<h2>CHAPTER XXIV<br/> <span class="GutSmall">OLD IRON AND NEW STEEL</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> clear sunshine of early summer
was becoming low on the hillsides. Sparkling and dimpling,
the clear amber-coloured stream of the Braunwasser rippled along
its stony bed, winding in and out among the rocks so humbly that
it seemed to be mocked by the wide span of the arch that crossed
it in all the might of massive bulwarks, and dignified masonry of
huge stones.</p>
<p>Some way above, a clearing of the wood below the mountain
showed huts, and labourers apparently constructing a mill so as
to take advantage of the leap of the water from the height above;
and, on the left bank, an enclosure was traced out, within which
were rising the walls of a small church, while the noise of the
mallet and chisel echoed back from the mountain side, and masons,
white with stone-dust, swarmed around.</p>
<p>Across the bridge came a pilgrim, marked out as such by hat,
wallet, and long staff, on which he leant heavily, stumbling
along as if both halting and footsore, and bending as one bowed
down by past toil and present fatigue. Pausing in the
centre, he gazed round with a strange disconcerted air—at
the castle on the terraced hillside, looking down with bright
eyes of glass glittering in the sunshine, and lighting up even
that grim old pile; at the banner hanging so lazily that the
tinctures and bearings were hidden in the folds; then at the
crags, rosy purple in evening glow, rising in broad step above
step up to the Red Eyrie, bathed in sunset majesty of dark
crimson; and above it the sweep of the descending eagle,
discernible for a moment in the pearly light of the sky.
The pilgrim’s eye lighted up as he watched it; but then,
looking down at bridge, and church, and trodden wheel-tracked
path, he frowned with perplexity, and each painful step grew
heavier and more uncertain.</p>
<p>Near the opposite side of the enclosure there waited a tall,
rugged-looking, elderly man with two horses—one an aged
mare, mane, tail, and all of the snowiest silvery white; the
other a little shaggy dark mountain pony, with a
pad-saddle. And close to the bank of the stream might be
seen its owner, a little girl of some seven years, whose tight
round lace cap had slipped back, as well as her blue silk hood,
and exposed a profusion of loose flaxen hair, and a plump,
innocent face, intent upon some private little bit of building of
her own with some pebbles from the brook, and some mortar filched
from the operations above, to the great detriment of her soft
pinky fingers.</p>
<p>The pilgrim looked at her unperceived, and for a moment was
about to address her; but then, with a strange air of repulsion,
dragged himself on to the porch of the rising church, where,
seated on a block of stone, he could look into the
interior. All was unfinished, but the portion which had
made the most progress was a chantry-chapel opposite to the
porch, and containing what were evidently designed to be two
monuments. One was merely blocked out, but it showed the
outline of a warrior, bearing a shield on which a coiled serpent
was rudely sketched in red chalk. The other, in a much more
forward state, was actually under the hands of the sculptor, and
represented a slender youth, almost a boy, though in the full
armour of a knight, his hands clasped on his breast over a lute,
an eagle on his shield, an eagle-crest on his helmet, and, under
the arcade supporting the altar-tomb, shields alternately of
eagles and doves.</p>
<p>But the strangest thing was that this young knight seemed to
be sitting for his own effigy. The very same face, under
the very same helmet, only with the varied, warm hues of life,
instead of in cold white marble, was to be seen on the shoulders
of a young man in a gray cloth dress, with a black scarf passing
from shoulder to waist, crossed by a sword-belt. The hair
was hidden by the helmet, whose raised visor showed keen,
finely-cut features, and a pair of dark brown eyes, of somewhat
grave and sad expression.</p>
<p>“Have a care, Lucas,” he presently said; “I
fear me you are chiselling away too much. It must be a
softer, more rounded face than mine has become; and, above all,
let it not catch any saddened look. Keep that air of solemn
waiting in glad hope, as though he saw the dawn through his
closed eyelids, and were about to take up his song
again!”</p>
<p>“Verily, Herr Freiherr, now the likeness is so far
forward, the actual sight of you may lead me to mar it rather
than mend.”</p>
<p>“So is it well that this should be the last
sitting. I am to set forth for Genoa in another week.
If I cannot get letters from the Kaisar, I shall go in search of
him, that he may see that my lameness is no more an
impediment.”</p>
<p>The pilgrim passed his hand over his face, as though to
dissipate a bewildering dream; and just then the little girl, all
flushed and dabbled, flew rushing up from the stream, but came to
a sudden standstill at sight of the stranger, who at length
addressed her. “Little lady,” he said,
“is this the Debateable Ford?”</p>
<p>“No; now it is the Friendly Bridge,” said the
child.</p>
<p>The pilgrim started, as with a pang of recollection.
“And what is yonder castle?” he further asked.</p>
<p>“Schloss Adlerstein,” she said, proudly.</p>
<p>“And you are the little lady of Adlerstein
Wildschloss?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” again she answered; and then, gathering
courage—“You are a holy pilgrim! Come up to the
castle for supper and rest.” And then, springing past
him, she flew up to the knight, crying, “Herr Freiherr,
here is a holy pilgrim, weary and hungry. Let us take him
home to the mother.”</p>
<p>“Did he take thee for a wild elf?” said the young
man, with an elder-brotherly endeavour to right the little cap
that had slidden under the chin, and to push back the
unmanageable wealth of hair under it, ere he rose; and he came
forward and spoke with kind courtesy, as he observed the
wanderer’s worn air and feeble step. “Dost need
a night’s lodging, holy palmer? My mother will make
thee welcome, if thou canst climb as high as the castle
yonder.”</p>
<p>The pilgrim made an obeisance, but, instead of answering,
demanded hastily, “See I yonder the bearing of
Schlangenwald?”</p>
<p>“Even so. Schloss Schlangenwald is about a league
further on, and thou wilt find a kind reception there, if thither
thou art bent.”</p>
<p>“Is that Graff Wolfgang’s tomb?” still
eagerly pursued the pilgrim; and receiving a sign in the
affirmative, “What was his end?”</p>
<p>“He fell in a skirmish.”</p>
<p>“By whose hand?”</p>
<p>“By mine.”</p>
<p>“Ha!” and the pilgrim surveyed him with
undisguised astonishment; then, without another word, took up his
staff and limped out of the building, but not on the road to
Schlangenwald. It was nearly a quarter of an hour
afterwards that he was overtaken by the young knight and the
little lady on their horses, just where the new road to the
castle parted from the old way by the Eagle’s Ladder.
The knight reined up as he saw the poor man’s slow, painful
steps, and said, “So thou art not bound for
Schlangenwald?”</p>
<p>“I would to the village, so please you—to the
shrine of the Blessed Friedmund.”</p>
<p>“Nay, at this rate thou wilt not be there till
midnight,” said the young knight, springing off his horse;
“thou canst never brook our sharp stones! See,
Thekla, do thou ride on with Heinz to tell the mother I am
bringing her a holy pilgrim to tend. And thou, good man,
mount my old gray. Fear not; she is steady and sure-footed,
and hath of late been used to a lame rider. Ah! that is
well. Thou hast been in the saddle before.”</p>
<p>To go afoot for the sake of giving a lift to a holy wayfarer
was one of the most esteemed acts of piety of the Middle Age, so
that no one durst object to it, and the palmer did no more than
utter a suppressed murmur of acknowledgment as he seated himself
on horseback, the young knight walking by his rein.
“But what is this?” he exclaimed, almost with
dismay. “A road to the castle up here!”</p>
<p>“Yes, we find it a great convenience. Thou art
surely from these parts?” added the knight.</p>
<p>“I was a man-at-arms in the service of the Baron,”
was the answer, in an odd, muffled tone.</p>
<p>“What!—of my grandfather!” was the
exclamation.</p>
<p>“No!” gruffly. “Of old Freiherr
Eberhard. Not of any of the Wildschloss crew.”</p>
<p>“But I am not a Wildschloss! I am grandson to
Freiherr Eberhard! Oh, wast thou with him and my father
when they were set upon in the hostel?” he cried, looking
eagerly up to the pilgrim; but the man kept his broad-leaved hat
slouched over his face, and only muttered, “The son of
Christina!” the last word so low that Ebbo was not sure
that he caught it, and the next moment the old warrior exclaimed
exultingly, “And you have had vengeance on them!
When—how—where?”</p>
<p>“Last harvest-tide—at the Debateable
Strand,” said Ebbo, never able to speak of the encounter
without a weight at his heart, but drawn on by the earnestness of
the old foe of Schlangenwald. “It was a meeting in
full career—lances broken, sword-stroke on either
hand. I was sore wounded, but my sword went through his
collar-bone.”</p>
<p>“Well struck! good stroke!” cried the pilgrim, in
rapture. “And with that sword?”</p>
<p>“With this sword. Didst know it?” said Ebbo,
drawing the weapon, and giving it to the old man, who held it for
a few moments, weighed it affectionately, and with a long low
sigh restored it, saying, “It is well. You and that
blade have paid off the score. I should be content.
Let me dismount. I know my way to the hermitage.”</p>
<p>“Nay, what is this?” said Ebbo; “thou must
have rest and food. The hermitage is empty, scarce
habitable. My mother will not be balked of the care of thy
bleeding feet.”</p>
<p>“But let me go, ere I bring evil on you all. I can
pray up there, and save my soul, but I cannot see it
all.”</p>
<p>“See what?” said Ebbo, again trying to see his
guest’s face. “There may be changes, but an old
faithful follower of my father’s must ever be
welcome.”</p>
<p>“Not when his wife has taken a new lord,” growled
the stranger, bitterly, “and he a Wildschloss! Young
man, I could have pardoned aught else!”</p>
<p>“I know not who you may be who talk of pardoning my
lady-mother,” said Ebbo, “but new lord she has
neither taken nor will take. She has refused every offer;
and, now that Schlangenwald with his last breath confessed that
he slew not my father, but sold him to the Turks, I have been
only awaiting recovery from my wound to go in search of
him.”</p>
<p>“Who then is yonder child, who told me she was
Wildschloss?”</p>
<p>“That child,” said Ebbo, with half a smile and
half a blush, “is my wife, the daughter of Wildschloss, who
prayed me to espouse her thus early, that so my mother might
bring her up.”</p>
<p>By this time they had reached the castle court, now a
well-kept, lordly-looking enclosure, where the pilgrim looked
about him as one bewildered. He was so infirm that Ebbo
carefully helped him up the stone stairs to the hall, where he
already saw his mother prepared for the hospitable reception of
the palmer. Leaving him at the entrance, Ebbo crossed the
hall to say to her in a low voice, “This pilgrim is one of
the old lanzknechts of my grandfather’s time. I
wonder whether you or Heinz will know him. One of the old
sort—supremely discontented at change.”</p>
<p>“And thou hast walked up, and wearied thyself!”
exclaimed Christina, grieved to see her son’s halting
step.</p>
<p>“A rest will soon cure that,” said Ebbo, seating
himself as he spoke on a settle near the hall fire; but the next
moment a strange wild low shriek from his mother made him start
up and spring to her side. She stood with hands clasped,
and wondering eyes. The pilgrim—his hat on the
ground, his white head and rugged face displayed—was gazing
as though devouring her with his eyes, murmuring,
“Unchanged! unchanged!”</p>
<p>“What is this!” thundered the young Baron.
“What are you doing to the lady?”</p>
<p>“Hush! hush, Ebbo!” exclaimed Christina.
“It is thy father! On thy knees! Thy father is
come! It is our son, my own lord. Oh, embrace
him! Kneel to him, Ebbo!” she wildly cried.</p>
<p>“Hold, mother,” said Ebbo, keeping his arm round
her, though she struggled against him, for he felt some doubts as
he looked back at his walk with the stranger, and remembered
Heinz’s want of recognition. “Is it certain
that this is indeed my father?”</p>
<p>“Oh, Ebbo,” was the cry of poor Christina, almost
beside herself, “how could I not be sure? I know
him! I feel it! Oh, my lord, bear with him. It
is his wont to be so loving! Ebbo, cannot you see it is
himself?”</p>
<p>“The young fellow is right,” said the stranger,
slowly. “I will answer all he may demand.”</p>
<p>“Forgive me,” said Ebbo, abashed, “forgive
me;” and, as his mother broke from him, he fell upon his
knee; but he only heard his father’s cry, “Ah!
Stine, Stine, thou alone art the same,” and, looking up,
saw her, with her face hidden in the white beard, quivering with
a rapture such as he had never seen in her before. It
seemed long to him ere she looked up again in her husband’s
face to sob on: “My son! Oh! my beautiful
twins! Our son! Oh, see him, dear lord!”
And the pilgrim turned to hear Ebbo’s “Pardon,
honoured father, and your blessing.”</p>
<p>Almost bashfully the pilgrim laid his hand on the dark head,
and murmured something; then said, “Up, then! The
slayer of Schlangenwald kneeling! Ah! Stine, I knew
thy little head was wondrous wise, but I little thought thou
wouldst breed him up to avenge us on old Wolfgang! So
slender a lad too! Ha! Schneiderlein, old rogue, I
knew thee,” holding out his hand. “So thou
didst get home safe?”</p>
<p>“Ay, my lord; though, if I left you alive, never more
will I call a man dead,” said Heinz.</p>
<p>“Worse luck for me—till now,” said Sir
Eberhard, whose tones, rather than his looks, carried perfect
conviction of his identity. It was the old homely accent,
and gruff good-humoured voice, but with something subdued and
broken in the tone. His features had grown like his
father’s, but he looked much older than ever the hale old
mountaineer had done, or than his real age; so worn and lined was
his face, his skin tanned, his eyelids and temples puckered by
burning sun, his hair and beard white as the inane of his old
mare, the proud Adlerstein port entirely gone. He stooped
even more without his staff than with it; and, when he yielded
himself with a sigh of repose to his wife’s tendance, she
found that he had not merely the ordinary hurts of travelling,
but that there were old festering scars on his ankles.
“The gyves,” he said, as she looked up at him, with
startled, pitying eyes. “Little deemed I that they
would ever come under thy tender hands.” As he almost
timidly smoothed the braid of dark hair on her
brow—“So they never burnt thee for a witch after all,
little one? I thought my mother would never keep her hands
off thee, and used to fancy I heard the crackling of the
flame.”</p>
<p>“She spared me for my children’s sake,” said
Christina; “and truly Heaven has been very good to us, but
never so much as now. My dear lord, will it weary thee too
much to come to the castle chapel and give thanks?” she
said, timidly.</p>
<p>“With all my heart,” he answered, earnestly.
“I would go even on my knees. We were not without
masses even in Tunis; but, when Italian and Spaniard would be
ransomed, and there was no mind of the German, I little thought I
should ever sing Brother Lambert’s psalm about turning our
captivity as rivers in the south.”</p>
<p>Ebbo was hovering round, supplying all that was needed for his
father’s comfort; but his parents were so completely
absorbed in one another that he was scarcely noticed, and, what
perhaps pained him more, there was no word about Friedel.
He felt this almost an injustice to the brother who had been
foremost in embracing the idea of the unknown father, and
scarcely understood how his parents shrank from any sorrowful
thought that might break in on their new-found joy, nor that he
himself was so strange and new a being in his father’s
eyes, that to imagine him doubled was hardly possible to the
tardy, dulled capacity, which as yet seemed unable to feel
anything but that here was home, and Christina.</p>
<p>When the chapel bell rang, and the pair rose to offer their
thanksgiving, Ebbo dutifully offered his support, but was
absolutely unseen, so fondly was Sir Eberhard leaning on his
wife; and her bright exulting smile and shake of the head gave an
absolute pang to the son who had hitherto been all in all to
her.</p>
<p>He followed, and, as they passed Friedmund’s coffin, he
thought his mother pointed to it, but even of this he was
uncertain. The pair knelt side by side with hands locked
together, while notes of praise rose from all voices; and
meantime Ebbo, close to that coffin, strove to share the joy, and
to lift up a heart that <i>would</i> sink in the midst of
self-reproach for undutifulness, and would dislike the thought of
the rude untaught man, holding aloof from him, likely to view him
with distrust and jealousy, and to undo all he had achieved, and
further absorbing the mother, the mother who was to him all the
world, and for whose sake he had given his best years to the
child-wife, as yet nothing to him.</p>
<p>It was reversing the natural order of things that, after
reigning from infancy, he should have to give up at eighteen to
one of the last generation; and some such thought rankled in his
mind when the whole household trooped joyfully out of the chapel
to prepare a banquet for their old new lord, and their young old
lord was left alone.</p>
<p>Alone with the coffin where the armour lay upon the white
cross, Ebbo threw himself on his knees, and laid his head upon
it, murmuring, “Ah, Friedel! Friedel! Would
that we had changed places! Thou wouldst brook it
better. At least thou didst never know what it is to be
lonely.”</p>
<p>“Herr Baron!” said a little voice.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page269"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>His
first movement was impatient. Thekla was apt to pursue him
wherever he did not want her; but here he had least expected her,
for she had a great fear of that coffin, and could hardly be
brought to the chapel at prayer times, when she generally
occupied herself with fancies that the empty helmet glared at
her. But now Ebbo saw her standing as near as she durst,
with a sweet wistfulness in her eyes, such as he had never seen
there before.</p>
<p>“What is it, Thekla?” he said. “Art
sent to call me?”</p>
<p>“No; only I saw that you stayed here all alone,”
she said, clasping her hands.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p269b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="“‘No; only I saw that you stayed here all alone,’ she said, clasping her hands.” Page 269" title= "“‘No; only I saw that you stayed here all alone,’ she said, clasping her hands.” Page 269" src="images/p269s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>“Must I not be alone, child?” he said,
bitterly. “Here lies my brother. My mother has
her husband again!”</p>
<p>“But you have me!” cried Thekla; and, as he looked
up between amusement and melancholy, he met such a loving eager
little face, that he could not help holding out his arms, and
letting her cling to him. “Indeed,” she said,
“I’ll never be afraid of the helmet again, if only
you will not lay down your head there, and say you are
alone.”</p>
<p>“Never, Thekla! while you are my little wife,”
said he; and, child as she was, there was strange solace to his
heart in the eyes that, once vacant and wondering, had now gained
a look of love and intelligence.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do?” she said, shuddering a
little, as he rose and laid his hand on Friedel’s
sword.</p>
<p>“To make thee gird on thine own knight’s
sword,” said Ebbo, unbuckling that which he had so long
worn. “Friedel,” he added, “thou wouldst
give me thine. Let me take up thy temper with it, thine
open-hearted love and humility.”</p>
<p>He guided Thekla’s happy little fingers to the fastening
of the belt, and then, laying his hand on hers, said gravely,
“Thekla, never speak of what I said just now—not even
to the mother. Remember, it is thy husband’s first
secret.”</p>
<p>And feeling no longer solitary when his hand was in the clasp
of hers, he returned to the hall, where his father was installed
in the baronial chair, in which Ebbo had been at home from
babyhood. His mother’s exclamation showed that her
son had been wanting to her; and she looked fuller than ever of
bliss when Ebbo gravely stood before his father, and presented
him with the good old sword that he had sent to his unborn
son.</p>
<p>“You are like to use it more than I,—nay, you have
used it to some purpose,” said he. “Yet must I
keep mine old comrade at least a little while. Wife, son,
sword, should make one feel the same man again, but it is all too
wonderful!”</p>
<p>All that evening, and long after, his hand from time to time
sought the hilt of his sword, as if that touch above all proved
to him that he was again a free noble in his own castle.</p>
<p>The story he told was thus. The swoon in which Heinz had
left him had probably saved his life by checking the gush of
blood, and he had known no more till he found himself in a rough
cart among the corpses. At Schlangenwald’s castle he
had been found still breathing, and had been flung into a
dungeon, where he lay unattended, for how long he never knew,
since all the early part of the time was lost in the clouds of
fever. On coarse fare and scanty drink, in that dark vault,
he had struggled by sheer obstinacy of vitality into
recovery. In the very height of midsummer alone did the sun
peep through the grating of his cell, and he had newly hailed
this cheerful visitor when he was roughly summoned, placed on
horseback with eyes and hands bound, and only allowed sight again
to find himself among a herd of his fellow Germans in the Turkish
camp. They were the prisoners of the terrible Turkish raid
of 1475, when Georg von Schenk and fourteen other noblemen of
Austria and Styria were all taken in one unhappy fight, and
dragged away into captivity, with hundreds of lower rank.</p>
<p>To Sir Eberhard the change had been greatly for the
better. The Turk had treated him much better than the
Christian; and walking in the open air, chained to a German
comrade, was far pleasanter than pining in his lonely
dungeon. At Adrianople, an offer had been made to each of
the captives, if they would become Moslems, of entering the
Ottoman service as Spahis; but with one voice they had refused,
and had then been draughted into different divisions. The
fifteen nobles, who had been offered for ransom, were taken to
Constantinople, to await its arrival, and they had promised Sir
Eberhard to publish his fate on their return to their homes; and,
though he knew the family resources too well to have many hopes,
he was rather hurt to find that their promise had been
unfulfilled.</p>
<p>“Alas! they had no opportunity,” said Ebbo.
“Gulden were scarce, or were all in Kaisar
Friedrich’s great chest; the ransoms could not be raised,
and all died in captivity. I heard about it when I was at
Wurms last month.”</p>
<p>“The boy at Wurms?” almost gasped Sir Eberhard in
amaze.</p>
<p>“I had to be there about matters concerning the
Wildschloss lands and the bridge,” said Ebbo; “and
both Dankwart von Schlangenwald and I made special inquiries
about that company in case you should have shared their
fate. I hoped to have set forth at that time, but the
Kaisar said I was still too lame, and refused me license, or
letters to the Sultan.”</p>
<p>“You would not have found me,” said his father,
narrating how he with a large troop of captives had been driven
down to the coast; where they were transferred to a Moorish
slave-dealer, who shipped them off for Tunis. Here, after
their first taste of the miseries of a sea life, the alternative
of Islam or slavery was again put before them. “And,
by the holy stone of Nicæa,” said Sir Eberhard,
“I thought by that time that the infidels had the advantage
of us in good-will and friendliness; but, when they told me women
had no souls at all, no more than a horse or dog, I knew it was
but an empty dream of a religion; for did I not know that my
little Ermentrude, and thou, Stine, had finer, clearer, wiser
souls than ever a man I had known? ‘Nay, nay,’
quoth I, ‘I’ll cast in my lot where I may meet my
wife hereafter, should I never see her here.’”
He had then been allotted to a corsair, and had thenceforth been
chained to the bench of rowers, between the two decks, where, in
stifling heat and stench, in storm or calm, healthy or diseased,
the wretched oarsmen were compelled to play the part of machinery
in propelling the vessel, in order to capture Christian
ships—making exertions to which only the perpetual lash of
the galley-master could have urged their exhausted frames; often
not desisting for twenty or thirty hours, and rowing still while
sustenance was put into their mouths by their drivers. Many
a man drew has last breath with his last stroke, and was at the
first leisure moment hurled into the waves. It was the
description that had so deeply moved Friedel long ago, and
Christina wept over it, as she looked at the bowed form once so
proud and free, and thought of the unhealed scars. But
there, her husband added, he had been chained next to a holy
friar of German blood, like himself a captive of the great
Styrian raid; and, while some blasphemed in their misery, or
wildly chid their patron saints, this good man strove to show
that all was to work out good; he had a pious saying for all that
befell, and adored the will of God in thus purifying him;
“And, if it were thus with a saint like him, I thought,
what must it be with a rough freebooting godless sinner such as I
had been? See”—and he took out a rosary of
strung bladders of seaweed; “that is what he left me when
he died, and what I meant to have been telling for ever up in the
hermitage.”</p>
<p>“He died, then?”</p>
<p>“Ay—he died on the shore of Corsica, while most of
the dogs were off harrying a village inland, and we had a sort of
respite, or I trow he would have rowed till his last gasp.
How he prayed for the poor wretches they were gone to
attack!—ay, and for all of us—for me
also—There’s enough of it. Such talk skills not
now.”</p>
<p>It was plain that Sir Eberhard had learnt more Christianity in
the hold of his Moorish pirate ship than ever in the Holy Roman
Empire, and a weight was lifted off his son’s mind by
finding that he had vowed never to return to a life of violence,
even though fancying a life of penance in a hermitage the only
alternative.</p>
<p>Ebbo asked if the Genoese merchant, Ser Gian Battista dei
Battiste, had indeed been one of his fellow-captives.</p>
<p>“Ha!—what?” and on the repetition,
“Truly I knew him, Merchant Gian as we used to call him;
but you twang off his name as they speak it in his own stately
city.”</p>
<p>Christina smiled. “Ebbo learnt the Italian tongue
this winter from our chaplain, who had studied at Bologna.
He was told it would aid in his quest of you.”</p>
<p>“Tell me not!” said the traveller, holding up his
hands in deprecation; “the Junker is worse than a
priest! And yet he killed old Wolfgang! But what of
Gian? Hold,—did not he, when I was with him at Genoa,
tell me a story of being put into a dungeon in a mountain
fortress in Germany, and released by a pair of young lads with
eyes beaming in the sunrise, who vanished just as they brought
him to a cloister? Nay, he deemed it a miracle of the
saints, and hung up a votive picture thereof at the shrine of the
holy Cosmo and Damian.”</p>
<p>“He was not so far wrong in deeming <i>one</i> of the
lads near of kin to the holy ones,” said Christina,
softly.</p>
<p>And Ebbo briefly narrated the adventure, when it evidently
appeared that his having led at least one foray gave his father
for the first time a fellow-feeling for him, and a sense that he
was one of the true old stock; but, when he heard of the release,
he growled, “So! How would a lad have fared who so
acted in my time? My poor old mother! She must have
been changed indeed not to have scourged him till he had no
strength to cry out.”</p>
<p>“He was my prisoner!” said Ebbo, in his old
defiant tone; “I had the right.”</p>
<p>“Ah, well! the Junker has always been master here, and I
never!” said the elder knight, looking round rather
piteously; and Ebbo, with a sudden movement, exclaimed,
“Nay, sir, you are the only lord and master, and I stand
ready to be the first to obey you.”</p>
<p>“You! A fine young book-learned scholar, already
knighted, and with all these Wildschloss lands too!” said
Sir Eberhard, gazing with a strange puzzled look at the delicate
but spirited features of this strange perplexing son.
“Reach hither your hand, boy.”</p>
<p>And as he compared the slender, shapely hand of such
finely-textured skin with the breadth of his own horny
giant’s paw, he tossed it from him, shaking his head with a
gesture as if he had no commands for such feminine-looking
fingers to execute, and mortifying Ebbo not a little.
“Ah!” said Christina, apologetically, “it
always grieved your mother that the boys would resemble me and
mine. But, when daylight comes, Ebbo will show you that he
has not lost the old German strength.”</p>
<p>“No doubt—no doubt,” said Sir Eberhard,
hastily, “since he has slain Schlangenwald; and, if the
former state of things be at an end, the less he takes after the
ancient stock the better. But I am an old man now, Stine,
though thou look’st fair and fresh as ever, and I do not
know what to make of these things. White napery on the
table; glass drinking things;—nay, were it not for thee and
the Schneiderlein, I should not know I was at home.”</p>
<p>He was led back to his narration, and it appeared that, after
some years spent at the oar, certain bleedings from the lungs,
the remains of his wound, had become so much more severe as to
render him useless for naval purposes; and, as he escaped
actually dying during a voyage, he was allowed to lie by on
coming into port till he had in some degree recovered, and then
had been set to labour at the fortifications, chained to another
prisoner, and toiling between the burning sand and burning sun,
but treated with less horrible severity than the necessities of
the sea had occasioned on board ship, and experiencing the
benefit of intercourse with the better class of captives, whom
their miserable fate had thrown into the hands of the Moors.</p>
<p>It was a favourite almsdeed among the Provençals,
Spaniards, and Italians to send money for the redemption of
prisoners to the Moors, and there was a regular agency for
ransoms through the Jews; but German captives were such an
exception that no one thought of them, and many a time had the
summons come for such and such a slave by name, or for five poor
Sicilians, twenty Genoese, a dozen Marseillais, or the like, but
still no word for the Swabian; till he had made up his mind that
he should either leave his bones in the hot mud of the harbour,
or be only set free by some gallant descent either of the brave
King of Portugal, or of the Knights of Rhodes, of whom the
captives were ever dreaming and whispering.</p>
<p>At length his own slave name was shouted; he was called up by
the captain of his gang, and, while expecting some fresh
punishment, or, maybe, to find himself sold into some domestic
form of slavery, he was set before a Jewish agent, who, after
examining him on his name, country, and station, and comparing
his answers with a paper of instructions, informed him that he
was ransomed, caused his fetters to be struck off, and shipped
him off at once for Genoa, with orders to the captain to consign
him to the merchant Signor del Battiste. By him Sir
Eberhard had been received with the warmest hospitality, and
treated as befitted his original station, but Battista disclaimed
the merit of having ransomed him. He had but acted, he
said, as the agent of an Austrian gentleman, from whom he had
received orders to inquire after the Swabian baron who had been
his fellow-captive, and, if he were still living, to pay his
ransom, and bring him home.</p>
<p>“The name—the name!” eagerly asked Ebbo and
his mother at once.</p>
<p>“The name? Gian was wont to make bad work of our
honest German names, but I tried to learn this—being so
beholden to him. I even caused it to be spelt over to me,
but my letters long ago went from me. It seems to me that
the man is a knight-errant, like those of thy ballads,
Stine—one Ritter Theur—Theur—”</p>
<p>“Theurdank!” cried Ebbo.</p>
<p>“Ay, Theurdank. What, you know him? There is
nothing you and your mother don’t know, I
believe.”</p>
<p>“Know him! Father, he is our greatest and
noblest! He has been kind to me beyond description.
He is the Kaisar! Now I see why he had that strange arch
look which so vexed me when he forbade me on my allegiance to set
forth till my lameness should be gone! Long ago had he
asked me all about Gian Battista. To him he must have
written.”</p>
<p>“The Kaisar!” said Sir Eberhard. “Nay,
the poor fellows I left in Turkey ever said he was too close of
fist for them to have hope from him.”</p>
<p>“Oh! that was old Kaisar Friedrich. This is our
own gallant Maximilian—a knight as true and brave as ever
was paladin,” said Christina; “and most truly loving
and prizing our Ebbo.”</p>
<p>“And yet I wish—I wish,” said Ebbo,
“that he had let me win my father’s liberty for
myself.”</p>
<p>“Yea, well,” said his father, “there spoke
the Adlerstein. We never were wont to be beholden to king
or kaisar.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” say Ebbo, after a moment’s
recollection, colouring as he spoke; “it is true that I
deserved it not. Nay, Sir Father, it is well. You owe
your freedom in very truth to the son you have not known.
It was he who treasured up the thought of the captive German
described by the merchant, and even dreamt of it, while never
doubting of your death; it was he who caught up
Schlangenwald’s first hint that you lived, while I, in my
pride, passed it by as merely meant to perplex me; it was he who
had formed an absolute purpose of obtaining some certainty; and
at last, when my impetuosity had brought on the fatal battle, it
was he who bought with his own life the avowal of your
captivity. I had hoped to have fulfilled Friedel’s
trust, and to have redeemed my own backwardness; but it is not to
be. While I was yet lying helpless on my bed, the Emperor
has taken it out of my power. Mother, you receive him from
Friedel’s hands, after all.”</p>
<p>“And well am I thankful that so it should be,”
said Christina. “Ah, Ebbo! sorely should I have pined
with anxiety when thou wast gone. And thy father knows that
thou hadst the full purpose.”</p>
<p>“Yea, I know it,” said the old man; “and,
after all, small blame to him even if he had not. He never
saw me, and light grieves the heart for what the eye hath not
seen.”</p>
<p>“But,” added the wife, “since the Romish
king freed you, dear lord, cared he not better for your journey
than to let you come in this forlorn plight?”</p>
<p>This, it appeared, was far from being his deliverer’s
fault. Money had been supplied, and Sir Eberhard had
travelled as far as Aosta with a party of Italian merchants; but
no sooner had he parted with them than he was completely
astray. His whole experience of life had been as a robber
baron or as a slave, and he knew not how to take care of himself
as a peaceful traveller; he suffered fresh extortions at every
stage, and after a few days was plundered by his guides, beaten,
and left devoid of all means of continuing the journey to which
he could hardly hope for a cheerful end. He did not expect
to find his mother living,—far less that his unowned wife
could have survived the perils in which he had involved her; and
he believed that his ancestral home would, if not a ruin, be held
by his foes, or at best by the rival branch of the family, whose
welcome of the outlawed heir would probably be to a dungeon, if
not a halter. Yet the only magnet on earth for the lonely
wanderer was his native mountain, where from some old peasant he
might learn how his fair young bride had perished, and perhaps
the sins of his youth might be expiated by continual prayer in
the hermitage chapel where his sister lay buried, and whence he
could see the crags for which his eye and heart had craved so
long with the home-sickness of a mountaineer.</p>
<p>And now, when his own Christina had welcomed him with all the
overflow of her loving heart, unchanged save that hers had become
a tenderer yet more dignified loveliness; when his gallant son,
in all the bloom of young manhood, received him with dutiful
submission; when the castle, in a state of defence, prosperity,
and comfort of which he had never dreamt, was again his
own;—still the old man was bewildered, and sometimes
oppressed almost to distress. He had, as it were, fallen
asleep in one age of the world, and wakened in another, and it
seemed as if he really wished to defer his wakening, or else that
repose was an absolute novelty to him; for he sat dozing in his
chair in the sun the whole of the next day, and scarcely
spoke.</p>
<p>Ebbo, who felt it a necessity to come to an understanding of
the terms on which they were to stand, tried to refer matters to
him, and to explain the past, but he was met sometimes by a shake
of the head, sometimes by a nod—not of assent, but of
sleep; and his mother advised him not to harass the wearied
traveller, but to leave him to himself at least for that day, and
let him take his own time for exertion, letting things meantime
go on as usual. Ebbo obeyed, but with a load at his heart,
as he felt that all he was doing was but provisional, and that it
would be his duty to resign all that he had planned, and partly
executed, to this incompetent, ignorant rule. He could
certainly, when not serving the Emperor, go and act for himself
at Thekla’s dower castle of Felsenbach, and his mother
might save things from going to utter ruin at Adlerstein; but no
reflection or self-reproach could make it otherwise than a bitter
pill to any Telemachus to have to resign to one so unlike Ulysses
in all but the length of his wanderings,—one, also, who
seemed only half to like, and not at all to comprehend, his
Telemachus.</p>
<p>Meantime Ebbo attended to such matters as were sure to come
each day before the Herr Freiherr. Now it was a question
whether the stone for the mill should be quarried where it would
undermine a bit of grass land, or further on, where the road was
rougher; now Berend’s swine had got into Barthel’s
rye, and Barthel had severely hurt one of them—the Herr
Freiherr’s interference could alone prevent a hopeless
quarrel; now a waggon with ironwork for the mill claimed
exemption from toll as being for the Baron: and he must send down
the toll, to obviate injustice towards Schlangenwald and
Ulm. Old Ulrich’s grandson, who had run away for a
lanzknecht, had sent a letter home (written by a comrade), the
Baron must read and answer it. Steinmark’s son wanted
to be a poor student: the Herr Freiherr must write him a letter
of recommendation. Mother Grethel’s ewe had fallen
into a cleft; her son came to borrow a rope, and ask aid, and the
Baron must superintend the hoisting the poor beast up
again. Hans had found the track of a wolf, and knew the
hole where a litter of cubs abode; the Freiherr, his wolf-hound,
and his spear were wanted for their destruction. Dietrich
could not tell how to manage his new arquebus: the Baron must
teach him to take aim. Then there was a letter from Ulm to
invite the Baron to consult on the tax demanded by the Emperor
for his Italian war, and how far it should concern the profits of
the bridge; and another letter from the Markgraf of Wurtemburg,
as chief of the Swabian League, requesting the Lord of Adlerstein
to be on the look-out for a band of robbers, who were reported to
be in neighbouring hills, after being hunted out of some of their
other lurking-places.</p>
<p>That very night, or rather nearly at the dawn of a summer
morning, there was a yelling below the castle, and a flashing of
torches, and tidings rang through it that a boor on the outskirts
of the mountain had had his ricks fired and his cattle driven by
the robbers, and his young daughters carried off. Old Sir
Eberhard hobbled down to the hall in time to see weapons flashing
as they were dealt out, to hear a clear decided voice giving
orders, to listen to the tramp of horse, and watch more reitern
pass out under the gateway than ever the castle had counted in
his father’s time. Then he went back to his bed, and
when he came down in the morning, found all the womankind of the
castle roasting and boiling. And, at noon, little Thekla
came rushing down from the watch-tower with news that all were
coming home up the Eagle’s Steps, and she was sure
<i>her</i> baron had sent her, and waved to her. Soon
after, <i>her</i> baron in his glittering steel rode his
cream-coloured charger (once Friedel’s) into the castle
court, followed by his exultant merrymen. They had
overtaken the thieves in good time, made them captives, and
recovered the spoil unhurt; and Heinz and Koppel made the castle
ring with the deed of their young lord, who had forced the huge
leader of the band to the earth, and kept him down by main
strength till they could come to bind him.</p>
<p>“By main strength?” slowly asked Sir Eberhard, who
had been stirred into excitement.</p>
<p>“He was a loose-limbed, awkward fellow,” said
Ebbo, “less strong than he looked.”</p>
<p>“Not only that, Sir,” said Heinz, looking from his
old master to his young one; “but old iron is not a whit
stronger than new steel, though the one looks full of might, and
you would think the other but a toy.”</p>
<p>“And what have you done with the rogues’
heads?” asked the old knight. “I looked to see
them on your spears. Or have you hung them?”</p>
<p>“Not so, Sir,” said Ebbo. “I sent the
men off to Stuttgard with an escort. I dislike doing
execution ourselves; it makes the men so lawless. Besides,
this farmer was Schlangenwalder.”</p>
<p>“And yet he came to you for redress?”</p>
<p>“Yes, for Sir Dankwart is at his commandery, and he and
I agreed to look after each other’s lands.”</p>
<p>Sir Eberhard retired to his chair as if all had gone past his
understanding, and thence he looked on while his son and wife
hospitably regaled, and then dismissed, their auxiliaries in the
rescue.</p>
<p>Afterwards Christina told her son that she thought his father
was rested, and would be better able to attend to him, and Ebbo,
with a painful swelling in his heart, approached him
deferentially, with a request that he would say what was his
pleasure with regard to the Emperor, to whom acknowledgments must
in the first place be made for his release, and next would arise
the whole question of homage and investiture.</p>
<p>“Look you here, fair son,” said Sir Eberhard,
rousing himself, “these things are all past me.
I’ll have none of them. You and your Kaisar
understand one another, and your homage is paid. It boots
not changing all for an old fellow that is but come home to
die.”</p>
<p>“Nay, father, it is in the order of things that you
should be lord here.”</p>
<p>“I never was lord here, and, what is more, I would not,
and could not be. Son, I marked you yesterday. You
are master as never was my poor father, with all the bawling and
blows that used to rule the house, while these fellows mind you
at a word, in a voice as quiet as your mother’s.
Besides, what should I do with all these mills and bridges of
yours, and Diets, and Leagues, and councils enough to addle a
man’s brain? No, no; I could once slay a bear, or
strike a fair stroke at a Schlangenwalder, but even they got the
better of me, and I am good for nothing now but to save my
soul. I had thought to do it as a hermit up there; but my
little Christina thinks the saints will be just as well pleased
if I tell my beads here, with her to help me, and I know that way
I shall not make so many mistakes. So, young Sir, if you
can give the old man a corner of the hearth while he lives, he
will never interfere with you. And, maybe, if the castle
were in jeopardy in your absence, with that new-fangled road up
to it, he could tell the fellows how to hold it out.”</p>
<p>“Sir—dear father,” cried the ardent Ebbo,
“this is not a fit state of things. I will spare you
all trouble and care; only make me not undutiful; take your own
place. Mother, convince him!”</p>
<p>“No, my son,” said Sir Eberhard; “your
mother sees what is best for me. I only want to be left to
her to rest a little while, and repent of my sinful life.
As Heinz says, the rusty old iron must lie by while the new steel
does the work. It is quiet that I need. It is joy
enough for me to see what she has made you, and all around.
Ah! Stine, my white dove, I knew thine was a wise head; but
when I left thee, gentle little frightened, fluttering thing, how
little could I have thought that all alone, unaided, thou wouldst
have kept that little head above water, and made thy son work out
all these changes—thy doing—and so I know they are
good and seemly. I see thou hast made him clerkly,
quick-witted, and yet a good knight. Ah! thou didst tell me
oft that our lonely pride was not high nor worthy fame.
Stine, how didst do it?”</p>
<p>“I did it not, dear husband; God did it for me. He
gave the boys the loving, true tempers that worked out the
rest! He shielded them and me in our days of
peril.”</p>
<p>“Yes, father,” added Ebbo, “Providence
guarded us; but, above all, our chief blessing has been the
mother who has made one of us a holy saint, and taught the other
to seek after him! Father, I am glad you see how great has
been the work of the Dove you brought to the Eagle’s
Nest.”</p>
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