come a crusading against the Turks with me?”</p>
<p>“Everywhere with such a leader!” enthusiastically
exclaimed Ebbo.</p>
<p>“What? up there?” said Maximilian, smiling.
“Thou hast the tread of a chamois-hunter.”</p>
<p>“Friedel has been on the Red Eyrie,” exclaimed
Ebbo; then, thinking he had spoken foolishly, he coloured.</p>
<p>“Which is the Red Eyrie?” good-humouredly asked
the king.</p>
<p>“It is the crag above our castle,” said Friedel,
modestly.</p>
<p>“None other has been there,” added Ebbo,
perceiving his auditor’s interest; “but he saw the
eagle flying away with a poor widow’s kid, and the sight
must have given him wings, for we never could find the same path;
but here is one of the feathers he brought
down”—taking off his cap so as to show a feather
rather the worse for wear, and sheltered behind a fresher
one.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Friedel, “thou shouldst say that
I came to a ledge where I had like to have stayed all night, but
that ye all came out with men and ropes.”</p>
<p>“We know what such a case is!” said the
king. “It has chanced to us to hang between heaven
and earth; I’ve even had the Holy Sacrament held up for my
last pious gaze by those who gave me up for lost on the
mountain-side. Adlerstein? The peak above the
Braunwasser? Some day shall ye show me this eyrie of yours,
and we will see whether we can amaze our cousins the
eagles. We see you at our father’s court
to-morrow?” he graciously added, and Ebbo gave a ready bow
of acquiescence.</p>
<p>“There,” said the king, as after their dismissal
he walked on with Sir Kasimir, “never blame me for rashness
and imprudence. Here has this height of the steeple proved
the height of policy. It has made a loyal subject of a
Mouser on the spot.”</p>
<p>“Pray Heaven it may have won a heart, true though
proud!” said Wildschloss; “but mousing was cured
before by the wise training of the mother. Your highness
will have taken out the sting of submission, and you will scarce
find more faithful subjects.”</p>
<p>“How old are the Junkern?”</p>
<p>“Some sixteen years, your highness.”</p>
<p>“That is what living among mountains does for a
lad. Why could not those thrice-accursed Flemish towns let
me breed up my boy to be good for something in the mountains,
instead of getting duck-footed and muddy-witted in the
fens?”</p>
<p>In the meantime Ebbo and Friedel were returning home in that
sort of passion of enthusiasm that ingenuous boyhood feels when
first brought into contact with greatness or brilliant
qualities.</p>
<p>And brilliance was the striking point in Maximilian. The
Last of the Knights, in spite of his many defects, was, by
personal qualities, and the hereditary influence of
long-descended rank, verily a king of men in aspect and
demeanour, even when most careless and simple. He was at
this time a year or two past thirty, unusually tall, and with a
form at once majestic and full of vigour and activity; a noble,
fair, though sunburnt countenance; eyes of dark gray, almost
black; long fair hair, a keen aquiline nose, a lip only beginning
to lengthen to the characteristic Austrian feature, an expression
always lofty, sometimes dreamy, and yet at the same time full of
acuteness and humour. His abilities were of the highest
order, his purposes, especially at this period of his life, most
noble and becoming in the first prince of Christendom; and, if
his life were a failure, and his reputation unworthy of his
endowments, the cause seems to have been in great measure the
bewilderment and confusion that unusual gifts sometimes cause to
their possessor, whose sight their conflicting illumination
dazzles so as to impair his steadiness of aim, while their
contending gleams light him into various directions, so that one
object is deserted for another ere its completion. Thus
Maximilian cuts a figure in history far inferior to that made by
his grandson, Charles V., whom he nevertheless excelled in every
personal quality, except the most needful of all, force of
character; and, in like manner, his remote descendant, the
narrow-minded Ferdinand of Styria, gained his ends, though the
able and brilliant Joseph II. was to die broken-hearted, calling
his reign a failure and mistake. However, such terms as
these could not be applied to Maximilian with regard to home
affairs. He has had hard measure from those who have only
regarded his vacillating foreign policy, especially with respect
to Italy—ever the temptation and the bane of Austria; but
even here much of his uncertain conduct was owing to the
unfulfilled promises of what he himself called his “realm
of kings,” and a sovereign can only justly be estimated by
his domestic policy. The contrast of the empire before his
time with the subsequent Germany is that of chaos with
order. Since the death of Friedrich II. the Imperial title
had been a mockery, making the prince who chanced to bear it a
mere mark for the spite of his rivals; there was no centre of
justice, no appeal; everybody might make war on everybody, with
the sole preliminary of exchanging a challenge;
“fist-right” was the acknowledged law of the land;
and, except in the free cities, and under such a happy accident
as a right-minded prince here and there, the state of Germany
seems to have been rather worse than that of Scotland from Bruce
to the union of the Crowns. Under Maximilian, the Diet
became an effective council, fist-right was abolished,
independent robber-lords put down, civilization began to effect
an entrance, the system of circles was arranged, and the empire
again became a leading power in Europe, instead of a mere vortex
of disorder and misrule. Never would Charles V. have held
the position he occupied had he come after an ordinary man,
instead of after an able and sagacious reformer like that
Maximilian who is popularly regarded as a fantastic caricature of
a knight-errant, marred by avarice and weakness of purpose.</p>
<p>At the juncture of which we are writing, none of
Maximilian’s less worthy qualities had appeared; he had not
been rendered shifty and unscrupulous by difficulties and
disappointments in money matters, and had not found it impossible
to keep many of the promises he had given in all good
faith. He stood forth as the hope of Germany, in salient
contrast to the feeble and avaricious father, who was felt to be
the only obstacle in the way of his noble designs of establishing
peace and good discipline in the empire, and conducting a general
crusade against the Turks, whose progress was the most
threatening peril of Christendom. His fame was, of course,
frequently discussed among the citizens, with whom he was very
popular, not only from his ease and freedom of manner, but
because his graceful tastes, his love of painting, sculpture,
architecture, and the mechanical turn which made him an improver
of fire-arms and a patron of painting and engraving, rendered
their society more agreeable to him than that of his dull,
barbarous nobility. Ebbo had heard so much of the
perfections of the King of the Romans as to be prepared to hate
him; but the boy, as we have seen, was of a generous, sensitive
nature, peculiarly prone to enthusiastic impressions of
veneration; and Maximilian’s high-spirited manhood,
personal fascination, and individual kindness had so entirely
taken him by surprise, that he talked of him all the evening in a
more fervid manner than did even Friedel, though both could
scarcely rest for their anticipations of seeing him on the morrow
in the full state of his entry.</p>
<p>Richly clad, and mounted on cream-coloured steeds, nearly as
much alike as themselves, the twins were a pleasant sight for a
proud mother’s eyes, as they rode out to take their place
in the procession that was to welcome the royal guests.
Master Sorel, in ample gown, richly furred, with medal and chain
of office, likewise went forth as Guildmaster; and Christina,
with smiling lips and liquid eyes, recollected the days when to
see him in such array was her keenest pleasure, and the utmost
splendour her fancy could depict.</p>
<p>Arrayed, as her sons loved to see her, in black velvet, and
with pearl-bordered cap, Christina sat by her aunt in the
tapestried balcony, and between them stood or sat little Thekla
von Adlerstein Wildschloss, whose father had entrusted her to
their care, to see the procession pass by. A rich Eastern
carpet, of gorgeous colouring, covered the upper balustrade, over
which they leant, in somewhat close quarters with the
scarlet-bodiced dames of the opposite house, but with ample space
for sight up and down the rows of smiling expectants at each
balcony, or window, equally gay with hangings, while the bells of
all the churches clashed forth their gayest chimes, and fitful
bursts of music were borne upon the breeze. Little Thekla
danced in the narrow space for very glee, and wondered why any
one should live in a cloister when the world was so wide and so
fair. And Dame Johanna tried to say something pious of
worldly temptations, and the cloister shelter; but Thekla
interrupted her, and, clinging to Christina, exclaimed,
“Nay, but I am always naughty with Mother Ludmilla in the
convent, and I know I should never be naughty out here with you
and the barons; I should be so happy.”</p>
<p>“Hush! hush! little one; here they come!”</p>
<p>On they came—stout lanzknechts first, the city guard
with steel helmets unadorned, buff suits, and bearing either
harquebuses, halberts, or those handsome but terrible weapons,
morning stars. Then followed guild after guild, each
preceded by the banner bearing its homely emblem—the
cauldron of the smiths, the hose of the clothiers, the helmet of
the armourers, the bason of the barbers, the boot of the sutors;
even the sausage of the cooks, and the shoe of the shoeblacks,
were re-presented, as by men who gloried in the calling in which
they did life’s duty and task.</p>
<p>First in each of these bands marched the prentices, stout,
broad, flat-faced lads, from twenty to fourteen years of age,
with hair like tow hanging from under their blue caps, staves in
their hands, and knives at their girdles. Behind them came
the journeymen, in leathern jerkins and steel caps, and armed
with halberts or cross-bows; men of all ages, from sixty to one
or two and twenty, and many of the younger ones with foreign
countenances and garb betokening that they were strangers
spending part of their wandering years in studying the Ulm
fashions of their craft. Each trade showed a large array of
these juniors; but the masters who came behind were comparatively
few, mostly elderly, long-gowned, gold-chained personages, with a
weight of solid dignity on their wise brows—men who
respected themselves, made others respect them, and kept their
city a peaceful, well-ordered haven, while storms raged in the
realm beyond—men too who had raised to the glory of their
God a temple, not indeed fulfilling the original design, but a
noble effort, and grand monument of burgher devotion.</p>
<p>Then came the ragged regiment of scholars, wild lads from
every part of Germany and Switzerland, some wan and pinched with
hardship and privation, others sturdy, selfish rogues, evidently
well able to take care of themselves. There were many rude,
tyrannical-looking lads among the older lads; and, though here
and there a studious, earnest face might be remarked, the
prospect of Germany’s future priests and teachers was not
encouraging. And what a searching ordeal was awaiting those
careless lads when the voice of one, as yet still a student,
should ring through Germany!</p>
<p>Contrasting with these ill-kempt pupils marched the grave
professors and teachers, in square ecclesiastic caps and long
gowns, whose colours marked their degrees and the Universities
that had conferred them—some thin, some portly, some
jocund, others dreamy; some observing all the humours around,
others still intent on Aristotelian ethics; all men of high fame,
with doctor at the beginning of their names, and “or”
or “us” at the close of them. After them rode
the magistracy, a burgomaster from each guild, and the Herr
Provost himself—as great a potentate within his own walls
as the Doge of Venice or of Genoa, or perhaps greater, because
less jealously hampered. In this dignified group was Uncle
Gottfried, by complacent nod and smile acknowledging his good
wife and niece, who indeed had received many a previous glance
and bow from friends passing beneath. But Master Sorel was
no new spectacle in a civic procession, and the sight of him was
only a pleasant fillip to the excitement of his ladies.</p>
<p>Here was jingling of spurs and trampling of horses; heraldic
achievements showed upon the banners, round which rode the
mail-clad retainers of country nobles who had mustered to meet
their lords. Then, with still more of clank and tramp, rode
a bright-faced troop of lads, with feathered caps and gay
mantles. Young Count Rudiger looked up with courteous
salutation; and just behind him, with smiling lips and upraised
faces, were the pair whose dark eyes, dark hair, and slender
forms rendered them conspicuous among the fair Teutonic
youth. Each cap was taken off and waved, and each pair of
lustrous eyes glanced up pleasure and exultation at the sight of
the lovely “Mutterlein.” And she? The
pageant was well-nigh over to her, save for heartily agreeing
with Aunt Johanna that there was not a young noble of them all to
compare with the twin Barons of Adlerstein! However, she
knew she should be called to account if she did not look well at
“the Romish King;” besides, Thekla was shrieking with
delight at the sight of her father, tall and splendid on his
mighty black charger, with a smile for his child, and for the
lady a bow so low and deferential that it was evidently remarked
by those at whose approach every lady in the balconies was
rising, every head in the street was bared.</p>
<p>A tall, thin, shrivelled, but exceedingly stately old man on a
gray horse was in the centre. Clad in a purple velvet
mantle, and bowing as he went, he looked truly the Kaisar, to
whom stately courtesy was second nature. On one side, in
black and gold, with the jewel of the Golden Fleece on his
breast, rode Maximilian, responding gracefully to the salutations
of the people, but his keen gray eye roving in search of the
object of Sir Kasimir’s salute, and lighting on Christina
with such a rapid, amused glance of discovery that, in her
confusion, she missed what excited Dame Johanna’s rapturous
admiration—the handsome boy on the Emperor’s other
side, a fair, plump lad, the young sovereign of the Low
Countries, beautiful in feature and complexion, but lacking the
fire and the loftiness that characterized his father’s
countenance. The train was closed by the Reitern of the
Emperor’s guard—steel-clad mercenaries who were
looked on with no friendly eyes by the few gazers in the street
who had been left behind in the general rush to keep up with the
attractive part of the show.</p>
<p>Pageants of elaborate mythological character impeded the
imperial progress at every stage, and it was full two hours ere
the two youths returned, heartily weary of the lengthened
ceremonial, and laughing at having actually seen the King of the
Romans enduring to be conducted from shrine to shrine in the
cathedral by a large proportion of its dignitaries. Ebbo
was sure he had caught an archly disconsolate wink!</p>
<p>Ebbo had to dress for the banquet spread in the
town-hall. Space was wanting for the concourse of guests,
and Master Sorel had decided that the younger Baron should not be
included in the invitation. Friedel pardoned him more
easily than did Ebbo, who not only resented any slight to his
double, but in his fits of shy pride needed the aid of his
readier and brighter other self. But it might not be, and
Sir Kasimir and Master Gottfried alone accompanied him, hoping
that he would not look as wild as a hawk, and would do nothing to
diminish the favourable impression he had made on the King of the
Romans.</p>
<p>Late, according to mediæval hours, was the return, and
Ebbo spoke in a tone of elation. “The Kaisar was most
gracious, and the king knew me,” he said, “and asked
for thee, Friedel, saying one of us was nought without the
other. But thou wilt go to-morrow, for we are to receive
knighthood.”</p>
<p>“Already!” exclaimed Friedel, a bright glow
rushing to his cheek.</p>
<p>“Yea,” said Ebbo. “The Romish king
said somewhat about waiting to win our spurs; but the Kaisar said
I was in a position to take rank as a knight, and I thanked him,
so thou shouldst share the honour.”</p>
<p>“The Kaisar,” said Wildschloss, “is not the
man to let a knight’s fee slip between his fingers.
The king would have kept off their grip, and reserved you for
knighthood from his own sword under the banner of the empire; but
there is no help for it now, and you must make your vassals send
in their dues.”</p>
<p>“My vassals?” said Ebbo; “what could they
send?”</p>
<p>“The aid customary on the knighthood of the
heir.”</p>
<p>“But there is—there is nothing!” said
Friedel. “They can scarce pay meal and poultry enough
for our daily fare; and if we were to flay them alive, we should
not get sixty groschen from the whole.”</p>
<p>“True enough! Knighthood must wait till we win
it,” said Ebbo, gloomily.</p>
<p>“Nay, it is accepted,” said Wildschloss.
“The Kaisar loves his iron chest too well to let you go
back. You must be ready with your round sum to the
chancellor, and your spur-money and your fee to the heralds, and
largess to the crowd.”</p>
<p>“Mother, the dowry,” said Ebbo.</p>
<p>“At your service, my son,” said Christina, anxious
to chase the cloud from his brow.</p>
<p>But it was a deep haul, for the avaricious Friedrich IV. made
exorbitant charges for the knighting his young nobles; and Ebbo
soon saw that the improvements at home must suffer for the
honours that would have been so much better won than bought.</p>
<p>“If your vassals cannot aid, yet may not your
kinsman—?” began Wildschloss.</p>
<p>“No!” interrupted Ebbo, lashed up to hot
indignation. “No, sir! Rather will my mother,
brother, and I ride back this very night to unfettered liberty on
our mountain, without obligation to any living man.”</p>
<p>“Less hotly, Sir Baron,” said Master Gottfried,
gravely. “You broke in on your noble godfather, and
you had not heard me speak. You and your brother are the
old man’s only heirs, nor do ye incur any obligation that
need fret you by forestalling what would be your just
right. I will see my nephews as well equipped as any young
baron of them.”</p>
<p>The mother looked anxiously at Ebbo. He bent his head
with rising colour, and said, “Thanks, kind uncle.
From <i>you</i> I have learnt to look on goodness as
fatherly.”</p>
<p>“Only,” added Friedel, “if the Baron’s
station renders knighthood fitting for him, surely I might remain
his esquire.”</p>
<p>“Never, Friedel!” cried his brother.
“Without thee, nothing.”</p>
<p>“Well said, Freiherr,” said Master Sorel;
“what becomes the one becomes the other. I would not
have thee left out, my Friedel, since I cannot leave thee the
mysteries of my craft.”</p>
<p>“To-morrow!” said Friedel, gravely.
“Then must the vigil be kept to-night.”</p>
<p>“The boy thinks these are the days of Roland and Karl
the Great,” said Wildschloss. “He would fain
watch his arms in the moonlight in the Dome Kirk! Alas! no,
my Friedel! Knighthood in these days smacks more of bezants
than of deeds of prowess.”</p>
<p>“Unbearable fellow!” cried Ebbo, when he had
latched the door of the room he shared with his brother.
“First, holding up my inexperience to scorn! As
though the Kaisar knew not better than he what befits me!
Then trying to buy my silence and my mother’s gratitude
with his hateful advance of gold. As if I did not loathe
him enough without! If I pay my homage, and sign the League
to-morrow, it will be purely that he may not plume himself on our
holding our own by sufferance, in deference to him.”</p>
<p>“You will sign it—you will do homage!”
exclaimed Friedel. “How rejoiced the mother will
be.”</p>
<p>“I had rather depend at once—if depend I
must—on yonder dignified Kaisar and that noble king than on
our meddling kinsman,” said Ebbo. “I shall be
his equal now! Ay, and no more classed with the court
Junkern I was with to-day. The dullards! No one
reasonable thing know they but the chase. One had been at
Florence; and when I asked him of the Baptistery and rare Giotto
of whom my uncle told us, he asked if he were a knight of the
Medici. All he knew was that there were ortolans at Ser
Lorenzo’s table; and he and the rest of them talked over
wines as many and as hard to call as the roll of
Æneas’s comrades; and when each one must drink to her
he loved best, and I said I loved none like my sweet mother, they
gibed me for a simple dutiful mountaineer. Yea, and when
the servants brought a bowl, I thought it was a wholesome draught
of spring water after all their hot wines and fripperies.
Pah!”</p>
<p>“The rose-water, Ebbo! No wonder they
laughed! Why, the bowls for our fingers came round at the
banquet here.”</p>
<p>“Ah! thou hast eyes for their finikin manners! Yet
what know they of what we used to long for in polished
life! Not one but vowed he abhorred books, and cursed Dr.
Faustus for multiplying them. I may not know the taste of a
stew, nor the fit of a glove, as they do, but I trust I bear a
less empty brain. And the young Netherlanders that came
with the Archduke were worst of all. They got together and
gabbled French, and treated the German Junkern with the very same
sauce with which they had served me. The Archduke laughed
with them, and when the Provost addressed him, made as if he
understood not, till his father heard, and thundered out,
‘How now, Philip! Deaf on thy German ear? I
tell thee, Herr Probst, he knows his own tongue as well as thou
or I, and thou shalt hear him speak as becomes the son of an
Austrian hunter.’ That Romish king is a knight of
knights, Friedel. I could follow him to the world’s
end. I wonder whether he will ever come to climb the Red
Eyrie.”</p>
<p>“It does not seem the world’s end when one is
there,” said Friedel, with strange yearnings in his
breast.</p>
<p>“Even the Dom steeple never rose to its full
height,” he added, standing in the window, and gazing
pensively into the summer sky. “Oh, Ebbo! this
knighthood has come very suddenly after our many dreams; and,
even though its outward tokens be lowered, it is still a holy,
awful thing.”</p>
<p>Nurtured in mountain solitude, on romance transmitted through
the pure medium of his mother’s mind, and his spirit
untainted by contact with the world, Friedmund von Adlerstein
looked on chivalry with the temper of a Percival or Galahad, and
regarded it with a sacred awe. Eberhard, though treating it
more as a matter of business, was like enough to his brother to
enter into the force of the vows they were about to make; and if
the young Barons of Adlerstein did not perform the night-watch
over their armour, yet they kept a vigil that impressed their own
minds as deeply, and in early morn they went to confession and
mass ere the gay parts of the city were astir.</p>
<p>“Sweet niece,” said Master Sorel, as he saw the
brothers’ grave, earnest looks, “thou hast done well
by these youths; yet I doubt me at times whether they be not too
much lifted out of this veritable world of ours.”</p>
<p>“Ah, fair uncle, were they not above it, how could they
face its temptations?”</p>
<p>“True, my child; but how will it be when they find how
lightly others treat what to them is so solemn?”</p>
<p>“There must be temptations for them, above all for
Ebbo,” said Christina, “but still, when I remember
how my heart sank when their grandmother tried to bring them up
to love crime as sport and glory, I cannot but trust that the
good work will be wrought out, and my dream fulfilled, that they
may be lights on earth and stars in heaven. Even this
matter of homage, that seemed so hard to my Ebbo, has now been
made easy to him by his veneration for the Emperor.”</p>
<p>It was even so. If the sense that he was the last
veritable <i>free</i> lord of Adlerstein rushed over Ebbo, he
was, on the other hand, overmastered by the kingliness of
Friedrich and Maximilian, and was aware that this submission,
while depriving him of little or no actual power, brought him
into relations with the civilized world, and opened to him paths
of true honour. So the ceremonies were gone through, his
oath of allegiance was made, investiture was granted to him by
the delivery of a sword, and both he and Friedel were dubbed
knights. Then they shared another banquet, where, as away
from the Junkern and among elder men, Ebbo was happier than the
day before. Some of the knights seemed to him as rude and
ignorant as the Schneiderlein, but no one talked to him nor
observed his manners, and he could listen to conversation on war
and policy such as interested him far more than the subjects
affected by youths a little older than himself. Their
lonely life and training had rendered the minds of the brothers
as much in advance of their fellows as they were behind them in
knowledge of the world.</p>
<p>The crass obtuseness of most of the nobility made it a relief
to return to the usual habits of the Sorel household when the
court had left Ulm. Friedmund, anxious to prove that his
new honours were not to alter his home demeanour, was drawing on
a block of wood from a tinted pen-and-ink sketch; Ebbo was deeply
engaged with a newly-acquired copy of Virgil; and their mother
was embroidering some draperies for the long-neglected castle
chapel,—all sitting, as Master Gottfried loved to have
them, in his studio, whence he had a few moments before been
called away, when, as the door slowly opened, a voice was heard
that made both lads start and rise.</p>
<p>“Yea, truly, Herr Guildmaster, I would see these
masterpieces. Ha! What have you here for
masterpieces? Our two new double-ganger
knights?” And Maximilian entered in a simple
riding-dress, attended by Master Gottfried, and by Sir Kasimir of
Adlerstein Wildschloss.</p>
<p>Christina would fain have slipped out unperceived, but the
king was already removing his cap from his fair curling locks,
and bending his head as he said, “The Frau Freiherrinn von
Adlerstein? Fair lady, I greet you well, and thank you in
the Kaisar’s name and mine for having bred up for us two
true and loyal subjects.”</p>
<p>“May they so prove themselves, my liege!” said
Christina, bending low.</p>
<p>“And not only loyal-hearted,” added Maximilian,
smiling, “but ready-brained, which is less frequent among
our youth. What is thy book, young knight? Virgilius
Maro? Dost thou read the Latin?” he added, in that
tongue.</p>
<p>“Not as well as we wish, your kingly highness,”
readily answered Ebbo, in Latin, “having learnt solely of
our mother till we came hither.”</p>
<p>“Never fear for that, my young blade,” laughed the
king. “Knowst not that the wiseacres thought me too
dull for teaching till I was past ten years? And what is
thy double about? Drawing on wood? How now! An
able draughtsman, my young knight?”</p>
<p>“My nephew Sir Friedmund is good to the old man,”
said Gottfried, himself almost regretting the lad’s
avocation. “My eyes are failing me, and he is aiding
me with the graving of this border. He has the knack that
no teaching will impart to any of my present
journeymen.”</p>
<p>“Born, not made,” quoth Maximilian.
“Nay,” as Friedel coloured deeper at the sense that
Ebbo was ashamed of him, “no blushes, my boy; it is a rare
gift. I can make a hundred knights any day, but the
Almighty alone can make a genius. It was this very matter
of graving that led me hither.”</p>
<p>For Maximilian had a passion for composition, and chiefly for
autobiography, and his head was full of that curious performance,
<i>Der Weisse König</i>, which occupied many of the leisure
moments of his life, being dictated to his former writing-master,
Marcus Sauerwein. He had already designed the portrayal of
his father as the old white king, and himself as the young white
king, in a series of woodcuts illustrating the narrative which
culminated in the one romance of his life, his brief happy
marriage with Mary of Burgundy; and he continued eagerly to talk
to Master Gottfried about the mystery of graving, and the various
scenes in which he wished to depict himself learning languages
from native speakers—Czech from a peasant with a basket of
eggs, English from the exiles at the Burgundian court, who had
also taught him the use of the longbow, building from architects
and masons, painting from artists, and, more imaginatively,
astrology from a wonderful flaming sphere in the sky, and the
black art from a witch inspired by a long-tailed demon perched on
her shoulder. No doubt “the young white king”
made an exceedingly prominent figure in the discourse, but it was
so quaint and so brilliant that it did not need the charm of
royal condescension to entrance the young knights, who stood
silent auditors. Ebbo at least was convinced that no
species of knowledge or skill was viewed by his kaisarly kingship
as beneath his dignity; but still he feared Friedel’s being
seized upon to be as prime illustrator to the royal
autobiography—a lot to which, with all his devotion to
Maximilian, he could hardly have consigned his brother, in the
certainty that the jeers of the ruder nobles would pursue the
craftsman baron.</p>
<p>However, for the present, Maximilian was keen enough to see
that the boy’s mechanical skill was not as yet equal to his
genius; so he only encouraged him to practise, adding that he
heard there was a rare lad, one Dürer, at Nuremburg, whose
productions were already wonderful. “And what is
this?” he asked; “what is the daintily-carved group I
see yonder?”</p>
<p>“Your highness means, ‘The Dove in the
Eagle’s Nest,’” said Kasimir. “It
is the work of my young kinsmen, and their appropriate
device.”</p>
<p>“As well chosen as carved,” said Maximilian,
examining it. “Well is it that a city dove should now
and then find her way to the eyrie. Some of my nobles would
cut my throat for the heresy, but I am safe here, eh, Sir
Kasimir? Fare ye well, ye dove-trained eaglets. We
will know one another better when we bear the cross against the
infidel.”</p>
<p>The brothers kissed his hand, and he descended the steps from
the hall door. Ere he had gone far, he turned round upon
Sir Kasimir with a merry smile: “A very white and tender
dove indeed, and one who might easily nestle in another eyrie,
methinks.”</p>
<p>“Deems your kingly highness that consent could be
won?” asked Wildschloss</p>
<p>“From the Kaisar? Pfui, man, thou knowst as well
as I do the golden key to his consent. So thou wouldst risk
thy luck again! Thou hast no male heir.”</p>
<p>“And I would fain give my child a mother who would deal
well with her. Nay, to say sooth, that gentle, innocent
face has dwelt with me for many years. But for my
pre-contract, I had striven long ago to win her, and had been a
happier man, mayhap. And, now I have seen what she has made
of her sons, I feel I could scarce find her match among our
nobility.”</p>
<p>“Nor elsewhere,” said the king; “and I
honour thee for not being so besotted in our German haughtiness
as not to see that it is our free cities that make refined and
discreet dames. I give you good speed, Adlerstein; but, if
I read aright the brow of one at least of these young fellows,
thou wilt scarce have a willing or obedient stepson.”</p>
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