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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ In the Fire of The Forge, Complete, by Georg Ebers
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd7; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
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+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Project Gutenberg's In The Fire Of The Forge, Complete, by Georg Ebers
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: In The Fire Of The Forge, Complete
+
+Author: Georg Ebers
+
+Release Date: October 17, 2006 [EBook #5551]
+Last Updated: August 26, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE FIRE OF THE FORGE, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>
+ IN THE FIRE OF THE FORGE
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ A ROMANCE OF OLD NUREMBERG
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Georg Ebers
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Translated from the German by Mary J. Safford
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>IN THE FIRE OF THE FORGE&mdash;I.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> <b>IN THE FIRE OF THE FORGE&mdash;II.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ IN THE FIRE OF THE FORGE&mdash;PART I.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the eve of St. Medard&rsquo;s Day in the year 1281, the moon, which had just
+ risen, was shining brightly upon the imperial free city of Nuremberg; its
+ rays found their way into the street leading from the strong Marienthurm
+ to the Frauenthor, but entrance to the Ortlieb mansion was barred by a
+ house, a watchtower, and&mdash;most successfully of all&mdash;by a tall
+ linden tree. Yet there was something to be seen here which even now, when
+ Nuremberg sheltered the Emperor Rudolph and so many secular and
+ ecclesiastical princes, counts, and knights, awakened Luna&rsquo;s curiosity.
+ True, this something had naught in common with the brilliant spectacles of
+ which there was no lack during this month of June; on the contrary, it was
+ very quiet here. An imperial command prohibited the soldiery from moving
+ about the city at night, and the Frauenthor, through which during the day
+ plenty of people and cattle passed in and out had been closed long before.
+ Very few of the worthy burghers&mdash;who went to bed betimes and rose so
+ early that they rarely had leisure to enjoy the moonlight long&mdash;passed
+ here at this hour. The last one, an honest master weaver, had moved with a
+ very crooked gait. As he saw the moon double&mdash;like everything else
+ around and above him&mdash;he had wondered whether the man up there had a
+ wife. He expected no very pleasant reception from his own at home. The
+ watchman, who&mdash;the moon did not exactly know why&mdash;lingered a
+ short time in front of the Ortlieb mansion, followed the burgher. Then
+ came a priest who, with the sacristan and several lantern bearers, was
+ carrying the sacrament to a dying man in St. Clarengasse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was usually more to be seen at this hour on the other side of the
+ city&mdash;the northwestern quarter&mdash;where the fortress rose on its
+ hill, dominating the Thiergartenthor at its foot; for the Emperor Rudolph
+ occupied the castle, and his brother-in-law, Burgrave Friedrich von
+ Zollern, his own residence. This evening, however, there was little
+ movement even there; the Emperor and his court, the Burgrave and his
+ train, with all the secular and ecclesiastical princes, counts, and
+ knights, had gone to the Town Hall with their ladies. High revel was held
+ there, and inspiring music echoed through the open windows of the spacious
+ apartment, where the Emperor Rudolph also remained during the ball. Here
+ the moonbeams might have been reflected from glittering steel or the gold,
+ silver, and gems adorning helmets, diadems, and gala robes; or they might
+ surely have found an opportunity to sparkle on the ripples of the Pegnitz
+ River, which divided the city into halves; but the heavenly wanderer, from
+ the earliest times, has preferred leafy hidden nooks to scenes of noisy
+ gaiety, a dim light to a brilliant glare. Luna likes best to gaze where
+ there is a secret to be discovered, and mortals have always been glad to
+ choose her as a confidante. Something exactly suited to her taste must
+ surely be going on just now near the linden which, in all the splendour of
+ fullest bloom, shaded the street in front of the Ortlieb mansion; for she
+ had seen two fair girls grow up in the ancient dwelling with the carved
+ escutcheon above the lofty oak door, and the ample garden&mdash;and the
+ younger, from her earliest childhood, had been on especially intimate
+ terms with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the topmost boughs of the linden, spite of their dense foliage,
+ permitted a glimpse of the broad courtyard which separated the patrician
+ residence from the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A chain, which with graceful curves united a short row of granite posts,
+ shut out the pedestrians, the vehicles and horsemen, the swine and other
+ animals driven through the city gate. In contrast with the street, which
+ in bad weather resembled an almost impassable swamp, it was always kept
+ scrupulously clean, and the city beadle might spare himself the trouble of
+ looking there for the carcasses of sucking pigs, cats, hens, and rats,
+ which it was his duty to carry away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young man with an unusually tall and powerful figure was standing in
+ this yard, gazing up at a window in the second story. The shadow of the
+ linden concealed his features and his dress, but the moon had already seen
+ him more than once in this very spot and knew that he was a handsome
+ fellow, whose bronzed countenance, with its prominent nose and broad brow,
+ plainly indicated a strong will. She had also seen the scar stretching
+ from the roots of his long brown locks across the whole forehead to the
+ left cheek-bone, that lent the face a martial air. Yet he belonged to no
+ military body, but was the son of a noble family of Nuremberg, which
+ boasted, it is true, of &ldquo;knightly blood&rdquo; and the right of its sons to
+ enter the lists of the tournament, but was engaged in peaceful pursuits;
+ for it carried on a trade with Italy and the Netherlands, and every male
+ scion of the Eysvogel race had the birthright of being elected a member of
+ the Honourable Council and taking part in the government of Nuremberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon had long known that the young man in the courtyard was an
+ Eysvogel, nor was this difficult to discover. Every child in Nuremberg was
+ familiar with the large showy coat of arms lately placed above the lofty
+ doorway of the Eysvogel mansion; and the nocturnal visitor wore a doublet
+ on whose left breast was embroidered the same coat of arms, with three
+ birds in the shield and one on the helmet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had already waited some time in vain, but now a young girl&rsquo;s head
+ appeared at the window, and a gay fresh voice called his Christian name,
+ &ldquo;Wolff!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Waving his cap, he stepped nearer to the casement, greeted her warmly, and
+ told her that he had come at this late hour to say good-night, though only
+ from the front yard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; she entreated. &ldquo;True, my father and Eva have gone to the dance
+ at the Town Hall, but my aunt, the abbess, is sitting with my mother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; replied Wolff, &ldquo;I only stopped in passing. Besides, I am
+ stealing even this brief time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Business?&rdquo; asked the young girl. &ldquo;Do you know, I am beginning to be
+ jealous of the monster which, like an old spider, constantly binds you
+ closer and closer in its web. What sort of dealing is this?&mdash;to give
+ the whole day to business, and only a few minutes of moonlight to your
+ betrothed bride!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish it were otherwise,&rdquo; sighed Wolff. &ldquo;You do not know how hard these
+ times are, Els! Nor how many thoughts beset my brain, since my father has
+ placed me in charge of all his new enterprises.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Always something new,&rdquo; replied Els, with a shade of reproach in her tone.
+ &ldquo;What an omnivorous appetite this Eysvogel business possesses! Ullmann
+ Nutzel said lately: &lsquo;Wherever one wants to buy, the bird&mdash;[vogel]&mdash;has
+ been ahead and snapped up everything in Venice and Milan. And the young
+ one is even sharper at a bargain,&rsquo; he added.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I want to make a warm nest for you, dearest,&rdquo; replied Wolff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As if we were shopkeepers anxious to secure customers!&rdquo; said the girl,
+ laughing. &ldquo;I think the old Eysvogel house must have enough big stoves to
+ warm its son and his wife. At the Tuckers the business supports seven,
+ with their wives and children. What more do we want? I believe that we
+ love each other sincerely, and though I understand life better than Eva,
+ to whom poverty and happiness are synonymous, I don&rsquo;t need, like the women
+ of your family, gold plates for my breakfast porridge or a bed of
+ Levantine damask for my lapdog. And the dowry my father will give me would
+ supply the daughters of ten knights.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know it, sweetheart,&rdquo; interrupted Wolff dejectedly; &ldquo;and how gladly I
+ would be content with the smallest&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then be so!&rdquo; she exclaimed cheerily. &ldquo;What you would call &lsquo;the smallest,&rsquo;
+ others term wealth. You want more than competence, and I&mdash;the saints
+ know-would be perfectly content with &lsquo;good.&rsquo; Many a man has been
+ shipwrecked on the cliffs of &lsquo;better&rsquo; and &lsquo;best.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fired with passionate ardour, he exclaimed, &ldquo;I am coming in now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the business?&rdquo; she asked mischievously. &ldquo;Let it go as it will,&rdquo; he
+ answered eagerly, waving his hand. But the next instant he dropped it
+ again, saying thoughtfully: &ldquo;No, no; it won&rsquo;t do, there is too much at
+ stake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els had already turned to send Katterle, the maid, to open the heavy house
+ door, but ere doing so she put her beautiful head out again, and asked:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is the matter really so serious? Won&rsquo;t the monster grant you even a
+ good-night kiss?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered firmly. &ldquo;Your menservants have gone, and before the maid
+ could open&mdash;&mdash;There is the moon rising above the linden already.
+ It won&rsquo;t do. But I&rsquo;ll see you to-morrow and, please God, with a lighter
+ heart. We may have good news this very day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of the wares from Venice and Milan?&rdquo; asked Els anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sweetheart. Two waggon trains will meet at Verona. The first
+ messenger came from Ingolstadt, the second from Munich, and the one from
+ Landshut has been here since day before yesterday. Another should have
+ arrived this morning, but the intense heat yesterday, or some cause&mdash;at
+ any rate there is reason for anxiety. You don&rsquo;t know what is at stake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But peace was proclaimed yesterday,&rdquo; said Els, &ldquo;and if robber knights and
+ bandits should venture&mdash;&mdash;But, no! Surely the waggons have a
+ strong escort.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The strongest,&rdquo; answered Wolff. &ldquo;The first wain could not arrive before
+ to-morrow morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see!&rdquo; cried the girl gaily. &ldquo;Just wait patiently. When you are once
+ mine I&rsquo;ll teach you not to look on the dark side. O Wolff, why is
+ everything made so much harder for us than for others? Now this evening,
+ it would have been so pleasant to go to the ball with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet, how often, dearest, I have urged you in vain&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he
+ began, but she hastily interrupted &ldquo;Yes, it was certainly no fault of
+ yours, but one of us must remain with my mother, and Eva&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yesterday she complained to me with tears in her eyes that she would be
+ forced to go to this dance, which she detested.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is the very reason she ought to go,&rdquo; explained Els. &ldquo;She is eighteen
+ years old, and has never yet been induced to enter into any of the
+ pleasures other girls enjoy. When she isn&rsquo;t in the convent she is always
+ at home, or with Aunt Kunigunde or one of the nuns in the woods and
+ fields. If she wants to take the veil later, who can prevent it, but the
+ abbess herself advises that she should have at least a glimpse of the
+ world before leaving it. Few need it more, it seems to me, than our Eva.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; Wolff assented. &ldquo;Such a lovely creature! I know no girl more
+ beautiful in all Nuremberg.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! you&mdash;&mdash;,&rdquo; said his betrothed bride, shaking her finger at
+ her lover, but he answered promptly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You just told me that you preferred &lsquo;good&rsquo; to &lsquo;better,&rsquo; and so doubtless
+ &lsquo;fair&rsquo; to &lsquo;fairer,&rsquo; and you are beautiful, Els, in person and in soul. As
+ for Eva, I admire, in pictures of madonnas and angels, those wonderful
+ saintly eyes with their uplifted gaze and marvellously long lashes, the
+ slight droop of the little head, and all the other charms; yet I gladly
+ dispense with them in my heart&rsquo;s darling and future wife. But you, Els&mdash;if
+ our Lord would permit me to fashion out of divine clay a life companion
+ after my own heart, do you know how she would look?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like me&mdash;exactly like Els Ortlieb, of course,&rdquo; replied the girl
+ laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A correct guess, with all due modesty,&rdquo; Wolff answered gaily. &ldquo;But take
+ care that she does not surpass your wishes. For you know, if the little
+ saint should meet at the dance some handsome fellow whom she likes better
+ than the garb of a nun, and becomes a good Nuremberg wife, the excess of
+ angelic virtue will vanish; and if I had a brother&mdash;in serious
+ earnest&mdash;I would send him to your Eva.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; cried Els, &ldquo;however quickly her mood changes, it will surely do her
+ no harm. But as yet she cares nothing about you men. I know her, and the
+ tears she shed when our father gave her the costly Milan suckenie, in
+ which she went to the ball, were anything but tears of joy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [Suckenie&mdash;A long garment, fitting the upper part of the body
+ closely and widening very much below the waist, with openings for
+ the arms.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I only wonder,&rdquo; added Wolff, &ldquo;that you persuaded her to go; the pious
+ lamb knows how to use her horns fiercely enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; Els assented, as if she knew it by experience; then she eagerly
+ continued, &ldquo;She is still just like an April day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And therefore,&rdquo; Wolff remarked, &ldquo;the dance which she began with tears
+ will end joyously enough. The young knights and nobles will gather round
+ her like bees about honey. Count von Montfort, my brother-in-law
+ Siebenburg says, is also at the Town Hall with his daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the comet Cordula was followed, as usual, by a long train of
+ admirers,&rdquo; said Els. &ldquo;My father was obliged to give the count lodgings; it
+ could not be avoided. The Emperor Rudolph had named him to the Council
+ among those who must be treated with special courtesy. So he was assigned
+ to us, and the whole suite of apartments in the back of the house,
+ overlooking the garden, is now filled with Montforts, Montfort household
+ officials, menservants, squires, pages, and chaplains. Montfort horses and
+ hounds crowd our good steeds out of their stalls. Besides the twenty
+ stabled here, eighteen were put in the brewery in the Hundsgasse, and
+ eight belong to Countess Cordula. Then the constant turmoil all day long
+ and until late at night! It is fortunate that they do not lodge with us in
+ the front of the house! It would be very bad for my mother!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you can rejoice over the departure all the more cordially,&rdquo; observed
+ Wolff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will hardly cause us much sorrow,&rdquo; Els admitted. &ldquo;Yet the young
+ countess brings much merriment into our quiet house. She is certainly a
+ tireless madcap, and it will vex your proud sister Isabella to know that
+ your brother-in-law Siebenburg is one of her admirers. Did she not go to
+ the Town Hall?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; Wolff answered; &ldquo;the twins have changed her wonderfully. You saw the
+ dress my mother pressed upon her for the ball&mdash;Genoese velvet and
+ Venetian lace! Its cost would have bought a handsome house. She was
+ inclined, too, to appear as a young mother at the festival, and I assure
+ you that she looked fairly regal in the magnificent attire. But this
+ morning, after she had bathed the little boys, she changed her mind.
+ Though my mother, and even my grandmother, urged her to go, she insisted
+ that she belonged to the twins, and that some evil would befall the little
+ ones if she left them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is noble!&rdquo; cried Els in delight, &ldquo;and if I should ever&mdash;-. Yet
+ no, Isabella and I cannot be compared. My husband will never be numbered
+ among the admirers of another woman, like your detestable brother-in-law.
+ Besides, he is wasting time with Cordula. Her worldliness repels Eva, it
+ is true, but I have heard many pleasant things about her. Alas! she is a
+ motherless girl, and her father is an old reveller and huntsman, who
+ rejoices whenever she does any audacious act. But he keeps his purse open
+ to her, and she is kind-hearted and obliging to a degree&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Equalled by few,&rdquo; interrupted Wolff, with a sneer. &ldquo;The men know how to
+ praise her for it. No paternoster would be imposed upon her in the
+ confessional on account of cruel harshness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor for a sinful or a spiteful deed,&rdquo; replied Els positively. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say
+ anything against her to me, Wolff, in spite of your dissolute
+ brother-in-law. I have enough to do to intercede for her with Eva and Aunt
+ Kunigunde since she singed and oiled the locks of a Swiss knight belonging
+ to the Emperor&rsquo;s court. Our Katterle brought the coals. But many other
+ girls do that, since courtesy permits it. Her train to the Town Hall
+ certainly made a very brave show; the fifty freight waggons you are
+ expecting will scarcely form a longer line.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young merchant started. The comparison roused his forgotten anxiety
+ afresh, and after a few brief, tender words of farewell he left the object
+ of his love. Els gazed thoughtfully after him; the moonlight revealed his
+ tall, powerful figure for a long time. Her heart throbbed faster, and she
+ felt more deeply than ever how warmly she loved him. He moved as though
+ some heavy burden of care bowed his strong shoulders. She would fain have
+ hastened after him, clung to him, and asked what troubled him, what he was
+ concealing from her who was ready to share everything with him, but the
+ Frauenthor, through which he entered the city, already hid him from her
+ gaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned back into the room with a faint sigh. It could scarcely be
+ solely anxiety about his expected goods that burdened her lover&rsquo;s mind.
+ True, his weak, arrogant mother, and still more his grandmother, the
+ daughter of a count, who lived with them in the Eysvogel house and still
+ ruled her daughter as if she were a child, had opposed her engagement to
+ Wolff, but their resistance had ceased since the betrothal. On the other
+ hand, she had often heard that Fran Eysvogel, the haughty mother,
+ dowerless herself, had many poor and extravagant relations besides her
+ daughter and her debt-laden, pleasure-loving husband, Sir Seitz
+ Siebenburg, who, it could not be denied, all drew heavily upon the coffers
+ of the ancient mercantile house. Yet it was one of the richest in
+ Nuremberg. Yes, something of which she was still ignorant must be
+ oppressing Wolff, and, with the firm resolve to give him no peace until he
+ confessed everything to her, she returned to the couch of her invalid
+ mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Wolff had scarcely vanished from the street, and Els from the window, when
+ a man&rsquo;s slender figure appeared, as if it had risen from the earth, beside
+ the spurge-laurel tree at the left of the house. Directly after some one
+ rapped lightly on the pavement of the yard, and in a few minutes the heavy
+ ironbound oak doors opened and a woman&rsquo;s hand beckoned to the late guest,
+ who glided swiftly along in the narrow line of shadow cast by the house
+ and vanished through the entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon looked after him doubtfully. In former days the narrow-shouldered
+ fellow had been seen near the Ortlieb house often enough, and his
+ movements had awakened Luna&rsquo;s curiosity; for he had been engaged in
+ amorous adventure even when work was still going on at the recently
+ completed convent of St. Clare&mdash;an institution endowed by the Ebner
+ brothers, to which Herr Ernst Ortlieb added a considerable sum. At that
+ time&mdash;about three years before&mdash;the bold fellow had gone there
+ to keep tryst evening after evening, and the pretty girl who met him was
+ Katterle, the waiting maid of the beautiful Els, as Nuremberg folk called
+ the Ortlieb sisters, Els and Eva. Many vows of ardent, changeless love for
+ her had risen to the moon, and the outward aspect of the man who made them
+ afforded a certain degree of assurance that he would fulfil his pledges,
+ for he then wore the long dark robe of reputable people, and on the front
+ of his cap, from which a net shaped like a bag hung down his back, was a
+ large S, and on the left shoulder of his long coat a T, the initials of
+ the words Steadfast and True. They bore witness that the person who had
+ them embroidered on his clothing deemed these virtues the highest and
+ noblest. It might have been believed that the lean fellow, who scarcely
+ looked his five-and-thirty years, possessed these lofty traits of
+ character; for, though three full years had passed since his last meeting
+ with Katterle at the building site, he had gone to his sweetheart with his
+ wonted steadfastness and truth immediately after the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s
+ entry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had given her reason to rely upon him; but the moon&rsquo;s gaze reaches far,
+ and had discovered the quality of Walther Biberli&rsquo;s &ldquo;steadfastness and
+ truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one respect it proved the best and noblest; for among thousands of
+ servitors the moon had not seen one who clung to his lord with more loyal
+ devotion. Towards pretty young women, on the contrary, he displayed his
+ principal virtues in a very singular way; for the pallid nocturnal
+ wanderer above had met him in various lands and cities, and wherever he
+ tarried long another maid was added to the list of those to whom Biberli
+ vowed steadfastness and truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, whenever Sir Long Coat&rsquo;s travels led him back to any one to whom he
+ had sworn eternal love, he went first to her, if she, too, retained the
+ old affection. But Katterle had cause to care for him most, for he was
+ more warmly devoted to her than to any of the others, and in his own
+ fashion his intentions were honest. He seriously intended, as soon as his
+ master left the imperial court&mdash;which he hoped would not happen too
+ soon&mdash;and returned to his ancestral castle in his native Switzerland,
+ to establish a home of his own for his old age, and no one save Katterle
+ should light the hearth fire. Her outward circumstances pleased him, as
+ well as her disposition and person. She was free-born, like himself&mdash;the
+ son of a forest keeper&mdash;and, again like him, belonged to a Swiss
+ family; her heritage (she was an orphan), which consisted of a house and
+ arable land in her home, Sarnen, where she still sent her savings,
+ satisfied his requirements. But above all she believed in him and admired
+ his versatile mind and his experience. Moreover, she gave him absolute
+ obedience, and loved him so loyally that she had remained unwedded, though
+ a number of excellent men had sought her in marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle had met him for the first time more than three years before when,
+ after the battle of Marchfield, he remained several weeks in Nuremberg.
+ They had sat side by side at a tournament, and, recognising each other as
+ Swiss-born by the sharp sound of the letters &ldquo;ch&rdquo; and the pronunciation of
+ other words, were mutually attracted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle had a kind heart; yet at that time she almost yielded to the
+ temptation to pray Heaven not to hasten the cure of a brave man&rsquo;s wounds
+ too quickly, for she knew that Biberli was a squire in the service of the
+ young Swiss knight Heinz Schorlin, whose name was on every lip because, in
+ spite of his youth, he had distinguished himself at the battle of
+ Marchfield by his rare bravery, and that the young hero would remain in
+ Nuremberg only until his severe injuries were completely healed. His
+ departure would bring to her separation from his servant, and sometimes
+ when homesickness tortured her she thought she would be unable to survive
+ the parting. Meanwhile Biberli nursed his master with faithful zeal, as if
+ nothing bound him to Nuremberg, and even after his departure Katterle
+ remained in good health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she had him again. Directly after the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s entrance, five
+ days before, Biberli had come openly to the Ortlieb house and presented
+ himself to Martsche,&mdash;[Margaret]&mdash;the old house keeper, as the
+ countryman and friend of the waiting maid, who had brought her a message
+ from home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, it had been impossible to say anything confidential either in the
+ crowded kitchen or in the servants&rsquo; hall. To-night&rsquo;s meeting was to afford
+ the opportunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The menservants, carrying sedan chairs and torches, had all gone out with
+ their master, who had taken his younger daughter, Eva, to the dance. They
+ were to wait in front of the Town Hall, because it was doubtful whether
+ the daughter of the house, who had been very reluctant to go to the
+ entertainment, might not urge an early departure. Count von Montfort,
+ whose quarters were in the Ortlieb mansion, and his whole train of male
+ attendants, certainly would not come back till very late at night or even
+ early morning, for the Countess Cordula remained at a ball till the close,
+ and her father lingered over the wine cup till his daughter called him
+ from the revellers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this warranted the lovers in hoping for an undisturbed interview. The
+ place of meeting was well chosen. It was unsatisfactory only to the moon
+ for, after Biberli had closed the heavy door of the house behind him, Luna
+ found no chink or crevice through which a gliding ray might have watched
+ what the true and steadfast Biberli was saying to Katterle. There was one
+ little window beside the door, but it was closed, and the opening was
+ covered with sheepskin. So the moon&rsquo;s curiosity was not gratified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of her silver rays, the long entry of the Ortlieb house, with its
+ lofty ceiling, was illumined only by the light of three lanterns, which
+ struggled dimly through horn panes. The shining dots in a dark corner of
+ the spacious corridor were the eyes of a black cat, watching there for
+ rats and mice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spot really possessed many advantages for the secret meeting of two
+ lovers, for as it ran through the whole width of the house, it had two
+ doors, one leading to the street, the other into the yard. In the right
+ wall of the entry there were also two small doors, reached by a flight of
+ steps. At this hour both closed empty rooms, for the office and the
+ chamber where Herr Ernst Ortlieb received his business friends had not
+ been occupied since sunset, and the bathroom and dressing-room adjoining
+ were used only during the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, some unbidden intruder might have come down the long broad staircase
+ leading to the upper story. But in that case the lovers had the best
+ possible hiding-place close at hand, for here large and small boxes,
+ standing side by side and one above another, formed a protecting wall;
+ yonder heaps of sacks and long rows of casks afforded room for concealment
+ behind them. Rolls of goods packed in sacking leaned against the chests,
+ inviting a fugitive to slip back of them, and surely no one would suspect
+ the presence of a pair of lovers in the rear of these mountains of hides
+ and bales wrapped in matting. Still it would scarcely have been advisable
+ to remain near them; for these packages, which the Ortlieb house brought
+ from Venice, contained pepper and other spices that exhaled a pungent
+ odor, endurable only by hardened nerves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Valuable goods of various kinds lay here until they could be placed in
+ cellars or storehouses or sold. But there was many an empty space, too, in
+ the broad corridor for, spite of Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s strictness, robbery on
+ the highroads had by no means ceased, and Herr Ernst Ortlieb was still
+ compelled to use caution in the transportation of costly wares.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Biberli and his sweetheart had assured themselves that the ardour of
+ their love had by no means cooled, they sat down on some bags filled with
+ cloves and related to each other the experiences through which they had
+ passed during the period of separation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle&rsquo;s life had flowed on in a pleasant monotony. She had no cause to
+ complain of her employers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fran Maria Ortlieb, the invalid mistress of the house, rarely needed her
+ services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During a ride to visit relatives in Ulm, the travellers, who were under
+ the same escort of men at arms as a number of Nuremberg freight waggons,
+ had been attacked by the robber knights Absbach and Hirschhorn. An arrow
+ had struck Frau Ortlieb&rsquo;s palfrey, causing the unfortunate woman a severe
+ fall, which produced an internal injury, from which she had not yet
+ recovered. The assault resulted unfortunately for young Hirschhorn, who
+ led it; he met with a shameful death on the gallows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The information enraged Biberli. Instead of feeling any sympathy for the
+ severely injured lady, he insisted that the Nuremberg burghers had dealt
+ with Hirschhorn in a rascally fashion; for he was a knight, and therefore,
+ as honest judges familiar with the law, they ought to have put him to
+ death by the sword instead of with the rope. And Katterle agreed with him;
+ she never contradicted his opinions, and surely Biberli must know what
+ treatment befitted a knight, since he was the foster-brother of one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor did the maid, who was in the personal service of the daughters of the
+ house, make any complaint against them. Indeed, she could not praise Els,
+ the elder, sufficiently. She was very just, the careful nurse of her
+ invalid mother, and always unvarying in her cheerful kindness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had no fault to find with Eva either, especially as she was more
+ religious than any one in the whole house. Spite of her marvellous beauty&mdash;Katterle
+ knew that there was nothing false about it&mdash;she would probably end by
+ joining the nuns in the convent. But her mood changed with every breath,
+ like the weathercock on the steeple. If she got out of bed the wrong way,
+ or one did not guess her wishes before they were uttered, she would fly
+ into a rage at the least trifle. Then she sometimes used very unkind
+ words; but no one could cherish anger against her long, for she had an
+ indescribably lovely manner of trying to atone for the offences which her
+ hasty young blood made her commit. She had gone to the ball that night as
+ if it were a funeral; she shunned men like poison, and even kept out of
+ the way of her sister&rsquo;s friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli laughed, as if there could be no doubt of his opinion, and
+ exclaimed: &ldquo;Just wait a while! My master will meet her at the Town Hall
+ tonight, and if the scrawny little squirrel I saw three years ago has
+ really grown up into such a beauty, if he does not get on her track and
+ capture her, my name isn&rsquo;t Biberli.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But surely,&rdquo; replied Katterle doubtfully, &ldquo;you told me that you had not
+ yet succeeded in persuading him to imitate you in steadfastness and
+ truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he is a knight,&rdquo; replied the servant, striking himself pompously
+ under the T on his shoulder, as if he, too, belonged to this favoured
+ class, &ldquo;and so he is as free to pursue a woman as to hunt the game in the
+ forest. And my Heinz Schorlin! You saw him, and admitted that he was worth
+ looking at. And that was when he had scarcely recovered from his dangerous
+ wounds, while now&mdash;&mdash;The French Knight de Preully, in Paris,
+ with whom my dead foster-brother, until he fell sick&mdash;&mdash;-&rdquo; Here
+ he hesitated; an enquiring look from his sweetheart showed that&mdash;perhaps
+ for excellent reasons&mdash;he had omitted to tell her about his sojourn
+ in Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that he had grown older and abandoned the wild revelry of that period
+ in favour of truth and steadfastness, he quietly related everything she
+ desired to know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had acquired various branches of learning while sharing the studies of
+ his foster-brother, the eldest son of the old Knight Schorlin, who was
+ then living, and therefore, when scarcely twenty, was appointed
+ schoolmaster at Stansstadt. Perhaps he might have continued to teach&mdash;for
+ he promised to be successful&mdash;had not a vexatious discovery disgusted
+ him with his calling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was informed that the mercenaries in the Schnitzthurm guard were paid
+ five shillings a week more than he, spite of the knowledge he had gained
+ by so much toil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his indignation he went back to Schorlin Castle, which was always open
+ to him, and he arrived just at the right time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His present master&rsquo;s older brother, whose health had always been delicate,
+ being unable to follow the profession of arms, was on the eve of departing
+ to attend the university at Paris, accompanied by the chaplain and an
+ equerry. When the Lady Wendula, his master&rsquo;s mother, learned what an
+ excellent reputation Biberli had gained as a schoolmaster, she persuaded
+ her husband to send him as esquire with their sickly son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Paris there was at first no lack of pleasures of every description,
+ especially as they met among the king&rsquo;s mercenaries many a dissolute Swiss
+ knight and man at arms. His foster-brother, to his sorrow, was unable to
+ resist the temptations which Satan scatters in Paris as the peasants
+ elsewhere sow rye and oats, and the young knight was soon attacked, by a
+ severe illness. Then Biberli&rsquo;s gay life ended too. For months he did not
+ leave his foster-brother&rsquo;s sick bed a single hour, by day or night, until
+ death released him from his suffering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his return to Castle Schorlin he found many changes; the old knight had
+ been called away from earth a few days before his son&rsquo;s death, and Heinz
+ Schorlin, his present master, had fallen heir to castle and lands. This,
+ however, was no great fortune, for the large estates of the Schorlin
+ family were burdened by heavy debts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dead lord, as countryman, boon companion, and brother in arms of the
+ Emperor Rudolph, had been always ready to place his sword at his service,
+ and whenever a great tournament was held he never failed to be present. So
+ the property had been consumed, and the Lady Wendula and her son and three
+ daughters were left in moderate circumstances. The two older girls had
+ taken the veil, while the youngest, a merry little maiden, lived with her
+ mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Emperor Rudolph had by no means forgotten the Lady Wendula and her
+ dead husband, and with the utmost kindness requested her to send him her
+ only son as soon as he was able to wield a sword and lance. He intended to
+ repay Heinz for the love and loyalty his father had shown him through his
+ whole life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the Hapsburg,&rdquo; Biberli added, &ldquo;had kept his word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few years his young lord was ready for a position at court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gotthard von Ramsweg, the Lady Wendula&rsquo;s older brother, a valiant knight,
+ went to his sister&rsquo;s home after her husband&rsquo;s death to manage the estate
+ and instruct his nephew in all the exercises of knighthood. Soon the
+ strong, agile, fearless son of a brave father, under the guidance of such
+ a teacher, excelled many an older youth. He was barely eighteen when the
+ Lady Wendula sent him to his imperial master. She had given him, with her
+ blessing, fiery horses, the finest pieces of his father&rsquo;s suits of mail,
+ an armour bearer, and a groom to take with him on his journey; and his
+ uncle had agreed to accompany him to Lausanne, where the Emperor Rudolph
+ was then holding his court to discuss with Pope Gregory&mdash;the tenth of
+ the name&mdash;arrangements for a new crusade. But nothing had yet been
+ said about Biberli. On the evening before the young noble&rsquo;s departure,
+ however, a travelling minstrel came to the castle, who sang of the deeds
+ of former crusaders, and alluded very touchingly to the loneliness of the
+ wounded knight, Herr Weisenthau, on his couch of pain. Then the Lady
+ Wendula remembered her eldest son, and the fraternal tendance which
+ Biberli had given him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so,&rdquo; the servant went on, &ldquo;in the anxiety of a mother&rsquo;s heart she
+ urged me to accompany Heinz, her darling, as esquire; and watch over his
+ welfare.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since I could use a pen, I was to write now and then what a mother
+ desires to hear of a son. She felt great confidence in me, because she
+ believed that I was true and steadfast. And I have kept in every respect
+ the vow I then made to the Lady Wendula&mdash;that she should not find
+ herself mistaken in me. I remember that evening as if it were only
+ yesterday. To keep constantly before my eyes the praise my mistress had
+ bestowed upon me, I ventured to ask my young master&rsquo; sister to embroider
+ the T and the S on the cap and the new coat, and the young lady did so
+ that very night. Since that time these two initials have gone with me
+ wherever our horses bear us, and as, after the battle of Marchfield,
+ Biberli nursed his master back to health with care and toil, he thinks he
+ can prove to you, his sole sweetheart, that he wears his T and S with good
+ reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In return for these words Katterle granted her friend the fitting reward
+ with such resignation that it was robbing the moon not to permit her to
+ look on. Her curiosity, however, was not to remain wholly ungratified; for
+ when Biberli found that it was time for him to repair to the Town Hall to
+ learn whether his master, Heinz Schorlin, needed his services, Katterle
+ came out of the house door with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They found much more to say and to do ere they parted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First, the Swiss maid-servant wished to know how the Emperor Rudolph had
+ received Heinz Schorlin; and she had the most gratifying news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During their stay at Lausanne, where he won the victory in a tournament,
+ Heinz was knighted; but after the battle of Marchfield he became still
+ dearer to the Emperor, especially when a firm friendship united the young
+ Swiss to Hartmann, Rudolph&rsquo;s eighteen-year-old son, who was now on the
+ Rhine. That very day Heinz had received a tangible proof of the imperial
+ favour, on account of which he had gone to the dance in an extremely
+ cheerful mood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This good news concerning the knight, whom her young mistress had perhaps
+ already met, awakened in the maid, who was not averse to the business of
+ matchmaking, so dear to her sex, very aspiring plans which aimed at
+ nothing less than a union between Eva and Heinz Schorlin. But Biberli had
+ scarcely perceived the purport of Katterle&rsquo;s words when he anxiously
+ interrupted her and, declaring that he had already lingered too long, cut
+ short the suggestion by taking leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His master&rsquo;s marriage to a young girl who belonged to the city nobility,
+ which in his eyes was far inferior in rank to a Knight Schorlin, should
+ cast no stone in the pathway of fame that was leading him so swiftly
+ upward. Many things must happen before Biberli could honestly advise him
+ to give up his present free and happy life and seek rest in his own nest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Eva Ortlieb were as lovely as the Virgin herself, and Sir Heinz&rsquo;s
+ inflammable heart should blaze as fervently as it always did, she should
+ not lure him into the paralysing bondage of wedlock so long as he was
+ there and watched over him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he must be married, Biberli had something else in view for him&mdash;something
+ which would make him a great lord at a single stroke. But it was too soon
+ even for that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he crossed the Fleischbrucke in the market place and approached the
+ brilliantly lighted Town Hall, he had considerable difficulty in moving
+ forward, for the whole square was thronged with curious spectators,
+ servants in gala liveries, sedan chairs, richly caparisoned steeds, and
+ torchbearers. The von Montfort retinue, which had quarters in the Ortlieb
+ house, was one of the most brilliant and numerous of all, and Biberli&rsquo;s
+ eyes wandered with a look of satisfaction over the gold-mounted sedan
+ chair of the young countess. He would rather have given his master to her
+ than to the Nuremberg maiden whom Katterle compared to a weathercock, and
+ who therefore certainly did not possess the lofty virtue of steadfastness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Sir Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s servant was on intimate terms with many of the
+ servitors of the imperial family, and one of them conducted him to the
+ balcony of the city pipers, which afforded a view of the great hall. The
+ Emperor sat there at the head of the banquet table, and by his side, on a
+ lower throne, his sister, the Burgravine von Zollern. Only the most
+ distinguished and aristocratic personages whom the Reichstag attracted to
+ Nuremberg, with their ladies, shared the feast given by the city in their
+ honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But yonder, at a considerable distance from them, though within the space
+ enclosed by a black and yellow silk cord, separated from the glittering
+ throng of the other guests, he perceived&mdash;he would not trust his own
+ eyes&mdash;the Knight Heinz Schorlin, and by his side a wonderfully
+ charming young girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli had not seen Eva Ortlieb for three years, yet he knew that it was
+ no other than she. But into what a lovely creature the active, angular
+ child with the thin little arms had developed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hall certainly did not lack superb women of all ages and every style
+ of figure and bearing suited to please the eye. Many might even boast of
+ more brilliant, aristocratic beauty, but not one could vie in witchery
+ with her on whom Katterle had cast an eye for his master. She had only
+ begun a modest allusion to it, but even that was vexatious; for Biberli
+ fancied that she had thereby &ldquo;talked of the devil,&rdquo; and he did not wish
+ him to appear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a muttered imprecation, by no means in harmony with his character, he
+ prepared to leave the balcony; but the scene below, though it constantly
+ filled him with fresh vexation, bound him to the spot as if by some
+ mysterious spell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Especially did he fancy that he had a bitter taste in his mouth when his
+ gaze noted the marvellous symmetry of Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s powerful though not
+ unusually tall figure, his beautiful waving locks, and the aristocratic
+ ease with which he wore his superb velvet robe-sapphire blue on the left
+ side and white on the right, embroidered with silver falcons-or perceived
+ how graciously the noblest of the company greeted him after the banquet;
+ not, indeed, from envy, but because it pierced his very heart to think
+ that this splendid young favourite of fortune, already so renowned, whom
+ he warmly loved, should throw himself away on the daughter of a city
+ merchant, though his motley wares, which he had just seen, were adorned by
+ the escutcheon of a noble house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Heinz Schorlin had already been attracted by many more aristocratic
+ fair ones, only to weary of them speedily enough. This time, also, Biberli
+ would have relied calmly on his fickleness had Katterle&rsquo;s foolish wish
+ only remained unuttered, and had Heinz treated his companion in the gay,
+ bold fashion which usually marked his manner to other ladies. But his
+ glance had a modest, almost devout expression when he gazed into the large
+ blue eyes of the merchant&rsquo;s daughter. And now she raised them! It could
+ not fail to bewitch the most obdurate woman hater!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Faithful, steadfast Biberli clenched his fists, and once even thought of
+ shouting &ldquo;Fire!&rdquo;, into the ballroom below to separate all who were
+ enjoying themselves there wooing and being wooed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But those beneath perceived neither him nor his wrath&mdash;least of all
+ his master and the young girl who had come hither so reluctantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At home Eva had really done everything in her power to be permitted to
+ stay away from the Town Hall. Herr Ernst Ortlieb, her father, however, had
+ been inflexible. The chin of the little man with beardless face and hollow
+ cheeks had even begun to tremble, and this was usually the precursor of an
+ outburst of sudden wrath which sometimes overpowered him to such a degree
+ that he committed acts which he afterwards regretted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time he had been compelled not to tolerate the opposition of his
+ obstinate child. Emperor Rudolph himself had urged the &ldquo;honourable&rdquo;
+ members of the Council to gratify him and his daughter-in-law Agnes, whom
+ he wished to entertain pleasantly during her brief visit, by the presence
+ of their beautiful wives and daughters at the entertainment in the Town
+ Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Ortlieb&rsquo;s invalid wife could not spare Els, her older daughter and
+ faithful nurse, so he required Eva&rsquo;s obedience, and compelled her to give
+ up her opposition to attending the festival; but she dreaded the vain,
+ worldly gaiety&mdash;nay, actually felt a horror of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even while still a pupil at the convent school she had often asked herself
+ whether it would not be the fairest fate for her, like her Aunt Kunigunde,
+ the abbess of the convent of St. Clare, to vow herself to the Saviour and
+ give up perishable joys to secure the rapture of heaven, which lasted
+ throughout eternity, and might begin even here on earth, in a quiet life
+ with God, a complete realisation of the Saviour&rsquo;s loving nature, and the
+ great sufferings which he took upon himself for love&rsquo;s sake. Oh, even
+ suffering and bleeding with the Most High were rich in mysterious delight!
+ Aye, no earthly happiness could compare with the blissful feeling left by
+ those hours of pious ecstasy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often she had sat with closed eyes for a long time, dreaming that she was
+ in the kingdom of heaven and, herself an angel, dwelt with angels. How
+ often she had wondered whether earthly love could bestow greater joy than
+ such a happy dream, or the walks through the garden and forest, during
+ which the abbess told her of St. Francis of Assisi, who founded her order,
+ the best and most warmhearted among the successors of Christ, of whom the
+ Pope himself said that he would hear even those whom God would not!
+ Moreover, there was no plant, no flower, no cry of any animal in the woods
+ which was not familiar to the Abbess Kunigunde. Like St. Francis; she
+ distinguished in everything which the ear heard and the eye beheld voices
+ that bore witness to the goodness and greatness of the Most High. The
+ abbess felt bound by ties of sisterly affection to every one of God&rsquo;s
+ creatures, and taught Eva to love them, too, and, as a person who treats a
+ child kindly wins the mother&rsquo;s heart also, to obtain by love of his
+ creatures that of the Creator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others had blamed her because she held aloof from her sister&rsquo;s friends and
+ amusements. They were ignorant of the joys of solitude, which her aunt and
+ her saint had taught her to know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had endured interruptions and reproaches, often humbly, oftener still,
+ when her hot blood swept away her self-control, with vehement indignation
+ and tears; but meanwhile she had always cherished the secret thought that
+ the time would come when she, too, would be permitted, at one with God and
+ the Saviour, to enjoy the raptures of eternal bliss. She loved her invalid
+ mother and, often as his sudden fits of passion alarmed her, she was
+ tenderly attached to her father; yet it would have seemed to her an
+ exquisite delight to be permitted to imitate the saints and sever all
+ bonds which united her to the world and its clogging demands. She had long
+ been yearning for the day when she would be allowed to entreat the abbess
+ to grant her admittance to the convent, whose doors would be flung wide
+ open for her because, next to the brothers Ebner, who founded it, her
+ parents had contributed the largest sum for its support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she was obliged to wait patiently, for Els, her older sister, would
+ probably soon marry her Wolff, and then it would be her turn to nurse her
+ invalid mother. Her own heart dictated this, and the abbess had said: &ldquo;Let
+ her enter eternity clasping your hand before you begin, with us, to devote
+ all your strength to securing your own salvation. Besides, you will
+ thereby ascend a long row of steps nearer to your sublime goal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eva would far rather have given her hand now, aloof from the world, to
+ the Most High in an inviolable bond. What marvel that, with such a goal in
+ view, she was deeply reluctant to enter the gay whirl of a noisy ball!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With serious repugnance she had allowed Katterle and her sister to adorn
+ her, and entered the sedan chair which was to convey her to the Town Hall.
+ Doubtless her own image, reflected in the mirror, had seemed charming
+ enough, and the loud expressions of delight from the servants and others
+ who admired her rich costume had pleased her; but directly after she
+ realized the vanity of this emotion and, while approaching the ballroom in
+ her chair, she prayed to her saint to help her conquer it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Striving honestly to vanquish this error, she entered the hall soon after
+ the Emperor and his young daughter-in-law; but there she was greeted from
+ the balcony occupied by the city pipers and musicians, long before Biberli
+ entered it, with the same fanfare that welcomed the illustrious guests of
+ the city, and with which blended the blare of the heralds&rsquo; trumpets.
+ Thousands of candles in the chandeliers and candelabra diffused a radiance
+ as brilliant as that of day and, confused by the noise and waves of light
+ which surged around her, she had drawn closer to her father, clinging to
+ him for protection. She especially missed her sister, with whom she had
+ grown up, who had become her second self, and whom she needed most when
+ she emerged from her quiet life of introspection into the gay world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first she had stood with downcast lashes, but soon her eyes wandered
+ over the waving plumes and flashing jewels, the splendour of silk and
+ velvet, the glitter of gold and glimmer of pearls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes the display in church had been scarcely less brilliant, and even
+ without her sister&rsquo;s request she had gazed at it, but how entirely
+ different it was! There she had rejoiced in her own modest garb, and told
+ herself that her simplicity was more pleasing to God and the saints than
+ the vain splendour of the others, which she might so easily have imitated
+ or even surpassed. But here the anxious question of how she appeared among
+ the rest of the company forced itself upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, she knew that the brocade suckenie, which her father had ordered
+ from Milan, was costly; that the sea-green hue of the right side
+ harmonised admirably with the white on the left; that the tendrils and
+ lilies of the valley wrought in silver, which seemed to be scattered over
+ the whole, looked light and airy; yet she could not shake off the feeling
+ that everything she wore was in disorder&mdash;here something was pulled
+ awry, there something was crushed. Els, who had attended to her whole
+ toilet, was not there to arrange it, and she felt thoroughly uncomfortable
+ in the midst of this worldly magnificence and bustle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding her father&rsquo;s presence, she had never been so desolate as
+ among these ladies and gentlemen, nearly all of whom were strangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her sister was intimate with the other girls of her age and station, few
+ of whom were absent, and if Eva could have conjured her to her side
+ doubtless many would have joined them; but she knew no one well, and
+ though many greeted her, no one lingered. Everybody had friends with whom
+ they were on far more familiar terms. The young Countess von Montfort, a
+ girl of her own age and an inmate of her own home, also gave her only a
+ passing word. But this was agreeable to her&mdash;she disliked Cordula&rsquo;s
+ free manners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many who were friends of Els had gathered around Ursula Vorchtel, the
+ daughter of the richest man in the city, and she intentionally avoided the
+ Ortliebs because, before Wolff Eysvogel sued for Els&rsquo;s hand, he and Ursula
+ had been intended for each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva was just secretly vowing that this first ball should also be the last,
+ when the imperial magistrate, Herr Berthold Pfinzing, her godfather, came
+ to present her to the Emperor, who had requested to see the little
+ daughter of the Herr Ernst Ortlieb whose son had fallen in battle for him.
+ His &ldquo;little saint,&rdquo; Herr Pfinzing added, looked no less lovely amid the
+ gay music of the Nuremberg pipers than kneeling in prayer amid the notes
+ of the organ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every tinge of colour had faded from Eva&rsquo;s cheeks, and though a few hours
+ before she had asked her sister what the Emperor&rsquo;s greatness signified in
+ the presence of God that she should be forced, for his sake, to be
+ faithless to the holiest things, now fear of the majesty of the powerful
+ sovereign made her breath come quicker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How, clinging to her godfather&rsquo;s hand, she reached the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s
+ throne she could never describe, for what happened afterwards resembled a
+ confused dream of mingled bliss and pain, from which she was first
+ awakened by her father&rsquo;s warning that the time of departure had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she raised her downcast eyes the monarch was standing before the
+ throne placed for him. She had been compelled to bend her head backward in
+ order to see his face, for his figure, seven feet in height, towered like
+ a statue of Roland above all who surrounded him. But when, after the
+ Austrian duchess, his daughter-in-law, who was scarcely beyond childhood,
+ and the Burgrave von Zollern, his sister, had graciously greeted her, and
+ Eva with modest thanks had also bowed low before the Emperor Rudolph, a
+ smile, spite of her timidity, flitted over her lips, for as she bent the
+ knee her head barely reached above his belt. The Burgravine, a vivacious
+ matron, must have noticed it, for she beckoned to her, and with a few kind
+ words mentioned the name of the young knight who stood behind her, between
+ her own seat and that of the young Duchess Agnes of Austria, and
+ recommended him as an excellent dancer. Heinz Schorlin, the master of the
+ true and steadfast Biberli, had bowed courteously, and answered
+ respectfully that he hoped he should not prove himself unworthy of praise
+ from such lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile his glance met Eva&rsquo;s, and the Burgravine probably perceived with
+ what, ardent admiration the knight&rsquo;s gaze rested on the young Nuremberg
+ beauty, for she had scarcely stepped back after the farewell greeting when
+ the noble lady said in a low tone, but loud enough for Eva&rsquo;s quick ear to
+ catch the words, &ldquo;Methinks yonder maiden will do well to guard her little
+ heart this evening against you, you unruly fellow! What a sweet, angelic
+ face!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva&rsquo;s cheeks crimsoned with mingled shame and pleasure at such words from
+ such lips, and she would have been only too glad to hear what the knight
+ whispered to the noble lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attention of the young Duchess Agnes, daughter of King Ottocar of
+ Bohemia and wife of the Emperor&rsquo;s third son, who also bore the name of
+ Rudolph, had been claimed during this incident by the Duke of Nassau, who
+ had presented his ladies to her, but they had scarcely retired when she
+ beckoned to Heinz Schorlin, and while talking with him gazed into his eyes
+ with such warm, childlike pleasure that Eva was incensed; she thought it
+ unseemly for a wife and a duchess to be on such familiar terms with a
+ simple knight. Nay, her disapproval of the princess&rsquo;s conduct must have
+ been very deep, for during the whole time of her conversation with the
+ knight there was a loud singing in the young girl&rsquo;s ears. The Bohemian&rsquo;s
+ face might be considered pretty; her dark eyes sparkled brightly,
+ animating the immature features, now slightly sunburnt; and although four
+ years younger than Eva, her figure, though not above middle height, was
+ well developed and, in spite of its flexibility, aristocratic in bearing.
+ While conversing with Heinz Schorlin she seemed joyously excited,
+ unrestrainedly cordial, but her manner expressed disappointment and royal
+ hauteur as another group of ladies and gentlemen came forward to be
+ presented, compelling her to turn her back upon the young Swiss with a
+ regretful shrug of her shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The counts and countesses, knights and ladies who thronged around her
+ concealed her from Eva&rsquo;s eyes, who, now that Heinz Schorlin had left the
+ Bohemian, again turned her attention to the Emperor, and even ventured to
+ approach him. What paternal gentleness Rudolph&rsquo;s deep tones expressed! How
+ much his face attracted her!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, it could make no pretensions to beauty&mdash;the thin, hooked nose
+ was far too large and long; the corners of the mouth drooped downward too
+ much; perhaps it was this latter peculiarity which gave the whole face so
+ sorrowful an aspect. Eva thought she knew its source. The wound dealt a
+ few months before by the death of his faithful wife, the love of his
+ youth, still ached. His eyes could not be called either large or bright;
+ but how kindly, how earnest, shrewd and, when an amusing thought passed
+ through his mind, how mischievous they could look! His light-brown hair
+ had not yet turned very grey, spite of his sixty-three years, but the
+ locks had lost their luxuriance and fell straight, except for a slight
+ curl at the lower ends, below his neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva&rsquo;s father, when a young man, had met Frederic II, of the Hohenstaufen
+ line, in Italy, and was wont to call this a special boon of fate. True,
+ her aunt, the abbess, said she did not envy him the honour of meeting the
+ Antichrist; yet that very day after mass she had counselled Eva to impress
+ the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s appearance on her memory. To meet noble great men
+ elevates our hearts and makes us better, because in their presence we
+ become conscious of our own insignificance and the duty of emulating them.
+ She would willingly have given more than a year of her life to be
+ permitted to gaze into the pure, loving countenance of St. Francis, who
+ had closed his eyes seven years after her birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Eva, who was accustomed to render strict obedience to her honoured
+ aunt, honestly strove to watch every movement of the Emperor; but her
+ attention had been continually diverted, mainly by the young knight, from
+ whom&mdash;the Emperor&rsquo;s sister, Burgravine Elizabeth, had said so herself&mdash;danger
+ threatened her heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the young Countess Cordula von Montfort, the inmate of her home, also
+ compelled her to gaze after her, for Heinz Schorlin had approached the
+ vivacious native of the Vorarlberg, and the freedom with which she treated
+ him&mdash;allowing herself to go so far as to tap him on the arm with her
+ fan&mdash;vexed and offended her like an insult offered to her whole sex.
+ To think that a girl of high station should venture upon such conduct
+ before the eyes of the Emperor and his sister!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not for the world would she have permitted any man to talk and laugh with
+ her in such a way. But the young knight whom she saw do this was again the
+ Swiss. Yet his bright eyes had just rested upon her with such devout
+ admiration that lack of respect for a lady was certainly not in his
+ nature, and he merely found himself compelled, contrary to his wish, to
+ defend himself against the countess and her audacity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva had already heard much praise of the great valour of the young knight
+ Heinz Schorlin. When Katterle, whose friend and countryman was in his
+ service, spoke of him&mdash;and that happened by no means rarely&mdash;she
+ had always called him a devout knight, and that he was so, in truth, he
+ showed her plainly enough; for there was fervent devotion in the eyes
+ which now again sought hers like an humble penitent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The musicians had just struck up the Polish dance, and probably the
+ knight, whom the Emperor&rsquo;s sister had recommended to her for a partner,
+ wished by this glance to apologise for inviting Countess Cordula von
+ Montfort instead. Therefore she did not need to avoid the look, and might
+ obey the impulse of her heart to give him a warning in the language of the
+ eyes which, though mute, is yet so easily understood. Hitherto she had
+ been unable to answer him, even by a word, yet she believed that she was
+ destined to become better acquainted, if only to show him that his power,
+ of which the Burgravine had spoken, was baffled when directed against the
+ heart of a pious maiden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And something must also attract him to her, for while she had the honour
+ of being escorted up and down the hall by one of the handsome sons of the
+ Burgrave von Zollern to the music of the march performed by the city
+ pipers, Heinz Schorlin, it is true, did the same with his lady, but he
+ looked away from her and at Eva whenever she passed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her partner was talkative enough, and his description of the German order
+ which he expected to enter, as his two brothers had already done, would
+ have seemed to her well worthy of attention at any other time, but now she
+ listened with but partial interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the dance was over and Sir Heinz approached, her heart beat so loudly
+ that she fancied her neighbours must hear it; but ere he had spoken a
+ single word old Burgrave Frederick himself greeted her, inquired about her
+ invalid mother, her blithe sister, and her aunt, the abbess, who in her
+ youth had been the queen of every dance, and asked if she found his son a
+ satisfactory partner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an unusual distinction to be engaged in conversation by this
+ distinguished gentleman, yet Eva would fain have sent him far away, and
+ her replies must have sounded monosyllabic enough; but the sweet shyness
+ that overpowered her so well suited the modest young girl, who had
+ scarcely passed beyond childhood, that he did not leave her until the
+ &lsquo;Rai&rsquo; began, and then quitted her with the entreaty that she would remove
+ the cap which had hitherto rendered her invisible, to the injury of
+ knights and gentlemen, and be present at the dance which he should soon
+ give at the castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pleasant old nobleman had scarcely left her when she turned towards
+ the young man who had just approached with the evident intention of
+ leading her to the dance, but he was again standing beside Cordula von
+ Montfort, and a feeling of keen resentment overpowered her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young countess was challenging his attention still more boldly,
+ tossing her head back so impetuously that the turban-like roll on her
+ hair, spite of the broad ribbon that fastened it under her chin, almost
+ fell on the floor. But her advances not only produced no effect, but
+ seemed to annoy the knight. What charm could he find in a girl who, in a
+ costume which displayed the greatest extreme of fashion, resembled a Turk
+ rather than a Christian woman? True, she had an aristocratic bearing, and
+ perhaps Els was right in saying that her strongly marked features revealed
+ a certain degree of kindliness, but she wholly lacked the spell of
+ feminine modesty. Her pleasant grey eyes and full red lips seemed created
+ only for laughter, and the plump outlines of her figure were better suited
+ to a matron than a maiden in her early girlhood. Not the slightest defect
+ escaped Eva during this inspection. Meanwhile she remembered her own image
+ in the mirror, and a smile of satisfaction hovered round her red lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the knight bowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was he inviting the countess to dance again? No, he turned his back to her
+ and approached Eva, whose lovely, childlike face brightened as if a sun
+ beam had shone upon it. The possibility of refusing her hand for the &lsquo;Rai&rsquo;
+ never entered her head, but he told her voluntarily that he had invited
+ Countess Cordula for the Polish dance solely in consequence of the
+ Burgravine&rsquo;s command, but now that he was permitted to linger at her side
+ he meant to make up for lost time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He kept his word, and was by no means content with the &lsquo;Rai&rsquo;; for, after
+ the young Duchess Agnes had summoned him to a &lsquo;Zauner&rsquo;, and during its
+ continuance again talked with him far more confidentially than the modest
+ Nuremberg maiden could approve, he persuaded Eva to try the &lsquo;Schwabeln&rsquo;
+ with him also; and though she had always disliked such dances she yielded,
+ and her natural grace, as well as her quick ear for time, helped her to
+ catch the unfamiliar steps without difficulty. While doing so he whispered
+ that even the angels in heaven could have no greater bliss than it
+ afforded him to float thus through the hall, clasping her in his arm,
+ while she glanced up at him with a happy look and bent her little head in
+ assent. She would gladly have exclaimed warmly: &ldquo;Yes, indeed! Yet the
+ Burgravine says that danger threatens me from you, you dear, kind fellow,
+ and I should do well to avoid you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, she felt indebted to him. What would have befallen her here in
+ his absence! Moreover, it gave her a strange sense of pleasure to gaze
+ into his eyes, allow herself to be borne through the wide hall by his
+ strong arm, and while pressed closely to his side imagine that his swiftly
+ throbbing heart felt the pulsing of her own. Instead of injuring her,
+ wishing her evil, and asking her to do anything wrong, he certainly had
+ only good intentions. He had cared for her as if he occupied the place of
+ her own brother who fell in the battle of Marchfield. It would have given
+ him most pleasure&mdash;he had said so himself&mdash;to dance everything
+ with her, but decorum and the royal dames who kept him in attendance would
+ not permit it. However, he came to her in every pause to exchange at least
+ a few brief words and a glance. During the longest one, which lasted more
+ than an hour and was devoted to the refreshment of the guests, he led her
+ into a side room which had been transformed into a blossoming garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seats were placed behind the green birch trees&mdash;amid whose boughs
+ hung gay lamps&mdash;and the rose bushes which surrounded a fountain of
+ perfumed water, and Eva had already followed the Swiss knight across the
+ threshold when she saw among the branches at the end of the room the
+ Countess Cordula, at whose feet several young nobles knelt or reclined,
+ among them Seitz Siebenburg, the brother-in-law of Wolff Eysvogel, her
+ sister&rsquo;s betrothed bridegroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The manner of the husband and father whose wife, only six weeks before,
+ had become the mother of twin babies&mdash;beautiful boys&mdash;and who
+ for Cordula&rsquo;s sake so shamefully forgot his duties, crimsoned her cheeks
+ with a flush of anger, while the half-disapproving, half-troubled look
+ that Sir Boemund Altrosen cast, sometimes at the countess, sometimes at
+ Siebenburg, showed her that she herself was on the eve of doing something
+ which the best persons could not approve; for Altrosen, who leaned
+ silently against the wall beside the countess, ever and anon pushing back
+ the coal-black hair from his pale face, had been mentioned by her
+ godfather as the noblest of the younger knights gathered in Nuremberg. A
+ voice in her own heart, too, cried out that this was no fitting place for
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Els had been with her, Eva said to herself, she certainly would not
+ have permitted her to enter this room, where such careless mirth
+ prevailed, alone with a knight, and the thought roused her for a short
+ time from the joyous intoxication in which she had hitherto revelled, and
+ awakened a suspicion that there might be peril in trusting herself to
+ Heinz Schorlin without reserve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not here,&rdquo; she entreated, and he instantly obeyed her wish, though the
+ Countess Cordula, as if he were alone, instead of with a lady, loudly and
+ gaily bade him stay where pleasure had built a hut under roses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva was pleased that her new friend did not even vouchsafe the young
+ countess an answer. His obedience led her also to believe that her anxiety
+ had been in vain. Yet she imposed greater reserve of manner upon herself
+ so rigidly that Heinz noticed it, and asked what cloud had dimmed the pure
+ radiance of her gracious sunshine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva lowered her eyes and answered gently: &ldquo;You ought not to have taken me
+ where the diffidence due to modesty is forgotten.&rdquo; Heinz Schorlin
+ understood her and rejoiced to hear the answer. In his eyes, also,
+ Countess Cordula this evening had exceeded the limits even of the liberty
+ which by common consent she was permitted above others. He believed that
+ he had found in Eva the embodiment of pure and beautiful womanhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had given her his heart from the first moment that their eyes met. To
+ find her in every respect exactly what he had imagined, ere he heard a
+ single word from her lips, enhanced the pleasure he felt to the deepest
+ happiness which he had ever experienced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had already been fired with a fleeting fancy for many a maiden, but not
+ one had appeared to him, even in a remote degree, so lovable as this
+ graceful young creature who trusted him with such childlike confidence,
+ and whose innocent security by the side of the dreaded heart-breaker
+ touched him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never before had it entered his mind concerning any girl to ask himself
+ the question how she would please his mother at home. The thought that she
+ whom he so deeply honoured might possess a magic mirror which showed her
+ her reckless son as he dallied with the complaisant beauties whose
+ graciousness, next to dice-playing, most inflamed his blood, had sometimes
+ disturbed his peace of mind when Biberli suggested it. But when Eva looked
+ joyously up at him with the credulous confidence of a trusting child, he
+ could imagine no greater bliss than to hear his mother, clasping the
+ lovely creature in her arms, call her her dear little daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His reckless nature was subdued, and an emotion of tenderness which he had
+ never experienced before thrilled him as she whispered, &ldquo;Take me to a
+ place where everybody can see us, but where we need not notice anyone
+ else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How significant was that little word &ldquo;we&rdquo;! It showed that already she
+ united herself and him in her thoughts. To her pure nature nothing could
+ be acceptable which must be concealed from the light of the sun and the
+ eyes of man. And her wish could be fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The place where Biberli had discovered them, and where refreshments had
+ just been served to the Emperor and the ladies and gentlemen nearest to
+ his person, who had been joined by several princes of the Church, was shut
+ off by the bannerets, thus preventing the entrance of any uninvited
+ person; but Heinz Schorlin belonged to the sovereign&rsquo;s suite and had
+ admittance everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he led Eva behind the black and yellow rope to two vacant chairs at the
+ end of the enclosed space where the banquet had been swiftly arranged for
+ the Emperor and the other illustrious guests of Nuremberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These seats were in view of the whole company, yet it would have been as
+ difficult to interrupt him and his lady as any of the table companions of
+ the imperial pair. Eva followed the knight without anxiety, and took her
+ place beside him in the well-chosen seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young cup-bearer of noble birth, with whom Heinz was well acquainted,
+ brought unasked to him and his companion sparkling Malvoisie in Venetian
+ glasses, and Heinz began the conversation by inviting Eva to drink to the
+ many days brightened by her favour which, if the saints heard his prayer,
+ should follow this, the most delightful evening of his life. He omitted to
+ ask her to pour the wine for him, knowing that many of the guests in the
+ ballroom were watching them; besides the saucy little count came again and
+ again to fill his goblet, and he wished to avoid everything which might
+ elicit sarcastic comment. The young cup-bearer desisted as soon as he
+ noticed the respectful reserve with which Heinz treated his lady, and the
+ youth was soon obliged to leave the hall with his liege lord, Duke Rudolph
+ of Austria, who was to set out for Carinthia early the following morning,
+ and withdrew with his wife without sharing the banquet. The latter
+ accompanied her husband to the castle, but she was to remain in Nuremberg
+ during the session of the Reichstag with the lonely widowed Emperor, who
+ was especially fond of the young Bohemian princess. Before and during the
+ dance with Heinz the latter had requested him to use the noble Arabian
+ steed, a gift from the Sultan Kalaun to the Emperor, who had bestowed it
+ upon her, and also expressed the hope of meeting the knight frequently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the conversation which Heinz began with Eva he was at first obliged to
+ defend himself, for she had admitted that she had heard the Burgravine&rsquo;s
+ warning to beware of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time she had found opportunity to tell him that her heart
+ yearned for something different from worldly love, and that she felt safe
+ from every one because St. Clare was constantly watching over her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied that he had been reared in piety, that he knew the close
+ relations existing between her patron saint and the holy Francis of
+ Assisi, and that he, too, had experienced many things from this man of
+ God. Eva, with warm interest, asked when and where, and he willingly told
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the way from Augsburg to Nuremberg, while riding in advance of the
+ imperial court, he had met an old barefooted man who, exhausted by the
+ heat of the day, had sunk down by the side of the road as if lifeless,
+ with his head resting against the trunk of a tree. Moved with compassion,
+ he dismounted, to try to do something for the greybeard. A few sips of
+ wine had restored him to consciousness, but his weary, wounded feet would
+ carry him no farther. Yet it would have grieved the old man sorely to be
+ forced to interrupt his journey, for the Chapter General in Portiuncula,
+ in Italy, had sent him with an important message to the brothers of his
+ order in Germany, and especially in Nuremberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old Minorite monk was especially dignified in aspect, and when he
+ chanced to mention that he had known St. Francis well and was one of those
+ who had nursed him during his last illness, a dispute had arisen between
+ Heinz Schorlin, the armor bearer, and his servant Walther Biberli, for
+ each desired to give up his saddle to the old man and pursue his journey
+ on foot for his sake and the praise of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Minorite could not be persuaded to break his vow never again to
+ mount a knight&rsquo;s charger and, even had it not been evident from his words,
+ Heinz asserted that the aristocratic dignity of his bearing would have
+ shown that he belonged to a noble race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli&rsquo;s eloquence gained the victory in this case also, and though the
+ groom led by the bridle another young stallion which the ex-schoolmaster
+ might have mounted, he had walked cheerily beside the old monk, sweeping
+ up the dust with his long robe. At the tavern the knight and his
+ attendants had been abundantly repaid for their kindness to the Minorite,
+ for his conversation was both entertaining and edifying; and Heinz
+ repeated to his lady, who listened attentively, much that the monk had
+ related about St. Francis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, too, was also on the ground dearest and most familiar to her. Her
+ little tongue ran fast enough, and her large blue eyes sparkled with an
+ unusually bright and happy lustre as she completed and corrected what the
+ young knight told her about the saint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much that was lovable, benevolent, and wonderful there was to relate
+ concerning this prophet of peace and good-will, this apostle of poverty
+ and toil who, in every movement of nature, perceived and felt a summons to
+ recognise the omnipotence and goodness of God, an invitation to devout
+ submission to the Most High!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many amusing, yet edifying and touching anecdotes, the Abbess
+ Kunigunde had narrated of him and the most beloved of his followers! Much
+ of this conversation Eva repeated to the knight, and her pleasure in the
+ subject of the conversation increased the vivacity of her active mind, and
+ soon led her to talk with eager eloquence. Heinz Schorlin fairly hung on
+ her lips, and his eyes, which betrayed how deeply all that he was hearing
+ moved him, rested on hers until a flourish of trumpets announced that the
+ interval between the dances was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had listened in delight and, he felt, was forever bound to her. When
+ duty summoned him to attend the Emperor he asked himself whether such a
+ conversation had ever been held in the midst of a merry dance; whether
+ God, in his goodness, had ever created a being so perfect in soul and body
+ as this fair saint, who could transform a ballroom into a church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aye, Eva had done so; for, ardent as was the knight&rsquo;s love, something akin
+ to religious devotion blended with his yearning desire. The last words
+ which he addressed to her before leading her back to the others contained
+ the promise to make her patron saint, St. Clare, his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess of Nassau had invited him for the next dance, but she found
+ Heinz Schorlin, whom the young Duchess Agnes had just said was merry
+ enough to bring the dead to life, a very quiet partner; while young Herr
+ Schurstab, who danced with Eva and, like all the members of the Honourable
+ Council, knew that she desired to take the veil, afterwards told his
+ friends that the younger beautiful E would suit a Carthusian convent,
+ where speech is prohibited, much better than a ballroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But after this &ldquo;Zauner&rdquo; Heinz Schorlin again loosed her tongue. When he
+ had told her how he came to the court, and she had learned that he had
+ joined the Emperor Rudolph at Lausanne just as he took the vow to take
+ part in the crusade, there was no end to her questions concerning the
+ reason that the German army had not already marched against the infidels,
+ and whether he himself did not long to make them feel his sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she asked still further particulars concerning Brother Benedictus,
+ the old Minorite whom he had treated so kindly. Heinz told her what he
+ knew, and when he at last enquired whether she still regretted having met
+ him whom she feared, she gazed frankly into his eyes and, smiling faintly,
+ shook her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This increased his ardour, and he warmly entreated her to tell him where
+ he could meet her again, and permit him to call her his lady. But she
+ hesitated to reply, and ere he could win from her even the faintest shadow
+ of consent, Ernst Ortlieb, who had been talking with other members of the
+ council in the room where the wine was served, interrupted him to take his
+ daughter home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went reluctantly. The clasp of the knight&rsquo;s hand was felt all the way
+ to the house, and it would have been impossible and certainly ungracious
+ not to return it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz Schorlin had obtained no assent, yet the last glance from her eyes
+ had been more eloquent than many a verbal promise, and he gazed after her
+ enraptured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed like desecration to give the hand in which hers had rested to
+ lead any one else to the dance, and when the rotund Duke of Pomerania
+ invited him to a drinking bout at his quarters at the Green Shield he
+ accepted; for without Eva the hall seemed deserted, the light robbed of
+ its brilliancy, and the gay music transformed to a melancholy dirge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when at the Green Shield the ducal wine sparkled in the beakers, the
+ gold shone and glistened on the tables, and the rattle of the dice invited
+ the bystanders to the game, he thought that whatever he undertook on such
+ a day of good fortune must have a lucky end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor had filled his purse again, but the friendly gift did not
+ cover his debts, and he wanted to be rid of them before he told his mother
+ that he had found a dear, devout daughter for her, and intended to return
+ home to settle in the ancestral castle, his heritage, and share with his
+ uncle the maintenance of his rights and the management of fields and
+ forests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, he must test for the first time the power of his new patroness,
+ St. Clare, instead of his old one, St. Leodegar. But the former served him
+ ill enough&mdash;she denied him her aid, at any rate in gambling. The full
+ purse was drained to its last &lsquo;zecchin&rsquo; only too soon, and Heinz,
+ laughing, turned it inside out before the eyes of his comrades. But though
+ the kind-hearted Duke of Pomerania, with whom Heinz was a special
+ favourite, pushed a little heap of gold towards him with his fat hands,
+ that the Swiss might try his luck again with borrowed money, which brings
+ good fortune, he remained steadfast for Eva&rsquo;s sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his way to the Green Shield he had confessed to Biberli&mdash;who,
+ torch in hand, led the way&mdash;that he intended very shortly to turn his
+ back on the court and ride home, because this time he had found the right
+ chatelaine for his castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That means the last one,&rdquo; the ex-schoolmaster answered quietly, carefully
+ avoiding fanning the flame of his young master&rsquo;s desire by contradiction.
+ Only he could not refrain from entreating him not to burn his fingers with
+ the dice, and, to confirm it, added that luck in gambling was apt to be
+ scanty where fortune was so lavish in the gifts of love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz now remembered this warning. It had been predicted to his darling
+ that meeting him would bring her misfortune, but he was animated by the
+ sincere determination to force the jewel of his heart to remember Heinz
+ Schorlin with anything but sorrow and regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What would have seemed impossible to him a few hours before, he now
+ realised. With a steady hand he pushed back the gold to the duke, who
+ pressed it upon him with friendly glances from his kind little eyes and an
+ urgent whispered entreaty, and took his leave, saying that to-night the
+ dice and he were at odds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words he left the room, though the host tried to detain him
+ almost by force, and the guests also earnestly endeavoured to keep the
+ pleasant, jovial fellow. The loss, over which Biberli shook his head
+ angrily, did, not trouble him. Even on his couch Heinz found but a short
+ time to think of his empty purse and the lovely maid who was to make the
+ old castle among his beloved Swiss mountains an earthly paradise, for
+ sleep soon closed his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning the events of the evening seemed like a dream. Would that
+ they had been one! Only he would not have missed, at any cost, the sweet
+ memories associated with Eva. But could she really become his own? He
+ feared not; for the higher the sun rose the more impracticable his
+ intentions of the night before appeared. At last he even thought of the
+ religious conversation in the dancing hall with a superior smile, as if it
+ had been carried on by some one else. The resolve to ask from her father
+ the hand of the girl he loved he now rejected. No, he was not yet fit for
+ a husband and the quiet life in the old castle. Yet Eva should be the lady
+ of his heart, her patron saint should be his, and he would never sue for
+ the love of any other maiden. Hers he must secure. To press even one kiss
+ on her scarlet lips seemed to him worth the risk of life. When he had
+ stilled this fervent longing he could ride with her colour on helm and
+ shield from tourney to tourney, and break a lance for her in every land
+ through which he passed with the Emperor. What would happen afterwards let
+ the saints decide. As usual, Biberli was his confidant, and declared
+ himself ready to use Katterle&rsquo;s services in his master&rsquo;s behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had his own designs in doing this. He could rely upon the waiting
+ maid&rsquo;s assistance, and if there were secret meetings between Eva Ortlieb
+ and his lord, which would appease the knight&rsquo;s ardour, even in a small
+ degree, the task of disgusting Heinz with his luckless idea of an early
+ marriage would not prove too difficult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Eva Ortlieb had been borne home from the ball in her sedan chair with a
+ happy smile hovering round her fresh young lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It still lingered there when she found her sister in their chamber,
+ sitting at the spinning wheel. She had not left her suffering mother until
+ her eyes closed in slumber, and was now waiting for Eva, to hear whether
+ the entertainment had proved less disagreeable than she feared, and&mdash;as
+ she had sent her maid to bed&mdash;to help her undress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One glance at Eva told her that she had perhaps left the ballroom even
+ more reluctantly than she entered it; but when Els questioned her so
+ affectionately, and with maternal care began to unfasten the ribbon which
+ tied her cap, the young girl, who in the sedan chair had determined to
+ confess to no one on earth what so deeply moved her heart, could not
+ resist the impulse to clasp her in her arms and kiss her with impetuous
+ warmth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els received the caress with surprise for, though both girls loved each
+ other tenderly, they, like most sisters, rarely expressed it by tangible
+ proofs of tenderness. Not until Eva released her did Els exclaim in merry
+ amazement: &ldquo;So it was delightful, my darling?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, so delightful!&rdquo; Eva protested with hands uplifted, and at the same
+ time met her sister&rsquo;s eyes with a radiant glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the thought entered her mind that it ill beseemed her to express so
+ much pleasure in a worldly amusement. Her glance fell in shame, and she
+ gently continued in that tone of self-compassion which was by no means
+ unfamiliar to the members of her family. &ldquo;True, though the Emperor is so
+ noble, and both he and the Burgravine were so gracious to me, at first&mdash;and
+ not only for a brief quarter of an hour, but a very long time I could feel
+ no real pleasure. What am I saying? Pleasure! I was indescribably desolate
+ and alone among all those vain, bedizened strangers. I was like a
+ shipwrecked sailor washed ashore by the waves and surrounded by people
+ whose language is unfamiliar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But half Nuremberg was at the ball,&rdquo; her sister interrupted. &ldquo;Now you see
+ the trouble, darling. Whoever, like you, remains in seclusion and mounts a
+ tall tree to be entirely alone, will be deserted; for who would be
+ kind-hearted enough to learn to climb for your sake? But it seems that
+ afterwards one and another&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Eva interrupted, &ldquo;if you think that any of your friends gave me more
+ than a passing greeting, you are mistaken. Not even Barbel, Ann, or Metz
+ took any special notice of your sister. They kept near Ursel Vorchtel, and
+ she and her brother Ulrich, of course, behaved as if I wore a fern cap and
+ had become invisible. I cannot tell you how uncomfortable I felt, and then&mdash;yes,
+ Els, then I first realised distinctly what you are to me. Obstinate as I
+ often am, in spite of all your kindness and care, ungraciously as I often
+ treat you, to-night I clearly perceived that we belong together, like a
+ pair of eyes, and that without you I am only half myself&mdash;or, at any
+ rate&mdash;not complete. And&mdash;as we are speaking in images&mdash;I
+ felt like a sapling whose prop has been removed; even your Wolff can never
+ have longed for you more ardently. My father found little time to give me.
+ As soon as he saw me take my place in the Polish dance he went with Uncle
+ Pfinzing to the drinking room, and I did not see him again till he came to
+ bring me home. He had asked Fran Nutzel to look after me, but her Kathrin
+ was taken ill, as I heard when we were leaving, and she disappeared with
+ her during the first dance. So I moved forlornly here and there until he&mdash;Heinz
+ Schorlin&mdash;came and took charge of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He? Sir Heinz Schorlin?&rdquo; asked Els in surprise, a look of anxious
+ suspense clouding her pretty, frank face. &ldquo;The reckless Swiss, whom
+ Countess Cordula said yesterday was the pike in the dull carp pond of the
+ court, and the only person for whom it was worth while to bear the penance
+ imposed in the confessional?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cordula von Montfort!&rdquo; cried Eva scornfully. &ldquo;If she speaks to me I shall
+ not answer her, I can tell you. My cheeks crimson when I think of the
+ liberty&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind her,&rdquo; said her sister soothingly. &ldquo;She is a motherless child,
+ and therefore unlike us. As for Heinz Schorlin, he is certainly a gallant
+ knight; but, my innocent lambkin, he is a wolf nevertheless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wolf?&rdquo; asked Eva, opening her large eyes as wide as if they beheld some
+ terrible object. But she soon laughed softly, and added quietly: &ldquo;But a
+ very harmless wolf, who humbly changes his nature when the right hand
+ strokes him. How you stare at me! I am not thinking of your beloved Wolff,
+ whom you have tamed tolerably well, but the wolf of Gubbio, which did so
+ much mischief, and to which St. Francis went forth, accosted him as
+ Brother Wolf, and reminded him that they both owed their lives to the
+ goodness of the same divine Father. The animal seemed to understand this,
+ for it nodded to him. The saint now made a bargain with the wolf, which
+ gave him its paw in pledge of the oath; and it kept the promise, for it
+ followed St. Francis into the city, and never again harmed anyone. The
+ citizens of Gubbio fed the good beast, and when it died sincerely mourned
+ it. If you wish to know from whom I heard this edifying story&mdash;which
+ is true, and can be confirmed by some one now in Nuremberg who witnessed
+ it&mdash;let me tell you that it was the wicked wolf himself; not the
+ Gubbio one, but he from Switzerland. An old Minorite monk, to whom he
+ compassionately gave his horse, is the witness I mentioned. At the tavern
+ the priest told him what he had beheld with his own eyes. Do you still
+ inveigh against the dangerous beast, which acts like the good Samaritan,
+ and finds nothing more delightful than hearing or speaking of our dear
+ saint?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And this in the Town Hall during the dance?&rdquo; asked Els, clasping her
+ hands as if she had heard something unprecedented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, fairly radiant with joy, nodded assent; and Els heard the ring of
+ pleasure in her clear voice, too, as she exclaimed: &ldquo;That was just what
+ made the ball so delightful. The dancing! Oh, yes, it is easy enough to
+ walk and turn in time to the music when one has such a knight for a
+ partner; but that was by no means the pleasantest part of it. During the
+ interval&mdash;it seemed but an instant, yet it really lasted a
+ considerable time&mdash;we first entered into conversation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In one of the side rooms?&rdquo; asked Els, the bright colour fading from her
+ cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you thinking of?&rdquo; replied Eva in a tone of offence. &ldquo;I believe I
+ know what is seemly as well as anybody else. True, your Countess Cordula
+ did not set the most praiseworthy example. She allowed the whole throng of
+ knights to surround her in the ante-room, and your future brother-in-law,
+ Siebenburg, outdid them all. We&mdash;Heinz Schorlin and I&mdash;sat near
+ the Emperor&rsquo;s table in the great hall, where everybody could see us. There
+ the conversation naturally passed from the old Minorite to the holy
+ founder of his order, and remained there. And if ever valiant knight
+ possessed a devout mind, it is Heinz Schorlin. Whoever goes into battle
+ without relying upon God and his saints,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;will find his courage
+ lack wings, and his armour the surest defensive &lsquo;weapon.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the ballroom!&rdquo; again fell from her sister&rsquo;s lips in the same tone of
+ amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where else?&rdquo; asked Eva angrily. &ldquo;I never met him except there. What do
+ you other girls talk about at such entertainments, if it surprises you?
+ Besides, St. Francis was by no means our only subject; we spoke of the
+ future crusade, too. And oh!&mdash;you may believe me&mdash;we would have
+ been glad to talk of such things for hours. He knew many things about our
+ saint; but the precise one which makes him especially great and lovable,
+ and withal so powerful that he attracted all whom he deemed worthy to
+ follow him, he had not understood, and I was permitted to be the first
+ person to bring it clearly before his mind. Ah! and his wit is as keen as
+ his sword, and his heart is as open to all that is noble and sacred as it
+ is loyal to his lord and Emperor. If we meet again I shall win him for the
+ white cross on the black mantle and the battle against the enemies of the
+ faith.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Eva,&rdquo; interrupted her sister, still under the spell of astonishment,
+ &ldquo;such conversation amid the merry music of the pipers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Wherever three Christians meet, even though they are only laymen, there
+ is a church,&rsquo; says Tertullian,&rdquo; Eva answered impressively. &ldquo;One need not
+ go to the house of God to talk about the things which ought to be the
+ highest and dearest to every one; and Heinz Schorlin&mdash;I know it from
+ his own lips&mdash;is of the same opinion, for he told me voluntarily that
+ he would never forget the few hours which we had enjoyed together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said her sister thoughtfully. &ldquo;But whether he does not owe this
+ pleasure more to the dancing than to the edifying conversation&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not!&rdquo; replied Eva, very positively. &ldquo;I can prove it, too; for
+ later, after he had heard many things about St. Clare, the female
+ counterpart of Francis, he vowed to make her his patron saint. Or do you
+ suppose that a knight changes his saints, as he does his doublet and coat
+ of mail, without having any great and powerful motive? Do you think it
+ possible that the idle pleasure of the dance led him to so important a
+ decision?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not. Nothing led him to it except the irresistible zeal of my
+ devout sister,&rdquo; answered Els, smiling, as she continued to comb her fair
+ hair. &ldquo;She spoke with tongues in the ballroom, as the apostles did at
+ Pentecost, and thus our &lsquo;little saint&rsquo; performed her first miracle: the
+ conversion of a godless knight during the dancing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call it so, if you choose,&rdquo; replied Eva, her red lips pouting scornfully,
+ as if she felt raised above such pitiful derision. &ldquo;How you hurt, Els! You
+ are pulling all the hair out of my head!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The object of this rebuke had used the comb with the utmost care, but the
+ great luxuriance of the long, fair, waving locks had presented many an
+ impediment, and Eva seemed unusually sensitive that night. Els thought she
+ knew why, and made no answer to the unjust charge. She knew her sister;
+ and as she wound the braids about her head, and then, in the maid&rsquo;s place,
+ hung part of her finery on hooks, and laid part carefully in the chest,
+ she asked her numerous questions about the dance, but was vouchsafed only
+ monosyllabic replies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Els knelt before the prie-dieu. Eva did the same, resting her head
+ so long upon her clasped hands that the patient older sister could not
+ wait for the &ldquo;Amen,&rdquo; but, in order not to disturb Eva&rsquo;s devotion, only
+ pressed a light kiss upon her head and then carefully drew the curtains
+ closely over the windows which, instead of glass, contained oiled
+ parchment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva&rsquo;s excitement filled her with anxiety. She knew, too, what a powerful
+ influence the bright moonlight sometimes exerted upon her while she slept,
+ and cast another glance at the closely curtained window before she went to
+ her own bed. There she lay a long time, with eyes wide open, pondering
+ over her sister&rsquo;s words, and in doing so perceived more and more clearly
+ that love was now knocking at the heart of the child kneeling before the
+ prie-dieu. Sir Heinz Schorlin, the wild butterfly, desired to sip the
+ honey from this sweet, untouched flower, and then probably abandon her
+ like so many before her. Love and anxiety made the girl, whose opinion was
+ usually milder than her sister&rsquo;s, a stern and unwise judge, for she
+ assumed that the Swiss&mdash;whose character in reality was far removed
+ from base hypocrisy&mdash;the man whom she had just termed a wolf, had
+ donned sheep&rsquo;s clothing to make her poor lambkin an easier prey. But she
+ was on guard and ready to spoil his game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did Eva really fail to understand the new feeling which had seized her so
+ swiftly and powerfully? Did she lull herself in the delusion that she
+ cared only for the welfare of the soul of the pious young knight?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, it might be so, and prudent Els, who had watched her own little world
+ intently enough, said to herself that it would be pouring oil upon the
+ flames to tease Eva about the defeat which she, the &ldquo;little saint,&rdquo; had
+ sustained in the battle against the demands of the world and of the
+ feminine heart. Besides, her sister was too dear for her to rejoice in her
+ humiliation. Els resolved not to utter a word about the Swiss unless
+ compelled to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva&rsquo;s prayers before retiring were often very long, but to-night it seemed
+ as if they would never end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is not appealing to St. Clare for herself alone, but for another,&rdquo;
+ thought Els. &ldquo;I spend less time in doing it. True, a Heinz Schorlin needs
+ longer intercession than my Eva, my Wolff, and my poor pious mother. But I
+ won&rsquo;t disturb her yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sighing faintly, she changed her position, but remained sitting propped
+ against the white pillows in order not to allow herself to be overcome by
+ sleep. But it was a hard struggle, and her lids often fell, her head
+ drooped upon her breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dawn was already glimmering without when the supplicant at last rose and
+ sought her couch. Her sister let her lie quietly for a while, then she
+ rose and put out the lamp which Eva had forgotten to extinguish. The
+ latter noticed it, turned her face towards her and called her gently. &ldquo;To
+ think that you should have to get up again, my poor Els! Give me a
+ good-night kiss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gladly, dearest,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;But it is really quite time to say
+ &lsquo;good-morning.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you have kept awake so long!&rdquo; replied Eva compassionately, as she
+ threw her arms gratefully around her sister&rsquo;s neck, kissed her tenderly,
+ and then pressed her hot cheek to hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is this?&rdquo; cried Els, with sincere anxiety. &ldquo;Are you hurt, child?
+ Surely you are weeping?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;I am only&mdash;I only thought that I had
+ adorned myself, decked myself out with idle finery, although I know how
+ many poor people are starving in want and misery, and how much more
+ pleasing in the sight of the Lord is the grey robe of the cloistered nun.
+ I could scarcely leave the hall in my overweening pleasure, and yet it
+ would have beseemed me far better to share the sufferings of the crucified
+ Saviour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, child,&rdquo; replied Els, striving to soothe her sister, &ldquo;how often I
+ have heard from you and our aunt, the abbess, that no one was so cheerful
+ and so glad to witness the enjoyment of human beings and animals as your
+ St. Francis!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He&mdash;he!&rdquo; groaned Eva, &ldquo;he who attained the highest goal, who heard
+ the voice of the Lord wherever he listened; he who chose poverty as his
+ beloved bride, who scorned show and parade and the trappings of wealth, as
+ he disdained earthly love; he who celebrated in song the love of the soul
+ glowing for the highest things, as no troubadour could do&mdash;oh, how
+ ardently he knew how to love, but to love the things which do not belong
+ to this world!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els longed to ask what Eva knew about the ardent fire of love; but she
+ restrained herself, darkened the bed as well as she could with the movable
+ curtain which hung from the ceiling on both sides above the double couch,
+ and said: &ldquo;Be sensible, child, and put aside such thoughts. How loudly the
+ birds are twittering outside! If our father is obliged to breakfast alone
+ there may be a storm, and I should be glad to have an hour&rsquo;s nap. You need
+ slumber, too. Dancing is tiresome. Shut your eyes and sleep as long as you
+ can. I&rsquo;ll be as quiet as a mouse while I am dressing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke she turned away from her sister and no longer resisted the
+ sleep which soon closed her weary eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As her father had ordered the servants not to disturb the young girls, Els
+ did not wake till the sun was high in the heavens. Eva&rsquo;s place at her side
+ was empty. She had already left the room. For the first time it had been
+ impossible to sleep even a few short moments, and when she heard from the
+ neighbouring cloister the ringing of the little bell that summoned the
+ nuns to prayers, she could stay in bed no longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Usually she liked to dress slowly, thinking meanwhile of many things which
+ stirred her soul. Sometimes while the maid or Els braided her hair she
+ could read a book of devotion which the abbess had given her. But this
+ morning she had carried the clothes she needed into the next room on
+ tiptoe, that she might not wake her sister, and urged Katterle, who helped
+ her dress, to hurry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She longed to see her aunt at the convent. While kneeling at the
+ prie-dieu, she had reached the certainty that her patron saint had led
+ Heinz Schorlin to her. He was her knight and she his lady, so he must
+ render her obedience, and she would use it to estrange him from the vanity
+ of the world and make him a champion of the holy cause of the Church of
+ Christ, the victorious conqueror of her foes. Sky-blue, the Holy Virgin&rsquo;s
+ colour, should be hers, and thus his also, and every victory gained by the
+ knight with the sky-blue on his helmet, under St. Clare&rsquo;s protection,
+ would then be hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz Schorlin was already one of the boldest and strongest knights; her
+ love must render him also one of the most godly. Yes, her love! If St.
+ Francis had not disdained to make a wolf his brother, why might she not
+ feel herself the loving sister of a youth who would obey her as a noble
+ falcon did his mistress, and whom she would teach to pursue the right
+ quarry? The abbess would not forbid such love, and the impulse that drew
+ her so strongly to the convent was the longing to know how her aunt would
+ receive her confession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night before when, after her conversation with Els, she began to pray,
+ she had feared that she had fallen into the snare of earthly love, and
+ dreaded the confession which she had to make to her aunt Kunigunde. Now
+ she found that it was no fleshly bond which united her to the knight. Oh,
+ no! As St. Francis had gone forth to console, to win souls for the Lord,
+ to bring peace and exhort to earnest labour in the service of the Saviour,
+ as his disciples had imitated him, and St. Clare had been untiring in
+ working, in his spirit, among women, she, too, would obey the call which
+ had come to her saint in Portiuncula, and prove herself for the first
+ time, according to the Scripture, &ldquo;a fisher of souls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she gladly anticipated the meeting; for though her sister did not
+ understand her, the abbess must know how to sympathise with what was
+ passing in her mind. This expectation was fulfilled; for as soon as she
+ was alone with her aunt she poured forth all her hopes and feelings
+ without reserve, eagerly and joyfully extolling her good fortune that,
+ through St. Clare, she had been enabled to find the noblest and most
+ valiant knight, that she might win him for the Holy War under her saint&rsquo;s
+ protection and to her honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abbess, who knew women&rsquo;s hearts, had at first felt the same fear as
+ Els; but she soon changed her opinion, and thought that she might be
+ permitted to rejoice over the new emotion in her darling&rsquo;s breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No girl in love talked so openly and joyously of the conquest won, least
+ of all would her truthful, excitable niece, whom she had drawn into her
+ own path, speak thus of the man who disturbed her repose. No sensitive
+ girl, unfamiliar with the world and scarcely beyond childhood, would
+ decide with such steadfast firmness, so wholly free from every selfish
+ wish, the future of the man dearest to her heart. No, no! Eva had already
+ attained her new birth, and was not to be compared with other girls She
+ had already once reached that ecstatic rapture which followed only a long
+ absorption in God and an active sympathy with the deep human love of the
+ Saviour and the unspeakable sufferings which he had taken upon himself.
+ Little was to be feared from earthly love for one who devoted herself with
+ all the passion of her fervid nature to the divine Bridegroom. Among the
+ many whom Kunigunde received into the convent as novices, she was most
+ certainly &ldquo;called.&rdquo; If she felt something which resembled love for the
+ young knight&mdash;and she made no concealment of it&mdash;it was only the
+ result of the sweet joy of winning for the Lord, the faith, and her saint
+ a soul which seemed to her worthy of such grace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dear, highly gifted child!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She, the abbess Kunigunde, was willing it should be so, and that Eva
+ should surpass herself. She should prove that genuine piety conquers even
+ the yearning of a quickly throbbing heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, she must keep her eyes open in order to prevent Satan, who is
+ everywhere on the watch, from mingling in a game not wholly free from
+ peril. But, on the other hand, the abbess intended to help her beloved
+ niece to reap the reward of her piety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was scarcely to be doubted that Heinz Schorlin was fired with ardent
+ love for Eva; but, for that very reason, he would be ready to yield her
+ obedience, and therefore it was advisable to tell her exactly to what she
+ must persuade him. She must win him to join the Order of Malta, and if the
+ famous champion of Marchfield performed heroic deeds with the white cross
+ on his black mantle, or in war on his red tunic, he, the Emperor&rsquo;s
+ favourite, would be sure of a high position among the military members of
+ the order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young girl listened eagerly, but the elderly abbess herself became
+ excited while encouraging the young future &ldquo;Sister&rdquo; to her noble task. The
+ days when, with the inmates of the convent, she had prayed that the
+ Emperor Rudolph might fulfil the Pope&rsquo;s desire, and in a new crusade again
+ wrest the Holy Land from the infidels, came back to her memory, and Heinz
+ Schorlin, guided by the nuns of St. Clare, seemed the man to bring the
+ fulfilment of this old and cherished wish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appeared like a leading of the saints and a sign from God that Heinz
+ had been dubbed a knight, and commenced his glorious career at Lausanne
+ while the Emperor Rudolph pledged himself to a new crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She detained Eva so long that dinner was over at the Ortlieb mansion, and
+ her impatient father would have sent for her had not the invalid mother
+ urged him to let her remain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, she longed to have a talk with her darling, who for the first time
+ in her life had attended a great entertainment, and doubtless it grieved
+ her to think that Eva did not feel the necessity of pouring out her heart
+ to her own mother rather than to any one else, and sharing with her all
+ the new emotions which undoubtedly had thrilled it; but she knew her
+ child, and would have considered it selfish to place any obstacle in the
+ pathway to eternal salvation of the elect whom God summoned with so loud a
+ voice. Formerly she would rather have seen the young girl, whose charms
+ were developing into such rare beauty, wedded to some good man; but now
+ she rejoiced in the idea that Eva was summoned to rule over the nuns in
+ the neighbouring cloister some day as abbess, in the place of her
+ sister-in-law Kunigunde. Her own days, she knew, were numbered, but where
+ could her child more surely find the happiness she desired for her than
+ with the beloved sisters of St. Clare, whose home she and her husband had
+ helped to build?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els had concealed from her parents what she fancied she had discovered,
+ for any anxiety injured the invalid, and no one could anticipate how her
+ irritable father might receive the information of her fear. On the other
+ hand, she could confide her troubles without anxiety to Wolff, her
+ betrothed husband. He was wise, prudent, loved Eva like a sister, and in
+ exchanging thoughts with him she always discovered the right course to
+ pursue; but though she expected him so eagerly and confidently, he did not
+ come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, in the afternoon, Eva returned home, her whole manner expressed such
+ firm, cheerful composure that Els began to hope she might have been
+ mistaken. The undemonstrative yet tender affection with which she met her
+ mother, too, by no means harmonised with her fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How lovely the young girl looked as she sat on a low stool at the head of
+ the invalid&rsquo;s couch and, with her mother&rsquo;s emaciated hand clasped in hers,
+ told her all that she had seen and experienced the evening before! To
+ please the beloved sufferer, she dwelt longer on the description of the
+ gracious manner of the Emperor Rudolph and his sister to her and her
+ father, the conversation with which the Burgrave had honoured her, and his
+ son&rsquo;s invitation to dance. Then for the first time she mentioned Heinz
+ Schorlin, whom she had found a godly knight, and finally spoke briefly of
+ the distinguished foreign nobles and ladies whom he had pointed out and
+ named.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this reminded the mother of former days and, in spite of the warning
+ of watchful Els not to talk too much, she did not cease questioning or
+ recalling the time when she herself attended such festivals, and as one of
+ the fairest maidens received much homage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been a good day, for it was long since she had enjoyed so much
+ quiet in her own home. The von Montforts, she told Eva, had set off early,
+ with a great train of knights and servants, to ride to Radolzburg, the
+ castle of the Burgrave von Zollern. Her father thought they would probably
+ have a dance there, for the young sons of the Burgrave would act as hosts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva asked carelessly who rode with Cordula this time to submit to her
+ whims, but Els perceived by her sister&rsquo;s flushed cheeks and the tone of
+ her voice what she desired to know, and answered as if by accident that
+ Sir Heinz Schorlin certainly was not one of her companions, for he had
+ ridden through the Frauenthor that afternoon in the train of the Emperor
+ Rudolph and his Bohemian daughter-in-law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twilight was already beginning to gather, and Els could not see whether
+ this news afforded Eva pleasure or annoyance, for her mother had taken too
+ little heed of her weakness, and one of the attacks which the physician so
+ urgently ordered her to avoid by caution commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els and the convent Sister Renata, who helped her nurse the invalid, were
+ now completely absorbed in caring for her, but Eva turned away from the
+ beloved sufferer&mdash;her sensitive nature could not endure the sight of
+ her convulsions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as her mother again lay weak but quiet on the pillows which Els
+ had rearranged for her, Eva obeyed her entreaty to go away, and went to
+ her own chamber. When another attack drew her back to the invalid, a sign
+ from her sister as she reached the threshold bade her keep away from the
+ couch. Should it prove necessary, she whispered, she would call her. If
+ Wolff came, Eva was to tell him that she could not leave her mother, but
+ he must be sure to return early the next morning, as she had a great deal
+ to say to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva then went to her father, who was dressing to attend a banquet at the
+ house of Herr Berthold Vorchtel, the first Losunger&mdash;[Presiding
+ Officer]&mdash;in the Council, from which he would be loath to absent
+ himself for the very reason that his host&rsquo;s family had been hostile to him
+ ever since the rumour of the betrothal of Wolff Eysvogel, whom the
+ Vorchtels had regarded as their daughter Ursula&rsquo;s future husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, Herr Ernst would not have gone to the entertainment had his
+ wife&rsquo;s condition given cause for anxiety. But he was familiar with these
+ convulsions which, it is true, weakened the invalid, but produced no other
+ results; so he permitted Eva to help him put the last touches to his
+ dress, on which he lavished great care. Spick and span as if he were just
+ out of a bandbox, the elderly man, before leaving the house, went once
+ more to the sick-room, and Eva stood near as, after many questions and
+ requests, he whispered something to Els which she did not hear. With
+ excited curiosity she asked what he had said so secretly, but he only
+ answered hurriedly, &ldquo;The name of the Man in the Moon&rsquo;s dog,&rdquo; kissed her
+ cheek, and ran downstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the foot he again turned to Eva and told her to send for him if her
+ mother should grow worse, for these entertainments at the Vorchtels
+ usually lasted a long time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will the Eysvogels be there too?&rdquo; asked the girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who knows,&rdquo; replied her father. &ldquo;I shall be glad if Wolff comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone in which he uttered the name of his future son-in-law distinctly
+ showed how little he desired to meet any other member of the family, and
+ Eva said sympathisingly, &ldquo;Then I hope you will have an opportunity to
+ remember me to Wolff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall I say nothing to Ursel?&rdquo; asked the father, pressing a good-night
+ kiss upon the young girl&rsquo;s forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She would not care for it,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;It cannot be easy to forget a
+ man like Wolff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish he had stuck to Ursel, and let Els alone,&rdquo; her father answered
+ angrily. &ldquo;It would have been better for both.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, father,&rdquo; interrupted Eva reproachfully, &ldquo;do not our lovers seem
+ really created for each other?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If the Eysvogels were only of the same opinion,&rdquo; exclaimed Ernst Ortlieb,
+ shrugging his shoulders with a faint sigh. &ldquo;Whoever marries, child, weds
+ not only a man or a woman; all their kindred, unhappily, must be taken
+ into the bargain. However, Els did not lack earnest warning. When your
+ time comes, girl, your father will be more careful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smiling tenderly, he passed his hand over the little cap which covered her
+ thick, fair hair, and went out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva returned to her room and sat down at the spinning-wheel in the bow
+ window, where Katterle had just drawn the curtains closely and lighted the
+ hanging lamp. But the distaff remained untouched, and her thoughts
+ wandered swiftly to the evening before and the ball at the Town Hall.
+ Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s image rose more and more distinctly before her mind, and
+ this pleased her, for she fancied that he wore on his helm the blue favour
+ which she had chosen, and it led her to consider against what foe she
+ should first send him in the service of his lady and the Holy Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Eva had gazed into vacancy a long time, and beheld a succession of
+ pleasing pictures, in every one of which, Heinz Schorlin appeared. Once,
+ in imagination, she placed a wreath on his helmet after a great victory
+ over the infidels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should not this vision become a reality? Doubtless it owed its origin
+ to a memory, for Wolff Eysvogel had been fired with love for her sister
+ while Els was winding laurel around his helmet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Honourable Council had resolved that the youths belonging to
+ noble families, who had fought in the battle of Marchfield and returned
+ victorious, should be adorned with wreaths by the maidens of their choice,
+ Fate had appointed her sister to crown Eysvogel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that time Wolff had but recently recovered from the severe wounds with
+ which he had returned from the campaign. But while he knelt before Els and
+ his eyes met hers, love had overmastered him so swiftly and powerfully,
+ that at the end of a few days he determined to woo her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile his own family resolutely opposed his choice. The father
+ declared that he had made an agreement with Berthold Vorchtel to marry him
+ to his daughter Ursula, and withdrawal on his son&rsquo;s part would embarrass
+ him. His grandmother, the arrogant old Countess Rotterbach, agreed with
+ him, and declared that Wolff ought to wed no one except a lady of the most
+ aristocratic birth or an heiress like Ursula. Her daughter Rosalinde
+ Eysvogel, as usual, was the echo of her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Ernst Ortlieb, too, would far rather have seen his Els marry into
+ another home; but Wolff himself was a young man of such faultless honour,
+ and the bride he had chosen was so eager to become his, that he deemed it
+ a duty to forget the aversion inspired by the suitor&rsquo;s family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Wolff, he had so firmly persisted in his resolve that his parents
+ at last permitted him to ask for his darling&rsquo;s hand, but his father had
+ made it a condition that the betrothal, on account of the youth of the
+ lovers, should not be announced till after Wolff had returned from Milan,
+ where he was to finish the studies commenced in Venice. True, everyone had
+ supposed that they were completed long ago, but Eysvogel senior insisted
+ upon his demand, and afterwards succeeded in deferring the announcement of
+ the betrothal, until the resolute persistence of Wolff, who meanwhile had
+ entered the great commercial house, and the wish of his own aged mother, a
+ sensible woman, who from the first had approved her grandson&rsquo;s choice and
+ to whom Herr Casper was obliged to show a certain degree of consideration,
+ compelled him to give it publicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days later Herr Casper&rsquo;s brother died, and soon after his estimable
+ old mother. He used these events as a pretext for longer delay, saying
+ that both he and his wife needed at least six months&rsquo; interval ere they
+ could forget their mourning in a gay wedding festival. Besides, he would
+ prefer not to have the marriage take place until after Wolff&rsquo;s election to
+ the Council, which, in all probability, would occur after Walpurgis of the
+ coming year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernst Ortlieb had sullenly submitted to all this. Nothing but his love for
+ his child and respect for Herr Casper&rsquo;s dead mother, who had taken Els to
+ her heart like a beloved granddaughter, would have enabled him to conquer
+ his hasty temper in his negotiations with the man whom he detested in his
+ inmost soul, and not hurl back the consent so reluctantly granted to his
+ son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friends who knew him admired the strength of will with which he
+ governed his impetuous nature in this transaction. Some asserted that
+ secret obligations compelled him to yield to the rich Eysvogel; for though
+ the Ortlieb mercantile house was reputed wealthy, the business prudence of
+ its head resulted in smaller profits, and people had not forgotten that it
+ had suffered heavy losses during the terrible period of despotism which
+ had preceded the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s accession to the throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The insecurity of the high-roads had injured every merchant, but in trying
+ to find some explanation for Herr Ortlieb&rsquo;s submission the attacks which
+ had cost him one and another train of wares were regarded as specially
+ disastrous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, the dowry which Els was to bring bore no comparison to the large
+ sums Ernst Ortlieb had lavished upon the erection of the St. Clare
+ Convent, and hence it was inferred that the wealth of the firm had
+ sustained considerable losses. This found ready credence, owing to the
+ retired life led by the Ortliebs,&mdash;whose house had formerly been one
+ of the most hospitable in the city,&mdash;ever since the wife had become
+ an invalid and Eva had grown up with an aversion to the world. Few took
+ the trouble to inquire into the very apparent causes for the change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet this view of the matter was opposed by many-nay, when the conversation
+ turned upon these subjects, Herr Berthold Vorchtel, perhaps the richest
+ and most distinguished man in Nuremberg, who rented the imperial taxes,
+ made comments from which, had it not been so difficult to believe, people
+ might have inferred that Casper Eysvogel was indebted to Ernst Ortlieb
+ rather than the latter to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the cautious, prudent man never explained the foundation of his
+ opinion, for he very rarely mentioned either of the two firms; yet prior
+ to the battle of Marchfield he had believed that his own daughter Ursula
+ and Wolff Eysvogel would sooner or later wed. Herr Casper, the young man&rsquo;s
+ father, had strengthened this expectation. He himself and his wife
+ esteemed Wolff, and his &ldquo;Ursel&rdquo; had shown plainly enough that she
+ preferred him to the other friends of her elder brother Ulrich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he returned home the two met like brother and sister, and the parents
+ of Ursula Vorchtel had expected Wolff&rsquo;s proposal until the day on which
+ the wreaths were bestowed had made them poorer by a favourite wish and
+ destroyed the fairest hope of their daughter Ursula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worthy merchant, it is true, deemed love a beautiful thing, but in
+ Nuremberg it was the parents who chose wives and husbands for their sons
+ and daughters; yet, after marriage, love took possession of the newly
+ wedded pair. A transgression of this ancient custom was very rare, and
+ even though Wolff&rsquo;s heart was fired with love for Els Ortlieb, his father,
+ Herr Vorchtel thought, should have refused his consent to the betrothal,
+ especially as he had already treated Ursel as his future daughter. Some
+ compulsion must have been imposed upon him when he permitted his son to
+ choose a wife other than the one selected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what could render one merchant dependent upon another except business
+ obligations?&mdash;and Berthold Vorchtel was sharp-sighted. He knew the
+ heavy draft which Herr Casper had made upon the confidence reposed in the
+ old firm, and thought he had perceived that the great splendour displayed
+ by the women of the Eysvogel family, the liberality with which Herr Casper
+ had aided his impoverished noble relatives, and the lavish expenditure of
+ his son-in-law, the debt-laden Sir Seitz Siebenburg, drew too heavily upon
+ the revenues of the ancient house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even now Casper Eysvogel&rsquo;s whole conduct proved how unwelcome was his
+ son&rsquo;s choice. To him, Ursula&rsquo;s father, he still intimated on many an
+ occasion that he had by no means resigned every hope of becoming, through
+ his son, more nearly allied to his family, for a betrothal was not a
+ wedding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Berthold Vorchtel, however, was not the man to enter into such
+ double-dealing, although he saw plainly enough how matters stood with his
+ poor child. She had confided her feelings to no one; yet, in spite of
+ Ursula&rsquo;s reserved nature, even a stranger could perceive that something
+ clouded her happiness. Besides, she had persistently refused the
+ distinguished suitors who sought the wealthy Herr Berthold&rsquo;s pretty
+ daughter, and only very recently had promised her parents, of her own free
+ will, to give up her opposition to marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ever since the betrothal, to the sincere sorrow of Els, she had studiously
+ avoided Wolff&rsquo;s future bride, who had been one of her dearest friends; and
+ Ulrich, Herr Vorchtel&rsquo;s oldest son, took his sister&rsquo;s part, and at every
+ opportunity showed Wolff&mdash;who from a child, and also in the battle of
+ Marchfield, had been a favourite comrade&mdash;that he bore him a grudge,
+ and considered his betrothal to any one except Ursula an act of shameful
+ perfidy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fair-minded father did not approve of his son&rsquo;s conduct, for his wife
+ had learned from her daughter that Wolff had never spoken to her of love,
+ or promised marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore, whenever Herr Berthold Vorchtel met Els&rsquo;s father&mdash;and this
+ often happened in the Council&mdash;he treated him with marked respect,
+ and when there was an entertainment in his house sent him an invitation,
+ as in former years, which Ernst Urtlieb accepted, unless something of
+ importance prevented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though the elder Vorchtel was powerless to change his children&rsquo;s
+ conduct, he never wearied of representing to his son how unjust and
+ dangerous were the attacks with which, on every occasion, he irritated
+ Wolff, whose strength and skill in fencing were almost unequalled in
+ Nuremberg. In fact, the latter would long since have challenged his former
+ friend had he not been so conscious of his own superiority, and shrunk
+ from the thought of bringing fresh sorrow upon Ursula and her parents,
+ whom he still remembered with friendly regard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva was fond of her future brother-in-law, and it had not escaped her
+ notice that of late something troubled him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She thoughtfully gave the wheel a push, and as it turned swiftly she
+ remembered the Swiss dance the evening before, and suddenly clenched her
+ small right hand and dealt the palm of her left a light blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She fancied that she had discovered the cause of Wolff&rsquo;s depression, for
+ she again saw distinctly before her his sister Isabella&rsquo;s husband, Sir
+ Seitz Siebenburg, as he swung Countess Cordula around so recklessly that
+ her skirt, adorned with glittering jewels, fluttered far out from her
+ figure. In the room adjacent to the hall he had flung himself upon his
+ knees before the countess, and Eva fancied she again beheld his big, red
+ face, with its long, thick, yellow mustache, whose ends projected on both
+ sides in a fashion worn by few men of his rank. The expression of the
+ watery blue eyes, with which he stared Cordula in the face, were those of
+ a drunkard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day he had followed her to the Kadolzburg, and probably meant to spend
+ the night there. So Wolff had ample reason to be anxious about his sister
+ and her peace of mind. That must be it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps he would yet come that evening, to give Els at least a greeting
+ from the street. How late was it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She hastily tried to draw the curtains aside from the window, but this was
+ not accomplished as quickly as she expected&mdash;they had been care fully
+ fastened with pins. Eva noticed it, and suddenly remembered her father&rsquo;s
+ whispered words to Els.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were undoubtedly about the window. According to the calendar, the
+ moon would be full that day, and she knew very well that it had a strange
+ influence upon her. True, within the past year it appeared to have lost
+ its power; but formerly, especially when she had devoted herself very
+ earnestly to religious exercises, she had often, without knowing how or
+ why, left her bed and wandered about, not only in her chamber but through
+ the house. Once she had climbed to the dovecot in the courtyard, and
+ another time had mounted to the garret where, she did not know in what
+ way, she had been awakened. When she looked around, the moon was shining
+ into the spacious room, and showed her that she was perched on one of the
+ highest beams in the network of rafters which, joined with the utmost
+ skill, supported the roof. Below her yawned a deep gulf, and as she looked
+ down into it she was seized with such terror that she uttered a loud
+ shriek for help, and did not recover her calmness until the old
+ housekeeper, Martsche, who had started from her bed in alarm, brought her
+ father to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had been taken down with the utmost care. No one was permitted to help
+ except white-haired Nickel, the old head packer, who often let a whole day
+ pass without opening his lips; for Herr Ernst seemed to lay great stress
+ upon keeping the moon&rsquo;s influence on Eva a secret. There was indeed
+ something uncanny about this night-walking, for even now it seemed
+ incomprehensible how she had reached the beam, which was at least the
+ height of three men above the floor. A fall might have cost her life, and
+ her father was right in trying to prevent a repetition of such nocturnal
+ excursions. This time Els had helped him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How faithfully she cared for them all!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, she had barred out even the faintest glimmer. Eva smiled as she saw
+ the numerous pins with which her sister had fastened the curtain, and an
+ irresistible longing seized her to see once more the wonderful light that
+ promoted the growth of the hair if cut during its increase, and also
+ exerted so strange an influence upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She must look up at the moon!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swiftly and skilfully, as if aided by invisible hands, her dainty fingers
+ opened curtain and window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drawing a deep breath, with an emotion of pleasure which she had not
+ experienced for a long time, she gazed at the linden before the house
+ steeped in silvery radiance, and upward to the pure disk of the full moon
+ sailing in the cloudless sky. How beautiful and still the night was! How
+ delightful it would be to walk up and down the garden, with her aunt the
+ abbess, with Els, and perhaps&mdash;she felt the blood crimson her cheeks&mdash;with
+ Heinz Schorlin!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where was he now?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Undoubtedly with the Emperor and his ladies, perhaps at the side of the
+ Bohemian princess, the young Duchess Agnes, who yesterday had so plainly
+ showed her pleasure in his society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then the watch, marching from the Marienthurn to the Frauenthor, gave
+ her vagrant thoughts a new turn. The city guard was soon followed by a
+ troop of horse, which probably belonged to the Emperor&rsquo;s train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was delightful to gaze, at this late hour, into the moonlit street, and
+ she wondered that she had never enjoyed it before. True, it would have
+ been still pleasanter had Els borne her company; and, besides, she longed
+ to tell her the new explanation she had found for Wolff&rsquo;s altered manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps her mother was asleep, and she could come with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How still the house was!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cautiously opening the door of the sick-room, she glanced in. Els was
+ standing at the head of the bed, supporting her mother with her strong
+ young arms, while Sister Renata pushed the cushions between the sufferer&rsquo;s
+ back and the bedstead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old difficulty of breathing had evidently attacked her again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, yes, the dim light of the lamp was shining on her pale face, and the
+ large sunken eyes were gazing with imploring anguish at the image of the
+ Virgin on the opposite wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How gladly Eva would have afforded her relief! She looked with a faint
+ sense of envy at her sister, whose skilful, careful hands did everything
+ to the satisfaction of the beloved sufferer, while in nursing she failed
+ only too often in giving the right touch. But she could pray&mdash;implore
+ the aid of her saint very fervently; nay, she was more familiar with her,
+ and might hope that she would fulfil a heartfelt wish of hers more quickly
+ than for her sister. It would not do to call Els to the window. She closed
+ the door gently, returned to her chamber, knelt and implored St. Clare,
+ with all the fervour of her heart, to grant her mother a good night. Then
+ she again drew the curtains closely over the window, and went to call
+ Katterle to help her undress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the maid was just entering with fresh water. What was the matter with
+ her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her hand trembled as she braided her young mistress&rsquo;s hair and sometimes,
+ with a faint sigh, she stopped the movement of the comb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her silence could be easily explained; for Eva had often forbidden
+ Katterle to talk, when she disturbed her meditation. Yet the girl must
+ have had some special burden on her mind, for when Eva had gone to bed she
+ could not resolve to leave the room, but remained standing on the
+ threshold in evident embarrassment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva encouraged her to speak, and Katterle, so confused that she often
+ hesitated for words and pulled at her ribbons till she was in danger of
+ tearing them from her white apron, stammered that she did not come on her
+ own account, but for another person. It was well known in the household
+ that her betrothed husband, the true and steadfast Walther Biberli, served
+ a godly knight, her countryman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; said Eva with apparent composure, &ldquo;and your Biberli has
+ commissioned you to bear me the respectful greeting of Sir Heinz
+ Schorlin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl looked at her young mistress in surprise. She had been prepared
+ for a sharp rebuke, and had yielded to her lover&rsquo;s entreaties to under
+ take this service amid tears, and with great anxiety; for if her act
+ should be betrayed, she would lose, amid bitter reproaches, the place she
+ so greatly prized. Yet Biberli&rsquo;s power over her and her faith in him were
+ so great that she would have followed him into a lion&rsquo;s den; and it had
+ scarcely seemed a more desirable venture to carry a love-greeting to the
+ pious maiden who held men in such disfavour, and could burst into
+ passionate anger as suddenly as her father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva had expected such a message. It seemed like a miracle to Katterle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a sigh of relief, and a hasty thanksgiving to her patron saint, she
+ at once began to praise the virtue and piety of the servant as well as his
+ lord; but Eva again interrupted, and asked what Sir Heinz Schorlin
+ desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle, with new-born confidence, repeated, as if it were some trivial
+ request, the words Biberli had impressed upon her mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By virtue of the right of every good and devout knight to ask his lady
+ for her colour, Sir Heinz Schorlin, with all due reverence, humbly prays
+ you to name yours; for how could he hold up his head before you and all
+ the knights if he were denied the privilege of wearing it in your honour,
+ in war as well as in peace?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here her mistress again interrupted with a positive &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; and, still
+ more emboldened, Katterle continued the ex-schoolmaster&rsquo;s lesson to the
+ end:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His lord, my lover says, will wait here beneath the window, in all
+ reverence, though it should be till morning, until you show him your sweet
+ face. No, don&rsquo;t interrupt me yet, Mistress Eva, for you must know that Sir
+ Heinz&rsquo;s lady mother committed her dear son to my Biberli&rsquo;s care, that he
+ might guard him from injury and illness. But since his master met you, he
+ has been tottering about as though he had received a spear-thrust, and as
+ the knight confessed to his faithful servitor that no leech could help him
+ until you permitted him to open his heart to you and show you with what
+ humble devotion&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here the maid was interrupted in a manner very different from her
+ expectations, for Eva had raised herself on her pillows and, almost unable
+ to control her voice in the excess of her wrath, exclaimed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The master who presumes to seek through his servant&mdash;&mdash;And by
+ what right does the knight dare thus insolently&mdash;&mdash;But no! Who
+ knows what modest wish was transformed in your mouth to so unprecedented a
+ demand? He desired to see my face? He wanted to speak to me in person, to
+ confess I know not what? From you&mdash;you, Katterle, the maid&mdash;the
+ knight expects&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she struck her little hand angrily against the wood of the bedstead
+ and, panting for breath, continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll show him!&mdash;&mdash;Yet no! What I have to answer no one else&mdash;&mdash;From
+ me, from me alone, he shall learn without delay. There is paper in yonder
+ chest, on the very top; bring it to me, with pen and ink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle silently hurried to obey this order, but Eva pressed her hand
+ upon her heaving bosom, and gazed silently into vacancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The manservant and the maid whom Heinz Schorlin had made his messengers
+ certainly could have no conception of the bond that united her to him;
+ even her own sister had misunderstood it. He should now learn that Eva
+ Ortlieb knew what beseemed her! But she, too, longed for another meeting,
+ and this conduct rendered it necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sooner they two had a conversation, the better. She could confidently
+ venture to invite him to the meeting which she had in view; her aunt, the
+ abbess, had promised to stand by her side, if she needed her, in her
+ intercourse with the knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But her colour?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle had long since laid the paper and writing materials before her,
+ but she still pondered. At last, with a smile of satisfaction, she seized
+ the pen. The manner in which she intended to mention the colour should
+ show him the nature of the bond which united them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was mistress of the pen, for in the convent she had copied the
+ gospels, the psalms, and other portions of the Scriptures, yet her hand
+ trembled as she committed the following lines to the paper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am angered&mdash;nay, even grieved&mdash;that you, a godly knight, who
+ knows the reverence due to a lady, have ventured to await my greeting in
+ front of my father&rsquo;s house. If you are a true knight, you must be aware
+ that you voluntarily promised to obey my every glance. I can rely upon
+ this pledge, and since I find it necessary to talk with you, I invite you
+ to an interview&mdash;when and where, my maid, who is betrothed to your
+ servant, shall inform him. A friend, who has your welfare at heart as well
+ as mine, will be with me. It must be soon, with the permission of St.
+ Clare, who, since you have chosen her for your patron saint, looks down
+ upon you as well as on me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As for my colour, I know not what to name; the baubles associated with
+ earthly love are unfamiliar to me. But blue is the colour of the pure
+ heaven and its noble queen, the gracious Virgin. If you make this colour
+ yours and fight for it, I shall rejoice, and am willing to name it mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the bottom of the little note she wrote only her Christian name &ldquo;Eva,&rdquo;
+ and when she read it over she found that it contained, in apt and seemly
+ phrases, everything that she desired to say to the knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While folding the paper and considering how she could fasten it, as there
+ was no wax at hand, she thought of the narrow ribbons with which Els tied
+ together, in sets of half a dozen, the fine kerchiefs worn over the neck
+ and bosom, when they came from the wash. They were sky-blue, and nothing
+ could be more suitable for the purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle brought one from the top of the chest. Eva wound it swiftly
+ around the little roll, and the maid hastily left the room, sure of the
+ gratitude of the true and steadfast Biberli.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eva was again alone, she at first thought that she might rejoice over
+ her hasty act; but on asking herself what Els would say, she felt certain
+ that she would disapprove of it and, becoming disconcerted, began to
+ imagine what consequences it might entail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The advice which her father had recently given Wolff, never to let any
+ important letter pass out of his hands until at least one night had
+ elapsed, returned to her memory, and from that instant the little note
+ burdened her soul like a hundred-pound weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She would fain have started up to get it back again, and a strong
+ attraction drew her towards the window to ascertain whether Heinz Schorlin
+ had really come and was awaiting her greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps Katterle had not yet delivered the note. What if she were still
+ standing at the door of the house to wait for Biberli? If, to be
+ absolutely certain, she should just glance out, that would not be looking
+ for the knight, and she availed herself of the excuse without delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In an instant she sprang from her bed and gently drew the curtain aside.
+ The street was perfectly still. The linden and the neighbouring houses
+ cast dark, sharply outlined shadows upon the light pavement, and from the
+ convent garden the song of the nightingale echoed down the quiet moonlit
+ street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle had probably already given the note to Heinz Schorlin who,
+ obedient to his lady&rsquo;s command, as beseemed a knight, had gone away. This
+ soothed her anxiety, and with a sigh she went back to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the longing to look out into the street again was so strong that she
+ yielded to the temptation; yet, ere she reached the window, she summoned
+ the strength of will which was peculiar to her and, lying down, once more
+ closed her lids, with the firm resolve to see and hear nothing. As she had
+ not shut her eyes the night before and, from dread of the ball, had slept
+ very little during the preceding one, she soon, though the moon was
+ shining in through the parted curtains, lapsed into a condition midway
+ between sleep and waking. Extreme fatigue had deadened consciousness, yet
+ she fancied that at times she heard the sound of footsteps on the pavement
+ outside, and the deep voices of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was what she heard in her half-dozing state, which was soon followed
+ by the sound slumber of youth, any delusion of the senses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The moon found something in front of the Ortlieb house worth looking at.
+ Rarely had she lighted with purer, brighter radiance the pathway of the
+ mortals who excited her curiosity, than that of the two handsome young men
+ who, at a moderate interval of time, passed through the Frauenthor, and
+ finally entered the courtyard of the Ortlieb residence almost at the same
+ instant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luna first saw them pace silently to and fro, and delighted in the
+ resentful glances they cast at each other. This joy increased as the one
+ in the long coat, embroidered on the shoulder with birds, and then the
+ other, whose court costume well became his lithe, powerful limbs, sat
+ down, each on one of the chains connecting the granite posts between the
+ street and the courtyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very tall one, who looked grave and anxious, was Wolff Eysvogel; the
+ other, somewhat shorter, who swung gaily to and fro on the chain as if it
+ afforded him much amusement, Heinz Schorlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both frequently glanced up at the lighted bow-window and the smaller one
+ on the second story, behind which Eva lay half asleep. This was the first
+ meeting of the two men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff, aware of his excellent right to remain on this-spot, would have
+ shown the annoying intruder his displeasure long before, had he not
+ supposed that the other, whom at the first glance he recognised as a
+ knight, was one of Countess Cordula von Montfort&rsquo;s admirers. Yet he soon
+ became unable to control his anger and impatience. Yielding to a hasty
+ impulse, he left the chain, but as he approached the stranger the latter
+ gave his swaying seat a swifter motion and, without vouchsafing him either
+ greeting or introductory remark, said carelessly, &ldquo;This is a lovely
+ night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am of the same opinion,&rdquo; replied Wolff curtly. &ldquo;But I would like to
+ ask, sir, what induced you to choose the courtyard of this house to enjoy
+ it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Induced?&rdquo; asked the Swiss in astonishment; then, looking the other in the
+ face with defiant sharpness, he added scornfully:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am warming the chain because it suits me to do so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are allowed the pleasure,&rdquo; returned Wolff in an irritated tone; &ldquo;nay,
+ I can understand that night birds of your sort find no better amusement.
+ Still, it seems to me that a knight who wishes to keep iron hot might
+ attain his object better in another way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, of course,&rdquo; cried Heinz Schorlin, springing swiftly to his feet with
+ rare elasticity. &ldquo;It gives a pleasant warmth when blade strikes blade or
+ the hot blood wets them. I am no friend to darkness, and it seems to me,
+ sir, as if we were standing in each other&rsquo;s light here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There our opinions concur for the second time this lovely night,&rdquo; quietly
+ replied the patrician&rsquo;s son, conscious of his unusual strength and skill
+ in fencing, with a slight touch of scorn. &ldquo;Like you, I am always ready to
+ cross blades with another; only, the public street is hardly the fitting
+ place for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May the plague take you!&rdquo; muttered the Swiss in assent to Wolff&rsquo;s
+ opinion. &ldquo;Besides, sir, who ever grasps iron so swiftly is worth a parley.
+ To ask whether you are of knightly lineage would be useless trouble, and
+ should it come to a genuine sword-dance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will find a partner in me at any time,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;as I, who
+ wear my ancient escutcheon with good right, would gladly give you a
+ crimson memento of this hour&mdash;though you were but the son of a
+ cobbler. But first let us ascertain&mdash;for I, too, dislike darkness&mdash;whether
+ we are really standing in each other&rsquo;s light. With all due respect for
+ your fancy for warming chains, it would be wise, ere Sir Red Coat&mdash;[The
+ executioner]&mdash;puts his round our ankles for disturbing the peace, to
+ have a sensible talk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Try it, for aught I care,&rdquo; responded Heinz Schorlin cheerily. &ldquo;Unluckily
+ for me, I live in a state of perpetual feud with good sense. One thing,
+ however, seems certain without any serious reflection: the attraction
+ which draws me here, as well as you, will not enter the cloister as a
+ monk, but as a little nun, wears no beard, but braids her hair. Briefly,
+ then, if you are here for Countess Cordula von Montfort&rsquo;s sake, your
+ errand is vain; she will sleep at Kadolzburg to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May her slumber be sweet!&rdquo; replied Wolff calmly. &ldquo;She is as near to me as
+ yonder moon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That gives the matter a more serious aspect,&rdquo; cried the knight angrily.
+ &ldquo;You or I. What is your lady&rsquo;s name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That, to my mind, is asking too much,&rdquo; replied Wolff firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the law of love gives you the right to withhold an answer. But, sir,
+ we must nevertheless learn for the sake of what fairest fair we have each
+ foregone sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then tell me, by your favour, your lady&rsquo;s colour,&rdquo; Wolff asked the Swiss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter laughed gaily: &ldquo;I am still putting that question to my saint.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, noticing Wolff&rsquo;s shake of the head, he went on in a more serious
+ tone: &ldquo;If you will have a little patience, I hope I may be able to tell
+ you, ere we part.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This assurance also seemed to Wolff an enigma. Who in the wide world would
+ come from under the respectable Ortlieb roof, at this hour, to tell a
+ stranger anything whatsoever concerning one of its daughters? Neither
+ could have given him the right to regard her as his lady, and steal at
+ night, like a marten, around the house which contained his dearest
+ treasure. This obscurity was an offence to Wolff Eysvogel, and he was not
+ the man to submit to it. Yonder insolent fellow should learn, to his hurt,
+ that he had made a blunder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But scarcely had he begun to explain to Heinz that he claimed the right to
+ protect both the daughters of this house, the younger as well as the
+ older, since they had no brother, when the knight interrupted:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho! There are two of them, and she, too, spoke of a sister. So, if it
+ comes to sharing, sir, we need not emulate the judgment of Solomon. Let us
+ see! The colour is uncertain, but to every Christian mortal a name clings
+ as closely as a shadow and, if I mention the initial letter of the one
+ which adorns my lady, I believe I shall commit no offence that a court of
+ love could condemn. The initial, which I like because it is daintily
+ rounded and not too difficult to write-mark it well&mdash;is &lsquo;E.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff Eysvogel started slightly and gripped the dagger in his belt, but
+ instantly withdrew his hand and answered with mingled amusement and
+ indignation: &ldquo;Thanks for your good will, Sir Knight, but this, too, brings
+ us no nearer our goal; the E is the initial of both the Ortlieb sisters.
+ The elder who, as you may know, is my betrothed bride, bears the name of
+ Elizabeth, or Els, as we say in Nuremberg.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the younger,&rdquo; cried Heinz joyously, &ldquo;honours with her gracious
+ innocence the name of her through whom sin came into the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you, Sir Knight,&rdquo; exclaimed Wolff fiercely, &ldquo;would do better not to
+ name sin and Eva Ortlieb in the same breath. If you are of a different
+ opinion&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; interrupted the Swiss, &ldquo;we come back to warming the iron.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you say,&rdquo; cried Wolff resolutely. &ldquo;In spite of the peace of the
+ country, I will be at your service at any time. As you see, I went out
+ unarmed, and it would not be well done to cross swords here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; Heinz assented. &ldquo;But many days and nights will follow
+ this moonlight one, and that you may have little difficulty in finding me
+ whenever you desire, know that my name is Heinrich&mdash;or to more
+ intimate friends, among whom you might easily be numbered if we don&rsquo;t
+ deprive each other of the pleasure of meeting again under the sun&mdash;Heinz
+ Schorlin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Schorlin?&rdquo; asked Wolff in surprise. &ldquo;Then you are the knight who, when a
+ beardless boy, cut down on the Marchfield the Bohemian whose lance had
+ slain the Emperor&rsquo;s charger, the Swiss who aided him to mount the steed of
+ Ramsweg of Thurgau&mdash;your uncle, if I am not mistaken&mdash;and then
+ took the wild ride to bring up the tall Capeller, with his troops, who so
+ gloriously decided the day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; laughed Heinz, &ldquo;who was finally borne off the field as dead before
+ the fulfilment of his darling wish to redden Swiss steel with royal
+ Bohemian blood. This closed the chronicle, Herr&mdash;what shall I call
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wolff Eysvogel, of Nuremberg,&rdquo; replied the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha! A son of the rich merchant where the Duke of Gulich found quarters?&rdquo;
+ cried the Swiss, lifting his cap bordered with fine miniver. &ldquo;May
+ confusion seize me! If I were not my father&rsquo;s son, I wouldn&rsquo;t mind
+ changing places with you. It must make the neck uncommonly stiff,
+ methinks, to have a knightly escutcheon on door and breast, and yet be
+ able to fling florins and zecchins broadcast without offending the devil
+ by an empty purse. If you don&rsquo;t happen to know how such a thing looks, I
+ can show you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet rumour says,&rdquo; observed Wolff, &ldquo;that the Emperor is gracious to you,
+ and knows how to fill it again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If one doesn&rsquo;t go too far,&rdquo; replied Heinz, &ldquo;and my royal master, who
+ lacks spending money himself only too often, doesn&rsquo;t keep his word that it
+ was done for the last time. I heard that yesterday morning, and thought
+ that the golden blessing which preceded it would last the dear saints only
+ knew how long. But ere the cock had crowed even once this morning the last
+ florin had vanished. Dice, Herr Wolff Eysvogel&mdash;dice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I would keep my hands off them,&rdquo; said the other meaningly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If the Old Nick or some one else did not always guide them back! Did you,
+ a rich man&rsquo;s son, never try what the dice would do for you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Sir Knight. It was at Venice, where I was pursuing my studies, and
+ tried my luck at gambling on many a merry evening with other sons of
+ mercantile families from Nuremberg, Augsburg, and Cologne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your feathers were generously plucked?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By no means. I usually left a winner. But after they fleeced a dear
+ friend from Ulm, and he robbed his master, I dropped dice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you did so as easily as if it were a short fast after an abundant
+ meal?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was little more difficult,&rdquo; Wolff asserted. &ldquo;My father would have
+ gladly seen me outdo my countrymen, and sent me more money than I needed.
+ Why should I deprive honest fellows who had less?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s just the difficulty,&rdquo; cried his companion eagerly. &ldquo;It was easy
+ for you to renounce games of chance because your winnings only added more
+ to the rest, and you did not wish to pluck poorer partners. But I! A poor
+ devil like me cannot maintain armour-bearer, servants, and steeds out of
+ what the dear little mother at home in her faithful care can spare from
+ crops and interest. How could we succeed in making a fair appearance at
+ court and in the tournament if it were not for the dice? And then, when I
+ lose, I again become but the poor knight the saints made me; when I win,
+ on the contrary, I am the great and wealthy lord I would have been born
+ had the Lord permitted me to choose my own cradle. Besides, those who lose
+ through me are mainly dukes, counts, and gentlemen with rich fiefs and fat
+ bourgs, whom losing doubtless benefits, as bleeding relieves a sick man.
+ What suits the soldier does not befit the merchant. We live wholly amid
+ risks and wagers. Every battle, every skirmish is a game whose stake is
+ life. Whoever reflects long is sure to lose. If I could only describe,
+ Herr Eysvogel, what it is to dash headlong upon the foe!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could imagine that vividly enough,&rdquo; Wolff eagerly interposed. &ldquo;I, too,
+ have broken many a lance in the lists and shed blood enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a dunce I am!&rdquo; cried Heinz in amazement, pressing his hand upon his
+ brow. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s why your face was so familiar! By my saint! I am no knight
+ if I did not see you then, before the battle waxed hot. It was close
+ beside your Burgrave Frederick, who held aloft the imperial banner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Probably,&rdquo; replied Wolff in a tone of assent. &ldquo;He sometimes entrusted the
+ standard to me, when it grew too heavy for his powerful arm, because I was
+ the tallest and the strongest of our Nuremberg band. But, unluckily, I
+ could not render this service long. A scimitar gashed my head. The larger
+ part of the little scar is hidden under my hair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The little scar!&rdquo; repeated Heinz gaily. &ldquo;It was wide enough, at any rate,
+ for the greatest soul to slip through it. A scar on the head from a wound
+ received four years ago, and yet distinctly visible in the moonlight!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It should serve as a warning,&rdquo; replied Wolff, glancing anxiously up the
+ street. &ldquo;If the patrol, or any nocturnal reveller should catch sight of
+ us, it would be ill for the fair fame of the Ortlieb sisters, for
+ everybody knows that only one&mdash;Els&rsquo;s betrothed lover&mdash;has a
+ right to await a greeting here at so late an hour. So follow me into the
+ shadow of the linden, I entreat you; for yonder&mdash;surely you see it
+ too&mdash;a figure is gliding towards us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s laugh rang out like a bell as he whispered to the
+ Nuremberg patrician: &ldquo;That figure is familiar to me, and neither we nor
+ our ladies need fear any evil from it. Excuse me moment, and I&rsquo;ll wager
+ twenty gold florins against yonder linden leaf that, ere the moonlight has
+ left the curbstone, I can tell you my lady&rsquo;s colour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he hastened towards the figure, now, standing motionless
+ within the shadow of the door post beside the lofty entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff Eysvogel remained alone, gazing thoughtfully upon the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The silent wanderer above had expected to behold a scene very unlike an
+ interview between two men. The latter required neither her purest, fullest
+ light, nor the shadow of a blossoming linden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Luna saw the young Nuremberg merchant gaze after the Swiss with an
+ expression of such deep anxiety and pain upon his manly features that she
+ felt the utmost pity for him. He did not look upward as usual to the
+ window of his beautiful Els, but either fixed his eyes upon the spot where
+ his new acquaintance was conversing with another person, or bent them
+ anxiously upon the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Wolff thought of Heinz Schorlin, it seemed as if Fate had thrown him
+ into the way of the Swiss that he might feel with twofold anguish the
+ thorns besetting his own life path. The young knight was proffered the
+ rose without the thorn. What cares had he? The present threw into his lap
+ its fairest blessings, and when he looked into the future he beheld only
+ the cheering buds of hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet this favourite of fortune had expressed a desire to change places with
+ him. The thought that many others, too, would be glad to step into his
+ shoes tortured Wolff&rsquo;s honest heart as though he himself were to blame for
+ the delusion of these short-sighted folk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apart from his strength and health, his well-formed body, his noble birth,
+ his faith in the love of his betrothed bride&mdash;at this hour he forgot
+ how much these things were&mdash;he found nothing in his lot which seemed
+ worth desiring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He might not even rejoice in his stainless honesty with the same perfect
+ confidence as in his betrothal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, he had cared for noble old Berthold Vorchtel&rsquo;s daughter as if she
+ were his sister. He had even found pleasure in the thought that Ursula was
+ destined to become his wife, yet no word either of love or allusion to
+ future marriage had been exchanged between them. He had felt free, and had
+ a right to consider himself so, when love for Els Ortlieb overwhelmed him
+ so swiftly and powerfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet Ursula and her oldest brother treated him as if he had been guilty of
+ base disloyalty. His pure conscience, however, enabled him to endure this
+ more easily than the other burden, of which he became aware on the
+ long-anticipated day when his father made him a partner in the old firm
+ and gave him an insight into the condition of the property and the course
+ of the business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he had learned the heavy losses which had been sustained recently,
+ and the sad disparity existing between the great display by which his
+ father and mother, as well as his grandmother, the countess, maintained
+ the appearance of their former princely wealth, and the balances of the
+ last few years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had just boasted to the reckless young knight that he had given up
+ gaming, he told but half the truth, for though since his period of study
+ in Venice, and later in Milan, he had not touched dice, he had been forced
+ to consent to a series of enterprises undertaken by his father, whose
+ stakes were far different from the gambling of the knights and nobles at
+ the Green Shield or in the camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet he intended to bind the fate of the woman he loved to his own, for
+ Els, spite of the opposition of his family, would have been already
+ indissolubly united to him, had not one failure after another destroyed
+ his courage to take her hand. Finally, he deemed it advisable to await the
+ result of the last great enterprise, now on the eve of decision. It might
+ compensate for many of the losses of recent years. Should it be
+ favourable, the heaviest burden would be lifted from his soul; in the
+ opposite case the old house would be shaken to its foundations. Yet even
+ its fall would have been easier for him to endure than this cruel
+ uncertainty, to which was added the torturing anxiety of bearing the
+ responsibility of things for which he was not to blame, and of which,
+ moreover, he was even denied a clear view. Yet he felt absolutely certain
+ that his father was concealing many things, perhaps the worst, and often
+ felt as if he were walking in the darkness over a mouldering bridge. Ah,
+ if it could only be propped up, and then rebuilt! But if it must give way,
+ he hoped the catastrophe would come soon. He knew that he possessed the
+ strength to build a new home for Els and himself. Even were it small and
+ modest, it should be erected on a firm foundation and afford a safe abode
+ for its inmates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What did the young, joyous-hearted fellow who was wooing Eva know of such
+ cares? Fate had placed him on the sunny side of life, where everything
+ flourished, and set him, Wolff, in the shade, where grass and flowers
+ died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a magic in fame which the young soul cannot easily escape, and
+ the name of Heinz Schorlin was indeed honoured and on every lip. The
+ imagination associated with it the cheerful nature which, like a loyal
+ comrade, goes hand in hand with success, deserved and undeserved good
+ fortune, woman&rsquo;s favour, doughty deeds, the highest and strongest traits
+ of character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An atmosphere like sunshine, which melts all opposition, emanated from
+ Heinz. Wolff had experienced it himself. He had seriously intended to make
+ the insolent intruder feel his strong arm, but since he had learned the
+ identity of the Swiss his acts and nature appeared in a new light. His
+ insolence had gained the aspect of self-confidence which did not lack
+ justification, and when a valiant knight talked to him so frankly, like a
+ younger brother to an older and wiser one, it seemed to the lonely man
+ who, of late, completely absorbed in the course of business, had held
+ aloof from the sports, banquets, and diversions of the companions of his
+ own age, that he had experienced something unusually pleasant. How tender
+ and affectionate it sounded when Heinz alluded to the &ldquo;little mother&rdquo; at
+ home! He, Wolff, on the contrary, could think only with a shade of
+ bitterness of the weak woman to whom he owed his existence, and whom
+ filial duty and earnest resolution alike commanded him to love, yet who
+ made it so difficult for him to regard her with anything save anxiety or
+ secret disapproval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the greatest advantage which the Swiss possessed over him was his
+ manner of speaking of his family. How could it ever have entered Wolff
+ Eysvogel&rsquo;s mind to call the tall, stiff woman, who was the feeble echo of
+ her extravagant, arrogant mother, and who rustled towards him, even in the
+ early morning, adorned with feathers and robed in rich brocade, his &ldquo;dear
+ little mother&rdquo;?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whoever spoke in the warm, loving tones that fell from the lips of Sir
+ Heinz when he mentioned his relatives at home certainly could have no evil
+ nature. No one need fear, though his usual mode of speech was so wanton,
+ that he would trifle with a pure, innocent creature like Eva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How Heinz had succeeded in winning so speedily the devout child, who was
+ so averse to the idle coquetries of the companions of her own age, seemed
+ incomprehensible, but he had no time to investigate now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He must go, for he had long been burning with impatience to depart. The
+ declaration of peace had taken effect only a few hours before, and the
+ long waggon trains from Italy, of which he had told Els yesterday, were
+ still delayed. The freight of spices and Levantine goods, Milan velvets,
+ silks, and fine Florentine cloths, which they were bringing from the city
+ of St. Mark, represented a large fortune. If it arrived in time, the
+ profits would cover a great portion of the losses of the past two years,
+ and the house would again be secure. If the worst should befall, how would
+ his family submit to deprivation, perhaps even to penury? He had less fear
+ of his grandmother&rsquo;s outbursts of wrath, but what would become of his
+ feeble mother, who was as dependent as a child on her own mother? Yet he
+ loved her; he felt deeply troubled by the thought of the severe
+ humiliation which menaced her. His sister Isabella, too, was dear to him,
+ in spite of her husband, the reckless Sir Seitz Siebenburg, in whose hands
+ the gold paid from the coffers of the firm melted away, yet who was
+ burdened with a mountain of debts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff had left orders at home to have his horse saddled. He had intended
+ only to wave a greeting to his Els and then ride to Neumarkt, or, if
+ necessary, as far as Ingolstadt, to meet the wains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A word of farewell to the new acquaintance, who was probably destined to
+ be his brother-in, law, and then&mdash;But just at that moment Heinz
+ approached, and in reply to Wolff&rsquo;s low question &ldquo;And your lady&rsquo;s colour?&rdquo;
+ he answered joyously, pointing to the breast of his doublet: &ldquo;I am
+ carrying the messenger which promises to inform me, here on my heart. In
+ the darkness it was silent; but the bright moonlight yonder will loose its
+ tongue, unless the characters here are too unlike those of the
+ prayer-book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drawing out Eva&rsquo;s little roll as he spoke, he approached a brightly
+ lighted spot, pointed to the ribbon which fastened it, and exclaimed:
+ &ldquo;Doubtless she used her own colour to tie it. Blue, the pure, exquisite
+ blue of her eyes! I thought so Forget-me-not blue! The most beautiful of
+ colours. You must pardon my impatience!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was about to begin to read the lines; but Wolff stopped him by pointing
+ to the Ortlieb residence and to two drunken soldiers who came out of the
+ tavern &ldquo;For Thirsty Troopers,&rdquo; and walked, singing and staggering, up the
+ opposite side of the street. Then, extending his hand to Heinz in
+ farewell, he asked in a low tone, pointing to Biberli&rsquo;s figure just
+ emerging from the shade, who was the messenger of love who served him so
+ admirably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My shadow,&rdquo; replied the knight. &ldquo;I loosed him from my heels and bade him
+ stand there. But no offence, Herr Wolff Eysvogel; you&rsquo;ll make the queer
+ fellow&rsquo;s acquaintance if, like myself, it would be agreeable to you to
+ meet often, not only on iron chains, but on friendly terms with each
+ other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing would please me more,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;But how in the world
+ could it happen that this well-guarded fortress surrendered to you after
+ so short a resistance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heinz Schorlin rides swiftly,&rdquo; he interrupted; but Wolff exclaimed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A swift ride awaits me, too, though of a different kind. When I return, I
+ shall expect you to tell me how you won our &lsquo;little saint,&rsquo; my
+ sister-in-law Eva. The two beautiful Ortlieb &lsquo;Es&rsquo; are one in the eyes of
+ the townsfolk, so we also will be often named in the same breath, and
+ shall do well to feel brotherly regard for each other. There shall be no
+ fault on my part. Farewell, till we meet again, an&rsquo; it please God in and
+ not outside of our ladies&rsquo; dwelling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While speaking he clasped the knight&rsquo;s hand with so firm a grasp that it
+ seemed as if he wished to force him to feel its pressure a long time, and
+ hastened through the Frauenthor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz Schorlin gazed thoughtfully after him a short time, then beckoned to
+ Biberli and, though the interval required for him to reach his master&rsquo;s
+ side was very brief, it was sufficient for the bold young lover, tortured
+ by his ardent longing, to form another idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look yonder, Biberli!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;The holy-water basin on the
+ door-post, the escutcheon on the lintel above, the helmet, which would
+ probably bear my weight. From there I can reach the window-sill with my
+ hand, and once I have grasped it, I need only make one bold spring and,
+ hurrah! I&rsquo;m on it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May our patron saint have mercy on us!&rdquo; cried the servant in horror. &ldquo;You
+ can get there as easily as you can spring on your two feet over two
+ horses; but the coming down would certainly be a long distance lower than
+ you would fancy&mdash;into the &lsquo;Hole,&rsquo; as they call the prison here, and,
+ moreover, though probably not until some time later, straight to the
+ flames of hell; for you would have committed a great sin against a noble
+ maiden rich in every virtue, who deemed you worthy of her love. And,
+ besides, there are two Es. They occupy the same room, and the house is
+ full of men and maid servants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pedagogue!&rdquo; said the knight, peevishly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, that was Biberli&rsquo;s calling once,&rdquo; replied the servant, &ldquo;and, for the
+ sake of your lady mother at home, I wish I were one still, and you, Sir
+ Heinz, would have to obey me like an obedient pupil. You are well aware
+ that I rarely use her sacred name to influence you, but I do so now; and
+ if you cherish her in your heart and do not wish to swoop down on the
+ innocent little dove like a destroying hawk, turn your back upon this
+ place, where we have already lingered too long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this well-meant warning seemed to have had brief influence upon the
+ person to whom it was addressed. Suddenly, with a joyous: &ldquo;There she is!&rdquo;
+ he snatched his cap from his head and waved a greeting to the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in a few minutes he replaced it with a petulant gesture of the hand,
+ saying sullenly: &ldquo;Vanished! She dared not grant me a greeting, because she
+ caught sight of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us thank and praise a kind Providence for it,&rdquo; said his servitor with
+ a sigh of relief, &ldquo;since our Lord and Saviour assumed the form of a
+ servant, that of a scarecrow, in which he has done admirable service, is
+ far too noble and distinguished for Biberli.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he walked on before the knight, and pointing to the tavern
+ beside the Frauenthurm whose sign bore the words &ldquo;For Thirsty Troopers,&rdquo;
+ he added: &ldquo;A green bush at the door. That means, unless the host is a
+ rogue, a cask fresh broached. I wonder whether my tongue is cleaving to my
+ palate from dread of your over-hasty courage, or whether it is really so
+ terribly sultry here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At any rate,&rdquo; Heinz interrupted, &ldquo;a cup of wine will harm neither of us;
+ for I myself feel how oppressive the air is. Besides, it is light in the
+ tavern, and who knows what the little note will tell me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile they passed the end of St. Klarengasse and went up to the green
+ bush, which projected from the end of a pole far out into the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soldiers in the pay of the city, and men-at-arms in the employ of the
+ Emperor and the princes who had come to attend the Reichstag, were sitting
+ over their wine in the tavern. From the ceiling hung two crossed iron
+ triangles, forming a six-pointed star. The tallow candles burning low in
+ their sockets, which it contained, and some pitch-pans in the corners,
+ diffused but a dim light through the long apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Master and man found an empty table apart from the other guests, in a
+ niche midway down the rear wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without heeding the brawling and swearing, the rude songs and disorderly
+ shouts, the drumming of clenched fists upon the oak tables, the wild
+ laughter of drunken soldiers, the giggling and screeching of bar-maids,
+ and the scolding and imperious commands of the host, they proved that the
+ green bush had not lied, for the wine really did come from a freshly
+ opened cask just brought up from the cellar. But as the niche was
+ illumined only by the tiny oil lamp burning beneath the image of the
+ Virgin, bedizened with flowers and gold and silver tinsel, fastened
+ against the wall, Biberli asked the weary bar-maid for a brighter light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the girl withdrew he sighed heavily, saying: &ldquo;O my lord, if you only
+ knew! Even now, when we are again among men and the wine has refreshed me,
+ I feel as if rats were gnawing at my soul. Conscience, my
+ lord-conscience!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, too, are usually quite ready to play the elf in the rose-garden of
+ love,&rdquo; replied Heinz gaily. &ldquo;Moreover, I shall soon need a T and an S
+ embroidered on my own doublet, for&mdash;&mdash;Why don&rsquo;t they bring the
+ light? Another cup of wine, the note, and then with renewed vigour we&rsquo;ll
+ go back again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo; interrupted Biberli, &ldquo;do not speak, do not even think,
+ of the bold deed you suggested! Doesn&rsquo;t it seem like a miracle that not
+ one of the many Ortlieb and Montfort servants crossed your path? Even such
+ a child of good luck as yourself can scarcely expect a second one the same
+ evening. And if there is not, and you go back under the window, you will
+ be recognised, perhaps even seized, and then&mdash;O my lord, consider
+ this!&mdash;then you will bear throughout your life the reproach of having
+ brought shame and bitter sorrow upon a maiden whom you yourself know is
+ lovely, devout, and pure. And I, too, who serve you loyally in your lady
+ mother&rsquo;s behalf, as well as the poor maid who, to pleasure me, interceded
+ for you with her mistress, will run the risk of our lives if you are
+ caught climbing into the window or committing any similar offence; for in
+ this city they are prompt with the stocks, the stone collar, the rack, and
+ the tearing of the tongue from the mouth whenever any one is detected
+ playing the part of go-between in affairs of love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Usually, old fellow,&rdquo; replied Heinz in a tone of faint reproach, &ldquo;we
+ considered it a matter of course that, though we took the most daring
+ risks in such things, we were certain not to be caught. Yet, to be frank,
+ some incomprehensible burden weighs upon my soul. My feelings are confused
+ and strange. I would rather tear the crown from the head of yonder image
+ of the Virgin than do aught to this sweet innocence for which she could
+ not thank me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he paused, for the bar-maid brought a two-branched candelabrum, in
+ which burned two tallow candles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz instantly opened the little roll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How delicate were the characters it contained! His heart&rsquo;s beloved had
+ committed them to the paper with her own hand, and the knight&rsquo;s blood
+ surged hotly through his veins as he gazed at them. It seemed as though he
+ held in his hand a portion of herself and, obeying a hasty impulse, he
+ kissed the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he eagerly began to study the writing; he had never seen anything so
+ delicate and peculiar in form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deciphering of the first lines in which, it is true, she called him a
+ godly knight, but also informed him that his boldness had angered her,
+ caused him much difficulty, and Biberli was often obliged to help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would she have rebuffed him so ungraciously with her lips as with the pen?
+ Was it possible that, on account of a request which every lover ventured
+ to address to his lady, she would withdraw the favour which rendered him
+ so happy? Oh, yes, for innocence is delicate and sensitive. She ought to
+ have repelled him thus. He was secretly rejoiced to see the sweet modesty
+ which had so charmed him again proved. He must know what the rest of the
+ letter contained, and the ex-schoolmaster was at hand to give the
+ information at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, the hastily written sentences presented some difficulties even for
+ Biberli, but after glancing through the whole letter, he exclaimed with a
+ satisfied smile: &ldquo;Just as I expected! At the first look one might think
+ that the devout little lady was wholly unlike the rest of her sex, but on
+ examining more closely she proves as much like any other beautiful girl as
+ two peas. With good reason and prudent caution she forbids the languishing
+ knight to remain beneath her window, yet she will risk a pleasant little
+ interview in some safe nook. That is wise for so young a girl, and at the
+ same time natural and womanly. I don&rsquo;t know why you knit your brows. Since
+ the first Eve came from a crooked rib, all her daughters prefer devious
+ ways. But first hear what she writes.&rdquo; Then, without heeding his master&rsquo;s
+ gloomy face, he began to read the note aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz listened intently, and after he had heard that the lady of his love
+ did not desire to meet him alone, but only under the protection of a
+ friend and her saint, when he heard her name her colour, it is true, but
+ also express the expectation that, as a godly knight, he would fight for
+ her sake in honour of the gracious Virgin, his face brightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During Biberli&rsquo;s scoffing comments he had felt as if a tempest had hurled
+ her pure image in the dust. But now that he knew what she asked of him, it
+ returned as a matter of course to its old place and, with a sigh of
+ relief, he felt that he need not be ashamed of the emotions which this
+ wonderful young creature had awakened in his soul. She had opened her
+ pious heart like a trusting sister to an older brother, and what he had
+ seen there was something unusual&mdash;things which had appeared sacred to
+ him even when a child. Since he took leave of her in the ball-room he had
+ felt as though Heaven had loaned this, its darling, to earth for but a
+ brief space, and her brocade robe must conceal angel wings. Should it
+ surprise him that the pure innocence which filled her whole being was
+ expressed also in her letter, if she summoned him, not to idle
+ love-dalliance but to a covenant of souls, a mutual conflict for what was
+ highest and most sacred? Such a thing was incomprehensible to Biberli; but
+ notwithstanding her letter&mdash;nay, even on its account&mdash;he longed
+ still more ardently to lead her home to his mother and see her receive the
+ blessing of the woman whom he so deeply honoured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had Eva&rsquo;s letter read for the second and the third time. But when
+ Biberli paused, and in a few brief sentences cast fresh doubts upon the
+ writer, Heinz angrily stopped him. &ldquo;The longing of the godly heart of a
+ pure maiden&mdash;mark this well&mdash;has naught in common with that
+ diabolical delight in secret love&mdash;dalliance for which others yearn.
+ My wish to force my way to her was sinful, and it was punished severely
+ enough, for during your rude scoffs I felt as though you had set fire to
+ the house over my head. But from this I perceive in what a sacred,
+ inviolable spot her image had found a place. True, it is denied you to
+ follow the lofty, heavenward aspiration of a pure soul&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O my lord,&rdquo; interrupted the servitor with hands uplifted in defence, &ldquo;who
+ besought you not to measure this innocent daughter of a decorous
+ household, who was scarcely beyond childhood, by the standard you applied
+ to others? Who entreated you to spare her fair fame? And if you deem the
+ stuff of which the servant is made too coarse to understand what moves so
+ pure a soul, you do Biberli injustice, for, by my patron saint, though
+ duty commanded me to interpose doubts and scruples between you and a
+ passion from which could scarcely spring aught that would bring joy to
+ your mother&rsquo;s heart I, too, asked myself the question why, in these days,
+ a devout maiden should not long to try her skill in conversion upon a
+ valiant knight who served her. Ever since St. Francis of Assisi appeared
+ in Italy, barefooted monks and grey-robed nuns, who follow him,
+ Franciscans and Sisters of St. Clare stream hither as water flows into a
+ mill-race when the sluice-gates are opened. With what edification we, too,
+ listened to the old Minorite whom we picked up by the wayside, at the
+ tavern where we usually found pleasure in nothing but drinking, gambling,
+ shouting, and singing! Besides, I know from my sweetheart with what
+ exemplary devotion the lovely Eva follows St. Clare.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is now and will remain my patron saint also, old Biber,&rdquo; interrupted
+ Heinz with joyful emotion, as he laid his hand gratefully on his
+ follower&rsquo;s shoulder; then rising and beckoning to the bar-maid, added:
+ &ldquo;The stuff of which you are made, old comrade, is inferior to no man&rsquo;s.
+ Only now and then the pedagogue plays you a trick. Had you uttered your
+ real opinion in the first place, the wine would have tasted better to us
+ both. Let Eva try the work of conversion on me! What, save my lady&rsquo;s love,
+ is more to me than our holy faith? It must indeed be a delight to take the
+ field for the Church and against her foes!&rdquo; While speaking, he paid the
+ reckoning and went out with Biberli.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon was now pouring her silver beams, with full radiance, over the
+ quiet street, the linden in front of the Ortlieb house, and its lofty
+ gable roof. Only a single room in the spacious mansion was still lighted,
+ the bow-windowed one occupied by the two sisters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz, without heeding Biberli&rsquo;s renewed protest, looked upward, silently
+ imploring Eva&rsquo;s pardon for having misjudged her even a moment. His gaze
+ rested devoutly on the open window, behind which a curtain was stirring.
+ Was it the night breeze that almost imperceptibly raised and lowered it,
+ or was her own dear self concealed behind it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at that moment he suddenly felt his servant&rsquo;s hand on his arm, and as
+ he followed his horror-stricken gaze, a chill ran through his own veins.
+ From the heavy door of the house, which stood half open, a white-robed
+ figure emerged with the solemn, noiseless footfall of a ghost, and
+ advanced across the courtyard towards him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it a restless spirit risen from its grave at the midnight hour, which
+ must be close at hand? Through his brain, like a flash of lightning,
+ darted the thought that Eva had spoken to him of her invalid mother. Had
+ she died? Was her wandering soul approaching him to drive him from the
+ threshold of the house which hid her endangered child?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The figure had stopped before the door and now, raising its head, gazed
+ with wide eyes upward at the moon, and&mdash;he was not mistaken&mdash;it
+ was no spectre of darkness; it was she for whom every pulse of his heart
+ throbbed&mdash;Eva!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No human creature had ever seemed to him so divinely fair as she in her
+ long white night-robe, over which fell the thick waves of her light hair.
+ The horror which had seized him yielded to the most ardent yearning.
+ Pressing his hand upon his throbbing heart, he watched her every movement.
+ He longed to go forward to meet her, yet a supernatural spell seemed to
+ paralyse his energy. He would sooner have dared clasp in his arms the
+ image of a beautiful Madonna than this embodiment of pure, helpless,
+ gracious innocence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she herself drew nearer, but he felt as if his will was broken, and
+ with timid awe he drew back one step, and then another, till the chain
+ stopped him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at that moment she paused, stretched out her white arm with a
+ beckoning gesture, and again turned towards the house, Heinz following
+ because he could not help it, her sign drew him after her with magnetic
+ power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Eva entered the dimly lighted corridor, and again her uplifted hand
+ seemed to invite him to follow. Then&mdash;the impetuous throbbing of his
+ heart almost stifled him&mdash;she set her little white foot on the first
+ step of the stairs and led the way up to the first landing, where she
+ paused, lifting her face to the open window, through which the moonbeams
+ streamed into the hall, flooding her head, her figure, and every
+ surrounding object with their soft light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz followed step by step. It seemed as if the wild surges of a sea were
+ roaring in his ears, and glittering sparks were dancing before his
+ yearning, watchful eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How he loved her! How intense was the longing which drew him after her!
+ And yet another emotion stirred in his heart with still greater
+ power-grief, sincere grief, which pierced his in, most soul, that she
+ could have beckoned to him, permitted him to follow her, granted him what
+ he would never have ventured to ask. Nay, when he set his foot on the
+ first step, it seemed as if the temple which contained his holiest
+ treasure fell crashing around him, and an inner voice cried loudly: &ldquo;Away,
+ away from here! Would you exchange the purest and loftiest things for what
+ tomorrow will fill you with grief and loathing?&rdquo; it continued to admonish.
+ &ldquo;You will relinquish what is dearest and most sacred to secure what is
+ ready to rush into your arms on all the high-roads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hence, hence, you poor, deluded mortal, ere it is too late!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even had he known it was the fair fiend Venus herself moving before
+ him under the guise of Eva, the spell of her unutterable beauty would have
+ constrained him to follow her, though the goal were the Horselberg, death,
+ and hell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the second landing she again stood still and, leaning against a pillar,
+ raised her arms and extended them towards the moon, in whose silvery light
+ they gleamed like marble. Heinz saw her lips move, heard his own name fall
+ from them, and all self-control vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eva!&rdquo; he cried with passionate fervor, holding out his arms to clasp her;
+ but, ere he even touched her, a shriek of despairing anguish echoed loudly
+ back from the walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sound of her own name had broken the threads with which the mysterious
+ power of the moonlight had drawn her from her couch, down through the
+ house, out of doors, and again back to the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sleep vanished with the dream which she had shared with him and,
+ shuddering, she perceived where she was, saw the knight before her, became
+ conscious that she had left her chamber in her night-robe, with disordered
+ hair and bare feet; and, frantic with horror at the thought of the
+ resistless might with which a mysterious force constrained her to obey it
+ against her own will, deeply wounded by the painful feeling that she had
+ been led so far across the bounds of maidenly modesty, hurt and angered by
+ the boldness of the man before her, who had dared to follow her into her
+ parents&rsquo; house, she again raised her voice, this time to call her from
+ whom she was accustomed to seek and find help in every situation in life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Els! Els!&rdquo; rang up the stairs; and the next moment Els, who had already
+ heard Eva&rsquo;s first scream, sprang down the few steps to her sister&rsquo;s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One glance at the trembling girl in her nightrobe, and at the moonlight
+ which still bathed her in its rays, told Els what had drawn Eva to the
+ stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight must have slipped into the house and found her there. She knew
+ him and, before Heinz had time to collect his thoughts, she said
+ soothingly to her sister, who threw her arms around her as though seeking
+ protection, &ldquo;Go up to your room, child!&mdash;Help her, Katterle. I&rsquo;ll
+ come directly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Eva, leaning on the maid&rsquo;s arm, mounted the stairs with trembling
+ knees, Els turned to the Swiss and said in a grave, resolute tone: &ldquo;If you
+ are worthy of your escutcheon, Sir Knight, you will not now fly like a
+ coward from this house across whose threshold you stole with shameful
+ insolence, but await me here until I return. You shall not be detained
+ long. But, to guard yourself and another from misinterpretation, you must
+ hear me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz nodded assent in silence, as if still under the spell of what he had
+ recently experienced. But, ere he reached the entry below, Martsche, the
+ old housekeeper, and Endres, the aged head packer, came towards him, just
+ as they had risen from their beds, the former with a petticoat flung round
+ her shoulders, the latter wrapped in a horse-blanket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva&rsquo;s shriek had waked both, but Els enjoined silence on everyone and,
+ after telling them to go back to bed, said briefly that Eva in her
+ somnambulism had this time gone out into the street and been brought back
+ by the knight. Finally, she again said to Heinz, &ldquo;Presently!&rdquo; and then
+ went to her sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Biberli bade farewell to his sweetheart, who gave him Eva&rsquo;s little
+ note, he had arranged to meet her again in an hour or, if his duties
+ detained him longer, in two; but after the &ldquo;true and steadfast&rdquo; fellow
+ left her, her heart throbbed more and more anxiously, for the wrong she
+ had done in acting as messenger between the young daughter of her
+ employers and a stranger knight was indeed hard to forgive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of waiting in the kitchen or entry for her lover&rsquo;s return, as she
+ had intended, she had gone to the image of the Virgin at the gate of the
+ Convent of St. Clare, before which she had often found consolation,
+ especially when homesick yearning for the mountains of her native
+ Switzerland pressed upon her too sorely. This time also it had been
+ gracious to her, for after she had prayed very devoutly and vowed to give
+ a candle to the Mother of God, as well as to St. Clare, she fancied that
+ the image smiled upon her and promised that she should go unpunished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On her return the knight had just followed Eva into the house, and Biberli
+ pursued his master as far as the stairs. Here Katterle met her lover, but,
+ when she learned what was occurring, she became greatly enraged and
+ incensed by the base interpretation which the servant placed upon Eva&rsquo;s
+ going out into the street and, terrified by the danger into which the
+ knight threatened to plunge them all, she forgot the patience and
+ submission she was accustomed to show the true and steadfast Biberli. But&mdash;resolved
+ to protect her young mistress from the presumptuous knight-scarcely had
+ she angrily cried shame upon her lover for this base suspicion, protesting
+ that Eva had never gone to seek a knight but, as she had often done on
+ bright moonlight nights, walked in her sleep down the stairs and out of
+ doors, when the young girl&rsquo;s shriek of terror summoned her to her aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli looked after her sullenly, meanwhile execrating bitterly enough
+ the wild love which had robbed his master of reason and threatened to hurl
+ him, Biberli, and even the innocent Katterle, whose brave defence of her
+ mistress had especially pleased him, into serious misfortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When old Endres appeared he had slipped behind a wall formed of bales
+ heaped one above another, and did not stir until the entry was quiet
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his amazement he had then found his master standing beside the door of
+ the house, but his question&mdash;which, it is true, was not wholly devoid
+ of a shade of sarcasm&mdash;whether the knight was waiting for the return
+ of his sleep-walking sweetheart, was so harshly rebuffed that he deemed it
+ advisable to keep silence for a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though Heinz Schorlin had perceived that he had followed an unconscious
+ somnambulist, he was not yet capable of calmly reflecting upon what had
+ occurred or of regarding the future with prudence. He knew one thing only:
+ the fear was idle that the lovely creature whose image, surrounded by a
+ halo of light, still hovered before him like a vision from a higher, more
+ beautiful world, was an unworthy person who, with a face of angelic
+ innocence, transgressed the laws of custom and modesty. Her shriek of
+ terror, her horror at seeing him, and the cry for help which had brought
+ her sister to her aid and roused the servants from their sleep, gave him
+ the right to esteem her as highly as ever; and this conviction fanned into
+ such a blaze the feeling of happiness which love had awakened and his
+ foolish distrust had already begun to stifle, that he was firmly resolved,
+ cost what it might, to make Eva his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After he had reached this determination he began to reflect more quietly.
+ What cared he for liberty and a rapid advance in the career upon which he
+ had entered, if only his future life was beautified by her love!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he were required to woo her in the usual form, he would do so. And what
+ a charming yet resolute creature was the other E, who, in her anxiety
+ about her sister, had crossed his path with such grave, firm dignity! She
+ was Wolff Eysvogel&rsquo;s betrothed bride, and it seemed to him a very pleasant
+ thing to call the young man, whom he had so quickly learned to esteem, his
+ brother-in-law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the father refused his daughter to him, he would leave Nuremberg and
+ ride to the Rhine, where Hartmann, the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s son, whom he
+ loved like a younger brother, was now living. Heinz had instructed the lad
+ of eighteen in the use of the lance and the sword, and Hartmann had sent
+ him word the day before that the Rhine was beautiful, but without him he
+ but half enjoyed even the pleasantest things. He needed him. Hundreds of
+ other knights and squires could break in the new horses for the Emperor
+ and the young Bohemian princess, though perhaps not quite so skilfully.
+ Hartmann would understand him and persuade his imperial father to aid him
+ in his suit. The warmhearted youth could not bear to see him sorrowful,
+ and without Eva there was no longer joy or happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was roused from these thoughts and dreams by his own name called in a
+ low tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle had gone with Eva to the chamber, whither the older sister
+ followed them. Tenderly embracing the weeping girl, she had kissed her wet
+ eyes and whispered in an agitated voice, with which, however, blended a
+ great deal of affectionate mischief: &ldquo;The wolf who forced his way into the
+ house does not seem quite so harmless as mine, whom I have succeeded in
+ taming very tolerably. Go to mother now, darling. I&rsquo;ll be back directly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you intend to do?&rdquo; asked Eva timidly, still unable, under the
+ influence of her strange experiences, to regain her self-control.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To look around the house,&rdquo; replied her sister, beckoning to Katterle to
+ accompany her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the entry she questioned the maid with stern decision, and the
+ trembling girl owned, amid her tears, that Eva had sent a little note to
+ the knight in reply to his request that she would name her colour, and
+ whatever else her anxious mistress desired hastily to learn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a threatening &ldquo;We will discuss your outrageous conduct later,&rdquo; Els
+ hurried down-stairs, and found in the entry the man whose pleasure in the
+ pursuit of the innocent child whom she protected she meant to spoil. But
+ though she expressed her indignation to the knight with the utmost
+ harshness, he besought a hearing with so much respect and in such seemly
+ words, that she requested him, in a gentler tone, to speak freely. But
+ scarcely had he begun to relate how Eva, at the ball, had filled his heart
+ with the purest love, when the trampling of horses&rsquo; hoofs, which had come
+ nearer and nearer to the house, suddenly ceased, and Biberli, who had gone
+ into the court-yard, came hurrying back, exclaiming in a tone of warning,
+ &ldquo;The von Montforts!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same moment two men-servants threw back both leaves of the door,
+ torchlight mingled with the moonbeams in the courtyard, and the next
+ instant a goodly number of knights and gentlemen entered the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli was not mistaken. The von Montforts had returned home, instead of
+ spending the night at Kadolzburg, and neither Els nor the Swiss had the
+ time or disposition to seek concealment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intruders were preceded by men-servants, whose torches lighted the
+ long, lofty storehouse brilliantly. It seemed to Els as if her heart
+ stopped beating and she felt her cheeks blanch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she beheld Count von Montfort&rsquo;s bronzed face, the countenance of a
+ sportsman and reveller; yonder the frank, handsome features of the young
+ Burgrave, Eitelfritz von Zollern, framed by the hood of the Knights of St.
+ John, drawn up during the night-ride; there the pale, noble visage of the
+ quiet knight Boemund Altrosen, far famed for his prowess with lance and
+ sword; beyond, the scarred, martial countenance of Count Casper Schlick,
+ set in a mass of tangled brown locks; and then the watery, blue eyes of
+ Sir Seitz Siebenburg, the husband of her future sister-in-law Isabella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had pressed in, talking eagerly, laughing, and rejoicing that the
+ wild night ride proposed by Cordula von Montfort, which had led over dark
+ forest paths, lighted only by a stray moonbeam, and often across fields
+ and ditches and through streams, had ended without mischance to man or
+ beast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they all crowded around the countess, Seitz Siebenburg bending towards
+ her with such zeal that the ends of his huge mustache brushed the plumes
+ in her cap, and Boemund Altrosen, who had just been gazing into the
+ flushed face of the daring girl with the warm joy of true love, cast a
+ look of menace at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els, too, greatly disliked &ldquo;the Mustache,&rdquo; as her future brother-in-law
+ was called because the huge ornament on his upper lip made him conspicuous
+ among the beardless knights. She was aware that he returned the feeling,
+ and had left no means untried to incite Wolff Eysvogel&rsquo;s parents to oppose
+ his betrothal. Now he was one of the first to notice her and, after
+ whispering with a malicious smile to the countess and those nearest to
+ him, he looked at her so malevolently that she could easily guess what
+ interpretation he was trying to put upon her nocturnal meeting with the
+ Swiss in the eyes of his companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her cheeks flamed with wrath, and like a flash of lightning came the
+ thought of the pleasure it would afford this wanton company, whose
+ greatest delight was to gloat over the errors of their neighbours, if the
+ knight who had brought her into this suspicious situation, or she herself,
+ should confess that not she, but the devout Eva, had attracted Heinz
+ hither. What a satisfaction it would be to this reckless throng to tell
+ such a tale of a young girl of whom the Burgravine von Zollern had said
+ the evening before to their Uncle Pfinzing, that purity and piety had
+ chosen Eva&rsquo;s lovely face for a mirror!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What if Heinz Schorlin, to save her, Els, from evil report, should confess
+ that she was here only to rebuke his insolent intrusion into a decorous
+ household?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This must be prevented, and Heinz seemed to understand her; for after
+ their eyes had met, his glance of helpless enquiry told her that he would
+ leave her to find an escape from this labyrinth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The merry party, who now perceived that they had interrupted the nocturnal
+ tryst of lovers, did not instantly know what to do and, as one looked
+ enquiringly at another, an embarrassed silence followed their noisy
+ jollity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the hush did not last long, and its interruption at first seemed to
+ Els to bode the worst result; it was a peal of gay, reckless laughter,
+ ringing from the lips of the very Cordula von Montfort, into whose eyes,
+ as the only one of her own sex who was present, Els had just gazed with a
+ look imploring aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Eva&rsquo;s aversion to the countess been justified, and was she about to
+ take advantage of her unpleasant position to jeer at her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the two quarreled at the ball the night before, and did Cordula now
+ perceive an opportunity to punish the younger sister by the humiliation of
+ the older one?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet her laugh sounded by no means spiteful&mdash;rather, very gay and
+ natural. The pleasant grey eyes sparkled with the most genuine mirth, and
+ she clapped her little hands so joyously that the falcon&rsquo;s chain on the
+ gauntlet of her riding glove rattled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what was this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one looks at a person whom one desires to wound with an expression of
+ such cheerful encouragement as the look with which Cordula now gazed at
+ Els and Heinz Schorlin, who stood by her side. True, they were at first
+ extremely perplexed by the words she now shouted to those around her in a
+ tone of loud exultation, as though announcing a victory; but from the
+ beginning they felt that there was no evil purpose in them. Soon they even
+ caught the real meaning of the countess&rsquo;s statement, and Els was ashamed
+ of having feared any injury from the girl whose defender she had always
+ been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won, Sir Knight&mdash;cleverly won!&rdquo; was her first sentence to Heinz.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, turning to Els, she asked with no less animation: &ldquo;And you, my fair
+ maid and very strict housemate, who has won the wager now? Do you still
+ believe it is an inconceivable thought that the modest daughter of a
+ decorous Nuremberg race, entitled to enter the lists of a tourney, would
+ grant a young knight a midnight meeting?&rdquo; And addressing her companions,
+ she continued, in an explanatory yet still playful tone: &ldquo;She was ready to
+ wager the beautiful brown locks which she now hides modestly under a
+ kerchief, and even her betrothed lover&rsquo;s ring. It should be mine if I
+ succeeded in leading her to commit such an abominable deed. But I was
+ content, if I won the wager, with a smaller forfeit; yet now that I have
+ gained it, Jungfrau Ortlieb, you must pay!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole company listened in astonishment to this speech, which no one
+ understood, but the countess, nodding mischievously to her nearest
+ neighbours, went on:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How bewildered you all look! It might tempt me to satisfy your curiosity
+ less speedily, but, after the delightful entertainment you gave us, my
+ Lord Burgrave, one becomes merciful. So you shall hear how I, as wise as
+ the serpent, craftily forced this haughty knight&rdquo;&mdash;she tapped Heinz
+ Schorlin&rsquo;s arm with her riding whip&mdash;&ldquo;and you, too, Jungfrau Ortlieb,
+ whose pardon I now entreat, to help me win the bet. No offence, noble
+ sirs! But this bet was what compelled me to drag you all from Kadolzburg
+ and its charms so early, and induce you to attend me on the reckless ride
+ through the moonlit night. Now accept the thanks of a lady whose heart is
+ grateful; for your obedience helped me win the wager. Look yonder at my
+ handsome, submissive knight, Sir Heinz Schorlin, so rich in every virtue.
+ I commanded, him, on pain of my anger, to meet me at midnight at the
+ entrance of our quarters&mdash;that is, the entry of the Ortlieb mansion;
+ and to this modest and happy betrothed bride (may she pardon the madcap!)
+ I represented how it troubled me and wounded my timid delicacy to enter so
+ late at night, accompanied only by gentlemen, the house which so
+ hospitably sheltered us, and go to my sleeping room, though I should not
+ fear the Sultan and his mamelukes, if with this in my hand&rdquo;&mdash;she
+ motioned to her riding whip&mdash;&ldquo;and my dear father at my side, I stood
+ on my own feet which, though by no means small, are well-shod and
+ resolute. Yet, as we are apt to measure others by our own standard, the
+ timid, decorous girl believed me, and poor Cordula, who indeed brought
+ only her maids and no female guardian, and therefore must dispense with
+ being received on her return by a lady capable of commanding respect, did
+ not appeal in vain to the charitable feelings of her beautiful housemate.
+ She promised faithfully to come down into the entry, when the horses
+ approached, to receive the poor lamb, surrounded by lynxes, wild-cats,
+ foxes, and wolves, and lead it into the safe fold&mdash;if one can call
+ this stately house by such a name. Both Sir Heinz Schorlin and Jungfrau
+ Elizabeth Ortlieb kept their word and joined each other here&mdash;to
+ their extreme amazement, I should suppose, as to my knowledge they never
+ met before&mdash;to receive me, and thus had an interview which, however
+ loudly they may contradict it, I call a nocturnal meeting. But my wager,
+ fair child, is won, and tomorrow you will deliver to me the exquisite
+ carved ivory casket, while I shall keep my bracelet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she paused, paying no heed to the merry threats, exclamations of
+ amazement, and laughter of her companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while her father, striking his broad chest, cried again and again,
+ with rapturous delight, &ldquo;A paragon of a woman!&rdquo; and Seitz Siebenburg, in
+ bitter disappointment, whispered, &ldquo;The fourteen saintly helpers in time of
+ need might learn from you how to draw from the clamps what is not worth
+ rescue and probably despaired of escape,&rdquo; she was trying to give time to
+ recover more composure her young hostess, to whom she was sincerely
+ attached, and who, she felt sure, could have met Heinz Schorlin, who
+ perhaps had come hither on her own account, only by some cruel chance. So
+ she added in a quieter tone: &ldquo;And now, Jungfrau Ortlieb, in sober earnest
+ I will ask your protection and guidance through the dark house, and
+ meanwhile you shall tell me how Sir Heinz greeted you and what passed
+ between you, either good or bad, during the time of waiting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els summoned up her courage and answered loud enough to be heard by all
+ present: &ldquo;We were speaking of you, Countess Cordula, and the knight said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ventured to remark, Countess,&rdquo; said Heinz, interrupting the new ally,
+ &ldquo;that though you might understand how to show a poor knight his folly, no
+ kinder heart than yours throbbed under any bodice in Switzerland, Swabia,
+ or France.&rdquo; Cordula struck him lightly on the shoulder with her riding
+ whip, saying with a laugh: &ldquo;Who permits you to peep under women&rsquo;s bodices
+ through so wide a tract of country, you scamp? Had I been in Jungfrau
+ Ortlieb&rsquo;s place I should have punished your entry into a respectable
+ house:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my dear Countess,&rdquo; Heinz interrupted, and his words bore so
+ distinctly the stamp of truth and actual experience that even Sir Seitz
+ Siebenburg was puzzled, &ldquo;though I am always disposed to be grateful to
+ you, I cannot feel a sense of obligation for this lady&rsquo;s reception of me,
+ even to the most gracious benefactress. For, by my patron saint, she
+ forbade me the house as if I were a thief and a burglar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And she was right!&rdquo; exclaimed the countess. &ldquo;I would have treated you
+ still more harshly. Only you would have spared yourself many a sharp word
+ had you confessed at once that it was I who summoned you here. I&rsquo;ll talk
+ with you tomorrow, and am I not right, Jungfrau Elsyou won&rsquo;t make him
+ suffer for losing the wager, but exercise your domestic authority after a
+ more gentle fashion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While speaking, she looked at Els with a glance so full of meaning that
+ the young girl&rsquo;s cheeks crimsoned, and the longing to put an end to this
+ deceitful game became almost uncontrollable. The thought of Eva alone
+ sealed her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One person only besides Sir Seitz Siebenburg had not been deceived&mdash;the
+ young knight Boemund Altrosen, whose love for Cordula was genuine, and
+ who, by its unerring instinct, felt that she had invented her tale and for
+ a purpose which did honour to her kindness of heart. So his calm black
+ eyes rested upon the woman he loved with proud delight, while Seitz
+ Siebenburg twisted his mustache fiercely. Not a look or movement of either
+ of the two girls had escaped his notice, and Cordula&rsquo;s bold interference
+ in behalf of the reckless Swiss knight, who now seemed to have ensnared
+ his future sister-in-law also, increased the envy and jealousy which
+ tortured him until he was forced to exert the utmost self-restraint in
+ order not to tell the countess to her face that he, at least, was far from
+ being deceived by such a fable. Yet he succeeded in controlling himself.
+ But as he forced his lips to silence he gazed with the most open scorn at
+ the bales of merchandise heaped around him. He would show the others that,
+ though the husband of a merchant&rsquo;s daughter, he retained the prejudices of
+ his knightly rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no one heeded the disagreeable fellow, who had no intimate friends in
+ the group. Most of the company were pressing round Heinz Schorlin with
+ jests and questions, but bluff Count von Montfort warmly clasped Els&rsquo;s
+ hand, while he apologised for the bold jest of his young daughter who, in
+ spite of her recklessness, meant kindly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could have been more unwelcome to a girl in so unpleasant a
+ situation than this delay. She longed most ardently to get away but, ere
+ she succeeded in escaping from the friendly old noble, two gentlemen
+ hastily entered the brightly lighted entry, at sight of whom her heart
+ seemed to stop beating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old count, who noticed her blanched face, released her, asking
+ sympathisingly what troubled her, but Els did not hear him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she felt him loose her hand she would fain have fled up the stairs to
+ her mother and sister, to avoid the discussions which must now follow. But
+ she knew into what violent outbursts of sudden anger her usually prudent
+ father could be hurried if there was no one at hand to warn him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There he stood in the doorway, his stern, gloomy expression forming a
+ strange contrast to the merry party who had entered in such a jovial mood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His companion, Herr Casper Eysvogel, had already noticed his future
+ daughter-in-law, recognised her by an amazed shrug of the shoulders which
+ was anything but a friendly greeting, and now eyed the excited revellers
+ with a look as grave and repellent as that of the owner of the house. Herr
+ Casper&rsquo;s unusual height permitted him to gaze over the heads of the party
+ though, with the exception of Count von Montfort, they were all tall, nay,
+ remarkably tall men, and the delicacy of his clear-cut, pallid, beardless
+ face had never seemed to Els handsomer or more sinister. True, he was the
+ father of her Wolff, but the son resembled this cold-hearted man only in
+ his unusual stature, and a chill ran through her veins as she felt the
+ stately old merchant&rsquo;s blue eyes, still keen and glittering, rest upon
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the day of her betrothal she had rushed into his arms with a warm and
+ grateful heart, and he had kissed her, as custom dictated; but it was done
+ in a strange way&mdash;his thin, well-cut lips had barely brushed her
+ brow. Then he stepped back and turned to his wife with the low command,
+ &ldquo;It is your turn now, Rosalinde.&rdquo; Her future mother-in-law rose quickly,
+ and doubtless intended to embrace her affectionately, but a loud cough
+ from her own mother seemed to check her, for ere she opened her arms to
+ Els she turned to her and excused her act by the words, &ldquo;He wishes it.&rdquo;
+ Yet Els was finally clasped in Frau Rosalinde&rsquo;s arms and kissed more
+ warmly than&mdash;from what had previously occurred&mdash;she had
+ expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff&rsquo;s grandmother, old Countess Rotterbach, who rarely left the huge
+ gilt armchair in her daughter&rsquo;s sitting-room, had watched the whole scene
+ with a scornful smile; then, thrusting her prominent chin still farther
+ forward, she said to her daughter, loud enough for Els to hear, &ldquo;This into
+ the bargain?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these things returned to the young girl&rsquo;s memory as she gazed at the
+ cold, statuesque face of her lover&rsquo;s father. It seemed as if he held his
+ tall, noble figure more haughtily erect than usual, and that his plain
+ dark garments were of richer material and more faultless cut than ever;
+ nay, she even fancied that, like the lion, which crouches and strains
+ every muscle ere it springs upon its victim, he was summoning all his
+ pride and sternness to crush her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els was innocent; nay, the motive which had brought her here to defend her
+ sister could not fail to be approved by every well-disposed person, and
+ certainly not last by her father, and it would have suited her truthful
+ nature to contradict openly Countess Cordula&rsquo;s friendly falsehood had not
+ her dread of fatally exposing Eva imposed silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How her father&rsquo;s cheeks glowed already! With increasing anxiety, she
+ attributed it to the indignation which overpowered him, yet he was only
+ heated by the haste with which, accompanied by his future son-in-law&rsquo;s
+ father, he had rushed here from the Frauenthor as fast as his feet would
+ carry him. Casper Eysvogel had also attended the Vorchtel entertainment
+ and accompanied Ernst Ortlieb into the street to discuss some business
+ matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He intended to persuade him to advance the capital for which he had just
+ vainly asked Herr Vorchtel. He stood in most urgent need for the next few
+ days of this great sum, of which his son and business partner must have no
+ knowledge, and at first Wolff Eysvogel&rsquo;s future father-in-law saw no
+ reason to refuse. But Herr Ernst was a cautious man, and when his
+ companion imposed the condition that his son should be kept in ignorance
+ of the loan, he was puzzled. He wished to learn why the business partner
+ should not know what must be recorded in the books of the house; but
+ Casper Eysvogel needed this capital to silence the Jew Pfefferkorn, from
+ whom he had secretly borrowed large sums to conceal the heavy losses
+ sustained in Venice the year before at the gaming table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first courteously, then with rising anger, he evaded the questions of
+ the business man, and his manner of doing so, with the little
+ contradictions in which the arrogant man, unaccustomed to falsehood,
+ involved himself, showed Herr Ernst that all was not as it should be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time they reached the Frauenthor, he had told Casper Eysvogel
+ positively that he would not fulfil the request until Wolff was informed
+ of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the sorely pressed man perceived that nothing but a frank confession
+ could lead him to his goal. But what an advantage it would give his
+ companion, what a humiliation it would impose upon himself! He could not
+ force his lips to utter it, but resolved to venture a last essay by
+ appealing to the father, instead of to the business man; and therefore,
+ with the haughty, condescending manner natural to him, he asked Herr
+ Ernst, as if it were his final word, whether he had considered that his
+ refusal of a request, which twenty other men would deem it an honour to
+ fulfil, might give their relations a form very undesirable both to his
+ daughter and himself?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I did not suppose that a necessity,&rdquo; replied his companion firmly,
+ and then added in an irritated tone: &ldquo;But if you need the loan so much
+ that you require for your son a father-in-law who will advance it to you
+ more readily, why, then, Herr Casper&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he paused abruptly. A flood of light streamed into the street from
+ the doorway of the Ortlieb house. It must be a fire, and with the startled
+ cry, &ldquo;St. Florian aid us! my entry is burning!&rdquo; he rushed forward with his
+ companion to the endangered house so quickly that the torchbearers, who
+ even in this bright night did good service in the narrow streets, whose
+ lofty houses barred out the moonlight, could scarcely follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Herr Ernst, far more anxious about his invalid, helpless wife than
+ his imperilled wares, soon reached his own door. His companion crossed the
+ threshold close behind him, sullen, deeply incensed, and determined to
+ order his son to choose between his love and favour and the daughter of
+ this unfriendly man, whom only a sudden accident had prevented from
+ breaking the betrothal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sight of so many torches blazing here was an exasperating spectacle to
+ Ernst Ortlieb, who with wise caution and love of order insisted that
+ nothing but lanterns should be used to light his house, which contained
+ inflammable wares of great value; but other things disturbed his
+ composure, already wavering, to an even greater degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was his Els doing at this hour among these gentlemen, all of whom
+ were strangers?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without heeding them or the countess, he was hastening towards her to
+ obtain a solution of this enigma, but the young Burgrave Eitelfritz von
+ Zollern, the Knight of Altrosen, Cordula von Montfort, and others barred
+ his way by greeting him and eagerly entreating him to pardon their
+ intrusion at so late an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having no alternative, he curtly assented, and was somewhat soothed as he
+ saw old Count von Montfort, who was still standing beside Els, engaged in
+ an animated conversation with her. His daughter&rsquo;s presence was probably
+ due to that of the guests quartered in his home, especially Cordula, whom,
+ since she disturbed the peace of his quiet household night after night, he
+ regarded as the personification of restlessness and reckless freedom. He
+ would have preferred to pass her unnoticed, but she had clung to his arm
+ and was trying, with coaxing graciousness, to soften his indignation by
+ gaily relating how she had come here and what had detained her and her
+ companions. But Ernst Ortlieb, who would usually have been very
+ susceptible to such an advance from a young and aristocratic lady, could
+ not now succeed in smoothing his brow. In his excitement he was not even
+ able to grasp the meaning of the story she related merrily, though with
+ well-feigned contrition. While listening to her with one ear, he was
+ straining the other to catch what Sir Seitz Siebenburg was saying to his
+ father-in-law, Casper Eysvogel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gathered from Countess Cordula&rsquo;s account that she had succeeded in
+ playing some bold prank in connection with Els and the Swiss knight Heinz
+ Schorlin, and the words &ldquo;the Mustache&rdquo; was whispering to his
+ father-in-law-the direction of his glance betrayed it&mdash;also referred
+ to Els and the Swiss. But the less Herr Ernst heard of this conversation
+ the more painfully it excited his already perturbed spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly his pleasant features, which, on account of the lady at his side,
+ he had hitherto forced to wear a gracious aspect, assumed an expression
+ which filled the reckless countess with grave anxiety, and urged the
+ terrified Els, who had not turned her eyes from him, to a hasty
+ resolution. That was her father&rsquo;s look when on the point of an outbreak of
+ fury, and at this hour, surrounded by these people, he must not allow
+ himself to yield to rage; he must maintain a tolerable degree of
+ composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without heeding the young Burgrave Eitelfritz or Sir Boemund Altrosen, who
+ were just approaching her, she forced her way nearer to her father, He
+ still maintained his self-control, but already the veins on his brow had
+ swollen and his short figure was rigidly erect. The cause of his
+ excitement&mdash;she had noticed it&mdash;was some word uttered by Seitz
+ Siebenburg. Her father was the only person who had understood it, but she
+ was not mistaken in the conjecture that it referred to her and the Swiss
+ knight, and she believed it to be base and spiteful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, after his father-in-law had told him that Ernst Ortlieb thought
+ his house was on fire, &ldquo;the Mustache,&rdquo; in reply to Herr Casper&rsquo;s enquiry
+ how his son&rsquo;s betrothed bride happened to be there, answered scornfully:
+ &ldquo;Els? She did not hasten hither, like the old man, to put the fire out,
+ but because one flame was not enough for her. Wolff must know it
+ to-morrow. By day the slender little flame of honourable betrothed love
+ flickers for him; by night it blazes more brightly for yonder Swiss
+ scoundrel. And the young lady chooses for the scene of this toying with
+ fire the easily ignited warehouse of her own father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will secure mine against such risks,&rdquo; Casper Eysvogel answered; then,
+ casting a contemptuous glance at Els and a wrathful one at the Swiss
+ knight, he added with angry resolution: &ldquo;It is not yet too late. So long
+ as I am myself no one shall bring peril and disgrace upon my house and my
+ son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Herr Ernst had suddenly become aware of the suspicion with which his
+ beautiful, brave, self-sacrificing child was regarded. Pale as death, he
+ struggled for composure, and when his eyes met the imploring gaze of the
+ basely defamed girl, he said to himself that he must maintain his
+ self-control in order not to afford the frivolous revellers who surrounded
+ him an entertaining spectacle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff was dear to him, but before he would have led his Els to the house
+ where the miserable &ldquo;Mustache&rdquo; lived, and whose head was the coldhearted,
+ gloomy man whose words had just struck him like a poisoned arrow, he, whom
+ the Lord had bereft of his beloved, gallant son, would have been ready to
+ deprive himself of his daughters also and take both to the convent. Eva
+ longed to go, and Els might find there a new and beautiful happiness, like
+ his sister, the Abbess Kunigunde. In the Eysvogel house, never!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During these hasty reflections Els extended her hand toward him, and the
+ shining gold circlet which her lover had placed on her ring finger
+ glittered in the torchlight. A thought darted through his brain with the
+ speed of lightning, and without hesitation he drew the ring from the hand
+ of his astonished daughter, whispering curtly, yet tenderly, in reply to
+ her anxious cry, &ldquo;What are you doing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trust me, child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then hastily approaching Casper Eysvogel, he beckoned to him to move a
+ little aside from the group.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other followed, believing that Herr Ernst would now promise the sum
+ requested, yet firmly resolved, much as he needed it, to refuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernst Ortlieb, however, made no allusion to business matters, but with a
+ swift gesture handed him the ring which united their two children. Then,
+ after a rapid glance around had assured him that no one had followed them,
+ he whispered to Herr Casper: &ldquo;Tell your Wolff that he was, and would have
+ remained, dear to us; but my daughter seems to me too good for his
+ father&rsquo;s house and for kindred who fear that she will bring injury and
+ shame upon them. Your wish is fulfilled. I hereby break the betrothal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, in so doing, you only anticipate the step which I intended to take
+ with more cogent motives,&rdquo; replied Casper Eysvogel with cool composure,
+ shrugging his shoulders contemptuously. &ldquo;The city will judge to-morrow
+ which of the two parties was compelled to sever a bond sacred in the sight
+ of God and men. Unfortunately, it is impossible for me to give your
+ daughter the good opinion you cherish of my son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drawing his stately figure to its full height as he spoke, he gazed at his
+ diminutive adversary with a look of haughty contempt and, without
+ vouchsafing a word in farewell, turned his back upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Repressed fury was seething in Ernst Ortlieb&rsquo;s breast, and he would
+ scarcely have succeeded in controlling himself longer but for the
+ consolation afforded by the thought that every tie was sundered between
+ his daughter and this cold, arrogant, unjust man and his haughty, evil
+ disposed kindred. But when he again looked for the daughter on whom his
+ hasty act had doubtless inflicted a severe blow, she was no longer
+ visible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Directly after he took the ring she had glided silently, unnoticed by most
+ of the company, up the stairs to the second story. Cordula von Montfort
+ told him this in a low tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els had made no answer to her questions, but her imploring, tearful eyes
+ pierced the young countess to the heart. Her quick ear had caught
+ Siebenburg&rsquo;s malicious words and Casper Eysvogel&rsquo;s harsh response and,
+ with deep pity, she felt how keenly the poor girl must suffer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The happiness of a whole life destroyed without any fault of her own! From
+ their first meeting Els had seemed to her incapable of any careless error,
+ and she had merely tried, by her bold, interference, to protect her from
+ the gossip of evil tongues. But Heinz Schorlin had just approached and
+ whispered that, by his knightly honour, Els was a total stranger to him,
+ and he only wished he might find his own dear sister at home as pure and
+ free from any fault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor child! But the countess knew who had frustrated her intervention in
+ behalf of Els. It was Sir Seitz Siebenburg, &ldquo;the Mustache,&rdquo; whose
+ officious homage, at first amusing, had long since become repulsive. Her
+ heart shrank from the thought that, merely from vain pleasure in having a
+ throng of admirers, she had given this scoundrel more than one glance of
+ encouragement. The riding whip fairly quivered in her right hand as, after
+ informing Ernst Ortlieb where Els had gone, she warned the gentlemen that
+ it was time to depart, and Seitz Siebenburg submissively, yet as
+ familiarly as if he had a right to her special favour, held out his hand
+ in farewell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Countess Cordula withdrew hers with visible dislike, saying in a tone
+ of chilling repulse: &ldquo;Remember me to your wife, Sir Knight. Tell her to
+ take care that her twin sons resemble their father as little as possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you want to have two ardent admirers the less?&rdquo; asked Siebenburg
+ gaily, supposing that the countess&rsquo;s remark was a jest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when she did not, as he expected, give these insulting words an
+ interpretation favourable to him, but merely shrugged her shoulders
+ scornfully, he added, glancing fiercely at the Swiss knight:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, you would doubtless be better pleased should the boys grow up to
+ resemble the lucky Sir Heinz Schorlin, for whose sake you proved yourself
+ the inventor of tales more marvellous, if not more credible, than the most
+ skilful travelling minstrel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps so,&rdquo; replied the countess with contemptuous brevity. &ldquo;But I
+ should be satisfied if the twins&mdash;and this agrees with my first wish
+ should grow up honest men. If you should pay me the honour of a visit
+ during the next few days, Sir Seitz, I could not receive it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words she turned away, paying no further heed to him, though he
+ called her name aloud, as if half frantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was after midnight when the servants closed the heavy door of the
+ Ortlieb mansion. The late guests had left it, mounted their horses, and
+ ridden away together through the Frauenthor into the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon no longer lighted their way. A sultry wind had swept from the
+ southwest masses of grey clouds, which constantly grew denser and darker.
+ Heinz Schorlin did not notice it, but his follower, Biberli, called his
+ attention to the rising storm and entreated him to choose the nearest road
+ to the city. To remain outside the gate in such darkness would be
+ uncomfortable, nay, perhaps not without peril, but the knight merely flung
+ him the peevish answer, &ldquo;So much the better,&rdquo; and, to Biberli&rsquo;s surprise,
+ turned into St. Klarengasse, which brought him by no means nearer to his
+ distant lodgings in the Bindergasse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was unfortunate to be warmly devoted to a master who had no fear, whom
+ he was obliged to serve as a messenger of love, and who now probably
+ scarcely knew himself whither this love would lead him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But true and steadfast Biberli would really have followed Sir Heinz, not
+ only in a dangerous nocturnal ramble, but through all the terrors of.
+ hell. So he only glanced down at his long, lean legs, which would be
+ exposed here to the bites of the dogs, with whom he stood on especially
+ bad terms, raised his long robe higher, as the paths over which they must
+ pass were of doubtful cleanliness, and deemed it a good omen when his foot
+ struck against a stout stick, which his patron saint had perhaps thrown in
+ his way as a weapon. Its possession was somewhat soothing, it is true, yet
+ he did not regain the pleasant consciousness of peace in which his soul
+ had rejoiced a few short hours before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew what to expect from the irritable mood into which recent events
+ appeared to have thrown his master. Heinz usually soon forgot any such
+ trivial disappointment, but the difficulty threatening himself and
+ Katterle was far worse&mdash;nay, might even assume terrible proportions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These alarming thoughts made him sigh so deeply that Heinz turned towards
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He would gladly have relieved his own troubled breast in the same way.
+ Never before had the soul of this light-hearted child of good fortune
+ served as the arena for so fierce a struggle of contending emotions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He loved Eva, and the image of her white, supernaturally beautiful figure,
+ flooded by the moonlight, still stood before him as distinctly as when,
+ after her disappearance, he had resolved to plead his suit for her to her
+ sister; but the usually reckless fellow asked himself, shuddering, what
+ would have happened had he obeyed Eva&rsquo;s summons and been found with her,
+ as he had just been surprised with her sister. She was not wholly free
+ from guilt, for her note had really contained an invitation to a meeting;
+ yet she escaped. But his needless impetuosity and her sudden appearance
+ before the house had placed her modest, charming sister, the betrothed
+ bride of the gallant fellow who had fought with him in the Marchfield, in
+ danger of being misunderstood and despised. If the finger of scorn were
+ pointed at her, if a stain rested on her fair fame, the austere Wolff
+ Eysvogel would hardly desire to make her his wife, and then this also
+ would be his fault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His kind, honest heart suffered keenly under these self-accusations, the
+ first which he had ever heeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto the volatile young fellow, who had often gaily risked his life in
+ battle and his last penny at the gaming table, had never thought of
+ seriously examining his own soul, battling by his own strength of will
+ against some secret longing and shunning its cause. On the contrary, from
+ childhood he had accustomed himself to rely on the protection and aid of
+ the Virgin and the saints; and when they passed the image with the
+ ever-burning lamp, where Katterle had just sought and found consolation,
+ he implored it not to let his bold intrusion into the home of the maiden
+ he loved bring evil upon her and her sister. He also vowed to the convent
+ and its saint&mdash;which, come what might, should also be his&mdash;a
+ rich gift whenever the Emperor or the gaming table again filled his purse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought of being burdened his whole life long with the reproach of
+ having made two such charming, innocent creatures miserable seemed
+ unendurable. He would gladly have given gold and blood to remove it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was too late that day, but he resolved to go to the confessional on the
+ morrow, for absolution had always relieved and lightened his heart. But
+ how trivial his errors had been! True, the wrong he had now committed was
+ not a mortal sin, and would hardly impose a severe penance upon him, yet
+ it burdened him like the most infamous crime. He did not understand
+ himself, and often wondered why he, reckless Heinz, thus made a mountain
+ out of a molehill. Yet when, after this reflection, he uttered a sigh of
+ relief, it seemed as if a voice within commanded him not to think lightly
+ of what had passed, for on that evening he had ceased to bestow pleasure
+ on every one, and instead of, as usual, being helpful and agreeable, he
+ had plunged others who had done him no wrong&mdash;nay, perhaps a whole
+ household, whose daughter had given him the first love of her young
+ heart-into misery and disgrace. Had he considered the consequences of his
+ act, he would still be merry Heinz. Then he remembered how, when a boy,
+ playing with other lads high up among the mountains just as it was
+ beginning to thaw, he had hurled the work they had finished with so much
+ toil, a snow man, down the slope, rejoicing with his playfellows over its
+ swift descent towards the valley, until they noticed with what frightful
+ speed its bulk increased as it sped over its snowy road, till at last,
+ like a terrible avalanche, it swept away a herdsman&rsquo;s hut&mdash;fortunately
+ an empty one. Now, also, his heedlessness had set in motion a mass which
+ constantly rolled onward, and how terrible might be the harm it would do!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Hartmann, the Emperor&rsquo;s son, were only there! He confided everything to
+ him, for he was sure of his silence. Both his duty as a knight and his
+ conscience forbade him to relate his experiences and ask counsel from any
+ one else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was still absorbed in these gloomy thoughts when, just before reaching
+ the Walch, he heard Biberli&rsquo;s deep sigh. Here, behind and beside the
+ frames of the cloth weavers, stood the tents before which the followers
+ and soldiers of the princes and dignitaries who had come to the Reichstag
+ were still sitting around the camp fire, carousing and laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any interruption was welcome to him, and to Biberli it seemed like a
+ deliverance to be permitted to use his poor endangered tongue, for his
+ master had asked what grief oppressed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you desired to know what trouble did not burden my soul I could find a
+ speedier answer,&rdquo; replied Biberli piteously. &ldquo;Oh, this night, my lord!
+ What has it not brought upon us and others! Look at the black clouds
+ rising in the south. They are like the dark days impending over us poor
+ mortals.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he confided to Heinz his fears for himself and Katterle. The knight&rsquo;s
+ assurance that he would intercede for him and, if necessary, even appeal
+ to the Emperor&rsquo;s favour, somewhat cheered his servitor&rsquo;s drooping spirits,
+ it is true, but by no means restored his composure, and his tone was
+ lugubrious enough as he went on:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the poor innocent girl in the Ortlieb house! Your little lady, my
+ lord, broke the bread she must now eat herself, but the other, the older
+ E.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; interrupted the knight sorrowfully. &ldquo;But if the gracious Virgin
+ aids us, they will continue to believe in the wager Cordula von Montfort&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She! she!&rdquo; Biberli exclaimed, enthusiastically waving his stick aloft.
+ &ldquo;The Lord created her in a good hour. Such a heart! Such friendly
+ kindness! And to think that she interposed so graciously for you&mdash;you,
+ Sir Heinz, to whom she showed the favour of combing your locks, as if you
+ were already her promised husband, and who afterwards, for another&rsquo;s sake,
+ left her at the ball as if she wore a fern cap and had become invisible. I
+ saw the whole from the musician&rsquo;s gallery. True, the somnambulist is
+ marvellously beautiful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the knight interrupted him by exclaiming so vehemently: &ldquo;Silence!&rdquo;
+ that he paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both walked on without speaking for some distance ere Heinz began again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even though I live to grow old and grey, never shall I behold aught more
+ beautiful than the vision of that white-robed girlish figure on the
+ stairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True and steadfast Biberli sighed faintly. Love for Eva Ortlieb held his
+ master as if in a vise; but a Schorlin seemed to him far too good a match
+ for a Nuremberg maiden who had grown up among sacks of pepper and chests
+ of goods and, moreover, was a somnambulist. He looked higher for his
+ Heinz, and had already found the right match for him. So, turning to him
+ again, he said earnestly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drive the bewitching vision from your mind, Sir Heinz. You don&rsquo;t know&mdash;but
+ I could tell you some tales about women who walk in their sleep by
+ moonlight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; asked Heinz eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a maiden,&rdquo; Biberli continued impressively, with the pious intention of
+ guarding his master from injury, &ldquo;the somnambulist merely runs the risk of
+ falling from the roof, or whatever accident may happen to a sleepwalker;
+ but if she enters the estate of holy matrimony, the evil power which has
+ dominion over her sooner or later transforms her at midnight into a troll,
+ which seizes her husband&rsquo;s throat in his sleep and strangles him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nursery tales!&rdquo; cried Heinz angrily, but Biberli answered calmly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It can make no difference to you what occurs in the case of such
+ possessed women, for henceforward the Ortlieb house will be closed against
+ you. And&mdash;begging your pardon&mdash;it is fortunate. For, my lord,
+ the horse mounted by the first Schorlin&mdash;the chaplain showed it to
+ you in the picture&mdash;came from the ark in which Noah saved it with the
+ other animals from the deluge, and the first Lady Schorlin whom the family
+ chronicles mention was a countess. Your ancestresses came from citadels
+ and castles; no Schorlin ever yet brought his bride from a tradesman&rsquo;s
+ house. You, the proudest of them all, will scarcely think of making such
+ an error, though it is true&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ernst Ortlieb, spite of his trade, is a man of knightly lineage, to whom
+ the king of arms opens the lists at every tournament!&rdquo; exclaimed Heinz
+ indignantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the combat with blunt weapons,&rdquo; replied Biberli contemptuously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, for the jousts and single combat,&rdquo; cried Heinz excitedly. &ldquo;The
+ Emperor Frederick himself dubbed Herr Ernst a knight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know best,&rdquo; replied Biberli modestly. But his coat of arms, like his
+ entry, smells of cloves and pepper. Here is another, however, who, like
+ your first ancestress, has a countess&rsquo;s title, and who has a right&mdash;My
+ name isn&rsquo;t Biberli if your lady mother at home would not be more than
+ happy were I to inform her that the Countess von Montfort and the darling
+ of her heart, which you are:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The name of Montfort and what goes with it,&rdquo; Heinz interrupted, &ldquo;would
+ surely please those at home. But the rest! Where could a girl be found
+ who, setting aside Cordula&rsquo;s kind heart, would be so great a contrast to
+ my mother in every respect?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stormy mornings merge into quiet days,&rdquo; said the servant. &ldquo;Everything
+ depends, my lord, upon the heart of which you speak so slightingly&mdash;the
+ heart and, even above that, upon the blood. &lsquo;Help is needed there,&rsquo; cried
+ the kind heart just now, and then the blood did its &lsquo;devoir&rsquo;. The act
+ followed the desire as the sound follows the blow of the hammer, the
+ thunder the flash of lightning. Well for the castle that is ruled by such
+ a mistress! I am only the servant, and respect commands me to curb my
+ tongue; but to-day I had news from home through the Provost Werner, of
+ Lucerne, whom I knew at Stansstadt. I meant to tell you of it over the
+ wine at the Thirsty Troopers, but that accursed note and the misfortune
+ which followed prevented. It will not make either of us more cheerful, but
+ whoever is ordered by the leech to drink gall and wormwood does wisely to
+ swallow the dose at one gulp. Do you wish to empty the cup now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight nodded assent, and Biberli went on. &ldquo;Home affairs are not going
+ as they ought. Though your uncle&rsquo;s hair is already grey, the knightly
+ blood in his veins makes him grasp the sword too quickly. The quarrel
+ about the bridge-toll has broken out again more violently than ever. The
+ townsfolk drove off our cattle as security and, by way of punishment, your
+ uncle seized the goods of their merchants, and they came to blows. True,
+ the Schorlin retainers forced back the men from town with bloody heads,
+ but if the feud lasts much longer we cannot hold out, for the others have
+ the money, and since the war cry has sounded less frequently there has
+ been no lack of men at arms who will serve any one who pays. Besides, the
+ townsfolk can appeal to the treaty of peace, and if your uncle continues
+ to seize the merchant&rsquo;s wares they will apply to the imperial magistrate,
+ and then:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; cried Heinz eagerly, &ldquo;then the time will have come for me to leave
+ the court and return home to look after my rights.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A single arm, no matter how strong it may be, can avail nothing there, my
+ lord,&rdquo; Biberli protested earnestly. &ldquo;Your Uncle Ramsweg has scarcely his
+ peer as a leader, but even were it not so you could not bring yourself to
+ send the old man home and put yourself in his place. Besides, it would be
+ as unwise as it is unjust. What is lacking at home is money to pay the
+ town what it demands for the use of the bridge, or to increase the number
+ of your men, and therefore:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; asked Heinz eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Therefore seek the Countess von Montfort, who favours you above every one
+ else,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;for with her all you need will be yours without
+ effort. Her dowry will suffice to settle twenty such bridge dues, and if
+ it should come to a fray, the brave huntress will ride to the field at
+ your side with helmet and spear. Which of the four Fs did Countess Cordula
+ von Montfort ever lack?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The four Fs?&rdquo; asked Heinz, listening intently. &ldquo;The Fs,&rdquo; explained the
+ ex-pedagogue, &ldquo;are the four letters which marriageable knights should
+ consider. They are: Family, figure, favour, and fortune. But hold your cap
+ on! What a hot blast this is, as if the storm were coming straight from
+ the jaws of hell. And the dust! Where did all these withered leaves come
+ from in the month of June? They are whirling about as if the foliage had
+ already fallen. There are big raindrops driving into my face too B-r-r!
+ You need all four Fs. No rain will wash a single one of them away, and I
+ hope it won&rsquo;t efface the least word of my speech either. What, according
+ to human foresight, could be lacking to secure the fairest happiness, if
+ you and the countess&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love,&rdquo; replied Heinz Schorlin curtly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will come of itself,&rdquo; cried Biberli, as if sure of what he was
+ saying, &ldquo;if the bride is Countess Cordula.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possibly,&rdquo; answered the knight, &ldquo;but the heart must not be filled by
+ another&rsquo;s image.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he paused, for in the darkness he had stumbled into the ditch by the
+ road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whirlwind which preceded the bursting of the storm blew such clouds of
+ dust and everything it contained into their faces that it was difficult to
+ advance. But Biberli was glad, for he had not yet found a fitting answer.
+ He struggled silently on beside his master against the wind, until it
+ suddenly subsided, and a violent storm of rain streamed in big warm drops
+ on the thirsty earth and the belated pedestrians. Then, spite of Heinz&rsquo;s
+ protestations, Biberli hurriedly snatched the long robe embroidered with
+ the St from his shoulders and threw it over his master, declaring that his
+ shirt was as safe from injury as his skin, but the rain would ruin the
+ knight&rsquo;s delicate embroidered doublet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he drew over his head the hood which hung from his coat, and
+ meanwhile must have decided upon an answer, for as soon as they moved on
+ he began again: &ldquo;You must drive your love for the beautiful sleepwalker
+ out of your mind. Try to do so, my dear, dear master, for the sake of your
+ lady mother, your young sister who will soon be old enough to marry, our
+ light-hearted Maria, and the good old castle. For your own happiness, your
+ lofty career, which began so gloriously, you must hear me! O master, my
+ dear master, tear from your heart the image of the little Nuremberg witch,
+ tempting though it is, I admit. The wound will bleed for a brief time, but
+ after so much mirthful pleasure a fleeting disappointment in love, I
+ should think, would not be too hard to bear if it will be speedily
+ followed by the fairest and most enduring happiness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here a flash of lightning, which illumined the hospital door close before
+ them, and made every surrounding object as bright as day, interrupted the
+ affectionate entreaty of the faithful fellow, and at the same time a
+ tremendous peal of thunder crashed and rattled through the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Master and servant crossed themselves, but Heinz exclaimed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That struck the tower yonder. A little farther to the left, and all
+ doubts and misgivings would have been ended.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can say that!&rdquo; exclaimed Biberli reproachfully while passing with his
+ master through the gate which had just been opened for an imperial
+ messenger. &ldquo;And you dare to make such a speech in the midst of this
+ heavenly wrath! For the sake of a pair of lovely eyes you are ready to
+ execrate a life which the saints have so blessed with every gift that
+ thousands and tens of thousands would not give it up from sheer gratitude
+ and joy, even if it were not a blasphemous crime!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the lightning and thunder drowned his words. Biberli&rsquo;s heart
+ trembled, and muttering prayers beseeching protection from the avenging
+ hand above, he walked swiftly onward till they reached the Corn Market.
+ Here they were again stopped, for, notwithstanding the late hour, a throng
+ of people, shouting and wailing, was just pouring from the Ledergasse into
+ the square, headed by a night watchman provided with spear, horn, and
+ lantern, a bailiff, torchbearers, and some police officers, who were
+ vainly trying to silence the loudest outcries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again a brilliant flash of lightning pierced the black mass of clouds, and
+ Heinz, shuddering, pointed to the crowd and asked, &ldquo;Do you suppose the
+ lightning killed the man whom they are carrying yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me see,&rdquo; replied Biberli, among whose small vices curiosity was by no
+ means the least. He must have understood news gathering thoroughly, for he
+ soon returned and informed Heinz, who had sought shelter from the rain
+ under the broad bow window of a lofty house, that the bearers were just
+ carrying to his parents&rsquo; home a young man whose thread of life had been
+ suddenly severed by a stab through the breast in a duel. After the
+ witnesses had taken the corpse to the leech Otto, in the Ledergasse, and
+ the latter said that the youth was dead, they had quickly dispersed,
+ fearing a severe punishment on account of the breach of the peace. The
+ murdered man was Ulrich Vorchtel, the oldest son of the wealthy Berthold
+ Vorchel, who collected the imperial taxes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Heinz shuddered. He had seen the unfortunate young man the day
+ before yesterday at the fencing school, and yesterday, full of overflowing
+ mirth, at the dance, and knew that he, too, had fought in the battle of
+ Marchfield. His foe must have been master of the art of wielding the
+ sword, for the dead man had been a skilful fencer, and was tall and
+ stalwart in figure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the servant ended his story Heinz stood still in the darkness for a
+ time, silently listening. The bells had begun to ring, the blast of the
+ watchman&rsquo;s horn blended with the wailing notes summoning aid, and in two
+ places&mdash;near the Thiergartenthor and the Frauenthor&mdash;the sky was
+ crimsoned by the reflection of a conflagration, probably kindled by some
+ flash of lightning, which flickered over the clouds, alternately rising
+ and falling, sometimes deeper and anon paler in hue. Throngs of people,
+ shouting &ldquo;Fire!&rdquo; pressed from the cross streets into the square. The
+ stillness of the night was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Heinz again turned to Biberli he said in a hollow tone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If the earth should swallow up Nuremberg tonight it would not surprise
+ me. But over yonder&mdash;look, Biber, the Duke of Pomerania&rsquo;s quarters in
+ the Green Shield are still lighted. I&rsquo;ll wager that they are yet at the
+ gaming table. A plague upon it! I would be there, too, if my purse
+ allowed. I feel as if yonder dead man and his coffin were burdening my
+ soul. If it was really good fortune in love that snatched the zecchins
+ from my purse yesterday:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; cried Biberli eagerly, &ldquo;to-night is the very time, ere Countess
+ Cordula teaches you to forget what troubles you, to win them back. The
+ gold for the first stake is at your disposal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From the Duke of Pomerania, you think?&rdquo; asked Heinz; then, in a quick,
+ resolute tone, added: &ldquo;No! Often as the duke has offered me his purse, I
+ never borrow from my peers when the prospect of repayment looks so
+ uncertain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gently, my lord,&rdquo; returned Biberli, slapping his belt importantly. &ldquo;Here
+ is what you need for the stake as your own property. No miracles have been
+ wrought for us, only I forgot But look! There are the black clouds rolling
+ northward over the castle. That was a frightful storm! But a spendthrift
+ doesn&rsquo;t keep house long-and the thunder has not yet followed that last
+ flash of lightning. There is plenty of uproar without it. It&rsquo;s hard work
+ to hear one&rsquo;s self speak amid all the ringing, trumpeting, yelling, and
+ shrieking. It seems as if they expected to put out the fire with noise.
+ The fathers of the city can attend to that. It doesn&rsquo;t appear to disturb
+ the duke and his guests at their dice; and here, my lord, are fifty
+ florins which, I think, will do for the beginning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli handed the knight a little bag containing this sum, and when Heinz
+ asked in perplexity where he obtained it, the ex-schoolmaster answered
+ gaily: &ldquo;They came just in the nick of time. I received them from Suss, the
+ jockey, while you were out riding this afternoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the black?&rdquo; Heinz enquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, my lord. It&rsquo;s a pity about the splendid stallion. But, as you
+ know, he has the staggers, and when I struck him on the coronet he stood
+ as if rooted to the earth, and the equerry, who was there, said that the
+ disease was proved. So the Jew silently submitted, let the horse be led
+ away, and paid back what we gave him. Fifty heavy florins! More than
+ enough for a beginning. If I may advise you, count on the two and the five
+ when fixed numbers are to be thrown or hit. Why? Because you must turn
+ your ill luck in love to advantage: and those from whom it comes are the
+ two beautiful Ortlieb Es, as Nuremberg folk call the ladies Els and Eva.
+ That makes the two. But E is the fifth letter in the alphabet, so I should
+ choose the five. If Biberli did not put things together shrewdly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He would be as oversharp as he has often been already,&rdquo; Heinz
+ interrupted, but he patted Biberli&rsquo;s wet arm as he spoke, and added kindly
+ &ldquo;Yet every day proves that my Biberli is a true and steadfast fellow; but
+ where in the wide world did you, a schoolmaster, gain instruction in the
+ art of throwing the dice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While we were studying in Paris, with my dead foster brother,&rdquo; replied
+ the servant with evident emotion. &ldquo;But now go up, my lord, before the fire
+ alarm, and I know not what else, makes the people upstairs separate. The
+ iron must be forged during this wild night. Only a few drops of rain are
+ falling. You can cross the street dry even without my long garment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While speaking he divested the knight of his robe, and continued eagerly:
+ &ldquo;Now, my lord, from the coffin, or let us say rather the leaden weight,
+ which oppresses your soul, let a bolt be melted that will strike
+ misfortune to the heart. Glittering gold has a cheering colour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop! stop!&rdquo; Heinz interrupted positively. &ldquo;No good wishes on the eve of
+ hunting or gaming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if I come bounding down the stairs of the Green Shield with a purse
+ as heavy as my heart is just now&mdash;why, Biberli, success puts a new
+ face on many things, and yours shall again look at me without anxiety.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The thunderclouds had gathered in the blackest masses above the Frauenthor
+ and the Ortlieb mansion. Ere the storm burst the oppressive atmosphere had
+ burdened the hearts within as heavily as it weighed outside upon tree,
+ bush, and all animated creation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the servants&rsquo; rooms under the roof the maids slept quietly and
+ dreamlessly; and the men, with their mouths wide open, snored after the
+ labour of the day, unconscious of what was passing outside in the sky or
+ the events within which had destroyed the peace of their master and his
+ family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only bed unoccupied was the one in the little room next to the stairs
+ leading to the garret, which was occupied by Katterle. The Swiss, kneeling
+ before it with her face buried in the coarse linen pillow case,
+ alternately sobbed, prayed, and cursed herself and her recklessness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the gale, which preceded the thunderstorm, blew leaves and straws in
+ through the open window she started violently, imagining that Herr Ortlieb
+ had come to call her to account and her trial was to begin. The barber&rsquo;s
+ widow, whom she had seen a few days before in the pillory, with a stone
+ around her neck, because she had allowed a cloth weaver&rsquo;s heedless
+ daughter to come to her lodging with a handsome trumpeter who belonged to
+ the city musicians, rose before her mental vision. How the poor thing had
+ trembled and moaned after the executioner&rsquo;s assistant hung the heavy stone
+ around her neck! Then, driven frantic by the jeers and insults of the
+ people, the missiles flung by the street boys, and the unbearable burden,
+ she could control herself no longer but, pouring forth a flood of curses,
+ thrust out her tongue at her tormentors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a spectacle! But ere she, Katterle, would submit to such disgrace she
+ would bid farewell to life with all its joys; and even to the countryman
+ to whom her heart clung, and who, spite of his well-proven truth and
+ steadfastness, had brought misery upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the memory of the hateful word which she, too, had called to the
+ barber&rsquo;s widow weighed heavily on her heart. Never, never again would she
+ be arrogant to a neighbour who had fallen into misfortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This vow, and many others, she made to St. Clare; then her thoughts
+ wandered to the city moat, to the Pegnitz, the Fischbach, and all the
+ other streams in and near Nuremberg, where it was possible to drown and
+ thus escape the terrible disgrace which threatened her. But in so doing
+ she had doubtless committed a heavy sin; for while recalling the Dutzen
+ Pond, from whose dark surface she had often gathered white water lilies
+ after passing through the Frauenthor into the open fields, and wondering
+ in what part of its reedy shore her design could be most easily executed,
+ a brilliant flash of lightning blazed through her room, and at the same
+ time a peal of thunder shook the old mansion to its foundations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was meant for her and her wicked thoughts. No! For the sake of
+ escaping disgrace here on earth, she dared not trifle with eternal
+ salvation and the hope of seeing her dead mother in the other world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remembrance of that dear mother, who had laboured so earnestly to
+ train her in every good path, soothed her. Surely she was looking down
+ upon her and knew that she had remained upright and honest, that she had
+ not defrauded her employers of even a pin, and that the little fault which
+ was to be so grievously punished had been committed solely out of love for
+ her countryman, who in his truth and steadfastness meant honestly by her.
+ What Biberli requested her to do could be no heavy sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the powers above seemed to be of a different opinion; for again a
+ dazzling glare of light illumined the room, and the crash and rattle of
+ the thunder of the angry heavens accompanied it with a deafening din.
+ Katterle shrieked aloud; it seemed as if the gates of hell had opened
+ before her, or the destruction of the world had begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frantic with terror, she sprang back from the window, through which the
+ raindrops were already sprinkling her face. They cooled her flushed cheeks
+ and brought her back to reality. The offence she had just committed was no
+ trivial one. She, whom Herr Ortlieb, with entire confidence, had placed in
+ the service of the fair young girl whose invalid mother could not care for
+ her, had permitted herself to be induced to persuade Eva, who was scarcely
+ beyond childhood, to a rendezvous with a man whom she represented to the
+ inexperienced maiden as a godly, virtuous knight, though she knew from
+ Biberli how far the latter surpassed his master in fidelity and
+ steadfastness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lead us not into temptation!&rdquo; How often she had repeated the words in the
+ Lord&rsquo;s Prayer, and now she herself had become the serpent that tempted
+ into sin the innocent child whom duty should have commanded her to guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, no! The guilt for which she was threatened with punishment was by no
+ means small, and even if her earthly judge did not call her to account,
+ she would go to confession to-morrow and honestly perform the penance
+ imposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moved by these thoughts, she gazed across the courtyard to the convent.
+ Just at that moment the lightning again flashed, the thunder pealed, and
+ she covered her face with her hands. When she lowered her arms she saw on
+ the roof of the nuns&rsquo; granary, which adjoined the cow-stable, a slender
+ column of smoke, followed by a narrow tongue of flame, which grew steadily
+ brighter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lightning had set it on fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sympathy for the danger and losses of others forced her own grief and
+ anxiety into the background and, without pausing to think, she slipped on
+ her shoes, snatched her shawl from the chest, and ran downstairs,
+ shouting: &ldquo;The lightning has struck! The convent is burning!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at that moment the door of the chamber occupied by the two sisters
+ opened, and Ernst Ortlieb, with tangled hair and pallid cheeks, came
+ toward her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within the room the dim light of the little lamp and the fiery glare of
+ the lightning illumined tear-stained, agitated faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Heinz Schorlin had called to her, and Els had hurried to her aid,
+ Eva, clad in her long, plain night robe, and barefooted, just as she had
+ risen from her couch, followed the maid to her room. What must the knight,
+ who but yesterday, she knew, had looked up to her as to a saint, think of
+ her now?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She felt as if she were disgraced, stained with shame. Yet it was through
+ no fault of her own, and overwhelmed by the terrible conviction that
+ mysterious, supernatural powers, against which resistance was hopeless,
+ were playing a cruel game with her, she had felt as if the stormy sea were
+ tossing her in a rudderless boat on its angry surges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unable to seek consolation in prayer, as usual, she had given herself up
+ to dull despair, but only for a short time. Els had soon returned, and the
+ firm, quiet manner with which her prudent, helpful friend and sister met
+ her, and even tried to raise her drooping courage by a jest ere she sent
+ her to their mother&rsquo;s sick room, had fallen on her soul like refreshing
+ dew; not because Els promised to act for her&mdash;on the contrary, what
+ she intended to do roused her to resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had been far too guilty and oppressed to oppose her, yet indignation
+ concerning the sharp words which Els had uttered about the knight, and her
+ intention of forbidding him the house, perhaps forever, had stimulated her
+ like strong acid wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not until after her sister had left her did she become capable of clearly
+ understanding what she had felt during her period of somnambulism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While her mother, thanks to a narcotic, slept soundly, breathing quietly,
+ and in the entry below something, she knew not what, perhaps due to her
+ father&rsquo;s return, was occurring, she sat thinking, pondering, while an
+ impetuous throng of rebellious wishes raised their voices, alternately
+ asking and denying, in her agitated breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How she had happened to rise from her couch and go out had vanished
+ utterly from her memory, but she was still perfectly conscious of her
+ feelings during the night walk. If hitherto she had yearned to drain
+ heavenly bliss from the chalice of faith, during her wanderings through
+ the house she had longed for nothing save to drink her fill from the cup
+ of earthly joy. Ardent kisses, of which she had forbidden herself even to
+ think, she awaited with blissful delight. Her timorous heart, held in
+ check by virgin modesty, accustomed to desire nothing save what she could
+ have confessed to her sister and the abbess, seemed as if it had cast off
+ every fetter and boldly resolved to risk the most daring deeds. The
+ somnambulist had longed for the moment when, after Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s
+ confession that he loved her, she could throw her arms around his neck
+ with rapturous gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, while awake, she had desired only to speak to him of her saint and of
+ his duty to overthrow the foes of the Church, she had wished while gazing
+ at the moon from the stairs, and in front of the house door, to whisper
+ sweet words of love, listen to his, and in so doing forget herself, the
+ world, and everything which did not belong to him, to her, and their love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she remembered this longing and yearning in a way very unlike a mere
+ dream. It seemed rather as if, while the moon was attracting her by its
+ magic power, something, which had long slumbered in the depths of her
+ soul, had waked to life; something, from which formerly, ere her heart and
+ mind had been able rightly to understand it, she had shrunk with pious
+ horror, had assumed a tangible form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she dreaded this newly recognised sinful part of her own nature, which
+ she had imagined a pure vessel that had room only for what was noble,
+ sacred, and innocent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She, too&mdash;she knew it now&mdash;was only a girl like those on whose
+ desire for love she had looked down with arrogant contempt, no bride of
+ heaven or saint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had not yet taken the veil, and it was fortunate, for what would have
+ become of her had she not discovered until after her profession this part
+ of her nature, which she thought every true nun, if she possessed it, must
+ discard, like the hair which was shorn from her head, before taking the
+ vow of the order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this self-inspection it became more and more evident that she was
+ not one person, but two in one&mdash;a twofold nature with a single body
+ and two distinct souls; and this conviction caused her as much pain as if
+ the cut which had produced the separation were still bleeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at that moment her eyes fell upon the image of the Virgin opposite,
+ and the usual impulse to lift her soul in prayer took possession of her
+ even more powerfully than a short time before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With fervent warmth she besought her to release her from this newly
+ awakened nature, which surely could not be pleasing in the sight of
+ Heaven, and let her once more become what she was before the unfortunate
+ ramble in the moonlight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the composure she needed for prayer was soon destroyed, for the image
+ of the knight rose before her again and again, and it seemed as if her own
+ name, which he had called with such ardent longing, once more rang in her
+ ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whoever thus raises his voice in appeal to another loves that person.
+ Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s love was great and sincere and, instead of heeding the
+ inner voice that warned her to return to prayer, she cried defiantly, &ldquo;I
+ will not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She could not yet part from the man for whom her heart throbbed with such
+ passionate yearning, who was so brave and godly, so ardently devoted to
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, it had been peacefully beautiful to dream herself into the bright
+ glory of heaven, yet the stormy rapture she had felt while thinking of him
+ and his love seemed richer and greater. She could not, would not part from
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she remembered her sister&rsquo;s intention of driving Heinz&mdash;Eva
+ already called the knight by that name in her soliloquy&mdash;from her
+ presence, and the thought that she might perhaps wound him so keenly that
+ knightly honour would forbid his return alarmed and incensed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What right had Els to distrust him? A godly knight played no base game
+ with the chosen lady of, his heart, and that, yes, that she certainly was,
+ since she had named her colour to him. Nothing should separate them. She
+ needed him for her happiness as much as she did light and air. Hitherto
+ she had longed for bliss in another world, but she was so young she
+ probably had a long life before her, and what could existence on earth
+ offer if robbed of the hope of his possession?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The newly awakened part of her nature demanded its rights. It would never
+ again allow itself to be forced into the old slumber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If her sister came back and boasted of having driven away the dangerous
+ animal forever, she would show her that she had a different opinion of the
+ knight, and would permit no one to interpose between them. But, while
+ still pondering over this plan, the door of the sick-room was softly
+ opened and her father beckoned to her to follow him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silently leading the way through the dusky corridor, no longer illumined
+ by the moonlight, he entered his daughter&rsquo;s room before her. The lamp,
+ still burning there, revealed the agitated face of her sister who, resting
+ her chin on her hand, sat on the stool beside the spinning wheel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva&rsquo;s courage, which had blazed up so brightly, instantly fell again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good heavens! What has happened?&rdquo; she cried in terror; but her father
+ answered in a hollow tone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the sake of your noble sister, to whom I pledged my word, I will
+ force myself to remain calm. But look at her! Her poor heart must be like
+ a graveyard, for she was doomed to bury what she held dearest. And who,&rdquo;
+ he continued furiously, so carried away by grief and indignation as to be
+ unmindful of his promise to maintain his composure, &ldquo;who is to blame for
+ it all, save you and your boundless imprudence?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, with uplifted hands, tried to explain how, unconscious of her acts,
+ she had walked in her sleep down the stairs and out of the house, but he
+ imperiously cut her short with:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Silence! I know all. My daughter gave a worthless tempter the right to
+ expect the worst from her. You, whom we deemed the ornament of this house,
+ whose purity hitherto was stainless, are to blame if people passing on the
+ street point at it! Alas! alas! Our honour, our ancient, unsullied name!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Groaning aloud, the father struck his brow with his clenched hand; but
+ when Els rose and passed her arm around his shoulders to speak words of
+ consolation, Eva, who hitherto had vainly struggled for words, could
+ endure no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whoever says that of me, my father,&rdquo; she exclaimed with flashing eyes;
+ scarcely able to control her voice, &ldquo;has opened his ears to slander; and
+ whoever terms Heinz Schorlin a worthless tempter, is blinded by a
+ delusion, and I call him to his face, even were it my own father, to whom
+ I owe gratitude and respect&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here she stopped and extended her arms to keep off the deeply angered
+ man, for he had started forward with quivering lips, and&mdash;she
+ perceived it clearly&mdash;was already under the spell of one of the
+ terrible fits of fury which might lead him to the most unprecedented
+ deeds. Els, however, had clung to him and, while holding him back with all
+ her strength, cried out in a tone of keen reproach, &ldquo;Is this the way you
+ keep your promise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, lowering her voice, she continued with loving entreaty: &ldquo;My dear,
+ dear father, can you doubt that she was asleep, unconscious of her acts,
+ when she did what has brought so much misery upon us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, interrupting herself, she added eagerly in a tone of the firmest
+ conviction: &ldquo;No, no, neither shame nor misery has yet touched you, my
+ father, nor the poor child yonder. The suspicion of evil rests on me, and
+ me alone, and if any one here must be wretched it is I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Herr Ernst, regaining his self-control, drew back from Eva, but the
+ latter, as if fairly frantic, exclaimed: &ldquo;Do you want to drive me out of
+ my senses by your mysterious words and accusations? What, in the name of
+ all the saints, has happened that can plunge my Els into misery and
+ shame?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Into misery and shame,&rdquo; repeated her father in a hollow tone, throwing
+ himself into a chair, where he sat motionless, with his face buried in his
+ hands, while Els told her sister what had occurred when she went down into
+ the entry to speak to the knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva listened to her story, fairly gasping for breath. For one brief moment
+ she cherished the suspicion that Cordula had not acted from pure sympathy,
+ but to impose upon Heinz Schorlin a debt of gratitude which would bind him
+ to her more firmly. Yet when she heard that her father had given back his
+ daughter&rsquo;s ring to Herr Casper Eysvogel and broken his child&rsquo;s betrothal
+ she thought of nothing save her sister&rsquo;s grief and, sobbing aloud, threw
+ herself into Els&rsquo;s arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girls held each other in a close embrace until the first flash of
+ lightning and peal of thunder interrupted the conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father and daughters had been so deeply agitated that they had not
+ heard the storm rising outside, and the outbreak of the tempest surprised
+ them. The peal of thunder, which so swiftly followed the lightning, also
+ startled them and when, soon after, a second one shook the house with its
+ crashing, rattling roar, Herr Ernst went out to wake the chief packer. But
+ old Endres was already keeping watch among the wares entrusted to him and
+ when, after a brief absence, the master of the house returned, he found
+ Eva again clasped in her sister&rsquo;s arms, and saw the latter kissing her
+ brow and eyes as she tenderly strove to comfort her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Eva seemed deaf to her soothing words. Els, her faithful Els, was no
+ longer the betrothed bride of her Wolff; her great, beautiful happiness
+ was destroyed forever. On the morrow all Nuremberg would learn that Herr
+ Casper had broken his son&rsquo;s betrothal pledge, because his bride, for the
+ sake of a tempter, Sir Heinz Schorlin, had failed to keep her troth with
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How deeply all this pierced Eva&rsquo;s heart! how terrible was the torture of
+ the thought that she was the cause of this frightful misfortune! Dissolved
+ in an agony of tears, she entreated the poor girl to forgive her; and Els
+ did so willingly, and in a way that touched her father to the very depths
+ of his heart. How good the girls must be who, spite of the sore suffering
+ which one had brought upon the other, were still so loving and loyal!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Convinced that Eva, too, had done nothing worthy of punishment, he went
+ towards them to clasp both in his arms, but ere he could do so the clap of
+ thunder which had frightened Katterle so terribly shook the whole room.
+ &ldquo;St. Clare, aid us!&rdquo; cried Eva, crossing herself and falling upon her
+ knees; but Els rushed to the window, opened it, and looked down the
+ street. Nothing was visible there save a faint red glow on the distant
+ northern horizon, and two mailed soldiers who were riding into the city at
+ a rapid trot. They had been sent from the stables in the Marienthurm to
+ keep order in case a fire should break out. Several men with hooks and
+ poles followed, also hurrying to the Frauenthor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reply to the question where the fire was and where they going, they
+ answered: &ldquo;To the Fischbach, to help. Flames have burst out apparently
+ under the fortress at the Thiergartenthor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long-drawn call for help from the warder&rsquo;s horn, which came at the
+ same moment, proved that the men were right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Ernst hastened out of the room just as Katterle&rsquo;s shriek, &ldquo;The
+ lightning struck! the convent is burning!&rdquo; rung from the upper step of the
+ stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had already pronounced her sentence, and the sight of her roused his
+ wrath again so vehemently that, spite of the urgent peril, he shouted to
+ her that, whatever claimed his attention now, she certainly should not
+ escape the most severe punishment for her shameful conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he ordered old Endres and two of the menservants to watch the
+ sleeping-room of his invalid wife, that in case anything should happen the
+ helpless woman might be instantly borne to a place of safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere he himself went to the scene of the conflagration he hurried back to
+ his daughters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the girls were giving him his hat and cloak he told them where the
+ fire had broken out, and this caused another detention of the anxious
+ master of the house, for Eva seized her shoes and stockings and, kicking
+ her little slippers from her feet, declared that she, too, would not
+ remain absent from the place when her dear nuns were in danger. But her
+ father commanded her to stay with her mother and sister, and went to the
+ door, turning back once more on the threshold to his daughters with the
+ anxious entreaty: &ldquo;Think of your mother!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another peal of thunder drowned the sound of his footsteps hurrying down
+ the stairs. When Els, who had watched her father from the window a short
+ time, went back to her sister, Eva dried her eyes and cheeks, saying:
+ &ldquo;Perhaps he is right; but whenever my heart urges me to obey any warm
+ impulse, obstacles are put in my way. What a weak nonentity is the
+ daughter of an honourable Nuremberg family!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els heard this complaint with astonishment. Was this her Eva, her &ldquo;little
+ saint,&rdquo; who yesterday had desired nothing more ardently than with humble
+ obedience, far from the tumult of the world, to become worthy of her
+ Heavenly Bridegroom, and in the quiet peace of the convent raise her soul
+ to God? What had so changed the girl in these few hours? Even the most
+ worldly-minded of her friends would have taken such an impeachment ill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she had no time now to appeal to the conscience of her misguided
+ sister. Love and duty summoned her to her mother&rsquo;s couch. And then! The
+ child had become aware of her love, and was she, Els, who had been parted
+ from Wolff by her own father, and yet did not mean to give him up,
+ justified in advising her sister to cast aside her love and the hope of
+ future happiness with and through the man to whom she had given her heart?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What miracles love wrought! If in a single night it had transformed the
+ devout future Bride of Heaven into an ardently loving woman, it could
+ accomplish the impossible for her also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Eva was gazing out of the window Els returned to her mother. She was
+ still asleep and, without permitting either curiosity or longing to divert
+ her from her duty, Els kept her place beside the couch of the beloved
+ invalid, spite of the fire alarm which, though somewhat subdued, was heard
+ in the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Eva was standing at the open window. The violence of the storm seemed
+ exhausted. The clouds were rolling northward, and the thunder followed the
+ flashes of lightning at longer and longer intervals. Peace was restored to
+ the heavens, but the crowd and noise in the city and the street constantly
+ increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The iron tongues of the alarm bells had never swung so violently, the
+ warder&rsquo;s horn had never made the air quiver with such resonant appeals for
+ aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor did the metallic voices above call for help in vain, for while a
+ roseate glow tinged the linden in front of her window and the houses on
+ the opposite side of the street with the hues of dawn, the crowds
+ thronging from the Frauenthor to St. Klarengasse grew denser and denser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The convent was not visible from her chamber, but the acrid odor of the
+ smoke and the loud voices which reached her ear from that direction proved
+ that the fire was no trivial one. While she was seeking out the spot from
+ which Heinz must have looked up to her window, the Ortlieb menservants,
+ with some of the Montfort retainers, came out of the house with pails and
+ ladders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A female figure glided into the dark street after them. A black shawl
+ concealed her head and the upper part of her figure, and she held a bundle
+ in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be Katterle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where was she going at this hour? As she was carrying the package, she
+ could scarcely intend to help in putting out the fire. Was she stealing
+ away from fear of punishment? Poor thing! Even the maid was hurled into
+ misfortune through her guilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It pierced her very heart. But while she called to Katterle to stop her,
+ something else, which engrossed her still more, diverted her attention&mdash;the
+ loud voice of Countess Cordula reached her from the street door. With whom
+ was she talking? Did the girl, who ventured upon so many things which
+ ill-beseemed a modest maiden, intend to join the men? Eva forgot that she,
+ too, would have hurried to the nuns had not her father prevented it. The
+ countess was already standing in the courtyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Eva had given her a hasty glance she again looked for the maid, but
+ Katterle had already vanished in the darkness. This grieved her; she had
+ neglected something which might have saved the girl, to whom she was
+ warmly attached, from some imprudent act. But while attracted by the
+ strange appearance of the countess she had forgotten the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cordula had probably just left her couch, for she wore only a plain dress
+ tucked up very high, short boots, which she probably used in hunting, and
+ a shawl crossed over her bosom; another was wound round her head in the
+ fashion of the peasant women who brought their goods to market on cold
+ winter days. No farmer&rsquo;s wife could be more simply clad, and yet&mdash;Eva
+ was forced to admit it&mdash;there was something aristocratic in her firm
+ bearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her companions were her father&rsquo;s chaplain and the equerry who had grown
+ grey in his service. Both were trying to dissuade her. The former pointed
+ to a troop of women who were following the chief of police and some city
+ constables, and said warningly: &ldquo;Those are all wanton queans, whom the law
+ of this city compels to lend their aid in putting out fires. How would it
+ beseem your rank to join these who shame their sex&mdash;&mdash;No, no! It
+ would be said to-morrow that the ornament of the house of Montfort had&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That Countess Cordula had used her hands in extinguishing the fire,&rdquo; she
+ interrupted with gay self-confidence. &ldquo;Is there any disgrace in that? Must
+ my noble birth debar me from being numbered among those who help their
+ neighbours so far as lies in their power? If any good is accomplished
+ here, those poor women yonder will make it no worse by their aid. If
+ people here believe that they do, it will give me double pleasure to
+ ennoble it by working with them. Putting out the flames will not degrade
+ me, and will make the women better. So, forward! See how the fire is
+ blazing yonder! Help is needed there and, thank Heaven, I am no weakling.
+ Besides, there are women who want assistance and, to women in peril, the
+ most welcome aid is woman&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old equerry, his eyes glittering with tears, nodded assent, and led
+ the way into the street; but the countess, instead of following instantly,
+ glanced back for the page who was to carry the bandages which she had
+ learned to use among her retainers at home. The agile boy did not delay
+ her long; but while his mistress was looking to see that he had forgotten
+ nothing of importance, he perceived at the window Eva, whose beauty had
+ long since fired his young heart, and cast a languishing glance at her.
+ Then Cordula also noticed her and called a pleasant greeting. Eva was on
+ the point of answering in the same tone, when she remembered that Cordula
+ had spoken of Heinz Schorlin in the presence of others as if he were
+ awaiting her in all submission. Anger surged hotly in her breast, and she
+ drew back into the room as if she had not heard the salutation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countess perceived it, and shrugged her shoulders pityingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, dissatisfied with herself, continued to gaze down into the street
+ long after the crowds of people flocking from the city had concealed
+ Cordula from her eyes. It seemed as though she would never again succeed
+ in anything that would bring contentment. Never had she felt so weak, so
+ ill-tempered, so devoid of self-reliance. Yet she could not, as usual,
+ seek consolation with her saint. There was so much here below to divert
+ her attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The roseate glow on the linden had become a crimson glare, the flickering
+ light on the opposite walls a dazzling illumination. The wind, now blowing
+ from the west, bore from St. Klarengasse burning objects which scattered
+ sparks around them&mdash;bundles of hay caught by the flames&mdash;from
+ the convent barn to the Marienthurm opposite, and into the street.
+ Besides, the noise above and behind, before and below her, grew louder and
+ louder. The ringing of the bells and the blare of trumpets from the
+ steeples continued, and with this constant ringing, pealing, and crashing
+ from above, mingled the high, clear voices of the choir of nuns in the
+ convent, beseeching in fervent litanies the help of their patron saint.
+ True, the singing was often drowned by the noise from the street, for the
+ fire marshals and quartermasters had been informed in time, and watchmen,
+ soldiers in the pay of the city, men from the hospital, and the abandoned
+ women (required by law to help put out the fires) came in little groups,
+ while bailiffs and servants of the Council, barbers (who were obliged to
+ lend their aid, but whose surgical skill could find little employment
+ here), members of the Council, priests and monks arrived singly. The
+ street also echoed with the trampling of many steeds, for mounted troopers
+ in coats of mail first dashed by to aid the bailiffs in maintaining order,
+ then the inspector of water works, with his chief subordinate, trotted
+ along to St. Klarengasse on the clumsy horses placed at their disposal by
+ the Council in case of fire. He was followed by the millers, with brass
+ fire engines. While their well-fed nags drew on sledges, with little
+ noise, through the mire of the streets now softened by the rain, the heavy
+ wooden water barrels needed in the work of extinguishing the flames, there
+ was a loud rattling and clanking as the carts appeared on which the men
+ from the Public Works building were bringing large and small ladders,
+ hooks and levers, pails and torches, to the scene of the conflagration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides those who were constrained by the law, many others desired to aid
+ the popular Sisters of St. Clare and thereby earn a reward from God. A
+ brewer had furnished his powerful stallions to convey to the scene of
+ action, with their tools, the eight masons whose duty it was to use their
+ skill in extinguishing the flames. All sorts of people&mdash;men and women&mdash;followed,
+ yelling and shrieking, to seek their own profit during the work of rescue.
+ But the bailiffs kept a sharp eye on them, and made way when the commander
+ of the German knights, with several companions on whose black mantles the
+ white cross gleamed, appeared on horseback, and at last old Herr Berthold
+ Vorchtel trotted up on his noble grey, which was known to the whole city.
+ He still had a firm seat in the saddle, but his head was bowed, and
+ whoever knew that only one hour before the corpse of his oldest son, slain
+ in a duel, had been brought home, admired the aged magistrate&rsquo;s strength
+ of will. As First Losunger and commander in chief he was the head of the
+ Council, and therefore of the city also. Duty had commanded him to mount
+ his steed, but how pale and haggard was his shrewd face, usually so
+ animated!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just in front of the Ortlieb mansion the commander of the German knights
+ rode to his side, and Eva saw how warmly he shook him by the hand, as if
+ he desired to show the old man very cordially his deep sympathy in some
+ sore trouble which had assailed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ever since Wolff&rsquo;s betrothal to Els had been announced the Vorchtels had
+ ceased to be on terms of intimacy with the Ortliebs; but old Herr
+ Berthold, though he himself had probably regarded young Eysvogel as his
+ &ldquo;Ursel&rsquo;s&rdquo; future husband, had always treated Eva kindly, and she was not
+ mistaken&mdash;tears were glittering on his cheeks in the torchlight. The
+ sight touched the young girl&rsquo;s inmost heart. How eagerly she desired to
+ know what had befallen the Vorchtels, and to give the old man some token
+ of sympathy! What could have caused him so much sorrow? Only a few hours
+ before her father had returned from a gay entertainment at his house. It
+ could scarcely concern Herr Berthold&rsquo;s wife, his daughter Ursula, or
+ either of his two vigorous sons. Perhaps death had only bereft him of some
+ more distant, though beloved relative, yet surely she would have known
+ that, for the Ortliebs were connected by marriage both with the old
+ gentleman and his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tortured by a presentiment of evil, Eva gazed after him, and also watched
+ for Heinz Schorlin among the people in the street. Must not anxiety for
+ her bring him hither, if he learned how near her house the fire was
+ burning?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever a helmet or knight&rsquo;s baret appeared above the crowd she thought
+ that he was coming. Once she believed that she had certainly recognised
+ him, for a tall young man of knightly bearing appeared, not mounted, but
+ on foot, and stopped opposite to the Ortlieb house. That must be he! But
+ when he looked up to her window, the reflection of the fire showed that
+ the man who had made her heart beat so quickly was indeed a young and
+ handsome knight, but by no means the person for whom she had mistaken him.
+ It was Boemund Altrosen, famed as victor in many a tournament, who when a
+ boy had often been at the house of her uncle, Herr Pfinzing. There was no
+ mistaking his coal-black, waving locks. It was said that the dark-blue
+ sleeve of a woman&rsquo;s robe which he wore on his helmet in the jousts
+ belonged to the Countess von Montfort. She was his lady, for whom he had
+ won so many victories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz Schorlin had mentioned him at the ball as his friend, and told her
+ that the gallant knight would vainly strive to win the reckless countess.
+ Perhaps he was now looking at the house so intently on Cordula&rsquo;s account.
+ Or had Heinz, his friend, sent him to watch over her while he was possibly
+ detained by the Emperor?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, no; he had just gone nearer to the house to question a man in the von
+ Montfort livery, and the reply now led him to move on towards the convent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Were the tears which filled Eva&rsquo;s eyes caused by the smoke that poured
+ from the fire more and more densely into the street, or to disappointment
+ and bitter anguish?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The danger which threatened her aunt and her beloved nuns also increased
+ her excitement. True, the sisters themselves seemed to feel safe, for
+ snatches of their singing were still audible amid the ringing of the bells
+ and the blare of the trumpets, but the fire must have been very hard to
+ extinguish. This was proved by the bright glow on the linden tree and the
+ shouts of command which, though unintelligible, rose above every other
+ sound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The street below was becoming less crowded. Most of those who had left
+ their beds to render aid had already reached the scene of the
+ conflagration. Only a few stragglers still passed through the open gate
+ towards the Marienthurm. Among them were horsemen, and Eva&rsquo;s heart again
+ throbbed more quickly, but only for a short time. Heinz Schorlin was far
+ taller than the man who had again deceived her, and his way would hardly
+ have been lighted by two mounted torch bearers. Soon her rosy lips even
+ parted in a smile, for the sturdy little man on the big, strong-boned
+ Vinzgau steed, whom she now saw distinctly, was her dearest relative, her
+ godfather, the kind, shrewd, imperial magistrate, Berthold Pfinzing, the
+ husband of her father&rsquo;s sister, good Aunt Christine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he looked up he would tell her about old Herr Vorchtel. Nor did he ride
+ past his darling&rsquo;s house without a glance at her window, and when he saw
+ Eva beckon he ordered the servants to keep back, and stopped behind the
+ chains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After he had briefly greeted his niece and she had enquired what had
+ befallen the Vorchtels, he asked anxiously: &ldquo;Then you know nothing yet?
+ And Els&mdash;has it been kept from her, too?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, in the name of all the saints?&rdquo; asked Eva, with increasing alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Herr Pfinzing, who saw that the door of the house was open, asked her
+ to come down. Eva was soon standing beside her godfather&rsquo;s big bay, and
+ while patting the smooth neck of the splendid animal he said hurriedly, in
+ a low tone: &ldquo;It&rsquo;s fortunate that it happened so. You can break it
+ gradually to your sister, child. To-night Summon up your courage, for
+ there are things which even a man&mdash;To make the story short, then:
+ Tonight Wolff Eysvogel and young Vorchtel quarreled, or rather Ulrich
+ irritated your Wolff so cruelly that he drew his sword&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wolff!&rdquo; shrieked Eva, whose hand had already dropped from the horse.
+ &ldquo;Wolff! He is so terribly strong, and if he drew his sword in anger&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He dealt his foe one powerful thrust,&rdquo; replied the imperial magistrate
+ with an expressive gesture. &ldquo;The sword pierced him through. But I must go
+ on Only this one thing more: Ulrich was borne back to his parents as a
+ corpse. And Wolff Where is he hiding? May the saints long be the only ones
+ who know! A quarrel with such a result under the Emperor&rsquo;s eyes, now when
+ peace has just been declared throughout the land! Who knows what sentence
+ will be pronounced if the bailiffs show themselves shrewder this time than
+ usual! My office compelled me to set the pack upon him. That is the reason
+ I am so late. Tell Els as cautiously as possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bowed gallantly and trotted on, but Eva, as if hunted by enemies,
+ rushed up the staircase, threw herself on her knees before the prie dieu,
+ and sobbed aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Vorchtel had undoubtedly heard of the events in the entry, taunted
+ Wolff with his betrothed bride&rsquo;s nocturnal interview with a knight, and
+ thus roused the strong man to fury. How terrible it all was! How could she
+ bear it! Her thoughtlessness had cost a human life, robbed parents of
+ their son! Through her fault her sister&rsquo;s betrothed husband, whom she also
+ loved, was in danger of being placed under ban, perhaps even of being led
+ to the executioner&rsquo;s block!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had no thought of any other motive which might have induced the
+ hot-blooded young men to cross swords and, firmly convinced that her
+ luckless letter had drawn Heinz Schorlin to the house and thus led to all
+ these terrible things, she vainly struggled for composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes she beheld in imagination the despairing Els; sometimes the aged
+ Vorchtels, grieving themselves to death; sometimes Wolff, outlawed, hiding
+ like a hunted deer in the recesses of the forest; sometimes the maid,
+ fleeing with her little bundle into the darkness of the night; sometimes
+ the burning convent; and at intervals also Heinz Schorlin, as he knelt
+ before her and raised his clasped hands with passionate entreaty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she repelled every thought of him as a sin, and even repressed the
+ impulse to look out into the street to seek him. Her sole duty now was to
+ pray to her patron saint and the Mother of God in behalf of her sister,
+ whom she had hurled into misfortune, and her poor heart bleeding from such
+ deep wounds; but the consolation which usually followed the mere uplifting
+ of her soul in prayer did not come, and it could not be otherwise, for
+ amid her continual looking into her own heart and listening to what went
+ on around her no real devotion was possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although she constantly made fresh efforts to collect her thoughts, and
+ continued to kneel with clasped hands before the prie dieu, not a
+ hoof-beat, not a single loud voice, escaped her ear. Even the alternate
+ deepening and paling of the reflection of the fire, which streamed through
+ the window, attracted her attention, and the ringing of bells and braying
+ of trumpets, which still continued, maintained the agitation in her soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet prayer was the sole atonement she could make for the wrong she had
+ done her sister; so she did not cease her endeavours to plead for her to
+ the Great Helper above, but her efforts were futile. Yet even when she
+ heard voices close by the house, among which she distinguished Countess
+ Cordula&rsquo;s and&mdash;if she was not mistaken&mdash;her father&rsquo;s, she
+ resisted the impulse to rise from her knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the vain struggle was ended by an interruption from without. After
+ unusually loud voices exclaiming and questioning had reached her from the
+ entry, the door of her chamber suddenly opened and old Martsche looked in.
+ The housekeeper was seeking something; but when she found the devout child
+ on her knees she did not wish to disturb her, and contented herself with
+ the evidence of her eyes. But Eva stopped her, and learned that she was
+ searching for Katterle, who could neither be found in her room, or
+ anywhere else. Herr Ortlieb had brought Countess von Montfort home
+ severely burned, and there were all sorts of things for the maid to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva clung shuddering to the back of the prie dieu, for the certainty that
+ the unfortunate girl had really fled was like strewing salt on her wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Martsche left her and Els entered, her excitement had risen to such a
+ pitch that she flung herself before her, as if frantic and, clinging to
+ her knees, heaping self-accusations upon herself with passionate
+ impetuosity, she pleaded, amid her sobs, for pardon and mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Els had been informed by her father of her lover&rsquo;s fatal deed,
+ and as soon as she perceived what tortured her sister she relieved her,
+ with loving words of explanation, from the reproach of being the cause of
+ this misfortune also, for the quarrel had taken place so early that no
+ tidings of the meeting in the entry could have reached young Vorchtel when
+ he became involved in the fray with Wolff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was it solely to soothe Eva that she assured her that, deeply as she
+ mourned the death of the hapless Ulrich and his parents&rsquo; grief, Wolff&rsquo;s
+ deed could not diminish either her love or her hope of becoming his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva listened to this statement with sparkling eyes. The love in her
+ sister&rsquo;s heart was as immovably firm as the ancient stones of her native
+ stronghold, which defied every storm, and on which even the destroying,
+ kindling lightning could inflict no injury. This made her doubly dear, and
+ from the depths of dull despair her soul, ever prone to soar upwards, rose
+ swiftly to the heights of hopeful exaltation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Els at last entreated her to go to rest without her, she willingly
+ consented, for her mother was comfortable, and Sister Renata was watching
+ at her bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva kept her promise, after Els, who wanted to see the Countess von
+ Montfort, had satisfied her concerning the welfare of the nuns and
+ promised to go to rest herself as soon as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stopping of the alarm bells proved that the fire was under control.
+ Even its reflection had disappeared, but the eastern sky was beginning to
+ be suffused with a faint tinge of rose colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When her sister left her Eva herself drew the curtains before the window,
+ and sleep soon ended her thoughts and yearnings, her grief and her hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Countess Cordula von Montfort&rsquo;s room faced the east and looked out into
+ the garden. The sun of the June morning had just risen, filling it with
+ cheerful light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The invalid&rsquo;s maid had wished to deny Els admittance, but the countess
+ called eagerly to her, and then ordered the windows to be opened, because
+ she never felt comfortable unless it was light around her and she could
+ breathe God&rsquo;s pure air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning breeze bore the smoke which still rose from the fire in
+ another direction, and thus a refreshing air really entered the room from
+ the garden, for the thunderstorm had refreshed all nature, and flower beds
+ and grass, bush and tree, exhaled a fresh odour of earth and leafage which
+ it was a delight to breathe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The leech Otto, to whom the severely wounded Ulrich Vorchtel had been
+ carried, had just left the countess. The burns on her hands and arms had
+ been bandaged&mdash;nay, the old gentleman had cut out the scorched
+ portions of her tresses with his own hand. Cordula&rsquo;s energetic action had
+ made the famous surgeon deem her worthy of such care. He had also advised
+ her to seek the nursing of the oldest daughter of her host, whose invalid
+ wife he was attending, and she had gladly assented; for Els had attracted
+ her from their first meeting, and she was accustomed to begin the day at
+ sunrise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How does it happen that you neither weep nor even hang your head after
+ all the sorrow which last night brought you?&rdquo; asked Cordula, as the
+ Nuremberg maiden sat down beside her bed. &ldquo;You are a stranger to the Swiss
+ knight, and when we surprised you with him you had not come to a meeting&mdash;I
+ know that full well. But if so true and warm a love unites you to young
+ Eysvogel, how does it happen that your joyous courage is so little damped
+ by his father&rsquo;s denial and his own unhappy deed, which at this time could
+ scarcely escape punishment? You do not seem frivolous, and yet&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; replied Els with a pleasant smile, &ldquo;many things have made a deeper
+ impression. We are not all alike, Countess, yet there is much in your
+ nature which must render it easy for you to understand me; for, Countess&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call me Cordula,&rdquo; interrupted the girl in a tone of friendly entreaty.
+ &ldquo;Why should I deny that I am fond of you? and at the risk of making you
+ vain, I will betray&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; asked Els eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That the splendid old leech described you to me exactly as I had imagined
+ you,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;You were one of those, he said, whose mere presence
+ beside a sick-bed was as good as medicine, and so you are; and, dear
+ Jungfrau Els, this salutary medicine benefits me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I am to dispense with the &lsquo;Countess,&rsquo;&rdquo; replied the other, &ldquo;you must
+ spare me the &lsquo;Jungfrau.&rsquo; Nursing you will give me all the more pleasure on
+ account of the warm gratitude&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind that,&rdquo; interrupted Cordula. &ldquo;But please look at the bandage,
+ beneath which the flesh burns and aches more than is necessary, and then
+ go on with your explanation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els examined the countess&rsquo;s arm, and then applied a household remedy whose
+ use she had learned from the wife of Herr Pfinzing, her Aunt Christine,
+ who was familiar with the healing art. It relieved the pain, and when
+ Cordula told her so, Els went on with her explanation. &ldquo;When all these
+ blows fell upon me, they at first seemed, indeed, unprecedented and
+ scarcely possible to endure. When afterwards my Wolff&rsquo;s unhappy deed was
+ added, I felt as though I were standing in a dense, dark mist, where each
+ step forwards must lead me into a stifling morass or over a precipice.
+ Then I began to reflect upon what had happened, as is my custom; I
+ separated, in my thoughts, the evil menacing in the future from the good,
+ and had scarcely made a little progress in this way when morass and abyss
+ lost their terrors; both, I found, could be left to take care of
+ themselves, since neither Wolff nor I lack love and good will, and we
+ possess some degree of prudence and caution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, this thinking and considering!&rdquo; cried the countess, with a faint
+ sigh. &ldquo;It succeeds in my case, too, only, unluckily, I usually don&rsquo;t begin
+ until it is too late and the folly has been committed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, henceforth, you must reverse the process,&rdquo; answered Els cheerily.
+ But directly after she changed her tone, which sounded serious enough as
+ she added: &ldquo;The sorrow of the poor Vorchtels and the grief my betrothed
+ husband must endure, because the dead man was once a dear friend,
+ certainly casts a dark shadow upon many things; but you, who love the
+ chase, must surely be familiar with the misty autumn mornings to which I
+ allude. Everything, far and near, is covered by a thick veil, yet one
+ feels that there is bright sunshine behind it. Suddenly the mist scatters&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And mountain and forest, land and water, lie before us in the radiant
+ sunlight!&rdquo; cried the countess. &ldquo;How well I know such scenes! And how I
+ should rejoice if a favourable wind would sweep the grey mist away for you
+ right speedily! Only&mdash;indeed, I am not disposed to look on the dark
+ side&mdash;only, perhaps you do not know how resolute the Emperor is that
+ the peace of the country shall be maintained. If your lover allowed
+ himself to be carried away&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This was not the first time,&rdquo; Els eagerly interrupted, &ldquo;that young
+ Vorchtel tried to anger him in the presence of others; and he believed
+ that he was justified in bearing a grudge against his former friend&mdash;it
+ was considered a settled thing that Wolff and his sister Ursula were to
+ marry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Until,&rdquo; Cordula broke in, &ldquo;he gazed into your bright eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How could you know that?&rdquo; asked Els in confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because, in love and hate, as well as in reckoning, two and three follow
+ one,&rdquo; laughed the countess. &ldquo;As for your Wolff, in particular, I will
+ gladly believe, with you, that he can succeed in clearing himself before
+ the judges. But with regard to old Eysvogel, who looks as though, if he
+ met our dear Lord Himself, he would think first which of the two was the
+ richer, your future brother-in-law Siebenburg, that disagreeable
+ &lsquo;Mustache,&rsquo; and his poor wife, who sits at home grieving over her
+ dissolute husband&mdash;what gratitude you can expect from such kindred&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None,&rdquo; replied Els sadly. Yet a mischievous smile hovered around her lips
+ as, bending over the invalid, she added in a whisper: &ldquo;But the good I
+ expect from all the evil is, that we and the Eysvogels will be separated
+ as if by wall and moat. They will never cross them, but Wolff would find
+ the way back to me, though we were parted by an ocean, and mountains
+ towering to the sky divided&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This confidence, indeed, maintains the courage,&rdquo; said the countess, and
+ with a faint sigh she added: &ldquo;Whatever evil may befall you, many might
+ envy you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then love has conquered you also?&rdquo; Els began; but Cordula answered
+ evasively:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let that pass, dear Jungfrau. Perhaps love treats me as a mother deals
+ with a froward child, because I asked too much of her. My life has become
+ an endless battue. Much game of all kinds is thus driven out to be shot,
+ but the sportsman finds true pleasure only in tracking the single
+ heathcock, the solitary chamois. Yet, no,&rdquo; and in her eagerness she flung
+ her bandaged hand so high into the air that she groaned with pain and was
+ forced to keep silence. When able to speak once more, still tortured by
+ severe suffering, she exclaimed angrily: &ldquo;No, I want neither driving nor
+ stalking. What do I care for the prey? I am a woman, too. I would fain be
+ the poor persecuted game, which the hunter pursues at the risk of breaking
+ his bones and neck. It must be delightful; one would willingly bear the
+ pain of a wound for its sake. I don&rsquo;t mean these pitiful burns, but a deep
+ and deadly one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ought to have spared yourself these,&rdquo; said Els in a tone of
+ affectionate warning. &ldquo;Consider what you are to your father, and how your
+ suffering pains him! To risk a precious human life for the sake of a
+ stupid brute&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They call it a sin, I know,&rdquo; Cordula burst forth. &ldquo;And yet I would commit
+ the same tomorrow at the risk of again&mdash;Oh, you cautious city people,
+ you maidens with snow-white hands! What do you know of a girl like me? You
+ cannot even imagine what my child life was; and yet it is told in a single
+ word&mdash;motherless! I was never permitted to see her, to hear her dear,
+ warning voice. She paid with her own life for giving me mine. My father?
+ How kind he is! He meant to supply his dead wife&rsquo;s place by anticipating
+ my every wish. Had I desired to feast my eyes on the castle in flames, it
+ would, perhaps, now lie in ashes. So I became what I am. True&mdash;and
+ this is something&mdash;I grew to be at least one person&rsquo;s joy&mdash;his.
+ No, no, at home there are others also, though they dwell in wretched
+ hovels, who would gladly welcome me back. But except these, who will ask
+ about the reckless countess? I myself do not care to linger long when the
+ mirror shows me my image. Do you wish to know what this has to do with the
+ fire? Much; for otherwise I should scarcely have been wounded. The
+ lightning had struck only the convent barn; the cow stable, when we
+ arrived, was still safe, but the flames soon reached it also. Neither the
+ nuns nor the men had thought of driving the cattle out. Poor city cattle!
+ In the country the animals have more friendly care. When the work of
+ rescue was at last commenced the cows naturally refused to leave their old
+ home. Some prudent person had torn the door off the hinges that they might
+ not stifle. Just in front of it stood a pretty red cow with a white star
+ on her face. A calf was by her side, and the mother had already sunk on
+ her knees and was licking it in mortal terror. I pitied the poor thing,
+ and as Boemund Altrosen, the black-haired knight who entered your house
+ with the rest after the ride to Kadolzburg, had just come there, I told
+ him to save the calf. Of course he obeyed my wish, and as it struggled he
+ dragged it out of the stable with his strong arms. The building was
+ already blazing, and the thatched roof threatened to fall in. Just at that
+ moment the old cow looked at me so piteously and uttered such a mournful
+ bellow that it touched me to the heart. My eyes rested on the calf, and a
+ voice within whispered that it would be motherless, like me, and miss
+ during the first part of its life God&rsquo;s best gift. But since, as you have
+ heard, I act before I think, I went myself&mdash;I no longer know how&mdash;into
+ the burning stable. It was hard to breathe in the dense smoke, and fiery
+ sparks scorched my shawl and my hair, but I was conscious of one thought:
+ You must save the helpless little creature&rsquo;s mother! So I called and lured
+ her, as I do at home, where all the cows are fond of me, but it was
+ useless; and just as I perceived this the thatched roof fell in, and I
+ should probably have perished had not Altrosen this time carried my own by
+ no means light figure out of the stable instead of the calf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you?&rdquo; asked Els eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I submitted,&rdquo; replied the countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; urged Els. &ldquo;Your heart throbbed faster with grateful joy, for
+ you saw the desire of your soul fulfilled. A hunter, and one of the
+ noblest of them all, risked his life in the pursuit of your love. O
+ Countess Cordula, I remember that knight well, and if the dark-blue sleeve
+ which he wore on his helm in the tournament was yours&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe it was,&rdquo; Cordula interrupted indifferently. &ldquo;But, what was of
+ more importance, when I opened my eyes again the cow was standing outside,
+ licking her recovered calf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the knight?&rdquo; asked Els. &ldquo;Whoever so heroically risks his life for his
+ lady&rsquo;s wish should be sure of her gratitude.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Boemund can rely on that,&rdquo; said Cordula positively. &ldquo;At least, what he
+ did this time for my sake weighs more heavily in the scale than the lances
+ he has broken, his love songs, or the mute language of his longing eyes.
+ Those are shafts which do not pierce my heart. How reproachfully you look
+ at me! Let him take lessons from his friend Heinz Schorlin, and he may
+ improve. Yes, the Swiss knight! He would be the man for me, spite of your
+ involuntary meeting with him and your devout sister, for whom he forgot
+ every one else, and me also, in the dancing hall. O Jungfrau Els, I have
+ the hunter&rsquo;s eyes, which are keen-sighted! For his sake your beautiful
+ Eva, with her saintly gaze, might easily forget to pray. It was not you,
+ but she, who drew him to-night to your house. Had this thought entered my
+ head downstairs in the entry I should probably, to be honest, have omitted
+ my little fairy tale and let matters take their course. St. Clare ought to
+ have protected her future votary. Besides, it pleases the arrogant little
+ lady to show me as plainly as possible, on every occasion, that I am a
+ horror to her. Let those who will accept such insults. My Christianity
+ does not go far enough to offer her the right cheek too. And shall I tell
+ you something? To spoil her game, I should be capable, in spite of all the
+ life preservers in the world, of binding Schorlin to me in good earnest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not!&rdquo; pleaded Els, raising her clasped hands beseechingly, and added,
+ as if in explanation: &ldquo;For the noble Boemund Altrosen&rsquo;s sake, do not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To promise that, my darling, is beyond my power,&rdquo; replied Cordula coolly,
+ &ldquo;because I myself do not know what I may do or leave undone tomorrow or
+ the day after. I am like a beech leaf on the stream. Let us see where the
+ current will carry it. It is certain,&rdquo; and she looked at her bandaged
+ hands, &ldquo;that my greatest beauty, my round arms, are disfigured. Scars
+ adorn a man; on a woman they are ugly and repulsive. At a dance they can
+ be hidden under tight sleeves, but how hot that would be in the
+ &lsquo;Schwabeln&rsquo; and &lsquo;Rai&rsquo;! So I had better keep away from these foolish
+ gaieties in future. A calf turns a countess out of a ballroom! What do you
+ think of that? New things often happen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she was interrupted; the housekeeper called Els. Sir Seitz
+ Siebenburg, spite of the untimely hour, had come to speak to her about an
+ important matter. Her father had gone to rest and sleep. The knight also
+ enquired sympathisingly about Countess von Montfort and presented his
+ respects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of which I can make no use!&rdquo; cried Cordula angrily. &ldquo;Tell him so,
+ Martsche.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the housekeeper withdrew she exclaimed impatiently: &ldquo;How it burns! The
+ heat would be enough to convert the rescued calf into an appetising roast.
+ I wish I could sleep off the pain of my foolish prank! The sunlight is
+ beginning to be troublesome. I cannot bear it; it is blinding. Draw the
+ curtain over the window.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cordula&rsquo;s own maid hastened to obey the order. Els helped the countess
+ turn on her pillows, and as in doing so she touched her arm, the sufferer
+ cried angrily: &ldquo;Who cares what hurts me? Not even you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she paused. The pleading glance which Els had cast at her must have
+ pierced her soft heart, for her bosom suddenly heaved violently and,
+ struggling to repress her sobs, she gasped, &ldquo;I know you mean kindly, but I
+ am not made of stone or iron either. I want to be alone and go to sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She closed her eyes as she spoke and, when Els bent to kiss her, tears
+ bedewed her cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after Els went down into the entry to meet her lover&rsquo;s
+ brother-in-law. He had refused to enter the empty sitting-room. The
+ Countess von Montfort&rsquo;s unfriendly dismissal had vexed him sorely, yet it
+ made no lasting impression. Other events had forced into the background
+ the bitter attack of Cordula, for whom he had never felt any genuine
+ regard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The experiences of the last few hours had converted the carefully
+ bedizened gallant into a coarse fellow, whose outward appearance bore
+ visible tokens of his mental depravity. The faultlessly cut garment was
+ pushed awry on his powerful limbs and soiled on the breast with wine
+ stains. The closely fitting steel chain armour, in which he had ridden
+ out, now hung in large folds upon his powerful frame. The long mustache,
+ which usually curled so arrogantly upwards, now drooped damp and limp over
+ his mouth and chin, and his long reddish hair fell in dishevelled locks
+ around his bloated face. His blue eyes, which usually sparkled so
+ brightly, now looked dull and bleared, and there were white spots on his
+ copper-coloured cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since Countess Cordula gave him the insulting message to his wife he had
+ undergone more than he usually experienced in the course of years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An accursed night!&rdquo; he had exclaimed, in reply to the housekeeper&rsquo;s
+ question concerning the cause of his disordered appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els, too, was startled by his looks and the hoarse sound of his voice.
+ Nay, she even drew back from him, for his wandering glance made her fear
+ that he was intoxicated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a short time before, it is true, he had scarcely been able to stand
+ erect, but the terrible news which had assailed him had quickly sobered
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had come at this unwontedly early hour to enquire whether the Ortliebs
+ had heard anything of his brother-in-law Wolff. There was not a word of
+ allusion to the broken betrothal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In return for the promise that she would let the Eysvogels know as soon as
+ she received any tidings of her lover, which Els gave unasked, Siebenburg,
+ who had always treated her repellently or indifferently, thanked her so
+ humbly that she was surprised. She did not know how to interpret it; nay,
+ she anticipated nothing good when, with urgent cordiality, he entreated
+ her to forget the unpleasant events of the preceding night, which she must
+ attribute to a sudden fit of anger on Herr Casper&rsquo;s part. She was far too
+ dear to all the members of the family for them to give her up so easily.
+ What had occurred&mdash;she must admit that herself&mdash;might have
+ induced even her best friend to misunderstand it. For one brief moment he,
+ too, had been tempted to doubt her innocence. If she knew old Eysvogel&rsquo;s
+ terrible situation she would certainly do everything in her power to
+ persuade her father to receive him that morning, or&mdash;which would be
+ still better&mdash;go to his office. The weal and woe of many persons were
+ at stake, her own above all, since, as Wolff&rsquo;s betrothed bride, she
+ belonged to him inseparably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even without the ring?&rdquo; interrupted Els bitterly; and when Siebenburg
+ eagerly lamented that he had not brought it back, she answered proudly
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t trouble yourself, Sir Seitz! I need this sacred pledge as little as
+ the man who still wears mine. Tell your kinsfolk so. I will inform my
+ father of Herr Casper&rsquo;s wish; he is asleep now. Shall I guess aright in
+ believing that the other disasters which have overtaken you are connected
+ with the waggon trains Wolff so anxiously expected?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siebenburg, twirling his cap in confusion, assented to her question,
+ adding that he knew nothing except that they were lost and, after
+ repeating his entreaty that she would accomplish a meeting between the two
+ old gentlemen, left her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would indeed have been painful for him to talk with Els, for a
+ messenger had brought tidings that the waggons had been attacked and
+ robbed, and the perpetrators of the deed were his own brothers and their
+ cousin and accomplice Absbach. True, Seitz himself had had no share in the
+ assault, yet he did not feel wholly blameless for what had occurred, since
+ over the wine and cards he had boasted, in the presence of the robbers, of
+ the costly wares which his father-in-law was expecting, and mentioned the
+ road they would take.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seitz Siebenburg&rsquo;s conscience was also burdened with something quite
+ different.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vexed and irritated by the countess&rsquo;s insulting rebuff, he had gone to the
+ Green Shield to forget his annoyance at the gaming table in the Duke of
+ Pomerania&rsquo;s quarters. He had fared ill. There was no lack of fiery Rhine
+ wine supplied by the generous host; the sultry atmosphere caused by the
+ rising thunderstorm increased his thirst and, half intoxicated, and
+ incensed by the luck of Heinz Schorlin, in whom he saw the preferred lover
+ of the lady who had so suddenly withdrawn her favour, he had been led on
+ to stakes of unprecedented amount. At last he risked the lands, castle,
+ and village which he possessed in Hersbruck as his wife&rsquo;s dower. Moreover,
+ he was aware of having said things which, though he could not recall them
+ to memory in detail, had roused the indignation of many of those who were
+ present. The remarks referred principally to the Ortlieb sisters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid the wild uproar prevailing around the gaming table that night the
+ duel which had cost young Vorchtel his life was not mentioned until the
+ last dice had been thrown. In the discussion the victor&rsquo;s betrothed bride
+ had been named, and Siebenburg clearly remembered that he had spoken of
+ the breaking of his brother-in-law&rsquo;s engagement, and connected it with
+ accusations which involved him in a quarrel with several of the guests,
+ among them Heinz Schorlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similar occurrences were frequent, and he was brave, strong, and skilful
+ enough to cope with any one, even the dreaded Swiss; only he was vexed and
+ troubled because he had disputed with the man to whom he had lost his
+ property. Besides, his father-in-law had so earnestly enjoined it upon him
+ to put no obstacle in the way of his desire to make peace with the
+ Ortliebs that he was obliged to bow his stiff neck to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrogant knight&rsquo;s position was critical, and real inward dignity was
+ unknown to him. Yet he would rather have been dragged with his brothers to
+ the executioner&rsquo;s block than humbled himself before the Swiss. But he must
+ talk with him for the sake of his twin sons, whose heritage he had so
+ shamefully gambled away. True, the utmost he intended was the confession
+ that, while intoxicated, he had staked his property at the gaming table
+ and said things which he regretted. Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s generosity was well
+ known. Perhaps he might offer some acceptable arrangement ere the notary
+ conveyed his estate to him. He did not yet feel that he could stoop so low
+ as to receive a gift from this young upstart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If his father-in-law, who supported him, was really ruined, as he had just
+ asserted, he would indeed be plunged into beggary, with his wife, whose
+ stately figure constantly rose before him, with a look of mute reproach,
+ his beautiful twin boys, and his load of debt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gigantic man felt physically crushed by the terrible blows of fate
+ which had fallen upon him during this last wakeful night. He would fain
+ have gone to the nearest tavern and there left it to the wine to bring
+ forgetfulness. To drink, drink constantly, and in the intervals sleep with
+ his head resting on his arms, seemed the most tempting prospect. But he
+ was obliged to return to the Eysvogels. There was too much at stake.
+ Besides, he longed to see the twins who resembled him so closely, and of
+ whom Countess Cordula had said that she hoped they would not be like their
+ father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The city gates were already open. Peasants and peasant women bringing
+ vegetables and other farm produce to market thronged the streets, wains
+ loaded with grain or charcoal rumbled along, and herds of cattle and
+ swine, laden donkeys, the little carts of the farmers and bee keepers
+ conveying milk and honey to the city, passed over the dyke, which was
+ still softened by the rain of the preceding night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thunderstorm had cooled the air, but the rays of the morning sun were
+ already scorching. A few heavy little clouds were darkly relieved against
+ the blue sky, and a peasant, driving two sucking pigs before him, called
+ to another, who was carrying a goose under each arm, that the sun was
+ drawing water, and thundershowers seldom came singly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the city looked pleasant enough in the freshness of early June. The
+ maidservants who were opening the shutters glanced gaily out into the
+ streets, and arranged the flowers in front of the windows or bowed
+ reverently as a priest passed by on his way to mass. The barefooted
+ Capuchin, with his long beard, beckoned to the cook or the tradesman&rsquo;s
+ wife and, as she put something into his beggar&rsquo;s sack and he thanked her
+ kindly with some pious axiom, she felt as if she herself and all her
+ household had gained a right to the blessing of Heaven for that day, and
+ cheerily continued her work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brass counter in the low, broad bow window of the baker&rsquo;s house
+ glittered brightly, and the pale apprentice wiped the flour from his face
+ and gave his master&rsquo;s rosy-cheeked daughter fresh warm cakes to set on the
+ shining shelves. The barber&rsquo;s nimble apprentice hung the towel and basin
+ at the door, while his master, wearied by the wine-bibbing and talk at the
+ tavern or his labour at the fire, was still asleep. His active wife had
+ risen before him, strewed the shop with fresh sand, and renewed the
+ goldfinch&rsquo;s food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The workshops and stores were adorned with birch branches, and the young
+ daughters of the burghers, in becoming caps, the maid servants and
+ apprentices, who were going to market with baskets on their arms, wore a
+ flower or something green on their breasts or in their caps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first notes of the bells, pealing solemnly, were summoning worshippers
+ to mass, the birds were singing in the garden, and the cocks were crowing
+ in the yards of the houses. The animals passing in the street lowed,
+ grunted, and cackled merrily in the dawn of the young day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gay young men, travelling students who had sought cheap quarters in the
+ country, now entered the city with a merry song on their lips just shaded
+ by the first down of manhood, and when a maiden met them she lowered her
+ eyes modestly before the riotous fellows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The terrors of the frightful thunderstorm seemed forgotten. Nuremberg
+ looked gladsome; a carpet hung from many a bow-window, and flags and
+ streamers fluttered from roofs and balconies to honour the distinguished
+ guests. Many signs of their presence were visible, squires and equerries,
+ in their masters&rsquo; colours, were riding spirited horses, and a few knights
+ who loved early rising were already in the saddle, their shining helmets
+ and coats of mail flashing brightly in the sunshine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gigantic figure of Sir Seitz Siebenburg moved with drooping head
+ through the budding joy of this June day towards the Eysvogel dwelling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His gloomy, haggard face and disordered attire made two neatly dressed
+ young shoemaker&rsquo;s apprentices, on their way to their work, nudge each
+ other and look keenly at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather meet him here in broad daylight among houses and people than
+ in the dusk on the highway,&rdquo; remarked one of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no danger,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;He wears the curb now. He moved
+ from the robber nest into the rich Eysvogel house opposite. That&rsquo;s Herr
+ Casper&rsquo;s son-in-law. But such people can never let other folks&rsquo; property
+ alone. Only here they work in another way. The shoes he wears were made in
+ our workshop, but the master still whistles for his pay, and he owes
+ everybody&mdash;the tailor, the lacemaker, the armourer, the girdlemaker,
+ and the goldsmith. If an apprentice reminds him of the debt, let him
+ beware of bruises.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Emperor Rudolph ought to issue an edict against such injustice!&rdquo;
+ wrathfully exclaimed the other and taller youth, the handsome son of a
+ master of the craft from Weissenburg on the Sand, who expected soon to
+ take his father&rsquo;s place. &ldquo;Up at Castle Graufels, which is saddled on our
+ little town, master and man would be going barefoot but for us; yet for
+ three years we haven&rsquo;t seen so much as a penny of his, though my father
+ says times have already improved, since the Hapsburg, as a just man&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Things have not been so bad here for a long while, the saints be
+ praised!&rdquo; his companion broke in. &ldquo;Siebenburg, or some of his wife&rsquo;s rich
+ kindred, will at last be compelled to settle matters. We have the law and
+ the Honourable Council to attend to that. Look up! Yonder stately old
+ house gave its daughter to the penniless knight. She is one of our
+ customers too; a handsome woman, and not one of the worst either. But her
+ mother, who was born a countess&mdash;if the shoe doesn&rsquo;t make a foot
+ small which Nature created big, there&rsquo;s such an outcry! True, the old
+ woman, her mother, is worse still; she scolds and screams. But look up at
+ the bow window. There she stands. I&rsquo;m only a poor brewer&rsquo;s son, but before
+ I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t say so!&rdquo; the other interrupted. &ldquo;Have you seen the owl in the
+ cage in front of the guardhouse at the gate of the hospital? It is her
+ living image; and how her chin projects and moves up and down, as though
+ she were chewing leather!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said the other, as if insisting upon something difficult to
+ believe, &ldquo;and yet the old woman is a real countess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Weissenburg apprentice expressed his astonishment with another: &ldquo;You
+ don&rsquo;t say so!&rdquo; but as he spoke he grasped his companion&rsquo;s arm, adding
+ earnestly: &ldquo;Let us go. That ugly old woman just looked at me, and if it
+ wasn&rsquo;t the evil eye I shall go straight to the church and drive away the
+ misfortune with holy water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, then,&rdquo; answered the Nuremberg youth, but continued thoughtfully:
+ &ldquo;Yet my master&rsquo;s grandmother, a woman of eighty, is probably older than
+ the one up there, but nobody could imagine a kinder, pleasanter dame. When
+ she looks approvingly at one it seems as if the dear God&rsquo;s blessing were
+ shining from two little windows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s just like my grandmother at home!&rdquo; exclaimed the Weissenburg
+ apprentice with sparkling eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning from the Eysvogel mansion as they spoke, they pursued their way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siebenburg had overtaken the apprentices, but ere crossing the threshold
+ of the house which was now his home he stopped before it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might, perhaps, be called the largest and handsomest in Nuremberg; but
+ it was only a wide two-story structure, though the roof had been adorned
+ with battlements and the sides with a small bow-windowed turret. At the
+ second story a bracket, bearing an image of the Madonna, had been built
+ out on one side, and on the other the bow window from which old Countess
+ Rotterbach had looked down into the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coat of arms was very striking and wholly out of harmony with the
+ simplicity of the rest of the building. Its showy splendour, visible for a
+ long distance, occupied the wide space between the door of the house and
+ the windows of the upper story. The escutcheon of the noble family from
+ which Rosalinde, Herr Casper&rsquo;s wife, had descended rested against the
+ shield bearing the birds. The Rotterbach supporters, a nude man and a bear
+ standing on its hind legs, rose on both sides of the double escutcheon,
+ and the stone cutter had surmounted the Eysvogel helmet with a count&rsquo;s
+ coronet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This elaborate decoration of the ancient patrician house had become one of
+ the sights of the city, and had often made Herr Casper, at the Honourable
+ Council and elsewhere, clench his fist under his mantle, for it had drawn
+ open censure and bitter mockery upon the arrogant man, but his desire to
+ have it replaced by a more modest one had been baffled by the opposition
+ of the women of his family. They had had it put up, and would not permit
+ any one to touch it, though Wolff, after his return from Italy, had
+ strenuously urged its removal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had brought the Eysvogels no good fortune, for on the day of its
+ completion the business received its first serious blow, and it also
+ served to injure the commercial house externally in a very obvious manner.
+ Whereas formerly many wares which needed to be kept dry had been hoisted
+ from the outer door and the street to the spacious attic, this was now
+ prevented by the projecting figures of the nude men and the bears.
+ Therefore it became necessary to hoist the goods to be stored in the attic
+ from the courtyard, which caused delay and hindrances of many kinds.
+ Various expedients had been suggested, but the women opposed them all, for
+ they were glad that the ugly casks and bales no longer found their way to
+ the garret past their windows, and it also gratified their arrogance that
+ they were no longer visible from the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siebenburg now looked up at the huge escutcheon and recalled the day when,
+ after having been specially favoured by Isabella Eysvogel at a dance in
+ the Town Hall, he had paused in the same place. A long line of laden
+ waggons had just stopped in front of the door surmounted by the double
+ escutcheon, and if he had previously hesitated whether to profit by the
+ favour of Isabella, whose haughty majesty, which attracted him, also
+ inspired him with a faint sense of uneasiness, he was now convinced how
+ foolish it would be not to forge the iron which seemed aglow in his
+ favour. What riches the men-servants were carrying into the vaulted entry,
+ which was twice as large as the one in the Ortlieb mansion! Besides, the
+ escutcheon with the count&rsquo;s coronet had given the knight assurance that he
+ would have no cause to be ashamed, in an assembly of his peers, of his
+ alliance with the Nuremberg maiden. Isabella&rsquo;s hand could undoubtedly free
+ him from the oppressive burden of his debts, and she was certainly a
+ magnificent woman! How well, too, her tall figure would suit him and the
+ Siebenburgs, whose name was said to be derived from the seven feet of
+ stature which some of them measured!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he again remembered the hour when she had laid her slender hand in
+ his. For a brief period he had been really happy; his heart had not felt
+ so light since early childhood, though at first he had ventured to confess
+ only one half his load of debt to his father-in-law. He had even assumed
+ fresh obligations to relieve his brothers from their most pressing cares.
+ They had attended his brilliant wedding, and it had flattered his vanity
+ to show them what he could accomplish as the wealthy Eysvogel&rsquo;s
+ son-in-law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how quickly all this had changed! He had learned that, besides the
+ woman who had given him her heart and inspired him with a passion hitherto
+ unknown, he had wedded two others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as the image of old Countess Rotterbach, Isabella&rsquo;s grandmother,
+ forced itself upon his mind, he unconsciously knit his brow. He had not
+ heard her say much, but with every word she bestowed upon him he was
+ forced to accept something bitter. She rarely left her place in the
+ armchair in the bow window in the sitting-room, but it seemed as if her
+ little eyes possessed the power of piercing walls and doors, for she knew
+ everything that concerned him, even his greatest secrets, which he
+ believed he had carefully concealed. More on her account than on that of
+ his mother-in-law, who did nothing except what the former commanded, he
+ had repeatedly tried to remove with his wife to the estate of Tannenreuth,
+ which had been assigned to him on the day of the marriage, that its
+ revenues might support the young couple, but the mother and grandmother
+ detained his wife, and their wishes were more to her than his. Perhaps,
+ however, he might have induced her to go with him had not his
+ father-in-law made his debts a snare, which he drew whenever it was
+ necessary to stifle his wishes, and he, too, wanted to retain his daughter
+ at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since Wolff&rsquo;s return from Italy he had become aware that the stream of
+ gold from the Eysvogel coffers flowed more sparingly, or even failed
+ altogether to satisfy his extravagant tastes. Therefore his relations with
+ his brother-in-law, whose prudent caution he considered avarice, and whose
+ earnest protests against his often unprecedented demands frequently roused
+ his ire, became more and more unfriendly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inmates of the Eysvogel house rendered his home unendurable, and from
+ the experiences of his bachelor days he knew only too well where mirth
+ reigned in Nuremberg. So he became a rare guest at the Eysvogels, and when
+ Isabella found herself neglected and deceived, she made him feel her
+ resentment in her own haughty and&mdash;as soon as she deemed herself
+ injured&mdash;harsh manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first her displeasure troubled him sorely, but the ardent passion which
+ had absorbed him during the early days of their marriage had died out, and
+ only flamed up with its old fervour occasionally; but at such times the
+ haughty, neglected wife repulsed him with insulting severity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet she had never permitted any one to disparage her husband behind his
+ back. True, Siebenburg did not know this, but he perceived more and more
+ plainly that both the Eysvogels, father and son, were oppressed by some
+ grave anxiety, and that the sums which Wolff now paid him no longer
+ sufficed to hold his creditors in check. He was not accustomed to impose
+ any restraint upon himself, and thus it soon became known throughout the
+ city that he did not live at peace with his wife and her family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet five weeks ago matters had appeared to improve. The birth of the twins
+ had brought something new into his life, which drew him nearer to
+ Isabella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children at first seemed to him two lovely miracles. Both boys, both
+ exactly like him. When they were brought to him on their white,
+ lace-trimmed pillows, his heart had swelled with joy, and it was his
+ greatest delight to gaze at them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the natural result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He, the stalwart Siebenburg, had not become the father of one ordinary
+ boy, but of two little knights at once. When he returned home&mdash;even
+ if his feet were unsteady&mdash;his first visit was to them, and he had
+ often felt that he was far too poor and insignificant to thank his
+ neglected wife aright for so precious a gift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever this feeling took possession of him he expressed his love to
+ Isabella with tender humility; while she, who had bestowed her hand upon
+ him solely from love, forgot all her wrongs, and her heart throbbed faster
+ with grateful joy when she saw him, with fatherly pride, carry the twins
+ about with bent knees, as if their weight was too heavy for his giant arms
+ to bear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second week after their birth Isabella fell slightly ill. Her mother
+ and grandmother undertook the nursing, and as the husband found them both
+ with the twins whenever he came to see the infants and their mother, the
+ sick-room grew distasteful to him. Again, as before their birth, he sought
+ compensation outside of the house for the annoyance caused by the women at
+ home; but the memory of the little boys haunted him, and when he met his
+ companions at the tavern he invited them to drink the children&rsquo;s health in
+ the host&rsquo;s best wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So life went on until the Reichstag brought the von Montforts, whom he had
+ met at a tournament in Augsburg, to the city of Nuremberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mirth reigned wherever Countess Cordula appeared, and Siebenburg needed
+ amusement and joined the train of her admirers&mdash;with what evil result
+ he now clearly perceived for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He again stood before the stately dwelling where he had hoped to find
+ luxury and wealth, but where his heart now throbbed more anxiously than
+ those of his kinsmen had formerly done in the impoverished castle of his
+ father, who had died so long ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Eysvogel dwelling, with its showy escutcheon above the door, was
+ threatened by want, and hand in hand with it, he knew, the most hideous of
+ all her children&mdash;disgrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he also remembered what he himself had done to increase the peril
+ menacing the ancient commercial house. Perhaps the old man within was
+ relying upon the estate of Tannenreuth, which he had assigned to him, to
+ protect some post upon which much depended, and he had gambled it away.
+ This must now be confessed, and also the amount of his own debts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An unpleasant task confronted him but, humiliating and harassing as was
+ the interview awaiting him beyond the threshold before which he still
+ lingered, at least he would not find Wolff there. This seemed a boon,
+ since for the first time he would have felt himself in the wrong in the
+ presence of his unloved brother-in-law. Even the burden of his debts
+ weighed less heavily on his conscience than the irritating words with
+ which he had induced his father-in-law to break off Wolff&rsquo;s betrothal to
+ Els Ortlieb. The act was base and malicious. Greatly as he had erred, he
+ had never before been guilty of such a deed, and with a curse upon himself
+ on his bearded lips he approached the door; but when half way to it he
+ stopped again and looked up to the second-story windows behind which the
+ twins slept. With what delight he had always thought of them! But this
+ time the recollection of the little boys was spoiled by Countess Cordula&rsquo;s
+ message to his wife to rear them so that they would not be like him, their
+ father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An evil wish! And yet the warmest love could have devised no better one in
+ behalf of the true welfare of the boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told himself so as he passed beneath the escutcheon through the heavy
+ open door with its iron ornaments. He was expected, the steward told him,
+ but he arched his broad breast as if preparing for a wrestling match,
+ pulled his mustache still longer, and went up the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The spacious, lofty sitting-room which Seitz Siebenburg entered looked
+ very magnificent. Gay Flanders tapestries hung on the walls. The ceiling
+ was slightly vaulted, and in the centre of each mesh of the net designed
+ upon it glittered a richly gilded kingfisher from the family coat of arms.
+ Bear and leopard skins lay on the cushions, and upon the shelf which
+ surrounded three sides of the apartment stood costly vases, gold and
+ silver utensils, Venetian mirrors and goblets. The chairs and furniture
+ were made of rare woods inlaid with ebony and mother of pearl, brought by
+ way of Genoa from Moorish Spain. In the bow window jutting out into the
+ street, where the old grandmother sat in her armchair, two green and
+ yellow parrots on brass perches interrupted the conversation, whenever it
+ grew louder, with the shrill screams of their ugly voices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siebenburg found all the family except Wolff and the twins. His wife was
+ half sitting, half reclining, on a divan. When Seitz entered she raised
+ her head from the white arm on which it had rested, turned her oval face
+ with its regular features towards him, and gathered up the fair locks
+ which, released from their braids, hung around her in long, thick tresses.
+ Her eyes showed that she had been weeping violently, and as her husband
+ approached she again sobbed painfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her grandmother seemed annoyed by her lamentations for, pointing to
+ Isabella&rsquo;s tears, she exclaimed sharply, glancing angrily at Siebenburg:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a pity for every one of them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight&rsquo;s blood boiled at the words, but they strengthened his courage.
+ He felt relieved from any consideration for these people, not one of whom,
+ except the poor woman shedding such burning tears, had given him occasion
+ to return love for love. Had they flowed only for the lost wealth, and not
+ for him and the grief he caused Isabella, they would not have seemed &ldquo;a
+ pity&rdquo; to the old countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siebenburg&rsquo;s breath came quicker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gratitude he owed his father-in-law certainly did not outweigh the
+ humiliations with which he, his weak wife, and ill-natured mother-in-law
+ had embittered his existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even now the old gentleman barely vouchsafed him a greeting. After he had
+ asked about his son, called himself a ruined man, and upbraided the knight
+ with insulting harshness because his brothers&mdash;the news had been
+ brought to him a short time before&mdash;were the robbers who had seized
+ his goods, and the old countess had chimed in with the exclamation, &ldquo;They
+ are all just fit for the executioner&rsquo;s block!&rdquo; Seitz could restrain
+ himself no longer; nay, it gave him actual pleasure to show these hated
+ people what he had done, on his part, to add to their embarrassments. He
+ was no orator, but now resentment loosened his tongue, and with swift,
+ scornful words he told Herr Casper that, as the son-in-law of a house
+ which liked to represent itself as immensely rich, he had borrowed from
+ others what&mdash;he was justified in believing it&mdash;had been withheld
+ through parsimony. Besides, his debts were small in comparison with the
+ vast sums Herr Casper had lavished in maintaining the impoverished estates
+ of the Rotterbach kindred. Like every knight whose own home was not
+ pleasant, he sometimes gambled; and when, yesterday, ill luck pursued him
+ and he lost the estate of Tannenreuth, he sincerely regretted the
+ disaster, but it could not be helped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Terror and rage had sealed the old countess&rsquo;s lips, but now they parted in
+ the hoarse cry: &ldquo;You deserve the wheel and the gallows, not the honourable
+ block!&rdquo; and her daughter, Rosalinde Eysvogel, repeated in a tone of
+ sorrowful lamentation, &ldquo;Yes, the wheel and the gallows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A scornful laugh from Siebenburg greeted the threat, but when Herr Casper,
+ white as death and barely able to control his voice, asked whether this
+ incredible confession was merely intended to frighten the women, and the
+ knight assured him of the contrary, he groaned aloud: &ldquo;Then the old house
+ must succumb to disgraceful ruin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Years of life spent together may inspire and increase aversion instead of
+ love, but they undoubtedly produce a certain community of existence. The
+ bitter anguish of his aged household companion, the father of his wife, to
+ whom bonds of love still unsevered united him, touched even Seitz
+ Siebenburg. Besides, nothing moves the heart more quickly than the grief
+ of a proud, stern man. Herr Casper&rsquo;s confession did not make him dearer to
+ the knight, but it induced him to drop the irritating tone which he had
+ assumed, and in an altered voice he begged him not to give up his cause as
+ lost without resistance. For his daughter&rsquo;s sake old Herr Ortlieb must
+ lend his aid. Els, with whom he had just spoken, would cling firmly to
+ Wolff, and try to induce her father to do all that was possible for her
+ lover&rsquo;s house. He would endeavour to settle with his own creditors
+ himself. His sharp sword and strong arm would be welcome everywhere, and
+ the booty he won&mdash;&mdash;Here he was interrupted by the grandmother&rsquo;s
+ query in a tone of cutting contempt: &ldquo;Booty? On the highway, do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more the attack from the hostile old woman rendered the knight&rsquo;s
+ decision easier, for, struggling not to give way to his anger, he
+ answered: &ldquo;Rather, I think, in the Holy Land, in the war against the
+ infidel Saracens. At any rate, my presence would be more welcome anywhere
+ than in this house, whose roof shelters you, Countess. If, Herr Casper,
+ you intend to share with my wife and the twins what is left after the old
+ wealth has gone, unfortunately, I cannot permit you to do so. I will
+ provide for them also. True, it was your duty; for ever since Isabella
+ became my wife you have taken advantage of my poverty and impaired my
+ right to command her. That must be changed from this very day. I have
+ learned the bitter taste of the bread which you provide. I shall confide
+ them to my uncle, the Knight Heideck. He was my dead mother&rsquo;s only
+ brother, and his wife, as you know, is the children&rsquo;s godmother. They are
+ childless, and would consider it the most precious of gifts to have such
+ boys in the castle. My deserted wife must stay with him, while I&mdash;I
+ know not yet in what master&rsquo;s service&mdash;provide that the three are not
+ supported only by the charity of strangers&mdash;-&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Seitz, Seitz!&rdquo; interrupted Isabella, in a tone of urgent entreaty.
+ She had risen from her cushions, and was hurrying towards him. &ldquo;Do not go!
+ You must not go so!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her tall figure nestled closely against him as she spoke, and she threw
+ her arms around his neck; but he kissed her brow and eyes, saying, with a
+ gentleness which surprised even her: &ldquo;You are very kind, but I cannot,
+ must not remain here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The children, the little boys!&rdquo; she exclaimed again, gazing up at him
+ with love-beaming eyes. Then his tortured heart seemed to shrink, and,
+ pressing his hand on his brow, he paused some time ere he answered
+ gloomily: &ldquo;It is for them that I go. Words have been spoken which appeal
+ to me, and to you, too, Isabella: &lsquo;See that the innocent little creatures
+ are reared to be unlike their unhappy father.&rsquo; And the person who uttered
+ them&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A sage, a great sage,&rdquo; giggled the countess, unable to control her bitter
+ wrath against the man whom she hated; but Siebenburg fiercely retorted:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Although no sage, at least no monster spitting venom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you permit this insult to be offered to your grandmother?&rdquo; Frau
+ Rosalinde Eysvogel wailed to her daughter as piteously as if the injury
+ had been inflicted on herself. But Isabella only clung more closely to her
+ husband, heeding neither her mother&rsquo;s appeal nor her father&rsquo;s warning not
+ to be deluded by Siebenburg&rsquo;s empty promises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the old countess vainly struggled for words, Rosalinde Eysvogel
+ stood beside the lofty mantelpiece, weeping softly. Before Siebenburg
+ appeared, spite of the early hour and the agitating news which she had
+ just received, she had used her leisure for an elaborate toilette. A long
+ trailing robe of costly brocade, blue on the left side and yellow on the
+ right, now floated around her tall figure. When the knight returned she
+ had looked radiant in her gold and gems, like a princess. Now, crushed and
+ feeble, she presented a pitiable image of powerless yet offensively hollow
+ splendour. It would have required too much exertion to assail her
+ son-in-law with invectives, like her energetic mother; but when she saw
+ her daughter, to whom she had already appealed several times in a tone of
+ anguished entreaty, rest her proud head so tenderly on her husband&rsquo;s broad
+ breast, as she had done during the first weeks of their marriage, but
+ never since, the unhappy woman clearly perceived that the knight&rsquo;s
+ incredible demand was meant seriously. What she had believed an idle boast
+ he actually requested. Yonder hated intruder expected her to part with her
+ only daughter, who was far more to her than her unloved husband, her
+ exacting mother, or the son who restricted her wishes, whom she had never
+ understood, and against whom her heart had long been hardened. But it
+ could not be and, losing all self-control and dignity, she shrieked aloud,
+ tore the blue headband from her hair and, repeating the &ldquo;never&rdquo; constantly
+ as if she had gone out of her senses, gasped: &ldquo;Never, never, never, so
+ long as I live!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke she rushed to her startled husband, pointed to her
+ son-in-law, who still held his wife in a close embrace, and in a
+ half-stifled voice commanded Herr Casper to strike down the gambler,
+ robber, spendthrift, and kidnapper of children, or drive him out of the
+ house like some savage, dangerous beast. Then she ordered Isabella to
+ leave the profligate who wanted to drag her down to ruin; and when her
+ daughter refused to obey, she burst into violent weeping, sobbing and
+ moaning till her strength failed and she was really attacked with one of
+ the convulsions she had often feigned, by the advice of her own mother, to
+ extort from her husband the gratification of some extravagant wish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indignant, yet full of sincere sympathy, Herr Casper supported his wife,
+ whose queenly beauty had once fired his heart, and in whose embrace he had
+ imagined that he would be vouchsafed here below the joys of the redeemed.
+ As she rested her head, with its long auburn tresses, still so luxuriant,
+ upon his shoulder, exquisite pictures of the past rose before the mental
+ vision of the elderly man; but the spell was quickly broken, for the
+ kerchief with which he wiped her face was dyed red from her rouged cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A bitter smile hovered around his well-formed, beardless lips, and the man
+ of business remembered the vast sums which he had squandered to gratify
+ the extravagant wishes of the mother and daughter, and show these
+ countesses that he, the burgher, in whose veins ran noble blood,
+ understood as well as any man of their own rank how to increase the charm
+ of life by luxury and splendour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he supported his wife, and the old countess was seeking to relieve
+ her, Isabella also prepared to hasten to her mother&rsquo;s assistance, but her
+ husband stopped her with resistless strength, whispering: &ldquo;You know that
+ these convulsions are not dangerous. Come with me to the children. I want
+ to bid them farewell. Show me in this last hour, at least, that these
+ women are not more to you than I.&rdquo; He released her as he spoke, and the
+ mental struggle which for a short time made her bosom heave violently with
+ her hurried breathing ended with a low exclamation, &ldquo;I will come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nurse, whom Isabella sent out of the room when she entered with her
+ husband, silently obeyed, but stopped at the door to watch. She saw the
+ turbulent knight kneel beside the children&rsquo;s cradle before the wife whom
+ he had so basely neglected, raise his tearful eyes to the majestic woman,
+ whose stature was little less than his own and, lifting his clasped hands,
+ make a confession which she could not hear; saw her draw him towards her,
+ nestle with loving devotion against his broad breast, and place first one
+ and then the other twin boy in his arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young mother&rsquo;s cheeks as well as the father&rsquo;s were wet, but the eyes
+ of both sparkled with grateful joy when Isabella, in taking leave of her
+ husband, thanked him with a last loving kiss for the vow that, wherever he
+ might go, he would treasure her and the children in his heart, and do
+ everything in his power to secure a fate that should be worthy of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Siebenburg went downstairs he met his father-in-law on the second-story
+ landing. Herr Casper, deadly pale, was clinging with his right hand to the
+ baluster, pressing his left on his brow, as he vainly struggled for
+ composure and breath. He had forgotten to strengthen himself with food and
+ drink, and the terrible blows of fate which had fallen upon him during
+ these last hours of trial crushed, though but for a short time, his still
+ vigorous strength. The knight went nearer to help him, but when he offered
+ Herr Casper his arm the old merchant angrily thrust it back and accepted a
+ servant&rsquo;s support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the man assisted him upstairs he repented that he had yielded to
+ resentment, and not asked his son-in-law to try to discover Wolff&rsquo;s hiding
+ place, but no sooner had food and fiery wine strengthened him than his act
+ seemed wise. The return of the business partner, without whose knowledge
+ he had incurred great financial obligations, would have placed him in the
+ most painful situation. The old gentleman would have been obliged to
+ account to Wolff for the large sum which he owed to the Jew Pfefferkorn,
+ the most impatient of his creditors, though he need not have told him that
+ he had used it in Venice to gratify his love of gaming. How should he
+ answer his son if he asked why he had rejected his betrothed bride, and
+ soon after condescended to receive her again as his daughter and enter
+ into close relations with her father? Yet this must be done. Ernst Ortlieb
+ was the only person who could help him. It had become impossible to seek
+ aid from Herr Berthold Vorchtel, the man whose oldest son Wolff had slain,
+ and yet he possessed the means to save the sinking ship from destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the news of the duel reached him the messenger&rsquo;s blanched face had
+ made him believe that Wolff had fallen. In that moment he had perceived
+ that his loss would have rendered him miserable for the rest of his life.
+ This was a source of pleasure, for since Wolff had extorted his consent to
+ the betrothal with Els Ortlieb, and thus estranged him from the Vorchtels,
+ he had seriously feared that he had ceased to love him. Nay, in many an
+ hour when he had cause to feel shame in the presence of his prudent,
+ cautious, and upright partner, it had seemed as if he hated him. Now the
+ fear of the judge whom he saw in Wolff was blended with sincere anxiety
+ concerning his only son, whose breach of the peace menaced him with
+ banishment&mdash;nay, if he could not pay the price of blood which the
+ Vorchtels might demand, with death. Doubtless he had done many things to
+ prejudice Wolff against his betrothed bride, yet he who had cast the first
+ stone at her now felt that, in her simple purity, she would be capable of
+ no repudiation of the fidelity she owed her future husband. However
+ strongly he had struggled against this conviction, he knew that she, if
+ any one, could make his son happy&mdash;far happier than he had ever been
+ with the tall, slender, snow-white, unapproachable countess, who had
+ helped bring him to ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While consuming the food and drink, he heard his wife, usually a most
+ obedient daughter, disputing with her mother. This was fortunate; for, if
+ they were at variance, he need not fear that they would act as firm allies
+ against him when he expressed the wish to have Wolff&rsquo;s marriage solemnised
+ as soon as circumstances would permit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not yet time to discuss the matter with any one. He would first go
+ to the Jew Pfefferkorn once more to persuade him to defer his claims, and
+ then, before the meeting of the Council, would repair to the Ortliebs, to
+ commit to Herr Ernst the destiny of the Eysvogel firm and his partner
+ Wolff, on which also depended the welfare of the young merchant&rsquo;s
+ betrothed bride. If the father remained obdurate, if he resented the wrong
+ he had inflicted yesterday upon him and his daughter, he was a lost man;
+ for he had already availed himself of the good will of all those whose
+ doors usually stood open to him. Doubtless the news of his recent severe
+ losses were in every one&rsquo;s mouth, and the letter which he had just
+ received threatened him with an indictment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The luckless Siebenburg&rsquo;s creditors, too, would now be added to his own.
+ It was all very well for him to say that he would settle his debts him
+ self. As soon as it was rumoured abroad that he had gambled away the
+ estate of Tannenreuth, whose value gave the creditors some security, they
+ would rise as one man, and the house assailed would be his, Casper
+ Eysvogel&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The harried man&rsquo;s thoughts of his son-in-law were by no means the most
+ kindly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the latter set out for the second distasteful interview of the
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His purpose was to make some arrangement with Heinz Schorlin about the
+ lost estate and obtain definite knowledge concerning his quarrel with him,
+ of which he remembered nothing except that intoxication and jealousy had
+ carried him further than would have happened otherwise. He had undoubtedly
+ spoken insultingly of Els; his words, when uttered against a lady, had
+ been sharper than beseemed a knight. Yet was not any one who found a
+ maiden alone at night with this man justified in doubting her virtue? In
+ the depths of his soul he believed in her innocence, yet he avoided
+ confessing it. Why should not the Swiss, whom Nature had given such power
+ over the hearts of women, have also entangled his brother-in-law&rsquo;s
+ betrothed bride in a love affair? Why should not the gay girl who had
+ pledged her troth to a grave, dull fellow like Wolff, have been tempted
+ into a little love dalliance with the bold, joyous Schorlin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not until he had received proof that he had erred would he submit to
+ recall his charges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had left his wife with fresh courage and full of good intentions. Now
+ that he was forced to bid her farewell, he first realised what she had
+ been to him. No doubt both had much to forgive, but she was a splendid
+ woman. Though her father&rsquo;s storehouses contained chests of spices and
+ bales of cloth, he did not know one more queenly. That he could have
+ preferred, even for a single moment, the Countess von Montfort, whose sole
+ advantage over her was her nimble tongue and gay, bold manners, now seemed
+ incomprehensible. He had joined Cordula&rsquo;s admirers only to forget at her
+ feet the annoyances with which he had been wearied at home. He had but one
+ thing for which to thank the countess&mdash;her remark concerning the
+ future of the twins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet was he really so base that it would have been a disgrace for his
+ darlings to resemble him? &ldquo;No!&rdquo; a voice within cried loudly, and as the
+ same voice reminded him of the victories won in tournaments and sword
+ combats, of the open hand with which, since he had been the rich
+ Eysvogel&rsquo;s son-in-law, he had lent and given money to his brothers, and
+ especially of the manly resolve to provide for his wife and children as a
+ soldier in the service of some prince, another, lower, yet insistent,
+ recalled other things. It referred to the time when, with his brothers, he
+ had attacked a train of freight waggons and not cut down their armed
+ escort alone. The curse of a broad-shouldered Nordlinger carrier, whose
+ breast he had pierced with a lance though he cried out that he was a
+ father and had a wife and child to support, the shriek of the pretty boy
+ with curling brown hair who clung to the bridle of his steed as he rode
+ against the father, and whose arm he had cut off, still seemed to ring in
+ his ears. He also remembered the time when, after a rich capture on the
+ highway which had filled his purse, he had ridden to Nuremberg in
+ magnificent new clothes at the carnival season in order, by his brothers&rsquo;
+ counsel, to win a wealthy bride. Fortune and the saints had permitted him
+ to find a woman to satisfy both his avarice and his heart, yet he had
+ neither kept faith with her nor even showed her proper consideration. But,
+ strangely enough, the warning voice reproached him still more sharply for
+ having, in the presence of others, accused and disparaged his
+ brother-in-law&rsquo;s betrothed bride, whose guilt he believed proved. Again he
+ felt how ignoble and unworthy of a knight his conduct had been. Why had he
+ pursued this course? Merely&mdash;he admitted it now&mdash;to harm Wolff,
+ the monitor and niggard whom he hated; perhaps also because he secretly
+ told himself that, if Wolff formed a happy marriage, he and his children,
+ not Siebenburg&rsquo;s twin boys, would obtain the larger share of the Eysvogel
+ property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This greed of gain, which had brought him to Nuremberg to seek a wife, was
+ probably latent in his blood, though his reckless accumulation of debts
+ seemed to contradict it. Yesterday, at the Duke of Pomerania&rsquo;s, it had
+ again led him into that wild, mad dice-throwing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seitz Siebenburg was no calm thinker. All these thoughts passed singly in
+ swift flashes through his excited brain. Like the steady monotone of the
+ bass accompanying the rise and fall of the air, he constantly heard the
+ assurance that it would be a pity if his splendid twins should resemble
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore they must grow up away from his influence, under the care of his
+ good uncle. With this man&rsquo;s example before their eyes they would become
+ knights as upright and noble as Kunz Heideck, whom every one esteemed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of the twins he had resolved to begin a new and worthier life
+ himself. His wife would aid him, and love should lend him strength to
+ conduct himself in future so that Countess von Montfort, and every one who
+ meant well by his sons, might wish them to resemble their father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He walked on, holding his head proudly erect. Seeing the first worshippers
+ entering the Church of Our Lady, he went in, too, repeated several
+ Paternosters, commended the little boys and their mother to the care of
+ the gracious Virgin, and besought her to help him curb the turbulent
+ impulses which often led him to commit deeds he afterwards regretted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many people knew Casper Eysvogel&rsquo;s tall, haughty son-in-law and marvelled
+ at the fervent devotion with which, kneeling in the first place he found
+ near the entrance, beside two old women, he continued to pray. Was it true
+ that the Eysvogel firm had been placed in a very critical situation by the
+ loss of great trains of merchandise? One of his neighbours had heard him
+ sigh, and declared that something must weigh heavily upon the &ldquo;Mustache.&rdquo;
+ She would tell her nephew Hemerlein, the belt-maker, to whom the knight
+ owed large sums for saddles and harnesses, that he would be wise to look
+ after his money betimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siebenburg quitted the church in a more hopeful mood than when he entered
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prayers had helped him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he reached the fruit market he noticed that people gazed at him in
+ surprise. He had paid no heed to his dress since the morning of the
+ previous day, and as he always consumed large quantities of food and drink
+ he felt the need of refreshment. Entering the first barber&rsquo;s shop, he had
+ the stubble removed from his cheeks and chin, and arranged his disordered
+ attire, and then, going to a taproom close by, ate and drank, without
+ sitting down, what he found ready and, invigorated in body and mind,
+ continued his walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fruit market was full of busy life. Juicy strawberries and early
+ cherries, red radishes, heads of cabbages, bunches of greens, and long
+ stalks of asparagus were offered for sale, with roses and auriculas,
+ balsams and early pinks, in pots and bouquets, and the ruddy peasant
+ lasses behind the stands, the stately burgher women in their big round
+ hats, the daughters of the master workmen with their long floating locks
+ escaping from under richly embroidered caps, the maidservants with neat
+ little baskets on their round arms, afforded a varied and pleasing scene.
+ Everything that reached the ear, too, was cheery and amusing, and rendered
+ the knight&rsquo;s mood brighter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Proud of his newly acquired power of resistance, he walked on, after
+ yielding to the impulse to buy the handsomest bouquet of roses offered by
+ the pretty flower girl Kuni, whom, on Countess Cordula&rsquo;s account, during
+ the Reichstag he had patronised more frequently than usual. Without
+ knowing why himself, he did not tell the pretty girl, who had already
+ trusted him very often, for whom he intended it, but ordered it to be
+ charged with the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the corner of the Bindergasse, where Heinz Schorlin lodged, he found a
+ beggar woman with a bandaged head, whom he commissioned to carry the roses
+ to the Eysvogel mansion and give them to his wife, Fran Isabella
+ Siebenburg, in his&mdash;Sir Seitz&rsquo;s&mdash;name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of the house occupied by the master cloth-maker Deichsler, where
+ the Swiss had his quarters, the tailor Ploss stopped him. He came from
+ Heinz Schorlin, and reminded Siebenburg of his by no means inconsiderable
+ debt; but the latter begged him to have patience a little longer, as he
+ had met with heavy losses at the gaming table the night before, and Ploss
+ agreed to wait till St. Heinrich&rsquo;s day&mdash;[15th July].
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many besides the tailor had large demands! and when could Seitz begin
+ to cancel his debts? The thought even darted through his mind that instead
+ of carrying his good intentions into effect he had not paid for the roses&mdash;but
+ flowers were so cheap in June!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, he had no time to dwell upon this trifle, for while quieting the
+ tailor he had noticed a girl who, notwithstanding the heat of the day,
+ kept her face hidden so far under her Riese&mdash;[A kerchief for the
+ head, resembling a veil, made of fine linen.]&mdash;that nothing but her
+ eyes and the upper part of her nose were visible. She had given him a
+ hasty nod and, if he was not mistaken, it was the Ortlieb sisters&rsquo; maid,
+ whom he had often seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he again looked after the muffled figure she was hurrying up the
+ cloth-maker&rsquo;s stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Katterle herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first landing she had glanced back, and in doing so pushed the
+ kerchief aside. What could she want with the Swiss? It could scarcely be
+ anything except to bring him a message from one of her mistresses,
+ doubtless Els.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he had seen aright, and acted wisely not to believe the countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Wolff! Deceived even when a betrothed lover! He did not exactly wish
+ him happiness even now, and yet he pitied him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seitz could now stand before Heinz Schorlin with the utmost confidence.
+ The Swiss must know how matters stood between the older E and him self,
+ though his knightly duty constrained him to deny it to others.
+ Siebenburg&rsquo;s self-reproaches had been vain. He had suspected no innocent
+ girl&mdash;only called a faithless betrothed bride by the fitting name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The matter concerning his estate of Tannenreuth was worse. It had been
+ gambled away, and therefore forfeited. He had already given it up in
+ imagination; it was only necessary to have the transfer made by the
+ notary. The Swiss should learn how a true knight satisfies even the
+ heaviest losses at the gaming table. He would not spare Heinz Schorlin. He
+ meant to reproach the unprincipled fellow who by base arts had alienated
+ the betrothed bride of an honest man&mdash;for that Wolff certainly was&mdash;when
+ adverse circumstances prevented his watching the faithless woman himself.
+ Twisting the ends of his mustache with two rapid motions, he knocked at
+ the young knight&rsquo;s door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Twice, three times, Siebenburg rapped, but in vain. Yet the Swiss was
+ there. His armour-bearer had told Seitz so downstairs, and he heard his
+ voice within. At last he struck the door so heavily with the handle of his
+ dagger that the whole house echoed with the sound. This succeeded; the
+ door opened, and Biberli&rsquo;s narrow head appeared. He looked at the visitor
+ in astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell your master,&rdquo; said the latter imperiously, recognising Heinz
+ Schorlin&rsquo;s servant, &ldquo;that if he closes his lodgings against dunning
+ tradesfolk&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By your knock, my lord,&rdquo; Biberli interrupted, &ldquo;we really thought the
+ sword cutler had come with hammer and anvil. My master, however, need have
+ no fear of creditors; for though you may not yet know it, Sir Knight,
+ there are generous noblemen in Nuremberg during the Reichstag who throw
+ away castles and lands in his favour at the gaming table.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And hurl their fists even more swiftly into the faces of insolent
+ varlets!&rdquo; cried Siebenburg, raising his right hand threateningly. &ldquo;Now
+ take me to your master at once!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or, at any rate, within his four walls,&rdquo; replied the servitor, preceding
+ Seitz into the small anteroom from which he had come. &ldquo;As to the &lsquo;at
+ once,&rsquo; that rests with the saints, for you must know&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense!&rdquo; interrupted the knight. &ldquo;Tell your master that Siebenburg has
+ neither time nor inclination to wait in his antechamber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And certainly nothing could afford Sir Heinz Schorlin greater pleasure
+ than your speedy departure,&rdquo; Biberli retorted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Insolent knave!&rdquo; thundered Seitz, who perceived the insult conveyed in
+ the reply, grasping the neck of his long robe; but Biberli felt that he
+ had seized only the hood, swiftly unclasped it, and as he hurried to a
+ side door, through which loud voices echoed, Siebenburg heard the low cry
+ of a woman. It came from behind a curtain spread over some clothes that
+ hung on the wall, and Seitz said to himself that the person must be the
+ maid whom he had just met. She was in Els Ortlieb&rsquo;s service, and he was
+ glad to have this living witness at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he could induce Heinz to talk with him here in the anteroom it would be
+ impossible for her to escape. So, feigning that he had noticed nothing, he
+ pretended to be much amused by Biberli&rsquo;s nimble flight. Forcing a laugh,
+ he flung the hood at his head, and before he opened the door of the
+ adjoining room again asked to speak to his master. Biberli replied that he
+ must wait; the knight was holding a religious conversation with a devout
+ old mendicant friar. If he might venture to offer counsel, he would not
+ interrupt his master now; he had received very sad news, and the tailor
+ who came to take his measure for his mourning garments had just left him.
+ If Seitz had any business with the knight, and expected any benefit from
+ his favour and rare generosity&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Siebenburg let him get no farther. Forgetting the stratagem which was
+ to lure Heinz hither, he burst into a furious rage, fiercely declaring
+ that he sought favour and generosity from no man, least of all a Heinz
+ Schorlin and, advancing to the door, flung the servant who barred his
+ passage so rudely against the wall that he uttered a loud cry of pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere it had died away Heinz appeared on the threshold. A long white robe
+ increased the pallor of his face, but yesterday so ruddy, and his reddened
+ eyes showed traces of recent tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he perceived what had occurred, and saw his faithful follower, with a
+ face distorted by pain, rubbing his shoulder, his cheeks flushed angrily,
+ and with just indignation he rebuked Siebenburg for his unseemly intrusion
+ into his quarters and his brutal conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, without heeding the knight, he asked Biberli if he was seriously
+ injured, and when the latter answered in the negative he again turned to
+ Seitz and briefly enquired what he wanted. If he desired to own that,
+ while in a state of senseless intoxication he had slandered modest
+ maidens, and was ignorant of his actions when he staked his castle and
+ lands against the gold lying before him, Heinz Schorlin, he might keep
+ Tannenreuth. The form in which he would revoke his calumny to Jungfrau
+ Ortlieb he would discuss with him later. At present his mind was occupied
+ with more important matters than the senseless talk of a drunkard, and he
+ would therefore request the knight to leave him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Heinz uttered the last words he pointed to the door, and this
+ indiscreet, anything but inviting gesture robbed Siebenburg of the last
+ remnant of composure maintained with so much difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is more infuriating to weak natures than to have others expect
+ them to pursue a course opposite to that which, after a victory over baser
+ impulses, they have recognised as the right one and intended to follow. He
+ who had come to resign his lost property voluntarily was regarded by the
+ Swiss as an importunate mendicant; he who stood here to prove that he was
+ perfectly justified in accusing Els Ortlieb of a crime, Schorlin expected
+ to make a revocation against his better knowledge. And what price did the
+ insolent fellow demand for the restored estate and the right to brand him
+ as a slanderer? The pleasure of seeing the unwelcome guest retire as
+ quickly as possible. No greater degree of contempt and offensive
+ presumption could be imagined, and as Seitz set his own admirable conduct
+ during the past few hours far above the profligate behaviour of the Swiss,
+ he was fired with honest indignation and, far from heeding the white robe
+ and altered countenance of his enemy, gave the reins to his wrath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pale with fury, he flung, as it were, the estate the Swiss had won from
+ him at his feet, amid no lack of insulting words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first Heinz listened to the luckless gambler&rsquo;s outbreak of rage in
+ silent amazement, but when the latter began to threaten, and even clapped
+ his hand on his sword, the composure which never failed him in the
+ presence of anything that resembled danger quickly returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had felt a strong aversion to Siebenburg from their first meeting, and
+ the slanderous words with which he had dragged in the dust the good name
+ of a maiden who, Heinz knew, had incurred suspicion solely through his
+ fault, had filled him with scorn. So, with quiet contempt, he let him rave
+ on; but when the person to whom he had just been talking&mdash;the old
+ Minorite monk whom he had met on the highroad and accompanied to Nuremberg&mdash;appeared
+ at the door of the next room, he stopped Seitz with a firm &ldquo;Enough!&rdquo;
+ pointed to the old man, and in brief, simple words, gave the castle and
+ lands of Tannenreuth to the monastery of the mendicant friars of the
+ Franciscan order in Nuremberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siebenburg listened with a contemptuous shrug of the shoulders, then he
+ said bitterly: &ldquo;I thought that a life of poverty was the chief rule in the
+ order of St. Francis. But no matter! May the gift won at the gaming table
+ profit the holy Brothers. For you, Sir Knight, it will gain the favour of
+ the Saint of Assisi, whose power is renowned. So you have acted wisely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he hesitated; he felt choked with rage. But while the Minorite was
+ thanking Heinz for the generous gift, Siebenburg&rsquo;s eyes again rested on
+ the curtain behind which the maid was concealed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now his turn to deal the Swiss a blow. The old mendicant friar was
+ a venerable person whose bearing commanded respect, and Heinz seemed to
+ value his good opinion. For that very reason the Minorite should learn the
+ character of this patron of his order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since you so earnestly desire to be rid of my company, Sir Heinz
+ Schorlin,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;I will fulfil your wish. Only just now you
+ appeared to consider certain words uttered last night in reference to a
+ lady&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let that pass,&rdquo; interrupted Heinz with marked emphasis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might expect that desire,&rdquo; replied Siebenburg scornfully; &ldquo;for as you
+ are in the act of gaining the favour of Heaven by pious works, it will be
+ agreeable to you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What?&rdquo; asked the Swiss sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will surely desire,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;to change conduct which is an
+ offence to honourable people, and still more to the saints above. You who
+ have estranged a betrothed bride from her lover and lured her to midnight
+ interviews, no doubt suppose yourself safe from the future husband, whom
+ the result of a duel&mdash;as you know&mdash;will keep from her side. But
+ Wolff happens to be my brother-in-law, and if I feel disposed to take his
+ place and break a lance with you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz, pale as death, interrupted him, exclaiming in a tone of the deepest
+ indignation: &ldquo;So be it, then. We will have a tilt with lances, and then we
+ will fight with our swords.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siebenburg looked at him an instant, as if puzzled by his adversary&rsquo;s
+ sharp assault, but quickly regained his composure and answered: &ldquo;Agreed!
+ In the joust&mdash;[single combat in the tourney]&mdash;with sharp weapons
+ it will soon appear who has right on his side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right?&rdquo; asked Heinz in astonishment, shrugging his shoulders scornfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, right,&rdquo; cried the other furiously, &ldquo;which you have ceased to prize.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So far from it,&rdquo; the Swiss answered quietly, &ldquo;that before we discuss the
+ mode of combat with the herald I must ask you to recall the insults with
+ which yesterday, in your drunkenness, you injured the honour of a virtuous
+ maiden in the presence of other knights and gentlemen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose protector,&rdquo; laughed Seitz, &ldquo;you seem to have constituted yourself,
+ by your own choice, in her bridegroom&rsquo;s place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I accept the position,&rdquo; replied Heinz with cool deliberation. &ldquo;Not you,
+ nay, I will fight in Wolff Eysvogel&rsquo;s stead&mdash;and with his consent, I
+ think. I know him, and esteem him so highly&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you invite his plighted bride to nocturnal love dalliance, and
+ exchange love messages with her,&rdquo; interrupted the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was too much for Heinz Schorlin and, with honest indignation, he
+ cried: &ldquo;Prove it! Or, by our Lord&rsquo;s blood!&mdash;My sword, Biberli!&mdash;Spite
+ of the peace proclaimed throughout the land, you shall learn, ere you open
+ your slandering lips again&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he paused suddenly, for while Biberli withdrew to obey the command
+ which, though it probably suited his wishes, he was slow in executing,
+ doubtless that he might save his master from a reckless act, Siebenburg,
+ frantic with fury, rushed to the curtain. Ere Heinz could interfere, he
+ jerked it back so violently that he tore it from the fastenings and forced
+ the terrified maid, whose arm he grasped, to approach the knight with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz had seen Katterle only by moonlight and in the twilight, so her
+ unexpected appearance gave him no information. He gazed at her
+ enquiringly, with as much amazement as though she had risen from the
+ earth. Siebenburg gave him no time to collect his thoughts, but dragged
+ the girl before the monk and, raising his voice in menace, commanded:
+ &ldquo;Tell the holy Brother who you are, woman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Katterle of Sarnen,&rdquo; she answered, weeping. &ldquo;And whom do you serve?&rdquo; the
+ knight demanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Ortlieb sisters, Jungfrau Els and Jungfrau Eva,&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The beautiful Es, as they are called here, holy Brother,&rdquo; said Siebenburg
+ with a malicious laugh, &ldquo;whose maid I recognise in this girl. If she did
+ not come hither to mend the linen of her mistress&rsquo;s friend&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here Biberli, who on his return to the anteroom had been terrified by
+ the sight of his sweetheart, interrupted the knight by turning to Heinz
+ with the exclamation: &ldquo;Forgive me, my lord. Surely you know that she is my
+ betrothed bride. She came just now&mdash;scarcely a dozen Paternosters
+ ago-to talk with me about the marriage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle had listened in surprise to the bold words of her true and
+ steadfast lover, yet she was not ill pleased, for he had never before
+ spoken of their marriage voluntarily. At the same time she felt the
+ obligation of aiding him and nodded assent, while Siebenburg rudely
+ interrupted the servant by calling to the monk: &ldquo;Lies and deception, pious
+ Brother. Black must be whitened here. She stole, muffled, to her
+ mistress&rsquo;s gallant, to bring a message from the older beautiful E, with
+ whom this godly knight was surprised last night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the passionate outbreak of his foe restored the Swiss to composure.
+ With a calmness which seemed to the servant incomprehensible, though it
+ filled him with delight, he turned to the monk, saying earnestly and
+ simply: &ldquo;Appearances may be against me, Pater Benedictus. I will tell you
+ all the circumstances at once. How this maid came here will be explained
+ later. As for the maiden whom this man calls the older beautiful E, never&mdash;I
+ swear it by our saint&mdash;have I sought her love or received from her
+ the smallest token of her favour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then turning to Siebenburg he continued, still calmly, but with menacing
+ sternness: &ldquo;If I judge you aright, you will now go from one to another
+ telling whom you found here, in order to injure the fair fame of the
+ maiden whom your wife&rsquo;s valiant brother chose for his bride, and to place
+ my name with hers in the pillory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where Els Ortlieb belongs rather than in the honourable home of a
+ Nuremberg patrician,&rdquo; retorted Siebenburg furiously. &ldquo;If she became too
+ base for my brother-in-law, the fault is yours. I shall certainly take
+ care that he learns the truth and knows where, and at what an hour, his
+ betrothed bride met foreign heartbreakers. To open the eyes of others
+ concerning her will also be a pleasant duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz sprang towards Biberli to snatch the sword from his hand, but he
+ held it firmly, seeking his master&rsquo;s eyes with a look of warning entreaty;
+ but his faithful solicitude would have been futile had not the monk lent
+ his aid. The old man&rsquo;s whispered exhortation to his young friend to spare
+ the imperial master, to whom he was so deeply indebted, a fresh sorrow,
+ restored to the infuriated young knight his power of self-control. Pushing
+ the thick locks back from his brow with a hasty movement, he answered in a
+ tone of the most intense contempt:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do what you will, but remember this: Beware that, ere the joust begins,
+ you do not ride the rail instead of the charger. The maidens whose pure
+ name you so yearn to sully are of noble birth, and if they appear to
+ complain of you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I will proclaim the truth,&rdquo; Siebenburg retorted, &ldquo;and the Court of
+ Love and Pursuivant at Arms will deprive you, the base seducer, of the
+ right to enter the lists rather than me, my handsome knight!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; replied Heinz quietly. &ldquo;You can discuss the other points with
+ my herald. Wolff Eysvogel, too&mdash;rely upon it&mdash;will challenge
+ you, if you fulfil your base design.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, turning his back upon Seitz without a word of farewell, he motioned
+ the monk towards the open door of the antechamber, and letting him lead
+ the way, closed it behind them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will come to you, you boaster!&rdquo; Siebenburg shouted contemptuously
+ after the Swiss, and then turned to Biberli and the maid with a
+ patronising question; but the former, without even opening his lips in
+ reply, hastened to the door and, with a significant gesture, induced the
+ knight to retire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seitz submitted and hastened down the stairs, his eyes flashing as if he
+ had won a great victory. At the door of the house he grasped the hilt of
+ his sword, and then, with rapid movements, twisted the ends of his
+ mustache. The surprise he had given the insolent Swiss by the discovery of
+ his love messenger&mdash;it had acted like a spell&mdash;could not have
+ succeeded better. And what had Schorlin alleged in justification? Nothing,
+ absolutely nothing at all. Wolff Eysvogel&rsquo;s herald should challenge the
+ Swiss, not him, who meant to open the deceived lover&rsquo;s eyes concerning his
+ betrothed bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He eagerly anticipated the joust and the sword combat with Heinz. The
+ sharper the herald&rsquo;s conditions the better. He had hurled more powerful
+ foes than the Swiss from the saddle, and from knightly &ldquo;courtoisie&rdquo; not
+ even used his strength without consideration. Heinz Schorlin should feel
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gazed around him like a victor, and throwing his head back haughtily he
+ went down the Bindergasse, this time past the Franciscan monastery towards
+ the Town Hall and the fish market. Eber, the sword cutler, lived there
+ and, spite of the large sum he owed him, Seitz wished to talk with him
+ about the sharp weapons he needed for the joust. On his way he gave his
+ imagination free course. It showed him his impetuous onset, his enemy&rsquo;s
+ fall in the sand, the sword combat, and the end of the joust, the swift
+ death of his hated foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These pictures of the future occupied his thoughts so deeply that he
+ neither saw nor heard what was passing around him. Many a person for whom
+ he forgot to turn aside looked angrily after him. Suddenly he found his
+ farther progress arrested. The crier had just raised his voice to announce
+ some important tidings to the people who thronged around him between the
+ Town Hall and the Franciscan monastery. Perhaps he might have succeeded in
+ forcing a passage through the concourse, but when he heard the name &ldquo;Ernst
+ Ortlieb,&rdquo; in the monotonous speech of the city crier, he followed the
+ remainder of his notice. It made known to the citizens of Nuremberg that,
+ since the thunderstorm of the preceding night, a maid had been missing
+ from the house of the Honourable Herr Ernst Ortlieb, of the Council, a
+ Swiss by birth, Katharina of Sarnen, called Katterle, a woman of blameless
+ reputation. Whoever should learn anything concerning the girl was
+ requested to bring the news to the Ortlieb residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What did this mean?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the girl had vanished at midnight and not returned to her employers
+ since, she could scarcely have sought Heinz Schorlin as a messenger of
+ love from Els. But if she had not come to the Swiss from one of the Es,
+ what proof did he, Seitz, possess of the guilt of his brother-in-law&rsquo;s
+ bride? How should he succeed in making Wolff understand that his beloved
+ Els had wronged him if the maid was to play no part in proving it?
+ Yesterday evening he had not believed firmly in her guilt; that very
+ morning it had even seemed to him a shameful thing that he had cast
+ suspicion upon her in the presence of others. The encounter with the maid
+ at the Swiss knight&rsquo;s lodgings had first induced him to insist on his
+ accusation so defiantly. And now? If Heinz Schorlin, with the help of the
+ Ortliebs, succeeded in proving the innocence of those whom he had accused,
+ then&mdash;ah, he must not pursue that train of thought&mdash;then, at the
+ lady&rsquo;s accusation, he might be deprived of the right to enter the lists in
+ the tournament; then all the disgrace which could be inflicted upon the
+ slanderous defamer of character threatened him; then Wolff would summon
+ him to a reckoning, as well as Heinz Schorlin. Wolff, whom he had begun to
+ hate since, with his resistless arm of iron, he had exposed him for the
+ first time to the malicious glee of the bystanders in the fencing hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet it was not this which suddenly bowed his head and loudly admonished
+ him that he had again behaved like a reckless fool. Cowardice was his
+ least fault. He did not fear what might befall him in battle. Whether he
+ would be barred out from the lists was the terrible question which
+ darkened the bright morning already verging towards noon. He had charged
+ Els with perfidy in the presence of others, and thereby exposed her, the
+ plighted bride of a knight, to the utmost scorn. And besides&mdash;fool
+ that he was!&mdash;his brothers had again attacked a train of waggons on
+ the highway and would soon be called to account as robbers. This would
+ certainly lead the Swiss and others to investigate his own past, and the
+ Pursuivant at Arms excluded from joust and tourney whoever &ldquo;injured trade
+ or merchant.&rdquo; What would not his enemy, who was in such high favour with
+ the Emperor, do to compass his destruction? But&mdash;and at the thought
+ he uttered a low imprecation&mdash;how could he ride to the joust if his
+ father-in-law closed his strong box which, moreover, was said to be empty?
+ If the old man was forced to declare himself bankrupt Siebenburg&rsquo;s
+ creditors would instantly seize his splendid chargers and costly suits of
+ armour, scarcely one half of which were paid for. How much money he needed
+ as security in case of defeat! His sole property was debts. Yet the
+ thought seemed like an illumination&mdash;his wife&rsquo;s valuable old jewels
+ could probably still be saved, and she might be induced to give him part
+ of the ornaments for the tournament. He need only make her understand that
+ his honour and that of the twins were at stake. Would that Heaven might
+ spare his boys such hours of anxiety and self-accusation!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what was this? Was he deluding himself? Did his over-excited
+ imagination make him hear a death knell pealing for his honour and his
+ hopes, which must be borne to their grave? Yet no! All the citizens and
+ peasants, men and women, great and small, who thronged the salt market,
+ which he had just entered, raised their heads to listen with him; for from
+ every steeple at once rang the mournful death knell which announced to the
+ city the decease of an &ldquo;honourable&rdquo; member of the Council, a secular or
+ ecclesiastical prince. The mourning banner was already waving on the roof
+ of the Town Hall, towards which he turned. Men in the service of the city
+ were hoisting other black flags upon the almshouse, and now the Hegelein&mdash;[Proclaimer
+ of decrees]&mdash;in mourning garments, mounted on a steed caparisoned
+ with crepe, came riding by at the head of other horsemen clad in sable,
+ proclaiming to the throng that Hartmann, the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s promising
+ son, had found an untimely end. The noble youth was drowned while bathing
+ in the Rhine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed as if a frost had blighted a blooming garden. The gay bustle in
+ the market place was paralysed. The loud sobs of many women blended with
+ exclamations of grief and pity from bearded lips which had just been
+ merrily bargaining for salt and fish, meat and game. Messengers with crepe
+ on their hats or caps forced a passage through the throng, and a train of
+ German knights, priests, and monks passed with bowed heads, bearing
+ candles in their hands, between the Town Hail and St. Sebald&rsquo;s Church
+ towards the corn magazine and the citadel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile dark clouds were spreading slowly over the bright-blue vault of
+ the June sky. A flock of rooks hovered around the Town Hall, and then
+ flew, with loud cries, towards the castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seitz watched them indifferently. Even the great omnipotent sovereign
+ there had his own cross to bear; tears flowed in his proud palace also,
+ and sighs of anguish were heard. And this was just. He had never wished
+ evil to any one who did not injure him, but even if he could have averted
+ this sore sorrow from the Emperor Rudolph he would not have stirred a
+ finger. His coronation had been a blow to him and to his brothers.
+ Formerly they had been permitted to work their will on the highways, but
+ the Hapsburg, the Swiss, had pitilessly stopped their brigandage. Now for
+ the first time robber-knights were sentenced and their castles destroyed.
+ The Emperor meant to transform Germany into a sheepfold, Absbach
+ exclaimed. The Siebenburg brothers were his faithful allies, and though
+ they complained that the joyous, knightly clank of arms would be silenced
+ under such a sovereign, they themselves took care that the loud battle
+ shouts, cries of pain, and shrieks for aid were not hushed on the roads
+ used for traffic by the merchants. But this was not Seitz&rsquo;s sole reason
+ for shrugging his shoulders at the expressions of the warmest sympathy
+ which rose around him. The Emperor was tenderly attached to Heinz
+ Schorlin, and the man who was so kindly disposed to his foe could never be
+ his friend. Perhaps to-morrow Rudolph might behead his brothers and
+ elevate Heinz Schorlin to still greater honors. Seitz, whose eyes had
+ overflowed with tears when the warder of his native castle lost his aged
+ wife, who had been his nurse, now found no cause to grieve with the
+ mourners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he continued his way, burdened with his own anxieties, amid the tears
+ and lamentations of the multitude. The numerous retinue of servants in the
+ Eysvogel mansion were moving restlessly to and fro; the news of the
+ prince&rsquo;s death had reached them. Herr Casper had left the house. He was
+ probably at Herr Ernst Ortlieb&rsquo;s. If the latter had already learned what
+ he, Seitz Siebenburg, had said at the gaming table of his daughter,
+ perhaps his hand had dealt the first decisive blow at the tottering house
+ where, so long as it stood, his wife and the twins would under any
+ circumstances find shelter. Resentment against the Swiss, hatred, and
+ jealousy, had made him a knave, and at the same time the most shortsighted
+ of fools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he approached the second story, in which the nursery was situated and
+ where he expected to find his wife, it suddenly seemed as if a star had
+ risen amid the darkness. If he poured out his heart to Isabella and let
+ her share the terrible torture of his soul, perhaps it would awaken a
+ tender sympathy in the woman who still loved him, and who was dearer to
+ him than he could express. Her jewels were certainly very valuable, but
+ far more precious was the hope of being permitted to rest his aching head
+ upon her breast and feel her slender white hand push back the hair from
+ his anxious brow. Oh, if misfortune would draw her again as near to him as
+ during the early months of their married life and directly before it, he
+ could rise from his depression with fresh vigour and transform the battle,
+ now half lost, into victory. Besides, she was clever and had power over
+ the hearts of her family, so perhaps she might point out the pathway of
+ escape, which his brain, unused to reflection, could not discover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His heart throbbed high as, animated by fresh hope, he entered the
+ corridor from which opened the rooms which he occupied with her. But his
+ wish to find her alone was not to be fulfilled; several voices reached
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was the meaning of the scene?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Isabella, her face deadly pale, and her tall figure drawn up to its full
+ height, stood before the door of the nursery with a stern, cold expression
+ on her lovely lips, like a princess pronouncing sentence upon a criminal.
+ She was panting for breath, and before her, her mother, and her
+ grandmother, Countess Cordula&rsquo;s pretty page, whom Siebenburg knew only too
+ well, was moving to and fro with eager gestures. He held in his hand the
+ bunch of roses which Seitz had sent to his newly-won wife and darling as a
+ token of reconciliation, and Siebenburg heard his clear, boyish tones
+ urge: &ldquo;I have already said so and, noble lady, you may believe me, this
+ bouquet, which the woman brought us, was intended for my gracious
+ mistress, Countess von Montfort. It was meant to give her a fair morning
+ greeting, and&mdash;Do not let this vex you, for it was done only in the
+ joyous game of love, as custom dictated. Ever since we came here your lord
+ has daily honoured my countess with the loveliest flowers whose buds
+ unfold in the region near the Rhine. But my gracious mistress, as you have
+ already heard, believes that you, noble lady, have a better right to these
+ unusually beautiful children of the spring than she who last evening bade
+ your lord behold in you, not in her, fair lady, the most fitting object of
+ his homage. So she sent me hither, most gracious madam, to lay what is
+ yours at your feet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, the agile boy, with a graceful bow, tried to place the
+ flowers in Isabella&rsquo;s hand, but she would not receive the bouquet, and the
+ abrupt gesture with which she pushed them back flung the nosegay on the
+ floor. Paying no further heed to it, she answered in a cold, haughty tone:
+ &ldquo;Thank your mistress, and tell her that I appreciated her kind intention,
+ but the roses which she sent me were too full of thorns.&rdquo; Then, turning
+ her back on the page, she advanced with majestic pride to the door of the
+ nursery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her mother and grandmother tried to follow, but Siebenburg pressed between
+ them and his wife, and his voice thrilled with the anguish of a soul
+ overwhelmed by despair as he cried imploringly: &ldquo;Hear me, Isabella! There
+ is a most unhappy misunderstanding here. By all that is sacred to me, by
+ our love, by our children, I swear those roses were intended for you, my
+ heart&rsquo;s treasure, and for you alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Countess Rotterbach cut him short by exclaiming with a loud chuckle:
+ &ldquo;The unripe early pears will probably come from the fruit market to the
+ housewife&rsquo;s hands later; the roses found their way to Countess von
+ Montfort more quickly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The malicious words were followed like an echo by Frau Rosalinde&rsquo;s tearful
+ &ldquo;It is only too true. This also!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight, unheeding the angry, upbraiding woman, hastened in pursuit of
+ his wife to throw himself at her feet and confess the whole truth; but
+ she, who had heard long before that Sir Seitz was paying Countess Cordula
+ more conspicuous attention than beseemed a faithful husband, and who,
+ after the happy hour so recently experienced, had expected, until the
+ arrival of the page, the dawn of brighter, better days, now felt doubly
+ abased, deceived, betrayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without vouchsafing the unfortunate man even a glance or a word, she
+ entered the nursery before he reached her; but he, feeling that he must
+ follow her at any cost, laid his hand on the lock of the door and tried to
+ open it. The strong oak resisted his shaking and pulling. Isabella had
+ shot the heavy iron bolt into its place. Seitz first knocked with his
+ fingers and then with his clenched fist, until the grandmother exclaimed:
+ &ldquo;You have destroyed the house, at least spare the doors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uttering a fierce imprecation, he went to his own chamber, hastily thrust
+ into his pockets all the gold and valuables which he possessed, and then
+ went out again into the street. His way led him past Kuni, the flower girl
+ from whom he had bought the roses. The beggar who was to carry them to his
+ wife did not hear distinctly, on account of her bandaged head, and not
+ understanding the knight, went to the girl from whom she had seen him
+ purchase the blossoms to ask where they belonged. Kuni pointed to the
+ lodgings of the von Montforts, where she had already sent so many bouquets
+ for Siebenburg. The latter saw both the flower-seller and the beggar
+ woman, but did not attempt to learn how the roses which he intended for
+ his wife had reached Countess Cordula. He suspected the truth, but felt no
+ desire to have it confirmed. Fate meant to destroy him, he had learned
+ that. The means employed mattered little. It would have been folly to
+ strive against the superior power of such an adversary. Let ruin pursue
+ its course. His sole wish was to forget his misery, though but for a brief
+ time. He knew he could accomplish this by drink, so he entered the Mirror
+ wine tavern and drained bumper after bumper with a speed which made the
+ landlord, though he was accustomed to marvellous performances on the part
+ of his guests, shake the head set on his immensely thick neck somewhat
+ suspiciously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The few persons present had gathered in a group and were talking sadly
+ about the great misfortune which had assailed the Emperor. The universal
+ grief displayed so hypocritically, as Seitz thought, angered him, and he
+ gazed at them with such a sullen, threatening look that no one ventured to
+ approach him. Sometimes he stared into his wine, sometimes into vacancy,
+ sometimes at the vaulted ceiling above. He harshly rebuffed the landlord
+ and the waiter who tried to accost him, but when the peasant&rsquo;s prediction
+ was fulfilled and the thunderstorm of the preceding night was followed at
+ midnight by one equally severe, he arose and left the hostelry. The rain
+ tempted him into the open air. The taproom was so sultry, so terribly
+ sultry. The moisture of the heavens would refresh him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The fury of the tempest had ceased, but the sky was still obscured by
+ clouds. A cool breeze blew from the northeast through the damp, heavy air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz Schorlin was coming from the fortress, and after crossing the
+ Diligengasse went directly towards his lodgings. His coat of mail, spurs,
+ and helmeted head were accoutrements for the saddle, yet he was on foot. A
+ throng of men, women, and children, whispering eagerly together,
+ accompanied him. One pointed him out to another, as if there was something
+ unusual about him. Two stalwart soldiers in the pay of the city followed,
+ carrying his saddle and the equipments of his horse, and kept back the
+ boys or women who boldly attempted to press too near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz did not heed the throng. He looked pale, and his thick locks,
+ falling in disorder from under his helmet, floated around his face. The
+ chain armour on his limbs and his long surcoat were covered with mire. The
+ young knight, usually so trim, looked disordered and, as it were, thrown
+ off his balance. His bright face bore the impress of a horror still
+ unconquered, as he gazed restlessly into vacancy, and seemed to be seeking
+ something, now above and now in the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pretty young hostess, Frau Barbara Deichsler, holding her little
+ three-year-old daughter by the hand, stood in front of the house in the
+ Bindergasse where he lodged. The knight usually had a pleasant or merry
+ word for her, and a gay jest or bit of candy for Annele. Nay, the young
+ noble, who was fond of children, liked to toss the little one in his arms
+ and play with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Barbara had already heard that, as Heinz was returning from the
+ fortress, the lightning had struck directly in front of him, killing his
+ beautiful dun charger, which she had so often admired. It had happened
+ directly before the eyes of the guard, and the news had gone from man to
+ man of the incredible miracle which had saved the life of the young Swiss,
+ the dearest friend of the Emperor&rsquo;s dead son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Heinz approached the door Frau Barbara stepped forward with Annele to
+ congratulate him that the dear saints had so graciously protected him, but
+ he only answered gravely: &ldquo;What are we mortals? Rejoice in the child, Frau
+ Barbara, so long as she is spared to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He passed into the entry as he spoke, but Frau Deichsler hastily prepared
+ to call his armour-bearer, a grey-bearded Swiss who had served the
+ knight&rsquo;s father and slept away the hours not devoted to his duties or to
+ the wine cup. He must supply the place of Biberli, who had left the house
+ a long time before, and for the first time in many years was keeping his
+ master waiting. But Heinz knew where he was, and while the armour-bearer
+ was divesting him, awkwardly enough, of his suit of mail and gala attire,
+ he was often seized with anxiety about his faithful follower, though many
+ things with which the morning had burdened his soul lay nearer to his
+ heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had he been so lucky in gambling as last night in the Duke of
+ Pomerania&rsquo;s quarters. Biberli&rsquo;s advice to trust to the two and five had
+ been repeatedly tested, and besides the estate of Tannenreuth, which
+ Siebenburg had staked against all his winnings, he had brought home more
+ gold than he had ever seen before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet he had gone to rest in a mood by no means joyous. It was painful to
+ him to deprive any one of his lands and home. He had even resisted
+ accepting Siebenburg&rsquo;s reckless stake, but his obstinate persistence and
+ demand could not be opposed. The calumnies by which the &ldquo;Mustache&rdquo; had
+ assailed the innocent Els Ortlieb haunted him, and many others had shown
+ their indignation against the traducer. Probably thirty gentlemen at the
+ gaming table had been witnesses of these incidents, and if, to-morrow, it
+ was in everybody&rsquo;s mouth that he, Heinz, had been caught at mid-night in
+ an interview with the elder beautiful Ortlieb E, the fault was his, and he
+ would be burdened with the guilt of having sullied the honour and name of
+ a pure maiden, the betrothed bride of an estimable man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Eva!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he woke in the morning his first thought had been of her. She had
+ seemed more desirable than ever. But his relatives at home, and the
+ counsel Biberli had urged upon him during their nocturnal wandering, had
+ constantly interposed between him and the maiden whom he so ardently
+ loved. Besides, it seemed certain that the passion which filled his heart
+ must end unhappily. Else what was the meaning of this unexampled good luck
+ at the gaming table? The torture of this thought had kept him awake a long
+ time. Then he had sunk into a deep, dreamless sleep. In the morning
+ Biberli, full of delight, roused him, and displayed three large bags
+ filled with florins and zecchins, the gains of the night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servant had begged to be permitted to count the golden blessing, which
+ in itself would suffice to buy the right to use the bridge from the city
+ of Luzerne twice over, and the best thing about which was that it would
+ restore the peace of mind of his lady mother at Schorlin Castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, in the name of all the saints, let him continue his life of liberty,
+ and leave the somnambulist to walk over the roofs, and suffer Altrosen,
+ who had worn her colour so patiently, to wed the countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how long the servitor&rsquo;s already narrow face became when Heinz, with a
+ grave resolution new to Biberli, answered positively that no ducats would
+ stray from these bags to Schorlin Castle. If, last night, anxiety had
+ burdened his mind like the corpse of a murdered man, these gains weighed
+ upon his soul like the loathsome body of a dead cat. Never in his whole
+ life had he felt so poor as with this devil&rsquo;s money. The witch-bait which
+ Biberli had given him with the two and the five had drawn it out of the
+ pockets of his fellow gamblers. He would be neither a cut-purse nor a
+ dealer in the black arts. The wages of hell should depart as quickly as
+ they came. While speaking, he seized the second largest bag and gave it to
+ the servant, exclaiming: &ldquo;Now keep your promise to Katterle like an honest
+ man. The poor thing will have a hard time at her employer&rsquo;s. I make but
+ one condition: you are to remain in my service. I can&rsquo;t do without you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the armour-bearer, in the agile Biberli&rsquo;s place, was handing him the
+ garments to be worn in the house, Heinz again remembered how the faithful
+ fellow had thrown himself on his knees and kissed his master&rsquo;s hands and
+ arms in the excess of his joyful surprise, and yet he had felt as if a
+ dark cloud was shadowing the brightness of his soul. The morning sun had
+ shone so radiantly into his window, and Annele had come with such
+ bewitching shyness to bring him a little bunch of lilies of the valley
+ with a rose in the centre, and a pleasant morning greeting from her
+ mother, that the cloud could not remain, yet it had only parted
+ occasionally to close again speedily, though it was less dense and dark
+ than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet he had taken the child in his arms and looked down into the narrow
+ street to show her the people going to market so gaily in the early
+ morning. But he soon put her down again, for he recognised in a horseman
+ approaching on a weary steed Count Curt Gleichen, the most intimate friend
+ of young Prince Hartmann and himself, and when he called to him he had
+ slid from his saddle with a faint greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz instantly rushed out of the house to meet him, but he had found him
+ beside his steed, which had sunk on its knees, and then, trembling and
+ panting, dragged itself, supported by its rider&rsquo;s hand, into the entry.
+ There it fell, rolled over on its side, and stretched its limbs stiffly in
+ death. It was the third horse which the messenger had killed since he left
+ the Rhine, yet he was sure of arriving too soon; for he had to announce to
+ a father the death of his promising son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz listened, utterly overwhelmed, to the narrative of the eye-witness,
+ who described how Hartmann, ere he could stretch out a hand to save him,
+ had been dragged into the depths by the waves of the Rhine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the sunny brightness of the morning the young Swiss had had a
+ presentiment of some great misfortune, and had told himself that he would
+ welcome it if it relieved him from the burden which had darkened his soul
+ since the disgraceful good luck of the previous night. Now it had
+ happened, and how gladly he would have continued to bear the heaviest load
+ to undo the past. He had sobbed on his friend&rsquo;s breast like a child,
+ accusing Heaven for having visited him with this affliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hartmann had been not only his friend but his pupil&mdash;and what a
+ pupil! He had instructed him in horsemanship and the use of the sword, and
+ during the last year shared everything with him and young Count Gleichen
+ as if they were three brothers and, like a brother, the prince had
+ constantly grown closer to his heart. Had he, Heinz, accompanied Hartmann
+ to the Rhine and been permitted to remain with him, neither or both would
+ have fallen victims to the river! And Hartmann&rsquo;s aged father, the noble
+ man to whom he owed everything, and who clung with his whole soul to the
+ beloved youth, his image in mind and person&mdash;how would the Emperor
+ Rudolph endure this? But a few months ago death had snatched from him his
+ wife, the love of his youth, the mother of his children, the companion of
+ his glorious career! The thought of him stirred Heinz to the depths of his
+ soul, and he would fain have hastened at once to the castle to help the
+ stricken father bear the new and terrible burden imposed upon him. But he
+ must first care for the messenger of these terrible tidings who, with lips
+ white from exhaustion, needed refreshment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli, who saw and thought of everything, had already urged the hostess
+ to do what she could, and sent the servant to the tailor that, when Heinz
+ rode to the fortress, he might not lack the mourning&mdash;a tabard would
+ suffice&mdash;which could be made in a few hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Barbara had just brought the lunch and promised to obey the command
+ to keep the terrible news which she had just heard a secret from every
+ one, that the rumor might not reach the fortress prematurely, when another
+ visitor appeared&mdash;Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s cousin, Sir Arnold Maier of
+ Silenen, a tall, broad-shouldered man of fifty, with stalwart frame and
+ powerful limbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His grave, bronzed countenance, framed by a grey beard, revealed that he,
+ too, brought no cheering news. He had never come to his young cousin&rsquo;s at
+ so early an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His intelligent, kindly grey eyes surveyed Heinz with astonishment. What
+ had befallen the happy-hearted fellow? But when he heard the news which
+ had wet the young knight&rsquo;s eyes with tears, his own lips also quivered,
+ and his deep, manly tones faltered as he laid his heavy hands on the
+ mourner&rsquo;s shoulders and gazed tearfully into his eyes. At last he
+ exclaimed mournfully: &ldquo;My poor, poor boy! Pray to Him to whom we owe all
+ that is good, and who tries us with the evil. Would to God I had less
+ painful tidings for you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz shrank back, but his cousin told him the tidings learned from a
+ Swiss messenger scarcely an hour before. The dispute over the bridge toll
+ had caused a fight. The uncle who supplied a father&rsquo;s place to Heinz and
+ managed his affairs&mdash;brave old Walther Ramsweg&mdash;was killed;
+ Schorlin Castle had been taken by the city soldiery and, at the command of
+ the chief magistrate, razed to the ground. Wendula Schorlin, Heinz&rsquo;s
+ mother, with her daughter Maria, had fallen into the hands of the city
+ soldiers and been carried to the convent in Constance, where she and her
+ youngest child now remained with the two older daughters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz, deeply agitated by the news, exclaimed: &ldquo;Uncle Ramsweg, our kind
+ second father, also in the grave without my being able to press his brave,
+ loyal hand in farewell! And Maria, our singing bird, our nimble little
+ squirrel, with those grave, world-weary Sisters! And my mother! You, too,
+ like every one, love her, Cousin&mdash;and you know her. She who has been
+ accustomed to command, and to manage the house and the lands, who like a
+ saint dried tears far and near amid trouble and deprivation&mdash;she,
+ deprived of her own strong will, in a convent! Oh, Cousin, Cousin! To hear
+ this, and not be able to rush upon the rabble who have robbed us of the
+ home of our ancestors, as a boy crushes a snail shell! Can it be imagined?
+ No Castle Schorlin towering high above the lake on the cliff at the verge
+ of the forest. The room where we all saw the light of the world and
+ listened to our mother&rsquo;s songs destroyed; the sacred chamber where the
+ father who so lovingly protected us closed his eyes; the chapel where we
+ prayed so devoutly and vowed to the Holy Virgin a candle from our little
+ possessions, or, in the lovely month of May, brought flowers to her from
+ our mother&rsquo;s little garden, the cliff, or the dark forest. The courtyard
+ where we learned to manage a steed and use our weapons, the hall where we
+ listened to the wandering minstrels, in ruins! Gone, gone, all gone! My
+ mother and Maria weeping prisoners!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here his cousin broke in to show him that love was leading him to look on
+ the dark side. His mother had chosen the convent for her daughter&rsquo;s sake;
+ she was by no means detained there by force. She could live wherever she
+ pleased, and her dowry, with what she had saved, would be ample to support
+ her and Maria, in the city or the country, in a style suited to their
+ rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This afforded Heinz some consolation, but enough remained to keep his
+ grief alive, and his voice sounded very sorrowful as he added: &ldquo;That
+ lessens the bitterness of the cup. But who will re build the ancient
+ castle? Who will restore our uncle? And the Emperor, my beloved, fatherly
+ master, dying of grief! Our Hartmann dead! Washed away like a dry branch
+ which the swift Reuss seizes and hurries out of our sight! Too much, too
+ hard, too terrible! Yet the sun shines as brightly as before! The children
+ in the street below laugh as merrily as ever!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Groaning aloud, he covered his face with his hands, and those from whom he
+ might have expected consolation were forced to leave him in the midst of
+ the deepest sorrow; for the Swiss mail, which had come to Maier of Silenen
+ as the most distinguished of his countrymen, was awaiting distribution,
+ and Count Gleichen was forced to fulfill his sorrowful duty as messenger.
+ His friend Heinz had lent him his second horse, the black, to ride to the
+ fortress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Heinz, pursued by grief and care, sometimes paced up and down the
+ room, sometimes threw himself into the armchair which Frau Barbara, to do
+ him special honour, had placed in the sitting-room, the Minorite monk
+ Benedictus, whom he had brought to Nuremberg, had come uninvited from the
+ neighbouring monastery to give him a morning greeting. The enthusiasm with
+ which St. Francis had filled his soul in his early years had not died out
+ in his aged breast. He who in his youth had borne the escutcheon of his
+ distinguished race in many a battle and tourney, as a knight worthy of all
+ honour, sympathised with his young equal in rank, and found him in the
+ mood to provide for his eternal salvation. On the ride to Nuremberg he had
+ perceived in Heinz a pious heart and a keen intellect which yearned for
+ higher things. But at that time the joyous youth had not seemed to him
+ ripe for the call of Heaven; when he found him bowed with grief, his eyes,
+ so radiant yesterday, swimming in tears, the conviction was aroused that
+ the Omnipotent One Himself had taken him by the hand to lead the young
+ Swiss, to whom he gratefully wished the best blessings, into the path
+ which the noble Saint of Assisi himself had pointed out to him, and
+ wherein he had found a bliss for which in the world he had vainly yearned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his conversation with his young friend had been interrupted, first by
+ the tailor who was to make his mourning garb, then by Siebenburg, and even
+ later he had had no opportunity to school Heinz; for after Seitz had gone
+ Biberli and Katterle had needed questioning. The result of this was
+ sufficiently startling, and had induced Heinz to send the servant and his
+ sweetheart on the errand from which the former had not yet returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the young knight found himself alone he repeated what the monk had
+ just urged upon him. Then Eva&rsquo;s image rose before him, and he had asked
+ himself whether she, the devout maiden, would not thank her saint when she
+ learned that he, obedient to her counsel, was beginning to provide for his
+ eternal salvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moved by such thoughts, he had smiled as he told himself that the Minorite
+ seemed to be earnestly striving to win him for the monastery. The old man
+ meant kindly, but how could he renounce the trade of arms, for which he
+ was reared and which he loved?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he had been obliged to ride to the fortress to wait upon the Emperor
+ and tell him how deeply he sympathised with his grief. But he was denied
+ admittance. Rudolph desired to be alone, and would not see even his
+ nearest relatives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the way home he wished to pass through the inner gate of the
+ Thiergartnerthor into Thorstrasse to cross the milk market. The violence
+ of the noonday thundershower had already begun to abate, and he had ridden
+ quietly forward, absorbed in his grief, when suddenly a loud, rattling
+ crash had deafened his ears and made him feel as if the earth, the gate,
+ and the fortress were reeling. At the same moment his horse leaped upward
+ with all four feet at once, tossed its clever head convulsively, and sank
+ on its knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half blinded by the dazzling light he saw, and bewildered by the
+ sulphurous vapour he noticed, Heinz nevertheless retained his presence of
+ mind, and had sprung from the saddle ere the quivering steed fell on its
+ side. Several of the guard at the gate quickly hastened to his assistance,
+ examined the horse with him, and found the noble animal already dead. The
+ lightning had darted along the iron mail on its forehead and the steel
+ bit, and struck the ground without injuring Heinz himself. The soldiers
+ and a Dominican monk who had sought shelter from the rain in the
+ guardhouse extolled this as a great miracle. The people who had crowded to
+ the spot were also seized with pious awe, and followed the knight to whom
+ Heaven had so distinctly showed its favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz himself only felt that something extraordinary had happened. The
+ world had gained a new aspect. His life, which yesterday had appeared so
+ immeasurably long, now seemed brief, pitifully brief. Perhaps it would end
+ ere the sun sank to rest in the Haller meadows. He must deem every hour
+ that he was permitted to breathe as a gift, like the earnest money he,
+ placed in the trainer&rsquo;s hand in a horse trade. According to human judgment
+ the lightning should have killed him as well as the horse. If he still
+ lived and breathed and saw the grey clouds drifting across the sky, this
+ was granted only that he might secure his eternal salvation, to which
+ hitherto he had given so little concern. How grateful he ought to be that
+ this respite had been allowed him&mdash;that he had not been snatched away
+ unwarned, like Prince Hartmann, in the midst of his sins!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would not Eva feel the same when she learned what had befallen him?
+ Perhaps Biberli would come back soon&mdash;he had been gone so long&mdash;and
+ could tell him about her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even before the thunderbolt had stirred the inmost depths of his being,
+ when he was merely touched by his deep grief and the monk&rsquo;s admonition, he
+ had striven to guide the servant and his sweetheart into the right path,
+ and the grey-haired monk aided him. The monastic life, it is true, would
+ not have suited Biberli, but he had shown himself ready to atone for the
+ wrong done the poor girl who had kept her troth for three long years and,
+ unasked, went back with her to her angry master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere Heinz set forth on his ride to the fortress he had gone out declaring
+ that he would prove the meaning of his truth and steadfastness, thereby
+ incurring a peril which certainly gave him a right to wear the T and St on
+ his long robe and cap forever. He must expect to be held to a strict
+ account by Ernst Ortlieb. If the incensed father, who was a member of the
+ Council, used the full severity of the law, he might fare even worse than
+ ill. But he had realised the pass to which he had brought his sweetheart,
+ and the Minorite led his honest heart to the perception of the sin he
+ would commit if he permitted her to atone for an act which she had done by
+ his desire&mdash;nay, at his command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the gold Heinz had given him, and after his assurance that he would
+ retain him in his service even when a married man, he could, it is true,
+ more easily endure being punished with her who, as his wife, would soon be
+ destined to share evil with him as well as good. He had also secured the
+ aid of both his master and the Minorite, and had arranged an account of
+ what had occurred, which placed his own crime and the maid&rsquo;s in a milder
+ light. Finally&mdash;and he hoped the best result from this&mdash;Katterle
+ would bring the Ortliebs good news, and he was the very man to make it
+ useful to Jungfrau Els.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he had committed his destiny to his beloved master, behind whom was the
+ Emperor himself, to the Minorite, who, judging from his great age and
+ dignified aspect, might be an influential man, St. Leodogar, and his own
+ full purse and, with a heart throbbing anxiously, entered the street with
+ the closely muffled Katterle, to take the unpleasant walk to the
+ exasperated master and father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning had been rife with important events to Biberli also. The means
+ of establishing a household, the conviction that it would be hard for him
+ to remain a contented man without the idol of his heart, and the still
+ more important one that it would not be wise to defer happiness long,
+ because, as the death of young Prince Hartmann had shown, and Pater
+ Benedictus made still more evident, the possibility of enjoying the
+ pleasures of life might be over far too speedily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been within an ace of losing his Katterle forever, and through no
+ one&rsquo;s guilt save that of the man on whose truth and steadfastness she so
+ firmly relied. After Siebenburg&rsquo;s departure she had confessed with tears
+ to him, his master, and the monk, what had befallen her, and how she had
+ finally reached the Bindergasse and Sir Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s lodgings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, during the conflagration, fearing punishment, she had fled, she went
+ first to the Dutzen pond. Determined to end her existence, she reached the
+ goal of her nocturnal and her life pilgrimage. The mysterious black water
+ with its rush-grown shore, where ducks quacked and frogs croaked in the
+ sultry gloom, lay before her in the terrible darkness. After she had
+ repeated several Paternosters, the thought that she must die without
+ receiving the last unction weighed heavily on her soul. But this she could
+ not help, and it seemed more terrible to stand in the stocks, like the
+ barber&rsquo;s widow, and be insulted, spit upon by the people, than to endure
+ the flames of purgatory, where so many others&mdash;probably among them
+ Biberli, who had brought her to this pass&mdash;would be tortured with
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she laid down the bundle which&mdash;she did not know why herself&mdash;she
+ had brought with her, and took off her shoes as if she were going into the
+ water to bathe. Just at that moment she suddenly saw a red light
+ glimmering on the dark surface of the water. It could not be the
+ reflection of the fires of purgatory, as she had thought at first. It
+ certainly did not proceed from the forge on the opposite shore, now
+ closed, for its outlines rose dark and motionless against the moon. No&mdash;a
+ brief glance around verified it&mdash;the light came from the burning of
+ the convent. The sky was coloured a vivid scarlet in two places, but the
+ glow was brightest towards the southeastern part of the city, where St.
+ Klarengasse must be. Then she was overpowered by torturing curiosity. Must
+ she die without knowing how much the fire had injured the newly built
+ convent, on whose site she had enjoyed the springtime of love, and how the
+ good Sisters fared? It seemed impossible, and her greatest fault for the
+ first time proved a blessing. It drew her back from the Dutzen pond to the
+ city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On reaching the Marienthurm she learned that only a barn and a cow stable
+ had b@en destroyed by the flames. For this trivial loss she had suffered
+ intense anxiety and been faithless to her resolution to seek death, which
+ ends all fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vexed by her own weakness, she determined to go back to her employer&rsquo;s
+ house and there accept whatever fate the saints bestowed. But when she saw
+ a light still shining through the parchment panes in the room occupied by
+ the two Es, she imagined that Herr Ernst was pronouncing judgment upon
+ Eva. In doing so her own guilt must be recalled, and the thought terrified
+ her so deeply that she joined the people returning from the fire, for whom
+ the Frauenthor still stood open, and allowed the crowd to carry her on
+ with them to St. Kunigunde&rsquo;s chapel in St. Lawrence&rsquo;s church; and when
+ some, passing the great Imhof residence, turned into the Kotgasse, she
+ followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto she had walked on without goal or purpose, but here the question
+ where to seek shelter confronted her; for the torchbearers who had lighted
+ the way disappeared one after another in the various houses. Deep darkness
+ suddenly surrounded her, and she was seized with terror. But ere the last
+ torch vanished, its light fell upon one of the brass basins which hung in
+ front of the barbers&rsquo; shops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barber! The woman whom she had seen in the stocks was the widow of
+ one, and the house where she granted the lovers the meeting, on whose
+ account she had been condemned to so severe a punishment, was in the
+ Kotgasse, and had been pointed out to her. It must be directly opposite.
+ The thought entered her mind that the woman who had endured such a
+ terrible punishment, for a crime akin to her own, would understand better
+ than any one else the anguish of her heart. How could the widow yonder
+ refuse her companion in guilt a compassionate reception!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a happy idea, but she would never have ventured to rouse the woman
+ from her sleep, so she must wait. But the first grey light of dawn was
+ already appearing in the eastern horizon on the opposite side of the
+ square of St. Lawrence, and perhaps Frau Ratzer would open her house
+ early.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The street did honour to the name of Kotgasse&mdash;[Kot or koth-mire].
+ Holding her dress high around her, Katterle waded across to the northern
+ row of houses and reached the plank sidewalk covered with mud to her
+ ankles; but at the same moment a door directly in front of her opened, and
+ two persons, a man and a woman, entered the street and glided by; but they
+ came from Frau Ratzer&rsquo;s&mdash;she recognised it by the bow-window above
+ the entrance. The maid hurried towards the door, which still stood open,
+ and on its threshold was the woman to whom she intended to pay her early
+ visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost unable to speak, she entreated her to grant a poor girl, who did
+ not know where to seek shelter at this hour, the protection of her house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The widow silently drew Katterle into the dark, narrow entry, shut the
+ door, and led her into a neat, gaily ornamented room. A lamp which was
+ still burning hung from the ceiling, but Frau Ratzer raised the tallow
+ candle she had carried to the door, threw its light upon her face, and
+ nodded approvingly. Katterle was a pretty girl, and the flush of shame
+ which crimsoned her cheeks was very becoming. The widow probably thought
+ so, too, for she stroked them with her fat hand, promising, as she did so,
+ to receive her and let her want for nothing if she proved an obedient
+ little daughter. Then she pinched the girl&rsquo;s arm with the tips of her
+ fingers so sharply that she shrank back and timidly told the woman what
+ had brought her there, saying that she was and intended to remain a
+ respectable girl, and had sought shelter with Frau Ratzer because she knew
+ what a sore disgrace she had suffered for the same fault which had driven
+ her from home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the widow, starting as if stung by a scorpion, denounced Katterle as
+ an impudent hussy, who rightfully belonged in the stocks, to which the
+ base injustice of the money-bags in the court had condemned her. There was
+ no room in her clean house for anyone who reminded her of this outrage and
+ believed that she had really committed so shameful an act. Then, seizing
+ the maid by the shoulders, she pushed her into the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile it had grown light. The sun had just risen in the east above the
+ square of St. Lawrence and spread a golden fan of rays over the azure sky.
+ The radiant spectacle did not escape the eyes of the frightened girl, and
+ she rejoiced because it gave her the assurance that the terrifying
+ darkness of the night was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How fresh the morning was, how clear and beautiful the light of the young
+ day! And it shone not only on the great and the good, but on the lowly,
+ the poor, and the wicked. Even for the horrible woman within the sky
+ adorned itself with the exquisite blue and glorious brilliancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uttering a sigh of relief she soon reached the Church of St. Lawrence,
+ which the old sexton was just opening. She was the first person who
+ entered the stately house of God that morning and knelt in one of the pews
+ to pray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had been the right thing for her to do. Dear Lord! Where was there
+ any maid in greater trouble, yet Heaven had preserved her from the death
+ on a red-hot gridiron which had rendered St. Lawrence, whose name the
+ church bore, a blessed martyr. Compared with that, even standing in the
+ pillory was not specially grievous. So she poured out her whole soul to
+ the saint, confessing everything which grieved and oppressed her, until
+ the early mass began. She had even confided to him that she was from
+ Sarnen in Switzerland, and had neither friend nor countryman here in
+ Nuremberg save her lover, the true and steadfast Biberli. Yet no! There
+ was one person from her home who probably would do her a kindness, the
+ wife of the gatekeeper in the von Zollern castle, a native of Berne, who
+ had come to Nuremberg and the fortress as the maid of the Countess
+ Elizabeth of Hapsburg, the present Burgravine. This excellent woman could
+ give her better counsel than any one, and she certainly owed the
+ recollection of Frau Gertrude to her patron saint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a brief thanksgiving she left the church and went to the fortress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she expected, her countrywoman received her kindly; and after Katterle
+ had confided everything to her, and in doing so mentioned Wolff Eysvogel,
+ the betrothed husband of the elder of her young mistresses, Frau Gertrude
+ listened intently and requested her to wait a short time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet one quarter of an hour after another elapsed before she again
+ appeared. Her husband, the Bernese warder, a giant of a man to whom the
+ red and yellow Swiss uniform and glittering halberd he carried in his hand
+ were very becoming, accompanied his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After briefly questioning Katterle, he exacted a solemn promise of secrecy
+ and then motioned to her to follow him. Meanwhile the maid had been
+ informed how the duel between Wolff Eysvogel and Ulrich Vorchtel had
+ ended, but while she still clasped her hands in horror, the Swiss had
+ opened the door of a bright, spacious apartment, where Els Ortlieb&rsquo;s
+ betrothed husband received her with a kind though sorrowful greeting. Then
+ he continued his writing, and at last gave her two letters. One, on whose
+ back he drew a little heart, that she might not mistake it for the other,
+ was addressed to his betrothed bride; the second to Heinz Schorlin, whom
+ Wolff&mdash;no, her ears did not deceive her&mdash;called the future
+ husband of his sister-in-law Eva. At breakfast, which she shared with her
+ country people and their little daughter, Katterle would have liked to
+ learn how Wolff reached the fortress, but the gatekeeper maintained
+ absolute silence on this subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The maid at last, without hindrance, reached the Deichsler house and found
+ Biberli (not) at home. She ought to have returned to the Ortliebs in his
+ company long before, but the knight still vainly awaited his servant&rsquo;s
+ appearance. He missed him sorely, since it did not enter his head that his
+ faithful shadow, Biberli, knew nothing of the thunderbolt which had almost
+ robbed him of his master and killed his pet, the dun horse. Besides, he
+ was anxious about his fate and curious to learn how he had found the
+ Ortlieb sisters; for, though Eva alone had power to make Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s
+ heart beat faster, the misfortune of poor Els affected him more deeply as
+ the thought that he was its cause grew more and more painful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff&rsquo;s letter, which Katterle delivered to him, revealed young Eysvogel&rsquo;s
+ steadfast love for the hapless girl. In it he also alluded to his
+ nocturnal interview with Heinz, and in cordial words admitted that he
+ thought he had found in him a sincere friend, to whom, if to any one, he
+ would not grudge his fair young sister-in-law Eva. Then he described how
+ the unfortunate duel had occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After mentioning what had excited young Ulrich Vorchtel&rsquo;s animosity, he
+ related that, soon after his interview with Heinz, he had met young
+ Vorchtel, accompanied by several friends. Ulrich had barred his way,
+ loading him with invectives so fierce and so offensive to his honour, that
+ he was obliged to accept the challenge. As he wore no weapon save the
+ dagger in his belt, he used the sword which a German knight among Ulrich&rsquo;s
+ companions offered him. Calm in the consciousness that he had given his
+ former friend&rsquo;s sister no reason to believe in his love, and firmly
+ resolved merely to bestow a slight lesson on her brother, he took the
+ weapon. But when Ulrich shouted to the crusader that the blade he lent was
+ too good for the treacherous hand he permitted to wield it, his blood
+ boiled, and with his first powerful thrust all was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The German knight had then introduced himself as a son of the Burgrave von
+ Zollern and taken him to the castle, where, with his father&rsquo;s knowledge,
+ the noble young Knight Hospitaller concealed him, and the point now was to
+ show the matter, which was undoubtedly a breach of the peace, to the
+ Emperor Rudolph in the right light. The young Burgrave thought that he,
+ Heinz Schorlin, could aid in convincing the sovereign, who would lend him
+ a ready ear, that he, Wolff, had only drawn his sword under compulsion. So
+ truly as Heinz himself hoped to be a happy man through Eva&rsquo;s love, he must
+ help him to bridge the chasm which, by his luckless deed, separated him
+ from his betrothed bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz had had this letter read aloud twice. Then when Biberli had gone and
+ he rode to the fortress, he had resolved to do everything in his power for
+ the young Nuremberg noble who had so quickly won his regard, but the
+ sorely stricken imperial father had refused to see him, and therefore it
+ was impossible to take any step in the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet Wolff&rsquo;s letter had showed that he believed him in all earnestness to
+ be Eva&rsquo;s future husband, and thus strengthened his resolve to woo her as
+ soon as he felt a little more independent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the thunderbolt had killed the horse under him, and the old Minorite
+ had again come and showed him that the Lord Himself, through the miracle
+ He had wrought, had taken him firmly and swiftly by the hand as His chosen
+ follower, it seemed to his agitated mind, when he took up the letter a
+ second time, as though everything Wolff had written about him and Els&rsquo;s
+ sister was not intended for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva was happiness&mdash;but Heaven had vouchsafed a miracle to prove the
+ transitoriness of earthly life, that by renunciation here he might attain
+ endless bliss above. Sacrifice and again sacrifice, according to the
+ Minorite, was the magic spell that opened the gates of heaven, and what
+ harder sacrifice could he offer than that of his love? &ldquo;Renounce!
+ renounce!&rdquo; he heard a voice within cry in his ears as, with much
+ difficulty, he himself read Wolff&rsquo;s letter, but whatever he might cast
+ away of all that was his, he still would fail to take up his cross as
+ Father Benedictus required; for even as an unknown beggar he would have
+ enjoyed&mdash;this he firmly believed&mdash;in Eva&rsquo;s love the highest
+ earthly bliss. Yet divine love was said to be so much more rapturous, and
+ how much longer it endured!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she? Did not the holy expression of her eyes and the aspiration of her
+ own soul show that she would understand him, approve his sacrifice,
+ imitate it, and exchange earthly for heavenly love? Neither could renounce
+ it without inflicting deep wounds on the heart, but every drop of blood
+ which gushed from them, the Minorite said, would add new and heavy weight
+ to their claim to eternal salvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ay, Heinz would try to resign Eva! But when he yielded to the impulse to
+ read Wolff&rsquo;s letter again he felt like a dethroned prince whom some
+ stranger, ignorant of his misfortune, praises for his mighty power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visions of the future which the greyhaired monk conjured up, all that
+ he told hint of his own regeneration, transformation, and the happiness
+ which he would find as a disciple of St. Francis in poverty, liberty, and
+ the silent struggle for eternal bliss, everything which he described with
+ fervid eloquence, increased the tumult in the young knight&rsquo;s deeply
+ agitated soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IN THE FIRE OF THE FORGE&mdash;PART II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The vesper bells had already died away, yet Heinz was still listening
+ eagerly to the aged Minorite, who was now relating the story of St.
+ Francis, his breach with everything that he loved, and the sorrowful
+ commencement of his life. The monk could have desired no more attentive
+ auditor. Only the young knight often looked out of the window in search of
+ Biberli, who had not yet returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter had gone to the Ortlieb mansion with Katterle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The runaway maid, whose disappearance, at old Martsche&rsquo;s earnest request,
+ had already been &ldquo;cried&rdquo; in the city, had no cause to complain of her
+ reception; for the housekeeper and the other servants, who knew nothing of
+ her guilt, greeted her as a favourite companion whom they had greatly
+ missed, and Biberli had taken care that she was provided with answers to
+ the questions of the inquisitive. The story which he had invented began
+ with the false report that a fire had broken out in the fortress. This had
+ startled Katterle, and attracted her to the citadel to aid her
+ countrywoman and her little daughter. Then came the statement that she
+ spent the night there, and lastly the tale that in the morning she was
+ detained in the Swiss warder&rsquo;s quarters by a gentleman of rank&mdash;perhaps
+ the Burgrave himself&mdash;who, after he had learned who she was, wished
+ to give her some important papers for Herr Ernst Ortlieb. She had waited
+ hours for them and finally, on the way home, chanced to meet Biberli.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the maid found it difficult to repeat this patchwork of truth and
+ fiction in proper order, but the ex-schoolmaster impressed it so firmly on
+ his sweetheart&rsquo;s mind that at last it flowed from her lips as fluently as
+ his pupils in Stanstadt had recited the alphabet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she became among the other servants the heroine of an innocent
+ adventure whose truth no one doubted, least of all the housekeeper, who
+ felt a maternal affection for her. Some time elapsed ere she could reach
+ the Es; they were still with their mother, who was so ill that the leech
+ Otto left the sick-room shaking his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he had gone Biberli stopped Els, who had accompanied the
+ physician outside the door of the sufferer&rsquo;s chamber, and earnestly
+ entreated her to forgive him and Katterle&mdash;who stood at his side with
+ drooping head, holding her apron to her eyes and persuade her father also
+ to let mercy take the place of justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But kind-hearted Els proved sterner than the maid had ever seen her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As her mother had been as well as usual when she woke, they had told her
+ of the events of the previous night. Her father was very considerate, and
+ even kept back many incidents, but the invalid was too weak for so
+ unexpected and startling a communication. She was well aware of her
+ excitable daughter&rsquo;s passionate nature; but she had never expected that
+ her little &ldquo;saint,&rdquo; the future bride of Heaven, would be so quickly fired
+ with earthly love, especially for a stranger knight. Moreover, the conduct
+ of Eva who, though she entreated her forgiveness, by no means showed
+ herself contritely ready to resign her lover, had given her so much food
+ for thought that she could not find the rest her frail body required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after these disclosures she was again attacked with convulsions, and
+ Els thought of them and the fact that they were caused by Eva&rsquo;s
+ imprudence, instigated by the maid, when she refused Biberli her
+ intercession with her father in behalf of him and his bride, as he now
+ called Katterle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servitor uttered a few touching exclamations of grief, yet meanwhile
+ thrust his hand into the pocket of his long robe and, with a courteous bow
+ and the warmest message of love from her betrothed husband, whom Katterle
+ had seen in perfect health and under the best care in the Zollern castle,
+ delivered to the indignant girl the letter which Wolff had entrusted to
+ the maid. Els hurried with the missive so impatiently expected to the
+ window in the hall, through which the sun, not yet reached by the rising
+ clouds, was shining, and as it contained nothing save tender words of love
+ which proved that her betrothed husband firmly relied upon her fidelity
+ and, come what might, would not give her up, she returned to the pair, and
+ hurriedly, but in a more kindly tone, informed them that her father was
+ greatly incensed against both, but she would try to soften him. At present
+ he was in his office with Herr Casper Eysvogel; Biberli might wait in the
+ kitchen till the latter went away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els then entered the sick-chamber, but Biberli put his hand under his
+ sweetheart&rsquo;s chin, bent her head back gently, and said: &ldquo;Now you see how
+ Biberli and other clever people manage. The best is kept until the last.
+ The result of the first throw matters little, only he who wins the last
+ goes home content. To know how to choose the bait is also an art. The
+ trout bites at the fly, the pike at the worm, and a yearning maiden at her
+ lover&rsquo;s letter. Take notice! To-day, which began with such cruel sorrow,
+ will yet have a tolerable end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; cried Katterle, nudging him angrily with her elbow, &ldquo;we never had a
+ day begin more happily for us. The gold with which we can set up
+ housekeeping&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; interrupted Biberli, &ldquo;the zecchins and gold florins are
+ certainly no trifle. Much can be bought with them. But Schorlin Castle
+ razed to the ground, my master&rsquo;s lady mother and Fraulein Maria held as
+ half captives in the convent, to say nothing of the light-hearted Prince
+ Hartmann and Sir Heinz&rsquo;s piteous grief&mdash;if all these things could be
+ undone, child, I should not think the bag of gold, and another into the
+ bargain, too high a price to pay for it. What is the use of a house filled
+ with fine furniture when the heart is so full of sorrow? At home we all
+ eat together out of a cracked clay dish across which a tinker had drawn a
+ wire, with rude wooden spoons made by my father, yet how we all relished
+ it!&mdash;what more did we want?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he drew her into the kitchen, where he found a friendly
+ reception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, the Ortlieb servants were attached to their employers and sincerely
+ sorry for the ill health of the mistress of the house, but for several
+ years the lamentations and anxiety concerning her had been ceaseless. The
+ young prince&rsquo;s death had startled rather than saddened them. They did not
+ know him, but it was terrible to die so young and so suddenly. They would
+ not have listened to a merry tale which stirred them to laughter, but
+ Biberli&rsquo;s stories of distant lands, of the court, of war, of the
+ tournament, just suited their present mood, and the narrator was well
+ pleased to find ready listeners. He had so many things to forget, and he
+ never succeeded better than when permitted to use his tongue freely. He
+ wagged it valiantly, too, but when the thunderstorm burst he paused and
+ went to the window. His narrow face was blanched, and his agile limbs
+ moved restlessly. Suddenly remarking, &ldquo;My master will need me,&rdquo; he held
+ out his hand to Katterle in farewell. But as the zigzag flash of lightning
+ had just been followed by the peal of thunder, she clung to him, earnestly
+ beseeching him not to leave her. He yielded, but went out to learn whether
+ Herr Casper was still in the office, and in a short time returned,
+ exclaiming angrily: &ldquo;The old Eysvogel seems to be building his nest here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, to the vexation of the clumsy old cook, whom he interrupted by his
+ restless movements in the Paternosters she was repeating on her rosary, he
+ began to stride up and down before the hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His light heart had rarely been so heavy. He could not keep his thoughts
+ from his master, and felt sure that Heinz needed him; that he, Biberli,
+ would have cause to regret not being with him at this moment. Had the
+ storm destroyed the Ortlieb mansion he would have considered it only
+ natural; and as he glanced around the kitchen in search of Katterle, who,
+ like most of the others, was on her knees with her rosary in her hand, old
+ Martsche rushed in, hurried up to the cook, shook her as if to rouse her
+ from sleep, and exclaimed: &ldquo;Hot water for the blood-letting! Quick! Our
+ mistress&mdash;she&rsquo;ll slip through our hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke, the young kitchen maid Metz helped the clumsy woman up, and
+ Biberli also lent his aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as the jug was filled, Els, too, hastened in, snatched it from the
+ hand of Martsche, whose old feet were too slow for her, and hurried with
+ it into the entry and up the stairs, passing her father, to whom she had
+ called on the way down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Casper Eysvogel stood at the bottom of the steps, and called after her
+ that it would not be his fault, but her father&rsquo;s, if everything between
+ her and his son was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She probably heard the words, but made no answer, and hastened as fast as
+ her feet would carry her to her mother&rsquo;s bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old physician was holding the gasping woman in his arms, and Eva knelt
+ beside the high bedstead sobbing, as she covered the dry, burning hand
+ with kisses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ernst Ortlieb entered the chamber of his beloved wife a cold chill
+ ran down his back, for the odour of musk, which he had already inhaled
+ beside many a deathbed, reached him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had come to this! The end which he had so long delayed by tender love
+ and care was approaching. The flower which had adorned his youth and,
+ spite of its broken stem, had grown still dearer and was treasured beyond
+ everything else that bloomed in his garden, would be torn from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time no friendly potion had helped her to sleep through the noise of
+ the thunderstorm. Soon after the attack of convulsions the agitated,
+ feeble sufferer had started up in terror at the first loud peal of
+ thunder. Fright followed fright, and when the leech came voluntarily to
+ enquire for her, he found a dying woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bleeding restored her to consciousness for a short time, and she
+ evidently recognised her husband and her children. To the former she gave
+ a grateful, tender glance of love, to Els an affectionate, confidential
+ gesture, but Eva, her pride and joy, whom the past night had rendered a
+ child of sorrow, claimed her attention most fully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her kind, gentle eyes rested a long time upon her: then she looked toward
+ her husband as if beseeching him to cherish this child with special
+ tenderness in his heart; and when he returned the glance with another, in
+ which all the wealth of his great and loyal love shone through his tears,
+ her fever-flushed features brightened. Memories of the spring of her love
+ seemed to irradiate her last moments and, as her eyes again rested on Eva,
+ her lips once more smiled with the bewitching expression, once her
+ husband&rsquo;s delight, which had long deserted them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed during this time as if she had forgotten the faithful nurse who
+ for years had willingly sacrificed the pleasures of her days and the sleep
+ of her nights, to lavish upon the child of her anxiety all that her
+ mother-heart still contained, which was naught save love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els doubtless noticed it, but with no bitter or sorrowful thoughts. She
+ and the beloved dying woman understood one another. Each knew what she was
+ to the other. Her mother need not doubt, nor did she, that, whatever
+ obstacles life might place in her pathway, Els would pursue the right
+ course even without counsel and guidance. But Eva needed her love and care
+ so much just now, and when the sufferer gave her older daughter also a
+ tender glance and vainly strove to falter a few words of thanks, Els
+ herself replaced in Eva&rsquo;s the hand which her mother had withdrawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fran Maria nodded gently to Els, as if asking her sensible elder daughter
+ to watch over her forsaken sister in her place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then her eyes again sought her husband, but the priest, to whom she had
+ just confessed, approached her instead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the holy man had performed the duties of his office, she again
+ turned her head toward Eva. It seemed as though she was feasting her eyes
+ on her daughter&rsquo;s charms. Meanwhile she strove to utter what more she
+ desired to say, but the bystanders understood only the words&mdash;they
+ were her last: &ldquo;We thought&mdash;should be untouched&mdash;But now Heaven&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she paused and, after closing her eyes for a time, went on in a lower
+ but perfectly distinct tone: &ldquo;You are good&mdash;I hope&mdash;the
+ forge-fire of life&mdash;it is fortunate for you The heart and its demands
+ The hap&mdash;pi&mdash;ness&mdash;which it&mdash;gave&mdash;me&mdash;&mdash;It
+ ought&mdash;it must&mdash;you, too&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst speaking she had again glanced towards her husband, then at the
+ Abbess Kunigunde, who knelt beside him, and as the abbess met the look she
+ thought, &ldquo;She is entrusting the child to me, and desires Eva to be happy
+ as one of us and the fairest of the brides of Heaven!&rdquo; Ernst Ortlieb,
+ wholly overpowered by the deepest grief, was far from enquiring into the
+ meaning of these last words of his beloved dying wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els, on the contrary, who had learned to read the sufferer&rsquo;s features and
+ understood her even without words when speech was difficult, had watched
+ every change in the expression of her features with the utmost attention.
+ Without reflecting or interpreting, she was sure that the movements of her
+ dying mother&rsquo;s lips had predicted to Eva that the &ldquo;forge fire of life&rdquo;
+ would exert its purifying and moulding influence on her also, and wished
+ that in the world, not in the convent, she might be as happy as she
+ herself had been rendered by her father&rsquo;s love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After these farewell words Frau Maria&rsquo;s features became painfully
+ distorted, the lids drooped over her eyes, there was a brief struggle,
+ then a slight gesture from the physician announced to the weeping group
+ that her earthly pilgrimage was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one spoke. All knelt silently, with clasped hands, beside the couch,
+ until Eva, as if roused from a dream, shrieked, &ldquo;She will never come back
+ again!&rdquo; and with passionate grief threw herself upon the lifeless form to
+ kiss the still face and beseech her to open her dear eyes once more and
+ not leave her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How often she had remained away from the invalid in order to let her aunt
+ point out the path for her own higher happiness whilst Els nursed her
+ mother; but now that she had left her, she suddenly felt what she had
+ possessed and lost in her love. It seemed as if hitherto she had walked
+ beneath the shadow of leafy boughs, and her mother&rsquo;s death had stripped
+ them all away as an autumn tempest cruelly tears off the foliage.
+ Henceforth she must walk in the scorching sun without protection or
+ shelter. Meanwhile she beheld in imagination fierce flames blazing
+ brightly from the dark soot&mdash;the forge fire of life, to which the
+ dead woman&rsquo;s last words had referred. She knew what her mother had wished
+ to say, but at the present time she lacked both the desire and the
+ strength to realise it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time each remained absorbed by individual grief. Then the father
+ drew both girls to his heart and confessed that, with their mother&rsquo;s death
+ life, already impoverished by the loss of his only son, had been bereft of
+ its last charm. His most ardent desire was to be summoned soon to follow
+ the departed ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els summoned up her courage and asked: &ldquo;And we&mdash;are we nothing to
+ you, father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surprised by this rebuke, he started, removed his wet handkerchief from
+ his eyes, and answered: &ldquo;Yes, yes&mdash;but the old do not reckon Ay, much
+ is left to me. But he who is robbed of his best possession easily forgets
+ the good things remaining, and good you both are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He kissed his daughter lovingly as he spoke, as if wishing to retract the
+ words which had wounded her; then gazing at the still face of the dead, he
+ said: &ldquo;Before you dress her, leave her alone with me for a time&mdash;&mdash;There
+ is a wild turmoil here and here&rdquo;&mdash;he pointed to his breast and brow&mdash;&ldquo;and
+ yet The last hours&mdash;&mdash;There is so much to settle and consider in
+ a future without her With her, with her dear calm features before my eyes&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here a fresh outburst of grief stifled his voice; but Els pointed to the
+ image of the Virgin on the wall and beckoned to her sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wholly engrossed by her own sorrow, Eva had scarcely heeded her father&rsquo;s
+ words, and now impetuously refused to leave her mother. Herr Ernst,
+ pleased by this immoderate grief for the one dearest to him, permitted her
+ to remain, and asked Els to attend to the outside affairs which a death
+ always brought with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els accepted the new duty as a matter of course and went to the door; but
+ at the threshold she turned back, rushed to the deathbed, kissed the pure
+ brow and closed eyelids of the sleeper, and then knelt beside her in
+ silent prayer. When she rose she clasped Eva, who had knelt and risen with
+ her, in a close embrace, and whispered: &ldquo;Whatever happens, you may rely on
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she consulted her father concerning certain arrangements which must
+ be made, and also asked him what she should say to the maid&rsquo;s lover, who
+ had come to beseech his forgiveness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell him to leave me in peace!&rdquo; cried Herr Ernst vehemently. Els tried to
+ intercede for the servant, but her father pressed both hands over his
+ ears, exclaiming: &ldquo;Who can reach a decision when he is out of his senses
+ himself? Let the man come to-morrow, or the day after. Whoever may call, I
+ will see no one, and don&rsquo;t wish to know who is here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the peace and solitude for which he longed seemed denied him. A few
+ hours after he left the chamber of death he was obliged to go to the Town
+ Hall on business which could not be deferred; and when, shortly before
+ sunset, he returned home and locked himself into his own room, old
+ Eysvogel again appeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked pale and agitated, and ordered the manservant&mdash;who denied
+ him admittance as he had been directed&mdash;to call Jungfrau Els. His
+ voice trembled as he entreated her to persuade her father to see him
+ again. The matter in question was the final decision of the fate of his
+ ancient house, of Wolff, and also her own and her marriage with his son.
+ Perhaps the death of his beloved wife might render her father&rsquo;s mood more
+ gentle. He did not yet know all Now he must learn it. If he again said
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; it would seal the ruin of the Eysvogel firm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How imploringly he could plead! how humbly the words fell from the old
+ merchant&rsquo;s lips, moving Els to her inmost heart as she remembered the curt
+ inflexibility with which, only yesterday, this arrogant man, in that very
+ spot, had refused any connection with the Ortliebs! How much it must cost
+ him to bow his stiff neck before her, who was so much younger, and
+ approach her father, whose heart he had so pitilessly trampled under foot,
+ in the character of a supplicant for aid, perhaps a beggar!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, Wolff was his son!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever wrong the father had done her she must forget it, and the task
+ was not difficult; for now&mdash;she felt it&mdash;no matter from what
+ motive, he honestly desired to unite her to his son. If her lover now led
+ her through the door adorned with the huge, showy escutcheon, she would no
+ longer come as a person unwillingly tolerated, but as a welcome
+ helper-perhaps as the saviour of the imperilled house. Of the women of the
+ Eysvogel family she forbade herself to think.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How touching the handsome, aristocratic, grey-haired man seemed to her in
+ his helpless weakness! If her father would only receive him, he would find
+ it no easier than she to deny him the compassion he so greatly needed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She knocked at the lonely mourner&rsquo;s door and was admitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was sitting, with his head bowed on his hands, opposite to the large
+ portrait of her dead mother in her bridal robes. The dusk of the gathering
+ twilight concealed the picture, but he had doubtless gazed long at the
+ lovely features, and still beheld them with his mental vision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els was received with a mournful greeting; but when Herr Ernst heard what
+ had brought her to him, he fiercely commanded her to tell Herr Casper that
+ he would have nothing more to do with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els interceded for the unfortunate man, begging, pleading, and assuring
+ her father that she would never give up Wolff. The happiness of her whole
+ life was centred in him and his love. If he refused the Eysvogels the aid
+ besought by the old merchant who, in his humility, seemed a different man&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here her father indignantly broke in, ordering her to disturb him no
+ longer. But now the heritage of his own nature asserted itself in Els and,
+ with an outburst of indignation, she pointed to the picture of her mother,
+ whose kind heart certainly could not have endured to see a broken-hearted
+ man, on whose rescue the happiness of her own child depended, turned from
+ her door like an importunate beggar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this the man whose locks had long been grey sprang from his chair with
+ the agility of a youth, exclaiming in vehement excitement: &ldquo;To embitter
+ the hours devoted to the most sacred grief is genuine Eysvogel
+ selfishness. Everything for themselves! What do they care for others? I
+ except your Wolff; let the future decide what concerns him and you. I will
+ stand by you. But to hope for happiness and peace-nay, even a life without
+ bitter sorrow for you from the rest of the kin&mdash;is to expect to
+ gather sweet pears from juniper bushes. Ever since your betrothal your
+ mother and I have had no sleep, disturbed whenever we talked to each other
+ about your being condemned to live under the same roof with that old
+ devil, the countess, her pitiable daughter, and that worthless Siebenburg.
+ But within the past few hours all this has been changed. The table-cloth
+ has been cut between the Eysvogels and the Ortliebs. No power in the world
+ can ever join it. I have not told you what has happened. Now you may learn
+ that you&mdash;&mdash;But first listen, and then decide on whose side you
+ will stand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Early this morning I went to the session of the Council. In the
+ market-place I met first one member of it, then a second, third, and
+ fourth; each asked me what had happened to the beautiful E, my lovely
+ little daughter. Gradually I learned what had reached their ears.
+ Yesterday evening, on his way home from here, the man outside, Casper
+ Eysvogel, sullied your&mdash;our&mdash;good name, child, in a way I have
+ just learned the particulars. He boasted, in the presence of those
+ estimable old gentlemen, the Brothers Ebner, that he had flung at my feet
+ the ring which bound you to his son. You had been surprised at midnight,
+ he said, in the arms of a Swiss knight, and that base scoundrel
+ Siebenburg, his daughter&rsquo;s husband, dared at the gaming-table, before a
+ number of knights and gentlemen&mdash;among them young Hans Gross, Veit
+ Holzschuher, and others-to put your interview with the Swiss in so false a
+ light that No, I cannot bring my lips to utter it&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need hear only this one thing more: the wretch said that he thanked
+ his patron saint that they had discovered the jade&rsquo;s tricks in time. And
+ this, child, was the real belief of the whole contemptible crew! But now
+ that the water is up to their necks, and they need my helping hand to save
+ them from drowning-now they will graciously take Ernst Ortlieb&rsquo;s daughter
+ if he will give them his property into the bargain, that they may destroy
+ both fortune and child. No&mdash;a thousand times no! It is not seemly, at
+ this hour, to yield to the spirit of hate; but she who is lying in her
+ last sleep above would not have counselled me by a single word to such
+ suicidal folly. I did not learn the worst until I went to the Council, or
+ I would have turned the importunate fellow from the door this morning.
+ Tell the old man so, and add that Ernst Ortlieb will have nothing more to
+ do with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the deeply incensed father pointed to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els had listened with eyes dilating in horror. The result surpassed her
+ worst fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had felt so secure in her innocence, and the countess had interceded
+ for her so cleverly that, absorbed by anxieties concerning Eva, Cordula,
+ and her mother, she had already half forgotten the disagreeable incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, now that her fair name was dragged through the mire, she could
+ scarcely be angry with those who pointed the finger of scorn at her; for
+ faithlessness to a betrothed lover was an offence as great as infidelity
+ to a husband. Nay, her friends were more ready to condemn a girl who broke
+ her vow than a wife who forgot her duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And if Wolff, in his biding-place in the citadel, should learn what was
+ said of his Els, to whom yesterday old and young raised their hats in glad
+ yet respectful greeting, would he not believe those who appealed to his
+ own father?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet ere she had fully realised this fear, she told herself that it was her
+ duty and her right to thrust it aside. Wolff would not be Wolff if even
+ for a moment he believed such a thing possible. They ought not, could not,
+ doubt each other. Though all Nuremberg should listen to the base calumny
+ and turn its back upon her, she was sure of her Wolff. Ay, he would
+ cherish her with twofold tenderness when he learned by whom this terrible
+ suffering had been inflicted upon her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drawing a long breath, she again fixed her eyes upon her mother&rsquo;s
+ portrait. Had she now rushed out to tell the old man who had so cruelly
+ injured her&mdash;oh, it would have lightened her heart!&mdash;the wrong
+ he had done and what she thought of him, her mother would certainly have
+ stopped her, saying: &ldquo;Remember that he is your betrothed husband&rsquo;s
+ father.&rdquo; She would not forget it; she could not even hate the ruined man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any effort to change her father&rsquo;s mood now&mdash;she saw it plainly&mdash;would
+ be futile. Later, when his just anger had cooled, perhaps he might be
+ persuaded to aid the endangered house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Ernst gazed after her sorrowfully as, with a gesture of farewell, she
+ silently left the room to tell her lover&rsquo;s father that he had come in
+ vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old merchant was waiting in the entry, where the wails of the servants
+ and the women in the neighbourhood who, according to custom, were beating
+ their brows and breasts and rending their garments, could be heard
+ distinctly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deadly pale, as if ready to sink, he tottered towards the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Els saw him hesitate at the top of the few steps leading to the
+ entry, she gave him her arm to support him down. As he cautiously put one
+ foot after the other on the stairs, she wondered how it was possible that
+ this man, whose tall figure and handsome face were cast in so noble a
+ mould, could believe her to be so base; and at the same moment she
+ remembered the words which old Berthold Vorchtel had uttered in her
+ presence to his son Ulrich: &ldquo;If anything obscure comes between you and a
+ friend, obtain a clear understanding and peace by truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the young man who had irritated his misjudged friend into crossing
+ swords with him followed this counsel, perhaps he would have been alive
+ now. She would take it herself, and frankly ask Wolff&rsquo;s father what
+ justified him in accusing her of so base a deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lamps were already lighted in the hall, and the rays from the central
+ one fell upon Herr Casper&rsquo;s colourless face, which wore an expression of
+ despair. But just as her lips parted to ask the question the odour of musk
+ reached her from the death-chamber, whose door Eva had opened. Her
+ mother&rsquo;s gentle face, still in death, rose before her memory, and she was
+ forced to exert the utmost self-control not to weep aloud. Without further
+ reflection she imposed silence upon herself and&mdash;yesterday she would
+ not have ventured to do it&mdash;threw her arm around Herr Casper&rsquo;s
+ shoulders, gazed affectionately at him, and whispered: &ldquo;You must not
+ despair, father. You have a faithful ally in this house in Els.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man looked down at her in astonishment, but instead of drawing her
+ closer to him he released himself with courteous coldness, saying
+ bitterly: &ldquo;There is no longer any bond between us and the Ortliebs,
+ Jungfrau Els. From this day forth I am no more your father than you are
+ the bride of my son. Your will may be good, but how little it can
+ accomplish has unfortunately been proved.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shrugging his shoulders wearily as he spoke, he nodded a farewell and left
+ the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four bearers were waiting outside with the sedan-chair, three servants
+ with torches, and two stout attendants carrying clubs over their
+ shoulders. All wore costly liveries of the Eysvogel colours, and when
+ their master had taken his seat in the gilded conveyance and the men
+ lifted it, Els heard a weaver&rsquo;s wife, who lived near by, say to her little
+ boy: &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the rich Herr Eysvogel, Fritzel. He has as much money to
+ spend every hour as we have in a whole year, and he is a very happy man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Els went back into the house.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ The repulse which she had just received caused her bitter sorrow. Her
+ father was right. Herr Casper had treated her kindly from a purely selfish
+ motive. She herself was nothing to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was so much for her to do that she found little time to grieve
+ over this new trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva was praying in the death-chamber for the soul of the beloved dead with
+ some of the nuns from the convent, who had lost in her mother a generous
+ benefactress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els was glad to know that she was occupied; it was better that her sister
+ should be spared many of the duties which she was obliged to perform.
+ Whilst arranging with the coffin-maker and the &ldquo;Hegelein,&rdquo; the sexton and
+ upholsterer, ordering a large number of candles and everything else
+ requisite at the funeral of the mistress of an aristocratic household, she
+ also found time to look after her father and Countess Cordula, who was
+ better. Yet she did not forget her own affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli had returned. He had much to relate; but when forced to admit that
+ nothing was urgent, she requested him to defer it until later, and only
+ commissioned him to go to the castle, greet Wolff in her name, and
+ announce her mother&rsquo;s death; Katterle would accompany him, in order to
+ obtain admittance through her countryman, the Swiss warder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els might have sent one of the Ortlieb servants; but, in the first place,
+ the fugitive&rsquo;s refuge must be concealed, and then she told herself that
+ Biberli, who had witnessed the occurrence of the previous evening, could
+ best inform Wolff of the real course of events. But when she gave him
+ permission to tell her betrothed husband all that he had seen and heard
+ the day before at the Ortlieb mansion, Biberli replied that a better
+ person than he had undertaken to do so. As he left his master, Sir Heinz
+ was just going to seek her lover. When she learned all that had befallen
+ the knight, she would understand that he was no longer himself. Els,
+ however, had no time to listen, and promised to hear his story when he
+ returned; but he was too full of the recent experience to leave it untold,
+ and briefly related how wonderfully Heaven had preserved his master&rsquo;s
+ life. Then he also told her hurriedly that the trouble which had come upon
+ her through Sir Heinz&rsquo;s fault burdened his soul. Therefore he would not
+ let the night pass without at least showing her betrothed husband how he
+ should regard the gossip of idle tongues if it penetrated to his
+ hiding-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els uttered a sigh of relief. Surely Wolff must trust her! Yet what
+ viciously coloured reports might reach him from the Eysvogels! Now that he
+ would learn the actual truth from the most credible eye-witnesses she no
+ longer dreaded even the worst calumny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one appeared at supper except her father. Eva had begged to be excused.
+ She wished to remain undisturbed; but the world, with rude yet beneficent
+ hand, interrupted even her surrender to her grief for her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tailor, who protested that, owing to the mourning for young Prince
+ Hartmann, he had fairly &ldquo;stolen&rdquo; this hour for the beautiful Ortlieb
+ sisters, came with his assistant, and at the same time a messenger arrived
+ from the cloth-house in the market-place bringing the packages of white
+ stuffs for selection. Then it was necessary to decide upon the pattern and
+ material; the sisters must appear in mourning the next morning at the
+ consecration, and later at the mass for the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva had turned to these worldly matters with sincere repugnance, but Els
+ would not release her from giving them due attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was well for her tortured soul and the poor eyes reddened by weeping.
+ But when she again knelt in the chamber of death beside her dear nuns and
+ saw the grey robe, which they all wore, the wish to don one, which she had
+ so often cherished, again awoke. No other was more pleasing to her
+ Heavenly Bridegroom, and she forbade herself in this hour to think of the
+ only person for whose sake she would gladly have adorned herself. Yet the
+ struggle to forget him constantly recalled him to her mind, no matter how
+ earnestly she strove to shut out his image whenever it appeared. But,
+ after her last conversation, must not her mother have died in the belief
+ that she would not give up her love? And the dead woman&rsquo;s last words? Yet,
+ no matter what they meant, here and now nothing should come between her
+ and the beloved departed. She devoted herself heart and soul to the memory
+ of the longing for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grief for her loss, repentance for not having devoted herself faithfully
+ enough to her, and the hope that in the convent her prayers might obtain a
+ special place in the world beyond for the beloved sleeper, now revived her
+ wish to take the veil. She felt bound to the nuns, who shared her
+ aspirations. When her father came to send her to her rest and asked
+ whether, as a motherless child, she intended to trust his love and care or
+ to choose another mother who was not of this world, she answered quietly
+ with a loving glance at the picture of St. Clare, &ldquo;As you wish, and she
+ commands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Ernst kindly replied that she still had ample time to make her
+ decision, and then again urged her to leave the watch beside the dead to
+ the women who had been appointed to it and the nuns, who desired to remain
+ with the body; but Eva insisted so eagerly upon sharing it that Els, by a
+ significant gesture to her father, induced him to yield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She kept her sister away whilst the corpse was being laid out and the
+ women were performing their other duties by asking Eva to receive their
+ Aunt Christine, the wife of Berthold Pfinzing, who had hurried to the city
+ from Schweinau as soon as she had news of her sister-in-law&rsquo;s death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing must cloud the memory of the beloved sufferer in the mind of her
+ child, and Els knew that Frau Christine had been a dear friend of the dead
+ woman, that Eva clung to her like a second mother, and that nothing could
+ reach her sister from her honest heart which would not benefit her. Nor
+ was she mistaken, for the warm, affectionate manner in which the matron
+ greeted the young girl restored her composure; nay, when Fran Christine
+ was obliged to go, because her time was claimed by important duties, she
+ would gladly have detained her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eva, in a calmer mood than before, at last entered the hall where her
+ mother&rsquo;s body now lay in a white silk shroud on the snowy satin pillows,
+ as she was to be placed before the altar for the service of consecration
+ on the morrow, she was again overwhelmed with all the violence of the
+ deepest grief; nay, the burning anguish of her soul expressed itself so
+ vehemently that the abbess, who had returned whilst the sisters were still
+ taking leave of their Aunt Christine, did not succeed in soothing her
+ until, drawing her aside, she whispered: &ldquo;Remember our saint, child. He
+ called everything, even the sorest agony, &lsquo;Sister Sorrow&rsquo;. So you, too,
+ must greet sorrow as a sister, the daughter of your heavenly Father.
+ Remember the supreme, loving hand whence it came, and you will bear it
+ patiently.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva nodded gratefully, and when grief threatened to overpower her she
+ thought of the saint&rsquo;s soothing words, &ldquo;Sister Sorrow,&rdquo; and her heart grew
+ calmer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els knew how much the emotions of the previous nights must have wearied
+ her, and had permitted her to share the vigil beside the corpse only
+ because she believed that she would be unable to resist sleep. She had
+ slipped a pillow between her back and that of the tall, handsome chair
+ which she had chosen for a seat, but Eva disappointed her expectation; for
+ whatever she earnestly desired she accomplished, and whilst Els often
+ closed her eyes, she remained wide awake. When sleep threatened to
+ overpower her she thought of her mother&rsquo;s last words, especially one
+ phrase, &ldquo;the forge fire of life,&rdquo; which seemed specially pregnant with
+ meaning. Yet, ere she had reached any definite understanding of its true
+ significance, the cocks began to crow, the song of the nightingale ceased,
+ and the twittering of the other birds in the trees and bushes in the
+ garden greeted the dawning day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she rose and, smiling, kissed Els, who was sleeping, on the forehead,
+ told Sister Renata that she would go to rest, and lay down on her bed in
+ the darkened chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst praying and reflecting she had thought constantly of her mother.
+ Now she dreamed that Heinz Schorlin had borne her in his strong arms out
+ of the burning convent, as Sir Boemund Altrosen had saved the Countess von
+ Montfort, and carried her to the dead woman, who looked as fresh and well
+ as in the days before her sickness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, three hours before noon, she awoke, she returned greatly refreshed
+ to her dead mother. How mild and gentle her face was even now; yet the
+ dear, silent lips could never again give her a morning greeting and,
+ overwhelmed by grief, she threw herself on her knees before the coffin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she soon rose again. Her recent slumber had transformed the passionate
+ anguish into quiet sorrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, too, she could think of external things. There was little to be done
+ in the last arrangement of the dead, but she could place the delicate,
+ pale hands in a more natural position, and the flowers which the gardener
+ had brought to adorn the coffin did not satisfy her. She knew all that
+ grew in the woods and fields near Nuremberg, and no one could dispose
+ bouquets more gracefully. Her mother had been especially fond of some of
+ them, and was always pleased when she brought them home from her walks
+ with the abbess or Sister Perpetua, the experienced old doctress of the
+ convent. Many grew in the forest, others on the brink of the water. The
+ beloved dead should not leave the house, whose guide and ornament she had
+ been, without her favourite blossoms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva arranged the flowers brought by the gardener as gracefully as
+ possible, and then asked Sister Perpetua to go to walk with her, telling
+ her father and sister that she wished to be out of doors with the nun for
+ a short time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She told no one what she meant to do. Her mother&rsquo;s favourite flowers
+ should be her own last gift to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Martsche received the order to send Ortel, the youngest manservant in
+ the household, a good-natured fellow eighteen years old, with a basket, to
+ wait for her and Sister Perpetua at the weir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the thunderstorm of the day before the air was specially fresh and
+ pure; it was a pleasure merely to breathe. The sun shone brightly from the
+ cloudless sky. It was a delightful walk through the meadows and forest
+ over the footpath which passed near the very Dutzen pool, where Katterle
+ the day before had resolved to seek death. All Nature seemed revived as
+ though by a refreshing bath. Larks flew heavenward with a low sweet song,
+ from amidst the grain growing luxuriantly for the winter harvest, and
+ butterflies hovered above the blossoming fields. Slender dragon-flies and
+ smaller busy insects flitted buzzing from flower to flower, sucking honey
+ from the brimming calyxes and bearing to others the seeds needed to form
+ fruit. The songs of finches and the twitter of white-throats echoed from
+ many a bush by the wayside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the forest they were surrounded by delightful shade animated by
+ hundreds of loud and low voices far away and close at hand. Countless buds
+ were opening under the moss and ferns, strawberries were ripening close to
+ the ground, and the delicate leafy boughs of the bilberry bushes were full
+ of juicy green oared fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near the weir they heard a loud clanking and echoing, but it had a very
+ different effect from the noise of the city; instead of exciting curiosity
+ there was something soothing in the regularity of the blows of the iron
+ hammer and the monotonous croaking of the frogs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this part of the forest, where the fairest flowers grew, the morning
+ dew still hung glittering from the blossoms and grasses. Here it was
+ secluded, yet full of life, and amidst the wealth of sounds in which might
+ be heard the tapping of the woodpecker, the cry of the lapwing, and the
+ call of the distant wood-pigeon, it was so still and peaceful that Eva&rsquo;s
+ heart grew lighter in spite of her grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sister Perpetua spoke only to answer a question. She sympathised with
+ Eva&rsquo;s thought when she frankly expressed her pleasure in every new
+ discovery, for she knew for whom and with what purpose she was seeking and
+ culling the flowers and, instead of accusing her of want of feeling, she
+ watched with silent emotion the change wrought in the innocent child by
+ the effort to render, in league with Nature, an act of loving service to
+ the one she held dearest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, even now grief often rudely assailed Eva&rsquo;s heart. At such times she
+ paused, sighing silently, or exclaimed to her companion, &ldquo;Ah, if she could
+ be with us!&rdquo; or else asked thoughtfully if she remembered how her mother
+ had rejoiced over the fragrant orchid or the white water-lily which she
+ had just found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sister Perpetua had taken part of the blossoms which she had gathered; but
+ Ortel already stood waiting with the basket, and the house-dog, Wasser,
+ which had followed the young servant, ran barking joyously to meet the
+ ladies. Eva already had flowers enough to adorn the coffin as she desired,
+ and the sun showed that it was time to return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto they had met no one. The blossoms could be arranged here in the
+ forest meadow under the shade of the thick hazel-bushes which bordered the
+ pine wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Eva had thrown hers on the grass, she asked the nun to do the same
+ with her own motley bundle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the thicket and the road stood a little chapel which had been
+ erected by the Mendel family on the spot where a son of old Herr Nikolaus
+ had been murdered. Four Frank robber knights had attacked him and the
+ train of waggons he had ridden out to meet, and killed the spirited young
+ man, who fought bravely in their defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such an event would no longer have been possible so near the city. But Eva
+ knew what had befallen the Eysvogel wares and, although she did not lack
+ courage, she started in terror as she heard the tramp of horses&rsquo; hoofs and
+ the clank of weapons, not from the city, but within the forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She hastily beckoned to her companion who, being slightly deaf had heard
+ nothing, to hide with her behind the hazel-bushes, and also told the young
+ servant, who had already placed the basket beside the flowers, to conceal
+ himself, and all three strained their ears to catch the sounds from the
+ wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ortel held the dog by the collar, silenced him, and assured his mistress
+ that it was only another little band of troopers on their way from Altdorf
+ to join the imperial army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this surmise soon proved wrong, for the first persons to appear were
+ two armed horsemen, who turned their heads as nimbly as their steeds, now
+ to the right and now to the left, scanning the thickets along the road
+ distrustfully. After a somewhat lengthy interval the tall figure of an
+ elderly man followed, clad in deep mourning. Beneath his cap, bordered
+ with fine fur, long locks fell to his shoulders, and he was mounted on a
+ powerful Binzgau charger. At his side, on a beautiful spirited bay, rode a
+ very young woman whose pliant figure was extremely aristocratic in its
+ bearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the hazel-bushes and pine trees, which had concealed the noble
+ pair, permitted a view of them, Eva recognised in the gentleman the
+ Emperor Rudolph, and in his companion Duchess Agnes of Austria, his young
+ daughter-in-law, whom she had not forgotten since the dance at the Town
+ Hall. Behind them came several mailed knights, with the emblems of the
+ deepest mourning on their garments and helmets, and among those nearest to
+ the Emperor Eva perceived&mdash;her heart almost stood still&mdash;the
+ person whom she had least expected to meet here&mdash;Heinz Schorlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst she was gathering the flowers for her mother&rsquo;s coffin his image had
+ almost vanished from her mind. Now he appeared before her in person, and
+ the sight moved her so deeply that Sister Perpetua, who saw her turn pale
+ and cling to the young pine by her side, attributed her altered expression
+ to fear of robber knights, and whispered, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be troubled, child; it is
+ only the Emperor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither the first horsemen-guards whom the magistrate, Berthold Pfinzing,
+ Eva&rsquo;s uncle, had assigned to the sovereign without his knowledge, to
+ protect him from unpleasant encounters during his early morning ride&mdash;nor
+ the Emperor and his companions could have seen Eva whilst they were
+ passing the chapel; but scarcely had they reached it when the dog Wasser,
+ which had escaped from Ortel&rsquo;s grasp, burst through the hazel copse and,
+ barking furiously, dashed towards the duchess&rsquo;s horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spirited animal leaped aside, but a few seconds later Heinz Schorlin
+ had swung himself from the saddle and dealt the dog so vigorous a kick
+ that it retreated howling into the thicket. Meanwhile he had watched every
+ movement of the bay, and at the right instant his strong hand had grasped
+ its nostrils and forced it to stand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Always alert and on the spot at the right time!&rdquo; cried the Emperor, then
+ added mournfully, &ldquo;So was our Hartmann, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The duchess bent her head in assent, but the grieving father pointed to
+ Heinz, and added: &ldquo;The boy owed his blithe vigour partly to the healthful
+ Swiss blood with which he was born, but yonder knight, during the decisive
+ years of life, set him the example. Will you dismount, child, and let
+ Schorlin quiet the bay?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; replied the duchess, &ldquo;I understand the animal. You have not yet
+ broken the wonderful son of the desert of shying, as you promised. It was
+ not the barking cur, but yonder basket that has dropped from the skies,
+ which frightened him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She pointed, as she spoke, to the grass near the chapel where, beside
+ Eva&rsquo;s flowers, stood the light willow basket which was to receive them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possibly, noble lady,&rdquo; replied Heinz, patting the glossy neck of the
+ Arabian, a gift to the Emperor Rudolph from the Egyptian Mameluke Sultan
+ Kalaun. &ldquo;But perhaps the clever creature merely wished to force his royal
+ rider to linger here. Graciously look over yonder, Your Highness; does it
+ not seem as if the wood fairy herself had laid by the roadside for your
+ illustrious Majesty the fairest flowers that bloom in field and forest,
+ mere and moss?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he stooped, selected from the mass of blossoms gathered by Eva
+ those which specially pleased his eye, hastily arranged them in a bouquet,
+ and with a respectful bow presented them to the duchess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She thanked him graciously, put the nosegay in her belt, and gazed at him
+ with so warm a light in her eyes that Eva felt as if her heart was
+ shrinking as she watched the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even princesses, who were separated from him by so wide a gulf, could not
+ help favouring this man. How could she, the simple maiden whom he had
+ assured of his love, ever have been able to give him up?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she had no time to think and ponder; the Emperor was already riding on
+ with the Bohemian princess, and Heinz went to his horse, whose bridle was
+ held by one of the troopers who followed the train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere he swung himself into the saddle again, however, he paused to reflect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought that he had robbed some flower or herb-gatherer of a portion
+ of the result of her morning&rsquo;s work had entered his mind and, obeying a
+ hasty impulse, he flung a glittering zecchin into the basket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva saw it, and every fibre of her being urged her to step forward, tell
+ him that the flowers were hers, and thank him in the name of the poor for
+ whom she destined his gift; but maidenly diffidence held her in check,
+ although he gave her sufficient opportunity; for when he perceived the
+ image of the Virgin in the Mendel chapel, he crossed himself, removed his
+ helmet, and bending the knee repeated, whilst the others rode on without
+ him, a silent prayer. His brown locks floated around his head, and his
+ features expressed deep earnestness and glowing ardour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, how gladly Eva would have thrown herself on her knees beside him,
+ clasped his hands, and&mdash;nay, not prayed, her heart was throbbing too
+ stormily for that-rested her head upon his breast and told him that she
+ trusted him, and felt herself one with him in earthly as well as heavenly
+ love!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whoever prayed thus in solitude had a soul yearning for the loftiest
+ things. Others might say what they chose, she knew him better. This man,
+ from the first hour of their meeting, had loved her with the most ardent
+ but also with the holiest passion; never, never had he sought her merely
+ for wanton amusement. Her mother&rsquo;s last wish would be fulfilled. She need
+ only trust him with her whole soul, and leave the &ldquo;forge fire of life&rdquo; to
+ strengthen and purify her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she remembered where the dying woman had heard the phrase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Aunt Christine had used it recently in her mother&rsquo;s presence. Young
+ Kunz Schurstab had fallen into evil ways in Lyons. Every one, even his own
+ father, had given him up for lost; but after several years he returned
+ home and proved himself capable of admirable work, both in his father&rsquo;s
+ business and in the Council. In reply to Frau Ortlieb&rsquo;s enquiry where this
+ transformation in the young man had occurred, her aunt answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the forge fire of life.&rdquo; Eva told herself that she had intentionally
+ kept aloof from its flames, and in the convent, perhaps, they would never
+ have reached her. Yesterday they had seized upon her for the first time,
+ and henceforward she would not evade them, that she might obey her mother
+ and become worthy of the man praying silently yonder. He owed to his
+ heroic courage and good sword a renowned name; but what had she ever done
+ save selfishly to provide for her own welfare in this world and the next?
+ She had not even been strong enough to hold the head of the mother, to
+ whom she owed everything and who had loved her so tenderly, when the
+ convulsions attacked her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even after she closed her eyes in death&mdash;she had noticed it&mdash;she
+ had been kept from every duty in the household and for the beloved dead,
+ because it was deemed unsuitable for her, and Els and every one avoided
+ putting the serious demands of life between the &ldquo;little saint&rdquo; and her
+ aspirations towards the bliss of heaven. Yet Eva knew that she could
+ accomplish whatever she willed to do, and instead of using the strength
+ which she felt stirring with secret power in her fragile body, she had
+ preferred to let it remain idle, in order to dwell in another world from
+ that in which she had been permitted to prove her might. The fire of the
+ forge, by whose means pieces of worthless iron were transformed into
+ swords and ploughshares, should use its influence upon her also. Let it
+ burn and torture her, if it only made her a genuine, noble woman, a woman
+ like her Aunt Christine, from whom her mother had heard the phrase of &ldquo;the
+ forge fire of life,&rdquo; who aided and pointed out the right path to hundreds,
+ and probably, at her age, had needed neither an Els nor an Abbess
+ Kunigunde to keep her, body and soul, in the right way. She loved both;
+ but some impulse within rebelled vehemently against being treated like a
+ child, and&mdash;now that her mother was dead&mdash;subjecting her own
+ will to that of any other person than the man to whom she would have
+ gladly looked up as a master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst Heinz knelt in front of the chapel without noticing Sister
+ Perpetua, who was praying before the altar within, these thoughts darted
+ through Eva&rsquo;s brain like a flash of lightning. Now he rose and went to his
+ horse, but ere he mounted it the dog, barking furiously, again broke from
+ the thicket close at her side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz must have seen her white mourning robes, for her own name reached
+ her ears in a sudden cry, and soon after&mdash;she herself could not have
+ told how&mdash;Heinz was standing beside the basket amidst the flowers,
+ with her hand clasped in his, gazing into her eyes so earnestly and sadly
+ that he seemed a different person from the reckless dancer in the Town
+ Hall, though the look was equally warm and tender. Whilst doing so, he
+ spoke of the deep wound inflicted upon her by her mother&rsquo;s death. Fate had
+ dealt him a severe blow also, but grief taught him to turn whither she,
+ too, had directed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at that moment the blast of the horn summoning the Emperor&rsquo;s train to
+ his side echoed through the forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Emperor!&rdquo; cried Heinz; then bending towards the flowers he seized a
+ few forget-me-nots, and, whilst gazing tenderly at them and Eva, murmured
+ in a low tone, as if grief choked his utterance: &ldquo;I know you will give
+ them to me, for they wear the colour of the Queen of Heaven, which is also
+ yours, and will be mine till my heart and eyes fail me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva granted his request with a whispered &ldquo;Keep them&rdquo;; but he pressed his
+ hand to his brow and, as if torn by contending emotions, hastily added:
+ &ldquo;Yes, it is that of the Holy Virgin. They say that Heaven has summoned me
+ by a miracle to serve only her and the highest, and it often seems to me
+ that they are right. But what will be the result of the conflicting powers
+ which since that flash of lightning have drawn one usually so prompt in
+ decision as I, now here, now there? Your blue, Eva, the hue of these
+ flowers, will remain mine whether I wear it in honour of the Blessed
+ Virgin, or&mdash;if the world does not release me&mdash;in yours. She or
+ you! You, too, Eva, I know, stand hesitating at the crossing of two paths&mdash;which
+ is the right one? We will pray Heaven to show it to you and to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he swung himself swiftly into the saddle and, obeying the
+ summons, dashed after his imperial master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva gazed silently at the spot where he had vanished behind a group of
+ pine trees; but Ortel, who had gathered a few early strawberries for her,
+ soon roused her from her waking dream by exclaiming, as he clapped his big
+ hands: &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be hanged, Jungfrau Eva, if the knight who spoke to you isn&rsquo;t
+ the Swiss to whom the great miracle happened yesterday!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The miracle?&rdquo; she asked eagerly, for Els had intentionally concealed what
+ she heard, and this evidently had something to do with the &ldquo;wonderful
+ summons&rdquo; of which Heinz had spoken without being understood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, a great, genuine miracle,&rdquo; Ortel went on eagerly. &ldquo;The lightning&mdash;I
+ heard it from the butcher boy who brings the meat, he learned it from his
+ master&rsquo;s wife herself, and now every child in the city knows it&mdash;the
+ lightning struck the knight&rsquo;s casque during the thundershower yesterday;
+ it ran along his armour, flashing brightly; the horse sank dead under him
+ without moving a limb, but he himself escaped unhurt, and the mark of a
+ cross can be seen in the place where the lightning struck his helmet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you think this happened to the very knight who took the flowers
+ yonder?&rdquo; asked Eva anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As certainly as I hope to have the sacrament before I die, Jungfrau Eva,&rdquo;
+ the youth protested. &ldquo;I saw him riding with that lank Biberli, Katterle&rsquo;s
+ lover, who serves him, and such noblemen are not found by the dozen.
+ Besides, he is one of those nearest to the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s person. If it
+ isn&rsquo;t he, I&rsquo;ll submit to torment&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fie upon your miserable oaths!&rdquo; Eva interrupted reprovingly. &ldquo;Do you know
+ also that the tall, stately gentleman with the long grey hair&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was the Emperor Rudolph!&rdquo; cried Ortel, sure he was right. &ldquo;Whoever
+ has once seen him does not forget him. Everything on earth belongs to him;
+ but when the knight took our flowers so freely just now as if they were
+ his own, I thought But there&mdash;there&mdash;there! See for yourself,
+ Jungfrau! A heavy, unclipped yellow zecchin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he took the coin in his hand, crossed himself, and added
+ thoughtfully: &ldquo;The little silver coin, or whatever he flung in here&mdash;perhaps
+ to pay for the flowers, which are not worth five shillings&mdash;has been
+ changed into pure gold by the saint who wrought the miracle for him. My
+ soul! If many in Nuremberg paid so high for forage, the rich Eysvogel
+ would leave the Council and go in search of wild flowers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva begged the man to leave the zecchin, promising to give him another at
+ home and half a pound in coppers as earnest money. &ldquo;This is what I call a
+ lucky morning!&rdquo; cried Ortel. But directly after he changed his tone,
+ remembering Eva&rsquo;s white mourning robe and the object of their expedition,
+ and his fresh voice sounded very sympathetic as he added: &ldquo;If one could
+ only call your lady mother back to life! Ah, me! I&rsquo;d spend all my savings
+ to buy for the saints as many candles as my mother has in her little shop,
+ if that would change things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst speaking he filled the basket with flowers, and the nun helped him.
+ Eva walked before them with bowed head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could she hope to wed the man for whom Heaven had performed such a
+ miracle? Was it no sin to hope and plead that he would wear their common
+ colour, not in honour of the Queen of Heaven, but of the lowly Eva, in
+ whom nothing was strong save the desire for good? Was not Heinz forcing
+ her to enter into rivalry with one the most distant comparison with whom
+ meant defeat? Yet, no! Her gracious Friend above knew her and her heart.
+ She knew with what tender love and reverence she had looked up to her from
+ childhood, and she now confided the love in her heart to her who had shown
+ herself gracious a thousand times when she raised her soul to her in
+ prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva was breathing heavily when she emerged from the forest and stopped to
+ wait until Sister Perpetua had finished her prayer in the chapel and
+ overtook her. Her heart was heavy, and when, in the meadow beyond the
+ woods, the heat of the sun, which was already approaching the zenith, made
+ itself felt, it seemed as if she had left the untroubled happiness of
+ childhood behind her in the green thicket. Yet she would not have missed
+ this forest walk at any price. She knew now that she had no rival save the
+ one whom Heinz ought to love no less than she. Whether they both decided
+ in favour of the world or the cloister, they would remain united in love
+ for her and her divine Son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Outside the courtyard of the Ortlieb mansion Eva saw Biberli going towards
+ the Frauenthor. He had been with Els a long time, giving a report as
+ frankly as ever. The day before he said to Katterle: &ldquo;Calm yourself, my
+ little lamb. Now that the daughters need you and me to carry secret
+ messages, the father will leave us in peace too. A member of the Council
+ would be like the receiver of stolen goods if he allowed a man whom he
+ deemed worthy of the stocks to render him many services.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Herr Ernst Ortlieb really did let him alone, because he was forced to
+ recognise that Biberli and Katterle were indispensable in carrying on his
+ daughter&rsquo;s intercourse with Wolff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els had forgiven the clever fellow the more willingly the more consoling
+ became the tidings he brought her from her betrothed bridegroom. Besides,
+ she regarded it as specially fortunate that she learned through him many
+ things concerning Heinz Schorlin, which for her sister&rsquo;s sake she was glad
+ to know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, it would have been useless trouble to try to extort from the true
+ and steadfast Biberli even a single word which, for his master&rsquo;s sake, it
+ would have been wiser to withhold, yet he discussed matters patiently, and
+ told her everything that he could communicate conscientiously. So, when
+ Eva returned, she was accurately informed of all that had befallen and
+ troubled the knight the day before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She listened sympathisingly to the servant&rsquo;s lamentation over the
+ marvellous change which had taken place in Heinz since his horse was
+ killed under him. But she shook her head incredulously at Biberli&rsquo;s
+ statement that his master seriously intended to seek peace in the
+ cloister, like his two older sisters; yet at the man&rsquo;s animated
+ description of how Father Benedictus had profited by Sir Heinz&rsquo;s mood to
+ estrange him from the world, the doubt vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli&rsquo;s assurance that he had often seen other young knights rush into
+ the world with specially joyous recklessness, who had suddenly halted as
+ if in terror and known no other expedient than to change the coat of mail
+ for the monk&rsquo;s cowl, reminded her of similar incidents among her own
+ acquaintances. The man was right in his assertion that most of them had
+ been directed to the monastery by monks of the Order of St. Francis, since
+ the name of the Saint of Assisi and the miracles he performed had become
+ known in this country also. Whoever believed it impossible to see the gay
+ Sir Heinz in a monk&rsquo;s cowl, added the experienced fellow, might find
+ himself mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had intentionally kept silence concerning Sir Seitz Siebenburg&rsquo;s
+ challenge and his master&rsquo;s other dealings with the &ldquo;Mustache.&rdquo; On the
+ other hand, he had eagerly striven to inform Els of the minutest details
+ of the reception he met with from her betrothed lover. With what zealous
+ warmth he related that Wolff, like the upright man he was, had rejected
+ even the faintest shadow of doubt of her steadfastness and truth, which
+ were his own principal virtues also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even before Sir Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s visit young Herr Eysvogel had known what
+ to think of the calumnies which, it is true, were repeated to him. His
+ calm, unclouded courage and clear mind were probably best shown by the
+ numerous sheets of paper he had covered with estimates, all relating to
+ the condition of the Eysvogel business. He had confided these documents
+ also to him to be delivered to his father, and after discharging this duty
+ he had come to her. According to his custom, he had reserved the best
+ thing for the last, but it was now time to give it to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he drew from the breast pocket of his long coat a wrought-iron
+ rose. Els knew it well; it had adorned the clasp of her lover&rsquo;s belt, and
+ the unusual delicacy of the workmanship had often aroused her admiration.
+ What the gift was to announce she read on the paper accompanying it, which
+ contained the following simple lines:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The iron rude, when shaped by fire and blows,
+ Delights our eyes as a most beauteous rose.
+ So may the lies which strove to work us ill
+ But serve our hearts with greater love to fill.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Biberli withdrew as soon as he had delivered the gift; his master was
+ awaiting him on his return from his early ride with the Emperor; but Els,
+ with glowing cheeks, read and reread the verse which brought such cheering
+ consolation from her lover. It seemed like a miracle that they recalled
+ the words of her dying mother concerning the forge fire which, in her last
+ moments, she had mentioned in connection with Eva&rsquo;s future. Here it had
+ formed from rude iron the fairest of flowers. Nothing sweeter or lovelier,
+ the sister thought, could be made from her darling. But would the fire
+ also possess the power to lead Eva, as it were, from heaven to earth, and
+ transform her into an energetic woman, symmetrical in thought and deed?
+ And what was the necessity? She was there to guide her and remove every
+ stone from her path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ah, if she should renounce the cloister and find a husband like her Wolff!
+ Again and again she read his greeting and pressed the beloved sheet to her
+ lips. She would fain have hastened to her mother&rsquo;s corpse to show it to
+ her. But just at that moment Eva returned. She must rejoice with her over
+ this beautiful confirmation of her hope, and as, with flushed cheeks and
+ brow moist with perspiration, she stood before her, Els tenderly embraced
+ her and, overflowing with gratitude, showed her her lover&rsquo;s gift and
+ verse, and invited her to share the great happiness which so brightly
+ illumined the darkness of her grief. Eva, who was so weary that she could
+ scarcely stand thought, like her sister, as Els read Wolff&rsquo;s lines aloud,
+ of her mother&rsquo;s last words. But the forge fire of life must not transform
+ her into a rose; she would become harder, firmer, and she knew why and for
+ whose sake. Only yesterday, had she been so exhausted, nothing would have
+ kept her, after a few brief words to prevent Els&rsquo;s disappointment, from
+ lying down, arranging her pillows comfortably, and refreshing herself with
+ some cooling drink; but now she not only succeeded in appearing attentive,
+ but in sympathising with all her heart in her sister&rsquo;s happiness. How
+ delightful it was, too, to be able to give something to the person from
+ whom hitherto she had only received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She succeeded so fully in concealing the struggle against the claims of
+ her wearied body that Els, after joyously perceiving how faithfully her
+ sister sympathised with her own delight, continued to relate what she had
+ just heard. Eva forced herself to listen and behave as if her account of
+ Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s wonderful escape and desire to enter a monastery was news
+ to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not until Els had narrated the last detail did she admit that she needed
+ rest; and when the former, startled by her own want of perception, urged
+ her to lie down, she would not do so until she had put the flowers she had
+ brought home into water. At last she stretched herself on the couch beside
+ her sister, who had so long needed sleep and rest, and a few minutes after
+ the deep dreamless slumber of youth chained both, until Katterle, at the
+ end of an hour, woke them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both used the favourable moments which follow the awakening from a sound
+ sleep to cherish the best thoughts and most healthful resolutions. When
+ Eva left her chamber she had clearly perceived what the last hours had
+ taken and bestowed, and found a positive answer to the important question
+ which she must now confront.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els, like her lover, would cling fast to her love, and strive with
+ tireless patience to conquer whatever obstacles it might encounter,
+ especially from the Eysvogel family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving home Eva adorned the beloved dead with the flowers, leaves,
+ and vines which the gardener had brought and she herself had gathered, and
+ at the church she put the last touches to this work so dear to her heart.
+ She gave the preference to the flowers which had been her mother&rsquo;s
+ favourites, but the others were also used. With a light hand and a
+ delicate appreciation of harmony and beauty she interwove the children of
+ the forest with those of the garden. She could not be satisfied till every
+ one was in the right place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Countess Cordula had insisted upon attending the consecration, but she had
+ not known who cared for its adornment. Yet when she stood in the church by
+ the side of the open coffin she gazed long at the gentle face of the quiet
+ sufferer, charming even in death, who on her bright couch seemed dreaming
+ in a light slumber. At last she whispered to Els: &ldquo;How wonderfully
+ beautiful! Did you arrange it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter shook her head, but Cordula added, as if soliloquising: &ldquo;It
+ seems as though the hands of the Madonna herself had adorned a sleeping
+ saint with garden flowers, and child-angels had scattered over her the
+ blossoms of the forest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Els, who hitherto had refused to talk in this place and this solemn
+ hour, broke her silence and briefly told Cordula who had artistically and
+ lovingly adorned her mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eva?&rdquo; repeated the countess, as if surprised, gazing at her friend&rsquo;s
+ younger sister who, as the music of the organ and the alternate chanting
+ had just begun, had already risen from her knees. Cordula felt spellbound,
+ for the young girl looked as fresh as a May rose and so touchingly
+ beautiful in the deep, earnest devotion which filled her whole being, and
+ the white purity of her mourning robes, that the countess did not
+ understand how she could ever have disliked her. Eva, with her up lifted
+ eyes, seemed to be gazing directly into the open heavens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cordula paid little attention to the sacred service, but watched the Es,
+ as she liked to call the sisters, all the more closely. The elder, though
+ so overwhelmed with grief that she could not help sobbing aloud, did not
+ cease to think of her dear ones, and from time to time gazed with tender
+ sympathy at her father or with quiet sorrow at her sister. Eva, on the
+ contrary, was completely absorbed by her own anguish and the memory of her
+ to whom it was due. The others appeared to have no existence for her.
+ Whilst the large tears rolled slowly down her cheeks, she sometimes gazed
+ tenderly at the face of the beloved dead; sometimes, with fervent
+ entreaty, at the image of the Virgin. The pleading expression of the large
+ blue eyes seemed to the countess to express such childlike need of help
+ that the impetuous girl would fain have clasped her to her heart and
+ exclaimed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait, you lovely, obstinate little orphan; Cordula, whom you dislike, is
+ here, and though you don&rsquo;t wish to receive any kindness from her, you must
+ submit. What do I care for all the worshippers of a very poor idol who
+ call themselves my &lsquo;adorers&rsquo;? I need only detain wandering pilgrims, or
+ invite minnesingers to the castle, to shorten the hours. And he for whom
+ yonder child-angel&rsquo;s heart yearns&mdash;would he not be a fool to prefer a
+ Will-o&rsquo;-the-wisp like me? Besides, it is easy for the peasant to give his
+ neighbour the cloud which hangs over his field. True, before the dance&mdash;&mdash;But
+ the past is past. Boemund Altrosen is the only person who is always the
+ same. One can rely upon him, but I really need neither. If I could only do
+ without the open air, the forest, horses, and hunting, I should suit
+ convent walls far better than this Eva, whom Heaven itself seems to have
+ created to be the delight of every man&rsquo;s heart. We will see what she
+ herself decides.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she recognised Sir Boemund Altrosen in the congregation and pursued
+ her train of thought. &ldquo;He is a noble man, and whoever thus makes himself
+ miserable about me I ought to try to cure. Perhaps I will yet do so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similar reflections occupied her mind until she saw Heinz Schorlin
+ kneeling, half concealed by a pillar, behind Boemund Altrosen. He had
+ learned from Biberli at what hour the consecration would take place, and
+ his honest heart bade him attend the service for the dead woman who had so
+ much to forgive him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ortlieb sisters did not see him, but Cordula unconsciously shook her
+ head as she gazed. Was this grave man, so absorbed in devotion that he did
+ not vouchsafe those who surrounded him even a single glance, the Heinz
+ whose delightful gaiety had captivated her heart? The linden, with foliage
+ withered by the autumn blasts, was more like the same tree in the spring
+ when the birds were singing in its boughs, than yonder absorbed supplicant
+ resembled the bold Heinz of a few days ago. The old mocker, Chamberlain
+ Wiesenthau, was right when he told her and her father that morning that
+ the gay Swiss had been transformed by the miracle which had befallen him,
+ like the Saul of holy writ, in the twinkling of an eye, into a Paul. The
+ calendar-makers were already preparing to assign a day to St. Schorlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she ought not to have joined in the boisterous laugh with which her
+ father rewarded the old slanderer&rsquo;s news. No! The knight&rsquo;s experience must
+ have made a deeper impression than the others suspected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps little Eva&rsquo;s love would result in her seeking with the sisters of
+ St. Clare, and Heinz with the Franciscans, peace and a loftier passion.
+ She was certainly to be pitied if love had taken as firm a hold upon her
+ heart as Cordula thought she had perceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again her kind heart throbbed with tender sympathy, and when the sisters
+ left the sedan chairs which had brought them back to the house, and
+ Cordula met Eva in the corridor, she held out her hand with frank
+ cordiality, saying, &ldquo;Clasp it trustingly, girl. True, you do not value it
+ much, but it is offered to no one to whom Cordula does not mean kindly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, taken by surprise, obeyed her request. How frank and kindly her grey
+ eyes were! Cordula herself must be so, too, and, obeying a hasty impulse,
+ she nodded with friendly warmth; then, as if ashamed of her change of
+ mood, hurried past her up the stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following day had been appointed for the mass for the dead in St.
+ Sebald&rsquo;s Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els had told Eva that the countess had seen Heinz Schorlin at the
+ consecration. The news pleased her, and she expressed her joy so
+ animatedly and spoke so confidently of the knight&rsquo;s love that Els felt
+ anxious. But she did not have courage to disturb her peace of mind, and
+ her father&rsquo;s two sisters, the abbess, and Herr Pfinzing&rsquo;s wife, also said
+ nothing to Eva concerning the future as they helped Els to arrange the
+ dead woman&rsquo;s clothing, which was to be given to the poor, decide to what
+ persons or charitable institutions it should be sent, and listened to her
+ account of the facts that formed the foundation of the slanders against
+ her, which were being more loudly and universally discussed throughout the
+ city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva felt painfully how incapable of rendering assistance the others
+ considered her, and her pride forbade her to urge it upon them. Even her
+ Aunt Kunigunde scarcely asked her a question. It seemed to the abbess that
+ the right hour for a decisive enquiry had not yet come, and wise Aunt
+ Christine never talked with her younger niece upon religious subjects
+ unless she herself requested her to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mass for the dead was to be celebrated at an unusually early hour, for
+ another, which would be attended by the whole city and all the
+ distinguished persons, knights, and nobles who had come to the Reichstag,
+ was to begin four hours before noon. This was for Prince Hartmann, who had
+ been snatched away so prematurely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ortliebs, with all their kindred and servants, the members of the
+ Council with their wives and daughters, and many burghers and burgher
+ women, assembled soon after sunrise in St. Sebald&rsquo;s Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those present were almost lost in the spacious, lofty interior with its
+ three naves. At first there was little appearance of devotion, for the
+ early arrivals had many things to ask and whisper to one another. The city
+ architect lowered his loud voice very little as he discussed with a
+ brother in the craft from Cologne in what way the house of God, which
+ originally had been built in the Byzantine style, could be at least partly
+ adapted to the French pointed arch which was used with such remarkable
+ success in Germany, at Cologne and Marburg. They discussed the eastern
+ choir, which needed complete rebuilding, the missing steeples, and the
+ effect of the pointed arch which harmonised so admirably with the German
+ cast of character, and did not cease until the music began. Now the great
+ number of those present showed how much love the dead woman had sowed and
+ reaped. The sisters, when they first looked around them, saw with grateful
+ joy the father of the young man who had fallen in the duel with Wolff, old
+ Herr Berthold Vorchtel, his wife, and Ursula. On the other hand, the pew
+ adorned with the Eysvogel coat of arms was still empty. This wounded Els
+ deeply; but she uttered a sigh of relief when&mdash;the introitus had just
+ begun&mdash;at least one member of the haughty family to which she felt
+ allied through Wolff appeared, Isabella Siebenburg, her lover&rsquo;s sister. It
+ was kind in her to come notwithstanding the absence of the others, and
+ even her own husband. Els would return it to her and her twins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The music, whose heart-stirring notes accompanied the solemn service,
+ deeply moved the souls of both sisters; but when, after the Gloria in
+ excelsis Deo, the Cum Sancto Spiritu pealed forth, Eva, who, absorbed in
+ devotion, had long since ceased to gaze around her, felt her sister&rsquo;s hand
+ touch her arm and, following the direction of her glance, saw at some
+ distance the man for whom her heart yearned, and the grave, devout knight
+ yonder seemed far nearer to her than the gay companion who, in the mazes
+ of the dance, had gazed so boldly into the faces of the men, so tenderly
+ into those of the fair women. How fast her heart throbbed! how ardently
+ she longed for the moment when he would raise his head and look across at
+ her! But when he moved, it was only to follow the sacred service and with
+ it Christ&rsquo;s sacrifice upon the cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Eva reproached herself for depriving her dead mother, to the repose
+ of whose soul this hour was dedicated, of her just due, and she strove
+ with all her power to regain the spirit of devotion which she had lost.
+ But her lover sat opposite and, though she lowered her eyes, her earnest
+ endeavour to concentrate her thoughts was futile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her struggle was interrupted by the commencement of the Credo, and during
+ this confession, which brings before the Christian in a fixed form what it
+ is incumbent upon him to believe, the thought entered her mind of
+ beseeching her whose faithful love had always guided her safely and for
+ her good&mdash;the Queen of Heaven, to whom Heinz was as loyally devoted
+ as she herself&mdash;that she might give her a sign whether she might
+ continue to believe in his love and keep faith with him, or whether she
+ should return to the path which led to a different form of happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the singing of the Credo the heavenly Helper, for whose aid she
+ hoped, made known to her that if, before the end of the Sanctus, which
+ immediately followed the Credo, Heinz looked over at her and returned her
+ glance, she might deem it certain that the Holy Virgin would permit her to
+ hope for his love. If he omitted to do so, then she would consider it
+ decided that he renounced his earthly for his heavenly love, and try
+ herself to give up the earthly one, in which, however, she believed she
+ had recognised something divine. The Credo closed and died away, the
+ resonant harmonies of the Sanctus filled the wide space, and the knight,
+ with the same devout attention, followed the sacred service in which, in
+ the imagination of believers, the bread and wine is transformed into the
+ body and blood of Christ, and a significant, painless ceremony represents
+ the Saviour&rsquo;s bloody death upon the cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva told herself that she ought to have followed with the same intentness
+ as Heinz the mass celebrated for the soul of her own mother, but she could
+ no longer succeed in doing so. Besides, she was denied the privilege of
+ looking freely and often at him upon whose movements depended the fate of
+ her life. Many glances were undoubtedly directed at her, the daughter of
+ the dead woman in whose memory so many citizens had gathered; many,
+ perhaps, had come solely to see the beautiful Es. Therefore propriety and
+ modesty forbade her to watch Heinz. She only ventured to cast a stolen
+ glance at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every note of the Sanctus was familiar to her, and when it drew near the
+ end Heinz retained the same position. The fairest hope of her life must be
+ laid with the flowers in her mother&rsquo;s coffin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the last bars of the Sanctus were commencing. He had scarcely had time
+ to change his attitude since her last secret glance at him, yet she could
+ not resist the temptation, though it was useless, of looking at him once
+ more. She felt like the prisoner who sees the judge rise and does not know
+ whether he intends to acquit or condemn him. The city lute-player who led
+ the choir was just raising his hands again to let them fall finally at the
+ close of the Sanctus, and as she turned her eyes from him in the direction
+ whence only too soon she was to be deprived of the fairest of rights, a
+ burning blush suddenly crimsoned her cheeks. Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s eyes had met
+ hers with a full, clear gaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva pressed her clasped hands, as if beseeching aid, upon her bosom, which
+ rose and fell beneath them with passionate emotion; and No, she could not
+ be mistaken; he had understood her, for his look expressed a wealth of
+ sympathy, the ardent, sorrowful sympathy which only love knows. Then the
+ eyes of both fell. When their glances met again, the hosanna of the choir
+ rang out to both like a shout of welcome with which liberated Nature
+ exultingly greets the awakening spring; and to the deeply agitated knight,
+ who had resolved to fly from the world and its vain pleasures, the hosanna
+ which poured its waves of sound towards him, whilst the eyes of the woman
+ he loved met his for the second time, seemed to revive the waning joy of
+ existence. The shout which had greeted the Saviour on his entry into
+ Jerusalem reached the &ldquo;called&rdquo; man like a command from love to open wide
+ the gate of the heart, and whether he willed it or not, love, amidst the
+ solemn melody of the hosanna, made a new and joyous entrance into his
+ grateful soul. But during the Benedictus he was already making the first
+ attempt to resist this emotion; and whilst Eva, first offering thanks for
+ the cheering decision, and then earnestly striving to enter with her whole
+ soul into the sacred service, modestly denied herself the pleasure of
+ looking across at her lover, Heinz was endeavouring to crush the hopes
+ which had again mastered the soul resolved on renunciation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet he found the conflict harder than he expected and as, at the close of
+ the mass, the Dona nobis pacem (grant us peace) began, he joined
+ beseechingly in the prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not granted, for even during the high mass for the soul of his
+ dearest friend, which also detained the Ortliebs in church, he sought
+ Eva&rsquo;s glance only too often, but always in vain. Once only, when the Dona
+ nobis pacem pealed forth again, this time for the prince, his eyes met
+ those of the woman he loved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young Duchess Agnes noticed whither he looked so often, but when
+ Countess Cordula knelt beside the Ortliebs, cordially returned every
+ glance of the knight&rsquo;s, and once even nodded slightly to him, the young
+ Bohemian believed the report that Heinz Schorlin and the countess were the
+ same as betrothed, and it vexed her&mdash;nay, spoiled the whole of the
+ day which had just begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Heinz left the church Eva&rsquo;s image filled his heart and mind. He went
+ directly from the sanctuary to his lodgings; but there neither Frau
+ Barbara, his pretty young hostess, nor Biberli would believe their eyes or
+ ears, when the former heard in the entry, the latter in the adjoining
+ room, the lash of a scourge upon naked limbs, and loud groans. Both sounds
+ were familiar to Barbel through her father, and to Biberli from the time
+ of penance after his stay in Paris, and his own person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz Schorlin, certainly for the first time in his life, had scourged
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was done by the advice of Father Benedictus but, although he followed
+ the counsel so earnestly that for a long time large bloody stripes covered
+ his back and shoulders, this remedy for sinful thoughts produced an effect
+ exactly opposite to the one expected; for, whenever the places where the
+ scourge had struck him so severely smarted under his armour, they reminded
+ him of her for whose sake he had raised his hand against himself, and the
+ blissful glance from her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ During the days which succeeded the mass for the dead the Ortlieb mansion
+ was very silent. The Burgrave von Zollern, who still gladly concealed in
+ his castle the brave companion in arms to whom he had entrusted the
+ imperial standard on the Marchfield, when his own strong arm needed rest,
+ had permitted Herr Ernst, as the young man&rsquo;s future father-in-law, to
+ visit him. Both were now in constant communication, as Els hoped, for the
+ advantage of the Eysvogel business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli did not cease acting as messenger between her and her future
+ bridegroom; nay, he could now devote the lion&rsquo;s share of his days to it;
+ his master, for the first time since he had entered his service, had left
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor had been informed of the great shock experienced by the young
+ knight, but it was unnecessary; an eye far less keen would not have failed
+ to note the change in Heinz Schorlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noble man who, even as a sovereign, retained the warmth of heart which
+ had characterised him in his youth as a count, sincerely loved his blithe,
+ loyal, brave young countryman, whose father he had valued, whose mother he
+ highly esteemed, and who had been the dearest friend of the son whom death
+ had so early snatched from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew him thoroughly, and had watched his development with increasing
+ warmth of sympathy, the more so as many a trait of character which he
+ recognised in Heinz reminded him of his own nature and aspirations at his
+ age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the court of Frederick II he too had not always walked in the paths of
+ virtue but, like Heinz, he had never let this merge into licentiousness,
+ and had maintained the chivalrous dignity of his station even more
+ strictly than the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither had he at any time deviated from the sincere piety which he had
+ brought from his home to the imperial court, and this was far more
+ difficult in the train of the bold and intellectual Hohenstaufen, who was
+ prone to blaspheme even the holiest things, than for Heinz. Finally he,
+ too, had lapsed into the mood which threatened to lead the light-hearted
+ Schorlin into a monastery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mighty impulse which, at that time, owing to the example and teachings
+ of St. Francis in Italy, had taken possession of so many minds, also left
+ its impress on his young soul, already agitated by sympathy with many an
+ extravagant idea, many an opinion condemned by the Church. But ere he had
+ taken even the first decisive step he was summoned home. His father had
+ resolved to obtain on the sacred soil of Palestine the mercy of Heaven
+ which was denied to the excommunicated Emperor, and desired his oldest
+ son, Rudolph, to represent him at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before his departure he confided to his noble son his aspirations for the
+ grandeur and enlargement of his house, and the youth of twenty-one did not
+ venture to tell the dignified, far-sighted man, whom his subjects rightly
+ surnamed &ldquo;the Wise,&rdquo; his ardent desire to live henceforth solely for the
+ salvation of his endangered soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sense of duty inherited from father and mother, which both had
+ imprinted deeply upon his soul, and also the ambition that had been
+ sedulously fostered at the court of the Emperor Frederick, had given him
+ courage to repress forever the wish with which he had left the
+ Hohenstaufen court. The sacrifice was hard, but he made it willingly as
+ soon as it became apparent to his reflective mind that not only his
+ earthly but his heavenly Father had appointed the task of devoting the
+ full wealth of his talents and the power of his will to the elevation of
+ the house of Hapsburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very next year he stood in the place of his father who fell at
+ Ascalon, deeply lamented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arduous labour imposed by the management of his own great possessions,
+ and the ceaseless endeavour to enlarge them, in accordance with the dead
+ man&rsquo;s wishes, gave him no time to cherish the longing for the peace of the
+ cloister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After his election as King of Germany, which had long been neglected under
+ the government of sham emperors, increased the burden of his duties the
+ more seriously he took them, and the more difficult the Bohemian king
+ Ottocar, especially, rendered it for him to maintain the crown he had won,
+ the more eagerly he strove, particularly after the victory of Marchfield
+ had secured his sovereignty, to increase the power of his house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A binding duty, a difficult task, must also withhold Heinz Schorlin from
+ the wish for whose fulfilment his fiery young soul now fervently longed,
+ and which he knew was receiving powerful sustenance from a worthy and
+ eloquent Minorite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rudolph&rsquo;s own brother had died in peace as canon of Basel and Strasbourg;
+ his sister was happy in her convent as a modest Dominican; but the young
+ knight over whose welfare he had promised his mother to watch, and whom he
+ loved, was not fitted for the monastic life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However earnest might be his intention&mdash;after the miracle which
+ seemed to have been wrought specially for him&mdash;of renouncing the
+ world, sooner or later the time must come when Heinz would long to return
+ to it and the profession of arms, for which he was born and reared. But if
+ he could not be deterred from entering the modest order of the mendicant
+ monks, who proudly called poverty their beloved bride, and should become
+ the head of a bishopric while young, he would inevitably be one of those
+ fighting prelates who seemed to the Emperor&mdash;who disliked halfway
+ measures&mdash;neither knight nor priest, and with whom he had had many a
+ quarrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opposition would merely have sharpened the young knight&rsquo;s desire;
+ therefore his imperial patron had treated him as if he were ignorant of
+ what was passing in his mind. Without circumlocution, he commanded him, at
+ the head of several bodies of Frank, Swabian, and Swiss troopers, whom he
+ placed at his orders, to attack the brothers Siebenburg and their allies,
+ and destroy their castle. If possible, he was to bring them alive before
+ the imperial judgment seat, and recover for the Eysvogels the merchandise
+ of which they had been robbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Heinz, after the Emperor Rudolph had mentioned the latter name,
+ earnestly entreated him to prevent Wolff&rsquo;s persecution, the sovereign
+ promised to fulfil the wish as soon as the proper time came. He himself
+ desired to be gracious to the brave champion of Marchfield, who under
+ great irritation had drawn his sword. But when Heinz also asked the
+ Emperor to send his friend Count Gleichen with him, the request was
+ refused. He must have the entire responsibility of the expedition which he
+ commanded; for nothing except an important duty that no one would help him
+ bear, gave promise of making him forget everything that usually engrossed
+ his attention, and thus his new object of longing. Besides, if he returned
+ victorious his fame and reward would be undivided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hapsburg wished to try upon his young favourite the means which had
+ availed to keep his own footsteps in the path which he desired to see
+ Heinz follow: constant occupation associated with heavy responsibility,
+ the success which brings with it the hope of future achievement and
+ thereby rouses ambition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wisdom and kindness of heart of the Emperor Rudolph, whom the
+ grey-haired ruler&rsquo;s friends called &ldquo;Wisdom,&rdquo; had certainly chosen the
+ right course for Heinz. But he who had always regarded every opportunity
+ of drawing his sword for his master as a rare piece of good fortune,
+ shrank in dismay from this, the most important and honourable charge that
+ had ever been bestowed upon him. It drew him away from the new path in
+ which he did not yet feel at home, because the love he could not abjure
+ constantly thrust him into the world, into the midst of the life and
+ tumult from which Heaven itself commanded him to turn aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Minorite had scarcely been right in the assertion that only the first
+ rounds of the ladder which leads to heavenly bliss were hard to climb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How quickly he had set his foot on the first step; but each upward stride
+ was followed by one that dragged him down-nay, it had seemed advisable
+ wholly to renounce the effort to ascend them, when the monk expected him
+ to sever the bond which united him to the Emperor, and to tell the
+ sovereign that he had entered the service of a greater Master, who
+ commanded him to fight with other weapons than the sword and lance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz had regarded this demand as a summons to turn traitor. It did not
+ seem to be the call of the devout, experienced director of souls to the
+ disciples, but the Guelph to the Ghibelline, for Ghibelline he meant to
+ remain. Gratitude was a Christian virtue, too, and to refuse his service
+ to the Emperor, who had been a father to him, to whom he had sworn fealty,
+ and who had loaded him with benefits, could not be pleasing in the sight
+ of any God. He could never become a Guelph, he told his venerable friend.
+ The Emperor Rudolph was his beloved master, from whom he had received
+ nothing but kindness. He might as well be required to refuse obedience to
+ his own father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What Guelph? What Ghibelline?&rdquo; cried the Minorite in a tone of grave
+ rebuke. &ldquo;The question is submission to the Most High, or to the world and
+ its claims. And why should not Heaven require, as you term it, that you
+ should obey the Lord more willingly than your earthly father&mdash;you,
+ whom the mercy of God summoned amidst thunder and lightning in the
+ presence of thousands? When Francis, our beloved model, the son of Pier
+ Bernardone, was threatened with his father&rsquo;s curse if he did not turn back
+ from the path which led to the highest goal, Francis restored all that he
+ had received from him, except his last garment, and with the exclamation,
+ &lsquo;Our Father who art in heaven, not Pier Bernardone,&rsquo; he made the choice
+ between his earthly and his heavenly Father. From the former he would have
+ received in abundance everything that the heart of a child of the world
+ desires-wealth, paternal love, and the blessing which is said to build
+ houses on earth. But Francis preferred poverty and contempt, nay, even his
+ father&rsquo;s curse and the reproach of ingratitude, receiving in exchange
+ possessions of a nobler nature and more lasting character. You have heard
+ their names. To obtain them, means to share the bliss of heaven. And you&rdquo;&mdash;he
+ continued loudly, adopting for the first time a tone of authoritative
+ severity&mdash;&ldquo;if you really yearned for the greatest possessions, go to
+ the fortress this very hour, and with the cry in your heart, though not on
+ your lips, &lsquo;Our Father who art in heaven, not my gracious master and
+ benefactor Rudolph,&rsquo; inform the Emperor what higher Lord you have vowed to
+ serve.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This kindled a fierce conflict in Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s soul, which perhaps
+ might have ended in favour of a new career and St. Francis, had not
+ Biberli, ere he reached a conclusion, rushed into the room shouting:
+ &ldquo;Seitz Siebenburg, the Mustache, has joined his brothers, and the Knight
+ of Absbach, with several others&mdash;von Hirsdorf, von Streitberg, and
+ whatever their names may be&mdash;have made common cause with them! It is
+ said that they also expected reinforcements from the Main, in order that
+ the right to the road&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gossip, or positive news?&rdquo; interrupted Heinz, drawing himself up to his
+ full height with the cool composure which he attained most easily when any
+ serious danger threatened him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As positive,&rdquo; replied his follower eagerly, &ldquo;as that Siebenburg is the
+ greatest rascal in Germany. You will be robbed of your joust with him, for
+ he&rsquo;ll mount the block instead of the steed, just as you predicted. The
+ ladies will drive him from the lists with pins and rods, to say nothing of
+ the scourging by which knight and squire will silence him. Oh, my lord, if
+ you only knew!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; asked the knight anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Biberli, paying no further heed to his master&rsquo;s orders never to
+ mention the Ortlieb sisters again in his presence, burst forth
+ indignantly: &ldquo;It might move a stone to pity to know the wrong the monster
+ has done Jungfrau Eva and her pure and virtuous sister, the loyal
+ betrothed bride of a brave man&mdash;and the abominable names bestowed on
+ the young ladies, whom formerly young and old, hat in hand, called the
+ beautiful Es.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz stamped his foot on the floor and, half frantic, impetuously
+ exclaimed, his blood boiling with honest indignation: &ldquo;May the air he
+ breathes destroy the slandering scoundrel! May I be flayed on the rack if&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he was interrupted by a low exclamation of warning from the Minorite,
+ who perceived in the knight&rsquo;s fierce oaths a lamentable relapse. Heinz
+ himself felt ashamed of the ungodly imprecations; yet he could by no means
+ succeed in regaining his former composure as, drawing a long breath, he
+ continued: &ldquo;And those city hypocrites, who call themselves Christians, and
+ build costly cathedrals for the good of their souls, are not ashamed&mdash;yes,
+ holy Father, it is true&mdash;basely to deny our Lord and Saviour, who is
+ Love itself, and deemed even the Magdalen worthy of His mercy, and rub
+ their hands in fiendish malignity when unpunished they can sully the white
+ robe of innocence, and drag pious, lovely simplicity to the pillory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is the very reason, my son,&rdquo; the monk interrupted soothingly, &ldquo;that
+ we disciples of the Saint of Assisi go forth to show the deluded what the
+ Lord requires of them. Therefore leave behind you the dust of the world,
+ which defiles both body and soul, join us, who did so before you, and
+ help, as one of our order, to make those who are perishing in sin and
+ dishonouring the name of Christ better and purer, genuine Christians. In
+ this hour of stress lay the sword out of your hand, and leave the steed&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall ride forth, rely upon it, holy Father,&rdquo; Heinz burst forth afresh.
+ &ldquo;With the sky-blue of the gracious Virgin, whom I love, on my shield and
+ helmet, I will dash like the angel Michael amongst the Siebenburgs and
+ their followers. And let me tell you, holy Father&mdash;you who were once
+ a knight also&mdash;if the Mustache, weltering in his blood at my feet,
+ prays for mercy, I&rsquo;ll teach him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Son! son!&rdquo; interrupted the monk again, this time raising his hands
+ imploringly; but Heinz, paying no heed, exclaimed hoarsely:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where did you get this news?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From our Berne countryman at the fortress,&rdquo; replied the servant eagerly;
+ &ldquo;Brandenstein, Schweppermann, and Heidenab brought the tidings. The
+ Emperor received them at the gate of the citadel, where he was keeping
+ watch ere he mounted his steed. He heard him call to the messengers, &lsquo;So
+ our Heinz Schorlin will have a hard nut to crack.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which he will crush after his own heart!&rdquo; cried Heinz, with flashing
+ eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, forcing himself to be calm, he exclaimed in broken sentences, whilst
+ Biberli was helping him put on his armour: &ldquo;Your wish, reverend Father, is
+ also mine. The world&mdash;the sooner I can rid myself of it the better;
+ yet what you describe in the most alluring terms is the peace in your
+ midst, I&mdash;I&mdash;Never, never will my heart be calm until&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he paused suddenly, struck his breast swiftly and repeatedly with his
+ fists, and continued eagerly: &ldquo;Here, Father Benedictus, here are old and
+ strong demands, which you, too, must once have known ere you offered the
+ other cheek to the foe. I know not what to call them, but until they are
+ satisfied I shall never be yours. They must be fulfilled; then, if in
+ battle and bloodshed I can also forget the love which ever rises again
+ when I think I have given it the deathblow, if Heaven still desires poor,
+ heartsick Heinz Schorlin, it shall have him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Minorite received the promise with a silent bend of the head. He felt
+ that he might seriously endanger the fulfilment of his ardent wish to gain
+ this soul for heaven if he urged Heinz further now. Patiently awaiting a
+ more fitting season, he therefore contented himself with questioning him
+ carelessly about the foe and his castles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day was hot, and as Biberli laced the gambeson&mdash;the thick,
+ quilted undergarment over which was worn the heavy leather coat covered
+ with scales and rings&mdash;the monk exclaimed: &ldquo;When the duty which you
+ believe you owe to the world has been fulfilled, you will gratefully
+ learn, as one of our order, how pleasant it is to walk with liberated soul
+ in our light-brown cowl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he ought to have repressed the remark, for Heinz cast a glance at him
+ which expressed his astonishment at being so misunderstood, and answered
+ with unyielding resolution: &ldquo;If I long for anything in your order,
+ reverend Father, it is not for easy tasks, but for the most difficult
+ burden of all. Your summons to take our Redeemer&rsquo;s cross upon me pleases
+ me better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I, my son, believe that your words will be inscribed amongst those
+ which are sure of reward,&rdquo; the monk answered; then with bowed head added
+ &ldquo;At that moment you were nearer the kingdom of heaven than the aged
+ companion of St. Francis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But perceiving how impatiently Heinz shrugged his shoulders, and convinced
+ that it would be advisable to leave him to himself for a time, the old man
+ blessed him with paternal affection and went his way. When the fiery youth
+ had performed the task which now claimed all his powers, he hoped to find
+ him more inclined to allow himself to be led farther along the path which
+ he had entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Minorite had gone. Biberli had noticed with delight that his master
+ had not sought as usual to detain him. The iron now seemed to him hot, and
+ he thought it would be worth while to swing the hammer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The danger in which Heinz stood of being drawn into the monastery made him
+ deeply anxious, and he had already ventured several times to oppose his
+ design. Life was teaching him to welcome a small evil when it barred the
+ way to a greater one, and his master&rsquo;s marriage, even with a girl of far
+ lower station than Eva Ortlieb, would have been sure of his favour, if
+ only it would have deterred him from the purpose of leaving the world to
+ which he belonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; the servitor began, &ldquo;in such heat it is easier to walk in the thin
+ cowl than in armour. The holy Father is right there. But when it is
+ necessary to be nimble, the knight has his dancing dress also. Oh, my
+ lord, what a sight it was when you were waltzing with the lovely Jungfrau
+ Eva! Look at Heinz Schorlin, the brave hero of Marchfield, and the girl
+ with the angel face who is with him!&rsquo; said those around me, as I was
+ gazing down from the balcony. And just think&mdash;I can&rsquo;t help speaking
+ of it again&mdash;that now respectable people dare to point their fingers
+ at the sisters and join in the base calumny uttered by a scoundrel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Heinz fulfilled Biberli&rsquo;s secret longing to be questioned about the
+ Es and the charges against them, and he forged the iron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not from thirst, he said, but to ascertain what fruit had grown from the
+ hellish seeds sown by Siebenburg, and probably the still worse ones of the
+ Eysvogel women, he went from tavern to tavern, and there he heard things
+ which made him clench his fists, and, at the Red Ox, roused him to such
+ violent protest that he went out of the tap-room faster than he entered
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon, without departing far from the truth, he related what was said
+ about the beautiful Es in Nuremberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was everywhere positively asserted that a knight belonging to the
+ Emperor&rsquo;s train had been caught at the Ortlieb mansion, either in a
+ nocturnal interview or while climbing into the window. Both sisters were
+ said to be guilty. But the sharpest arrows were aimed at Els, the
+ betrothed bride of the son of a patrician family, whom many a girl would
+ have been glad to wed. That she preferred the foreigner, whether a
+ Bohemian, a Swabian, or even a Swiss, made her error doubly shameful in
+ the eyes of most persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever Biberli had investigated the source of these evil tales, he had
+ invariably found it to be Seitz Siebenburg, his retainers, the Eysvogel
+ butler, or some man or maidservant in their employ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Vorchtels, who, as he knew from Katterle, would have had the most
+ reason to cherish resentment against the Ortliebs, had no share in these
+ slanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shrewd fellow had discovered the truth, for after Seitz Siebenburg had
+ wandered about in the open air during the storm, he again tried to see his
+ wife. But the effort was vain. Neither entreaties nor threats would induce
+ her to open the door. Meanwhile it had grown late and, half frantic with
+ rage, he went to the Duke of Pomerania&rsquo;s quarters in the Green Shield to
+ try his luck in gaming. The dice were again moving rapidly, but no one
+ grasped the box when he offered a stake. No more insulting rebuff could be
+ imagined, and the repulse which he received from his peers, and especially
+ the duke, showed him that he was to be excluded from this circle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was taught at the same time that if he answered the challenge of the
+ Swiss he would not be permitted to enter the lists. Thus he confronted the
+ impossibility of satisfying a demand of honour, and this terrible thought
+ induced him to declare war against everything which honour had hitherto
+ enjoined, and with it upon its guardians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If they treated him as a robber and a dishonoured man, he would behave
+ like one; but those who had driven him so far should suffer for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the rest of the night and on the following day, until the gate was
+ closed, he wandered, goblet in hand, only half conscious of what he was
+ doing, from tavern to tavern, to tell the guests what he knew about the
+ beautiful Es; and at every repetition of the accusations, of whose justice
+ he was again fully convinced, his hatred against the sisters, and those
+ who were their natural defenders and therefore his foes, increased. Every
+ time he repeated the old charges an addition increasing the slander was
+ made and, as if aided by some mysterious ally, it soon happened that in
+ various places his own inventions were repeated to him by the lips of
+ others who had heard them from strangers. True, he was often contradicted,
+ sometimes violently but, on the whole, people believed him more readily
+ than would have happened in the case of any other person; for every one
+ admitted that, as the brother-in-law of the older E, he had a right to
+ express his indignation in words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile his twins often returned to his memory. The thought ought to
+ have restrained him from such base conduct; but the idea that he was
+ avenging the wrong inflicted upon their father&rsquo;s honour, and thus upon
+ theirs, urged him further and further.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not until a long ride through the forest had sobered him did he see his
+ conduct in the proper light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Insult and disgrace would certainly await him in the city. His brothers
+ would receive him kindly. They were of his own blood and could not help
+ welcoming his sharp sword. Side by side with them he would fight and, if
+ it must be, die. A voice within warned him against making common cause
+ with those who had robbed the family of which he had become a member, yet
+ he again used the remembrance of his innocent darlings to palliate his
+ purpose. For their sakes only he desired to go to his death, sword in
+ hand, like a valiant knight in league with those who were risking their
+ lives in defence of the ancient privilege of their class. They must not
+ even suspect that their father had been shut out from the tournament, but
+ grow up in the conviction that he had fallen as a heroic champion of the
+ cause of the lesser knights to whom he belonged, and on whose neck the
+ Emperor had set his foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The assurance which Biberli brought Heinz Schorlin that Seitz Siebenburg
+ had joined those whom he was ordered to punish, placed the task assigned
+ him by the Emperor in a new and attractive light; but the servant&rsquo;s
+ report, so far as it concerned the Ortlieb sisters, pierced the inmost
+ depths of his soul. He alone was to blame for the disgrace which had
+ fallen upon innocent maidens. By the destruction of the calumny he would
+ at least atone for a portion of his sin. But this did not suffice. It was
+ his duty to repair the wrong he had done the sisters. How? That he could
+ not yet determine; for whilst wielding the executioner&rsquo;s sword in his
+ master&rsquo;s service all these thoughts must be silenced; he could consider
+ nothing save to fulfil the task confided to him by his imperial benefactor
+ and commander in chief, according to his wishes, and show him that he had
+ chosen wisely in trusting him to &ldquo;crack the nut&rdquo; which he himself had
+ pronounced a hard one. The yearning and renunciation, the reproaches and
+ doubts which disturbed his life, until recently so easy, had disgusted him
+ with it. He would not spare it. Yet if he fell he would be deprived of the
+ possibility of doing anything whatever for those who through his
+ imprudence had lost their dearest possession&mdash;their good name.
+ Whenever this picture rose before him it sometimes seemed as if Eva was
+ gazing at him with her large, bright eyes as trustingly as during the
+ pause in the dancing, and anon he fancied he saw her as she looked at her
+ mother&rsquo;s consecration in her deep mourning before the altar. At that time
+ her grief and pain had prevented her from noticing how his gaze rested on
+ her; yet never had she appeared more desirable, never had he longed more
+ ardently to clasp her in his arms, console her, and assure her that his
+ love should teach her to forget her grief, that she was destined to find
+ new happiness in a union with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had happened to him just as he commenced the struggle for a new life.
+ Startled, he confessed it to his grey-haired guide, and used the means
+ which the Minorite advised him to employ to attain forgetfulness and
+ renunciation, but always in vain. Had he, like St. Francis, rushed among
+ briers, his blood would not have turned into roses, but doubtless fresh
+ memories of her whose happiness his guilt had so suddenly and cruelly
+ destroyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For her sake he had already begun to doubt his vocation on the very
+ threshold of his new career, and did not recover courage until Father
+ Benedictus, who had communicated with the Abbess Kunigunde, informed him
+ that Eva was wax in her hands, and within the next few days she would
+ induce her niece to take the veil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This news had exerted a deep influence upon the young knight&rsquo;s soul. If
+ Eva entered the cloister before him, the only strong tie which united him
+ to the world would be severed, and nothing save the thought of his mother
+ would prevent his following his vocation. Yet vehement indignation seized
+ him when he heard from Biberli that the slanderer&rsquo;s malice would force Eva
+ to seek refuge with the Sisters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, a thousand times no! The woman whom he loved should need to seek
+ refuge from nothing for which Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s desire and resolve alike
+ commanded him to make amends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He must succeed in proving to the whole world that she and her sister were
+ as pure as they lived in his imagination, either by offering in the lists
+ the boldest defiance to every one who refused to acknowledge that both
+ were the most chaste and decorous ladies in the whole world, and Eva, at
+ the same time, the loveliest and fairest, or by the open interference of
+ the Emperor or the Burggravine in behalf of the persecuted sisters, after
+ he had confessed the whole truth to his exalted patrons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when Biberli pointed out the surest way of restoring the endangered
+ reputation of the woman he loved, and begged him to imagine how much more
+ beautiful she would look in the white bridal veil than in her mourning
+ Riese&mdash;[Kerchief of fine linen, arranged like a veil]&mdash;he
+ ordered him to keep silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The miracle wrought in his behalf forbade him to yearn for happiness and
+ joy here below. It was intended rather to open his eyes and urge him to
+ leave the path which led to eternal damnation. It pointed him to the
+ kingdom of heaven and its bliss, which could be purchased only by severe
+ sacrifice and the endurance of every grief which the Saviour had taken
+ upon Himself. But he could at least pay one honour to the maiden to whom
+ he was so strongly attracted, and whose happiness for life was menaced by
+ his guilt. When he had assembled his whole force at Schwabach, he would go
+ into battle with her colour on his helmet and shield. The Queen of Heaven
+ would not be angry with him if he wore her light blue to atone to the pure
+ and pious Eva, who was hers even more fully than he himself, for the wrong
+ inflicted upon her by spiteful malice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s friends thought the change in his mood a natural
+ consequence of the events which had befallen him; young Count Gleichen,
+ his most intimate companion, even looked up to him since his &ldquo;call&rdquo; as a
+ consecrated person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His grey-haired cousin, Sir Arnold Maier, of Silenen, was a devout man
+ whose own son led a happy life as a Benedictine monk at Engelberg. The
+ sign by which Heaven had signified its will to Heinz had made a deep
+ impression upon him, and though he would have preferred to see him
+ continue in the career so auspiciously begun, he would have considered it
+ impious to dissuade him from obeying the summons vouchsafed by the Most
+ High. So he offered no opposition, and sent by the next courier a letter
+ to Lady Wendula Schorlin, his young cousin&rsquo;s mother, in which, with
+ Heinz&rsquo;s knowledge-nay, at his request&mdash;he related what her son had
+ experienced, and entreated her not to withhold him from the vocation of
+ which God deemed him worthy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Biberli wrote to his master&rsquo;s mother in a different strain, and
+ did not desist from expressing his opinion, to Heinz, and assuring him
+ that his place was on a battle charger, with his sword in its sheath or in
+ his hand, rather than in a monastery with a rosary hanging from a hempen
+ girdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had vexed Heinz&mdash;nay, made him seriously angry with the faithful
+ fellow; and when in full armour he prepared to mount his steed to receive
+ the last directions of his imperial master, and Biberli asked him on which
+ horse he should follow, he answered curtly that this time he would go
+ without him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet when he saw tears fill the eyes of his &ldquo;true and steadfast&rdquo; companion,
+ he patted the significant St. on his cap, and added kindly: &ldquo;Never mind,
+ Biber, everything will be unchanged between us till I obey my summons, and
+ you build your own nest with Katterle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Biberli had remained in Nuremberg whilst Heinz Schorlin, after the
+ Emperor with fatherly kindness had dismissed him, granting him full
+ authority, set forth at the head of his troops as their commander, to take
+ the field against the Siebenburgs and their allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servant was permitted to attend him only to the outskirts of the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the Spitalthor, Countess Cordula, though she was returning from a
+ ride into the country, had wheeled her spirited dappled horse and joined
+ him as familiarly as though she belonged to him. Heinz, who would have
+ liked best to be alone, and to whom any other companion would have been
+ more welcome, showed her this plainly enough, but she did not seem to
+ notice it, and during the whole of their ride together gave her tongue
+ free rein and, though he often indignantly interrupted her, described with
+ increasing warmth what the Ortlieb sisters had suffered through his fault.
+ In doing so she drew so touching a picture of Eva&rsquo;s silent sorrow that
+ Heinz sometimes longed to thank her, but more frequently to have her
+ driven away by his men at arms; for he had mounted his horse with the
+ intention of dividing the time of his ride between pious meditations and
+ plans for the arrangement of the expedition. What could be more unwelcome
+ than the persistent loquacity of the countess, who filled his heart and
+ mind with ideas and wishes that threatened most seriously to imperil his
+ design?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cordula plainly perceived how unwillingly he listened. Nay, as Heinz more
+ and more distinctly, at last even offensively, showed her how little he
+ desired her society, it only increased the animation of her speech, which
+ seemed to her not to fail wholly in the influence she desired to exert in
+ Eva&rsquo;s favour; therefore she remained at his side longer than she had at
+ first intended. She did not even turn back when they met the young Duchess
+ Agnes, who with her train was returning to the city from a ride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bohemian princess had known that Heinz would ride through the
+ Spitalthor at this hour to confront his foe, and had intended that the
+ meeting with her should seem like a good omen. The thought of wishing him
+ success on his journey had been a pleasant one. True, Cordula&rsquo;s presence
+ did not prevent this, but it disturbed her, and she was vexed to find the
+ countess again at Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She showed her displeasure so plainly that her Italian singing mistress,
+ the elderly spinster Caterina de Celano, took sides with her, and
+ scornfully asked the countess whether she had brought her curling irons
+ with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she bit her lips at Cordula&rsquo;s swift retort &ldquo;O no! Malice meets us on
+ every road, but in Germany we do not pull one another&rsquo;s hair on the
+ highway over every venomous or foolish word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned her back on her as she spoke until the duchess had taken leave
+ of Heinz, and then rode on with him; but as soon as a portion of the road
+ intervened between her and the countess the young Bohemian exclaimed: &ldquo;We
+ must certainly try to save Sir Heinz from this disagreeable shrew!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the saints will aid the good work,&rdquo; the Italian protested, &ldquo;for they
+ themselves have a better right to the charming knight. How grave he
+ looked! Take care, your Highness, he is following, as my nimble cousin
+ Frangipani did a short time ago, in the footsteps of the Saint of Assisi.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he must not, shall not, go into the monastery!&rdquo; cried the young
+ duchess, with childish refractoriness. &ldquo;The Emperor is opposed to it, and
+ he, too, does not like the von Montfort&rsquo;s boisterous manner. We will see
+ whether I cannot accomplish something, Caterina.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she stopped. They had again reached the village of Rottenpach, and in
+ front of the newly built little church stood its pastor, with the
+ dignitaries of the parish, and the children were scattering flowers in the
+ path. She checked her Arabian, dismounted, and graciously inspected the
+ new house of God, the pride of the congregation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the way home, just beyond the village, her horse again shied. The
+ animal had been startled by an old Minorite monk who sat under a crab
+ apple tree. It was Father Benedictus, who had set out early to anticipate
+ Heinz and surprise him in his night quarters by his presence. But he had
+ overestimated his strength, and advanced so slowly that Heinz and his
+ troopers, from whom he had concealed himself behind a dusty hawthorn bush,
+ had not seen him. From Schweinau the walk had become difficult, especially
+ as it was contrary to the teaching of the saint to use a staff. Many a
+ compassionate peasant, many a miller&rsquo;s lad and Carter, had offered him a
+ seat on the back of his nag or in his waggon but, without accepting their
+ friendly offers, he had plodded on with his bare feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps this journey would be his last, but on it he would redeem the
+ promise which he had made his dying master, to go forth according to the
+ command of the Saviour, which Francis of Assisi had made his own and that
+ of his order, to preach and to proclaim, &ldquo;The kingdom of heaven is at
+ hand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Without price,&rdquo; ran the words, &ldquo;have ye received, without price give.&rdquo; He
+ had no regard for earthly reward, therefore he yearned the more ardently
+ for the glad knowledge that he had saved a soul for heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had learned to love Heinz as the saint had formerly loved him, and he
+ did not grudge him the happiness which, at the knight&rsquo;s age, had fallen to
+ the lot of the man whose years now numbered eighty. How long he had been
+ permitted to enjoy this bliss! True, during the last decades it had been
+ clouded by many a shadow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had endured much hardship in the service of his sacred cause, but the
+ greater the sacrifice he offered the more exquisite was the reward reaped
+ by his soul. Oh, if this pilgrimage might yield him Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s vow
+ to follow his saint and with him the Saviour!&mdash;if he might be
+ permitted, clasping in his the hand of the beloved youth he had saved, to
+ exchange this world for eternal bliss!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Earth had nothing more to offer; for he who was one of the leaders of his
+ brotherhood beheld with grief their departure from the paths of their
+ founder. Poverty, which secures freedom to the body, which knows nothing
+ of the anxieties of this world and the burden of possession, which permits
+ the soul to soar unfettered far above the dust&mdash;poverty, the divine
+ bride of St. Francis, was forsaken in many circles of his brother monks.
+ With property, ease and the longing for secular influence had stolen into
+ many a monastery. Many shunned the labour which the saint enjoined upon
+ his disciples, and the old jugs were often filled with new wine, which he,
+ Benedictus, never tasted, and which the saint rejected as poison. He was
+ no longer young and strong enough to let his grief and indignation rage
+ like a purifying thunderstorm amidst these abuses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Heinz Schorlin!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this youth of noble blood, equally gifted in mind and person, whom
+ Heaven itself had summoned with lightning and thunder, devoted himself
+ from sincere conviction, with a heart full of youthful enthusiasm, to his
+ sacred cause&mdash;if Heinz, consecrated by him, and fully aware of the
+ real purposes of the saint, who, also untaught and rich only in knowledge
+ of the heart, had begun a career so momentous in consequences, announced
+ himself as a fearless champion of St. Francis&rsquo;s will, then the St. George
+ had been found who was summoned to slay the dragon, and with his blood
+ instil new life at last into the monasteries of Germany, then perhaps the
+ fresh prosperity which he desired for the order was at hand. The larger
+ number of its recruits came from the lower ranks of the people. Sir Heinz
+ Schorlin&rsquo;s example would perhaps bring it also, as an elevating element,
+ the sons of his peers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, bathed in perspiration, and often on the point of fainting, he
+ followed Heinz through the dust of the highway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, when his strength failed, and he sat down by the roadside to take
+ breath, his soul-life gained a loftier aspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Heinz rode by without seeing him he continued his way until his feet
+ grew so heavy that he was forced to sit down beside the road. Then he
+ imagined that the Saviour Himself came towards him, gazed lovingly into
+ his face, and turned to beckon some one, Benedictus did not know whom,
+ heavenward. Suddenly the clouds that had covered the sky parted, and the
+ old man fancied he heard the song of the troubadour whose soul had been
+ subdued by love for God, which his friend and master had addressed to his
+ Redeemer. It must come from the lips of his angels on high, but he longed
+ to join in the strain. True, his aged lips, rapidly as they moved, uttered
+ no sound, but he fancied he was sharing in this song of the soul, glowing
+ with fervent, consuming flames of love, dedicated to the Saviour, the
+ source of all love:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Love&rsquo;s flames my kindling heart control,
+ Love for my Bridegroom fair,
+ When on my hand he placed the ring,
+ The Lamb whose fervent love I share
+ Did pierce my inmost soul,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ the fiery song began, and an absorbing yearning for death and the beloved
+ Redeemer, whose form had vanished in the sea of flames surging before his
+ dilated eyes, moved the very depths of his soul as he commenced the second
+ verse:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;My heart amidst Love&rsquo;s tortures broke,
+ Slain by the might of Love&rsquo;s keen stroke,
+ To earth my senseless body sank,
+ Love&rsquo;s flames my life-blood drank.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ With flushed cheeks, utterly borne away from the world and everything
+ which surrounded him, he raised his arms towards heaven, then they
+ suddenly fell. Starting up, he passed his hand over his dazzled eyes and
+ shook his head sorrowfully. Instead of the angels&rsquo; song, he heard the beat
+ of horses&rsquo; hoofs coming nearer and nearer. The open heavens had closed
+ again; he lay a poor exhausted mortal, with burning brow, beside the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Duchess Agnes, after visiting the new church at Rottenpach, rode past him
+ on her return to Nuremberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither she nor her train heeded the old monk. But the Italian who, as she
+ rode by, had been attracted by the noble features of the aged man, whose
+ eyes still sparkled with youthful enthusiasm, gazed at him enquiringly.
+ Her glance met his, and the Minorite&rsquo;s wrinkled features wore a look of
+ eager enquiry. He longed to rise and ask the name of the black-eyed lady
+ at the duchess&rsquo;s side. But ere he could stand erect, the party had passed
+ on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Disturbed in mind, and scarcely able to set one sore foot before the
+ other, he dragged himself forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he reached Rottenpach he met one of the duchess&rsquo;s pages who had
+ remained at the village forge and was now riding after his mistress.
+ Father Benedictus called to him, and the boy, awed by the grey-haired
+ monk, answered his questions, and told him that the lady on the horse with
+ the white star on its face was the duchess&rsquo;s Italian singing mistress,
+ Caterina de Celano.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every drop of blood receded from the Minorite&rsquo;s fever-flushed cheeks, and
+ the page was about to spring from his saddle to support him, but the monk
+ waved him back impatiently, and by the exertion of all his strength of
+ will forced himself to stagger on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had just felt happy in the heart of eternal love; but now the
+ expression of his countenance changed, and his dark, sunken eyes flashed
+ angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The faded woman beside the duchess bore the name of the lady whose
+ faithlessness had first induced him to seek rest and forgetfulness in the
+ peace of the cloister, and led him to despise her whole sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horsewoman must be a granddaughter, daughter, or niece of the woman
+ who had so basely betrayed him. How much she resembled the traitress, but
+ she did not understand how to hide her real nature as well; her faded
+ features wore a somewhat malicious expression. The resentment which he
+ thought he had conquered again awoke. He would have liked to rush after
+ her and call her to her face&mdash;&mdash;. Yet what would that avail? How
+ was she to blame for the treachery of another person, whom perhaps she did
+ not even know?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet he longed to follow her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His fevered blood urged him on, but his exhausted, aching limbs refused to
+ serve him. One more violent effort, and sparks flashed before his eyes,
+ his lips were wet with blood, and he sank gasping on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After some time he succeeded in dragging himself to the side of the road,
+ where he lay until a Nuremberg carrier, passing with his team of four
+ horses, lifted him, with the help of his servant, into his cart and took
+ him on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Schweinau the jolting of the vehicle became unendurable to the
+ sufferer, and the carrier willingly fulfilled his wish to be taken to the
+ hospital where mangled criminals, tortured by the rack, were nursed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, however, they instantly perceived that his place was not in this
+ house dedicated to criminal misfortune, and the kind Beguines of Schweinau
+ took charge of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the way the old monk suffered severely in both soul and body. It seemed
+ like treason, like a rejection of his pure and pious purposes, that Heaven
+ itself barred the path along which he was wearily wandering to win it a
+ soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The entombment of the magnificent coffin of Frau Maria Ortlieb under the
+ pavement of the family chapel was over. The little group of sympathising
+ friends had left the church. Only the widower and his daughters remained,
+ and when he knew that he could no longer be seen by the few who still
+ lingered in the house of God, he clasped the two girls to his heart with a
+ suppressed sob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had he experienced such deep sorrow, such anguish of soul. He had
+ not even been permitted to take leave of his beloved companion with
+ unmixed grief; fierce resentment had mingled with his trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To remain alone in the house with his daughters after the burial and
+ answer their questions seemed to him impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meeting of the Council, which would soon begin, served as a pretence
+ for leaving them. Eva was to blame for what he had just suffered; but he
+ knew everything concerning the rumours about the inexperienced girl and
+ Heinz Schorlin, and there fore was aware that her fault was trivial. To
+ censure her seemed as difficult as to discuss calmly with her and the
+ sensible Els what could be done under existing circumstances; besides, he
+ was firmly convinced that Eva had nothing left except to take, without
+ delay, the veil for which she had longed from childhood. His sister, the
+ Abbess Kunigunde, was keeping the door of the convent open. She had
+ promised the girl to await her at home. In taking leave of his daughters,
+ he begged them not to wait for him, because the Council were to decide the
+ fate of the Eysvogel business, and the session might last a long while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then his Els gazed at him with a look of such earnest entreaty that he
+ nodded, and in a tone of the warmest compassion began: &ldquo;I shall be more
+ than glad to aid your Wolff, my dear girl, but he himself told you how the
+ case stands. What would it avail if I beggared myself and you for the
+ Eysvogels and their tottering house? I must remain hard now, in order
+ later to smooth the path for Wolff and you, Els. If Berthold Vorchtel
+ would make up his mind to join me, it might be different, but he summoned
+ the Council as a complainant, and if he is the one to overthrow the
+ reeling structure, who can blame him? We shall see. Whatever I can
+ reasonably do for the unfortunate family shall be accomplished, my girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he kissed his older daughter on the forehead, hastily gave the
+ younger the same caress, and left the chapel. But Els detained him,
+ whispering: &ldquo;Whatever wrong was inflicted upon us yesterday, do not let it
+ prejudice you, father. It was meant neither for her whose peace nothing
+ can now disturb, nor for you. We alone&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You certainly,&rdquo; Herr Ernst interrupted bitterly, &ldquo;were made to feel how
+ far superior in virtue they considered themselves to you, who are better
+ and purer than all of them. But keep up Eva&rsquo;s courage. I have been talking
+ with your Uncle Pfinzing and your Aunt Christine. You yourself took them
+ into your confidence, and we will consult together how the serpent&rsquo;s head
+ is to be crushed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned away as he spoke, but Els went back to her sister, and after a
+ brief prayer they left the church with bowed heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sedan-chairs were waiting outside. Each was to be borne home
+ separately, but both preferred, spite of the bright summer weather, to
+ draw the curtains, that unseen they might weep, and ask themselves how
+ such wrongs could have been inflicted upon the dead woman and themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The respect of high and low for the Ortlieb family had been most
+ brilliantly displayed when the body of the son, slain in battle, had been
+ interred in the chapel of his race. And their mother? How many had held
+ her dear! to how many she had been kind, loving, and friendly! How great a
+ sympathy the whole city had shown during her illness, and how many of all
+ classes had attended the mass for her soul! And the burial which had just
+ taken place?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, on her father&rsquo;s account all the members of the Council were present,
+ but scarcely half the wives had appeared. Their daughters&mdash;Els had
+ counted them&mdash;numbered only nine, and but three were included among
+ her friends. The others had probably come out of curiosity. And the common
+ people, the artisans, the lower classes, who in countless numbers had
+ accompanied her brother&rsquo;s coffin to its resting place, and during the mass
+ for the dead had crowded the spacious nave of St. Sebald&rsquo;s? There had been
+ now only a scanty group. The nuns from the convent were present, down to
+ the most humble lay Sister; but they were under great obligations to her
+ mother, and their abbess was her father&rsquo;s sister. There were few other
+ women except the old crones from the hospitals and nurseries, who were
+ never absent when there was an opportunity to weep or to backbite. In
+ going through the nave of the church into the chapel the sisters had
+ passed a group of younger lads and maidens, who had nudged one another in
+ so disrespectful a way, whispering all sorts of things, that Els had tried
+ to draw Eva past them as swiftly as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her wish to keep her more sensitive sister from noticing the disagreeable
+ gestures and insulting words of the cruel youths and girls was gratified.
+ True, Eva also felt with keen indignation that far too little honour was
+ paid to her beloved dead; that the blinded people believed the slanderers
+ who repeated even worse things of her Els than of herself, and made their
+ poor mother, who had lived and suffered like a saint, atone for what they
+ imagined were the sins of her daughters; but the jeers and scorn which had
+ obtruded themselves upon her father and sister from more than one quarter,
+ in many a form, had entirely escaped her notice. She had accustomed
+ herself from childhood to indulge in reflections and emotions apart from
+ the demands of the world. Whatever occupied her mind or soul absorbed her
+ completely; here she had been wholly engrossed in this silent intercourse
+ with the departed, and a single glance at the group assembled in the
+ church had showed her everything which she desired to know of her
+ surroundings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz had gone to the field the day before yesterday. Her silent colloquy
+ concerned him also. How difficult he made it for her to maintain the
+ resolution which she had formed during the mass for the dead, since he
+ remained aloof, without giving even the slightest token of remembrance.
+ True, an inward voice constantly repeated that he could not part from her
+ any more easily than she from him; but her maidenly pride rebelled against
+ the neglect with which he grieved her. The defiant desire to punish him
+ for departing without a word of farewell urged her back to the convent.
+ She had spent many hours there daily, and in its atmosphere of peace felt
+ better and happier than in her father&rsquo;s house or any other spot which she
+ visited. The close association with her aunt, the abbess, was renewed.
+ True, she had not urged Eva to a definite statement by so much as a single
+ word, yet she had made her feel plainly how deeply it would wound her if
+ her pupil should resolve to disappoint the hopes which she herself had
+ fostered. If Eva refused to take the veil, would not her kind friend be
+ justified in charging her with unequalled ingratitude? and whose opinion
+ did she value even half as much, if she excepted her lover&rsquo;s, whose
+ approval was more to her than that of all the rest of the world?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was better than she, and who could tell what important motive kept him
+ away? Countless worldly wishes had blended with the devotion which she
+ felt in the convent; and had not the abbess herself taught her to obey,
+ without regard to individuals or their opinion, the demands of her own
+ nature, which were in harmony with the will of the Most High? and how
+ loudly every voice within commanded her to be loyal to her love! She had
+ made her decision, but offended pride, the memory of the happy, peaceful
+ hours in the convent and, above all, the fear of grieving the beloved
+ guide of her childhood, withheld her from the firm and irrevocable
+ statement to which her nature, averse to hesitation and delay, impelled
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nearer the sedan-chair came to the Ortlieb mansion the faster her
+ heart beat, for that very day, probably within the next few hours, the
+ abbess would compel her to choose between her father&rsquo;s house and the
+ convent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was panting for breath and deadly pale when, just after Els&rsquo;s arrival,
+ she stepped from the chair. It had become intensely hot. Within the
+ vaulted corridor with its solid, impenetrable walls, a cooler atmosphere
+ received her, and she hoped to find in her own chamber fresher, purer air,
+ and&mdash;at least for the next few hours&mdash;undisturbed peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what was the meaning of this scene? At her entrance, the conversation
+ which Els had evidently just commenced with several other women at the
+ door of the office suddenly ceased. It must be due to consideration for
+ her; for she had not failed to notice the significant glance with which
+ her sister looked at her and then removed her finger from her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abbess, who had been concealed by a wall of chests piled one above
+ another, now came forward and laid her hand upon the shoulder of a little
+ elderly woman, who must have been disputing vehemently with the old
+ housekeeper, Martsche, for she was flushed with excitement, and the
+ housekeeper&rsquo;s chin still quivered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Usually Eva paid little heed to the quarrels of the servants, but this one
+ appeared to have some connection with herself, and the cause could be no
+ trivial one, since Aunt Kunigunde took part in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she had no sooner approached the other women than the abbess drew her
+ aside and asked her a few unimportant questions. They were probably
+ intended to keep her away from the disputants. But Eva knew the little
+ woman, and wished to learn what offence had been given modest, humble
+ Widow Vorkler. Her husband had been employed by the Ortlieb firm as a
+ carrier, who had driven his team of six horses to Milan faithfully until
+ killed in the Tyrol during an attack by robber knights in the lawless
+ period before the coronation of the Emperor Rudolph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the aid of Herr Ernst Ortlieb, the widow had then set up a little
+ shop for the sale of wax candles, images of the saints, rosaries, and
+ modest confirmation gifts, by which means she gained an honest livelihood
+ for her seven children and herself. Her oldest son, who on account of hip
+ disease was not fit for hard work, helped her, and the youngest was Ortel,
+ who had carried Eva&rsquo;s basket on the day of her dead mother&rsquo;s consecration.
+ Her daughter Metz was also in the Ortlieb&rsquo;s service as assistant to the
+ chief cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Frau Vorkler had come to see her children, she had scarcely been able
+ to find words which sufficiently expressed her grateful appreciation, but
+ to-day she seemed like a different person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brief colloquy between the abbess and Eva already appeared to her too
+ long, and when the former bade her finish her business later with Els and
+ old Martsche, she angrily declared that, with all due reverence for the
+ Lady Abbess, she must inform Jungfrau Eva also what compelled her, a
+ virtuous woman with a grateful heart, to take her children from the
+ service of the employer for whom her husband had sacrificed his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els, who was eager to conceal the woman&rsquo;s insulting errand from Eva, tried
+ to silence Frau Vorkler, but she defiantly persisted, and with redoubled
+ zeal protested that speak she must or her heart would break. Then she
+ declared that she had been proud to place her children in so godly a
+ household, but now everything was changed, and though it grieved her to
+ the soul, she must insist upon taking Metz and Ortel from its service. She
+ lived by the piety of people who bought candles for the dear saints and
+ rosaries for praying; but even the most devout had eyes everywhere, and if
+ it were known that her young children were serving in a house where such
+ things happened, as alas! were reported through the whole city concerning
+ the daughters of this family&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here old Martsche with honest indignation interrupted the excited woman;
+ but Fran Vorkler would not be silenced, and asked what a poor girl like
+ her Metz possessed except her good name. How quickly suspicion would rest
+ on a lass whose respectability was questioned! People had begun to do so
+ ever since the Ortlieb sisters were called the &ldquo;beautiful&rdquo; instead of the
+ pious and virtuous Es. This showed how such notice of the face and figure
+ benefited Christian maidens. Yesterday and to-day she had given a
+ three-farthing candle to her saint as a thank offering that this horror
+ had not reached their mother&rsquo;s ears. The dead woman had been a truly
+ devout and noble lady, and her soul would be grateful to her for
+ impressing upon the minds of her motherless daughters that the path which
+ they had recklessly entered&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was too much for Ortel, who, concealed behind a heap of sacks, had
+ listened to the discussion, and clasping his hands beseechingly, he now
+ went up to his mother and entreated her to beware of repeating the
+ slanders of evil-minded people who had dared to cast stones at the
+ gracious maidens, who were as pure and innocent as their saint herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Ortel! His kind young eyes streaming with tears might have softened a
+ rock; but the enraged candle-dealer misinterpreted his honest emotion, and
+ he certainly would not have been allowed to go on so far had not rage and
+ amazement kept her silent. But Frau Vorkler never lost the use of her
+ tongue long, and what a flood of abuse of the degenerate children of the
+ time, who forgot the respect and gratitude due to their own mother, she
+ began to pour forth! But when faithful Endres, who had grown grey in the
+ Ortlieb service, and under whose orders Ortel was placed to help in
+ unpacking, commanded her to be silent or leave the house, and told her
+ son, instead of following her, to stay with his old employer, Frau Vorkler
+ proceeded to lament over the corruption of the whole world, and did not
+ fail to deal a few side-thrusts at the two daughters of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here also she made little progress, for the abbess led Eva up the
+ stairs, and the two old family servants, Martsche representing the guiding
+ mind and Endres the rude strength, made common cause. The latter upheld
+ Ortel in his refusal to leave the house, and the former declared that Metz
+ must remain the usual time after giving notice. She would not help Frau
+ Vorkler to force the poor child into an unequal, miserable marriage with
+ the old miser to whom she wanted to give her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This remark was aimed at the master-tailor Seubolt, the guardian of the
+ Vorkler children, who, though forty years her senior, wanted to make
+ pretty Metz his wife, and who had also promised the widow to obtain for
+ his future brother-in-law Ortel an excellent place in the stables of the
+ German order of military monks. Not outraged morality, but the guardian
+ and suitor in one person, had induced the candle-dealer to take her
+ children from their good places in the Ortlieb household. The widow&rsquo;s fear
+ of having her real motive detected spared the necessity of using force.
+ But whilst slowly retiring backwards, crab fashion, she shrieked at her
+ antagonists the threat that her children&rsquo;s guardian, no less a personage
+ than master-tailor Nickel Seubolt, was a man who would help her gain her
+ just rights and snatch the endangered souls of Ortel and her poor young
+ Metz from temporal and eternal destruction in this Sodom and Gomorrah&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of the burden which oppressed her soul she was forced to confide
+ to the street. Endres closed the heavy door of the house behind her with a
+ strength and celerity marvellous in a man of his years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ortel was terribly agitated. Soon after his mother&rsquo;s departure he went
+ with his sister to the woodhouse, where both wept bitterly; for Metz had
+ given her heart to a young carrier who was expected to return from a trip
+ to Frankfort the first of July, and would rather have thrown herself into
+ the Pegnitz than married the rich old tailor to whom she knew her mother
+ had promised her pretty daughter; whilst her brother, like many youths of
+ his station, thought that the place of driver of a six-horse wain was the
+ most delightful calling in the world, and both were warmly attached to
+ their employer and the family whom they served. And yet both felt that it
+ was a heavy sin to refuse to obey their mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Eva was spared witnessing the close of this unpleasant incident. The
+ abbess had led her up the stairs into the sitting-room. St. Clare herself,
+ she thought, had sent Fran Vorkler to render the choice she intended to
+ place before her niece that very day easier for Eva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even whilst ascending the broad steps she put her arm around her, but in
+ the apartment, whence the noonday sun had been shut out and they were
+ greeted with a cool atmosphere perfumed with the fragrance of the bouquets
+ of roses and mignonette which Eva and the gardener had set in jars on the
+ mantelpiece early in the morning, the abbess drew her darling closer to
+ her side, saying, &ldquo;The world is again showing you its most disagreeable
+ face, my poor child, ere you bid it farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She kissed her brow and eyes tenderly as she spoke, expecting Eva, as she
+ had often done when anything troubled her young soul, to return the caress
+ impulsively, and accept with grateful impetuosity the invitation to the
+ shelter which she offered; but the vile assault of the coarse woman who
+ brought to her knowledge what people were thinking and saying about her
+ produced upon the strange child, who had already given her many a
+ surprise, an effect precisely opposite to her expectations. No, Eva had by
+ no means forgotten the pain inflicted by Frau Vorkler&rsquo;s base accusations;
+ but if whilst in the sedan-chair she had feared that she should lack
+ courage to inflict upon her beloved aunt and friend so great a
+ disappointment, she now felt that this dread had been needless, and that
+ her offended maidenly pride absolved her from consideration for any
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With cautious tenderness she released herself from the arms of the abbess,
+ gazed sorrowfully at her with her large eyes as if beseeching forgiveness
+ then, as she saw her aunt look at her with pained surprise, again threw
+ herself on her breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of being protectingly embraced by the elder woman, the young girl
+ clasped her closely to her heart, kissed and patted her with caressing
+ love, and with the winning charm peculiar to her besought her forgiveness
+ if she denied herself and her that which she had long desired as the
+ fairest and noblest goal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the abbess interrupted her to represent what awaited her in the world
+ and in the convent, Eva listened, nestling closely to her side until she
+ had finished, then sighing as deeply as if her own resolve caused her the
+ keenest suffering, threw her head back, exclaiming, &ldquo;Yet, in spite of
+ everything, I cannot, must not enter the convent now.&rdquo; Clasping the
+ abbess&rsquo;s hand, she explained what prevented her from fulfilling the wish
+ of her childhood&rsquo;s guide, which had so long been her own, extolling with
+ warm, sincere gratitude the quiet happiness and sweet anticipations
+ enjoyed with her beloved nuns ere love had conquered her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the recent days of sorrow she had again sought the path to her
+ saints and found the greatest solace in prayer; but whenever she uplifted
+ her heart to the Saviour, whose bride she had once so fervently vowed to
+ become, the Redeemer had indeed appeared as usual before the eyes of her
+ soul, but he resembled in form and features Sir Heinz Schorlin, and,
+ instead of turning her away from the world to divine love, she had
+ surrendered herself completely to earthly affection. Prayer had become
+ sin. The saint&rsquo;s song:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O Love, Love&rsquo;s reign announcing,
+ Why dost thou wound me so?
+ Into thy fiercest flames I fling
+ My heart, my life below.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ no longer invited her to give herself up to be fused into divine love, but
+ merely rendered the need of her own soul clearer, and expressed in words
+ the yearning of her heart for her lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here her aunt interrupted her with the assurance that all this&mdash;she
+ had had the same experience when, renouncing the love of the noblest and
+ best of men, she took the veil&mdash;would be different, wholly different,
+ when with St. Clare&rsquo;s aid she had again found the path on which she had
+ already once so nearly reached heaven. Even now she beheld in imagination
+ the day when Eva would look back upon the world she had left as if it were
+ a mere formless mass of clouds. These were no idle words. The promise was
+ something derived from her own experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On her pilgrimage to Rome she had gazed from an Alpine peak and beheld at
+ her feet nothing save low hills, forests, valleys, and flashing streams,
+ with here and there a village; but she could distinguish neither human
+ beings nor animals; a light mist had veiled everything, converting it into
+ one monotonous surface. But above her head the sky, like a giant dome free
+ from cloud and mist, arched in a beautiful vault, blue as turquoise and
+ sapphire. It seemed so close that the eagle soaring near her might reach
+ it with a few strokes of his pinions. She was steeped in radiance, and the
+ sun shone down upon her with overpowering brilliancy like the eye of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Close at her side a gay butterfly hovered about the solitary little white
+ flower which grew from a bare rock on the topmost summit. In the brilliant
+ light and amidst the solemn silence that butterfly seemed like a
+ transfigured soul, and aroused the question, Who that was permitted to
+ live on this glowing height, so near the Most High, could desire to return
+ to the grey mist below?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the human soul which soared to the shining height where it was so near
+ heaven, would blissfully enjoy the purity of the air and the un shadowed
+ light which bathed it, and all that was passing in the world below would
+ blend into a single vanquished whole, whose details could no longer be
+ distinguished. Thus Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s image would also mingle with the
+ remainder of the world, lying far below her, to which he belonged. It
+ should merely incite her to rise nearer and nearer to heaven, to the
+ radiant light above, to which her soul would mount as easily as the eagle
+ that before the pilgrim&rsquo;s eyes had vanished in the divine blue and the
+ golden sunshine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So come and dare the flight!&rdquo; she concluded with warm enthusiasm. &ldquo;The
+ wings you need have grown from your soul, you chosen bride of Heaven. Use
+ them. That which now most repels you from the goal will fall away as the
+ snake sheds its skin. Like the phoenix rising from its ashes, the
+ destruction of the little earthly love which even now causes you more pain
+ than pleasure, will permit the ascent of the great love for Him Who is
+ Love incarnate, the love which encompasses the lonely butterfly on the
+ white blossom in the silent, deserted mountain solitude, which lacks no
+ feather on its wings, no tiniest hair on its feelers, as warmly and
+ carefully as the vast, unlimited universe whose duration ends only with
+ eternity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, with labouring breath, had fairly hung upon the lips of the revered
+ woman, who at last gazed upwards with dilated eyes like a prophetess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she paused the young girl nodded assent. Her teacher and friend
+ seemed to have crushed her resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the eagle which had disappeared before the pilgrim&rsquo;s eyes in the
+ azure vault of heaven, the radiant light on the pure summit summoned her
+ pure soul to dare the flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abbess watched with delight the influence of her words upon the soul
+ of her darling, who, gazing thoughtfully at the floor, now seemed to be
+ pondering over what she had urged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But suddenly Eva raised her bowed head, and her eyes, sparkling with a
+ brighter light, sought those of the abbess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her quick intellect had attentively considered what she had heard, and her
+ vivid power of imagination had enabled her to transfer to reality the
+ picture which had already half won her over to her friend&rsquo;s wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Aunt Kunigunde, no!&rdquo; she began, raising her hands as if in repulse.
+ &ldquo;Your radiant height strongly allures me also, yet, gladly as I believe
+ that, for many the world would be easily forgotten above, where no sound
+ from it reaches us and the mist conceals individual figures from our eyes,
+ for me, now that love has filled my heart, it would be impossible to
+ ascend the peak alone and without him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear me, aunt!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was it that attracted me so powerfully from the beginning? At first,
+ as you know, the hope of making him a combatant for the possessions which
+ I have learned through you to regard as the highest and most sacred. Then,
+ when love came, when a new power, heretofore unknown, awoke within me and&mdash;everything
+ must be told&mdash;I longed for his wooing and his embrace, I also felt
+ that our union could take root and put forth blossoms only in the full
+ harmony of our mutual love for God and the Saviour. And though since the
+ mass for the dead was celebrated for my mother&mdash;it wounded me, and
+ defiance and the wish to punish him urged me to put the convent walls
+ between us&mdash;no further token of his love has come, though I know as
+ well as you that he desired to quit the world, this by no means impairs&mdash;nay,
+ it only strengthens&mdash;the confidence I feel that our souls belong to
+ one another as inseparably as though the sacrament had hallowed our union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Therefore I should never succeed in coming so near heaven as you, the
+ lonely, devout pilgrim, attained on the summit of your mountain peak,
+ unless he accompanied me in spirit, unless his soul joined mine in the
+ ascent or the flight. It rests in mine as mine rests in his, and were they
+ separated both would bleed as if from severed veins. For this reason,
+ aunt, he can never blend into a uniform mass with the rest of the world
+ below me; for if I gained the radiant height, he would remain at my side
+ and gaze with me at the mist-veiled world beneath. He can never vanish
+ from the eyes of my soul, and so, dear aunt, because I owe it to him to
+ avoid even the semblance&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she hesitated; for from the adjoining room they heard a man&rsquo;s deep
+ voice telling Els something in loud, excited tones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This interruption was welcome to the abbess; she had as yet found no
+ answer to her niece&rsquo;s startling objection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva answered her questioning glance with the exclamation, &ldquo;Uncle
+ Pfinzing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He?&rdquo; replied the abbess dejectedly. &ldquo;His opinion has some weight with
+ you, and this very day, during the burial, he told me how glad he should
+ be to see you sheltered in the convent from the hateful calumnies caused
+ by your imprudence!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet&mdash;you will see it directly,&rdquo; the girl declared, &ldquo;he will surely
+ understand me when I explain that I would rather endure the worst than
+ appear to seek refuge from evil tongues in flight. Whoever has expected
+ Eva Ortlieb to shelter herself from malice behind strong walls will be
+ mistaken. Heinz is certainly aware of the shameful injustice which has
+ pursued us, and if he returns he must find me where he left me. I am now
+ encountering what my dead mother called the forge fire of life, and I will
+ not shun it like a coward. Heinz, I know, will overthrow the man who
+ unchained this generation of vipers against us; but if he does not return,
+ or can bring himself to cast the love that unites us behind him with the
+ world from which he would fain turn, then, aunt&rdquo;&mdash;and Eva&rsquo;s eyes
+ flashed brightly with passionate fire, and her clear voice expressed the
+ firm decision of a vigorous will&mdash;&ldquo;then I will commit our cause to
+ One who will not suffer falsehood to conquer truth or wrong to triumph
+ over right. Then, though it should be necessary to walk over red-hot
+ ploughshares, let the ordeal bear witness for us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abbess, startled, yet rejoicing at the fulness of faith flaming in her
+ darling&rsquo;s passionate speech, approached Eva to soothe her; but scarcely
+ had she begun to speak when the door opened and Berthold Pfinzing entered
+ with his older niece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was holding Els by the hand, and it was evident that some sorrowful
+ thought occupied the minds of both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has any new horror happened?&rdquo; fell in tones of anxious enquiry from Eva&rsquo;s
+ lips before she even greeted her dearest relative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think of something very bad,&rdquo; was her sister&rsquo;s reply, in a tone so
+ dejected and mournful, that Eva, with a low cry&mdash;&ldquo;My father!&rdquo;&mdash;pressed
+ her hand upon her heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not dead, darling,&rdquo; said the magistrate, stroking her head soothingly
+ with his short, broad hand, &ldquo;by all the saints, not even wounded or ill.
+ Yet the daughter has guessed aright, and I have kept the &lsquo;Honourables&rsquo;
+ waiting, that I might tell you the news myself; for what may not such
+ tidings become whilst passing from lip to lip! It is a toad, a very ugly
+ toad, and I would not permit a dragon to be brought into the house to you
+ poor things in its place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He poured all this forth very rapidly, for, notwithstanding the intense
+ heat, and the burden of business at the Town Hall, he had left it, though
+ only to do his dear Es a kindness, lie and his worthy wife Christine, the
+ sister of Herr Ernst Ortlieb and of the abbess, had long been familiar
+ with all the tales which slander had called to life, and had striven
+ zealously enough to refute them. What he had now to relate filled him with
+ honest indignation against the evil tongues, and he knew how deeply it
+ would excite and grieve Eva, his godchild, who stood especially near his
+ heart. He would gladly have said a few kind words to her before beginning
+ his story, but he was obliged to return to the Town Hall immediately to
+ open the important conference concerning the fate of the Eysvogel
+ business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His appearance showed how rapidly he had hurried to the house through the
+ burning sunshine, for drops of perspiration were trickling down his broad,
+ low forehead over his plump, smoothshaven cheeks and thick red neck, in
+ which his small chin vanished as if it were a cushion. Besides, he
+ constantly raised a large linen handkerchief to his face, and his huge
+ chest laboured for breath as he hastily repeated to Eva and the abbess
+ what he had just announced to Els in a few rapid words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Ernst Ortlieb had gone to the Town Hall, where he attended an
+ examination in his character as magistrate, and had entered the court yard
+ to enjoy the cool air for a short time with a few other &ldquo;Honourables,&rdquo; in
+ the shady walk near the main gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then master-tailor Seubolt, the guardian of Ortel and his sister, who
+ were in service at the Ortlieb mansion, approached the Town Hall. No one
+ could have supposed that the tall, grey-headed man with the bowed back,
+ who was evidently nearing sixty, really meant to make a young girl like
+ Metz Vorkler his wife. Besides, he assumed a very humble, modest demeanour
+ when, passing through the vaulted entrance of the Town Hall, which stood
+ open to every citizen, he approached Herr Ernst to ask, with many bows and
+ humble phrases, for the permission, which he had been refused at the
+ Ortlieb house, to remove his wards from a place which their mother, as
+ well as he himself, felt sure&mdash;he had supposed that the &ldquo;Honourable&rdquo;
+ would have no objection&mdash;would be harmful to them in both body and
+ soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surprised and indignant, but perfectly calm, Herr Ernst had requested him
+ to tell him whatever he had to say at a more convenient time. But as the
+ tailor insisted that the matter would permit no delay, he invited him to
+ step aside with him, in order not to make the councillors who were with
+ him witnesses of the unpleasant discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seubolt, however, seemed to have no greater desire than to be heard by as
+ many people as possible. Raising his voice to a very loud tone, though he
+ still maintained an extremely humble manner, he began to give the reasons
+ which induced him, spite of his deep regret, to remove his wards from the
+ Ortlieb house. And now, sheltering himself behind frequent repetitions of
+ &ldquo;As people say&rdquo; and &ldquo;Heaven forbid that I should believe such things,&rdquo; he
+ began to relate what the most venomous slander had dared to assert
+ concerning the beautiful Es.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time Herr Ernst had forced himself to listen quietly to this
+ malicious abuse of those whom he held dearest, but at last it became too
+ much for the quick-tempered man. The tailor had ventured to allude to
+ Jungfrau Els &ldquo;who certainly had scarcely given full cause for such evil
+ slander&rdquo; in words which caused even the councillors standing near to
+ contradict him loudly, and induced Herr Pfinzing, who had just come up, to
+ beckon to the city soldiers. At that instant the blood mounted to the
+ insulted father&rsquo;s brain, and the misfortune happened; for as the tailor,
+ with an unexpected gesture of the arm he was flourishing, brushed Herr
+ Ernst&rsquo;s cap, the latter, fairly insane with rage, snatched the pike from
+ one of the men who, obeying Herr Pfinzing&rsquo;s signal, were just approaching
+ the tailor, and with a wild cry struck down the base traducer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Pfinzing, with the presence of mind characteristic of him, instantly
+ ordered the beadles to carry the wounded man into the Town Hall, and thus
+ prevented the luckless deed of violence from creating any excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The few persons in the courtyard had been detained, and perhaps everything
+ might yet be well. Herr Ernst had instantly delivered himself up to
+ justice, and instead of being taken to prison like a common criminal, had
+ been conveyed in a closed sedan-chair to the watch-tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pike had pierced the tailor&rsquo;s shoulder, but the wound did not seem to
+ be mortal, and Herr Ernst&rsquo;s rash deed might be made good by the payment of
+ blood-money, though, it is true, on account of the tailor&rsquo;s position and
+ means, this might be a large sum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My horse,&rdquo; said Herr Berthold in conclusion, &ldquo;was waiting for me, and
+ brought me here as swiftly as he must carry me back again. But, you poor
+ things! as for you, my Els, you have a firm nature, and if you insist upon
+ refusing the invitation to our house, why, wait here to learn whether your
+ father needs you. You, my little goddaughter Eva, are provided for. This
+ sorrow, of course, will throw the veil over your fair head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worthy man, as he spoke, laid his hand on her shoulder and looked at
+ her with a glance which seemed to rely on her assent, but she interrupted
+ him with the exclamation, &ldquo;No, uncle! Until you have convinced yourself
+ that no one will dare assail Eva Ortlieb&rsquo;s honour, do not ask her again if
+ she desires the protection of the convent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate hurriedly passed his huge handkerchief over his face; then
+ taking Eva&rsquo;s head between his hands, kissed her brow, and&mdash;turning
+ the shrewd, twinkling eyes, which were as round as everything else about
+ his person, towards the others, said: &ldquo;Did any one suggest this, or did
+ the &lsquo;little saint&rsquo; have the sensible idea herself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eva, smiling, pointed to her own forehead, he exclaimed: &ldquo;My
+ respects, child. They say that what stirs up there descends from godfather
+ to godchild, and I&rsquo;ll never put goblet to my lips again if I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he stopped, and called after Els that he had not meant to hint, for
+ she was hurrying out to get her uncle something to drink. But ere the door
+ closed behind her he went on eagerly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But to you, my saintly child, I will say: your piety soars far too high
+ for me to follow with my heavy body; yet on the ride here I, old sinner
+ that I am, longed&mdash;no offence, sister-in-law abbess!&mdash;to warn
+ you against the convent, for the very reason which keeps you away from
+ your saint. We&rsquo;ll find the gag to stop the mouths of these accursed
+ slanderers forever, and then, if you want to enter the convent, they shall
+ not say, when you take the veil, &lsquo;Eva Ortlieb is hiding from her own shame
+ and the tricks with which we frightened her out of the world.&rsquo; No! All
+ Nuremberg shall join in the hosanna!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then taking the goblet which Els had just filled, he drained it with great
+ satisfaction, and rushing off, called back to the sisters: &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll soon see
+ you again, you brave little Es. My wife is coming to talk over the matter
+ with you. Don&rsquo;t let that worthless candle-dealer&rsquo;s children leave the
+ house till their time is up. If you wish to visit your father in the
+ watch-tower there will be no difficulty. I&rsquo;ll tell the warder. Only the
+ drawbridge will be raised after sunset. You can provide for his bodily
+ needs, too, Els. We cannot release him yet; the law must take its course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the door he stopped again and called back into the room: &ldquo;We can&rsquo;t be
+ sure. If Frau Vorkler and the tailor&rsquo;s friends make an outcry and molest
+ you, send at once to the Town Hall. I&rsquo;ll keep my eyes open and give the
+ necessary orders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes after he trotted through the Frauenthor on his clumsy
+ stallion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The watch-tower was in the northern part of the city, in the corn magazine
+ of the fortress, and the whole width of Nuremberg must be traversed to
+ reach it. Even before Herr Pfinzing had left the house the sisters
+ determined to go to their father, and the abbess approved the plan. She
+ invited the girls to spend the night at the convent, if they found the
+ deserted house too lonely, but they did not promise to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Countess Cordula, who was on friendly terms with Eva, also emptied the
+ vials of her wrath with all the impetuosity of her nature upon Sir Seitz
+ Siebenburg and the credulity and malice of the people. From the beginning
+ she had been firmly convinced that the &ldquo;Mustache,&rdquo; as she now called the
+ knight in a tone of the most intense aversion, had contrived this base
+ conspiracy, and her opinion was strengthened by Biberli. Now she would
+ gladly have torn herself into pieces to mitigate the sisters&rsquo; hard lot.
+ She wanted to accompany them to the watch-tower, to have them taken there
+ in her sedan-chair carried by horses, which had room for several persons,
+ and at last begged for the favour of being allowed to spend the night in
+ the room adjoining theirs. If the girls, amidst all these base suspicions,
+ should find Nuremberg unendurable, she would leave the scene of the
+ Reichstag with them to-morrow, if necessary, and take them to her castle
+ in the Vorarlberg. She had other plans for them, too, in her mind, but
+ lacked time now to explain them to the sisters; they could not obtain
+ admittance to their father&rsquo;s prison after sundown, and in a few hours the
+ long summer day would be over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not advisable to use their sedan-chairs adorned with the Ortlieb
+ coat of arms, which every one knew, so they went on foot with their faces
+ shrouded by the &lsquo;Reise&rsquo; which was part of their mourning dress; and, in
+ order not to violate usage, were accompanied by two servants, old Martsche
+ and Katterle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Fleischbrucke they might have avoided the market-place, but Els
+ wanted to enquire whether the Eysvogel matter was being discussed. One of
+ the &ldquo;Honourables&rdquo;&mdash;all of whom she knew&mdash;was always to be found
+ near the Town Hall, and Eva understood her sister&rsquo;s anxiety and went with
+ her willingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when they were passing the prison she became frightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the squares formed by the iron grating in front of the broad
+ window of the largest one, head after head, hand after hand, was thrust
+ into the street. The closely cropped heads of the prisoners, many of which
+ showed mutilations by the hand of the executioner, which had barely
+ healed, formed, as separated only by the iron bars, they protruded above,
+ below, and beside one another into the open air, a mosaic picture,
+ startlingly repulsive in appearance; for savage greed glittered in the
+ eyes of most, and showed itself in the movements of the long, thin hands
+ extended for gifts. Bitter need and passionate longing gazed defiantly,
+ beseechingly, and threateningly at the people who crowded round the
+ window. Few were silent; they implored the curious and pitying men, women,
+ and children, who in the presence of their misery rejoiced in their more
+ favoured lot, for aid in their distress, and rarely in vain; for many a
+ mother gave her children a loaf to hand to the unfortunates, and meanwhile
+ impressed on their minds the lesson that they would fare as badly as the
+ most horrible of the mutilated prisoners unless they were good and
+ obedient to their parents and teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Street boys held out an apple or a bit of bread, to snatch it away just as
+ they touched it with their finger-tips, thus playing with them for their
+ own amusement, but the tribulation of the wretched captives. Then some man
+ who had seen better days, or a criminal whom sudden passion had made a
+ murderer, would burst into a rage and, seizing the iron bars, shake them
+ savagely, whilst the others, shrieking, drew in their heads. Then fierce
+ curses, threats, and invectives echoed over the market-place and,
+ screaming aloud, the boys ran back; but they soon resumed their malicious
+ sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, it is true, a mother came who placed her gift in the hands of her
+ child, or a modest old woman, tradesman, or soldier, from motives of
+ genuine compassion, offered the prisoners a jug of new milk or
+ strengthening wine. Nor was there any lack of priests or monks who desired
+ to give the consolations of religion to the pitiable men behind the bars,
+ but most of them reaped little gratitude; only a few listened to their
+ exhortations with open hearts, and but too frequently they were silenced
+ by insults and rude outcries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the sisters, attended by their maidservants, were passing these
+ pitiable people, Frau Tucher, whose daughter had been very ill, sent, for
+ the love of God, a large basket of freshly baked bread to the prisoners.
+ One of her servants was distributing it, and they greedily snatched the
+ welcome gift from his hand. A woman, who was about to give one of the
+ rolls to the hollow-eyed child in her arms just as a rude fellow who had
+ lost his ears snatched it, scratched his dirty, freckled face with her
+ sharp nails, and the sight of the blood which dripped from his lip over
+ his chin upon the roll was so hideous a spectacle that Eva clung closer to
+ her sister, who had just put her hand into the pocket hanging from her
+ belt to give the unfortunates a few shillings, and drew her away with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both, followed by the two maids, made their way as fast as possible
+ through the people who had flocked hither in great numbers for a purpose
+ which the sisters were to learn only too soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a long time since they had been here, and a few weeks previously
+ the &ldquo;Honourables&rdquo; had had the pillory moved from the other side of the
+ Town Hall to this spot. Katterle&rsquo;s warning was not heard in the din around
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd grew denser every moment, and Eva had already asked her sister
+ to turn back, when Els saw the man who brought to her father the summons
+ to the meetings of the Council, and requested him to accompany them
+ through the throng to the courtyard; but amidst the uproar of shouts and
+ cries he misunderstood her, and supposing that she wished to witness the
+ spectacle which had attracted so many, forced a way for the sisters into
+ the very front rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The person who had just been bound in this place of shame was the barber&rsquo;s
+ widow from the Kotgasse, who had already been here once for giving lovers
+ an opportunity for secret meetings, and to whom Katterle had fled for
+ shelter. Bowed by the weight of the stone which had been hung around her
+ neck, the woman, with outstretched head, looked furiously around the
+ circle of her tormentors like a wild beast crouched to spring, and
+ scarcely had the messenger brought the sisters and their servants to a
+ place near her when, recognising Katterle, she shrieked shrilly to the
+ crowd that there were the right ones, the dainty folk who, if they did not
+ belong to a rich family, would be put in the place where, in spite of the
+ Riese over their faces, with which they mourned for their lost good name,
+ they had more reason to be than she, who was only the lowly widow of a
+ barber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Overwhelmed with horror the girls pressed on, and at Eva&rsquo;s terrified
+ exclamation, &ldquo;Let us, O let us go!&rdquo; the man did his best. But they made
+ slow progress through the crowd, whose yells, hisses, and catcalls pursued
+ them to the entrance of the neighbouring Town Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the guard, with crossed halberds, kept back the people who were
+ crowding after the insulted girls, and it was fortunate, for Eva&rsquo;s feet
+ refused to carry her farther, and her older sister&rsquo;s strength to support
+ her failed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sighing deeply, Els led her to a bench which stood between two pillars,
+ and then ordered old Martsche, and Katterle, who was trembling in every
+ limb, to watch Eva till her return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before they went on, her sister must have some rest, and Martin Schedel,
+ the old Clerk of the Council, was the man with whom to obtain it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went in search of him as fast as her feet would bear her, and by a
+ lucky accident met the kind old man, whom she had known from childhood, on
+ the stairs leading to the Council chamber and the upper offices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernst Ortlieb&rsquo;s unhappy deed, and the story of the base calumnies in
+ circulation about the unfortunate man&rsquo;s daughters, which he had just heard
+ from Herr Pfinzing, had filled the worthy old clerk&rsquo;s heart with pity and
+ indignation; so he eagerly embraced the opportunity afforded to atone to
+ the young girls for the wrongs committed against them by their
+ fellow-citizens. Telling the maidservants to wait in the antechamber of
+ the orphan&rsquo;s court-room, he led the sisters to his own office, helping Eva
+ up the long flight of stairs with an arm which, though aged, was still
+ vigorous. After insisting that she should sit in the armchair before the
+ big desk, and placing wine and water before her, he begged the young girls
+ to wait until his return. He was obliged to be present at the meeting,
+ which had probably already begun. The matter in question was the Eysvogel
+ business, and if Els would remain he could tell her the result. Then he
+ left them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, deadly pale, leaned back with closed eyes in the clerk&rsquo;s high chair.
+ Els bathed her brow with a wet handkerchief, consoling her by representing
+ how foolish it would be to suffer the lowest of the populace to destroy
+ her happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her sister nodded assent, saying: &ldquo;Did you notice the faces of those
+ people behind the bars? Most of them, I thought, looked stupid rather than
+ evil.&rdquo; Here she hesitated, and then added thoughtfully: &ldquo;Yet they cannot
+ be wise. These poor creatures seldom obtain any great sum by thieving and
+ cheating. To what terrible punishments they expose themselves both in this
+ world and the next! And conscience!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, conscience!&rdquo; Els eagerly repeated. &ldquo;So long as we can say that we
+ have done nothing wrong, we can suffer even the worst to be said of us
+ without grieving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still,&rdquo; sighed Eva, &ldquo;I feel as if that horrible woman&rsquo;s insults had
+ sullied me with a stain no water can wash away. What sorrows have come
+ upon us since our mother died, Els!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her sister nodded, and added mournfully: &ldquo;Our father, my Wolff, your poor,
+ stricken heart, and below in the Council chamber, Eva, perhaps whilst we
+ are talking, those who are soon to be my kindred are being doomed. That is
+ harder to bear, child, than the invectives with which a wicked woman
+ slanders us. Often I do not know myself where I get the strength to keep
+ up my courage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned away as she spoke to wipe the tears from her eyes without being
+ seen; but Eva perceived it, and rose to clasp her in her arms and whisper
+ words of cheer. Ere she had taken the first step, however, she started; in
+ rising she had upset the clerk&rsquo;s tin water-pail, which fell rattling on
+ the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The water!&rdquo; she exclaimed sadly, &ldquo;and my tongue is parched.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll fetch more,&rdquo; said Els consolingly; &ldquo;Herr Martin brought it from over
+ yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opening the door to which she had pointed, she entered a low, spacious
+ anteroom, in which was a brass fire engine, ladders, pails, and various
+ other utensils for extinguishing a fire in the building, hung on the rough
+ plastered wall which separated this room from the office of the city
+ clerk. The centre of the opposite wall was occupied by two small windows
+ surmounted by a broad, semicircular arch, and separated by a short Roman
+ pillar. The sashes of both, whose leaden casings were filled with little
+ round horn panes, stood wide open. This double window was in the upper
+ part of the Council chamber, which occupied two stories. To create a
+ draught this hot day it had been flung wide open, and Els could
+ distinguish plainly the words uttered below. The first that reached her
+ was the name: &ldquo;Wolff Eysvogel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A burning sensation thrilled her. If she went nearer to the window she
+ could hear what the Honourables decided concerning the Eysvogel house;
+ and, overpowered by her ardent desire not to lose a single word of the
+ discussion which was to determine the happiness of Wolff&rsquo;s life, and
+ therefore hers, she instantly silenced the voice which admonished her that
+ listening was wrong. Yet the habit of caring for Eva was so dear to her,
+ and ruled her with such power, that before listening to what was passing
+ in the Council chamber below she looked for the water, which she speedily
+ found, took it to the thirsty girl, and hurriedly told her what she had
+ discovered in the next room and how she intended to profit by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of Eva&rsquo;s entreaty not to do it, she hastened back to the open
+ window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The younger sister, though she shook her head, gazed after her with a
+ significant smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Eva this was no accident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps it was her saint herself who, when her sister went to seek
+ refreshment for her, had guided her to the window. Eva deemed it a boon to
+ be permitted to find here in solitude the rest needful for her body which,
+ though usually so strong, had been shaken by horror, and to struggle and
+ pray for a clear understanding of the many things which troubled her; for
+ to her prayer was far more than the petition for a spiritual or earthly
+ blessing; nay, she prayed far less frequently to implore anything than
+ from yearning for the Most High to whose presence the wings of prayer
+ raised her. So long as she was absorbed in it, she felt removed from the
+ world and borne into the abode of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now also, whilst Els was listening, she brought no earthly matter to the
+ Power who guided the universe as well as her own little individual life,
+ but merely lost herself in supplication and in her intercourse with the
+ Omnipotent One, who seemed to her a familiar friend; she forgot what
+ grieved and troubled her and how she had been pained. But meanwhile the
+ prediction she had made to the abbess was verified; she felt as if her
+ lover&rsquo;s soul rose with hers to the pure height where she dwelt, and that
+ the earthly love which filled her heart and his was but an effluence of
+ the Eternal Love, whose embodiment to her was God and the Saviour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The union of herself and Heinz seemed imaged by two streams flowing from
+ the same great inexhaustible, pure, and beneficent fountain, which, after
+ having run through separate channels, meet to traverse as a single river
+ the blooming meadows and keep them fresh and green. God&rsquo;s love, her own,
+ and his were each separate and yet the same, portions of the great fount
+ which animated, saved, and blessed her, him, and the whole vast universe.
+ The spring gushing from her love and his was eternal, and therefore
+ neither could be exhausted, no matter how much it gave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But both were still in the world. As he would certainly put forth all his
+ might to show himself worthy of the confidence placed in him by his
+ Emperor and master, she too must test her youthful strength in the arduous
+ conflict which she had begun. Her recent experiences were the flames of
+ the forge fire of life of which her mother had spoken&mdash;and how
+ pitifully she had endured their glow! This must be changed. She had often
+ proved that when the body is wearied the soul gains greater power to soar.
+ Should she not begin to avail herself of this to make her feeble body obey
+ her will? With compressed lips and clenched hand she resolved to try.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Whilst Eva, completely absorbed in herself, was forming this resolution,
+ Els, panting for breath, stood at the open window under the ceiling of the
+ Council chamber, gazing down and listening to the sounds from beneath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Directly opposite to her was the inscription
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Feldt Urtel auf erden, als ir dort woldt geurtheilt werden,&rdquo; in the
+ German and Latin languages, and below this motto, urging the magistrates
+ to justice, was a large fresco representing the unjust judge Sisamnes
+ being flayed by an executioner in the costume of the Nuremberg Leben&mdash;[Executioner&rsquo;s
+ assistant. Really &ldquo;Lowen.&rdquo;]&mdash;before the eyes of King Cambyses, in
+ order to cover the judgment seat with his skin. Another picture
+ represented this lofty throne, on which sat the ruler of Persia dispensing
+ justice. The subject of a third was the Roman army interrupted in its
+ march by the order of the Emperor Trajan, that he might have time to hear
+ a widow&rsquo;s accusation of the murderer of her son and to punish the
+ criminal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els did not bestow a single glance upon these familiar pictures, but gazed
+ down at the thirteen elderly and the same number of much younger men, who
+ in their high-backed chairs were holding council together at her left hand
+ far below her. These were the burgomasters of the city, of whom an elder
+ and a younger one directed for the space of a month, as &ldquo;Questioner,&rdquo; the
+ government of the public affairs of the city and the business of the
+ &ldquo;Honourable Council.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this time the office was filled by Albert Ebner and Jorg Stromer,
+ whilst in the secret council formed by seven of the older gentlemen, as
+ the highest executive authority, Hans Schtirstab as the second and
+ Berthold Vorchtel as first Losunger filled the chief offices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So this year the deeply offended father held the highest place in the
+ Council, and in the whole community of Nuremberg he, more than any one
+ else, would decide the fate of the Eysvogels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els knew this, and with an anxious heart saw him gaze earnestly and sadly
+ at the papers which Martin Schedel, the city clerk, had just brought to
+ him from a special desk. At his side, in the centre of the table covered
+ with green cloth, sat the listener&rsquo;s uncle, the magistrate Berthold
+ Pfinzing, who in the Emperor&rsquo;s name presided over the court of justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He also appeared in his character of protector of the Jews, and Samuel
+ Pfefferkorn, a Hebrew usurer, had just left the hall after an examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Casper Eysvogel was gazing after him with a face white as death. His
+ handsome head shook as the imperial magistrate, turning to Berthold
+ Vorchtel, the chief Losunger, said in a tone loud enough to be heard by
+ all present, &ldquo;So this is also settled. Herr Casper contracted the great
+ debt to the Jew without the knowledge of his son and partner, and this
+ explains to a florin the difference between the accounts of the father and
+ son. The young man was intentionally kept in the dark about the greatest
+ danger which threatened the business. To him the situation of the house
+ must have appeared critical, but by no means hopeless. But for the
+ Siebenburgs and the other bandits, who transformed the last important and
+ promising venture of the firm into a great loss, and with the sale of the
+ landed property, it might perhaps have speedily risen, and under prudent
+ and skilful management regained its former prosperity. The enormous sum to
+ which the debt to Samuel Pfefferkorn increased gives the position of
+ affairs a different aspect. Since, as protector of the Jew, I must insist
+ upon the payment of this capital with the usual interest, the old Eysvogel
+ firm will be unable to meet its obligations&mdash;nay, its creditors can
+ be but partially paid. Therefore nothing remains for us to do save to
+ consider how to protect as far as possible our city and the citizens who
+ are interested. Yet, in my opinion, the entire firm does not deserve
+ punishment&mdash;only the father, who concealed from his upright son his
+ own accounts and those of Samuel Pfefferkorn, and&mdash;it is hard for me
+ to say this in Herr Casper&rsquo;s presence;&mdash;also, when the peril became
+ urgent, illegally deprived his business partner of the possibility of
+ obtaining a correct view of the real situation of affairs. So, in the
+ Emperor&rsquo;s name, let justice take its course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words pronounced the doom of the ancient, great, and wealthy
+ Eysvogel firm; yet the heart of Els throbbed high with joy when, after a
+ brief interchange of opinions between the assembled members of the
+ Council, the imperial magistrate, turning to Herr Vorchtel, again began:
+ &ldquo;As Chief Losunger, it would be your place, Herr Berthold, to raise your
+ voice on the part of the Honourable Council in defence of the accused; but
+ since we are all aware of the great grief inflicted upon you by the son of
+ the man in whose favour you would be obliged to speak, we should, I think,
+ spare you this duty, and transfer it to Herr Hans Schtirstab, the second
+ Losunger, or to Herr Albert Ebner, the oldest of the governing
+ burgomasters, who, though equally concerned in this sad case, are less
+ closely connected with the Eysvogels themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els uttered a sigh of relief, for both the men named were friendly to
+ Wolff; but Herr Vorchtel had already risen and began to speak, turning his
+ wise old head slowly to and fro, and drawing his soft grey beard through
+ his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He commenced his address as quietly as if he were talking with friends at
+ his own table, and the tones of his deep voice, as well as the expression
+ of his finely moulded aged features, exerted a soothing influence upon his
+ listeners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els, with a throbbing heart, felt that nothing which this man advocated
+ could be wrong, and that whatever he recommended would be sure of
+ acceptance; for he stood amongst his young and elderly fellow directors of
+ the Nuremberg republic like an immovably steadfast guardian of duty and
+ law, who had grown grey in the atmosphere of honesty and honour. Thus she
+ had imagined the faithful Eckart, thus her own Wolff might look some day
+ when age had bleached his hair and labour and anxiety had lined his lofty
+ brow with wrinkles; Berthold Vorchtel, and other &ldquo;Honourables&rdquo; who
+ resembled him; grey-haired Conrad Gross; tall, broad-shouldered Friedrich
+ Holzschuher, whose long, snow-white hair fell in thick waves to his
+ shoulders; Ulrich Haller, in whose locks threads of silver were just
+ appearing, princely in form and bearing; stately Hermann Waldstromer, who
+ had the keen eyes of a huntsman; the noble Ebner brothers, who would have
+ attracted attention even in an assembly of knights and counts&mdash;nay,
+ the Emperor Rudolph was probably thinking of the men below when he said
+ that the Nuremberg Council reminded him of a German oak wood, where firm
+ reliance could be placed on every noble trunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Berthold Vorchtel was just such a noble, reliable tree. Els told
+ herself so, and though she knew how deeply he was wounded when Wolff
+ preferred her to his daughter Ursula, and how sorely he mourned his son
+ Ulrich&rsquo;s death, she was nevertheless convinced that this man would bear
+ the Eysvogels no grudge for the grief suffered through them, for no word
+ which was not just and estimable would cross his aged lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was not mistaken; for after Herr Berthold had insisted upon his right
+ to raise his voice, not in behalf of Herr Casper but for his business firm
+ and its preservation, he remarked, by way of introduction, that for the
+ sake of Nuremberg he would advise that the Eysvogel house should not be
+ abandoned without ceremony to the storm which its chief had aroused
+ against the ancient, solid structure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he turned to the papers and parchments, to which the city clerk had
+ just added several books and rolls. His address, frequently interrupted by
+ references to the documents before him, sounded clear and positive. The
+ amount of the sums owed by the Eysvogel firm, as well as the names of its
+ creditors in Nuremberg, Augsburg, Ulm, and Regensburg, Venice, Milan,
+ Bruges, and other German and foreign cities, formed the most important
+ portion of his speech. During its progress he frequently seized a bit of
+ chalk and blackboard, writing rapidly on the green table whole rows of
+ figures, and the young burgomasters especially exchanged admiring smiles
+ as the experienced old merchant added and subtracted in an instant sums
+ for which they themselves would have needed twice as much time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The figures and names buzzed in the ears of the listener at the window
+ like the humming of a swarm of gnats. To understand and remember them was
+ impossible, and she gazed in astonishment at the old man who so clearly
+ comprehended the confused tangle and drew from it so readily just what he
+ needed for his purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he closed, and with a loud &ldquo;Therefore&rdquo; began to communicate the
+ result, she summoned all the mental power she possessed in order to
+ understand it. She succeeded, but her knees fairly trembled when she heard
+ the sum which the house was obliged to repay to others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, when Herr Berthold lastly gave the estimate of the Eysvogel property
+ in merchandise, buildings, and estates, she was again surprised. She had
+ not supposed that Wolff&rsquo;s proud family was so wealthy; but the close of
+ this report brought fresh disappointment, for including the sum which Herr
+ Casper had borrowed from the Jew Pfefferkorn, the debts of the firm
+ exceeded its possessions far more than Els had expected from the amount of
+ its riches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was wholly ignorant of the condition of her own father&rsquo;s property; but
+ she thought she knew that it was far from being enough to suffice here.
+ And this appeared to be the case, for when Berthold Vorchtel resumed his
+ speech he alluded to Ernst Ortlieb. In words full of sympathy he lamented
+ the unprecedented insult which had led him to commit the deed of violence
+ that prevented his sharing in this consultation. But before his removal he
+ had given him an important commission. Upon certain conditions&mdash;but
+ only upon them&mdash;he would place a considerable portion of his fortune
+ at his disposal for the settlement of this affair. Still, large as was the
+ promised sum, it would by no means be sufficient to save the Eysvogel
+ business from ruin. Yet he, Berthold Vorchtel, was of the opinion that its
+ fall must be prevented at any cost. The sincerity of this conviction he
+ intended to prove by the best means at a merchant&rsquo;s command-the pledge of
+ his own large capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words deeply moved the whole assembly, and Els saw her uncle glance
+ at the old gentleman with a look which expressed the warm appreciation of
+ a man of the same mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Casper Eysvogel, who, lost in thought, had permitted the statements of the
+ Losunger, which were mingled with many a bitter censure of his own
+ conduct, to pass without contradiction&mdash;nay, apparently in a state of
+ apathy in which he was no longer capable of following details&mdash;straightened
+ his bowed figure and gazed enquiringly into Herr Berthold&rsquo;s face as if he
+ did not venture to trust his own ears; but the other looked past him, as
+ he added that what he was doing for the Eysvogel business was due to no
+ consideration for the man who had hitherto directed it, or his family, but
+ solely on account of the good city whose business affairs the confidence
+ of the Council had summoned him to direct, and her commerce, whose
+ prosperity was equally dear to most of the Honourables around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cries and gestures of assent accompanied the last sentence; but Berthold
+ Vorchtel recognised the demonstration by remarking that it showed him that
+ the Council, in the name of the city, would be disposed to do its share in
+ raising the amount still lacking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This statement elicited opposition, expressed in several quarters in low
+ tones, and from one seat loudly, and Herr Berthold heard it. Turning to
+ Peter Ammon, one of the Eysvogels&rsquo; principal creditors, who was making the
+ most animated resistance, he remarked that no one could be more unwilling
+ than himself to use the means of the community to protect from the
+ consequences of his conduct a citizen whose own errors had placed him in a
+ perilous position, but, on the other hand, he would always&mdash;and in
+ this case with special zeal&mdash;be ready to aid such a person in spite
+ of the faults committed, if he believed that he could thus protect the
+ community from serious injury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he asked permission to make a digression, and being greeted with
+ cries of &ldquo;Go on!&rdquo; from all sides, began in brief, clear sentences to show
+ how the commerce of Nuremberg from small beginnings had reached its
+ present prosperity. Instead of the timid, irregular exchange of goods as
+ far as the Rhine, the Main, and the Danube, regular intercourse with
+ Venice, Milan, Genoa, Bohemia, and Hungary, Flanders, Brabant, and the
+ coast of the Baltic had commenced. Trade with the Italian cities, and
+ through them, even with the Levant, had made its first successful opening
+ under the Hohenstaufen rule; but during the evil days when the foreign
+ monarchs had neglected Germany and her welfare, it sustained the most
+ serious losses. By the election of Rudolph of Hapsburg who, with vigour,
+ good-will, and intelligence, had devoted his attention to the security of
+ commerce in the countries over which he reigned, better days for the
+ merchant had returned, and it was very evident what his work required,
+ what injured and robbed it of its well-earned reward. Confidence at home
+ and abroad was the foundation of prosperity, not alone of the Nuremberg
+ merchant but of trade in general. Under the Hohenstaufen rule their
+ upright ancestors had so strengthened this confidence that wherever he
+ went the Nuremberg merchant received respect and confidence above many&mdash;perhaps
+ all others. The insecurity of the roads and of justice in the lawless
+ times before the election of the Hapsburgs might have impaired this great
+ blessing; but since Rudolph had wielded the sceptre with virile energy,
+ made commerce secure, and administered justice, confidence had also
+ returned, and to maintain it no sacrifice should be too great. As for him,
+ Berthold Vorchtel, he would not spare himself, and if he expected the city
+ to imitate him he would know how to answer for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he was interrupted by loud shouts of applause; but, without heeding
+ them, he quietly went on: &ldquo;And it is necessary to secure confidence in the
+ Nuremberg merchant in two directions: his honesty and the capital at his
+ command. Our business friends, far and near, must be permitted to continue
+ to rely upon our trustworthiness as firmly as upon rock and iron. If we
+ brought the arrogant Italian to say of us that, amongst the German cities
+ who were blind, Nuremberg was the one-eyed, we ought now to force them to
+ number us amongst those who see with both eyes, the honest,
+ trust-inspiring blue eyes of the German. But to attain this goal we need
+ the imperial protection, the watchful power of a great and friendly ruler.
+ The progress which our trade owed to the Hohenstaufen proves this; the
+ years without an Emperor, on the contrary, showed what threatens our
+ commerce as soon as we lack this aid. Rights and privileges from
+ sovereigns smoothed the paths in which we have surpassed others. To obtain
+ new and more important ones must be our object. From the first Reichstag
+ which the Emperor Rudolph held here, he has shown that he esteems us and
+ believes us worthy of his confidence. Many valuable privileges have
+ revealed this. To maintain this confidence, which is and will remain the
+ source of the most important favours to Nuremberg, is enjoined upon us
+ merchants by prudence, upon us directors of the city by regard for its
+ prosperity. But, my honourable friends, reluctantly as I do so, I must
+ nevertheless remind you that this confidence, here and there, has already
+ received a shock through the errors of individuals. Who could have
+ forgotten the tale of the beautiful cap of the unhappy Meister Mertein,
+ who has preceded us into the other world? Doubtless it concerned but one
+ scabby sheep, yet it served to bring the whole flock into disrepute.
+ Perhaps the fact that it occurred so soon after Rudolph&rsquo;s election to the
+ sovereignty, during the early days of his residence in our goodly city,
+ imprinted it so deeply upon our imperial master&rsquo;s memory. A few hours ago
+ he asked for some information concerning the sad affair which now occupies
+ our attention, and when I represented that the public spirit and honesty
+ of my countrymen, fellow-citizens, and associate members of the Council
+ would prevent it from injuring our trade at home or abroad, he alluded to
+ that story, by no means in the jesting way with which he formerly
+ mentioned the vexatious incident that redounded to the honour of no one
+ more than that of his own shrewdness, which at that time&mdash;seven years
+ ago&mdash;was so often blended with mirth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the speaker began to allude to this much-discussed incident a smile
+ had flitted over the features of his listeners, for they remembered it
+ perfectly, and the story of Emperor Rudolph and the cap was still related
+ to the honour of the presence of mind of the wise Hapsburg judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the period of the assembly of the princes a Nuremberg citizen had
+ taken charge of a bag containing two hundred florins for a foreign
+ merchant who had lodged with him, but when he was asked for the property
+ entrusted to him denied that he had received it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This disgraceful occurrence was reported to the Emperor, but he apparently
+ paid no heed to it, and received Master Mertein, amongst other citizens
+ who wished to be presented to him. The dishonest man appeared in a rich
+ gala dress and as, embarrassed by the Emperor&rsquo;s piercing gaze, he
+ awkwardly twirled his cap&mdash;a magnificent article bordered with costly
+ fur; the sovereign took it from his hand, examined it admiringly and, with
+ the remark that it would suit even a king, placed it on his own royal
+ head. Then he approached one after another to exchange a few words and, as
+ if forgetting that he wore the head-gear, left the apartment to order a
+ messenger to take the cap at once to its owner&rsquo;s wife, show it to her as a
+ guarantee of trustworthiness, and ask her to bring the bag which the
+ foreign merchant had given him to the castle. The woman did so and the
+ cheat was unmasked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everyone present, like Els, was familiar with this story, which wrongly
+ cast so evil a light upon the uprightness of the citizens of Nuremberg.
+ Who could fail to be painfully affected by the thought that Rudolph,
+ during his present stay amongst them, must witness the injury of others by
+ a Nuremberg merchant? Who could have now opposed Herr Berthold, when he
+ asked, still more earnestly than before, that the community would do its
+ share to maintain confidence in the reliability of the Nuremberg citizens,
+ and especially of the Honourable Council and everyone of its members?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when he mentioned the large sum which he himself, and the other which
+ Ernst Ortlieb intended on certain conditions to devote to the settlement
+ of this affair, Peter Ammon also withdrew his opposition. The First
+ Losunger&rsquo;s proposal was unanimously accepted, and also the condition made
+ by his associate, Ernst Ortlieb. Casper Eysvogel, on whom the resolution
+ bore most heavily, submitted in silence, shrugging his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How high Els&rsquo;s heart throbbed, how she longed to rush down into the
+ Council chamber and clasp the hand of the noble old man at the green
+ table, when he said that in consequence of Ernst Ortlieb&rsquo;s condition&mdash;which
+ he also made&mdash;the charge of the newly established Eysvogel business
+ must be transferred from Herr Casper&rsquo;s hands to those of his son, Herr
+ Wolff, as soon as the imperial pardon permitted him to leave his
+ hiding-place. He, Berthold Vorchtel, would make no complaint against him,
+ for he knew that Wolff had been forced to cross swords with his Ulrich. He
+ had formed this resolution after a severe struggle with himself; but as a
+ Christian and a fair-minded man he had renounced the human desire for
+ revenge, and as God had wished to give him a token of his approval, he had
+ sent to his house a substitute for his dead son. Fresh cries of approval
+ interrupted this communication, whose meaning Els did not understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a word of remonstrance was uttered when the imperial magistrate at
+ last proposed that Casper Eysvogel and the women of his family should
+ leave the city and atone for his great offence by ten years in exile. One
+ of his estates, which he advised the city to buy, could be assigned him as
+ a residence. Herr Casper&rsquo;s daughter, Frau Isabella Siebenburg, had
+ already, with her twin sons, found shelter at the Knight Heideck&rsquo;s castle.
+ Her husband, who had joined his guilty brothers, would speedily fall into
+ the hands of justice and reap what he had sowed. For the final settlement
+ of this affair he begged the Honourable Council to appoint commissioners,
+ whom he would willingly join.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Herr Vorchtel again rose and requested his honourable friends to
+ treat the new head of the house with entire confidence; for from the books
+ of the firm and the statements which he had made in his hiding-place and
+ sent to the Council, both he and the city clerk had become convinced that
+ he was one of the most cautious and upright young merchants in Nuremberg.
+ Their opinion was also shared by the most prominent business acquaintances
+ of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This pleased the listener. But whilst the speaker sat down amidst the
+ eager assent of his associates in office, and Herr Casper Eysvogel,
+ leaning on the arm of his cousin, Conrad Teufel, left the hall with
+ tottering steps, utterly crushed, she saw the city clerk Schedel, after a
+ hasty glance upwards, approach the side door, through which he could reach
+ the staircase leading to his rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He evidently intended to tell the result of the discussion. But the old
+ gentleman would need considerable time to reach her, so she again listened
+ to what was passing below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She heard her uncle, the magistrate, speak of her father&rsquo;s unfortunate
+ deed, and tell the Council how the name of Herr Ernst&rsquo;s daughters, who
+ were held in such honour, had become innocently, through evil gossip, the
+ talk of the people. Just at that moment the old man&rsquo;s shuffling step
+ sounded close by the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els stopped listening to hasten towards the messenger of good tidings, and
+ the old gentleman could scarcely believe his own eyes when he saw the
+ happiness beaming in the girl&rsquo;s beautiful fresh face, whose anxiety and
+ pallor had just roused his deep sympathy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was scarcely possible that anyone could have anticipated him with the
+ glad news, and spite of his seventy-two years the city clerk had retained
+ the keen eyes of youth. When he entered the anteroom with Els and saw the
+ open window and beside it the white Riese which she had removed in order
+ to hear better, he released himself from the arm she had passed around his
+ shoulders, shook his finger threateningly at her, and cried: &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+ fortunate that I find only the Riese, and not the listener, otherwise I
+ should be compelled to deliver her to the jailer, or even the torturer,
+ for unwarranted intrusion into the secrets of the honourable Council. I
+ can hardly institute proceedings against a bit of linen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later the sisters left the Town Hall. Their white Rieses
+ were wound so closely about their faces that their features were
+ completely hidden, but the thin material permitted them to see Herr
+ Vorchtel, leaning upon the arm of the young burgomaster, Hans Nutzel,
+ leave the Council chamber, where the other Honourables were still
+ deliberating. Pointing to the old man, the city clerk told Els with a
+ significant smile that Ursula Vorchtel was engaged to the talented,
+ attractive young merchant now walking with her father, and that he had
+ promised Herr Vorchtel to aid him and his younger son in the management of
+ his extensive business. This was a great pleasure to the noble old
+ merchant, and when he, the city clerk, met Ursula that morning, spite of
+ her deep mourning, she again looked out upon the world like the happy
+ young creature she was. Her new joy had greatly increased her beauty, and
+ her lover was the very person to maintain it. Herr Schedel thought it
+ would be pleasant news to Els, too. The young girl pressed his hand
+ warmly; for these good tidings put the finishing touch to the glad tidings
+ she had just heard. The reproach which, unjust as it might be, had spoiled
+ many an hour for Wolff and entailed such fatal consequences, was now
+ removed, and to her also &ldquo;Ursel&rsquo;s&rdquo; altered manner had often seemed like a
+ silent accusation. She felt grateful, as if it were a personal joy, for
+ the knowledge that the girl who had believed herself deserted by Wolff,
+ her own lover, was now a happy betrothed bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ursula&rsquo;s engagement removed a burden from Eva&rsquo;s soul, too, only she did
+ not understand how a girl whose heart had once opened to a great love
+ could ever belong to anyone else. Els understood her; nay, in Ursula&rsquo;s
+ place she would have done the same, if it were only to weave a fresh
+ flower in her afflicted father&rsquo;s fading garland of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The city clerk accompanied them to the great entrance door of the Town
+ Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several jailers and soldiers in the employ of the city were standing
+ there, and whilst their old friend was promising to do his utmost to
+ secure Ernst Ortlieb&rsquo;s liberation and recommending the girls to the
+ protection of one of the watchmen, Eva&rsquo;s cheeks flushed; for a messenger
+ of the Council had just approached the others, and she heard him utter the
+ name of Sir Heinz Schorlin and his follower Walther Biberli. Els listened,
+ too, but whilst her sister in embarrassment pressed her hand upon her
+ heart, she frankly asked the city clerk what had befallen the knight and
+ his squire, who was betrothed to her maid. She heard that at the last
+ meeting of the Council an order had been issued for Biberli&rsquo;s arrest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His name must have been brought up during the discussions of the slanders
+ which had so infamously pursued the Ortlieb sisters, but she could not
+ enquire how or in what connection, for the sun was already low in the
+ western sky, and if the girls wished to see their father there was no time
+ to lose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, though Katterle had just said that Countess von Montfort was waiting
+ outside in her great sedan-chair for the young ladies, they were still
+ detained, for they would not leave the Town Hall without thanking the city
+ clerk and saying farewell to him. He was still near, but the captain of
+ the city soldiers had drawn him aside and was telling him something which
+ seemed to permit no delay, and induced the old gentleman to glance at the
+ sisters repeatedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva did not notice it; for Biberli&rsquo;s arrest, which probably had some
+ connection with Heinz and herself, had awakened a series of anxious
+ thoughts associated with her lover and his faithful follower. Els troubled
+ herself only about the events occurring in her immediate vicinity, and
+ felt perfectly sure that the captain&rsquo;s communications referred not only to
+ the four itinerant workmen and the three women who had just been led
+ across the courtyard to the &ldquo;Hole,&rdquo; and to whom the speaker pointed
+ several times, but especially to her and her sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the city clerk at last turned to them again, he remarked carelessly
+ that a disagreeable mob in front of the Ortlieb mansion had been
+ dispersed, and then, with urgent cordiality, invited the two girls to
+ spend the night under the protection of his old housekeeper. When they
+ declined, he assured them that measures would be taken to guard them from
+ every insult. He had something to tell their uncle, and the communication
+ appeared to permit no delay, for with a haste very unusual in the
+ deliberate old gentleman he left the two sisters with a brief farewell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Countess Cordula had become weary of waiting in the sedan-chair.
+ She came striding to meet her new friends, attired in a rustling
+ canary-green silk robe whose train swept the ground, but it was raised so
+ high in front that the brown hunting-boots encasing her well-formed feet
+ were distinctly visible. She was swinging her heavy riding-whip in her
+ hand, and her favourite dogs, two black dachshunds with yellow spots over
+ their eyes, followed at her heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it was against the rules to bring dogs into the Town Hall, the
+ doorkeeper tried to stop her, but without paying the slightest attention
+ to him, she took Els by the hand, beckoned to Eva, and was turning to
+ leave the path leading to the market-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In doing so her eyes fell upon the courtyard, where, just after the Ave
+ Maria, a motley throng had gathered. Here, guarded by jailers, stood
+ vagabonds and disreputable men and women, sham blind beggars and cripples,
+ swindlers, and other tatterdemalions, who had been caught in illegal
+ practices or without the beggar&rsquo;s sign. In another spot, dark-robed
+ servants of the Council were discussing official and other matters. Near
+ the &ldquo;Hole&rdquo; a little party of soldiers were resting, passing from hand to
+ hand the jug of wine bestowed by the Honourable Council. The &ldquo;Red Coat&rdquo;&mdash;[Executioner]&mdash;was
+ giving orders to his &ldquo;Life&rdquo;&mdash;[Executioner&rsquo;s assistant (&ldquo;Lion&rdquo;)]&mdash;as
+ they carried across the courtyard a new instrument of torture intended for
+ the room adjoining the Council chamber, where those who refused to make
+ depositions were forced to it. In a shady corner sat old people, poorly
+ clad women, and pale-faced children, the city poor, who at this hour
+ received food from the kitchen of the Town Hall. A few priests and monks
+ were going into the wing of the building which contained the &ldquo;Hole,&rdquo; with
+ its various cells and the largest chamber of torture, to give the
+ consolations of religion to the prisoners and those tortured by the rack
+ who had not yet been conveyed to the hospital at Schweinau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countess&rsquo;s keen glance wandered from one to another. When they reached
+ the group of paupers they rested upon a woman with deadly pale, hollow
+ cheeks, pressing a pitifully emaciated infant to her dry breast, and her
+ eyes swiftly filled with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; she whispered to old Martsche, taking several gold coins from the
+ pocket that hung at her belt, &ldquo;give these to the poorest ones. You are
+ sensible. Divide it so that several will have a share and the money will
+ reach the right hands. You can take your time. We need neither you nor
+ Katterle. Go back to the house. I will carry your young mistresses to
+ their father and home again. Where I am you need have no fear that harm
+ will befall them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she turned again towards the &ldquo;Hole,&rdquo; and seeing the people yelling
+ and shouting while awaiting imprisonment, she pointed to them with her
+ whip, saying, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a part of the pack which was set upon you. You shall
+ hear about it presently. But now come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke she went before the girls and urged them to step quickly into
+ the large, handsome sedan-chair, around which an unusual number of people
+ had assembled, for she wished to avoid any recognition of the sisters by
+ the curious spectators. The gilded box, borne between two powerful Brabant
+ horses in such a way that it hung between the tail of the first and the
+ head of the second, would have had room for a fourth occupant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it moved forward, swaying from side to side, Cordula pointed to the
+ curtained windows, and said: &ldquo;Shameful, isn&rsquo;t it? But it is better so,
+ children. That arch-rascal Siebenburg robbed the people of the little
+ sense they possessed, and that cat of a candle-dealer, with her mate, the
+ tailor, or rather his followers, poisoned the minds of the rest. How
+ quickly it worked! Goodness, it seems to me, acts more slowly. True, your
+ hot-tempered father spoiled the old rascal&rsquo;s inclination to woo pretty
+ Metz for a while; but his male and female gossips, aunts, cousins, and
+ work-people apparently allowed themselves to be persuaded by his future
+ mother-in-law to the abominable deed, which caused the brawling rabble you
+ saw in the Town Hall court to content themselves with a hard couch in the
+ &lsquo;Hole&rsquo; overnight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They have done everything bad concerning us, though I don&rsquo;t know exactly
+ what,&rdquo; cried Els indignantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wished to do, Miss Wisdom,&rdquo; replied the countess, patting Els&rsquo;s arm
+ soothingly. &ldquo;We kept our eyes open, and I helped to put a stop to their
+ proceedings. The rabble gathered in front of your house, yelling and
+ shrieking, and when I stepped into your bow-window there was as great an
+ outcry as if they were trying to bring down the walls of Jericho a second
+ time. Some boys even flung at me everything they could find in the mire of
+ the streets. The most delightful articles! There was actually a dead rat!
+ I can see its tail flying now! Our village lads know how to aim better.
+ Before the worst came, by the advice of the equerry and our wise chaplain,
+ whom I consulted, we had done what was necessary, and summoned the guard
+ at the Frauenthor to our assistance. But the soldiers were in no great
+ haste; so when matters were going too far, I stepped into the breach
+ myself, called down to tell them my name, and also showed my crossbow with
+ an arrow on the string. This had an effect. Only a few women still
+ continued to load me with horrible abuse. Then the chaplain came to the
+ window and this restored silence; but, in spite of his earnest words, not
+ a soul stirred from the spot until the patrol arrived, dispersed the
+ rabble, and arrested some of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els, who sat by Cordula&rsquo;s side, drew her towards her and kissed her
+ gratefully; but Eva&rsquo;s eyes had filled with tears of grief at the beginning
+ of the countess&rsquo;s report of this new insult, and the hostility of so many
+ of the townsfolk; yet she succeeded in controlling herself. She would not
+ weep. She had even forced herself to gaze, without the quiver of an
+ eyelash, at the sorrowful and horrible spectacle outside of the &ldquo;Hole.&rdquo;
+ She must cease being a weak child. How true her dying mother&rsquo;s words had
+ been! To be able to struggle and conquer, she must not withdraw from life
+ and its influences, which, if she did not spare herself, promised to
+ transform her into the resolute woman she desired to become.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had listened with labouring breath to the speaker&rsquo;s last words, and
+ when Els embraced Cordula, she raised her little clenched hand, exclaiming
+ with passionate emotion: &ldquo;Oh, if I had only been at home with you! You are
+ brave, Countess, but I, too, would not have shrunk from them. I would
+ voluntarily have made myself the target for their malice, and called to
+ their faces that only miserably deluded people or shameless rascals could
+ throw stones at my Els, who is a thousand times better than any of them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or at you, you dear, brave child,&rdquo; added Cordula in an agitated tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the day following the burning of the convent the countess had given
+ up her whim of winning Heinz Schorlin. She now knew that all her nobler
+ feelings spoke more loudly in favour of the quiet man who had borne her
+ out of the flames. Sir Boemund Altrosen&rsquo;s love had proved genuine, and she
+ would reward him for it; but the heart of the pretty creature opposite to
+ her was also filled with deep, true love, and she would do everything in
+ her power for Eva, whom she had loved ever since her affliction had
+ touched her tender heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both sisters were now aware of Cordula&rsquo;s kind intentions, and the warm
+ pleasure she displayed when Els told her what the Council had determined,
+ showed plainly enough that the motherless young countess, who had neither
+ brother nor sister, clung to the daughters of her host like a third
+ sister. Old Herr Vorchtel&rsquo;s treatment of the man who had inflicted so deep
+ a sorrow upon him touched her inmost soul. It was grand, noble; the
+ Saviour himself would have rejoiced over it. &ldquo;If it would only please the
+ good old man,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;I would rather offer him my lips to kiss
+ than the handsomest young knight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though two of Count von Montfort&rsquo;s mounted huntsmen and several constables
+ accompanied the unusually large and handsome sedan-chair, a curious crowd
+ had followed it; but the opinion probably prevailed that the countess&rsquo;s
+ companions were some of her waiting-women. When they alighted in front of
+ the watch-tower, however, an elderly laundry-maid who had worked for the
+ Ortliebs recognised the sisters and pointed them out to the others,
+ protesting that it was hard for a woman of her chaste spirit to have
+ served in a house where such things could have happened. Then a tailor&rsquo;s
+ apprentice, who considered the whole of the guild insulted in the wounded
+ Meister Seubolt, put his fingers to his wide mouth and emitted a long,
+ shrill whistle; but the next instant a blow from a powerful fist silenced
+ him. It was young Ortel, who had come to the watch-tower to seek Herr
+ Ernst and tell him that he and his sister Metz, spite of their mother and
+ guardian, meant to stay in his service. His heart&rsquo;s blood would not have
+ been too dear to guard Eva, whom he instantly recognised, from every
+ insult; but he had no occasion to use his youthful strength a second time,
+ for the soldiers who guarded the tower and the city mercenaries drove back
+ the crowd and kept the square in front of the tower open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countess would not be detained long, for the sun had already sunk
+ behind the towers and western wall of the fortress, and the reflection of
+ the sunset was tinging the eastern sky with a roseate hue. The warden
+ really ought to have refused them admittance, for the time during which he
+ was permitted to take visitors to the imprisoned &ldquo;Honourable&rdquo; had already
+ passed. But for the daughters of Herr Ernst Ortlieb, to whom he was
+ greatly indebted, he closed his eyes to this fact, and only entreated them
+ to make their stay brief, for the drawbridge leading to the tower must be
+ raised when darkness gathered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young girls found their father, absorbed in grief as if utterly
+ crushed, seated at a table on which stood a leaden inkstand with several
+ sheets of paper. He still held the pen in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received his daughters with the exclamation, &ldquo;You poor, poor children!&rdquo;
+ But when Els tried to tell him what had given her so much pleasure, he
+ interrupted her to accuse himself, with deep sorrow, of having again
+ permitted sudden passion to master him. Probably this was the last time;
+ such experiences would cool even the hottest blood. Then he began to
+ relate what had induced him to raise his hand against the tailor, and as,
+ in doing so, he recalled the insolent hypocrite&rsquo;s spiteful manner, he
+ again flew into so violent a rage that the blow which he dealt the table
+ made the ink splash up and soil both the paper lying beside it and his own
+ dress, still faultlessly neat even in prison. This caused fresh wrath, and
+ he furiously crushed the topmost sheet, already half covered with writing,
+ and hurled it on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not until Els stooped to pick it up did he calm himself, saying, with a
+ shrug of the shoulders, &ldquo;Who can remain unmoved when the whirlwind of
+ despair seizes him? When a swarm of hornets attacks a horse, and it rears,
+ who wonders? And I&mdash;What stings and blows has Fate spared me?&rdquo; Els
+ ventured to speak soothingly to him, and remind him of God, and the saints
+ to whom he had made such generous offerings in building the convent; but
+ this awakened an association, and he asked if it were true that Eva had
+ refused to take the veil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She made a silent gesture of assent, expecting another outburst of anger;
+ but her father only shook his head sorrowfully, clasped her right hand in
+ both his, and said sadly: &ldquo;Poor, poor child! But she, she&mdash;your
+ mother&mdash;would probably&mdash;&mdash;The last words her dear lips
+ bestowed upon us concerned you, child, and I believe their meaning&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the warden interrupted him to remind the girls that it was time to
+ depart; but whilst Els was begging the man for a brief delay, Herr Ernst
+ looked first at the paper and writing materials, then at his daughters,
+ and added with quiet decision: &ldquo;Before you go, you must hear that, in
+ spite of everything, I did not wholly lose courage, but began to act.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is right, dear father,&rdquo; exclaimed Els, and told him briefly and
+ quickly what the Council had decided, how warmly old Berthold Vorchtel had
+ interceded for Wolff, and that the management of the business was to be
+ confided solely to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These tidings swiftly and powerfully revived the fading hopes of the
+ sorely stricken man. He drew up his short figure as if the vigour of youth
+ had returned, declaring that he now felt sure that this first star in the
+ dark night would soon be followed by others. &ldquo;It will now be your Wolff&rsquo;s
+ opportunity,&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;to make amends for much that Fate But I was
+ commencing something else. Give me that bit of crumpled paper. I&rsquo;ll look
+ at it again early to-morrow morning; it is a letter to the Emperor I was
+ composing. Your brother ought not to have given up his young life on the
+ battlefield for the Crown in vain. He owes me compensation for the son,
+ you for the brother. He is certainly a fair-minded man, and therefore will
+ not shut his ears to my complaint. Just wait, children! And you, my devout
+ Eva, pray to your saint that the petition, which concerns you also, may
+ effect what I expect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is that?&rdquo; asked Eva anxiously. &ldquo;That the wrong done you, you
+ poor, deceived child, shall be made good,&rdquo; replied Herr Ernst with
+ imperious decision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva clasped his hand, pleading warmly and tenderly: &ldquo;By all that you hold
+ dear and sacred, I beseech you, father, not to mention me and Sir Heinz
+ Schorlin in your letter. If he withdrew his love from me, no imperial
+ decree&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The veins on the Councillor&rsquo;s brow again swelled with wrath, and though he
+ did not burst into a passion, he exclaimed in violent excitement: &ldquo;A
+ nobleman who declares his love to a chaste Nuremberg maiden of noble birth
+ assumes thereby a duty which, if unfulfilled, imposes a severe punishment
+ upon him. This just punishment, at least, the tempter shall not escape.
+ The Emperor, who proclaimed peace throughout the land and cleared the
+ highways of the bands of robbers, will consider it his first duty&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the warden interrupted him by calling from the threshold of the room
+ that the draw-bridge would be raised and the young ladies must follow him
+ without delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva again besought her father not to enter an accusation against the
+ knight, and Els warmly supported her sister; but their brief, ardent
+ entreaty produced no effect upon the obstinate man except, after he had
+ pressed a farewell kiss upon the brows of both, to tell them with resolute
+ dignity that the night would bring counsel, and he was quite sure that
+ this time, as usual, he should pursue the right course for the real good
+ of his dear children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto Herr Ernst had indeed proved himself a faithful and prudent head
+ of his family, but this time his daughters left him with heavy, anxious
+ hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fear of her father&rsquo;s intention tortured Eva like a new misfortune, and Els
+ and the countess also hoped that the petition would go without the
+ accusation against Heinz.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the sedan-chair was bearing the girls home few words were
+ exchanged. Not until they approached the Frauenthor did they enter into a
+ more animated conversation, which referred principally to Biberli and the
+ question whether the Honourable Council would call Katterle to account
+ also, and what could be done to save both from severe punishment. Cordula
+ had drawn aside the curtain on the right and was gazing into the street,
+ apparently from curiosity, but really with great anxiety. But Herr
+ Pfinzing had done his part, and with the exception of several soldiers in
+ the pay of the city there were few people in sight near the Ortlieb
+ mansion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A horse was being led up and down on the opposite side of the courtyard,
+ and behind the chains stood a sedan-chair with several men, to whom Metz
+ had just brought from the kitchen a coal of fire to light their torches.
+ The pretty girl looked as bright as if she felt small concern for the
+ severe wound of the grey-haired tailor who had chosen her for his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As the young girls were getting out of their sedan-chair, the Frauenthor,
+ which was closed at nightfall, opened to admit another whose destination
+ also seemed to be the Ortlieb mansion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle was standing in the lower entry with her apron raised to her
+ face. She had learned that her true and steadfast lover had been carried
+ to the &ldquo;Hole,&rdquo; and was waiting here for her mistresses and also for Herr
+ Pfinzing and his wife, whom old Martsche had conducted to the sittingroom
+ in the second story. Herr Pfinzing, in her opinion, had as much power as
+ the Emperor, and his wife was famed all over the city for her charitable
+ and active kindness. When the noble couple came down Katterle meant to
+ throw herself on her knees at their feet and beseech them to have mercy on
+ her betrothed husband. The sisters and Cordula comforted her with the
+ promise that they would commend Biberli&rsquo;s cause to the magistrate; but as
+ they went upstairs they again expressed to one another the fear that
+ Katterle herself would sooner or later follow the man she loved to prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They found Herr Pfinzing and his wife in the sitting-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle was not wrong in expecting kindly help from this lady, for a more
+ benevolent face than hers could scarcely be imagined, and, more over, Fran
+ Christine certainly did not lack strength to do what she deemed right.
+ Though not quite so broad as her short, extremely corpulent husband, she
+ surpassed him in height by several inches, and time had transformed the
+ pretty, slender, modest girl into a majestic woman. The slight arch of the
+ nose, the lofty brow, the light down on the upper lip, and the deep voice
+ even gave her a somewhat imperious aspect. Had it not been for the kind,
+ faithful eyes, and an extremely pleasant expression about the mouth, one
+ might have wondered how she could succeed in inspiring everyone at the
+ first glance with confidence in her helpful kindness of heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her grey pug had also been brought with her. How could an animal supply
+ the place of beloved human beings? Yet the pug had become necessary to her
+ since her son, like so many other young men who belonged to patrician
+ Nuremberg families, had fallen in the battle of Marchfield, and her
+ daughter had accompanied her husband to his home in Augsburg. The onerous
+ duties of her husband&rsquo;s office compelled him to leave her alone a great
+ deal, and even in her extremely active life there were lonely hours when
+ she needed a living creature that was faithfully devoted to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was often overburdened with work, for every charitable institution
+ sought her as a &ldquo;fosterer.&rdquo; True, in many cases their request was vain.
+ Whatever she undertook must be faultlessly executed, and the charge of the
+ orphan children in the city, the Beguines, and the hospital at her summer
+ residence occupied her sufficiently. During the winter she lived with her
+ husband at his official quarters in the castle, but as soon as spring came
+ she longed for her little manor at Schweinau, for she had taken into the
+ institution erected there for the widows of noble crusaders, but in which
+ only the last four of these ladies were now supported, a number of
+ Beguines. These were godly girls and women who did not wish to submit to
+ convent rules, or did not possess the favour or the money required for
+ admission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without pledging themselves to celibacy or any of the other restrictions
+ imposed upon the nuns, they desired only, in association with others of
+ the same mind, to lead a life pleasing in the sight of God and devoted to
+ Christian charity. Schweinau afforded abundant opportunity for charitable
+ women to aid suffering fellow-mortals, since it was here that the
+ unfortunates who had been mutilated by the hands of the executioner and
+ his assistants, or wounded on the rack, often nearly unto death, were
+ brought to be bandaged, and as far as possible healed. The Beguines
+ occupied themselves in nursing them, but had many a conflict with the
+ spiritual authorities, who preferred the monks and nuns bound by a
+ monastic vow. The order of St. Francis alone regarded them with favour,
+ interceded for them, and watched over them with kindly interest, taking
+ care that they were kept aloof from everything which would expose them to
+ reproach or blame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine, the Abbess Kunigunde&rsquo;s sister, aided her in this effort,
+ and the Beguines, to whom the magistrate&rsquo;s wife in no way belonged, but
+ who had given them a home on her own estate, silently rendered her
+ obedience when she wished to see undesirable conditions in their common
+ life removed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els, as well as Eva, had long since told Frau Christine, who was equally
+ dear to both, everything that afforded ground for the shameful calumnies
+ which had now urged their father to a deed for which he was atoning in
+ prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, a few hours before, a messenger from her husband informed her of
+ what had occurred, she had instantly come to the city to see that the
+ right thing was done, and take the girls thus bereft of their father from
+ the desolate Ortlieb mansion to her own house. Herr Pfinzing had warmly
+ approved this plan, and accompanied her to the &ldquo;Es,&rdquo; as he, too, was fond
+ of calling his nieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she had been told what motives induced Eva not to confide herself
+ just now to the protection of the convent, Frau Christine struck her broad
+ hips, exclaiming, &ldquo;There&rsquo;s something in blood! The young creature acts as
+ if her old aunt had thought for her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her invitation sounded so loving and cordial, her husband pressed it with
+ such winning, jovial urgency, and the pug Amicus, whose attachment to Eva
+ was especially noticeable, supported his mistress&rsquo;s wish with such ardent
+ zeal, that she called the sisters&rsquo; attention to his intercession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the girls had already expressed to each other, with the mute
+ language of the eyes, their inclination to accept the invitation so
+ affectionately extended. Els only made the condition that they were not to
+ go to Schweinau until early the following morning, after their visit to
+ their father; Eva, on the other hand, desired to go as soon as possible,
+ gladly and gratefully confessing to her aunt how much more calmly she
+ would face the future now that she was permitted to be under her
+ protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just creep under the old hen&rsquo;s wings, my little chicken; she will keep
+ you warm,&rdquo; said the kind-hearted woman, kissing Eva. But, as she began to
+ plan for the removal of the sisters, more visitors were announced&mdash;indeed,
+ several at once; first, Albert Ebner, of the Council, and his wife, then
+ Frau Clara Loffelholz, who came without her husband, and the two daughters
+ of the imperial ranger Waldstromer, Els&rsquo;s most intimate friends. They had
+ come in from the forest-house the day before to attend Frau Maria
+ Ortlieb&rsquo;s burial. Now, with their mother&rsquo;s permission, they came to invite
+ the deserted girls to the forest. The others also begged the sisters to
+ come to them, and so did Councillors Schurstab, Behaim, Gross,
+ Holzschuher, and Pirckheimer, who came, some with their wives and some
+ singly, to look after the daughters of their imprisoned colleague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great sitting-room was filled with guests, and the stalwart figures
+ and shrewd, resolute faces of the men, the kind, good, and usually
+ pleasing countenances of the women, whose blue eyes beamed with
+ philanthropic benevolence, though they carried their heads high enough,
+ afforded a delightful spectacle, and one well calculated to inspire
+ respect. There could be no doubt that those whose locks were already grey
+ represented distinguished business houses and were accustomed to manage
+ great enterprises. There was not a single one whom the title &ldquo;Honour of
+ the Family&rdquo; could not have well befitted; and what cheerful
+ self-possession echoed in the deep voices of the men, what maternal
+ kindness in those of the elder women, most of whom also spoke in sonorous
+ tones!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els and Eva often cast stolen glances at each other as they greeted the
+ visitors, thanked them, answered questions, gave explanations, accepted
+ apologies, received and courteously declined invitations. They did not
+ comprehend what had produced this sudden change of feeling in so many of
+ their equals in rank, what had brought them in such numbers at so late an
+ hour, as if the slightest delay was an offence, to their quiet house,
+ which that very day had seemed to Frau Vorkler too evil to permit her
+ children to remain in its service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old magistrate and his wife, on the contrary, thought that they knew.
+ They had helped the sisters to receive the first callers; but when Frau
+ Barbara Behaim, a cousin of the late Frau Maria, had appeared, they gave
+ up their post to her, and slipped quietly into the next room to escape the
+ throng.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There they retired to the niche formed by the deep walls of the broad
+ central window of the house, and Herr Berthold Pfinzing whispered to his
+ wife: &ldquo;There was too much philanthropy and kindness for me in there. A
+ great deal of honey at once cloys me. But you, prophetess, foresaw what is
+ now occurring, and I, too, scarcely expected anything different. So long
+ as one still has a doublet left compassion is in no haste, but when the
+ last shirt is stripped from the body charity&mdash;thank the saints!&mdash;moves
+ faster. We are most ready to help those who, we feel very sure, are
+ suffering more than they deserve. There are many motherless children; but
+ young girls who have lost both parents, exposed to every injustice&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are certainly rare birds,&rdquo; his wife interrupted, &ldquo;and this will
+ undoubtedly be of service to the children. But if they are now invited to
+ the houses of the same worthy folk who, a few hours ago, thought
+ themselves too good to attend the funeral of their admirable mother, and
+ anxiously kept their own little daughters away from them, they probably
+ owe it especially to the right mediators, noble old Vorchtel and another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-day, if ever, certainly furnished evidence how heavily the testimony
+ and example of a really estimable man weighs on the scale. The First
+ Losunger interceded for the children as if they were his own daughters,
+ attacked the slanderers, and of course I didn&rsquo;t leave him in the lurch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peter Holzschuher declared that you defended them like the Roman Cicero,&rdquo;
+ cried Frau Christine merrily. &ldquo;But don&rsquo;t be vexed, dear husband; no matter
+ how heavily the influence of the two Bertholds&mdash;Vorchtel&rsquo;s and yours&mdash;weighed
+ in the balance, nay, had that of a third and a fourth of the best
+ Councillors been added, what is now taking place before our eyes and ears
+ would not have happened, if&mdash;-&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; asked the magistrate eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If,&rdquo; replied the matron in a tone of the firmest conviction, &ldquo;they had
+ not all been far from believing, even for a moment, in their inmost souls
+ the shameful calumny which baseness dared to cast upon those two&mdash;just
+ look more closely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet if that was really the case&mdash;&rdquo; her husband began to object, but
+ she eagerly continued: &ldquo;Many did not utter their better knowledge or faith
+ because the evil heart believes in wickedness rather than virtue,
+ especially if their own house contains something&mdash;we will say a young
+ daughter&mdash;whose shining purity is thereby brought into a clearer
+ light. Besides, we ourselves have often been vexed by&mdash;let us do
+ honour to the truth!&mdash;by the defiant manner in which your devout
+ godchild&mdash;yonder &lsquo;little saint&rsquo;&mdash;held aloof in her spiritual
+ arrogance from the companions of her own age&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; the corpulent husband added, &ldquo;two young girls cannot be called
+ &lsquo;the beautiful Es&rsquo; unpunished in houses which contain a less comely T, S,
+ and H. Just think of the Katerpecks. There&mdash;thank the saints!&mdash;they
+ are taking leave already.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say anything about them!&rdquo; said Frau Christine, shaking her finger
+ threateningly. &ldquo;They are good, well-behaved children. It was pretty
+ Ermengarde Muffel yonder by the fireplace who, after the dance at the Town
+ Hall, assailed your godchild most spitefully with her sharp tongue. My
+ friend Frau Nutzel heard her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, that dance!&rdquo; said the magistrate, sighing faintly. &ldquo;But the child was
+ certainly distinguished in no common way. The Emperor Rudolph himself
+ looked after her as if an angel had appeared to him. You yourself heard
+ his sister&rsquo;s opinion of her. Her husband, the old Burgrave, and his son,
+ handsome Eitelfritz&mdash;But you know all that. Half would have been
+ enough to stir ill-will in many a heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And to turn her pretty little head completely,&rdquo; added his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That, by our Lady, Christine,&rdquo; protested the magistrate, &ldquo;that, at least,
+ did not happen. It ran off from her like water from an oil jar. I noticed
+ it myself, and the abbess&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your sister,&rdquo; interrupted the matron thoughtfully, &ldquo;she was the very one
+ who led her into the path that is not suited for her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; the magistrate eagerly asserted. &ldquo;God did not create a girl, the
+ mere sight of whom charms so many, to withdraw her from the gaze of the
+ world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Husband! husband!&rdquo; exclaimed Frau Christine, tapping his arm gaily. &ldquo;But
+ there go the Schurstabs and Ebners. What a noise there is in the street
+ below!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her husband looked out of the bow window, pointed down, and asked her to
+ come and stand beside him. When she had risen he passed his arm around the
+ slenderest part of her waist, which, however, he could not quite clasp,
+ and eagerly continued: &ldquo;Just look! One would think it was a banquet or a
+ dance. The whole street is filled with sedan-chairs, servants, and
+ torch-bearers. A few hours ago the constables had hard work to prevent the
+ deluded people from destroying the house of the profligate Es, and now one
+ half of the distinguished honourable Councillors come to pay their homage.
+ Do you know, dear, what pleases the most in all this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; asked Frau Christine, turning her face towards him with a look of
+ eager enquiry, which showed that she expected to hear something good. But
+ he nodded slightly, and answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We members of patrician families cling to old customs; each wants to keep
+ his individuality, as he would share or exchange his escutcheon with no
+ one. Then, when one surpasses the rest in external things, whatever name
+ they may bear, no one hastens to imitate him. We men are independent,
+ rugged fellows. But if the heart and mind of any one of us are bent upon
+ something really good and which may be said to be pleasing in the sight of
+ God, and he successfully executes it, then, Christine, then&mdash;I have
+ noticed it in a hundred instances&mdash;then the rest rush after him like
+ sheep after the bellwether.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And this time you, and the other Berthold, were the leaders,&rdquo; cried Fran
+ Christine, hastily pressing a kiss upon her old husband&rsquo;s cheek behind the
+ curtain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she turned back into the dusky chamber, pointed to the open door of
+ the sitting-room, and said, &ldquo;just look! If that isn&rsquo;t&mdash;&mdash;There
+ comes Ursula Vorchtel with her betrothed husband, young Hans Nutzel! What
+ a fine-looking man the slender youth has become! Ursel&mdash;her visit is
+ probably the greatest pleasure which Els has had during this blessed
+ hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wise woman was right; for when Ursel held out her hands to her former
+ friend, whom she had studiously avoided so long, the eyes of both girls
+ were moist, and Els&rsquo;s cheeks alternately flushed and paled, like the play
+ of light and shadow on the ground upon a sunny morning in a leafy wood
+ when the wind sways the tree tops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What did they not have to say to each other! As soon as they were
+ unnoticed a moment Ursel kissed her newly regained friend, and whispered,
+ pointing to her lover, with whom Fran Barbara Behaim was talking: &ldquo;He
+ first taught me to know what true love is, and since then I have realised
+ that it was wrong and foolish for me to be angry with you, my dear Els,
+ and that Wolff did right to keep his troth, hard as his family made it for
+ him to do so. Had my Hans met me a little sooner, we should not now have
+ to mourn our poor Ulrich. I know&mdash;for I have tried often enough to
+ soothe his resentment&mdash;how greatly he incensed your lover. Oh, how
+ sad it all is! But your aunt, the abbess, was right when she told us
+ before our confirmation, &lsquo;When the cross that is imposed upon us weighs
+ too heavily, an angel often comes, lifts it, and twines it with lovely
+ roses!&rsquo; That has been my experience, dear Els; and what great injustice I
+ did you when I kept out of your way so meanly! I always felt drawn to you.
+ But when that evil gossip began I turned against them all and bade them be
+ silent in my presence, for it was all false, base lies. I upheld your Eva,
+ too, as well as you, though she had been very ungracious whenever we met.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How joyously Els opened her heart to these confessions! How warmly she
+ interceded for her sister! The girls had passed their arms around each
+ other, as if they had returned to the days of their childhood, and when
+ Ursel&rsquo;s lover glanced at his betrothed bride, who, spite of her
+ well-formed figure and pleasant face, could not be classed amongst the
+ most beautiful of women, he thought she might compare in attractiveness
+ with the loveliest maidens, but no one could equal her in kindness of
+ heart. She saw this in the warm, loving look with which he sought her
+ pleasant grey eyes, as he approached to remind her that it was time to go;
+ but beckoning to him, she begged him to wait just a moment longer, which
+ she employed in whispering to Els: &ldquo;You should find shelter with us, and
+ no one else, if my father&mdash;&mdash;Don&rsquo;t think he refused to let me
+ invite you on account of poor Ulrich, or because he was angry with you.
+ It&rsquo;s only because&mdash;&mdash;After the session to-day they all praised
+ his noble heart, and I don&rsquo;t know what else, so loudly and with such
+ exaggeration that it was too much to believe. If he interceded for the
+ Eysvogel firm and you poor children, it was only because, as a just man,
+ he could not do otherwise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Ursel!&rdquo; Els here interrupted, wishing to join in her father&rsquo;s praise;
+ but the latter would not listen and eagerly continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, he really felt so. His modesty made him unwilling to awaken the
+ belief that he asked the betrothed bride of the man&mdash;you understand
+ and her sister into his house, to set an example of Christian
+ reconciliation. False praise, he says, weighs more heavily than disgrace.
+ He has already heard more of it than he likes, and therefore, for no other
+ reason, he does not open his house to you, but upon his counsel and his
+ aid, he bids me tell you, you can confidently rely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the friends took leave of each other, and Ursula also embraced Eva,
+ who approached her with expressions of warm gratitude, kissed her, and
+ said, as she went away, &ldquo;When next we meet, Miss Ungracious, I hope we
+ shall no longer turn our backs on each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ursel had gone with her lover, and most of the others had followed,
+ Els felt so elated by thankfulness that she did not understand how her
+ heart, burdened with such great and heavy anxieties, could be capable of
+ rising to such rapturous delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How gladly she would have hastened to Wolff to give him his share of this
+ feeling! But, even had not new claims constantly pressed upon her, she
+ could on no account have sought his hiding-place at this hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the last guest and the abbess also had retired, Aunt Christine asked
+ Els to pack whatever she and her sister needed for the removal to
+ Schweinau, for Eva was to go there with her at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Countess Cordula, who, much as she regretted the necessity of being
+ separated from her companions, saw that they were right to abandon the
+ house from which their father had been torn, wanted to help Els, but just
+ as the two girls were leaving the room a new visitor arrived&mdash;Casper
+ Teufel, of the Council, a cousin of Casper Eysvogel, who had leaned on his
+ arm for support when he left the session that afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els would not have waited for any other guest, but this one, as his first
+ words revealed, came from the family to which she felt that she belonged,
+ and the troubled face of the greyhaired, childless widower, who was
+ usually one of the most jovial of men, as well as the unusually late hour
+ of his call, indicated so serious a reason for his coming that she
+ stopped, and with anxious urgency asked what news he had brought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not unexpected, yet his brief report fell heavily on the heart of
+ Els, which had just ventured to beat gaily and lightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her uncle and aunt, Eva and the countess, also listened to the story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had accompanied Casper Eysvogel to his home and remained with him
+ whilst, overflowing with resentment and vehement, unbridled complaints of
+ the injustice and despotism to which&mdash;owing specially to the
+ hostility and self-conceit of old Berthold Vorchtel&mdash;he had fallen a
+ victim, he informed Fran Rosalinde and her mother what the Council had
+ determined concerning his own future and that of his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he finally reported that he himself and the ladies must leave the
+ house and the city, Countess Rotterbach, with a scornful glance at her
+ deeply humiliated son-in-law, exclaimed, &ldquo;This is what comes of throwing
+ one&rsquo;s self away!&rdquo; The unfortunate man, already shaken to the inmost depths
+ of his being, sank on his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conrad Teufel had instantly placed him in bed and sent for the leech; but
+ even after they had bathed his head with cold water and bled him he did
+ not regain consciousness. His left side seemed completely paralysed, and
+ his tongue could barely lisp a few unintelligible words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the leech&rsquo;s desire a Sister of Charity had been sent for. Isabella
+ Siebenburg, the sufferer&rsquo;s daughter, had already gone with her twin sons,
+ in obedience to her husband&rsquo;s wish, to Heideck Castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had departed in anger, because she had vainly endeavoured to induce
+ her mother and grandmother, who opposed her, to speak more kindly of her
+ husband. When they disparaged the absent man with cruel harshness, she
+ felt&mdash;she had told her cousin so&mdash;as if the infants could
+ understand the insult offered to their father, and, to protect the
+ children even more than herself, from her husband&rsquo;s feminine foes, she
+ left the falling house, in spite of the entreaties and burning tears with
+ which, in the hour of parting, her mother strove to detain her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere her departure she gave her jewels and the silver which her grandfather
+ had bequeathed to her to Conrad Teufel, to satisfy the most urgent demands
+ of her husband&rsquo;s creditors. Her father and she had parted kindly, and he
+ made no attempt to oppose her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one except the Sister of Charity was now in attendance upon the old
+ gentleman; for his wife wept and wailed without finding strength to do
+ anything, and even reproached her own mother, whom she accused of having
+ plunged them all into misfortune, and caused the stroke of paralysis from
+ which her husband was suffering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grey-haired countess, the cousin went on, had passed from one attack
+ of convulsions into another, and when he approached her had shrieked the
+ words &ldquo;ingratitude&rdquo; and &ldquo;base reward&rdquo; so shrilly at him, in various tones,
+ that they were still ringing in his ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything in the luckless household was out of gear, and its noble guest,
+ the Duke von Gulich, would feel the consequences, for the servants had
+ lost their wits too. Spite of the countless men and maids, he had been
+ obliged to go himself to the pump to get a glass of water for the sick
+ man, and the fragments of the vase which the grandmother had flung at him
+ with her own noble hand were still lying on the floor. His name was Teufel&mdash;[devil]&mdash;but
+ even in his home in Hades things could scarcely be worse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Herr Teufel at last paused, the magistrate and his wife exchanged a
+ significant glance, while Eva gazed with deep suspense, and Cordula with
+ earnest pity, at Els, who had listened to the story fairly panting for
+ breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she raised her tearful eyes to Herr Pfinzing and Frau Christine,
+ saying mournfully, &ldquo;I must beg you to excuse me, my dear aunt and uncle;
+ you have heard how much my Wolff&rsquo;s father needs me,&rdquo; all saw their
+ expectations fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hard, hard!&rdquo; said the magistrate, patting her on the shoulder. &ldquo;Yet the
+ lead with which we burden ourselves from kindly intentions becomes wood,
+ or at last even feathers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Frau Christine was not content with uttering cheering words; she
+ offered to accompany Els and secure the place to which she was entitled.
+ Frau Rosalinde had formerly often visited the matron to seek counsel, and
+ had shown her, with embarrassing plainness, how willingly she admitted her
+ superior ability. She disliked the old countess&mdash;but with whom would
+ not the self-reliant woman, conscious of her good intentions, have dared
+ to cope? Since the daughter of the house had left her relatives, the place
+ beside his father&rsquo;s sick-bed belonged to the son&rsquo;s future wife. Frau
+ Rosalinde was weak, but not the worst of women. &ldquo;Just wait, child,&rdquo; Aunt
+ Christine concluded, &ldquo;she will see soon enough what a blessing enters the
+ house and the sick-room with you. We will try to erect a wall against the
+ old woman&rsquo;s spite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conrad Teufel confessed that he had come with the hope of inducing Els,
+ who had nursed her own mother so skilfully and patiently, to make so
+ praiseworthy a resolution. In taking leave he promised to keep a sharp
+ lookout for her rights, and, if necessary, to show the old she-devil his
+ own cloven foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After he, too, had gone, the preparations for the sisters&rsquo; departure were
+ commenced. Whilst Cordula was helping Eva to select the articles she
+ wished to take to Schweinau, and her older sister, with Katterle&rsquo;s
+ assistance, was packing the few pieces of clothing she needed as a nurse
+ in the Eysvogel family, the countess offered to visit Herr Ernst in the
+ watch-tower early the following morning and tell him what detained his
+ daughters. Towards evening Eva could come into the city under the
+ protection of her aunt, who had many claims upon her the next day, and see
+ the prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time, to the surprise of her sister, who had always relieved her of
+ such cares, Eva herself did the packing. When she had finished she led the
+ weeping Katterle to her uncle, that she might beg for mercy upon her
+ lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate was thoroughly aware of the course of affairs, and talked
+ to the maid with the gentle manner, pervaded with genuine kindness of
+ heart, which was one of his characteristics. Biberli had already been
+ subjected to an examination by torture; but even on the rack he had not
+ said one word about his betrothed bride, and had resolutely denied
+ everything which could criminate his master. A second trial awaited him on
+ the morrow, but the magistrate promised to do all in his power to obtain
+ the mildest possible sentence for him. At any rate, like all whose blood
+ was shed by a legal sentence, he would be sent to Schweinau to be cured,
+ and as Katterle would accompany Eva there, she could find an opportunity
+ of nursing her betrothed husband herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words he dismissed the girl, but when again alone with his wife
+ he admitted to her that the poor fellow might easily fare badly&mdash;nay,
+ might even lose his tongue&mdash;if on the rack, which was one of the
+ instruments of torture to which he must again be subjected, he confessed
+ having forced his way into the house of an &ldquo;Honourable&rdquo; at night. True,
+ the fact that in doing so he had only followed his master, would mitigate
+ the offence. He must bind the judges to secrecy, should it prove
+ impossible to avoid the necessity of informing them of Eva&rsquo;s somnambulism.
+ If the sentence were very severe, he might perhaps be able to delay its
+ execution. Sir Heinz Schorlin, who stood high in the Emperor&rsquo;s favour,
+ would then be asked to apply to the sovereign to annul it, or at any rate
+ to impose a lighter punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he was interrupted by his nieces and Cordula, and soon after Frau
+ Christine went out with Els to go to the Eysvogels. Herr Pfinzing remained
+ with the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A personage of no less distinction than the Duchess Agnes had complained
+ to him of the reckless countess. Only yesterday she had ridden into the
+ forest with her father, and when the young Bohemian princess met her,
+ Cordula&rsquo;s dogs had assailed her skittish Arabian so furiously that it
+ would have been difficult for a less practised rider to keep her seat in
+ the saddle. This time the docile animals had refused to obey their
+ mistress, and the duchess expressed the suspicion that she had not
+ intended to call them off; for, though she had carelessly apologised, she
+ asked, as if the words were a gibe, if there was anything more delightful
+ than to curb a refractory steed. She had an answer ready for Cordula,
+ however, and retorted that the disobedience of her dogs proved that, if
+ she understood how to obtain from horses what she called the greatest
+ delight, she certainly failed in the case of other living creatures. She
+ therefore offered her royal condolence on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she remarked to the magistrate that the incident had occurred in the
+ imperial forest where, as she understood, the unrestricted wandering of
+ strange hunting dogs was prohibited. Therefore, in future, Countess von
+ Montfort might be required to leave hers at home when she rode to the
+ woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate now brought the complaint to the person against whom it was
+ made, adopting a merry jesting tone, in which Cordula gaily joined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the old gentleman asked whether she had previously angered the
+ irritable princess, she answered laughing, &ldquo;The saints have hitherto
+ denied to the wife of the Emperor&rsquo;s son, as well as to other girls of
+ thirteen or fourteen, the blessing of children, so she likes to play with
+ dolls. She chanced to prefer the same one for which she saw me stretch out
+ my hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old magistrate vainly sought to understand this jest; but Eva knew
+ whom the countess meant by the doll, and it grieved her to see two women
+ hostile to each other, seeking to amuse themselves with one who bore so
+ little resemblance to a toy, and to whom she looked up with all the
+ earnestness of a soul kindled by the deepest passion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the magistrate and the countess were gaily arguing and jesting
+ together she sat silent, and the others did not disturb her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a long time Frau Christine returned. Traces of tears were plainly
+ visible, though she had tried, whilst in the sedan-chair, to efface them.
+ The scenes which Els had experienced at the Eysvogels&rsquo; had certainly been
+ far worse than she had feared&mdash;nay, the old countess&rsquo;s attack upon
+ her was so insulting, Frau Rosalinde&rsquo;s helpless grief and Herr Casper&rsquo;s
+ condition were so pitiable, that she had thought seriously of bringing the
+ poor girl back with her, and removing her from these people who, she was
+ sure, would make Els&rsquo;s life a torment as soon as she herself had gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grandmother&rsquo;s enquiry whether Jungfrau Ortlieb expected to find her
+ Swiss gallant there, and similar insolent remarks, seemed fairly steeped
+ with rancour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a repulsive spectacle the old woman, utterly bereft of dignity,
+ presented as with solemn mockery she courtesied to Els again and again, as
+ if announcing herself her most humble servant; but the poor child kept
+ silence until Frau Christine herself spoke, and assigned her niece to the
+ place beside Herr Casper&rsquo;s sick-bed, which no one else could fill so well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stillness reigned in this chamber, and Els scarcely had occasion to dread
+ much disturbance, for the countess had been strictly forbidden to enter
+ the sufferer&rsquo;s room. Frau Rosalinde seemed to fear the sight of the
+ helpless man, and the Sister of Charity was a strong, resolute woman, who
+ welcomed Els with sincere cordiality, and promised Frau Christine to let
+ no evil befall her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sedan-chairs were already waiting outside, and the lady would have
+ gladly deferred her account of these sorrowful events until later, but
+ Cordula so affectionately desired to learn how her friend had fared in her
+ lover&rsquo;s home, that she hurriedly and swiftly gratified her wish. Speaking
+ of the matter relieved her heart, and in a somewhat calmer mood she was
+ carried to Schweinau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The little Pfinzing castle in Schweinau was neither spacious nor splendid,
+ but it was Fran Christine&rsquo;s favourite place of abode.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heat of summer found no entrance through the walls&mdash;three feet in
+ thickness&mdash;of the ancient building. Early in the morning and at
+ evening it was pleasant to stay in the arbour, a room open in the front,
+ extending the whole length of the edifice, where one could breathe the
+ fresh air even during rainy weather. It overlooked the herb garden, which
+ was specially dear to its mistress, for it contained roses, lilies, pinks,
+ and other flowers; and part of the beds, after being dug by the gardener,
+ who had charge of the kitchen garden in the rear, were planted and tended
+ by her own hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hour between sunrise and mass was devoted to this work, in which Eva
+ was to help her, and it would afford her much information; for her aunt
+ raised many plants which possessed healing power. Some of the seeds or
+ bulbs had been brought from foreign lands, but she was perfectly familiar
+ with the virtues of all. Schweinau afforded abundant opportunity to use
+ them, and the nurses in the city hospital, and the leech Otto, and other
+ physicians, as well as many noble dames in the neighbourhood who took the
+ place of a physician among their peasants and dependents, applied to Fran
+ Christine when they needed certain roots, leaves, berries, and seeds for
+ their sick. Nor did the monks and nuns, far and near, ever come to her for
+ such things in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, the life at Castle Schweinau was by no means so quiet as the one
+ which Eva had hitherto loved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she accepted the invitation she knew that, if she shared all her
+ aunt&rsquo;s occupations, she would not have even a single half hour of her own;
+ but this was not her first visit here, and she had learned that Frau
+ Christine allowed her entire liberty, and required nothing which she did
+ not offer of her own free will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she saw the matron, after the mass and the early repast which her
+ husband shared with her before going to the city, visit the aged widows of
+ the crusaders in the little institution behind the kitchen garden and
+ inspect and regulate the work of the Beguines, she often wondered where
+ this woman, whose age was nearer seventy than sixty, found strength for
+ all this, as well as the duties which followed. First there were orders to
+ give in the kitchen that the principal meal, after the vesper bells had
+ rung, should always win from the master of the house the &ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t be
+ better,&rdquo; which his wife heard with the same pleasure as ever. Then, after
+ visiting the wash-house, the bleachcry, the linen presses, the cellar, the
+ garret, and even the beehives to see that everything was in order, and
+ emerging from the hands of the maid as a well-dressed noblewoman, she
+ received visit after visit. Members of the patrician families of Nuremberg
+ arrived; monks and nuns on various errands for their cloisters and their
+ poor; gentlemen and ladies from ecclesiastical and secular circles, in
+ both city and country, among them frequently the most aristocratic
+ attendants of the Reichstag; for she numbered the Burgrave and his wife
+ among her friends, and when questioned about the Nuremberg women, the
+ Burgrave Frederick mentioned her as second to none in ability, shrewdness,
+ and kindness of heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both he and his worthy wife sometimes sought her in the sphere of
+ occupation which consumed the lion&rsquo;s share of her time and strength&mdash;the
+ superintendence of the Schweinau hospital. True, she often let days elapse
+ without entering it; but if anything went wrong and her assistance was
+ desirable or necessary in serious cases, she remained there until late at
+ night, or even until the following morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At such times even the most distinguished visitors were sent home with the
+ message that Frau Christine could not leave the sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Burgrave and his wife were the only persons permitted to follow her
+ into the hospital, and they had probably gained the privilege of speaking
+ to her there because they were among its most liberal supporters, and
+ three of their sons wore the cross of the Knights Hospitaller, and often
+ spent weeks there, as the rule of the order prescribed, in nursing the
+ sufferers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Women also had the right to enter the hospital to be cured of the wounds
+ inflicted by the scourge or the iron of the executioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each sufferer was to be nursed there only three days, but Frau Christine
+ took care that no one to whom such treatment might be harmful should be
+ put out. The Honourable Council was obliged, willing or unwilling, to
+ defray the necessary expense. The magistrate had many a battle to fight
+ for these encroachments, but he always found a goodly majority on the side
+ of the hospital and his wife. If the number of those who required longer
+ nursing increased too rapidly they did not spare their own fine residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hospital and the hope of being allowed to help within its walls had
+ brought Eva to Schweinau. The experiences of the past few days had swept
+ through the peace of her young soul like a tempest, overthrowing firmly
+ built structures and fanning glimmering sparks to flames. Since her quiet
+ self-examination in the room of the city clerk, she had known what she
+ lacked and what duty required her to become. The bond which united her to
+ her saint and the Saviour still remained, but she knew what was commanded
+ by him from whom St. Clare&rsquo;s mission also came, what Francis of Assisi had
+ enjoined upon his followers whose experiences had been like hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were to strive to restore peace to their perturbed souls by faithful
+ toil for their brothers and sisters; and what toil better suited a feeble
+ girl like herself than the alleviation of her unhappy neighbour&rsquo;s
+ suffering? The harder the duties imposed upon her in the service of love,
+ the better. She would set to work in the hope of making herself the true,
+ resolute woman which her mother, with the eyes of the soul, had seen her
+ fragile child become; but she could imagine nothing more difficult than
+ the tasks to be fulfilled here. This was the real fierce heat of the forge
+ fire to which the dead woman had wished to entrust her purification and
+ transformation. She would not shun, but hasten to it. While her lover was
+ wielding the sword she, too, had a battle to fight. She had heard from
+ Biberli that Heinz wished to undergo the most severe trials. This was
+ noble, and her enthusiastic nature, aspiring to the loftiest goal, was
+ filled with the same desire. Eager to learn how they would bear the test,
+ she scanned her young shoulders and gazed at the burden which she intended
+ to lay upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, the year before, her aunt took her to the hospital for the first
+ time, she had returned home completely unnerved. She had not even had the
+ slightest suspicion that there was such suffering on earth, such pain
+ amongst those near her, such depravity amongst those of her own sex. What
+ comparison was there between what Els had done for her gentle, patient
+ mother, or what she would do for old Herr Casper, who lay in a soft bed&mdash;it
+ had been shown to her as something of rare beauty, of ebony and ivory&mdash;and
+ the task of nursing these infamous gallows-birds bleeding from severe
+ wounds, and these depraved sick women? But if God&rsquo;s own Son gave up His
+ life amidst the most cruel suffering for sinful humanity, how dared she,
+ the weak, erring, slandered girl, who had no goodness save her passionate
+ desire to do what was right, shrink from helping the most pitiable of her
+ neighbours? Here in the hospital at Schweinau lay the heavy burden which
+ she wished to take upon herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She desired it also in order to maintain the bond which had united her to
+ the Saviour. She would be constantly reminded here of his own words,
+ &ldquo;Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren,
+ ye have done it unto me.&rdquo; To become a bride of Jesus Christ and, closely
+ united to Him in her inmost soul, await the hour when He would open His
+ divine arms to her, had seemed the fairest lot in life. Now she had
+ pledged herself in the world to another, and yet she did not wish to give
+ up her Saviour. She desired to show Him that though she neither could nor
+ would resign her earthly lover, her heart still throbbed for the divine
+ One as tenderly as of yore. And could He who was Love incarnate condemn
+ her, when He saw how, without even being permitted to hope that her lover
+ would find his way back to her, she clung with inviolable steadfastness to
+ her troth, though no one save He and His heavenly Father had witnessed her
+ silent vow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She belonged to Heinz, and he&mdash;she knew it&mdash;to her. Even though
+ later, after all the world had acknowledged her innocence, the walls of
+ convent and monastery divided them, their souls would remain indissolubly
+ united. If there should be no meeting for them here below, in the other
+ world the Saviour would lead them to each other the more surely, the more
+ obediently they strove to fulfil His divine command. As Heinz desired to
+ take up the cross in imitation of Christ she, too, would bear it. It was
+ to be found beside the straw pallets of the wounded criminals. The
+ fulfilment of every hard duty which she voluntarily performed seemed like
+ a step that brought her nearer to the Saviour, and at the same time to the
+ union with her lover, even though in another world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first request she made to her aunt on the way to mass, early in the
+ morning of the first day of her stay in Schweinau, was an entreaty for
+ permission to work in the hospital. It was granted, but not until the eyes
+ of the experienced woman, ever prompt in decision, had rested with anxious
+ hesitation upon the beautiful face and exquisite lithe young figure. The
+ thought that it would be a pity for such lovely, pure, stainless girlish
+ charms to be used in the service of these outcasts had almost determined
+ her to utter a resolute &ldquo;No&rdquo;; but she did not do it; nay, a flush of shame
+ crimsoned her face as her eyes rested on the image of the crucified
+ Redeemer which stood beside the road leading to the little village church;
+ for whom had He, the Most High, summoned to His service and deemed
+ specially worthy of the kingdom of heaven? The simple-hearted, the
+ children, the adulterers, the sinners and publicans, the despised, and the
+ poor! No, no, it would not degrade the lovely child to help the miserable
+ creatures yonder, any more than it did the rarest plant which she raised
+ in her herb garden when she used it to heal the hurts of some abandoned
+ wretch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And besides, with what deep loathing she herself had gone to the hospital
+ at first, and how fully conscious of her own infinite superiority she had
+ returned from amongst these depraved beings to the outdoor air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet how this feeling, which had stirred within her heart, gradually
+ changed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During her closer acquaintance with the poor and the despised, the nature
+ and work of Christ first became perfectly intelligible to her; for how
+ many traits of simple, self-sacrificing readiness to help, what touching
+ contentment and grateful joy in the veriest trifle, what childlike piety
+ and humble resignation even amidst intolerable suffering, these
+ unfortunates had shown! Nay, when she had become familiar with the lives
+ of many of her protegees and learned how they had fallen into the hands of
+ the executioner and reached Schweinau, she had asked herself whether,
+ under similar circumstances, the majority of those who belonged to her own
+ sphere in life would not have found the way there far more speedily, and
+ whether they would have endured the punishment inflicted half so patiently
+ or with so much freedom from bitterness and rebellion against the decrees
+ of the Most High. She had discovered salutary sap in many a human plant
+ that had at first seemed absolutely poisonous; where she had shrunk from
+ touching such impurity, violets and lilies had bloomed amidst the mire.
+ Instead of holding her head haughtily erect, she had often left the
+ hospital with a sense of shame, and it was long since she had ceased to
+ use the proud privilege of her rank to despise people of lower degree. If
+ sometimes tempted to exercise it, the impulse was roused far more
+ frequently by those of her own station, who were base in mind and heart,
+ than by the sufferers in the hospital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had become very modest in regard to herself, why should she wake to
+ new life the arrogance now hushed in Eva&rsquo;s breast?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much secret distress of mind and anguish of soul had been endured by the
+ poor child, who yesterday had opened her whole heart to her, when she went
+ to rest in her chamber. How lowly she felt, how humble was the little
+ saint who recently had elevated herself above others only too quickly and
+ willingly! It would do her good to descend to the lowest ranks and measure
+ her own better fate by their misery. She who felt bereaved could always be
+ the giver in the hospital, and she felt with subtle sympathy what
+ attracted Eva to her sufferers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate&rsquo;s wife was a religious matron, devoted to her Church, but
+ in her youth she had been by no means fanatical. The Abbess Kunigunde, her
+ younger sister, however, had fought before her eyes the conflict of the
+ soul, which had finally sent the beautiful, much-admired girl within
+ convent walls. No one except her quiet, silent sister Christine had been
+ permitted to witness the mental struggle, and the latter now saw repeated
+ in her young niece what Kunigunde had experienced so many years before.
+ Difficult as it had then been for her to understand the future abbess,
+ now, after watching many a similar contest in others, it was easy to
+ follow every emotion in Eva&rsquo;s soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During a long and happy married life, in which year by year mutual respect
+ had increased, the magistrate and his wife had finally attained the point
+ of holding the same opinions on important questions; but when Herr
+ Berthold returned from the city, and finding Eva already at the hospital,
+ told his wife, at the meal which she shared with him, that from his point
+ of view she ought to have strenuously opposed her niece&rsquo;s desire, and he
+ only hoped that her compliance might entail no disastrous consequences
+ upon the excitable, sensitive child, the remarkable thing happened that
+ Frau Christine, without as usual being influenced by him, insisted upon
+ her own conviction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it happened that this time the magistrate was robbed of the little nap
+ which usually followed the meal, and yet, in spite of the best will to
+ yield, he could not do his wife the favour of allowing himself to be
+ convinced. Still, he did not ask her to retract the consent which she had
+ once given, so Eva was permitted to continue to visit the hospital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nurse, a woman of estimable character and strong will, would
+ faithfully protect her whatever might happen. Frau Christine had placed
+ the girl under her special charge, and the Beguine Hildegard, a woman of
+ noble birth and the widow of a knight who had yielded his life in Italy
+ for the Emperor Frederick, received her with special warmth because she
+ had a daughter whom, just at Eva&rsquo;s age, death had snatched from her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the magistrate would not be soothed. Not until he saw from the arbour,
+ whilst the dessert still remained on the table; Cordula riding up on
+ horseback did he cease recapitulating his numerous objections and go to
+ meet the countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his straightforward mind and calm feelings the most incomprehensible
+ thing had been Frau Christine&rsquo;s description of the soul-life of her sister
+ and her niece. He knew the terrible impressions which even a man could not
+ escape amongst the rabble in the hospital, and had used the comparison
+ that what awaited Eva there was like giving a weak child pepper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Countess Cordula, aided by the old man&rsquo;s hand, swung herself from the
+ saddle of her spirited dappled steed, he thought: &ldquo;If it were she who
+ wanted to tend our sick rascals instead of the delicate Eva, I wouldn&rsquo;t
+ object. She&rsquo;d manage Satan himself whilst my little godchild was holding
+ intercourse with her angels in heaven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the arbour Cordula explained why she had not come before; but her
+ account told the elderly couple nothing new.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she went to see Ernst Ortlieb in the watch-tower that morning he had
+ already been taken to the Town Hall. No special proceedings were required,
+ since he was his own accuser, and many trustworthy witnesses deposed that
+ he had been most grossly irritated&mdash;nay, as his advocate represented,
+ had wounded the tailor in self-defence. Yet Ernst Ortlieb could not be
+ dismissed from imprisonment at once, because the tailor&rsquo;s representative
+ demanded a much larger amount of blood-money than the court was willing to
+ grant. The wound was not dangerous to life, but still prevented his
+ leaving his bed and appearing in person before his judges. The
+ candle-dealer was nursing him in his own house and instigating him to make
+ demands whose extravagance roused the judges&rsquo; mirth. As after a tedious
+ discussion Meister Seubolt still insisted upon them, the magistrates from
+ the Council and the Chief of Police, who composed the court, advised Herr
+ Ernst to have the sentence deferred and recognise the tailor&rsquo;s claim that
+ his case belonged to the criminal court. Out of consideration for the
+ citizens and the excited state of the whole guild of tailors, it seemed
+ advisable to avoid any appearance of partiality, yet in that case the
+ self-accuser must submit to imprisonment until the sentence was
+ pronounced. This delay, however, was of trivial importance; for Herr
+ Pfinzing had promised his brother-in-law that his cause should be
+ considered and settled on the following day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Berthold had told his wife all this soon after his return, and added,
+ with much admiration of the valiant fellow&rsquo;s steadfastness, that Biberli,
+ Sir Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s servant, had again been subjected to an examination
+ by torture and was racked far more severely than justice could approve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countess reported that after her friend&rsquo;s father had been taken back
+ to the watch-tower a few hours before, she had found him in excellent
+ spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, the Burgrave von Zollern had not come to visit him in person, like
+ many &ldquo;Honourables&rdquo; and gentlemen, but he had sent his son Eitelfritz to
+ enquire how he fared, and the prisoner was occupied with the petition
+ which he wished to send the sovereign the next day through Meister
+ Gottlieb von Passau, the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s protonotary. He had told
+ Cordula, with a resolute air, that it contained the charge that Sir Heinz
+ Schorlin had found his way into his house at night, and would not even
+ suffer her to finish her entreaty to omit the accusation. &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; the
+ countess added mournfully, &ldquo;I urge you, to whom the young girl is dear, to
+ consider the pitiable manner in which, by her own father&rsquo;s folly, Eva&rsquo;s
+ name will be on the tongues of the whole court, and what the gossips
+ throughout the city will say about the poor child in connection with such
+ an accusation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Pfinzing sighed heavily, and rose, but her husband, who perceived her
+ intention, stopped her with the remark that it would be useless to go that
+ day, for the sun was already setting and the watchtower was closed at
+ nightfall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This induced the matron to return to her seat; but she had scarcely
+ touched the easy-chair ere she again rose and told the servant to saddle
+ the big bay. She would ride to the city on horseback this time; the
+ bearers moved too slowly. Then turning to her husband, she said gaily:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you for the excuse you have made for me, but I cannot use it in
+ this case. My foolish brother must on no account make the charge which
+ will expose his daughter; it would be a serious misfortune were I to
+ arrive too late. What is the use of being the wife of the imperial
+ magistrate, if a Nuremberg drawbridge cannot be raised for me even after
+ sunset? If the petition has already gone, I must see Meister Gottlieb.
+ True, it was not to be sent until to-morrow, but there is nothing of which
+ we are more glad to rid ourselves than the disagreeable transactions from
+ which we shrink. Give me a pass for the warder, Pfinzing; and you,
+ Countess, excuse me; it is you who send me away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the maid brought her headkerchief and her cloak, and the magistrate
+ in a low tone told he servant to have his horse ready, too, Frau Christine
+ asked Cordula to bring Eva from the hospital, if she felt no disgust at
+ the sight of common people suffering from wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The huts of our wood-cutters, labourers, and fishermen look cleaner, it
+ is true, than the hovels of the charcoal burners and quarrymen in the
+ Montfort forests and mountains; yet none of them are perfumed with
+ sandal-wood and attar of roses, and the blow of the axe which gashes one
+ of our wood-cutter&rsquo;s flesh presents a similar spectacle to the wounds
+ which your criminals bring with them to Schweinau. And let me tell you, I
+ am the leech in Montfort, and unless death is near, and the chaplain
+ accompanies me bearing the sacrament, I often go alone with the
+ manservant, the maid, or the pages who carry my medicines. Since I grew up
+ I have attended to our sick, and I cannot tell you how many fractures,
+ wounds, hurts, and fevers I have cured or seen progress to a fatal end. I
+ stand godmother to nearly all the newborn infants in our villages and
+ hamlets. The mothers whom I nurse insist upon it. There are almost as many
+ Cordulas as girls on the Montfort estates, and in many a hut there are two
+ or three of them. Michel the fisherman has a Cordula, a Cordel, and a
+ Dulla. Therefore it follows that I am accustomed to severe wounds, though
+ my heart often aches at the sight of them. I know how to bandage as well
+ as a barber, and, if necessary, can even use the knife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought so,&rdquo; cried the magistrate, much comforted. &ldquo;Set my delicate
+ little Eva an example if her courage fails; or, what would be still
+ better, if you see that the horrible business goes too much against the
+ grain, persuade her to give up work which requires stronger hands and a
+ less sensitive nature. But there are the horses already. I want to go to
+ the city, too, Christel, and it&rsquo;s lucky that I don&rsquo;t have to go alone at
+ night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So said the man who jumped in to save somebody from drowning,&rdquo; replied
+ Fran Christine laughing: &ldquo;It&rsquo;s lucky it happened, because I was just going
+ to take a bath!&rdquo; But it pleased her to have her husband&rsquo;s companionship,
+ and she did not approach her horse until he had examined the saddle-girth
+ and the bridle with the utmost care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before putting her foot in the stirrup, she told the old housekeeper to
+ take Countess von Montfort to the hospital and commend her to the special
+ care of Sister Hildegard. She would call for Cordula and Eva on her return
+ from the city; but they must not wait for her should the strength of
+ either fail. She had ordered a sedan-chair to be kept ready for her niece
+ at the hospital. A second one would be at the countess&rsquo;s disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I call foresight!&rdquo; cried the magistrate laughing. &ldquo;Only, my
+ dear countess, see that our little saint doesn&rsquo;t attempt anything too
+ hard. Her pious heart would run her little head against the wall if
+ matters came to that and, like the noble Moorish steeds, she would drop
+ dead in her tracks rather than stop. Such a delicate creature is like a
+ lute. When the key is raised higher and higher the string snaps, and we
+ want to avoid that. With you, my young heroine&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no danger of that kind,&rdquo; Cordula gaily protested. &ldquo;This
+ instrument is provided with metal strings; the tone is neither sweet nor
+ musical, but they are durable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good, firm material, such as I like,&rdquo; the magistrate declared. Then he
+ helped his wife mount her horse, placed the bridle in her left hand,
+ looked at the saddle-girth again, and, spite of his corpulence, swung
+ himself nimbly enough on his strong steed. Then, with Frau Christine, he
+ trotted after the torch-bearers towards the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The drawbridge before the watch-tower was promptly lowered for the
+ imperial magistrate and his wife. He would have dissuaded Frau Chris the
+ from the ride and come alone, had not experience taught him that Ernst
+ Ortlieb was more ready to listen to her than to him. But they came too
+ late; just before sunset Herr Ernst had availed himself of the visit of
+ the imperial forester, Waldstromer, to give him the petition to convey to
+ the protonotary, by whom it was to reach the Emperor. Nor did he regret
+ this decision, but insisted that his duty as a father and a Nuremberg
+ &ldquo;Honourable&rdquo; would not permit the wrong done to his child and his
+ household by a foreign knight to pass unpunished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, Fran Christine exerted all her powers of persuasion to change his
+ opinion, and her husband valiantly supported her, but they accomplished
+ nothing except to gain the prisoner&rsquo;s consent that if the paper had not
+ yet reached the Emperor the protonotary might defer its presentation until
+ he was asked for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Ernst had made this concession after the magistrate&rsquo;s representation
+ that Sir Heinz Schorlin had been subjected to an experience which had
+ stirred the inmost depths of his soul, and soon after had been
+ unexpectedly sent in pursuit of the Siebenburgs. Hence he had found no
+ time to speak to the father. If he persisted in his intention of entering
+ a monastery, the petition would be purposeless. If it proved that he was
+ merely trifling with Eva, there would be time enough to call upon the
+ Emperor to punish him. Besides, he knew from Maier of Silenen that the
+ knight had firmly resolved to renounce the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the magistrate and his wife did not take their nocturnal ride in vain,
+ for after leaving the watch-tower they met the protonotary at St.
+ Sebald&rsquo;s. He had received the petition, but had not yet delivered it to
+ his royal master, and promised to withhold it for a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rejoicing over this success, Herr Pfinzing accompanied Fran Christine, who
+ wanted to visit Els, to the Eysvogel residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The din of many voices and loud laughter greeted them from the spacious
+ entry. Three mendicant friars, with overflowing pouches, pressed past
+ them, and two others were still standing with the men and the maidservants
+ assembled in the light of the lanterns. They had filled the barefooted
+ monks&rsquo; bags, for the salvation of their own souls, with the provisions of
+ the house, and were talking garrulously, already half intoxicated by the
+ jugs of wine which the butler willingly filled to earn a sweet reward from
+ the young maids, who eagerly sought the favour of the rotund bachelor
+ whose hair was just beginning to turn grey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate&rsquo;s entrance startled them, and the butler vainly strove to
+ hide a large jar whose shape betrayed that it came from Sicily and
+ contained the noble vintage of Syracuse. Two of the maids slid under their
+ aprons the big hams and pieces of roast meat with which they had already
+ begun to regale themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Berthold, smiling sadly, watched the conduct of the masterless
+ servants; then raising his cap, bowed with the utmost respect to the
+ disconcerted revellers, and said courteously, &ldquo;I hope it will agree with
+ you all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The startled group looked sheepishly at one another. The butler was the
+ only person who quickly regained his composure, came forward to the
+ magistrate cap in hand, and said obsequiously that he and his
+ fellow-servants were in evil case. The house had no master. No one knew
+ from whom he or she was to receive orders. Most of them had been
+ discharged by the Honourable Councillor, but no one knew when he was to
+ leave or whom to ask for his wages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate then informed them that Herr Wolff Eysvogel had the right
+ to give orders, and during his absence his betrothed bride, Jungfrau Els
+ Ortlieb. The next morning a member of the Council would examine the claims
+ of each, pay the wages, and with Frau Rosalinde and Jungfrau Els determine
+ the other matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The butler had imbibed a goodly share of the noble wine. His fat cheeks
+ glowed, and at the magistrate&rsquo;s last remark he laughed softly: &ldquo;If we wait
+ for the folk upstairs to agree we shall stay here till the Pegnitz flows
+ up the valley. Just listen to their state of harmony, sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact the shrill, angry accents of a woman&rsquo;s loud voice, with which
+ mingled deeper tones that were very familiar to Herr Berthold, echoed down
+ into the entry. It certainly looked ill for the concord of the women of
+ the house; yet the magistrate could not permit the unprincipled servant&rsquo;s
+ insolence to pass unpunished, so he answered quietly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right, fellow. One can put a stop to this shameful conduct more
+ quickly than several, and by virtue of my office I will therefore be the
+ one to command here. You will leave this house and service to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the angry butler, with the hoarse tones of a drunkard, declared
+ that in Nuremberg none save rascals were turned out of doors directly
+ after a discharge, the magistrate, with grave dignity, cut him short by
+ remarking that he would do better not to bring before the magistrates the
+ question of what beseemed the servant who wasted the valuable property
+ entrusted to his care, as had been done here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words he pointed to the spot where the jug of wine which he had
+ plainly seen was only half concealed, and the threat silenced the man,
+ whose conscience reproached him far more than Herr Pfinzing could imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile quiet had not been restored upstairs. Frau Christine had
+ released Els from a store-room in which the old countess, after persuading
+ her daughter to this spiteful and childish trick, had locked her. A
+ serious discussion amongst the women followed, which was closed only by
+ the interposition of the magistrate. Perhaps this might have been
+ accomplished less quickly had not the leech Otto appeared as a welcome
+ aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Rosalinde penitently besought forgiveness, her mother was again
+ forbidden to come to the lower story, and threatened, if she approached
+ the sick-room, with immediate removal from the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This strictness was necessary to render it possible for Els to maintain
+ her difficult position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day had been filled with painful incidents and shameful humiliations.
+ The old countess had summoned two relatives, both elderly canonesses, to
+ aid her in her assault upon the intruder, and perhaps they were the
+ persons who advised locking up Sir Casper&rsquo;s nurse, to whom they denied the
+ right of still calling herself the bride of the young master of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine had arrived at the right time. Els was beginning to lose
+ courage. She had found nothing which could aid her to sustain it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since Biberli had been deprived of his liberty she had rarely heard from
+ Wolff, and his invalid father, for whose sake she remained in the house,
+ seemed to view her with dislike. At first he had tried neither to speak to
+ nor look at her, but that morning, while raising a refreshing cup to his
+ parched lips, he had cast at her from the one eye whose lid still moved a
+ glance whose enmity still haunted her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the priest who visited him several times was by no means kindly
+ disposed towards her. He belonged to the Dominican order, and was the
+ confessor of the old countess and Frau Rosalinde. They must have slandered
+ her sorely to him; and as the order of St. Francis, to which the Sisters
+ of St. Clare belonged, was a thorn in his flesh, he bore her a grudge
+ because, as the Abbess Kunigunde&rsquo;s niece, she stood by her and her
+ convent, and threatened to win the Eysvogel household over to the
+ Franciscans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the magistrate and his wife left their niece, Herr Berthold ordered
+ the men and maidservants to stand in separate rows, then, in the
+ physician&rsquo;s presence, introduced Els to them as the mistress whom they
+ were to obey, and requested her to choose those whose services she wished
+ to retain. The rest would be compensated at the Town Hall the next day for
+ their abrupt dismissal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els had never found it harder to say good-by to her relatives; but the
+ leech Otto remained with her some time, and was soon joined by Conrad
+ Teufel, thereby rendering it a little easier for her to persist in the
+ performance of her difficult duty. On the way home to Schweinau the
+ magistrate and his wife talked together as eagerly as if they had just met
+ after a long separation. They had gone back to the query how nursing the
+ wounded criminals would affect Eva, and both hoped that Cordula&rsquo;s presence
+ and encouragement would strengthen her power of resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what did this mean?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they approached the little castle they saw from the road in the arbour,
+ which was lighted with links, the figure of the countess. She was sitting
+ in Frau Christine&rsquo;s easy chair, but Eva was nowhere in view. Had her
+ strength failed, and was Cordula awaiting their return after putting her
+ more delicate friend to bed? And Boemund Altrosen, who stood opposite to
+ her, leaning against one of the pillars which supported the arched ceiling
+ of the room, how came he here? The Pfinzings had known him from early
+ childhood, for his father had been a dear friend and brother in arms of
+ the magistrate; and&mdash;whilst Boemund, as a boy, was enjoying the
+ instruction of the Benedictines in the monastery of St. AEgidius, he had
+ been a favourite comrade of Frau Christine&rsquo;s son, who had fallen in
+ battle, and always found a cordial reception in his parents&rsquo; house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With what tender anxiety the knight gazed into Cordula&rsquo;s pale face!
+ Something must have befallen the blooming, vigorous huntress and daring
+ horsewoman, and both Herr Berthold and his wife feared that it concerned
+ Eva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young couple now perceived their approach, and Cordula, rising, waved
+ her handkerchief to them. Yet how slowly she rose, how feebly the
+ vivacious girl moved her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Berthold helped his wife from the saddle as quickly as possible, and
+ both hurried anxiously towards the arbour. Frau Christine did not remain
+ in the winding path, but though usually she strictly insisted that no one
+ should tread on the turf, hastily crossed it to reach her goal more
+ quickly. But ere she could put the question she longed to ask, Cordula
+ sorrowfully exclaimed: &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t judge me too severely. &lsquo;He who exalts
+ himself shall be humbled,&rsquo; says the Bible, and also that the first shall
+ be last, and the last first; but I have been forced to sit upon the ground
+ whilst Eva occupies the throne. I belong at the end of the last rank,
+ whilst she leads the foremost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Please explain the riddle at once,&rdquo; pleaded Frau Christine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Boemund Altrosen came forward, held out his hand to his old friend,
+ and spoke for Cordula &ldquo;The horror and loathsomeness were too much for her,
+ whilst Jungfrau Ortlieb endured them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eva remained at the hospital,&rdquo; the countess added dejectedly, &ldquo;because a
+ dying woman would not let her go; whilst I&mdash;the knight is right&mdash;could
+ bear it no longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine glanced triumphantly at her husband, but when she saw
+ Cordula&rsquo;s pale cheeks she exclaimed: &ldquo;Poor child! And there was no one
+ here to&mdash;&mdash;One moment, Countess!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throwing down her riding-whip and gloves as she spoke, she was hurrying
+ towards the sideboard on which stood the medicine-case, to prepare a
+ strengthening drink; but Cordula stopped her, saying: &ldquo;The housekeeper has
+ already supplied the necessary stimulant. I will only ask to have my horse
+ brought to the door, or my father will be anxious. I was obliged to await
+ your return, because&mdash;&mdash;Well, my flight from the hospital
+ certainly was not praiseworthy, and it affords me no special pleasure to
+ confess it. But you must not think me even more pitiful than I proved
+ myself, so I stayed to tell you myself&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That it is one thing,&rdquo; interrupted Sir Boemund, &ldquo;to nurse worthy
+ wood-cutters, gamekeepers, fishermen, and charcoal-burners, who, when
+ wounded and ill, look up to their gracious mistress as if she were an
+ angel of deliverance, and quite a different matter to mingle with the
+ miserable rabble yonder. The bloody stripes which the executioner&rsquo;s lash
+ cuts in the criminal&rsquo;s back do not render him more gentle; the mutilation
+ which he curses, and the disgrace with which an abandoned woman&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; interrupted Cordula, whose lips and cheeks had again grown
+ colourless. &ldquo;Do not mention those scenes which have poisoned my soul. It
+ was too hideous, too terrible! And how the woman with the red band around
+ her neck, the mark of the rope by which she carried the stone, rushed at
+ the other whose eye had been put out! how they fought on the floor,
+ scratching, biting, tearing each other&rsquo;s hair&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the tender-hearted girl, covering her convulsed face with her hands,
+ sobbed aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine drew her compassionately to her heart, pressed the
+ motherless child&rsquo;s head to her bosom, and let her weep her fill there,
+ whilst the magistrate said to Sir Boemund: &ldquo;And Eva Ortlieb also witnessed
+ this hideous scene, yet the delicate young creature endured it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altrosen nodded assent, adding eagerly, as if some memory rose vividly
+ before him: &ldquo;She often looked distressed by these horrors, but usually&mdash;how
+ shall I express it?&mdash;usually calm and content.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Content,&rdquo; repeated the magistrate thoughtfully. Then, suddenly
+ straightening his short, broad figure, he thrust his little fat hand into
+ a fold of the knight&rsquo;s doublet, exclaiming: &ldquo;Boemund, do you want to know
+ the most difficult riddle that the Lord gives to us men to solve? It is&mdash;take
+ heed&mdash;a woman&rsquo;s soul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Altrosen curtly; the word sounded like a sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While speaking, his dark eye was bent on Cordula, whose head still rested
+ on Frau Christine&rsquo;s breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, adjusting the bandage which since the fire had been wound around his
+ forehead and his dark hair, he continued in a tone of explanation: &ldquo;Count
+ von Montfort sent me, when it grew dark, to accompany his daughter home.
+ From your little castle I was directed to the hospital, where I found her
+ amongst the horrible women. She had struggled faithfully against her
+ loathing and disgust, but when I arrived her power of resistance was
+ already beginning to fail. Fortunately the sedan-chair was there, for she
+ felt that her feet would scarcely carry her back. I ordered one to be
+ prepared for Jungfrau Ortlieb, though I remembered the dying woman who
+ kept her. As if the matter were some easy task, she begged the countess to
+ excuse her, and remained beside the wretched straw pallet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deeply agitated girl had just released herself from the matron&rsquo;s
+ embrace, and begged the knight to have her Roland saddled; but Frau
+ Christine stopped him, and entreated Cordula, for her sake, to use her
+ sedan-chair instead of the horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it will gratify you,&rdquo; replied the countess smiling; &ldquo;but I should
+ reach home safely on the piebald.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who doubts it?&rdquo; asked the matron. &ldquo;Give her your arm, husband. The
+ bearers are ready, and you will soon overtake them on your horse,
+ Boemund.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The walk through the warm June night will do me good,&rdquo; the latter
+ protested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the sedan-chair which conveyed Cordula, lighted by several
+ torch-bearers on foot and on horseback, began to move towards the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At St. Linhard, Boemund Altrosen, who walked beside it, asked the
+ question, &ldquo;Then I may hope, Countess? I really may?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She nodded affectionately, and answered under her breath: &ldquo;You may; but we
+ must first try whether the flower of love which blossomed for you out of
+ my weakness is the real one. I believe it will be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He joyously raised her hand to his lips, but a torch-bearer&rsquo;s shout&mdash;&ldquo;Count
+ von Montfort and his train!&rdquo;&mdash;urged him back from the sedan chair. A
+ few seconds after Cordula welcomed her father, who had anxiously ridden
+ forth to meet his jewel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can hardly do more, and yet I must,&rdquo; groaned Frau Christine, as she
+ gazed after the torch-bearers who preceded Cordula. Her husband, however,
+ tried to detain her, offering to go to their young guest in her place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the effort was vain. The motherless child, whom the captive father
+ probably believed to be in safety with her sensible sister, was at a post
+ of danger, and only a woman&rsquo;s eye could judge whether it would do to yield
+ to Eva&rsquo;s wish, which the housekeeper had just told her mistress, and allow
+ her&mdash;it was already past midnight-to remain longer at the hospital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She would not have hesitated to require her niece&rsquo;s return home had not
+ maternal solicitude urged her to deprive her of nothing which could aid
+ her troubled soul to regain its poise. If possible at all, it would be
+ through devotion to an arduous work of charity that she would understand
+ her own nature, and find an answer to the question whether, when the
+ slanderers were silenced, she would take the veil or cling firmly to the
+ hopeless love which had mastered her young heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If she succeeded in remaining steadfast here and, in spite of the glad
+ consciousness of having conquered by the sign of the cross, was still
+ loyal to her worldly love, then the latter was genuine and strong, and Eva
+ did not belong to the convent; then her sister, the abbess, was mistaken
+ in the girl whose soul she had guided from early childhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine, who usually formed an opinion quickly and resolutely, had
+ not dared to give Eva a positive answer the previous evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With sympathising emotion the matron had heard her confess that during her
+ nocturnal wanderings a new feeling, which she could no longer still, had
+ awakened in her breast. When she also told her the image of true love
+ which she had formed, she could not bring herself to undeceive her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abbess had made a somewhat similar confession to her, the older
+ sister, when her young heart&mdash;how long ago it seemed!&mdash;had also
+ been mastered by love. The object of its ardent passion was no less a
+ personage than the Burgrave von Zollern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine had seen his marriage with the Hapsburg princess awaken her
+ sister&rsquo;s desire to renounce the world. Kunigunde was then a maiden of
+ rare, majestic beauty, and only the Burgrave&rsquo;s exalted station had
+ prevented his wedding &ldquo;Eva,&rdquo; as she was called before she took the veil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a husband and father, he had found deep happiness in the love of the
+ Countess Elizabeth, the future Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s sister, yet he had
+ remained a warm friend of the abbess; and when he treated Eva with such
+ marked distinction at the dance, she owed it not only to her own charms
+ but also to the circumstance that, like the girl whom he had loved in his
+ youth, she bore the name of &ldquo;Eva Ortlieb,&rdquo; and the expression of her eyes
+ vividly recalled the happiest time in his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The abbess, after a still more severe renunciation, had attained even
+ greater happiness in the convent. Her sister could not blame her for
+ wishing the same lot for the devout young niece, whose fate seemed to bear
+ a closer and closer resemblance to her own; but yesterday she had argued
+ with her, for Kunigunde had insisted firmly that if the girl did not
+ voluntarily knock at the convent door she should be forced to enter, not
+ only for her own sake but also Sir Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s. Nothing could rouse
+ the ire of every true Christian more than the thought that a noble knight,
+ for whose conversion Heaven had wrought a miracle, could turn a deaf ear
+ to the summons for the sake of a girl scarcely beyond childhood. To place
+ convent walls between the pair would therefore be a work pleasing in the
+ sight of God-nay, necessary for the example.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This statement sounded so resolute and imperative that Frau Christine, who
+ knew her sister&rsquo;s gentle nature, had been convinced that she was obeying
+ the mandate of a superior. Soon afterward she learned that Kunigunde had
+ followed the dictates of the zealous prior of the Dominicans, who was
+ regarded as the supreme judge in religious affairs. At a chance meeting
+ she had imprudently asked this man, who had never been friendly to her or
+ her order, to give his opinion concerning this matter, which gave her no
+ rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine had eagerly opposed her. The case of Heinz Schorlin was
+ different from that of the Burgrave Frederick, who could never be
+ permitted to wed the daughter of a Nuremberg merchant. If the Swiss
+ renounced his intention of entering the monastery, there was nothing to
+ prevent his wooing Eva. It should by no means be as the prior of the
+ Dominicans had said: &ldquo;They must both renounce the world,&rdquo; but, &ldquo;They must
+ test themselves, and if the world holds them firmly, and the Emperor, who
+ is a fatherly friend to Heinz, makes no objection, it would be a duty to
+ unite the pair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The decisive hour for Eva was now at hand, and Fran Christine, eager to
+ learn in what condition she should find her niece, had herself carried to
+ the hospital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her husband and several men-servants accompanied her, for at this late
+ hour the neighbourhood, where so many criminals were nursed for a short
+ time, was by no means safe. Companions, friends, and relatives of the
+ criminals were often attracted thither by sympathy, curiosity, or business
+ affairs. Whoever had occasion to shun appearing by daylight in a place
+ which never lacked bailiffs and city soldiers, slunk to the hospital at
+ night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a heavy rain had just begun to fall, the short distance to be traversed
+ by the magistrate and his wife was empty. Ample provision also seemed to
+ have been made to guard the place of healing, for several armed troopers
+ belonging to the city guard were pacing up and down before he board fence
+ which surrounded it, and the approach of the late visitors was heralded by
+ the deep baying of large hounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate was well known here, and the doorkeeper, roused from his
+ sleep, hastened to light the way for him and his wife with a lantern. In
+ spite of the planks which had been placed in he courtyard, the task of
+ crossing it was by no means easy; for the night was intensely dark, and
+ the foot passed beyond the boards, it plunged into the mire, on which they
+ floated rather than lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the barking of the dogs had drowned very other sound, but as they
+ approached the house thatched with straw, where the wounded men were
+ nursed, harsh voices, interrupted at times by the angry oaths of some
+ patient roused from sleep, or the watchman&rsquo;s command to keep quiet,
+ reached them in a loud uproar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A narrow passage dimly lighted by a lantern led to the women&rsquo;s quarters,
+ where Eva had remained. The magistrate entered the men&rsquo;s dormitory to make
+ an inspection, while his wife, needing no guidance, passed on to the
+ women, meeting no one on her way except a Sister of Charity and two
+ men-servants who, under the guidance of a sleepy Dominican monk, were
+ bearing out the corpse of some one who had just passed away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sister Hildegard, who was sitting at the door of the dormitory, half
+ asleep, started up as Frau Christine crossed the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight&rsquo;s widow, a vigorous matron, whose hair had long been grey,
+ pointed with the rosary in her hand to the end of the long, dimly lighted
+ apartment, and said in a low tone: &ldquo;The sick woman seems to be asleep now.
+ The prior sent the old Dominican to whom Eva is talking. He is said to be
+ the most learned and eloquent member of the order. If I am right, he came
+ here to appeal to your niece&rsquo;s conscience. At least his first question was
+ for her, and you see how eagerly he is speaking. When yonder sick woman
+ seemed to be drawing near her end she asked for the sacrament, which was
+ administered by the Dominican. It was a sorrowful farewell on account of
+ her children, but the barber thinks we may perhaps save her yet. Father
+ Benedictus, the old Minorite, who was found on the road and brought to us,
+ seems, on the other hand, to be dying. We will gladly keep him in the
+ Beguines home until the angel summons him. Unfortunately, yonder poor
+ woman&rsquo;s third day will end tomorrow. We are not permitted to shelter her
+ here any longer, and if we turn her out&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the matter with the woman?&rdquo; interrupted Frau Christine, but the
+ other gazed into her face with warm sympathising affection and such tender
+ entreaty that the magistrate&rsquo;s wife, before she began her reply,
+ exclaimed: &ldquo;So it is the old, pitiful story! But let her stay! Yes, even
+ though, instead of every pound of farthings, she cost us ten times as much
+ in gold! But we will spare what is necessary for her. I see by your face
+ that it will not be wasted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; replied Sister Hildegard gratefully. &ldquo;Oh, how she came
+ here! Now, it is true, she has more than she needs. Your dear niece&mdash;she
+ is an angel of charity&mdash;sent her Katterle out to get what was wanted.
+ But where is the girl?&rdquo; She gazed around the spacious chamber as she
+ spoke, but could not find Katterle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, a dim light pervaded the whole apartment, and Sister Hildegard,
+ referring to it, added &ldquo;The light keeps many of the patients awake, and we
+ have a better use for the pennies which the oil and chips cost. When there
+ are brilliant entertainments to be given, or works of mercy done which the
+ whole world sees, the Honourables let their gold flow freely enough, but
+ who beholds the abodes of horror? We look best in the dark, and no one
+ will miss what we save in light.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly no one present incurred any danger of seeing at this hour the
+ pitiable spectacles visible by day; for what was occurring at the opposite
+ end of the room could not be perceived from the door. So when it closed
+ Eva could not distinguish who had entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this was agreeable to Frau Christine; for before going to her niece
+ she wished to inquire about the woman by whom she had been detained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the others, she was lying upon the board platform which surrounded
+ the four walls of the room, interrupted only by the door through which she
+ had just passed. It rose in a slanting direction towards the wall, that
+ the sufferers&rsquo; heads might be higher than their feet. Instead of cushions,
+ it was covered with a thick layer of straw, the beds of the patients who
+ were nursed here. It seemed to be changed very rarely, for especially near
+ the door at which the two women were still standing a damp, unpleasant
+ odour emanated from the straw. It belonged here, however, as feathers are
+ a part of birds, and the people who were nursed within its walls were
+ accustomed to nothing better. When, fifteen years before, the oversight of
+ the hospital was entrusted to Frau Christine, she had found the condition
+ of affairs still worse, and the idea of procuring beds for the injured
+ persons to be cured here was as far from her thoughts, or those of the
+ rest of the world, as cushioning the stable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was the way things were at Schweinau. Straw of all sorts might be
+ expected to be found here, not only on the wooden platform but on the
+ floor, in the yard, and everywhere else, as surely as leaves upon the
+ ground of a wood in the autumn. To leave the house without taking stalks
+ in the hair and garments was as impossible as for any person accustomed to
+ better conditions, who did not wish to faint from discomfort, to do
+ without a scent bottle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formerly Frau Christine had endeavoured to obtain better air, but even her
+ kind-hearted husband had laughed at the foolish idea, because such things
+ would benefit only herself and some of the nurses. In the taverns usually
+ frequented by the inmates of the hospital they learned to endure a
+ different atmosphere, which was stifling to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After contagious diseases certain precautions were always taken. On Sunday
+ morning it was even fumigated with juniper-berries on hot tin and boiling
+ vinegar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine had introduced this disinfectant herself by the advice of
+ Otto the leech, when all who had been brought hither with open wounds,
+ among them vigorous young men, had died like flies. At that time the
+ distinguished physician had even succeeded in getting the Honourable
+ Council to defray the cost of having the walls newly white washed and
+ fresh clay stamped on the floor. He had also directed that the old straw
+ should be replaced by clean every Sunday morning, and now matters were
+ better still, for the rule was that every sick person should have a fresh
+ layer. True, it was not always fulfilled, and many a person was forced to
+ be content with his predecessor&rsquo;s couch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the women&rsquo;s room, however, the change of straw was more rigidly
+ required. The nurse herself attended to it, and Sister Hildegard gave her
+ energetic assistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In difficult cases the influence of the leech Otto was called to her aid,
+ but he had grown old and no longer came to Schweinau. Two barbers now
+ cared for the bandaging and healing of the wounds, and if they were at a
+ loss the younger city physician was summoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sister Hildegard now pointed to the couch beside which the Dominican was
+ talking to Eva, and said: &ldquo;She is the widow of a carrier and the child of
+ worthy people; her father was the sexton of St. Sebald&rsquo;s. True, he died
+ long ago, at the same time as her mother. It was twelve years since,
+ during the plague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Reicklein, yonder, had no other relatives here&mdash;her parents were
+ from Bamberg&mdash;but she was well off, and her husband, Veit, earned
+ enough by his travels through the country. But on St. Blaise&rsquo;s day, early
+ in the month of February, during a trip to Vogtland, it was at Hof, he was
+ overtaken by a snowstorm, and the worthy man was found frozen under a
+ drift, with his staff and pouch. The sad news reached her just after the
+ birth of a little boy, and there were two other mouths to feed besides.
+ Her savings went quickly enough, and she fell into dire poverty, for she
+ had not yet recovered her strength, and could not do housework. During
+ Passion Week she sold her bed to pay what she had borrowed and to feed the
+ children. It was cold, she had not a copper, nor any possibility of
+ earning anything. Then the rest went, too, and there was no way of getting
+ food enough for the children and herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But as her father had been in the employ of the city and was an honest
+ man, by the advice of the provost of St. Sebald&rsquo;s, who had been her
+ confessor from childhood, she applied to the Honourable Council, and
+ received the answer that old Hans Schab was by no means forgotten, and
+ therefore, to relieve her need, she was referred to the beadle, who would
+ give her the permit which enabled her to ask alms from those who went to
+ St. Sebald&rsquo;s Church, and had already afforded many a person ample support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For her children&rsquo;s sake she crushed the pride which rebelled against it,
+ and stood at the church door, not once, but again and again. The other
+ mendicants, however, treated her so roughly, and the cruel enmity with
+ which they tried to crowd her out of her place seemed so unbearable, that
+ she could not hold out. Once, when they insulted her too much, and again
+ thrust her back so spitefully that not even one of the many churchgoers
+ noticed her, she, fled to her children in the little room, determined to
+ stop this horrible begging. This happened the Saturday before Whitsuntide,
+ and as she had gone out hoping this time to bring something back, she had
+ promised the children food enough to satisfy their hunger. They should
+ have some Whitsuntide cakes, too, as they did years ago. When she reached
+ the house and little Walpurga&mdash;you&rsquo;ll see her presently, a pretty
+ child six years old&mdash;ran to meet her, asking for the cakes and the
+ bread to satisfy her hunger, while Annelein, who is somewhat older, but
+ less bright and active, did the same, she felt as if she should die, and
+ carrying the baby, which she had held in her arms while begging at the
+ church door, back into the room, she told Walpurga to watch it, as she had
+ long been in the habit of doing, until she came back with the bread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the children&rsquo;s sake she would try begging once more, but she could
+ not go to St. Sebald&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So she went from house to house, asking alms; but she was a well-formed
+ woman, who did not show her serious illness. She kept herself tidy, too,
+ and looked better in her poor rags than many who were better off. Had she
+ carried her nursing infant, perhaps she might have succeeded better, but
+ even the most compassionate housewives either turned her from their doors
+ or offered her work at the wash-tub, or in cleaning or gardening. The
+ weakness from which she had suffered since the birth of her child made
+ stooping so painful that she could not do what they required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When she was at last obliged to turn homeward, because the baby had
+ probably been screaming for her a long time, she had only one small copper
+ coin, with which she went to the baker Kilian&rsquo;s, in the Stopfelgasse, to
+ ask for a penny&rsquo;s worth of bread. The baker&rsquo;s wife was not there, and her
+ spinster sister-in-law, an elderly, ill-natured woman, was serving the
+ customers in her place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As she turned to cut the bit of bread, and all sorts of nice sweet cakes
+ lay on the shining counters before poor Riecklein, the children seemed to
+ stand before her, headed by Walpurga, asking for the cakes and the bread
+ she had promised them to eat their fill; and as no one was passing in the
+ quiet street, Satan stirred within her for the first time, and a sweet
+ jumble slid into the little basket on her arm. Had she stopped there she
+ might have escaped unpunished; but there were two hungry little beaks
+ agape in the nest, and she saw a pretty lamb with a little red flag on its
+ back. If Walpurga could only have it! And with the clumsiness due to her
+ inexperience in such matters she seized that, too, and put it with the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meanwhile the sister-in-law had turned, and instead of enquiring at a
+ time so near the holy feast what had induced her to commit such a crime,
+ she shrieked, &lsquo;Stop thief!&rsquo; and similar cries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So the widow was taken to the Hole, and as she had hitherto borne an
+ unsullied reputation and was the child of a good man, justice allowed
+ itself to be satisfied with having her scourged with rods privately
+ instead of in public. So she came here. But as her poor body was too
+ fragile to withstand all the trouble which had come upon her, she had a
+ violent attack of fever, and a few hours ago death stretched its hand
+ towards her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the children?&rdquo; asked Frau Christine, deeply moved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was allowed to have the baby,&rdquo; answered Sister Hildegard, &ldquo;but she
+ told us about the others and their desolate condition. In the delirium of
+ fever she saw them stealing and the constable seizing them. Then your Eva
+ encouraged me to send for them by promising to provide their food. So they
+ came here. The worker on cloth from whom she rented her little room had
+ helped them, and it was from her that Sister Pauline, whom I sent there,
+ first learned that Walpurga, for whose sake she had so sadly forgotten her
+ duty, was not even her own child, but an adopted one whom her late
+ husband, on one of his trips, had found abandoned on the highroad at
+ Vierzehnheiligen, beside an image of the Virgin, and brought home with
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Sister Hildegard paused, and Frau Christine also remained silent a
+ long time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, it was horrible here, and the air was impure; but had Countess
+ Cordula looked more closely she would probably have seen one of the
+ beautiful flowers which often bloomed amidst all the weeds, the poisonous
+ and parasitic vegetation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva was right to pity this woman, and if her life could be saved she
+ herself would relieve her necessities and secure her children&rsquo;s future.
+ She silently made this resolve whilst the Sister led the way to the couch
+ of the scourged thief. The unfortunate woman should learn that God often
+ compels us to traverse the roughest and stoniest paths in the wilderness
+ ere he leads us into the Promised Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva was so deeply absorbed in her conversation with the Dominican that she
+ did not see her aunt until she stood before her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They greeted each other with a silent nod, and a smile of satisfaction
+ flitted over the girl&rsquo;s face as she motioned to the sleeper whose slumber
+ she was watching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young mother&rsquo;s pretty face still glowed with the flush of fever. One
+ arm clasped the baby, which lay amidst the white linen Katterle had just
+ brought. He was a pretty child, who showed no traces of the poverty in
+ which he had been reared. Beside the widow were two little girls about six
+ years old. The one at the left was sound asleep, with her head resting on
+ her little fat arm. The other, at the sick woman&rsquo;s right, pressed her fair
+ head upon her breast. Her slumber was very light, and she often opened her
+ large, blue eyes and gazed with touching anxiety at the sick woman. This
+ was the adopted child, Walpurga, and never had the matron beheld amongst
+ the poor and suffering so lovely a human flower as this little
+ six-year-old child, struggling with sleep in her affectionate desire to
+ render aid. The other little girl&rsquo;s free hand also touched her mother, and
+ thus these four, united in poverty and sorrow, but also in love, seemed to
+ form a single whole. What a peaceful, charming picture!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine gazed with earnest sympathy at each member of this group.
+ How well-formed was every one! how pure and innocent the features of the
+ children looked! how kind and loving those of the suffering mother, who
+ was a thief, and whose tender back had felt the scourge of the
+ executioner!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought made her shudder. But when little Walpurga, half asleep,
+ raised her tiny hand and lovingly stroked the wounded shoulder of her
+ adopted mother, the matron, as usual when anything pleasant moved her
+ heart, longed to have her husband at her side. How easily, since he was so
+ near, she could afford him a sight of this touching picture! It should
+ prove that she had been right to let Eva remain here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Faithful to her custom of permitting no delay in the execution of a good
+ resolution, she wanted to send Katterle to call her husband, but the girl
+ could not be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Frau Christine went herself, beckoning to Eva to follow; but they had
+ scarcely reached the centre of the room when a peal of shrill laughter
+ greeted them from a couch on the left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The person from whom it came was the barber&rsquo;s widow, whose attack had
+ alarmed Eva so terribly the day before in front of the pillory. It pealed
+ loudly and shrilly through the stillness of the night, and when the matron
+ turned angrily to reprove the person who so inconsiderately disturbed the
+ rest of the others, the woman clapped her hands and instantly a chorus of
+ sharp, screaming voices rose around her. The barber&rsquo;s widow, who knew
+ everybody who lived in Nuremberg, had recognised the magistrate&rsquo;s wife at
+ her entrance, and secretly incited her neighbours to follow her example
+ and, as soon as she gave the signal, demand better fare and make Frau
+ Christine, the patroness of the hospital, feel what they thought of the
+ cruelty of her husband, who had delivered them to the executioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The female thieves and swindlers-in short, all the reprobate women around
+ Frau Ratzer, whose feet had just been tied on account of her unruly
+ behaviour in the Countess von Montfort&rsquo;s presence&mdash;obeyed her signal,
+ and the fierce voices raised in demand and invective woke those who were
+ sleeping farther away. Weeping, wailing, and screaming they started up,
+ clamouring to know what danger threatened them, whilst Frau Ratzer and her
+ fellow-conspirators shrieked for beer or wine instead of water, for meat
+ with the black bread and wretched broth and, yelling and howling, bade the
+ patroness tell her husband that they thought him a brute and a bloodhound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a hideous, confused, ear-splitting din, which threatened serious
+ consequences, for some of the women, leaving their straw beds, hastened
+ towards the door or surrounded Frau Christine and Eva with uplifted fists
+ and threatening nails.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The warning voices of the matrons, to whose aid the Beguines had hastened,
+ were drowned by the uproar, but the danger which specially threatened Eva,
+ whom the barber&rsquo;s widow pointed out to her neighbour who had stolen a
+ child to train it to beg, was soon ended, for the wild cries had reached
+ the men&rsquo;s building, from which Herr Berthold Pfinzing came hurrying in,
+ accompanied by the superintendent, his assistants, and several monks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the women reproached the magistrate, who in reality was a lenient
+ judge, with being a cruel tyrant, they were now to learn that he certainly
+ did not lack uncompromising energy. The unpleasant position in which he
+ found his wife and his beloved godchild did not incline him to gentleness.
+ He would have liked to have tied the hands of all these women, most of
+ whom had forfeited the consideration due their sex. This was really done
+ to the most unruly, while the barber&rsquo;s widow was carried to the
+ prison-chamber, which the hospital did not lack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After quiet was at last restored and Frau Christine had told her husband
+ that she had been attacked while on her way to show him a delightful scene
+ in the midst of all this terrible misery, he angrily exclaimed: &ldquo;A
+ magnificent picture! Balm for the eyes and ears of your own brother&rsquo;s
+ virginal daughter! The saints be praised that you both escaped so easily.
+ Can there be in the worst hell anything more horrible than what has just
+ been witnessed here? Really, where a Countess Cordula cannot endure&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Frau Christine soothingly interrupted her irate husband, and so great
+ was her influence over him, that his tone sounded like friendly
+ encouragement as he added: &ldquo;You wanted to show me something special, but I
+ was detained over there. Though it was late, I wanted to see the worthy
+ fellow again. What a man he is! I mean Sir Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s squire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor Biberli?&rdquo; asked Eva eagerly; and there was a faint tone of reproach
+ in her voice as she continued, &ldquo;You promised to look after him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So I did, child,&rdquo; the magistrate protested. &ldquo;But justice must take its
+ course, and the rack is part of the examination by torture. He might
+ easily have lost his tongue, and if his master doesn&rsquo;t return soon and
+ another accuser should appear, who knows what will happen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that must not, shall not be!&rdquo; cried Eva, the old defiance echoing
+ imperiously in her voice. &ldquo;Heinz Schorlin&mdash;you said so yourself&mdash;would
+ not plead in vain for mercy to the Emperor; and before I will see the
+ faithful fellow&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gently, child,&rdquo; whispered Frau Christine to her niece, laying her hand on
+ her arm, but the magistrate, shaking his finger at her, answered
+ soothingly: &ldquo;Jungfrau Ortlieb would rather thrust her own little feet into
+ the Spanish boot. Be comforted! The three pairs we have are all too large
+ to squeeze them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva lowered her eyes in embarrassment, and exclaimed in a modest,
+ beseeching tone: &ldquo;But, uncle, do not you, too, feel that it would be cruel
+ and unjust to make this honest fellow a cripple in return for his faithful
+ services?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do feel it,&rdquo; answered Herr Berthold, his face assuming an expression of
+ regret; &ldquo;and for that very reason I ventured to take a girl over whom I
+ have no authority out of her service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Katterle?&rdquo; asked Eva anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her uncle nodded assent, adding: &ldquo;First hear what interested me so quickly
+ in the strange fellow. At the first charge, which merely accused him of
+ having carried a message of love from his master to Jungfrau Ortlieb, I
+ interceded for him, and yesterday the other magistrates, to whom I had
+ explained the case, joined me. So he escaped with a sentence of exile from
+ the city for five years. I hoped it would not be necessary to present the
+ second accusation, for it was signed by no name, but merely bore three
+ crosses, and for a long time most of the magistrates, following my
+ example, have considered such things as treacherous attacks made by
+ cowards who shun the light of day; but it was impossible to suppress it
+ entirely, because the law commands me to withhold no complaint made to the
+ court. So it was read aloud, and Hans Teufel&rsquo;s motion to let it drop
+ without any action met with no approval, warmly as I supported it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must not blame the gentlemen. They all wish to act for your benefit,
+ and desire nothing except a clear understanding of this vexatious
+ business. But in that indictment Biberli was charged with having forced
+ his way into an Honourable&rsquo;s house at night to obtain admittance for his
+ master. In collusion with a maid-servant he was also said to have
+ maintained the love correspondence between Herr Ernst Ortlieb&rsquo;s two
+ daughters, a Swiss knight, and Boemund Altrosen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Infamous!&rdquo; cried Eva. &ldquo;What, in the name of all the saints, have we to do
+ with Altrosen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You certainly have very little,&rdquo; replied Frau Christine, &ldquo;but the Ortlieb
+ mansion has all the more. To-night he will again be seen before its door,
+ and if still later he appears with his lute under Countess Cordula&rsquo;s
+ windows and is heard singing to her, it wouldn&rsquo;t surprise me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And people,&rdquo; exclaimed Eva with increasing indignation, &ldquo;will add another
+ link to the chain of slander. If a Vorkler and her companions repeat the
+ calumny, who can wonder? But that the magistrates should believe such
+ shameful things about the brothers of their own fellow-member&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was precisely because they do not believe it and wish to keep you away
+ from the court,&rdquo; her uncle interrupted, &ldquo;that they insisted upon the
+ examination. They desired to show the people by their verdict and the
+ severity of the procedures how thoroughly in earnest they were. But whilst
+ I was compelled to absent myself an hour because the Emperor wished to
+ inspect the new towers on the city wall, and I had to attend him in the
+ character of showman, they sentenced the poor fellow, since his loose
+ tongue had brought the whole rout and rabble against him, to torture so
+ severe that I shuddered when told of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Biberli?&rdquo; asked Eva, trembling with suspense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All honour is due the man!&rdquo; cried Herr Berthold, raising his cap. &ldquo;The
+ rods scourged his fettered limbs, his thumbs were pressed in the screws,
+ bound to the ladder, he was dragged over the larded hare&mdash;-&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, hush!&rdquo; cried Fran Christine with uplifted hands, and her husband
+ nodded understandingly. Then, with a faint sigh, he added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why should I torture you with these horrors? Nothing was spared him. Yet
+ the worthy fellow stuck to his statement that he had accompanied his
+ master to your house in the full moonlight to take a somnambulist who had
+ wandered out of the open door back to her friends. Sir Heinz Schorlin had
+ met Jungfrau Ortlieb only once&mdash;at the dance in the Town Hall. Though
+ he had sometimes appeared before her father&rsquo;s house, it was not on account
+ of Herr Ernst&rsquo;s daughters, but&mdash;and this was an allusion to Cordula
+ von Montfort&mdash;for the sake of another lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After the lightning had killed his master&rsquo;s horse under him he had
+ avoided every woman, because he wished to enter a monastery. He could
+ prove all these statements by many witnesses. Yesterday he named them, and
+ Count Gleichen and his retainers appeared with several others. The
+ Minorite Benedictus was vainly sought at the Franciscans.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is here in the house of the Beguines,&rdquo; replied Frau Christine, &ldquo;and
+ weak as he is, he will have strength enough to make a deposition in the
+ knight&rsquo;s favour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate said that this might be necessary if a new charge were
+ brought against the servitor, Katterle, and perhaps even Sir Heinz
+ Schorlin himself. Rarely had he seen a bad cause maintained with so much
+ obstinacy. The complainants had witnesses who testified under oath what
+ they had heard in taverns and tap-rooms from Sir Seitz Siebenburg and
+ those who repeated his tales. Their examination had lasted a long time,
+ and what they alleged was as absurd as possible, yet for that very reason
+ difficult to refute. These depositions had aided the cause of the accused,
+ but in consequence of such numerous charges many questions of course were
+ put to Biberli, and thus the torture had been cruelly increased and
+ prolonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Eva interrupted the speaker with another outburst of indignation, but
+ he only shrugged his shoulders pityingly, saying: &ldquo;Gently, child! A
+ shoemaker who recently upbraided the &lsquo;Honourables&rsquo; for something similar
+ was publicly scourged, and if cruelties have been practised here it is the
+ fault of the law, not of the judges. But worse yet may come, if the pack
+ is not silenced by a higher will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Emperor?&rdquo; asked the girl with quivering lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, child,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;and your old godfather had thought of
+ bringing this evil cause before our royal master. He gladly exercises
+ mercy, but only after carefully investigating the pros and cons. In this
+ case there is but one person in whom he has full confidence, and who is
+ also in a position to tell him the exact truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heinz Schorlin!&rdquo; cried Eva. &ldquo;He must be informed at once, without delay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; replied Herr Pfinzing quietly. &ldquo;And since, as the uncle and
+ godfather of Jungfrau Eva, who would have gladly undertaken the ride, I
+ could not order her horse to be saddled, I sent some one else whose heart
+ also will point out the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle!&rdquo; Eva eagerly interrupted, raising her clasped hands in gratitude.
+ &ldquo;But whom can you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she hesitated, then suddenly exclaimed as if sure of her point: &ldquo;Oh,
+ I know the messenger, Countess von Montfort&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve aimed too high,&rdquo; replied Herr Berthold smiling, &ldquo;yet I think the
+ choice was no worse. Your maid, child, the poor fellow&rsquo;s sweetheart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Christine and Eva, in the same breath, uttered an exclamation of
+ surprise and assent, and both asked how the magistrate had chanced to
+ select her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A waggon from Schwabach, which happened opportunely to be on its way to
+ Siebenburg, had brought Biberli to Schweinau on its homeward trip, just
+ before the magistrate and his wife reached the hospital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle had been present when the tortured man was brought out and laid
+ upon his couch of straw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not recognise him until, with pathetic reproach, he called her by
+ name and, horrified by the spectacle he presented, she fell upon her
+ knees. But the couch at her side had already been prepared for him, and
+ she did not need to rise again in order to stroke him, comfort him, and
+ promise not to desert him, even if he should be a miserable cripple for
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the magistrate approached the couple, to offer Biberli his friendly
+ aid, the latter faltered that he had only one desire&mdash;to see his
+ beloved master once more. Besides, his case was hopeless unless the knight
+ obtained a pardon for him from the Emperor Rudolph, for his persecutors
+ would not cease their pursuit of him, and he could not endure the torture
+ a second time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the magistrate paused in his narrative, for he thought of an incident
+ which he was reluctant to mention in the presence of the Dominican who had
+ administered the sacrament to the suffering widow and now joined the group
+ of listeners. This was, that a member of the latter&rsquo;s order had approached
+ Biberli and exhorted him not to fear another examination by torture, for
+ the Lord gave the innocent strength to maintain the truth even under the
+ keenest suffering. A peculiar smile hovered around the lips of the poor
+ tortured fellow, which Herr Berthold fully understood; for the brave
+ servitor had by no means stuck to the truth during the pangs inflicted
+ upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my dear ones,&rdquo; Herr Pfinzing continued, &ldquo;a harder heart than mine
+ would have been touched by what I saw and heard beside that couch of straw
+ when I was left alone with poor Biberli and his sweetheart. If you could
+ have seen how Katterle threw herself upon her lover after I had told her
+ that even the most agonizing torture could not force him to confirm the
+ charge which had been brought against her! Rarely does one mortal pour
+ forth such a flood of ardent gratitude upon another; and when Biberli
+ repeated that his dear master&rsquo;s help would be necessary to protect her and
+ him from another examination, she offered to go in search of him at once,
+ notwithstanding the rain and the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I thought that no messenger could be found who was more familiar
+ with the course of affairs, and at the same time inspired with more loving
+ zeal. So, as the waggon in which Biberli had come was still waiting
+ outside, I spoke to the carter, who had brought a load of wheat to
+ Nuremberg, and now, on his way home, had ample room under the tilt. I knew
+ the man, and we soon came to an agreement. From Schwabach, his brother,
+ who knows every foot of the road, will take her to the imperial troops who
+ are fighting with the Siebenburgs. I undertook to arrange with you for her
+ absence. She is now rolling along in the old carter Apel&rsquo;s waggon towards
+ Schwabach and Sir Heinz Schorlin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto the magistrate had maintained his composure, but now his deep
+ voice lost its firmness, and it was neither the loving words of
+ appreciation whispered by his wife nor the gratitude which Eva tenderly
+ displayed that checked his speech, but the remembrance of the parting
+ between the man so cruelly tortured and his sweetheart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli had hoped that she would nurse him; the sight of her would have
+ cheered his eyes and heart, yet he sent her out into darkness and danger.
+ Gratitude and love, the consciousness that just now she could be of
+ infinite importance to him and do much for him, bound her to his couch
+ like so many fetters, yet she had gone, and had even assumed the
+ appearance of doing so willingly and being confident of success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How their faces had brightened when the magistrate told them that his wife
+ and Eva would take charge of him, and he himself would see that he had a
+ better bed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli murmured sadly: &ldquo;Straw and I have been used to each other in many
+ a tavern, but now a somewhat softer couch might be of service, for
+ wherever my racked body was touched I believe there would be something out
+ of joint.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Berthold had no reason to be ashamed of his emotion, for he had
+ learned from the barber that the poor fellow had by no means exaggerated,
+ and, as a witness of part of the torture, he knew that even the most cruel
+ anguish had not conquered the faithful Biberli&rsquo;s firm resolve to bring
+ neither his master nor his sweetheart before the judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In recalling this noble act of the lowly servitor he grew eloquent, and
+ described minutely what the poor fellow had suffered, and how, after
+ Katterle had left him, he lay motionless, with his thin, pale face
+ irradiated by a grateful smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The women, too, and the monk AEgidius, an old Minorite, who had been
+ watching beside the aged Brother of his order, Benedictus, and had just
+ joined them, shed tears at his story; but Eva, from the very depths of her
+ soul, exclaimed aloud, &ldquo;Happy is he who is permitted to endure such
+ tortures for love&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The others gazed in surprise at the young girl who, with her clasped hands
+ pressed upon her heaving bosom, and her large eyes uplifted, looked as if
+ she beheld heaven opening before her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old Minorite&rsquo;s heart swelled at this confession and the sight of the
+ maiden. Thus, though far less richly endowed with the divine gift of
+ beauty, he had seen St. Clare absorbed in prayer. The words uttered by the
+ fresh lips of this favoured girl, whom he beheld for the first time,
+ expressed a feeling which might guide her into the path of the Holy
+ Martyrs and, filled with pious enthusiasm, he approached, drew her clasped
+ hands away from her breast, pressed them in his own and, remembering what
+ the Abbess Kunigunde had told him yesterday beside the couch of Benedictus
+ concerning her severe conflict, exclaimed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whoever said that, knows the words of Holy Writ which promise the crown
+ of eternal life to those who are faithful unto death. Obey the voice, my
+ child, which unites you to those who are called. St. Clare herself summons
+ you to her heavenly home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The others listened to the old monk in silence. Eva slightly shook her
+ head. But when the disappointed Minorite released her hands she clasped
+ his thin one, saying modestly: &ldquo;How could I be worthy of so sublime a
+ promise? The poor servant on his straw bed, with his T and St embroidered
+ on cap and cloak, of whom my uncle told us, has a tenfold greater claim, I
+ think, to the crown of life, for which, as yet, I have been permitted to
+ do so little. But I hope to win it, and the saint who calls everything
+ that breathes and lives brothers and sisters, as children of the same
+ exalted Father, cannot teach that the fidelity shown in the world deserves
+ less reward than that of the chosen ones in the convent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a foolish and sacrilegious opinion,&rdquo; answered the Dominican
+ sternly. &ldquo;We will take care, my dear daughter, to guide your soul from
+ pathless wandering into the right path which Holy Church has marked out
+ for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned his back upon the group as he spoke, but the grey-haired
+ Minorite, smiling sadly, turned to Eva, saying: &ldquo;I cannot contradict him.
+ Fidelity to those whom we love, my child, is far less meritorious than
+ that which we show to Heaven. To you, daughter, its doors have already
+ opened. How strong must be the pleasure felt by the children of the world
+ in this brief earthly happiness, since they are so ready to sacrifice for
+ it the certainty of eternal bliss! Your error will grieve the abbess and
+ Father Benedictus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words he, too, took his leave, but Frau Christine whispered to
+ her niece: &ldquo;These monks are not the Holy Church to which we both belong as
+ obedient daughters. To my poor mind and heart it seems as if the Saviour
+ would deem you right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen,&rdquo; added the magistrate, who had heard his wife&rsquo;s murmured words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Day followed day, a week elapsed, and no message had reached Schweinau
+ from Heinz Schorlin or Katterle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrate had learned that the Siebenburg brothers, with the robber
+ knights who had joined them, were obstinately defending their castles and
+ making it difficult for Heinz Schorlin to perform his task. The day before
+ news had come that the Absbach&rsquo;s strong mountain fortress had fallen; that
+ the allied knights, in a sortie which merged into a miniature battle, had
+ been defeated, and the Siebenburgs could not hold out much longer; but in
+ the stress of his duties the knight seemed to have forgotten to make the
+ slightest effort in behalf of his faithful servant. At least the
+ protonotary Gottlieb, a friend of Herr Berthold, through whose hands
+ passed all letters addressed to the Emperor, positively assured them that,
+ though plenty of military reports had arrived, in not a single one had the
+ young commander mentioned his servant even by a word. He, the protonotary,
+ had taken advantage of a favourable hour to urge his royal master, as a
+ reward for Biberli&rsquo;s rare fidelity, to protect him from further
+ persecution by the citizens of Nuremberg; but the Emperor Rudolph did not
+ even allow him to finish, because, as a matter of principle, he refrained
+ from interference in matters whose settlement rightfully pertained to the
+ Honourable Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When soon after Herr Pfinzing availed himself of a report which he had to
+ deliver to the Emperor to intercede himself for the valiant fellow, the
+ Hapsburg, with the ruler&rsquo;s strong memory, recalled the protonotary&rsquo;s plea
+ and referred Herr Berthold to the answer the former had received,
+ remarking, less graciously than usual, that the imperial magistrate ought
+ to know that he would be the last to assail the privileges which he had
+ himself bestowed upon the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally even Burgrave Frederick, whose sympathy had been enlisted in
+ Biberli&rsquo;s behalf by Herr Berthold, fared no better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His interests were often opposed to those of the Council and, kindly as
+ was his disposition, disputes concerning many questions of law were
+ constantly occurring between him and the Honourables. When he began to
+ persuade the Emperor to prevent by a pardon the cruelty which the Council
+ intended to practise upon a servant of Sir Heinz Schorlin, who was doing
+ such good service in the field, the sovereign told even him, his friend
+ and brother-in-law, who had toiled so energetically to secure him the
+ crown, that he would not interfere, though it were in behalf of a beloved
+ brother, with the decrees of the Council, and the noble petitioner was
+ silenced by the reasons which he gave. The Burgrave deemed the Emperor&rsquo;s
+ desire to maintain the Honourables&rsquo; willingness to grant the large loan he
+ intended to ask to fill his empty treasury still more weighty than those
+ with which he had repulsed Herr Pfinzing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the pardon granted to Ernst Ortlieb and Wolff Eysvogel
+ could only tend to increase the good will of the Council. The former was
+ given at once, the latter only conditionally after the First Losunger of
+ the city, with several other Honourables, had recommended it. The Emperor
+ thought it advisable to defer this act of clemency. A violation of the
+ peace of the country committed under his own eyes ought not to be pardoned
+ during his stay in the place where the bloody deed was committed. It would
+ have cast a doubt upon the serious intent of the important measure which
+ threatened with the severest punishment any attempt upon the lives and
+ property of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as the Emperor held his court at Nuremberg, Wolff, against whom no
+ accuser had yet appeared, must remain concealed. When the sovereign had
+ left the city he might again mingle with his fellow-citizens. An imperial
+ letter alluding to the gratitude which Rudolph owed to the soldiers of
+ Marchfield, to whose band the evildoer belonged, and the whole good city
+ of Nuremberg for the hospitable reception tendered to him and his
+ household, should shield from punishment the young patrician who had only
+ drawn his sword in self-defence, and fulfil the petition of the Council
+ for Wolff Eysvogel&rsquo;s restoration to the rights which he had forfeited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news of this promise gave Els the first happy hour after long days of
+ discomfort and the most arduous mental conflict. True, the measures
+ adopted by her friends seemed to have guarded her from the attacks of the
+ old Countess Rotterbach; but Fran Rosalinde, since she had been allowed
+ more freedom to move about than her mother, who had been confined to the
+ upper story, felt like a boat drifting rudderless down the stream. She
+ needed guidance and, as Els now ruled the house, asked direction from her
+ for even the most simple matters. Clinging to her like a child deserted by
+ its nurse, she told her the most hostile and spiteful remarks which the
+ countess never failed to make whenever it suited her daughter to bear her
+ company. During the last few days the old lady had again won Rosalinde
+ over to her side, and in consequence an enmity towards Els had sprung up,
+ which was often very spiteful in its manifestations, and was the more
+ difficult to bear, the more rigidly her position as daughter of the house
+ forbade energetic resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But most painful of all to the volunteer nurse was the sick man&rsquo;s manner;
+ for though Herr Casper rarely regained perfect consciousness, he showed
+ his unfriendly disposition often enough by glances, gestures, and words
+ stammered with painful effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the brave girl&rsquo;s patience seemed inexhaustible, and she resolutely
+ performed even the most arduous tasks imposed by nursing the sufferer.
+ Nay, the thought that Wolff owed his life to him aided her always to be
+ kind to her father-in-law, no matter how much he wounded her, and to tend
+ him no less carefully than she had formerly cared for her invalid mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she had held out valiantly until, at the end of a long, torturing week,
+ something occurred which destroyed her courage. On returning from an
+ errand in the city, she was received at the door of the sick-room by her
+ future mother-in-law with the statement that she would take charge of her
+ husband herself, and no longer allow the intruder to keep her from the
+ place which belonged to her alone. The old countess&rsquo;s power of persuasion
+ had strengthened her courage, and the unwonted energy of the weak, more
+ than yielding woman, exerted so startling and at the same time
+ disheartening an effect upon the wearied, tortured young creature that she
+ attempted no resistance. The entreaties of the leech and kind Herr Teufel,
+ however, induced her to persist a short time longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when, soon after, the same incident occurred a second time, it seemed
+ impossible to remain in their house even another day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without opposing her lover&rsquo;s mother, she retired to her chamber and,
+ weeping silently, spite of the earnest entreaties of the Sister of
+ Charity, packed the few articles she had brought with her and prepared to
+ leave the post maintained with so much difficulty. To be again with Eva
+ under the protection of her uncle and aunt now seemed the highest goal of
+ her longing. She did not wish to go home; for after his liberation from
+ the tower her father had had a long conversation with Wolff and old
+ Berthold Vorchtel, and then, at the desire of the Council, had ridden to
+ Augsburg and Ulm to arrange the affairs of the Eysvogel firm. He had felt
+ that he could be spared by his family, knowing that his younger daughter
+ was safe at Schweinau, and having heard that Wolff&rsquo;s pardon would not be
+ long delayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, too, had experienced toilsome days and many an anxious night. True,
+ Biberli and the carrier&rsquo;s widow, with her children, had been moved to the
+ Beguines&rsquo; house, where she could pursue her charitable work safe from the
+ rude attacks of the criminal inmates of the hospital; but what heavy cares
+ had burdened her concerning the two patients for whom she was battling
+ with death! how eagerly she watched for tidings from the neighbourhood of
+ the Siebenburgs! what hours of trouble were caused by the prior of the
+ Dominicans and his envoys, who strove to convince her that her intention
+ of renouncing her conventual life was treason to God, and that the
+ boldness with which she had released herself from the former guides of her
+ spiritual life and sought her own way would lead her to heresy and
+ perdition! How painful, too, was the feeling that she was being examined
+ to discover whether the Abbess Kunigunde had any share in her change of
+ purpose!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The torture to which stronger men rarely succumbed seemed to threaten the
+ life of the more delicate ex-schoolmaster. At first the leech Otto, who,
+ to please Els and Fran Christine, and touched by the brave spirit of this
+ humble man, had daily visited Biberli, believed that he could not save
+ him. On the straw pallet, and with the incompetent nursing at the
+ hospital, he would have died very speedily, and what would have befallen
+ his poor mangled toes and fingers in the hands of the barbers who managed
+ affairs there?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Beguines the kindly, skilful old physician had bandaged his hands
+ and feet as carefully as if he had been the most aristocratic gentleman,
+ and no prince could have been more tenderly and patiently watched by
+ trained nurses; for, wonderful to relate, Eva, who had so willingly left
+ her sick mother to her sister&rsquo;s care, and had often been vexed with
+ herself because she could not even remotely equal Els beside the couch of
+ the beloved invalid, rendered the mangled squire every service with a
+ touch so light and firm that the old physician often watched her with glad
+ astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Caution, the quality she most lacked, seemed to have suddenly waked from a
+ long slumber with doubly clear, far-seeing eyes. If it was necessary to
+ turn the sick man, she paid special heed to every aching spot in his
+ tortured body, and invented contrivances which she arranged with patient
+ care to save him pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her own bed had been placed in the widow&rsquo;s chamber next to Biberli&rsquo;s, and
+ from the night that her Aunt Christine had permitted her to remain in the
+ Beguine house, she, who formerly had loved sleep and slumbered soundly,
+ had been beside the sick woman at the least sign. On the third day she
+ rendered her, with her own hands, every service for which she had formerly
+ needed a Beguine&rsquo;s aid. She had possessed the gift of uttering words of
+ cheer and comfort even to her invalid mother better than any one else, and
+ often gave new courage to the suffering man when almost driven to despair
+ by the anguish of pain assailing him in ten places at once. How kindly she
+ taught him what comfort the sufferer finds who not only moves his lips and
+ turns his rosary in prayer, as he had hitherto done, but commends himself
+ and his pain to Him who endured still worse agonies on the cross! What a
+ smile of content rested on the lips of the man who, in the ravings of
+ fever, had so often repeated the words &ldquo;steadfast and true,&rdquo; when she told
+ him that he had done honour most marvellously to his favourite virtue,
+ represented by the T and St, and might expect his master&rsquo;s praise and
+ gratitude!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these things fell from her lips more warmly the more vividly she
+ conjured up the image of the man for whose sake the gallant fellow had
+ endured this martyrdom, the happier it made her to help Heinz, though
+ without his knowledge, to pay the great debt of gratitude which he owed
+ the faithful servitor. She was not aware of it, but the strongest of all
+ educational powers&mdash;sorrow and love&mdash;were transforming the
+ unsocial, capricious &ldquo;little saint&rdquo; into a noble, self-sacrificing woman.
+ She was training herself to be what she desired to become to her lover,
+ and the secret power whose influence upon her whole being she distinctly
+ felt at each success, she herself called&mdash;remembering the last words
+ of her dying mother&mdash;&ldquo;the forge fire of life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first it had been extremely painful for Biberli to allow himself to be
+ nursed with such devoted, loving care by the very person from whom he had
+ earnestly endeavoured to estrange his master; but soon the warmest
+ gratitude cast every other feeling into the shade, and when he woke from
+ the light slumber into which he frequently fell and saw Eva beside his
+ bed, his heart swelled and he often felt as if Heaven had sent her to him
+ to restore the best gifts for which he was struggling&mdash;life and
+ health. When he began to recover, the faithful fellow clung to her with
+ the utmost devotion; but this by no means lessened his love for his master
+ and his absent sweetheart. On the contrary, the farther his convalescence
+ progressed the more constantly and anxiously he thought of Heinz and
+ Katterle, the more pleasure it afforded him to talk about them and to
+ discuss with Eva what could have befallen both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was impossible&mdash;Biberli believed this as firmly as his nurse&mdash;that
+ Heinz could coldly forget his follower or Katterle neglect what she had
+ undertaken. So both agreed in the conjecture that the messengers sent by
+ the absent ones had been prevented from reaching their destination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The supposition was correct. Two troopers despatched by Heinz had been
+ captured by the Siebenburgs, and the maid&rsquo;s messenger had cheated her by
+ pocketing the small fee which she paid him and performing another
+ commission instead of going to Schweinau. Of the knight&rsquo;s letters which
+ had fallen into the wrong hands, one had besought the Emperor Rudolph to
+ pardon the loyal servant, the other had thanked Biberli, and informed him
+ that his master remembered and was working for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Katterle had reached Heinz, had been required to tell him everything she
+ knew about Eva and Biberli down to the minutest detail and had then been
+ commissioned to repeat to the latter what had been also contained in the
+ letter. On the way home, however, she only reached Schwabach, for the long
+ walk in the most terrible anxiety, drenched by a pouring rain, whilst
+ enquiring her way to Heinz, and especially the terrible excitements of the
+ last few days, had been too much even for her vigorous constitution. Her
+ pulse was throbbing violently and her brow was burning when she knocked at
+ the door of Apel, the carrier, who had taken her into his waggon at
+ Schweinau, and the good old man and his wife received and nursed her. The
+ fever was soon broken, but weakness prevented her journeying to Schweinau
+ on foot, and, as Apel intended to go to Nuremberg the first of the
+ following week, she had been forced to content herself with sending the
+ messenger who had betrayed her confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How hard it was for Katterle to wait! And her impatience reached its
+ height when, before she could leave, some of the imperial troopers stabled
+ their horses at the carrier&rsquo;s and reported that Castle Siebenburg and the
+ robber stronghold of the Absbachs were destroyed. Sir Heinz Schorlin had
+ fought like St. George. Now he was detained only by the fortresses of the
+ knights Hirschhorn and Oberstein, whose situation on inaccessible crags
+ threatened long to defy the imperial power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought that the strong Swiss girl might be ill never entered the mind
+ of Biberli or Eva, but in quiet hours he asked himself which it would
+ probably grieve him most to miss forever&mdash;his beautiful young nurse
+ or his countrywoman and sweetheart. His heart belonged solely to Katterle,
+ but towards Eva he obeyed the old trait inherent in his nature, and clung
+ with the same loyalty hitherto evinced for his master to her whom he now
+ regarded as his future mistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This she must and should be, because already life seemed to him no longer
+ desirable without her voice. Never had he heard one whose pure tones
+ penetrated the heart more deeply. And had Heinz been permitted to hear her
+ talk with the Dominicans, he would have given up his wish to renounce the
+ world and, instead of entering a monastery, striven with every power of
+ his being to win this wonderful maiden, for whom his heart glowed with
+ such ardent love. When she persisted in her refusal to take the veil
+ because she had learned that it is possible in the world to live at peace
+ with one&rsquo;s self, feel in harmony with God, and follow in love and fidelity
+ the footsteps of the Saviour, she had heard many a kindly word of
+ admonition, many a sharp reproof, and many a fierce threat from the
+ Dominicans, but she did not allow herself to be led astray, and understood
+ how to defend herself so cleverly and forcibly that his heart dilated, and
+ he asked himself how a girl of eighteen could maintain her ground so
+ firmly, so shrewdly, and with such thorough knowledge of the Scriptures,
+ against devout, highly educated men&mdash;nay, the most learned and
+ austere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Abbess Kunigunde had also appeared sometimes at his bedside, and Eva&rsquo;s
+ conversations with her revealed to him that she had obtained her armour
+ against the Dominicans from the Sisters of St. Clare. True, at first the
+ former had laboured with the utmost earnestness to win her back to the
+ convent, but two days before she had met two Dominicans, and the evident
+ efforts of one who seemed to hold a distinguished position among his
+ brother monks to gain Eva for his own order and withdraw her from the
+ Sisters of St. Clare, whom he believed to be walking in paths less
+ pleasing to God, had so angered the abbess that she lost the power, and
+ perhaps also the will, to maintain her usual composure. Therefore,
+ yesterday she had opposed her niece&rsquo;s wish to remain in the world less
+ strongly than before; nay, on parting with her she had clasped her in her
+ arms and, as it were, restored her freedom by admitting that various paths
+ led to the kingdom of heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was balm to the convalescent&rsquo;s wounds; for he cherished no wish more
+ ardent than to accompany his master to the marriage altar, where Eva would
+ give her hand to Heinz Schorlin as her faithful husband, and the abbess&rsquo;s
+ last visit seemed to favour this desire. Besides, he who had gazed at life
+ with open eyes had never yet beheld a brave young warrior, soon after
+ reaping well-earned renown, yearn for the monk&rsquo;s cowl. Doubt, suffering,
+ and a miraculous escape from terrible peril had inspired the
+ joyous-hearted Heinz with the desire to renounce the world. Now, perhaps,
+ Heaven itself was showing him that he had not received the boon of life to
+ bury himself in a monastery, but to be blessed with the fairest and
+ noblest of gifts, the love of a woman who, in his opinion, had not her
+ equal beneath the wide vault of the azure sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Countess Cordula was not suited for his master. During the long hours that
+ he lay quietly on his pallet a hundred reasons strengthened this opinion.
+ The man for whom he had steadfastly endured such severe agony, and was
+ suffering still, was worthy of a more beautiful, devout, and calm
+ companion-nay, the very loveliest and best&mdash;and that, in his eyes,
+ was the girl for whom Heinz had felt so overmastering a passion just
+ before his luckless winnings at the gaming table. This potent fire of love
+ might doubtless be smothered with sand and ashes, but never extinguished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were Biberli&rsquo;s thoughts as he recalled the events of the previous
+ day. He had found Eva less equable in her tender management than usual.
+ Some anxiety concerning something apart from her patients seemed to
+ oppress her. True, she had not wished to reveal it, but his eyes were
+ keen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after sunrise that morning she had carefully rebandaged his crushed
+ thumb, which was not yet healed. Then she had gone away, as she assured
+ him, for only a few hours. Now the sun was already high in the heavens,
+ yet she did not return, though it was long past the time for the bandages
+ to be renewed, and the drops to be given which sustained the life of the
+ dying Minorite in the adjoining room. It made him uneasy, and when anxiety
+ had once taken root in his heart it sent its shoots forward and backward,
+ and he remembered many things in which Eva had been different the day
+ before. Why had she whispered so long with Herr Pfinzing and then looked
+ so sorrowfully at him, Biberli? Why had Frau Christine come not less than
+ three times yesterday afternoon, and again in the evening? She had some
+ secret to discuss with the surgeon Otto. Had any change taken place in his
+ condition? and did the leech intend to amputate his thumb, or even his
+ hand? But, no! only yesterday he had been assured that he could save all
+ five fingers, and his sorely mangled left foot too. The widow was better,
+ and all hope of saving the Minorite&rsquo;s life had been relinquished two days
+ ago. Eva&rsquo;s anxiety must have some other cause, and he asked himself, in
+ alarm, whether she could have received any bad news from his master or
+ Katterle?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A terrible sense of uneasiness overpowered him, and the necessity of
+ confiding it to some one took such possession of the loquacious man that
+ he called little Walpurga from the next room. But instead of running to
+ his bedside, she darted forward with the joyful cry, &ldquo;She is coming!&rdquo;
+ towards the door and Eva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the latter, leading the child by the hand, entered the room.
+ Biberli felt as if the sun were rising again. How gay her greeting
+ sounded! The expression of her blue eyes seemed to announce something
+ pleasant. Whoever possessed this maiden would be sure to have no lack of
+ light in his home, no matter how dark the night might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He must have been mistaken concerning the anxiety which had seemed to
+ oppress her on his account. Instead of bad news, she was surely bringing
+ good tidings. Nay, she had the best of all; for Katterle, Eva told him,
+ would soon arrive. But his future wife had been ill too. Her cheeks had
+ not yet regained their roundness or their bright colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sharp-sighted Biberli noticed this, and exclaimed: &ldquo;Then she is here
+ already! For, my mistress, how else could you know how her cheeks look?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards the maid was really standing beside her lover&rsquo;s couch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva allowed them to enjoy the happiness of meeting undisturbed, and went
+ to her other two patients. When she returned to the couple, Katterle had
+ already related what she had experienced in Schwabach. It was little more
+ than Eva had already heard from her uncle and others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Seitz Siebenburg, whom he bitterly hated, had fallen in a sword
+ combat by his master&rsquo;s own hand, afforded Biberli the keenest delight. No
+ portion of the narrative vexed him except the nonarrival of the
+ messengers, and the probability that some time must yet elapse ere Heinz
+ could sheathe his sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva&rsquo;s cheeks flushed with joy and pride as she heard how nobly her lover
+ had justified the confidence of his imperial patron. But it seemed to be
+ impossible to follow Biberli&rsquo;s flood of eloquence to the end. She was in
+ haste, and he had been right concerning the cares which oppressed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had stood beside his couch the day before with a heavy heart, and it
+ required the exercise of all her strength to conceal the anxiety with
+ which her mind was filled, for if she did not intercede for him that very
+ day; if his pardon could not be announced early the following morning
+ during the session of the court in the Town Hall, then the half-recovered
+ man must be surrendered to the judges again, and Otto believed that the
+ torture would be fatal to his enfeebled frame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tailor and his adherents, as Eva knew from Herr Pfinzing, were making
+ every effort to obtain his condemnation and prove to the city that they
+ had not censured the proceedings of the Ortlieb household as mere reckless
+ slanderers. Eva and her sister would be again mentioned in the
+ investigation, and were even threatened with an examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first this had startled her, but she believed her uncle&rsquo;s assurance
+ that this examination would fully prove her innocence before the eyes of
+ the whole world. For her own sake Eva surely would not have suffered
+ herself to be so tortured by anxiety night and day, or undertaken and
+ resolved to dare so much. The thought that the faithful follower whom her
+ patient nursing had saved from death and to whom she had become warmly
+ attached must now lose his life, and Heinz Schorlin be robbed of the
+ possibility of doing anything for him, had cast every other fear in the
+ shade, and had kept her constantly in motion the evening before and this
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all that she and her Aunt Christine had attempted in behalf of the
+ imperilled man had been futile. To apply to the Emperor again every one,
+ including the magistrate, had declared useless, since even the Burgrave
+ had been refused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The members of the Council and the judges in the court had already, at
+ Aunt Christine&rsquo;s solicitation, deferred the proceedings four days, but the
+ law now forbade longer delay. Though individuals would gladly have spared
+ the accused the torture, its application could scarcely be avoided, for
+ how many accusers and witnesses appeared against him, and if there were
+ weighty depositions and by no means truthful replies on the part of the
+ prisoner, the torture could not be escaped. It legally belonged to the
+ progress of the investigation, and how many who had by no means recovered
+ from the last exposure to the rack were constantly obliged to enter the
+ torture chamber? Besides, the judges would be charged with partiality by
+ the tailor and his followers, and to show such visible tokens of favour
+ threatened to prejudice the dignity of the court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had found good will everywhere, but all had withheld any positive
+ promise. It was so easy to retreat behind the high-sounding words &ldquo;justice
+ and law,&rdquo; and then: who for the sake of a squire&mdash;who, moreover, was
+ in the service of a foreign knight&mdash;would awaken the righteous
+ indignation of the artisans, who made the tailor&rsquo;s cause their own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever the aunt and niece tried had failed either wholly or partially.
+ Besides, Eva had been obliged to keep in the background in order not to
+ expose herself to the suspicion of pleading her own cause. Many probably
+ thought that Frau Christine herself was talking ostensibly in behalf of
+ the servant and really for her brother&rsquo;s slandered daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eva met Katterle in front of the hospital, she had passed without
+ noticing her, so completely had sorrow, anxiety, and the effort to think
+ of some expedient engrossed her attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been very difficult to meet Biberli with an untroubled manner, yet
+ she had even succeeded in showing a bright face to the carrier&rsquo;s widow, as
+ well as to Father Benedictus, whose hours seemed to be numbered, and who
+ only yesterday had wounded her deeply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she returned from the Minorite&rsquo;s room to Biberli&rsquo;s the lovers were no
+ longer alone. The fresh, pleasant face of a vigorous woman, who had
+ already visited the sufferer several times, greeted her beside his couch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, in the exchange of salutations, her eyes met Eva&rsquo;s the latter
+ suddenly found the plan of action she had vainly sought. Gertrude of Berne
+ could help her take the chance which, in the last extremity, she meant to
+ risk, for she was the wife of the Swiss warder in the Burgrave&rsquo;s castle.
+ It certainly would not be difficult for her to procure her an interview
+ with the Burgravine Elizabeth. If the noble lady could not aid herself,
+ she could&mdash;her cheeks paled at the thought, yet she resolutely clung
+ to it&mdash;present her to her brother, the Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eva, in a low tone, told Frau Gertrude what she hoped to accomplish
+ at the castle, she learned that the Emperor had ridden with the
+ Archduchess Agnes and a numerous train to the imperial forest, to show his
+ Bohemian daughter-in-law the beekeeper&rsquo;s hives, and would scarcely return
+ before sunset; but the Burgravine had remained at home on account of a
+ slight illness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless Eva wished to go to the castle, and, whatever reception the
+ noble lady bestowed upon her, she would return to Schweinau as soon as
+ possible. Father Benedictus was so ill that she could not remain away from
+ him long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Burgravine could do nothing for Biberli, she would undertake the
+ risk which made her tremble, because it compelled her, the young girl, to
+ appear alone at the court with all its watchful eyes and sharp tongues.
+ She would go to the fortress to beseech the Emperor herself for pardon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She could act with entire freedom to-day, for her uncle had ridden to the
+ city and, Frau Gertrude said, was one of the party who accompanied the
+ Emperor to the beekeeper&rsquo;s, whilst her aunt had just gone to Nuremberg to
+ see Els, who had besought her, in a despairing letter, to let her come to
+ Schweinau, for her power of endurance was exhausted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How gladly Eva would have accompanied her aunt to her sister to exhort her
+ to take courage! What a strange transformation of affairs! Ever since she
+ could think Els had sustained her by her superior strength and
+ perseverance. Now she was to be the stronger, and teach her to exercise
+ patience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She thought she had gained the right to do so. Whilst Eva was still
+ explaining her plan to Frau Gertrude, she herself perceived that she had
+ taken no account of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was nearly noon, and if she ordered a sedan-chair to convey her to the
+ city and back again to Schweinau, it would be too late to approach the
+ Emperor as a petitioner. She could fulfil her design only by riding; but
+ the warder&rsquo;s wife reminded her that it would be contrary to custom&mdash;nay,
+ scarcely possible&mdash;to appear before the Emperor, or even his sister,
+ in a riding habit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the young girl speedily found a way to fulfil her ardent wish to aid.
+ On her swift palfrey, which her uncle had sent to Schweinau long before
+ that she might refresh herself, after her arduous duties, by a ride, she
+ would go to the city, stop at her own home, and have her new expensive
+ mourning clothes taken to the castle. The only doubt was whether she could
+ change her garments in the quarters of the Swiss, and whether Frau
+ Gertrude would help her do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter gladly assented. There was no lack of room in her apartments,
+ nor did Frau Gertrude, who had served the Burgravine as waiting maid many
+ years before her marriage, lack either skill or good will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she went directly home on her mule; but Eva, after promising her
+ patients to return soon, hastened to her uncle&rsquo;s residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There she mounted the palfrey and reached the city gate a long time before
+ the Swiss. The clothes she needed were soon found in the Ortlieb mansion,
+ and she was then carried in a sedan-chair to the castle with her wardrobe,
+ whilst the groom led her palfrey after her. Countess Cordula was not at
+ home; she, too, had ridden to the forest with the Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Burgravine Elizabeth willingly consented to receive the charming child
+ whose fate had awakened her warm interest. She had just been hearing the
+ best and most beautiful things about Eva, for the leech Otto had been
+ called to visit her in her attack of illness, and the old man was
+ overflowing with praises of both sisters. He indignantly mentioned the
+ vile calumnies with which Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s name was associated, and which
+ base slander had fixed upon the innocent girls whose pure morality he
+ would guarantee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great lady, who probably remembered having directed Heinz&rsquo;s attention
+ to Eva at the dance, understood very clearly that they could not fail to
+ attract each other. Of all the knights in her imperial brother&rsquo;s train,
+ none seemed to the Burgravine more worthy of her favour than her gay young
+ countryman, whose mother had been one of the friends of her youth. She
+ would gladly have rendered him a service and, in this case, not only for
+ his own sake but still more on account of the rare fidelity of his
+ servant, who was also a native of her beloved Swiss mountains. Yet,
+ notwithstanding all this, it seemed impossible to bring this matter again
+ before the Emperor. She knew her husband, and after the rebuff he had
+ received on account of the tortured man he would be angry if she should
+ plead his cause with her royal brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But her kind heart, and the regard which both Eva and Heinz Schorlin had
+ inspired, strengthened her desire to aid, as far as lay in her power, the
+ brave maiden who urged her suit with such honest warmth, and the
+ petitioner&rsquo;s avowal of her intention, as a last resort, of appealing to
+ the Emperor in person showed her how to convert her kind wishes into
+ deeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let Eva&rsquo;s youth and beauty try to persuade the Emperor to an act of
+ clemency which he had refused to wisdom and power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After supper her brother received various guests, and she could present
+ the daughter of a Nuremberg patrician whom he already knew, and whose rare
+ charms had attracted his notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though she had been compelled to forego the ride to the forest, she was
+ well enough to appear at supper in the Emperor&rsquo;s residence, which was
+ close to her own castle. When the meal was over she would take Eva herself
+ to her royal brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She told her this, and the gratitude which she received was so warm and
+ earnest that it touched her heart, and as she bade the beautiful, brave
+ child farewell she clasped her in her arms and kissed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Encouraged and hopeful, Eva again mounted her palfrey, and urged the swift
+ animal outside the city to so rapid a pace that the old groom on his
+ well-fed bay was left far behind. But the change of dress, the waiting,
+ and the numerous questions asked by the Burgravine had consumed so much
+ time that the poplars were already casting long shadows when she
+ dismounted before the hospital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sister Hildegard received her with an embarrassment by no means usual, but
+ which Eva thought natural when the former told her that the dying Father
+ Benedictus had asked for her impatiently. The widow was doing well, and
+ Biberli would hardly need her; for the wife of a Swabian knight in whose
+ service he had formerly been was sitting by his couch with her young
+ daughter, and their visit seemed to please him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva remarked in surprise that she thought the sick man had never served
+ any one except the Schurlins, but she was in too much haste for further
+ questions, and entered the room where Biberli lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her face was flushed by the rapid ride; her thick, fair hair, which
+ usually fell loosely on her shoulders, had been hastily braided before she
+ mounted her horse, but the long, heavy braids had become unfastened on the
+ way, and now hung in tresses round her face and pliant figure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She waved her hand gaily from the threshold to the patient for whom she
+ had done and dared so much; but ere approaching his couch she modestly
+ saluted the stately matron who was with Biberli, and nodded a pleasant
+ welcome to her daughter, whose pretty, frank face attracted her. After the
+ Swabians had cordially returned her greeting, she briefly excused herself,
+ as an urgent duty would not permit her to yield to her desire to remain
+ with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, she addressed a few hasty questions to the squire about his
+ health, kissed little Walpurga, who had nestled to her side, bade her tell
+ her another that she would come to her later, and entered the next room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Biberli asked his visitors eagerly, after the door had closed
+ behind her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, how beautiful she is!&rdquo; cried the younger lady quickly, but her
+ mother&rsquo;s voice trembled with deep emotion as she answered: &ldquo;How I objected
+ to my son&rsquo;s marriage with the daughter of a city family! Nay, I intended
+ to cast all the weight of my maternal influence between Heinz and the
+ Nuremberg maiden. Yet you did not say too much, my friend, and what your
+ praise began Eva&rsquo;s own appearance has finished. She will be welcome to me
+ as a daughter. I have scarcely ever seen anything more lovely. That she is
+ devout and charitable and, moreover, has a clear intellect and resolute
+ energy, can be plainly perceived in spite of the few minutes which she
+ could spare us. If Heaven would really suffer our Heinz to win the heart
+ of this rare creature&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every fibre of it is his already,&rdquo; interrupted Biberli. &ldquo;The rub&mdash;pardon
+ me, noble lady!&mdash;is somewhere else. Whether he&mdash;whether Heinz
+ can be induced to renounce the thought of the monastery, is the question.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sighed faintly as he gazed into the still beautiful, strong, and yet
+ kindly face of the Lady Wendula Schorlin, Sir Heinz&rsquo;s mother, for she was
+ the older visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We ought not to doubt that,&rdquo; replied the matron firmly. &ldquo;As the last of
+ his ancient race, it is his duty to provide for its continuance, not
+ solely for his own salvation. He was always a dutiful son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; replied Biberli thoughtfully, &ldquo;&lsquo;Away with those who gave us life!&rsquo;
+ was the exhortation of Father Benedictus in the next room. &lsquo;Away with the
+ service of sovereign and woman!&rsquo; he cried to our knight. &lsquo;Away with
+ everything that stands in the way of your own salvation!&rsquo; And,&rdquo; Biberli
+ added, &ldquo;St. Francis was not the first to devise that. Our Lord and Saviour
+ commanded His disciples to leave father and mother and to follow Him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who will prevent his walking in the paths of Jesus Christ?&rdquo; replied the
+ Lady Wendula? &ldquo;Yet, though he follows His footsteps, he must and can do so
+ as a scion of a noble race, as a knight and the brave soldier and true
+ servant of his Emperor, which he is, as a good son and, God willing, as a
+ husband and father. He is sure of my blessing if he wields his sword as a
+ champion of his holy faith. When my two daughters took the veil I
+ submissively yielded. They can pray for heavenly bliss for their brother
+ and ourselves. My only son, the last Schorlin, I neither can nor will
+ permit to renounce the world, in which he has tasks to perform which God
+ Himself assigned him by his birth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how could Heinz part from this angel,&rdquo; cried Maria&mdash;to whom,
+ next to her mother, her brother was the dearest person on earth&mdash;&ldquo;if
+ he is really sure of her love!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She herself had not yet opened her heart to love. To wander through forest
+ and field with the aged head of her family, assist her mother in
+ housekeeping, and nurse the sick poor in the village, had hitherto been
+ the joy and duty of her life. Gaily, often with a song upon her lips, she
+ had carelessly seen one day follow another until Schorlin Castle was
+ besieged and destroyed, and her dear uncle, the Knight Ramsweg, was slain
+ in the defence of the fortress confided to his care. Then she and her
+ mother were taken to the convent at Constance. Both remained there in
+ perfect freedom, as welcome guests of the nuns, until the mounted courier
+ brought a letter from the Knight Maier of Silenen, her cousin, who wrote
+ from Nuremberg that Heinz, like his sisters, intended to renounce the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Schorlin set out at once, and with an anxious heart rode to Nuremberg
+ with her daughter as fast as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had arrived a few hours before and gone to their cousin from Silenen.
+ From him the Lady Wendula learned what her maternal love desired to know.
+ Biberli&rsquo;s fate brought her, after a brief rest, to the hospital, and how
+ it comforted the faithful fellow&rsquo;s heart to see the noble lady who had
+ confided his master to his care, and in whose house the T and St had been
+ embroidered on his long coat and cap!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Wendula had remembered these letters, and when she spoke of them he
+ replied that since he had partially verified what the T and St had
+ announced to people concerning his character, and to which the letters had
+ themselves incited him, he no longer needed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he lapsed into silence, and at last, as the result of his
+ meditations, told his mistress that there was something unusual about his
+ insignificant self, because he earnestly desired to practise the virtues
+ whose possession he claimed before the eyes of the people. He had usually
+ found the worst wine in the taverns with showy signs, and when the Lady
+ Wendula&rsquo;s daughter had embroidered those letters on the cloth for him,
+ what he furnished the guests was also of very doubtful quality. On his
+ sick bed he had been obliged to place no curb upon his proneness to
+ reflection, and in doing so had discovered that there was no virtue which
+ can be owned like a house or a steed, but that each must be constantly
+ gained anew, often amidst toil and suffering. One thing, however, was now
+ firmly established in his belief: that his favourite virtues were really
+ the fairest of all, because&mdash;one will answer for all&mdash;man never
+ felt happier than when he had succeeded in keeping his fidelity inviolate
+ and maintaining his steadfastness. He had learned, too, from Fraulein Eva
+ that the Redeemer Himself promised the crown of eternal life to those who
+ remain faithful unto death. In this confidence he awaited the jailers, who
+ perhaps would come very soon to lead him into the most joyless of all
+ apartments&mdash;the Nuremberg torture chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he told the ladies what he knew of the love which united Heinz and
+ Eva. The four Fs which he had advised his master to heed in his wooing&mdash;Family,
+ Figure, Favor, and Fortune&mdash;he no longer deemed the right
+ touch-tones. Whilst he was forced to lie idly here he had found that they
+ should rather be exchanged for four Ss&mdash;Spirituality, Steadfastness,
+ Stimulation, and Solace&mdash;for the eyes and the heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these were united in Eva and, moreover, there could be no objection to
+ the family to which she belonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon he had commenced so enthusiastic a eulogy of his beloved nurse
+ and preserver that more than once Lady Wendula, smiling, stopped him,
+ accusing him of permitting his grateful heart to lead him to such
+ exaggeration that the maiden he wished to serve would scarcely thank him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet Eva&rsquo;s personal appearance had disappointed neither the experienced
+ mother nor the easily won daughter. Nay, when Maria Schorlin gazed at her
+ through the half-open door of the Minorite&rsquo;s room, because she did not
+ want to lose sight of the girl who had already attracted her on account of
+ her hard battle in the cause of love, and who specially charmed her
+ because it was her Heinz whom she loved, she thought no human being could
+ resist the spell which emanated from Eva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With her finger on her lip she beckoned to her mother, and she, too, could
+ not avert her eyes from the wonderful creature whom she hoped soon to call
+ daughter, as she saw Eva standing, with eyes uplifted to heaven, beside
+ the old man&rsquo;s couch, and heard her, in compliance with his wish, as she
+ had often done before, half recite, half sing in a low voice the Song of
+ the Sun, the finest work of St. Francis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words were in the Italian language, in which this song had flowed from
+ the poet heart of the Saint of Assisi, so rich in love to God and all
+ animate nature; for she had learned to speak Italian in the Convent of St.
+ Clare, to which several Italians had been transferred from their own home
+ and that of their order and its founder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Wendula and her daughter could also follow the song; for the mother
+ had learned the beautiful language of the Saint of Assisi from the
+ minnesingers in her youth, and in the early years of her marriage had
+ accompanied the Emperor Frederick, with her husband, across the Alps. So
+ she had taught Maria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Lady Schorlin approached the door Eva, with her large eyes uplifted,
+ was just beginning the second verse:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Praised by His creatures all
+ Praised be the Lord my God
+ By Messer Sun, my brother, above all,
+ Who by his rays lights us and lights the day.
+ Radiant is he, with his great splendour stored,
+ Thy glory, Lord, confessing.
+
+ &ldquo;By sister Moon and stars my Lord is praised,
+ Where clear and fair they in the heavens are raised.
+
+ &ldquo;By brother Wind, my Lord, thy praise is said,
+ By air and clouds, and the blue sky o&rsquo;erhead,
+ By which thy creatures all are kept and fed.
+
+ &ldquo;By one most humble, useful, precious, chaste,
+ By sister Water, O my Lord, thou art praised.
+
+ &ldquo;And praised is my Lord
+ By brother Fire-he who lights up the night;
+ Jocund, robust is he, and strong and bright.
+
+ &ldquo;Praised art Thou, my Lord, by mother Earth,
+ Thou who sustainest her and governest,
+ And to her flowers, fruit, herbs, dost colour give and birth.
+
+ &ldquo;And praised is my Lord
+ By those who, for Thy love, can pardon give
+ And bear the weakness and the wrongs of men.
+
+ &ldquo;Blessed are those who suffer thus in peace,
+ By Thee, the Highest, to be crowned in heaven.
+
+ &ldquo;Praised by our sister Death, my Lord, art Thou,
+ From whom no living man escapes.
+ Who die in mortal sin have mortal woe,
+ But blessed are they who die doing Thy will;
+ The second death can strike at them no blow.
+
+ &ldquo;Praises and thanks and blessing to my Master be!
+ Serve ye Him all, with great humility.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ How God was loved by this saint, who beheld in everything the Most High
+ had created kindred whom he loved and held intercourse with as with
+ brother and sister! Whatever the divine Father&rsquo;s love had formed&mdash;the
+ sun, the moon and stars, the wood, water and fire, the earth and her fair
+ children, the various flowers and plants&mdash;he made proclaim, each for
+ itself and all in common, like a mighty chorus, the praise of God. Even
+ death joins in the hymn, and all these sons and daughters of the same
+ exalted Father call to the minds of men the omnipotent, beneficent rule of
+ the Lord. They help mortals to appreciate God&rsquo;s majesty, fill their hearts
+ with gratitude, and summon them to praise His sublimity and greatness. In
+ death, whom the poet also calls his sister, he sees no cruel murderer,
+ because she, too, comes from the Most High. &ldquo;And what sister,&rdquo; asks the
+ saint, &ldquo;could more surely rescue the brother from sorrow and suffering?&rdquo;
+ Whoever, as a child of God, feels like the loving Saint of Assisi, will
+ gratefully suffer death to lead him to union with the Father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Benedictus had followed the magnificent poem with rapture. At the lines,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;But blessed are they who die doing Thy will;
+ The second death can strike at them no blow,&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ he nodded gently, as if sure that the close of his earthly pilgrimage
+ meant nothing to him except the beginning of a new and happy life; but
+ when Eva ended with the command to serve the Lord with great humility, he
+ lowered his eyes to the floor hesitatingly, as if not sure of himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he soon raised them again and fixed them on the young girl. They
+ seemed to ask the question whether this noble hymn did not draw his nurse
+ also to him who had sung it; whether, in spite of it, she still persisted,
+ with sorrowful blindness, in her refusal to join the Sisters of St. Clare,
+ whom the saintly singer also numbered amongst his followers. Yet he felt
+ too feeble to appeal to her conscience now, as he had often done, and bear
+ the replies with which this highly gifted, peculiar creature, in every
+ conversation his increasing weakness permitted him to share with her, had
+ pressed him hard and sometimes even silenced him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, they fought with unequal weapons. Pain and illness paralysed his
+ keen intellect, and difficulty of breathing often checked the eloquent
+ tongue, both of which had served him so readily in his intercourse with
+ Heinz Schorlin. She contended with the most precious goal of youth before
+ her eyes, fresh and healthy in mind and body, conscious, in the midst of
+ the struggle, against doubt and suffering, for what she held dearest of
+ her own vigorous energy, panoplied by the talisman of the last mandate
+ from the lips of her dying mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Benedictus, during a long life devoted to the highest aims, had battled
+ enough. He already saw Sister Death upon the threshold, and he wished to
+ depart in peace and reap the reward for so much conflict, pain, and
+ sacrifice. The Lord Himself had broken his weapons. The Minorite Egidius,
+ his friend and companion in years, must carry on with Eva, Father
+ Ignatius, the most eloquent member of the order in Nuremberg, with Heinz
+ Schorlin, the work which he, Benedictus, had begun. Though he himself must
+ retire from the battlefield, he was sure that his post would not remain
+ empty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chant had placed him in the right mood to take leave of the Brothers,
+ whose arrival Sister Hildegard had just announced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since yesterday he had seen the Saviour constantly before his mental
+ vision. Sometimes he imagined that he beheld Him beckoning to him;
+ sometimes that He extended His arms to him; sometimes he even fancied that
+ he heard His voice, or that of St. Francis, and both invited him to
+ approach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day-the leech had admitted it, and he himself felt it by his fevered
+ brow, the failing pulsations of the heart, and the chill in the cold feet,
+ perhaps already dead&mdash;he might expect to leave the dust of the world
+ and behold those for whom he longed face to face in a purer light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wished to await the end surrounded only by the Brothers, who were
+ fighting the same battle, reminded by nothing of the world, as if in the
+ outer court of heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva, the beautiful yet perverse woman, was one of the last persons whom he
+ would have desired to have near him when he took the step into the other
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speech was difficult. A brief admonition to renounce her earthly love in
+ order to share the divine one whose rich joys he hoped to taste that very
+ day was the farewell greeting he vouchsafed Eva. When she tried to kiss
+ his hand he withdrew it as quickly as his weakness permitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she retired, and Father AEgidius led the Brothers of the order in
+ Nuremberg into the room. Meanwhile it had grown dark, and the Beguine
+ Paulina brought in a two-branched candelabrum with burning candles. Eva
+ took it from her hand and placed it so that the light should not dazzle
+ her patient; but he saw her and, by pointing with a frowning brow to the
+ door, commanded her to leave the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She gladly obeyed. When she had passed the Brothers, however, she paused
+ on the threshold before going into the entry and again gazed at the old
+ man&rsquo;s noble, pallid features illumined by the candlelight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had never seen him look so. He was gazing, radiant with joy, at the
+ monks, who were to give him the benediction at his departure. Then he
+ raised his dark eyes as if transfigured; he was thanking Heaven for so
+ much mercy, but the other Minorites fell on their knees beside the bed and
+ prayed with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How lovingly the old man looked into each face! He had never favoured her
+ with such a glance. Yet no other nursing had been so difficult and often
+ so painful. At first he had shown a positive enmity to her, and even asked
+ Sister Hildegard for another nurse; but no suitable substitute for Eva
+ could be found. Then he had earnestly desired to be removed to the
+ Franciscan monastery in Nuremberg; this, however, could not be done
+ because it would have hastened his death. So he was forced to remain, and
+ Eva felt that her presence was not the least thing which rendered the
+ hospital distasteful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, as his aged eyes refused their service and he liked to have someone
+ read aloud from the gospels which he carried with him, or from notes
+ written by his own hand, which also comprised some of the poems of St.
+ Francis, and no one else in the house was capable of performing this
+ office, he at last explicitly desired to keep her for his nurse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To anoint and bandage, according to the physician&rsquo;s prescription, his sore
+ feet and the deep scars made on his back by severe scourging, which had
+ reopened, became more difficult the more plainly he showed his aversion to
+ her touch, because she&mdash;he had told her so himself&mdash;was a woman.
+ She certainly had not found it easy to keep awake and wear a pleasant
+ expression when, after a toilsome day, he woke her at midnight and forced
+ her to read aloud until the grey dawn of morning. But hardest of all for
+ Eva to bear were the bitter words with which he wounded her, and which
+ sounded specially sharp and hostile when he reproached her for standing
+ between Heinz Schorlin and the eternal salvation for which the knight so
+ eagerly longed. He seemed to bear her a grudge like that which the artist
+ feels towards the culprit who has destroyed one of his masterpieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, too, a chance word betrayed that he blamed Heaven for having denied
+ him victory in the battle for the soul of Heinz. Schorlin which he had
+ begun to wage in its name. True, such murmuring was always followed by
+ deep repentance. But in every mood he still strove to persuade Eva to
+ renounce the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she confessed what withheld her from doing so, he at first tried to
+ convince her by opposing reasons, but usually strength to continue the
+ interchange of thought soon failed him. Then he confined himself to
+ condemning with harsh words her perverse spirit and worldly nature, and
+ threatening her with the vengeance of Heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once, after repeating the Song of the Sun, as she had done just now, he
+ asked whether she, too, felt that nothing save the peace of the cloister
+ would afford the possibility of feeling the greatness and love of the Most
+ High as warmly and fully as this majestic song commands us to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, summoning her courage, she assured him of the contrary. Though but a
+ simple girl, she, who had often been the guest of the abbess, felt the
+ grandeur and glory of God as much more deeply in the world and during the
+ fulfilment of the hardest duties which life imposed than with the Sisters
+ of St. Clare, as the forests and fields were wider than the little convent
+ garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man, in a rage, upbraided her with being a blinded fool, and asked
+ her whether she did not know that the world was finite and limited, whilst
+ what the convent contained was eternal and boundless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another time he had wounded her so deeply by his severity that she had
+ found it impossible to restrain her tears. But he had scarcely perceived
+ this ere he repented his harshness. Nothing but love ought to move his
+ heart on the eve of a union with Him whom he had just called Love itself,
+ and with earnest and tender entreaties he besought Eva to forgive him for
+ the censure which was also a work of love. Throughout the day he had
+ treated her with affectionate, almost humble, kindness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these things returned to Eva&rsquo;s thoughts as she left her grey-haired
+ patient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was standing on the threshold of the other world, and it was easy for
+ her to think of him kindly, deeply as he had often wounded her. Nay, her
+ heart swelled with grateful joy because she had been so patient and
+ suffered nothing to divert her from the arduous duty which she had
+ undertaken in nursing the old man, who regarded her with such disfavour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A light had been brought into Biberli&rsquo;s room too. When Eva entered with
+ glowing cheeks she found the Swabians still sitting beside his couch. The
+ door leading into the chamber of the dying man had been closed long
+ before, yet the notes of pious litanies came from the adjoining room. Lady
+ Schorlin noticed her deep emotion with sympathy, and asked her to sit down
+ by her side. Maria offered her own low stool, but Eva declined its use,
+ because she would soon be obliged to ride back to the city. She pressed
+ her hand upon her burning brow, sighing, &ldquo;Now, now&mdash;after such an
+ hour, at court!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Wendula urged her with such kindly maternal solicitude to take a
+ little rest that the young girl yielded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The matron&rsquo;s remark that she, too, was invited to the reception at the
+ imperial residence that evening brought an earnest entreaty from Eva to
+ accept the invitation for her sake, and the Swabian promised to gratify
+ her if nothing occurred to prevent. At any rate, they would ride to the
+ city together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Biberli&rsquo;s astonished enquiry concerning the cause of Eva&rsquo;s visit to the
+ fortress was answered evasively, and she was glad when the singing in the
+ next room led the Swabian to ask whether it was true that the master of
+ her suffering friend on the couch, who intended to devote himself to a
+ monastic life, meant to enter the order of the Minorite whom she had just
+ left and become a mendicant friar. When Eva assented, the lady remarked
+ that members of this brotherhood had rarely come to her castle; but
+ Biberli said that they were quiet, devout men who, content with the alms
+ they begged, preached, and performed other religious duties. They were
+ recruited more from the people than from the aristocratic classes. Many,
+ however, joined them in order to live an idle life, supported by the gifts
+ of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva eagerly opposed this view, maintaining that true piety could be most
+ surely found in the order of St. Francis. Then, with warm enthusiasm, she
+ praised its founder, asserting that, on the contrary, the Saint of Assisi
+ had enjoined labour upon his followers. For instance, one of his favourite
+ disciples was willing to shake the nuts from the rotten branches of a nut
+ tree which no one dared to climb if he might have half the harvest. This
+ was granted, but he made a sack of his wide brown cowl, filled it with the
+ nuts, and distributed them amongst his poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This pleased the mother and daughter; yet when the former remarked that
+ work of this kind seemed to her too easy for a young, noble, and powerful
+ knight, Eva agreed, but added that the saint also required an activity in
+ which the hands, it is true, remained idle, but which heavily taxed even
+ the strongest soul. St. Francis himself had set the example of performing
+ this toil cheerfully and gladly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst giving this information she had again risen. Sister Hildegard had
+ announced that her palfrey and the horses of the guests had been led up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally Eva promised to mount at the same time as the Swabians, bade
+ farewell to Biberli, who looked after her with surprise, yet silently
+ conjectured that this errand to the Emperor was in his behalf, and then
+ went into the entry, where Sister Hildegard told her that Father
+ Benedictus had just died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monks were still chanting beside his deathbed. Brother AEgidius, the
+ friend and comrade of the dead man, however, had left them and approached
+ Eva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deeply agitated, he struggled to repress his sobs as he told her that the
+ old man&rsquo;s longing was fulfilled and his Saviour had summoned him. To die
+ thus, richly outweighed the many sacrifices he had so willingly made here
+ below during a long life. If Eva had witnessed his death she would have
+ perceived the aptness of the saying that a monk&rsquo;s life is bitter, but his
+ death is sweet. Such an end was granted only to those who cast the world
+ aside. Let her consider this once more, ere she renounced the eternal
+ bliss for which formerly she had so devoutly yearned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva&rsquo;s only answer was the expression of her grief for his friend&rsquo;s
+ decease. But whilst passing out into the darkness she thought: the holy
+ Brother certainly had a beautiful and happy death, yet how gently,
+ trusting in the mercy of her Redeemer, my mother also passed away, though
+ during her life and on her deathbed she remained in the world. And then&mdash;whilst
+ Father Benedictus was closing his eyes&mdash;what concern did he probably
+ have for aught save his own salvation, but my mother forgot herself and
+ thought only of others, of those whom she loved, whilst the Saviour
+ summoned her to Himself. Her eyes were already dim and her tongue faltered
+ when she uttered the words which had guided her daughter until now. The
+ forge fire of life burns fiercely, yet to it my gratitude is due if the
+ resolutions I formed in the forest after I had gathered the flowers for
+ her and saw Heinz kneeling in prayer have not been vain, but have changed
+ the capricious, selfish child into a woman who can render some service to
+ others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Heinz comes now and seeks me, I think I can say trustingly, &ldquo;Here I
+ am!&rdquo; We have both striven for the divine Love and recognised its glorious
+ beauty. If later, hand in hand, we can interweave it with the earthly one,
+ why should it not be acceptable to the Saviour? If Heinz offers me his
+ affection I will greet it as &ldquo;Sister Love,&rdquo; and it will certainly summon
+ me with no lower voice to praise the Father from whom it comes and who has
+ bestowed it upon me, as do the sun, the moon and stars, the fire and
+ water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst speaking she went out, and after learning that Frau Christine and
+ her husband had not yet returned, she rode with the Swabians towards the
+ city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order not to pass through the whole length of Nuremberg, Eva guided her
+ friends around the fortifications. Their destination was almost the same,
+ and they chose to enter at the Thiergartnerthor, which was in the
+ northwestern part of the city, under the hill crowned by the castle,
+ whilst the road to Schweinau usually led through the Spitalthor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the way Lady Wendula induced Eva to tell her many things about herself,
+ urging her to describe her father and her dead mother. Her daughter Maria,
+ on the other hand, was most interested in her sister Els, who, as she had
+ heard from Biberli, was the second beautiful E.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva liked to talk about her relatives, but her depression continued and
+ she spoke only in reply to questions, for the Minorite&rsquo;s death had
+ affected her, and her heart throbbed anxiously when she thought of the
+ moment that she must appear amongst the courtiers and see the Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would her errand be vain? Must poor Biberli pay for his resolute fidelity
+ with his life? What pain it would cause her, and how heavily it would
+ burden his master&rsquo;s soul that he had failed to intercede for him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not until Lady Schorlin questioned her did Eva confess what troubled her,
+ and how she dreaded the venture which she had undertaken on her own
+ responsibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were obliged to wait outside the Thiergartnerthor, for it had just
+ been opened to admit a train of freight waggons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst Eva remained on the high-road, with the castle before her eyes, she
+ sighed from the depths of her troubled heart: &ldquo;Why should the Emperor
+ Rudolph grant me, an insignificant girl, what he refused his sister&rsquo;s
+ husband, the powerful Burgrave, to whom he is so greatly indebted? Oh,
+ suppose he should treat me harshly and bid me go back to my spinning
+ wheel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she felt the arm of the dignified lady at her side pass round her and
+ heard her say: &ldquo;Cheer up, my dear girl. The blessing of a woman who feels
+ as kindly towards you as to her own daughter will accompany you, and no
+ Emperor will ungraciously rebuff you, you lovely, loyal, charitable
+ child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At these words from her kind friend Eva&rsquo;s heart opened as if the dear
+ mother whom death had snatched from her had inspired her with fresh
+ courage, and from the very depths of her soul rose the cry, &ldquo;Oh, how I
+ thank you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She urged her nimble palfrey nearer the lady&rsquo;s horse to kiss her left
+ hand, which held the bridle, but Lady Wendula would not permit it and,
+ drawing her towards her, exclaimed, &ldquo;Your lips, dear one,&rdquo; and as her red
+ mouth pressed the kind lady&rsquo;s, Eva felt as if the caress had sealed an old
+ and faithful friendship. But this was not all. Maria also wished to show
+ the affection she had won, and begged for a kiss too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without suspecting it, Eva, on the way to an enterprise she dreaded,
+ received the proof that her lover&rsquo;s dearest relatives welcomed her with
+ their whole hearts as a new member of the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other side of the gate she was obliged to part from the Swabians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Wendula bade her farewell with an affectionate &ldquo;until we meet again,&rdquo;
+ and promised positively to go to the reception at the castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva uttered a sigh of relief. It seemed like an omen of success that this
+ lady, who had so quickly inspired her with such perfect confidence, was to
+ witness her difficult undertaking. She felt like a leader who takes the
+ field with a scanty band of soldiers and is unexpectedly joined by the
+ troops of a firm friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Arnold, the warder from Berne, helped Eva from the saddle, a blaze of
+ light greeted her from the imperial residence. The banquet was just
+ beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Gertrude had more than one piece of good news to tell while assisting
+ the young girl. Among the sovereign&rsquo;s guests was her uncle the magistrate,
+ who had accompanied the Emperor to the beekeeper&rsquo;s, and with his wife,
+ whom she would also find there, had been invited to the banquet. Besides&mdash;this,
+ as the best, she told her last&mdash;her father, Herr Ernst Ortlieb, had
+ returned from Ulm and Augsburg, and a short time before had come to the
+ fortress to conduct Jungfrau Els, by the Burgrave&rsquo;s gracious permission,
+ to her betrothed husband&rsquo;s hiding place. Fran Gertrude had lighted her
+ way, and a long separation might be borne for such a meeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ex-maid was obliged to bestir herself that Eva might have a few
+ minutes for her sister and Wolff, yet she would fain have spent a much
+ longer time over the long, thick, fair hair, which with increasing
+ pleasure she combed until it flowed in beautiful waving tresses over the
+ rich Florentine stuff of her plain white mourning robe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Swiss had also provided white roses from the Burgrave&rsquo;s garden to
+ fasten at the square neck of Eva&rsquo;s dress. The latter permitted her to do
+ this, but her wish to put a wreath of roses on the young girl&rsquo;s head,
+ according to the fashion of the day, was denied, because Eva thought it
+ more seemly to appear unadorned, and not as if decked for a festival when
+ she approached the Emperor as a petitioner. The woman whose life had been
+ spent at court perceived the wisdom of this idea, and at last rejoiced
+ that she had not obtained her wish; for when her work was finished Eva
+ looked so bewitching and yet so pure and modest, that nothing could be
+ removed or&mdash;even were it the wreath of roses&mdash;added without
+ injuring the perfect success of her masterpiece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lack of time soon compelled the young girl to interrupt the exclamations
+ of admiration uttered by the skilful tiring woman herself, her little
+ daughter, the maidservant, and the friend whom Fran Gertrude had invited
+ to come in as if by accident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While following the warder&rsquo;s wife through various corridors and rooms, Eva
+ thought of the hour in her own home before the dance at the Town Hall, and
+ it seemed as if not days but a whole life intervened, and she was a
+ different person, a complete contrast in most respects to the Eva of that
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the dance she had secretly rejoiced in the applause elicited by her
+ appearance; now she was indifferent to it&mdash;nay, the more eagerly the
+ spectators expressed their delight the more she grieved that the only
+ person whom she desired to please was not among them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How easy it had been to be led to the dance, and how hard was the errand
+ awaiting her! Her heart shrank before the doubt awakened by the flood of
+ light pouring from the windows of the imperial residence; the doubt
+ whether her lover would not avoid her if&mdash;ah, had it only been
+ possible!&mdash;if he should meet her among the guests yonder; whether the
+ eloquent Father Ignatius, who had followed him, might not already have won
+ from the knight a vow compelling him to turn from her and summon all his
+ strength of will to forget her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, no! He could no more renounce his love than she hers. She would not,
+ dare not, let such terrible thoughts torture her now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz was far away, and the fate of her love would be decided later. The
+ cause of her presence here was something very different, and the
+ conviction that it was good, right, and certain of his approval, dispelled
+ the pain that had overpowered her, and raised her courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unspeakably hard trials lay behind her, and harder ones must, perhaps, yet
+ be vanquished. But she no longer needed to fear them, for she felt that
+ the strength which had awakened within her after she became conscious of
+ her love was still sustaining and directing her, and would enable her to
+ govern matters which she could not help believing that she herself would
+ be too weak to guide to their goal. She felt freed from her former
+ wavering and hesitation, and as formerly in the modest house of the
+ Beguines, now in the stately citadel she realised that, in sorrow and
+ severe trial, she had learned to assert her position in life by her own
+ strength. Her father, whom she was to meet presently, would find little
+ outward change in her, but when he had perceived the transformation
+ wrought in the character of his helpless &ldquo;little saint&rdquo; it would please
+ him to hear from her how wonderfully her mother&rsquo;s last prophetic words
+ were being fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was emerging from the forge fire of life, steeled for every conflict,
+ yet those would be wrong who believed that, trusting to her own newly won
+ strength, she had forgotten to look heavenward. On the contrary, never had
+ she felt nearer to her God, her Saviour, and the gracious Virgin. Without
+ them she could accomplish nothing, yet for the first time she had
+ undertaken tasks and sought to win goals which were worthy of beseeching
+ them for aid. Love had taught her to be faithful in worldly life, and she
+ said to herself, &ldquo;Better, far better I can certainly become; but firmer
+ faith cannot be kept.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff&rsquo;s hiding place was a large, airy room, affording a view of the Frank
+ country, with its meadows, fields, and forests. Eva saw there by the light
+ of the blazing pine chips her father, sister, and brother-in-law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the meeting between all these beloved ones after a long separation
+ partook more of sorrow than of joy. Els had really resolved to leave the
+ Eysvogel mansion, yet she met her Aunt Christine with the joyful cry: &ldquo;I
+ shall stay! Wolff&rsquo;s father and I have become good friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, a few hours before Herr Casper had looked at her kindly and
+ gratefully, and when she showed him how happy this rendered her, warmly
+ entreated her in a broken voice not to leave him. She had proved herself
+ to be his good angel, and the sight of her was the only bright spot in his
+ clouded life. Then she had gladly promised to stay, and intended to keep
+ her word. She had only accompanied her father, who had unexpectedly
+ returned for a short time, because she could trust the nun who shared her
+ nursing of the paralysed patient, and he rarely recognised his watcher at
+ night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How long Els had been separated from her lover! When Eva greeted the
+ reunited pair they had already poured forth to each other the events which
+ had driven them to the verge of despair, and which now once more permitted
+ them with budding hope to anticipate new happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eva had little time, yet the sisters found an opportunity to confide many
+ things to each other, though at first their father often interrupted them
+ by opposing his younger daughter&rsquo;s intention of going to the Emperor as a
+ supplicant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl whose wishes but a short time ago he had refused or gratified,
+ according to the mood of the moment, like those of a child, had since
+ gained, even in his eyes, so well founded a claim to respect, she opposed
+ him in her courteous, modest way with such definiteness of purpose,
+ Biberli&rsquo;s fate interested him so much, and the prospect of seeing his
+ daughters brought before the court was so painful, that he admitted the
+ force of Eva&rsquo;s reasons and let her set forth on her difficult mission
+ accompanied by his good wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Els had dropped her maternal manner; nay, she received her sister as her
+ superior, and began to describe her work in the hospital to Wolff in such
+ vivid colours that Eva laid her hand on her lips and hurried out of the
+ room with the exclamation, &ldquo;If you insist upon our changing places, we
+ will stand in future side by side and shoulder to shoulder! Farewell till
+ after the battle!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She could not have given much more time to her relatives under any
+ circumstances, for the Burgravine&rsquo;s maid of honour who was to attend her
+ to the reception was already waiting somewhat impatiently in Frau
+ Gertrude&rsquo;s room, and took her to the castle without delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The place where they were to stay was the large apartment adjoining the
+ dining hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The confidence which Eva had regained on her way to her relatives vanished
+ only too quickly in the neighbourhood of the sovereign and the sight of
+ the formal reception bestowed on all who entered. Her heart throbbed more
+ and more anxiously as she realised for the first time how serious a step
+ she had taken; nay, it was long ere she succeeded in calming herself
+ sufficiently to notice the clatter of the metal vessels and the Emperor&rsquo;s
+ deep voice, which often drowned the lower tones of the guests. Reverence
+ for royalty was apparent everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much quieter this banquet was than those of the princes and nobles!
+ The guests knew that the Emperor Rudolph disliked the boisterous manners
+ of the German nobility. Besides, the sovereign&rsquo;s mourning exerted a
+ restraint upon mirth and recklessness. All avoided loud laughter, though
+ the monarch was fond of gaiety and heroically concealed the deep grief of
+ his own soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the lord high steward announced to the maid of honour who had brought
+ Eva here that dessert was served, the latter believed that the dreaded
+ moment when she would be presented to the Emperor was close at hand, but
+ quarter of an hour after quarter of an hour passed and she still heard the
+ clanking of metal and the voices of the guests, which now began to grow
+ louder, and amidst which she sometimes distinguished the strident tones of
+ the court fool, Eyebolt, and the high ones of the Countess Cordula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time moved at a snail&rsquo;s pace, and she already fancied her heart could no
+ longer endure its violent throbbing, when at last&mdash;at last&mdash;the
+ heavy oak chairs were pushed noisily back over the stone floor of the
+ dining hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the balcony of the audience chamber a flourish of trumpets echoed
+ loudly along the arches of the lofty, vaulted ceiling of the apartment,
+ and the Emperor, leading the company, crossed the threshold attended by
+ several dignitaries, the court jesters, and some pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His august sister, the Burgravine Elizabeth, leaned on his arm. The papal
+ ambassador, Doria, in the brilliant robe of a cardinal, followed,
+ escorting the Duchess Agnes, but he parted from her in the hall. Among
+ many other secular and ecclesiastical princes and dignitaries appeared
+ also Count von Montfort and his daughter, the old First Losunger of
+ Nuremberg, Berthold Vorchtel, and Herr Pfinzing with his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several guests from the city entered at the same time through another
+ door, among whom, robed in handsome festal garments, were Eva&rsquo;s new
+ Swabian acquaintances. How gladly she would have hastened to them! But a
+ grey-haired stately man of portly figure, whose fur-trimmed cloak hung to
+ his ankles&mdash;Sir Arnold Maier of Silenen, led them to a part of the
+ hall very distant from where she was standing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To make amends, Count von Montfort and Cordula came very near her; but she
+ could not greet them. Each person&mdash;she felt it&mdash;must remain in
+ his or her place. And the restraint became stronger as the Duchess Agnes,
+ giving one guest a nod, another a few words, advanced nearer and nearer,
+ pausing at last beside Count von Montfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old huntsman advanced respectfully towards the Bohemian princess, and
+ Eva heard the fourteen-year-old wife ask, &ldquo;Well, Count, how fares your
+ wish to find the right husband for your wilful daughter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course it must be fulfilled, Duchess, since your Highness deigned to
+ approve it,&rdquo; he answered, with his hand upon his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And may his name be known?&rdquo; she queried with evident eagerness, her dark
+ eyes sparkling brightly and a faint flush tingeing the slight shade of tan
+ on her child face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The duty of a knight and paternal weakness unfortunately still seal my
+ lips,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Your Highness knows best that a lady&rsquo;s wish&mdash;even
+ if she is your own child&mdash;is a command.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are praised as an obedient father,&rdquo; replied the Bohemian with a
+ slight shrug of the shoulders. &ldquo;Yet you probably need not conceal whether
+ the happy man, who is not only encouraged, but this time also chosen by
+ the charming huntress of many kinds of game, is numbered among our
+ guests.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unfortunately he is denied the pleasure, your Highness,&rdquo; replied the
+ count; but Cordula, who had noticed Eva, and had heard the Duchess Agnes&rsquo;s
+ last words, approached her royal foe, and with a low, reverential bow,
+ said: &ldquo;My poor heart must imagine him far away from here amid peril and
+ privation. Instead of breaking ladies&rsquo; hearts, he is destroying the
+ castles of robber knights and disturbers of the peace of the country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The duchess, in silent rage, clenched her white teeth upon her quivering
+ lips, and was about to make an answer which would scarcely have flattered
+ Cordula, when the Emperor, who had left his distinguished attendants,
+ approached Eva, with the Burgravine still leaning on his arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not notice it; she was vainly trying to interpret the meaning of
+ Cordula&rsquo;s words. True, she did not know that when no messenger brought
+ Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s intercession for Biberli, in whose fate the countess felt
+ a sincere interest, she had commanded her own betrothed husband to ride
+ his horse to death in order to tell the master of the sorely imperilled
+ man what danger threatened his faithful servant, and remind him, in her
+ name, that gratitude was one of the virtues which beseemed a true knight,
+ even though the matter in question concerned only a servant Boemund
+ Altrosen had obeyed, and must have overtaken Heinz long ago and probably
+ aided him to rout the Siebenburgs and their followers. But Cordula read
+ the young Bohemian&rsquo;s child heart, and it afforded her special pleasure to
+ deal her a heavy blow in the warfare they were waging, which perhaps might
+ aid another purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surprise and bewilderment which the countess&rsquo;s answer had aroused in
+ Eva heightened the spell of her beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had she heard aright? Could Heinz really have sued for the countess&rsquo;s hand
+ and been accepted? Surely, surely not! Neither was capable of such
+ perfidy, such breach of faith. Spite of the testimony of her own ears, she
+ would not believe it. But when she at last saw the Emperor&rsquo;s tall figure
+ before her, and he gazed down at her with a kind, fatherly glance, she
+ answered it with her large blue eyes uplifted beseechingly, and withal as
+ trustilly, as if she sought to remind him that, if he only chose to do so,
+ his power made it possible to convert everything which troubled and
+ oppressed her to good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tearful yet bright gaze of those resistless eyes pierced the Emperor&rsquo;s
+ very soul, and he imagined how this lovely vision of purity and innocence,
+ this rare creature, of whom he had heard such marvellous things from Herr
+ Pfinzing during their ride through the forest, would have fired the heart
+ of his eighteen-year-old son, so sensitive to every impression, whom death
+ had snatched from him so suddenly. And whilst remembering Hartmann, he
+ also thought of his dead son&rsquo;s most loyal and dearest friend, Heinz
+ Schorlin, who was again showing such prowess in his service, and had
+ earned a right to recognition and reward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not know his young favourite&rsquo;s present state of mind concerning his
+ desire for a monastic life, but he had probably become aware that his
+ swiftly kindled, ardent love for yonder lovely child had led him into an
+ act of culpable imprudence. Besides, that very day many things had reached
+ his ears concerning these two who suited each other as perfectly as Heinz
+ Schorlin seemed&mdash;even to the Hapsburg, who was loyally devoted to the
+ Holy Church&mdash;unfit for a religious life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor could do much to further the union of this pair, yet he too
+ was obliged to exercise caution. If he joined them in wedlock as though
+ they were his own children he might be sure of causing loud complaints
+ from the priesthood, and especially the Dominicans, who were very
+ influential at the court of Rome&mdash;nay, he must be prepared for
+ opposition directed against himself as well as the young pair. The prior
+ of the order had already complained to the nuncio of the lukewarmness of
+ the Superior of the Sisters of St. Clare, who idly witnessed the
+ estrangement from the Church of the soul of a maiden belonging to a
+ distinguished family; and Doria had told the sovereign of this provoking
+ matter, and expressed the prior&rsquo;s hope that Sir Heinz Schorlin, who
+ enjoyed the monarch&rsquo;s favour, would be won for the monastic life.
+ Opposition to this marriage, which he approved, and therefore desired to
+ favour, was also to be expected from another quarter. Therefore he must
+ act with the utmost caution, and in a manner which his antagonists could
+ not oppose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this reflection a peculiar smile, familiar to the courtiers as an omen
+ of a gracious impulse, hovered around his lips, which during the past
+ month had usually revealed by their expression the grief that burdened his
+ soul and, raising his long forefinger in playful menace, he began:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, Jungfrau Eva Ortlieb! What have you been doing since I had the boon
+ of meeting so rare a beauty at the dance? Do you know that you have caused
+ a turmoil amongst both ecclesiastical and secular authorities, and that
+ many a precious hour has been shortened for me on your account? You have
+ disturbed both the austere Dominican Fathers and the devout Sisters of St.
+ Clare. The former think the gentle nuns treat you too indulgently, and the
+ latter charge the zealous followers of St. Domingo with too much
+ strictness concerning you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, besides, if you were not so well aware of it yourself, you would
+ scarcely believe it: for the sake of an insignificant serving man, who is
+ under your special protection, I, who carry the burden of so many serious
+ and weighty affairs, am beset by those of high and low degree. How much,
+ too, I have also suffered on account of his master, Sir Heinz Schorlin&mdash;again
+ in connection with you, you lovely disturber of the peace! To say nothing
+ of the rest, your own father brings a charge against him. The accusation
+ is made in a letter which Meister Gottlieb, our protonotary, was to
+ withhold by Herr Ortlieb&rsquo;s desire, but through a welcome accident it fell
+ into my hands. This letter contains statements, my lovely child, which I&mdash;Nay,
+ don&rsquo;t be troubled; the roses on your cheeks are glowing enough already,
+ and for their sake I will not mention its contents; only they force me to
+ ask the question&mdash;come nearer&mdash;whether, though it caused you
+ great annoyance that a certain young Swiss knight forced his way into your
+ father&rsquo;s house under cover of the darkness, you do not hope with me, the
+ more experienced friend, that this foolhardy fellow, misguided by ardent
+ love, with the aid of the saints to whom he is beginning to turn, may be
+ converted to greater caution and praiseworthy virtue? Whether, in your
+ great charity&mdash;which I have heard so highly praised&mdash;you would
+ be capable&rdquo;&mdash;Here he paused and, lowering his voice to a whisper,
+ added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do me the favour to lend your ear&mdash;what a well-formed little thing
+ it is!&mdash;a short time longer, to confide to the elderly man who feels
+ a father&rsquo;s affection for you whether you would be wholly reluctant to
+ attempt the reformation of the daring evil-doer yourself were he to offer,
+ not only his heart, but the little ring with&mdash;I will guarantee it&mdash;his
+ honourable, knightly hand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, your Majesty!&rdquo; cried Eva, gazing at the gracious sovereign with an
+ expression of such imploring entreaty in her large, tearful blue eyes
+ that, as if regretting his hasty question, he added soothingly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well, we will reach the goal, I think, at a slower pace. Such a
+ confession will probably flow more easily from the lips when sought by the
+ person for whom it means happiness or despair, than when a stranger&mdash;even
+ one as old and friendly as I&mdash;seeks to draw it from a modest maiden.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he paused; he had just recognised Lady Wendula Schorlin. Waving his
+ hand to her in joyous greeting, he ordered a page to conduct her to him
+ and, again turning to Eva, said: &ldquo;Look yonder, my beautiful child: there
+ is someone in whom you would confide more willingly than in me. I think
+ Sir Heinz&rsquo;s mother, who is worthy of all reverence and love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here surprise and joy forced from Eva&rsquo;s lips the question, &ldquo;His mother?&rdquo;
+ and there was such amazement in the tone that, as the Lady Wendula, bowing
+ low, approached the Emperor, after exchanging the first greetings which
+ pass between old friends who have been long separated, he asked how it
+ happened that though Eva seemed to have already met the matron, she heard
+ with such surprise that she was the mother of his brave favourite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Wendula then confessed the name she had given herself, that she might
+ study the young girl without being known; and again that peculiar smile
+ flitted across the Emperor Rudolph&rsquo;s beardless face, and lingered there,
+ as he asked the widow of his dead companion in arms whether, after such an
+ examination, she believed she had found the right wife for her son; and
+ she replied that a long life would not give her time enough to thank
+ Heaven sufficiently for such a daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The maiden who was the subject of this whispering, whose purport only a
+ loving glance from the Lady Wendula revealed, pressed her hand upon her
+ heart, whose impetuous throbbing stifled her breath. Oh, how gladly she
+ would have hastened to the mother of the man she loved and his young
+ sister, who stood at a modest distance, to clasp them in her arms, and
+ confide to them what seemed too great, too much, too beautiful for herself
+ alone, yet which might crumble at a single word from her lover&rsquo;s lips like
+ an undermined tower swept away by the wind! But she was forced to have
+ patience, and submit to whatever might yet be allotted to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was she to lack agitating experiences, for the Emperor&rsquo;s murmured
+ question whether she desired to hear herself called &ldquo;daughter&rdquo; by this
+ admirable lady had scarcely called forth an answer, which, though mute,
+ revealed the state of her heart eloquently enough, than he added in a
+ louder tone, though doubtfully: &ldquo;Then, so far, all would be well; but,
+ fair maiden, my young friend, unfortunately, was by no means satisfied, if
+ I heard aright, with knocking at the door of a single heart. Things have
+ reached my ears&mdash;But this, too, must be&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he suddenly paused, for already during this conversation with the
+ ladies there had been a noise at the door of the hall, and now the person
+ whom the Emperor had just accused entered, closely followed by the
+ chamberlain, Count Ebenhofen, whose face was deeply flushed from his vain
+ attempts to keep Sir Heinz Schorlin back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz&rsquo;s cheeks were also glowing from his struggle with the courtier, who
+ considered it a grave offence that a knight should dare to appear before
+ the Emperor at a peaceful social assembly clad in full armour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His appearance created a joyful stir among the other members of the court&mdash;nay,
+ in spite of the sovereign&rsquo;s presence, cordial expressions of welcome fell
+ from the lips of ladies and nobles. The Bohemian princess alone cast an
+ angry glance at the blue ribbon which adorned the helmet of the returning
+ knight; for &ldquo;blue&rdquo; was Countess von Montfort&rsquo;s colour, and &ldquo;rose red&rdquo; her
+ own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ecclesiastics whom Heinz passed whispered eagerly together. The
+ Duchess Agnes&rsquo;s confessor, an elderly Dominican of tall stature, was
+ listening to the provost of St. Sebald&rsquo;s, a grey-haired man a head shorter
+ than he, of dignified yet kindly aspect, who, looking keenly at Heinz,
+ remarked: &ldquo;I fear that your prior hopes too confidently to win yonder
+ young knight. No one walks with that bearing who is on the eve of
+ renouncing the world. A splendid fellow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To whom armour is better suited than the cowl,&rdquo; observed the Bishop of
+ Bamberg, a middleaged prelate of aristocratic appearance, approaching the
+ others. &ldquo;Your prior, my dear brothers, would have little pleasure, I
+ think, in the fish he is so eagerly trying to drag from the Minorite&rsquo;s net
+ into his own. He would leap ashore again all too quickly. He is not fit
+ for the monastery. He would do better for a priest, and I would bid him
+ welcome as a military brother in office.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bold enough he certainly is,&rdquo; added the Dominican. &ldquo;I would not advise
+ every one to enter the Emperor&rsquo;s presence and this distinguished gathering
+ in such attire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, Heinz showed plainly that he had come directly from the
+ battlefield and the saddle, for a suit of stout chain armour, which
+ covered the greater part of his tolerably long tunic, encased his limbs,
+ and even the helmet which he bore on his arm, spite of the blue ribbon
+ that adorned it, was by no means one of the delicate, costly ones worn in
+ the tournament. Besides, many a bruise showed that hard blows and thrusts
+ had been dealt him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s quarters the day before his young hostess, Frau
+ Barbel, had had the costly armour entrusted to her care, and the trappings
+ belonging to it, cleaned and put in order, but her labour was vain; for
+ Heinz Schorlin had ridden directly to the fortress from Schweinau, without
+ stopping at his lodgings in the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a short time before he had learned that his two messengers had been
+ captured and failed to reach their destination. He owed this information
+ to Sir Boemund Altrosen&mdash;and many another piece of news which Cordula
+ had given him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main portion of Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s task was completed when the
+ countess&rsquo;s ambassador reached him, so he set out on his homeward way at
+ once, and this time his silent friend had been eloquent and told him
+ everything which had occurred during his absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now knew that Boemund and Cordula had plighted their troth, what the
+ faithful Biberli had done and suffered for him, and lastly&mdash;even to
+ the minutest detail&mdash;the wonderful transformation in Eva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had ridden forth he had hoped to learn to renounce her whom he
+ loved with all the might of his fervid soul, and to bring himself to close
+ his career as a soldier with this successful campaign; but whilst he
+ destroyed castles and attacked the foe, former wishes were stilled, and a
+ new desire and new convictions took their place. He could not give up the
+ profession of arms, which all who bore the name of Schorlin had practised
+ from time immemorial, and to resign the love which united him to Eva was
+ impossible. She must become his, though she resembled an April day, and
+ Biberli&rsquo;s tales of the danger which threatened the husband from a
+ sleep-walking wife returned more than once to his memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet what beautiful April days he had experienced, and though Eva might
+ have many faults, the devout child, with her angel beauty, certainly did
+ not lack the will to do what was right and pleasing to God. When she was
+ once his she should become so good that even his mother at home would
+ approve his choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had wholly renounced the idea of going into the monastery. The Minorite
+ Ignatius, whom Father Benedictus had sent after him that he might finish
+ the work which the latter had begun, was a man who lacked neither
+ intellect nor eloquence; but he did not possess the fiery enthusiasm and
+ aristocratic confidence of the dead man. Yet when the zealous monks, whom
+ the prior of the Dominicans had despatched to complete Heinz&rsquo;s conversion,
+ opposed him, the former entered into such sharp and angry arguments with
+ them that the young knight, who witnessed more than one of their quarrels,
+ startled and repelled, soon held aloof from all three and told them that
+ he had resolved to remain in the world, and his onerous office gave him no
+ time to listen to their well-meant admonitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not created for the monastery. If Heaven had vouchsafed him a
+ miracle, it was done to preserve his life that&mdash;as Eva desired&mdash;he
+ might fight to the last drop of his blood for the Church, his holy faith,
+ and the beloved Emperor. But if he remained in the world, Eva would do the
+ same; they belonged to each other inseparably. Why, he could not have
+ explained, but the voice which constantly reiterated it could not lie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After he had slain Seitz Siebenburg in the sword combat, and destroyed his
+ brother&rsquo;s castle, his resolve to woo Eva became absolutely fixed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His heart dictated this, but honour, too, commanded him to restore to the
+ maiden and her sister the fair fame which his passionate impetuosity had
+ injured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the rapid ride which he and Boemund Altrosen took to Nuremberg he
+ had stopped at Schweinau hospital, and found in Biberli, Eva&rsquo;s former
+ enemy, her most enthusiastic panegyrist. Heinz also heard from him how
+ quickly she had won the hearts of his mother and Maria, and that he would
+ find all three at the fortress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lastly, Sister Hildegard had informed him of the great peril threatening
+ his beloved faithful servant and companion, &ldquo;old Biber,&rdquo; which had led Eva
+ there to appeal to the Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beside the body of Father Benedictus he learned how beautiful had been the
+ death of the old man who had so honestly striven to lead him into the path
+ which he believed was the right one for him to tread. In a brief prayer
+ beside his devout friend Heinz expressed his gratitude, and called upon
+ him to witness that, even in the world, he would not forget the shortness
+ of this earthly pilgrimage, but would also provide for the other life
+ which endured forever. True, Heinz had but a few short moments to devote
+ to this farewell, the cause of the faithful follower who, unasked, had
+ unselfishly endured unutterable tortures for him, took precedence of
+ everything else and would permit no delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the knight, with his figure drawn up to its full height, strode
+ hastily into the royal hall, he beheld with joyful emotion those who were
+ most dear to him, for whose presence he had longed most fervently during
+ the ride&mdash;his mother, Eva, his sister, and the imperial friend he
+ loved so warmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Overwhelmed by agitation, he flung himself on his knees before his master,
+ kissing his hand and his robe, but the Emperor ordered him to rise and
+ cordially greeted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before speaking to his relatives, Heinz informed the monarch that he had
+ successfully executed his commission and, receiving a few words of thanks
+ and appreciation, modestly but with urgent warmth entreated the Emperor,
+ if he was satisfied with his work, instead of any other reward, to save
+ from further persecution the faithful servant who for his sake had borne
+ the most terrible torture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The face of the sovereign, who had welcomed Heinz as if he were a
+ long-absent son, assumed a graver expression, and his tone seemed to
+ vibrate with a slight touch of indignation, as he exclaimed: &ldquo;First, let
+ us settle your own affairs. Serious charges have been made against you, my
+ son, as well as against your servant, on whose account I have been so
+ tormented. A father, who is one of the leading men in this city, accuses
+ you of having destroyed his daughter&rsquo;s good name by forcing yourself into
+ his house after assuring his child of your love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heinz turned to Eva, to protest that he was here to atone for the wrong he
+ had done her, but the Emperor would not permit him to speak. It was
+ important to silence at once any objection which could be made against the
+ marriage by ecclesiastical and secular foes; therefore, eagerly as he
+ desired to enjoy the happiness of the young pair, he forced himself to
+ maintain the expression of grave dissatisfaction which he had assumed, and
+ ordered a page to summon the imperial magistrate, the First Losunger of
+ the city, and his protonotary, who were all amongst the guests, and,
+ lastly, the Duchess Agnes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could read the latter&rsquo;s child eyes like the clear characters of a book,
+ and neither the radiant glow on her face at Heinz Schorlin&rsquo;s entrance nor
+ her hostile glance at the Countess von Montfort had escaped his notice.
+ Both her affection and her jealous resentment should serve him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young Bohemian now thought herself certain that Heinz Schorlin, and no
+ other, was Cordula&rsquo;s chosen knight; the countess, at his entrance, had
+ exclaimed to her father loudly enough, &ldquo;Here he is again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the princess stood before the Emperor, with the gentlemen whom he had
+ summoned, he asked her to decide the important question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yonder knight&mdash;he motioned towards Heinz&mdash;had been guilty of an
+ act which could scarcely be justified. Though he had wooed the daughter of
+ a noble Nuremberg family, and even forced his way into her father&rsquo;s house,
+ he had apparently forgotten the poor girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; cried the young wife indignantly, &ldquo;the unprincipled man has not
+ only made a declaration of love to another, but formally asked her hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That would seem like him,&rdquo; said the Emperor. &ldquo;But we must not close our
+ ears to the charge of the Nuremberg Honourable. His daughter, a lovely,
+ modest maiden of excellent repute, has been seriously injured by Heinz
+ Schorlin, and so I beg you, child, to tell us, with the keen appreciation
+ of the rights and duties of a lady which is peculiar to you, what
+ sentence, in your opinion, should be imposed upon Sir Heinz Schorlin to
+ atone for the wrong he has done to the young Nuremberg maiden.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He beckoned to the protonotary, as he spoke, to command him to show Ernst
+ Ortlieb&rsquo;s accusation to the duchess, but she seemed to have practised the
+ art of reading admirably; for, more quickly than it would otherwise have
+ appeared possible to grasp the meaning of even the first sentences, she
+ exclaimed, drawing herself up to her full height and gazing at Cordula
+ with haughty superiority: &ldquo;There is but one decision here, if the morality
+ of this noble city is to be preserved and the maiden daughters of her
+ patrician families secured henceforward from the misfortune of being a
+ plaything for the wanton levity of reckless heart breakers. But this
+ decision, on which I firmly and resolutely insist, as lady and princess,
+ in the name of my whole sex and of all knightly men who, with me, prize
+ the reverence and inviolable fidelity due a lady, is: Sir Heinz Schorlin
+ must ask the honourable gentleman who, with full justice, brought this
+ complaint to your imperial Majesty, for his daughter&rsquo;s hand and, if the
+ sorely injured maiden vouchsafes to accept it, lead her to the marriage
+ altar before God and the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoken according to the feelings of my own heart,&rdquo; replied the Emperor
+ and, turning to the citizens of Nuremberg, he added: &ldquo;So I ask you,
+ gentlemen, who are familiar with the laws and customs of this good city
+ and direct the administration of her justice, will such a marriage remove
+ the complaint made against Sir Heinz Schorlin and his servant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will,&rdquo; replied old Herr Berthold Vorchtel, gravely and firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Pfinzing also assented, it is true, but added earnestly that an
+ unfortunate meeting had caused another to suffer even more severely than
+ Eva from the knight&rsquo;s imprudence. This was her older sister, the betrothed
+ bride of young Eysvogel. For her sake, as well as to make the bond between
+ Sir Heinz Schorlin and the younger Jungfrau Ortlieb valid, the father&rsquo;s
+ consent was necessary. If his imperial Majesty desired to bring to a
+ beautiful end, that very day, the gracious work so auspiciously commenced
+ there was no obstacle in the way, for Ernst Ortlieb was at the von Zollern
+ Castle with the daughter who had been so basely slandered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor asked in surprise how they came there, and then ordered Eva&rsquo;s
+ father and sister to be brought to him. He was eager to make the
+ acquaintance of the second beautiful E.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Wolff Eysvogel?&rdquo; asked the magistrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We agreed to release him after we had turned our back on Nuremberg,&rdquo;
+ replied the sovereign. &ldquo;Much as we have heard in praise of this young man,
+ gladly as we have shown him how gratefully we prize the blood a brave man
+ shed for us upon the Marchfield, no change can be made in what, by virtue
+ of our imperial word&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not, little brother,&rdquo; interrupted the court fool, Eyebolt, &ldquo;but
+ for that very reason you must open the Eysvogel&rsquo;s cage as quickly as
+ possible and let him fly hither, for on the ride to the beekeeper&rsquo;s you
+ crossed in your own seven-foot tall body the limits of this good city,
+ whose length does not greatly surpass it&mdash;your imperial person, I
+ mean. So you as certainly turned your back upon it as you stand in front
+ of things which lie behind you. And as an emperor&rsquo;s word cannot have as
+ much added or subtracted as a fly carries off on its tail, if it has one,
+ you, little brother, are obliged and bound to have the strange monster,
+ which is at once a wolf and a bird, immediately released and summoned
+ hither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not amiss,&rdquo; laughed the Emperor, &ldquo;if the boundaries of Nuremberg saw our
+ back for even so brief a space as it needs to make a wise man a fool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will follow your counsel, Eyebolt.&mdash;Herr Pfinzing, tell young
+ Eysvogel that the Emperor&rsquo;s pardon has ended his punishment. The breach of
+ the country&rsquo;s peace may be forgiven the man who so heroically aided the
+ battle for peace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then turning to Meister Gottlieb, the protonotary, he whispered so low
+ that he alone could hear the command, that he should commit to paper a
+ form of words which would give the bond between Heinz Schorlin and Eva
+ Ortlieb sufficient legal power to resist both secular authority and that
+ of the Dominicans and Sisters of St. Clare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this conference court etiquette had prevented the company from
+ exchanging any remarks. Whatever one person might desire to say to another
+ he was forced to entrust to the mute language of the eyes, and a sportive
+ impulse induced Emperor Rudolph to maintain the spell which held apart
+ those who were most strongly attracted to each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, whilst he was talking with the protonotary, the bolder guests
+ ventured to move about more freely, and of them all Cordula imposed the
+ least restraint upon herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere Heinz had found time to address a word to Eva or to greet his mother
+ she glided swiftly to his side and, with an angry expression on her face,
+ whispered: &ldquo;If Heaven bestowed the greatest happiness upon the most
+ deserving, you must be the most favoured of mortals, for a more exquisite
+ masterpiece than your future wife&mdash;I know her&mdash;was never
+ created. But now open your ears and follow my advice: Do not reveal the
+ state of your heart until you have left the castle so far behind that you
+ are out of sight of the Bohemian princess, or your ship of happiness may
+ be wrecked within sight of port.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, with a well-assumed air of indignation, she abruptly turned her back
+ upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After moving away, she intentionally remained standing near the duchess,
+ with drooping head. The latter hastily approached her, saying with
+ admirably simulated earnestness: &ldquo;You, Countess, will probably be the last
+ to refuse your approval of my interference against our knightly butterfly
+ and in behalf of the poor inexperienced girl, his victim.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that is your Highness&rsquo;s opinion,&rdquo; replied Cordula, shrugging her
+ shoulders as if it were necessary to submit to the inevitable, &ldquo;for my
+ part I fear your kind solicitude may send me behind convent walls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Countess von Montfort a nun!&rdquo; cried the child wife, laughing. &ldquo;If it were
+ Sir Heinz Schorlin to whom you just alluded, you, too, are among the
+ deluded ones whom we must pity, yet with prudent foresight you provided
+ compensation long ago. Instead of burying yourself in a convent, you, whom
+ so many desire, would do better to beckon to one of your admirers and
+ bestow on him the happiness of which the other was not worthy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cordula fixed her eyes thoughtfully on the floor a short time, then, as if
+ the advice had met with her approval, exclaimed: &ldquo;Your Royal Highness&rsquo;s
+ mature wisdom has found the right expedient this time also. I am not fit
+ for the veil. Perhaps you may hear news of me to-morrow. By that time my
+ choice will be determined. What would you say to the dark-haired
+ Altrosen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A brave champion!&rdquo; replied the Bohemian, and this time the laugh which
+ accompanied her words came from the heart. &ldquo;Try him, in the name of all
+ the saints! But look at Sir Heinz Schorlin! A gloomy face for a happy man!
+ He does not seem quite pleased with our verdict.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She beckoned, as she spoke, to her chamberlain and the high steward, took
+ leave of her imperial father-in-law and, with her pretty little head flung
+ proudly back, rustled out of the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after Herr Pfinzing ushered Ernst Ortlieb, his daughter, and Wolff
+ into the presence of the sovereign, who gazed as if restored to youth at
+ the handsome couple whose weal or woe was in his hands. This consciousness
+ afforded him one of the moments when he gratefully felt the full beauty
+ and dignity of his responsible position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With friendly words he restored Wolff&rsquo;s liberty, and expressed the
+ expectation that, with such a companion, he would raise the noble house of
+ his ancestors to fresh prosperity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he at last turned to Heinz again he asked in a low tone: &ldquo;Do you know
+ what this day means to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nineteen years ago it gave you poor Hartmann,&rdquo; replied the knight, his
+ downcast eyes resting sadly on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The kind-hearted sovereign nodded significantly, and said, &ldquo;Then it must
+ benefit those who, so long as he lives, may expect his father&rsquo;s favour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gazed thoughtfully into vacancy and, faithful to his habit of fixing
+ his eye on a goal, often distant, and then carefully carrying out the
+ details which were to ensure success, ere he turned to the next one, he
+ summoned the imperial magistrate and the First Losunger to his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After disclosing to them his desire to allow the judges to decide and,
+ should the verdict go against Biberli, release him from punishment by a
+ pardon, both undertook to justify the absence of the accused from the
+ trial. The wise caution with which the Emperor Rudolph avoided interfering
+ with the rights of the Honourable Council afforded old Herr Berthold
+ Vorchtel great satisfaction. Both he and the magistrate, sure of the
+ result, could promise that this affair, which had aroused so much
+ excitement, especially among the artisans, would be ended by the marriage
+ of the two Ortlieb sisters and the payment of the blood money to the
+ wounded tailor. Any new complaint concerning them would then be lawfully
+ rejected by both court and magistrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had Heinz thanked his imperial benefactor more warmly for any gift,
+ but though the Emperor received his gallant favourite&rsquo;s expressions of
+ gratitude and appreciation kindly, he did not yet permit him to enjoy his
+ new happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were still some things which must be decided, and for the third time
+ his peculiar smile showed the initiated that he was planning some pleasant
+ surprise for those whom it concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mention of the blood money which Herr Ernst Ortlieb owed the
+ slandering tailor, who had not yet recovered from his wound, induced the
+ Emperor to look at the father of the beautiful sisters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew that Herr Ernst had also lost a valiant son in the battle of
+ Marchfield, and Eva&rsquo;s father had been described as an excellent man, but
+ one with whom it was difficult to deal. Now, spite of the new happiness of
+ his children, the sovereign saw him glance gloomily, as if some wrong had
+ been done him, from his daughters to Heinz, and then to Lady Schorlin and
+ Maria, to whom he had not yet been presented. He doubtless felt that the
+ Emperor had treated him and his family with rare graciousness, and was
+ entitled to their warmest gratitude yet, as a father and a member of the
+ proud and independent Honourable Council of the free imperial city of
+ Nuremberg, he considered his rights infringed&mdash;nay, it had cost him a
+ severe struggle not to protest against such arbitrary measures. He had his
+ paternal rights even here&mdash;Els and Eva were not parentless orphans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noble monarch and shrewd judge of human nature perceived what was
+ passing in the Nuremberg merchant&rsquo;s mind, but the pleasant smile still
+ rested on his lips as, with a glance at the ill-humoured Honourable, he
+ exclaimed to his future son-in-law: &ldquo;I have just remembered something,
+ Heinz, which might somewhat cool your warm expressions of gratitude.
+ Yonder lovely child consented to become yours, it is true, but that does
+ not mean very much, for it was done without the consent of her father, by
+ which the compact first obtains signature and seal. Herr Ernst Ortlieb,
+ however, seems to be in no happy mood. Only look at him! He is certainly
+ mutely accusing me of vexatious interference with his paternal rights, and
+ yet he may be sure that I feel a special regard for him. His son&rsquo;s blood,
+ which flowed for his Emperor&rsquo;s cause, gives him a peculiar claim upon our
+ consideration, and we therefore devoted particular attention to his
+ complaint. In this he now demands, my son, that you restore to him, Herr
+ Ernst Ortlieb, the two hundred silver marks which are awarded to the
+ tailor as blood money and he must pay to the injured artisan. The prudent
+ business man can scarcely be blamed for making this claim, for the wound
+ he inflicted upon the ill-advised tradesman who so basely, insulted those
+ dearest to him would certainly not have been dealt had not your insolent
+ intrusion into the Ortlieb mansion unchained evil tongues. So, Heinz, you
+ caused his hasty act, and therefor, are justly bound to answer for the
+ consequence; If he brings the accusation, the judges will condemn you to
+ pay the sum. I therefore ask whether you have it ready.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Herr Ernst attempted to explain that, in the present state of
+ affairs, there could be no further mention of a payment which was only,
+ intended to punish the disturber of his domestic peace more severely; but
+ the Emperor stopper him and bade Heinz speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter gazed in embarrassment at the helmet he held in his hand, and
+ had not yet found; fitting answer when the Emperor cried: &ldquo;What am I to
+ think? Was the Duke of Pomerani; wrong when he told me of a heap of gold&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Your Majesty,&rdquo; Heinz here interrupter without raising his eyes. &ldquo;What
+ was left of the money would have more than sufficed to cover the sum
+ required&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought so!&rdquo; exclaimed the sovereign with out letting him finish; &ldquo;for
+ a young knight who like a great lord, bestows a fine estate upon the pious
+ Franciscans, certainly need only command his treasurer to open the strong
+ box&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are mocking me, Your Majesty,&rdquo; Heinz quietly interposed. &ldquo;You are
+ doubtless well aware whence the golden curse came to me. I thrust it aside
+ like noxious poison, and if I am reluctant to use it to buy, as it were,
+ what is dearest and most sacred to me, indeed it does not spring from
+ parsimony, for I had resolved to offer the two remaining purses to the
+ devout Sisters of St. Clare and the zealous Minorite Brothers, one of the
+ best of whom laboured earnestly for the salvation of my soul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is right, my son,&rdquo; fell from the Emperor&rsquo;s lips in a tone of warm
+ approval. &ldquo;If the gold benefits the holy poverty of these pious Brothers
+ and Sisters, the devil&rsquo;s gift may easily be transformed into a divine
+ blessing. You both&mdash;&rdquo; he gazed affectionately at Heinz and Eva as he
+ spoke&mdash;&ldquo;have, as it were, deserted the cloister, and owe it
+ compensation. But your depriving yourself of your golden treasure, my
+ friend&mdash;for two hundred silver marks are no trifle to a young knight&mdash;puts
+ so different a face upon this matter that&mdash;that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Here
+ he lowered his voice and continued with affectionate mirthfulness&mdash;&ldquo;that
+ a friend must determine to do what he can for him. True, my gallant Heinz,
+ I see that your future father-in-law, the other Nuremberg Honourables, and
+ even your mother, are ready to pay the sum; but he who is most indebted to
+ you holds fast this privilege, and that man am I, my brave champion! What
+ you did for your Emperor and his best work, the peace of the country,
+ deserves a rich reward and, thanks to the saints, I have something which
+ will discharge my debt. The Swabian fief of Reichenbach became vacant. It
+ has a strong citadel, from which we command you to maintain the peace of
+ the country and overthrow robber knights. This fief shall be yours. You
+ can enjoy it with your dear wife. It must belong to your children and
+ children&rsquo;s children forever; for that a Schorlin should be born who would
+ be unworthy of such a fief and faithless to his lord and Emperor seems to
+ me impossible. Three villages and broad forests, with fields and meadows,
+ pertain to the estate. As lord of Reichenbach, it will be easy for you to
+ pay the blood money, if your father-in-law is not too importunate a
+ creditor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter certainly would not be that, and it cost Ernst Ortlieb no
+ effort to bend the knee gratefully before the kindly monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor Rudolph accepted the homage, but he clasped the young lord of
+ Reichenbach to his heart like a beloved son, and as he placed Eva&rsquo;s hand
+ in his, and she raised her beautiful face to him, he stooped and kissed
+ her with fatherly kindness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Wolff entreated him to bless his alliance in the place of his
+ suffering father, he did so gladly; and Els also willingly offered him her
+ lips; when he requested the same favour her sister had granted him, that
+ he might boast of the kisses bestowed on him by the two beautiful Es,
+ Nuremberg&rsquo;s fairest maidens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Heinz heeded Cordula&rsquo;s warning. In the royal hall every one would have
+ been justified in believing him a very cool lover, but during the walk
+ with Eva to the lodgings of his cousin Maier of Silenen, where the
+ Schurlins, Ortliebs, Wolff, and Herr Pfinzing and his wife were to meet to
+ celebrate the betrothal, the moon, whose increasing crescent was again in
+ the sky, beheld many things which gave her pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The priest soon united Heinz and Eva, but the celestial pilgrim willingly
+ resigned the power formerly exerted over the maiden to the husband, who
+ clasped her to his heart with tender love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luna was satisfied with Wolff and Els also. She afterwards watched the
+ fate of both couples in Swabia and Nuremberg, and when the showy
+ escutcheon was removed from the Eysvogel mansion, and a more modest one
+ put in its place, she was gratified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She soon saw that a change had also been made in the one above the door of
+ the Ortlieb house, for the Ortlieb coat of arms, in accordance with the
+ family name, had borne the figure of a cat, the animal which loves the
+ place,&mdash;[Ort, place.]&mdash;the house to which it belongs, but on the
+ wedding day of the two beautiful Es the Emperor Rudolph had commanded
+ that, in perpetual remembrance of its two loveliest daughters, the
+ Ortliebs should henceforward bear on their escutcheon two linden leaves
+ under tendrils, the symbol of loyal steadfastness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, a few months after Wolff&rsquo;s union with his heart&rsquo;s beloved, the
+ coffin of old Countess Rotterbach, adorned with a handsome coronet upon
+ the costly pall, was borne out of the house at the quiet evening hour, she
+ thought there was no cause to mourn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, she grieved when, for a long time, she did not see old
+ Casper Eysvogel, whose tall figure she had formerly watched with pleasure
+ when, at a late hour, he returned from some banquet, his bearing erect,
+ and his step as firm as if wine could not get the better of him. But
+ suddenly one warm September noon, when her pale, waxing crescent was
+ plainly visible in the blue sky by daylight, she beheld him again. He was
+ less erect than before, but he seemed content with his fate; for, as a
+ cooler breeze waved the light cobwebs in the little garden, into which he
+ had been led, his daughter-in-law Els with loving care wrapped his feet in
+ the rug which she had embroidered for him with the Eysvogel coat of arms,
+ and he gratefully kissed her brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was fully ten years later that Luna saw him also borne to the grave.
+ Frau Rosalinde, his son, and his beautiful wife followed his coffin with
+ sincere sorrow. The three gifted children whom Els had given to her Wolff
+ remained standing in front of the house with Frau Rickel, their nurse. The
+ carrier&rsquo;s widow, who had long since regained her health in the Beguine
+ House at Schweinau, had been taken into Frau Eysvogel&rsquo;s service. Her
+ little adopted daughter Walpurga, scarcely seventeen years old, had just
+ been married to the Ortlieb teamster Ortel. The moon heard the nurse tell
+ what a pleasant, quiet man Herr Casper had been, and how, away from his
+ own business affairs and those of the Council, his sole effort had seemed
+ to be to interfere with no one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon had forgotten to look at Frau Rosalinde. Besides, after her
+ mother&rsquo;s death she was rarely seen even by the members of her own
+ household, but when Els desired to seek her she was sure of finding her
+ with the children. The parents willingly afforded her the pleasure she
+ derived from the companionship of the little ones, but they were often
+ obliged to oppose her wish to dress her grandchildren magnificently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frau Rosalinde rarely saw the twin sons of her daughter Isabella, who took
+ the veil after her husband&rsquo;s death to pray for his sorely imperilled soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight Heideck, the uncle and faithful teacher of the boys, was
+ unwilling to let them go to the city. He ruled them strictly until they
+ had proved that Countess Cordula&rsquo;s wish had been fulfilled and, resembling
+ their unfortunate father only in figure and beauty, strength and courage,
+ they had grown into valiant, honourable knights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wolff justified the expectations of Berthold Vorchtel and the Honourable
+ Council concerning his excellent ability. When, eight years after he
+ undertook the sole guidance of the business, the Reichstag again met in
+ Nuremberg, it was the house of Eysvogel which could make the largest loan
+ to the Emperor Rudolph, who often lacked necessary funds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Reichstag of the year 1289, whose memory is shadowed by many a
+ sorrowful incident, most of the persons mentioned in our story met once
+ more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Countess Cordula, now the happy wife of Sir Boemund Altrosen, had also
+ come and again lodged in the Ortlieb house. But this time the only person
+ whose homage pleased her was the grey-haired, but still vigorous and
+ somewhat irascible Herr Ernst Ortlieb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Abbess Kunigunde alone was absent. When, after many an arduous
+ conflict, especially with the Dominicans, who did not cease to accuse her
+ of lukewarmness, she felt death approaching, she had summoned her darling
+ Eva from Swabia, and the young wife&rsquo;s husband, who never left her save
+ when he was wielding his sword for the Emperor, willingly accompanied her
+ to Nuremberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With Eva&rsquo;s hand clasped in hers, and supported by Els, the abbess died
+ peacefully, rich in beautiful hopes. How often she had described such an
+ end to her pupil as the fairest reward for the sacrifices in which convent
+ life was so rich! But the memory of her mother&rsquo;s decease had brought to
+ Eva, while in Schweinau, the firm conviction that dwellers in the world
+ were also permitted to find a similar end. The Saviour Himself had
+ promised the crown of eternal life to those who were faithful unto death,
+ and she and her husband maintained inviolable fidelity to the Saviour, to
+ each other, and to every duty which religion, law, and love commanded them
+ to fulfil. Therefore, why should they not be permitted to die as happily
+ and confidently as her aunt, the abbess?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her life was rich in happiness, and though Heinz Schorlin as a husband and
+ father, as the brave and loyal liegeman of his Emperor, and the prudent
+ manager of his estate, regained his former light-heartedness, and taught
+ his wife to share it, both never forgot the painful conflict by which they
+ had won each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Eva passed the village forge and saw the smith draw the glowing iron
+ from the fire and, with heavy hammer strokes, fashion it upon the anvil as
+ he desired, she often remembered the grievous days after her mother&rsquo;s
+ death, which had made the &ldquo;little saint&rdquo;&mdash;she did not admit it
+ herself, but the whole Swabian nobility agreed in the opinion&mdash;the
+ most faithful of wives and mothers, the Providence of the poor, the
+ zealous promoter of goodness, the most simply attired of noblewomen far
+ and near, yet the most aristocratic and distinguished in her appearance of
+ them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hand in hand with her husband she devoted the most faithful care to their
+ children, and if Biberli, the castellan of the castle, and Katterle his
+ wife, who had remained childless, were too ready to read the wishes of
+ their darlings in their eyes, she exclaimed warningly to the loyal old
+ friend, &ldquo;The fire of the forge!&rdquo; He and Katterle knew what she meant, for
+ the ex-schoolmaster had explained it in the best possible way to his
+ docile wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR&rsquo;S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Abandoned women (required by law to help put out the fires)
+ Deem every hour that he was permitted to breathe as a gift
+ False praise, he says, weighs more heavily than disgrace
+ His sole effort had seemed to be to interfere with no one
+ No virtue which can be owned like a house or a steed
+ Retreat behind the high-sounding words &ldquo;justice and law&rdquo;
+ Shipwrecked on the cliffs of &lsquo;better&rsquo; and &lsquo;best&rsquo;
+ Strongest of all educational powers&mdash;sorrow and love
+ The heart must not be filled by another&rsquo;s image
+ Usually found the worst wine in the taverns with showy signs
+ Welcome a small evil when it barred the way to a greater one
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg&rsquo;s In The Fire Of The Forge, Complete, by Georg Ebers
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+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </body>
+</html>