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|
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 58655 ***
[Illustration]
TALES FROM THE GESTA ROMANORUM
TRANSLATED BY REV. C. SWAN
[Illustration]
New York and London
G. P. Putnam’s Sons
The Knickerbocker Press, New Rochelle, N. Y.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Illustration]
PREFACE
TO THE FIRST AMERICAN EDITION (PUBLISHED BY WILEY & PUTNAM IN 1845).
You have here, my good friends, sundry moral and entertaining stories,
invented by the monks of old, and used by them for amusement, as well as
for instruction; from which the most celebrated poets, of our own and
other lands, have condescended to draw their plots.
The improvements and refinements of this age will naturally lead you to
condemn as absurdities, many of the incidents with which these tales
abound. Considering the knowledge of the present day, you are justified
in so doing. But I pray you to bear in mind that few qualities are more
dependent on time, than probability and improbability. When you read
these tales, you must, for the time, retrace your steps to the age in
which they were written; and though the tale may seem absurd to us of
this day, yet if it was calculated to impress the minds of those for
whom it was invented, and to whom it was told, its merit was great, and
therefore deserving of due praise. A giant or a magician was as probable
to the people of the middle ages, as electricity to us. I pray you bear
this in mind whilst you judge of these tales.
Romantic fiction pleases all minds, both old and young: the reason is
this, says an old Platonist, “that here things are set down as they
should be; but in the true history of the world, things are recorded
indeed as they are, but it is but a testimony that they have not been as
they should be. Wherefore, in the upshot of all, when we shall see that
come to pass, that so mightily pleases us in the reading the most
ingenious plays and heroic poems, that long afflicted Virtue at last
comes to the crown, the mouth of all unbelievers must be stopped.”
To the work of the ingenious Mr. Swan, the only translator of these
stories that I know of in this country, I am indebted for my first
introduction to these old tales; and I cannot conclude these few words
without thanking him for having often lightened my labors by his close
and admirable versions.
G. B.
_December, 1844._
[Illustration]
CONTENTS.
I.—The Gesta Romanorum—Its Origin—TALE OF THE UNGRATEFUL
MAN—Sources of Didactic Fiction—JOVINIAN THE PROUD EMPEROR—Morals
of the Tales 1
II.—Discussion on the Source of Fiction Renewed—THE KING AND THE
GLUTTON—GUIDO, THE PERFECT SERVANT—The Middle-Age
Allegories—Pliny and Mandeville’s Wonders Allegorized 31
III.—Progress of Fiction from the East to the West—The Early
Christians—The Monks—The Spanish Arabians—The Crusades—THE KNIGHT
AND THE KING OF HUNGARY—The English Gesta 46
IV.—Modern Conversions of the Old Tales—THE THREE BLACK CROWS—King
Lear—THE EMPEROR OF ROME AND HIS THREE DAUGHTERS—The Merchant of
Venice—THE THREE CASKETS 58
V.—The Probable Author of the Gesta—Modern Conversions—Parnell and
Schiller—THE ANGEL AND THE HERMIT—The Poet’s
Improvements—FULGENTIUS AND THE WICKED STEWARD—Irving’s Vision in
the Museum—The Claims of the Old Writers on the New 74
VI.—Curiosities of the Gesta—THE WICKED PRIEST—The Qualities of the
Dog—THE EMPEROR’S DAUGHTER—Curious Application—THE EMPEROR LEO
AND THE THREE IMAGES—An Enigma 90
VII.—Curiosities of the Gesta—Byrkes’ Epitaph—THE LAY OF THE LITTLE
BIRD—OF THE BURDENS OF THIS LIFE—Ancient Fairs—Winchester—Modern
Continental Fairs—Russia—Nischnei-Novgorod 104
VIII.—Southey’s Thalaba—THE SUGGESTIONS OF THE EVIL
ONE—COTONOLAPES, THE MAGICIAN—THE GARDEN OF ALOADDIN—The Old Man
of the Mountain—The Assassins—Their Rise and Fall—Gay’s
Conjurer—SIR GUIDO, THE CRUSADER—Guy, Earl of Warwick 120
IX.—Illustrations of Early Manners—Sorcery—THE KNIGHT AND THE
NECROMANCER—Waxen Figures—Degeneracy of Witches—THE CLERK AND THE
IMAGE—Gerbert and Natural Magic—Elfin Chivalry—THE DEMON KNIGHT
OF THE VANDAL CAMP—Scott’s Marmion—Assumption of Human Forms by
Spirits—THE SEDUCTIONS OF THE EVIL ONE—Religious Origin of
Charges of Witchcraft 149
X.—THE THREE MAXIMS—The Monk’s Errors in History—THE TRIALS OF
EUSTACE—Sources of its Incidents—Colonel Gardiner—St.
Herbert—Early English Romance of Sir Isumbras 174
XI.—Another Chat about Witches and Witchcraft—Late Period of the
Existence of Belief in Witches—QUEEN SEMIRAMIS—Elfin Armorers—The
Sword of the Scandinavian King—Mystical Meaning of Tales of
Magic—Anglo-Saxon Enigmas—CELESTINUS AND THE MILLER’S HORSE—THE
EMPEROR CONRAD AND THE COUNT’S SON—Legend of “The Giant with the
Golden Hairs” 203
XII.—Love and Marriage—THE KNIGHT AND THE THREE QUESTIONS—Racing
for a Wife—JONATHAN AND THE THREE TALISMANS—Tale of the Dwarf and
the Three Soldiers—Conclusion 233
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
THE GESTA ROMANORUM
CHAPTER I.
The Gesta Romanorum—Its Origin—TALE OF THE UNGRATEFUL MAN—Sources of
Didactic Fiction—JOVINIAN THE PROUD EMPEROR—Morals of the Tales.
It was a dull, cold Christmas evening; the snow fell fast and small,
and the cutting northeast wind blew its white shower into heaps and
ridges in every corner of St. John’s quadrangle, and piled its clear
flakes against every projecting part of the old building. No one was
moving in college, at least out-of-doors; but the rude laugh from
the buttery, and the dull-red gleam through the closely drawn
curtains of one of the upper rooms in the outer quadrangle, proved
that in two portions of the college Christmas was being kept with
plenty and with gayety.
The change from the white cold of the quadrangle to the ruddy blaze
of that upper room was inspiriting. The fire burnt bright; the small
table, drawn immediately in front of its merry blaze, glittered with
after-dinner good cheer; and three young and happy faces sat by that
little table, and compared their former Christmases at home, with
this one, during which they were determined to remain up in Oxford
and read for the ensuing examination.
“Morrison is always in good luck,” said Henry Herbert, the youngest
of the party. “Whatever it is, whether drawing lots for a Newham
party, or cramming for an examination, he always succeeds; and now
he is the last man that got away from Oxford before the roads were
blocked up by this snow-drift.”
“Fortunate fellow!” said Lathom. “We are shut up now—fifteen feet of
snow at Dorchester, and Stokenchurch bottom quite impassable.”
“Ay, and Oxford streets equally so,” said Frederick Thompson, the
last of the triumvirate, “and we shut up here with the pleasant
prospect of taking our constitutional, for some days to come, under
the old Archbishop’s cloisters.”
“By the by,” said Herbert, “what were you after in the old library
last week, Lathom?”
“Looking for a copy of the Gesta Romanorum, with the idea of reading
some of its amusing stories during our after-dinner sittings.”
“Any thing but those Romans: it is bad enough to have read and
believed all that Livy wrote, from his Sucking Wolf to his Capitol
Goose, and then to have a shrewd German prove that kings were not
kings, and consuls not consuls, just when you are beginning to think
that you really do know something about your Roman history.”
“You will have but little of Roman history, Thompson; the title of
the book but ill agrees with its contents: fables of all climes
contribute their share in the formation of this singular
composition. The majority of the tales are entirely unconnected with
the history of Rome, though the writer, in order to, in some manner,
cover this deviation from his title, has taken care to preface
almost every story with the name of some emperor, who in most cases
never existed, and sometimes has little to do with the incidents of
the narrative.”
“To whom, most learned antiquary, are we indebted for this very
stout volume?”
“To the imagination, knowledge, and literary labor of the monks of
the middle ages. In the refectory, whilst the monks ate their meals,
one, the youngest generally, of the society, read from some such
collection as this, a tale at once amusing and instructive. Nor was
the use of these fables confined to the refectory. The success which
has always attended instruction by fables, and the popularity ever
consequent on this form of teaching, led the monks to use this
medium to illustrate their public discourses, as well as for their
own daily relaxation.”
“Few things are more certain,” said Herbert, “than that an argument,
however clear,—a deduction, however logical,—operates but faintly
except on trained intellects; but an apposite story at once arouses
the attention, and makes a more durable impression on illiterate
auditors. Knowledge in the garb of verse is soonest appreciated by
an uneducated mind, and remains there far longer than in any other
form. A ballad will descend from generation to generation without a
fault or an interpolation.”
“Yes,” rejoined Lathom, “and next to poetry comes poetic prose, at
the head of which class stands didactic fiction. Many a clever man
has confessed that he was more indebted to Shakspeare and Scott for
his English and Scottish history, than to the standard historians of
either land.”
“And as far as the general belief goes,” said Thompson, “the popular
dramatist or poet will always outweigh the learned historian. Let
Walpole or Turner write what they will about Richard the Third; to
the majority—ay, to more than four fifths of the people—he is still
Shakspeare’s Richard, the Humpbacked Murderer.”
“One of the best of the old monks’ stories,” said Lathom, “was
translated in _Blackwood’s Magazine_ some years since. It well
illustrates the popular method by which the writers of these tales
inculcated Christian duties on their brethren of the convent, or on
their hearers in the Church. If you like, I will read it.”
The following was the tale of
THE UNGRATEFUL MAN.
Vitalis, a noble Venetian, one day, at a hunting party, fell into a pit,
which had been dug to catch wild animals. He passed a whole night and
day there, and I will leave you to imagine his dread and his agony. The
pit was dark. Vitalis ran from the one side of it to the other, in the
hope of finding some branch or root by which he might climb its sides
and get out of his dungeon; but he heard such confused and extraordinary
noises, growlings, hissings, and plaintive cries, that he became
half-dead with terror, and crouched in a corner motionless, awaiting
death with the most horrid dismay. On the morning of the second day he
heard some one passing near the pit, and then raising his voice he cried
out with the most dolorous accent: “Help, help! draw me out of this; I
am perishing!”
A peasant crossing the forest heard his cry. At first he was frightened;
but after a moment or two, taking courage, be approached the pit, and
asked who had called.
“A poor huntsman,” answered Vitalis, “who has passed a long night and
day here. Help me out, for the love of God. Help me out, and I will
recompense you handsomely.”
“I will do what I can,” replied the peasant.
Then Massaccio (such was the name of the peasant) took a hedge-bill
which hung at his girdle, and cutting a branch of a tree strong enough
to bear a man,—“Listen, huntsman,” said he, “to what I am going to say
to you. I will let down this branch into the pit. I will fasten it
against the sides, and hold it with my hands; and by pulling yourself
out by it, you may get free from your prison.”
“Good,” answered Vitalis; “ask me anything you will, and it shall be
granted.”
“I ask for nothing,” said the peasant, “but I am going to get married,
and you may give what you like to my bride.”
So saying, Massaccio let down the branch—he soon felt it heavy, and the
moment after a monkey leapt out of the pit. He had fallen like Vitalis,
and had seized quickly on the branch of Massaccio. “It was the devil
surely which spoke to me from the pit,” said Massaccio, running away in
affright.
“Do you abandon me, then?” cried Vitalis, in a lamentable accent; “my
friend, my dear friend, for the love of the Lord, for the love of your
mistress, draw me out of this; I beg, I implore you; I will give her
wedding gifts, I will enrich you. I am the Lord Vitalis, a rich
Venetian; do not let me die of hunger in this horrible pit.”
Massaccio was touched by these prayers. He returned to the pit—let down
another branch, and a lion jumped out, making the woods echo with a roar
of delight.
“Oh certainly, certainly, it was the devil I heard,” said Massaccio, and
fled away again; but stopping short, after a few paces, he heard again
the piercing cries of Vitalis.
“O God, O God,” cried he, “to die of hunger in a pit! Will no one then
come to my help? Whoever you may be, I implore you return; let me not
die, when you can save me. I will give you a house and field, and cows
and gold, all that you can ask for; save me, save me only.”
Massaccio, thus implored, could not help returning. He let down the
branch, and a serpent, hissing joyously, sprang out of the pit.
Massaccio fell on his knees, half-dead with fear, and repeated all the
prayers he could think of to drive away the demon. He was only brought
to himself by hearing the cries of despair which Vitalis uttered.
“Will no one help me?” said he. “Ah, then, must I die? O God, O God!”
and he wept and sobbed in a heart-breaking manner.
“It is certainly the voice of a man for all that,” said Massaccio.
“Oh, if you are still there,” said Vitalis, “in the name of all that is
dear to you, save me, that I may die at least at home, and not in this
horrible pit. I can say no more; my voice is exhausted. Shall I give you
my palace at Venice, my possessions, my honors? I give them all; and may
I die if I forfeit my word. Life, life only; save only my life.”
Massaccio could not resist such prayers, and mingled with such promises.
He let down the branch again.
“Ah, here you are at last,” said he, seeing Vitalis come up.
“Yes,” said he, and uttering a cry of joy he fainted in the arms of
Massaccio.
Massaccio sustained, assisted him, and brought him to himself; then,
giving him his arm,—“Let us,” said he, “quit this forest”; but Vitalis
could hardly walk,—he was exhausted with hunger.
“Eat this piece of bread,” said Massaccio, and he gave him some which he
took out of his wallet.
“My benefactor, my savior, my good angel,” said Vitalis, “how can I ever
sufficiently recompense you!”
“You have promised me a marriage portion for my bride, and your palace
at Venice for myself,” said Massaccio. But Vitalis now began to regain
his strength.
“Yes, certainly, I will give a portion to your wife, my dear Massaccio,
and I will make you the richest peasant of your village. Where do you
live?”
“At Capalatta in the forest; but I would willingly quit my village to
establish myself at Venice in the palace you have promised me.”
“Here we are out of the forest,” said Vitalis; “I know my road now;
thank you, Massaccio.”
“But when shall I come for my palace and the portion for my intended?”
returned the peasant.
“When you will,” said the other, and they separated.
Vitalis went to Venice, and Massaccio to Capalatta, where he related his
adventure to his mistress, telling her what a rich portion she was to
have, and what a fine palace she was to live in.
The next day early he set out for Venice, and asked for the palace of
the Signor Vitalis,—went straight to it, and told the domestics that he
should come shortly with his mistress, in a fine carriage, to take
possession of the palace which the Signor Vitalis had promised to give
him. Massaccio appeared to those who heard him mad, and Vitalis was told
that there was a peasant in his hall, who asked for a marriage portion,
and said the palace belonged to him.
“Let him be turned out immediately,” said Vitalis, “I know him not.”
The valets accordingly drove him away with insults, and Massaccio
returned to his cottage in despair, without daring to see his mistress.
At one corner of his fireplace was seated the monkey, at the other
corner the lion, and the serpent had twisted itself in spiral circles
upon the hearth. Massaccio was seized with fear. “The man has driven me
from his door,” thought he; “the lion will certainly devour me, the
serpent sting me, and the monkey laugh at me; and this will be my reward
for saving them from the pit.” But the monkey turned to him with a most
amicable grimace; the lion, vibrating gently his tail, came and licked
his hand, like a dog caressing his master; and the serpent, unrolling
its ringy body, moved about the room with a contented and grateful air,
which gave courage to Massaccio.
“Poor animals!” said he, “they are better than the Signor Vitalis; he
drove me like a beggar from the door. Ah! with what pleasure I would
pitch him again into the pit! And my bride! whom I thought to marry so
magnificently! I have not a stick of wood in my wood-house, not a morsel
of meat for a meal, and no money to buy any. The ungrateful wretch, with
his portion and his palace!”
Thus did Massaccio complain. Meanwhile the monkey began to make
significant faces, the lion to agitate his tail with great uneasiness,
and the serpent to roll and unroll its circles with great rapidity. Then
the monkey, approaching his benefactor, made him a sign to follow, and
led him into the wood-house, where was regularly piled up a quantity of
wood sufficient for the whole year. It was the monkey who had collected
this wood in the forest, and brought it to the cottage of Massaccio.
Massaccio embraced the grateful ape. The lion then uttering a delicate
roar, led him to a corner of the cottage, where he saw an enormous
provision of game, two sheep, three kids, hares and rabbits in
abundance, and a fine wild boar, all covered with the branches of trees
to keep them fresh. It was the lion who had hunted for his benefactor.
Massaccio patted kindly his mane. “And you, then,” said he to the
serpent, “have you brought me nothing? Art thou a Vitalis, or a good and
honest animal like the monkey and the lion?” The serpent glided rapidly
under a heap of dried leaves, and reappeared immediately, rearing itself
superbly on its tail, when Massaccio saw with surprise a beautiful
diamond in its mouth. “A diamond!” cried Massaccio, and stretched forth
his hand to stroke caressingly the serpent and take its offering.
Massaccio then set out immediately for Venice to turn his diamond into
money. He addressed himself to a jeweller. The jeweller examined the
diamond; it was of the finest water.
“How much do you ask for it?” said he.
“Two hundred crowns,” said Massaccio, thinking his demand to be great;
it was hardly the tenth part of the value of the stone. The jeweller
looked at Massaccio, and said: “To sell it at that price you must be a
robber, and I arrest you!”
“If it is not worth so much, give me less,” said Massaccio; “I am not a
robber, I am an honest man; it was the serpent who gave me the diamond.”
But the police now arrived and conducted him before the magistrate.
There he recounted his adventure, which appeared to be a mere fairy
vision. Yet as the Signor Vitalis was implicated in the story, the
magistrate referred the affair to the state inquisition, and Massaccio
appeared before it.
“Relate to us your history,” said one of the inquisitors, “and lie not,
or we will have you thrown into the canal.”
Massaccio related his adventure.
“So,” said the inquisitor, “you saved the Signor Vitalis?”
“Yes, noble signors.”
“And he promised you a marriage portion for your bride, and his palace
at Venice for yourself?”
“Yes, noble signors.”
“And he drove you like a beggar from his door?”
“Yes, noble signors.”
“Let the Signor Vitalis appear,” said the same inquisitor.
Vitalis appeared.
“Do you know this man, Signor Vitalis?” said the inquisitor.
“No, I know him not,” replied Vitalis.
The inquisitors consulted together. “This man,” said they, speaking of
Massaccio, “is evidently a knave and a cheat; he must be thrown into
prison. Signor Vitalis, you are acquitted.” Then, making a sign to an
officer of police, “Take that man,” said he, “to prison.”
Massaccio fell on his knees in the middle of the hall. “Noble signors,
noble signors,” said he, “it is possible that the diamond may have been
stolen; the serpent who gave it me may have wished to deceive me. It is
possible that the ape, the lion, and the serpent may all be an illusion
of the demon, but it is true that I saved the Signor Vitalis. Signor
Vitalis” (turning to him), “I ask you not for the marriage portion for
my bride, nor for your palace of marble, but say a word for me; suffer
me not to be thrown into prison; do not abandon me; I did not abandon
you when you were in the pit.”
“Noble signors,” said Vitalis, bowing to the tribunal, “I can only
repeat what I have already said: I know not this man. Has he a single
witness to produce?”
At this moment the whole court was thrown into fear and astonishment,
for the lion, the monkey, and the serpent, entered the hall together.
The monkey was mounted on the back of the lion, and the serpent was
twined round the arm of the monkey. On entering, the lion roared, the
monkey spluttered, and the serpent hissed.
“Ah! these are the animals of the pit,” cried Vitalis, in alarm.
“Signor Vitalis,” resumed the chief of the inquisitors, when the dismay
which this apparition had caused had somewhat diminished, “you have
asked where were the witnesses of Massaccio. You see that God has sent
them at the right time before the bar of our tribunal. Since, then, God
has testified against you, we should be culpable before Him if we did
not punish your ingratitude. Your palace and your possessions are
confiscated, and you shall pass the rest of your life in a narrow
prison. And you,” continued he, addressing himself to Massaccio, who was
all this time caressing the lion, the monkey, and the serpent, “since a
Venetian has promised you a palace of marble, and a portion for your
bride, the republic of Venice will accomplish the promise; the palace
and possessions of Vitalis are thine. You,” said he to the secretary of
the tribunal, “draw up an account of all this history, that the people
of Venice may know, through all generations, that the justice of the
tribunal of the state inquisition is not less equitable than it is
rigorous.”
Massaccio and his wife lived happily for many years afterwards in the
palace of Vitalis with the monkey, the lion, and the serpent; and
Massaccio had them represented in a picture, on the wall of his palace,
as they entered the hall of the tribunal, the lion carrying the monkey,
and the monkey carrying the serpent.
“To what source can this tale be traced?”
“To the Arabian fable book called Callah-u-Dumnah,” replied Lathom.
“Mathew Paris recites it as a fable commonly used by our crusading
Richard to reprove his ungodly nobles, and old Gower has versified
it in his Confessio Amantis. The translator in _Blackwood_ seems not
to have been aware of its existence in the Gesta Romanorum, content
to translate it from the later version of Massenius, a German
Jesuit, who lived at Cologne in 1657.”
“Few subjects,” said Herbert, “seem more involved than the history
of didactic fiction. The more mysterious an investigation bids fair
to be, the less we have to depend on fact, and the more we are at
the mercy of conjecture, so much the more does the mind love to
grasp at the mystery, and delight in the dim perspective and
intricacies of the way. Each successive adventurer finds it more
easy to pull down the various bridges, and break in the various
cuttings by which his predecessor has endeavored to make the way
straight, than to throw his own bridge over the river or the morass
of time that intervenes between the traveller and the goal.”
“Four distinct sources,” said Lathom, “have been contended for: the
Scandinavian bards, the Arabians of the Spanish peninsula, the
Armoricans or Bretons, and the classical authors of Greece and Rome.
Mallet and Bishop Percy came forward as the advocates of
Scandinavia; Dr. Wharton writes himself the champion of the Spanish
Arabians; Wilson is rather inclined to the Breton theory; and Dr.
Southey and Mr. Dunlop come forward as the advocates of the
classical and mythological authors; whilst Sir Henry Ellis would
reconcile all differences by a quiet jumble of Breton scenes colored
by Scandinavia and worked by Arabian machinery. Let us, however,
adjourn this subject until to-morrow, as I wish to read you another
of these tales, in order to give you some idea of the moral
applications and explanations appended to them by the monkish
writers. We will take Jovinian the Proud Emperor, and in this case
you must be content with my own translation.”
JOVINIAN THE PROUD EMPEROR.
In the days of old, when the empire of the world was in the hands of the
lord of Rome, Jovinian was emperor. Oft as he lay on his couch, and
mused upon his power and his wealth, his heart was elated beyond
measure, and he said within himself: “Verily, there is no other god than
me.”
It happened one morning after he had thus said unto himself, that the
emperor arose, and summoning his huntsmen and his friends, hastened to
chase the wild deer of the forest. The chase was long and swift, and the
sun was high in the heavens, when Jovinian reined up his horse on the
bank of a clear bright stream that ran through the fertile country on
which his palace stood. Allured by the refreshing appearance of the
stream, he bade his attendants abide still, whilst he sought a secluded
pool beneath some willows, where he might bathe unseen.
The emperor hastened to the pool, cast off his garments, and revelled in
the refreshing coolness of the waters. But whilst he thus bathed, a
person like to him in form, in feature, and in voice, approached the
river’s bank, arrayed himself unperceived in the imperial garments, and
then sprang on Jovinian’s horse, and rode to meet the huntsmen, who,
deceived by the likeness and the dress, obeyed his commands, and
followed their new emperor to the palace gates.
Jovinian at length quitted the water, and sought in every direction for
his apparel and his horse, but could not find them. He called aloud upon
his attendants, but they heard him not, being already in attendance on
the false emperor. And Jovinian regarded his nakedness and said:
“Miserable man that I am! to what a state am I reduced! Whither shall I
go? Who will receive me in this plight? I bethink me there is a knight
hereabout whom I have advanced to great honor; I will seek him, and with
his assistance regain my palace, and punish the person who has done me
this wrong.”
Naked and ashamed, Jovinian sought the gate of the knight’s castle, and
knocked loudly at the wicket.
“Who art thou, and what dost thou seek?” asked the porter, without
unclosing the gate.
“Open, open, sirrah!” replied the emperor, with redoubled knocks on the
wicket.
“In the name of wonder, friend, who art thou?” said the old porter as he
opened the gate, and saw the strange figure of the emperor before the
threshold.
“Who am I, askest thou, sirrah? I am thy emperor. Go, tell thy master,
Jovinian is at his gate, and bid him bring forth a horse and some
garments, to supply those that I have been deprived of.”
“Rascal,” rejoined the porter—“thou the emperor! Why, the emperor but
just now rode up to the castle, with all his attendants, and honored my
master by sitting with him at meat in the great hall. Thou the emperor!
a very pretty emperor indeed; faugh, I’ll tell my master what you say,
and he will soon find out whether you are mad, drunk, or a thief.”
The porter, greatly enraged, went and told his lord how that a naked
fellow stood at the gate, calling himself the emperor, and demanding
clothes and a good steed.
“Bring the fellow in,” said the knight.
So they brought in Jovinian, and he stood before the lord of the castle,
and again declared himself to be the emperor Jovinian. Loud laughed the
knight to the emperor.
“What, thou my lord the emperor! art mad, good fellow? Come, give him my
old cloak; it will keep him from the flies.”
“Yes, sir knight,” replied Jovinian, “I am thy emperor, who advanced
thee to great honor and wealth, and will shortly punish thee for thy
present conduct.”
“Scoundrel!” said the knight, now enraged beyond all bounds, “traitor!
thou the emperor! ay, of beggars and fools. Why, did not my lord but
lately sit with me in my hall, and taste of my poor cheer? and did not
he bid me ride with him to his palace gate, whence I am but now
returned? Fool, I pitied thee before; now I see thy villany. Go, turn
the fellow out, and flog him from the castle-ditch to the river-side.”
And the people did as the knight commanded them. So when they ceased
from flogging the emperor, he sat him down on the grass, and covered him
with the tattered robe, and communed on his own wretchedness.
“Oh, my God!” said Jovinian,—for he now thought of other gods but
himself,—“is it possible that I have come to such a state of misery, and
that, through the ingratitude of one whom I have raised so high!” And as
he thus spake, he thought not of his own ingratitude to his God, through
whom alone all princes reign and live. And now he brooded over
vengeance—“Ay,” said he, as he felt the sore weals on his back from the
scourging; “ay, I will be avenged. When he next sees me, he shall know
that he who gives can also take away. Come, I will seek the good duke,
my ablest counsellor; he will know his sovereign, and gladly aid him in
his calamity.” And with these thoughts he wrapped his cloak round him,
and sought the house of the good duke.
Jovinian knocked at the gate of the duke’s palace, and the porter opened
the wicket, and seeing a half-naked man, asked him why he knocked, and
who he was.
“Friend,” replied the emperor, “I am Jovinian. I have been robbed of my
clothes whilst bathing, and am now with no apparel, save this ragged
cloak, and no horse; so tell the duke the emperor is here.”
The porter, more and more astonished at the emperor’s words, sought his
master, and delivered Jovinian’s message to him.
“Bring in the poor man,” said the duke; “peradventure he is mad.”
So they brought Jovinian unto the duke’s great hall, and the duke looked
on him, but knew him not. And when Jovinian reiterated his story, and
spoke angrily unto the duke, he pitied him. “Poor mad fellow,” said the
good duke, “I have but just now returned from the palace, where I left
the very emperor thou assumest to be. Take him to the guard-house.
Perhaps a few days’ close confinement on bread and water may cool his
heated brain. Go, poor fellow; I pity thee!”
So the servants did as their lord commanded, and they fed Jovinian on
bread and water, and after a time turned him out of the castle; for he
still said he was the emperor.
Sorely and bitterly did the emperor weep and bewail his miserable fate
when the servants drove him from the castle gate. “Alas, alas!” he
exclaimed in his misery, “what shall I do, and whither shall I resort?
Even the good duke knew me not, but regarded me as a poor madman. Come,
I will seek my own palace, and discover myself to my wife. Surely she
will know me at least.”
“Who art thou, poor man?” asked the king’s porter of him when he stood
before the palace gate and would have entered in.
“Thou oughtest to know me,” replied Jovinian, “seeing thou hast served
me these fifteen years.”
“Served you, you dirty fellow,” rejoined the porter. “I serve the
emperor. Serve you, indeed!”
“I am the emperor. Dost thou not know me? Come, my good fellow, seek the
empress, and bid her, by the sign of the three moles on the emperor’s
breast, send me hither the imperial robes, which some fellow stole
whilst I was bathing.”
“Ha! ha! fellow; well, you are royally mad. Why, the emperor is at
dinner with his wife. Well, well, I’ll do thy bidding, if it be but to
have the whipping of thee afterwards for an impudent madman. Three moles
on the emperor’s breast! how royally thou shalt be beaten, my friend.”
When the porter told the empress what the poor madman at the gate had
said, she held down her head, and said, with a sorrowful voice, unto her
lord: “My good lord and king, here is a fellow at the palace gate that
hath sent unto me, and bids me, by those secret signs known only to thee
and me, to send him the imperial robes, and welcome him as my husband
and my sovereign.”
When the fictitious emperor heard this, he bade the attendants bring in
Jovinian. And lo, as he entered the hall, the great wolf-hound, that had
slept at his feet for years, sprang from his lair, and would have pulled
him down, had not the attendants prevented him; whilst the falcon, that
had sat on his wrist in many a fair day’s hawking, broke her jesses, and
flew out of the hall: so changed was Jovinian the emperor.
“Nobles and friends,” said the new emperor, “hear ye what I will ask of
this man.”
And the nobles bowed assent, whilst the emperor asked Jovinian his name,
and his business with the empress.
“Askest thou me who I am, and wherefore I am come?” rejoined Jovinian.
“Am not I thy emperor, and the lord of this house and this realm?”
“These our nobles shall decide,” replied the new king. “Tell me now,
which of us twain is your emperor?”
And the nobles answered with one accord: “Thou dost trifle with us,
sire. Can we doubt that thou art our emperor, whom we have known from
his childhood? As for this base fellow, we know not who he is.”
And with one accord the people cried out against Jovinian that he should
be punished.
On this the usurper turned to the empress of Jovinian—“Tell me,” said
he, “on thy true faith, knowest thou this man who calls himself emperor
of this realm?”
And the empress answered: “Good my lord, have not thirty years passed
since I first knew thee, and became the mother of our children? Why
askest thou me of this fellow? and yet it doth surprise me how he should
know what none save you and I can know?”
Then the usurper turned to Jovinian, and with a harsh countenance
rebuked his presumption, and ordered the executioners to drag him by the
feet by horses until he died. This said he before all his court; but he
sent his servant to the tailor, and commanded him to scourge Jovinian;
and for this once to set him free.
The deposed emperor desired death. “Why,” said he to himself, “should I
now live? my friends, my dependents, yea, even the partner of my bed
shuns me, and I am desolate among those whom my bounties have raised.
Come, I will seek the good priest, to whom I so often have laid open my
most secret faults: of a surety, he will remember me.”
Now the good priest lived in a small cell, nigh to a chapel about a
stone’s-cast from the palace gate; and when Jovinian knocked, the
priest, being engaged in reading, answered from within: “Who is there?
why troublest thou me?”
“I am the emperor Jovinian; open the window, I would speak to thee,”
replied the fugitive.
Immediately the narrow window of the cell was opened, and the priest,
looking out, saw no one save the poor half-clothed Jovinian. “Depart
from me, thou accursed thing!” cried the priest; “thou art not our good
lord the emperor, but the foul fiend himself, the great tempter.”
“Alas, alas!” cried Jovinian, “to what fate am I reserved, that even my
own good priest despises me! Ah me, I bethink me—in the arrogance of my
heart, I called myself a god: the weight of my sin is grievous unto me.
Father, good father, hear the sins of a miserable penitent.”
Gladly did the priest listen to Jovinian; and when he had told him all
his sins, the good priest comforted the penitent, and assured him of
God’s mercy, if his repentance was sincere. And so it happened that on
this a cloud seemed to fall from before the eyes of the priest; and when
he again looked on Jovinian he knew him to be the emperor, and he pitied
him, clothing him with such poor garments as he had, and went with him
to the palace gate.
The porter stood in the gateway, and as Jovinian and the priest drew
near he made a lowly obeisance, and opened the gate for the emperor.
“Dost thou know me?” asked the emperor.
“Very well, my lord,” replied the servant; “but I wish that you had not
left the palace.”
So Jovinian passed on to the hall of his palace; and as he went, all the
nobles rose and bowed to the emperor; for the usurper was in another
apartment, and the nobles knew again the face of Jovinian.
But a certain knight passed into the presence of the false emperor. “My
lord,” said he, “there is one in the great hall to whom all men bow, for
he so much resembleth you that we know not which is the emperor.”
Then said the usurper to the empress: “Go and see if you know this man.”
“Oh, my good lord,” said the empress, when she returned from the hall,
“whom can I believe? are there, then, two Jovinians?”
“I will myself go and determine,” rejoined the usurper, as he took the
empress by her hand, and, leading her into the great hall, placed her on
the throne beside himself.
“Kinsfolk and nobles,” said the usurper, “by the oaths ye have sworn,
determine between me and this man.”
And the empress answered: “Let me, as in duty bound, speak first. Heaven
be my witness, I know not which is my lord and husband.”
And all the nobles said the same.
Thereupon the feigned Jovinian rose and spake: “Nobles and friends,
hearken! that man is your emperor and your master; hear ye him; know
that he did exalt himself above that which was right, and make himself
equal unto God. Verily he hath been rewarded; he hath suffered much
indignity and wrong, and, of God’s will, ye knew him not; he hath
repented him of his grievous sin, and the scourge is now removed; he has
made such satisfaction as man can make. Hear ye him, know him, obey
him.”
As the feigned emperor thus addressed the astonished nobles, his
features seemed illumined with a fair and spiritual light, his imperial
robes fell from off him, and he stood confessed before the assembly an
angel of God, clothed in white raiment. And, as he ended his speech, he
bowed his head, and vanished from their sight.
Jovinian returned to his throne, and for three years reigned with so
much mercy and justice, that his subjects had no cause to regret the
change of their emperor. And it came to pass, after the space of three
years, the same angel appeared to him in a dream, and warned him of his
death. So Jovinian dictated his troublous life to his secretaries, that
it might remain as a warning unto all men against worldly pride, and an
incitement to the performance of our religious duties. And when he had
so done, he meekly resigned himself, and fell asleep in death.
“So much for the story, as a story; now for the moral, with all that
eccentric spirit of refinement and abstraction with which the age
was characterized,” said Herbert.
“The moral in this case is less eccentric than in many to which I
hope we shall come before Christmas is over.”
“Jovinian was but the picture of the proud, worldly-minded man,
entirely given up to vanity and folly. The first knight whose castle
he visited was True Wisdom, ever disdainful of the pomps and
vanities of the world. The next knight was Conscience. The dog that
turned against his old master, was the lusts of the flesh, our own
evil desires, which will ever in the end turn against those who have
pampered them. The falcon is God’s grace; the empress, man’s soul;
and the clothes in which the good priest clothed the half-frozen
emperor, are those kingly virtues which he had thrown off, when he
gave loose rein to the vanities of the world.”
“It must be admitted,” remarked Herbert, “that from very early times
a secondary meaning was commonly attached to every important work;
it progressed from the sacred writings through the poetic fictions
of the classics, to compositions professedly allegorical. The want
of discrimination, which in our eyes assumes much of the appearance
of profane levity, with which the fictions of the classics were
interpreted to signify the great truths and mysteries of religion,
was, perhaps, hardly reprehensible in the simple state of knowledge
which prevailed at the time when these attempts at secondary
interpretation were made.”
“And hence it was,” said Lathom, “that in the early ages it might
seem to partake of little levity to prefigure our Saviour’s birth in
that of Bacchus; his sufferings and death in that of Actæon, or his
resurrection in the legend of Hercules, as related by Lycophron; as
late as the thirteenth century the Franciscan Walleys wrote a moral
and theological exposition of the Metamorphoses of Ovid.”
“But surely the writers of that age did not stop there,” said
Thompson; “was it not the case, that to these expositions succeeded
compositions professedly allegorical, and which the spirit of
refinement of that age resolved into further allegories, for which
they were never intended?”
“Undoubtedly so!” replied Lathom; “it was not enough that the writer
of the ‘Romaunt of the Rose’ had allegorized the difficulties of an
ardent lover in the accomplishment of his object, under the mystery
of the rose which was to be gathered in a fair but almost
inaccessible garden. Every profession saw in this allegory the great
mystery of their craft. To the theologian it was the rose of
Jericho, the New Jerusalem, the Blessed Virgin, or any other mystery
to which obstinate heretics were unable to attain; to the chemist it
was the philosopher’s stone; to the lawyer it was the most
consummate point of equity; to the physician the infallible panacea,
the water of life; and does not this spirit of allegory extend to
the present day, only in a somewhat different form?”
“Not unlike the present system of commentating,” remarked Henry
Herbert. “As soon as a poet has attained to any great reputation,
and death has sealed up his writings, then comes the host of
annotators and critics, each one more intent than his predecessor to
develop the mind of the writer, to discover with what hidden
intentions, with what feelings, this or that passage was written,
and to build on some stray expression a mighty theory, for some more
clever writer to overthrow, and raise a new fabric on its ruins. And
in these attempts it is not the old author whose glory is sought to
be heightened, but the new man who would ascend the ladder of
reputation on the labors of the ‘man of old.’”
“Far different,” rejoined Lathom, “was the spirit which prompted the
fashion of resolving every thing into allegories in the middle ages;
nor, indeed, is it to be solely charged to an unmeaning and wanton
spirit of refinement. ‘The same apology,’ says Wharton, ‘may be
offered for cabalistic interpreters, both of the classics and of the
old romances. The former, not willing that those books should be
quite exploded which contained the ancient mythology, labored to
reconcile the apparent absurdities of the pagan system with the
Christian mysteries, by demonstrating a figurative resemblance. The
latter, as true learning began to dawn, with a view of supporting
for a time the expiring credit of giants and magicians, were
compelled to palliate those monstrous incredibilities, by a bold
attempt to unravel the mystic web which had been woven by fairy
hands, and by showing that truth was hid under the gorgeous veil of
gothic invention.’ And now, Thompson, we must adjourn, you to your
real Greeks and Romans, Herbert and I to Aristotle’s Summum Bonum.”
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER II.
Discussion on the Source of Fiction Renewed—THE KING AND THE
GLUTTON—GUIDO, THE PERFECT SERVANT—The Middle-Age Allegories—Pliny
and Mandeville’s Wonders Allegorized.
“Surely,” said Henry Herbert, when the friends were again assembled,
“surely the poems of the northern Scalds, the legends of the
Arabians of Spain, the songs of the Armoricans, and the classics of
the ancient world, have been the sources of the most prevalent
fictions.”
“The sources from which the monks themselves compiled these stories,
but by no means the original sources,” replied Lathom. “The
_immediate_ source must be sought in even earlier times and more
eastern climes. In some instances perverted notions of Scripture
characters furnished the supernatural agency of the legend; in the
majority the machinery came direct from the East, already dilated
and improved. In many parts of the old Scriptures we learn how
familiar the nations of the East were with spells; and the elevation
of Solomon Daoud to the throne of the Genii and to the lordship of
the Talisman, proves the _traditional_ intercourse between God’s own
people and the nations of the far East.”
“The theory is probable,” said Thompson. “We can easily conceive how
the contest of David and Goliath may have formed the foundation of
many a fierce encounter between knight and giant, and the feats of
Samson been dilated into the miracles of the heroes of chivalry.”
“There is one very pertinent instance of such a conversion in this
very book. In the Book of Tobit, which is indeed referred to in the
application of the tale of ‘The Emperor Vespasian and the Two
Rings,’ we find an angel in the place of a saint, enchantments,
antidotes, distressed damsels, demons, and nearly all the recognized
machinery of fiction. The vagaries of the Talmud, clearly derived
from Eastern sources, were no small treasure on which to draw for
wonders and miracles. And when we find all the machinery of the East
in the poems of the Scalds, we cannot but perceive how much more
reasonable it is to suppose the cold conceptions of the Northern
bards to have been fed from the East, than the warm imaginations of
the East to have drawn their inspiration from the North.”
“Very plausible, Lathom,” replied Herbert; “but still this objection
must not be neglected—the ignorance and misrepresentation of the
religions of the East, shown through every page of the popular
legends of the chivalric age.”
“An objection of apparent weight, I will admit; and yet may it not
have been the aim of the Christian writers to represent the infidels
in the worst possible light, to pervert their creed, to exaggerate
their vices? The charge of idolatry, and the adoration of the golden
image of Mahomet, may have been mere pious frauds.”
“Admitting even this apology,” rejoined Herbert, “the difference of
religion in the East and North seems another objection. The Romans
adopted the legends of Greece, and naturalized them. With the
mythology came the religious rites appendant to it. How did it
happen that the Scalds adopted the one without falling into the
other error?”
“Are the cases similar?” replied Lathom; “were the nations alike?
Was there no difference of predisposition in the Romans and the
Scalds as to the adoption of the mythologies of the East and Greece?
Had not long intercourse in the one case prepared the Romans to
receive? did it not agree with their preconceived notions? Such was
not the case with the Northern nations. Children, and rude children
of nature, they were in no way prepared for a similar effect; but,
seizing on the prominent features of the legends presented to them,
they engrafted them on their own wild and terrible stories, adding
to the original matter in some cases, and rejecting portions of it
in others.”
“Well, I will not carry this discussion further,” said Herbert, “for
fear of losing a story to-night; but I by no means give up my
sources of didactic fictions.”
“Well, then, a truce for this evening. I will read the tale of The
King and the Glutton, by which the old monk wished to illustrate the
moral, that men are blinded by their own avarice.”
THE KING AND THE GLUTTON.
There once lived a king of Rome, who, out of charity to the blind,
decreed that every subject of his that was so afflicted, should be
entitled to receive a hundred shillings from the royal treasury. Now
there was in Rome a club of men who lived for the world alone, and spent
all they had in rioting and eating. Seven days had they continued
revelling in one tavern, when the host demanded to be paid his bill.
Every one searched his pockets, but still there was not enough to pay
the reckoning.
“There still wants one hundred shillings,” said the innkeeper; “and
until that is paid, ye go not hence.”
These young men knew not what to do, as they were penniless. “What shall
we do?” said they one to another. “How can we pay so large a sum?” At
length one bethought him of the king’s edict.
“Listen,” said he, “listen to me; does not the king give one hundred
shillings to every blind man that applies for it?”
“Even so,” said the rest; “but what then? we are not blind.”
“What then?” rejoined the young man. “Come, let us cast lots who shall
be made blind, that when he is deprived of sight we may take him to the
king’s palace, and obtain the hundred shillings.”
So the young men cast lots, and the lot fell upon the man who had
proposed this plan. And the rest took him, and putting out his eyes, led
him to the king’s palace. When they knocked at the gate, the porter
opened the wicket, and demanded their business.
“Business,” said they; “see ye not our companion is blind? he seeks to
receive the king’s benevolent gift.”
“The blindness is rather sudden,” muttered the porter, who knew the
young man by sight. “Well, well, I will fetch the almoner.”
So the almoner, who distributed the king’s charity, came to the gate,
and looking on the young man, asked him what he wanted.
“A hundred shillings, which my lord the king gives to those that are
blind,” replied the youth.
“Thy blindness is very sudden,” rejoined the almoner; “when did it
happen, and where? for I saw thee yesterday with both eyes perfect in
the tavern by the city wall.”
“Last night, noble sir,” replied the blind man, “last night at that
tavern I became blind.”
“Go fetch the host,” said the almoner sternly, “we will look into this
matter more fully.”
So when the innkeeper came, he inquired of him how the matter was; and
when he had heard all their deeds, he turned to the young man, and said—
“Of a surety thou knowest but half the law, and dost interpret it wrong;
to such as are blind by God’s act, does our gracious king give his
charity; such the law protects and relieves. But thou—why art thou
blind? Thinkest thou that thou dost deserve to be rewarded for
voluntarily surrendering thine eyes, in order to discharge the debt thou
and thy companions had contracted by gluttony and rioting? Begone,
foolish man: thy avarice hath made thee blind.”
So they drove away the young men from the king’s gate, lamenting their
folly and wickedness.
“There can be little doubt,” said Herbert, “what moral the author of
this tale intended to teach. The king’s gift clearly illustrates
God’s reward for forgiveness, to those that by natural infirmity and
temptation fall into sin; as the withholding it from the glutton, is
meant to teach us how difficult it will be to obtain the forgiveness
of voluntary sin, done out of pure wickedness.”
“You have found out the monk’s moral rightly in this tale, Henry;
but I think you will not be so successful in that which I now
propose reading to you—the story of
“GUIDO, THE PERFECT SERVANT.”
There was once a great emperor of Rome named Valerius, who would that
every man, according to his wishes, should serve him; so he commanded
that whosoever should strike _three_ times on the gate of his palace
should be admitted to do him service. In the emperor’s kingdom was also
a poor man named Guido, who, when he heard of his lord’s commands, thus
spake with himself: “Now, I am a poor man, and lowly born; is it not
better to live and serve than to starve and be free?” So he went to the
king’s gate, and knocked three knocks; and lo, it was opened to him,
according as it had been said; and he was brought before the emperor.
“What seek you, friend?” asked Valerius, as Guido bowed before him.
“To serve my king,” was Guido’s reply.
“What service can you perform for me?” rejoined the emperor.
“Six services can I perform, O king: as your body-guard, I can prepare
your bed and your food, and attend your chamber. I can sleep when others
watch, and watch while others sleep. As your cup-bearer, I can drink
good wine, and tell whether it be so or not. I can summon the guests to
my master’s banquet, to his great honor and benefit. I can kindle a fire
which shall warm all that seek it, and yet not smoke. And I can show the
way to the Holy Land, to the health of such as shall go thither.”
“By my truth,” rejoined the emperor, “these are great things that thou
dost promise. See that thou do them. Each for one year. Serve me first
as my body-guard.”
Guido was content to obey the emperor; and he prepared to perform his
duties as his body-guard. Every night he made ready the emperor’s bed,
and prepared his apparel. Every night he lay before the emperor’s
chamber-door, armed at all points; whilst by his side watched a faithful
dog to warn him of the approach of danger. In every thing did he
minister so faithfully to his lord, that the emperor was well pleased
with him, and after his first year, made him seneschal of his castle and
steward of his household. Then did Guido commence his labors in his
second office. During the entire summer he gathered large stores of
every thing needful into the castle, and collected much provision at
little cost, by carefully watching his opportunities. Anon came on the
winter, and when those who had slept during the times of plenty began to
labor and lay up in their store-houses, Guido remained at ease, and
completed his second year’s service with credit to himself.
And now the third year of Guido’s service came on; and the emperor
called for his chief butler, and said: “Mix in a cup good wine, must,
and vinegar, and give it to Guido to drink; that we may know how he doth
taste good drink, and what he knoweth of its qualities.”
So the butler did as he was ordered, and gave the cup to Guido, who,
when he had tasted of it, said: “Of a truth it was good, it is good, and
it will be good.” And when the emperor asked him how these things could
be, he said: “The vinegar was good, the old wine is good, and the must
will be good when it is older.” So the emperor saw that he had answered
rightly and discreetly of the mixture, which he knew not of before. “Go,
therefore,” said Valerius, “through my country, and invite my friends to
a banquet at the festival of Christmas now at hand”; and Guido bowed
assent, and departed on his way.
But Guido did not execute his lord’s commands—going not unto his
friends, but unto his enemies. So that when the emperor descended into
his banquet-hall his heart was troubled; for his enemies sat round his
table, and there was not a friend among them. So he called Guido, and
spake angrily to him.
“How, sir! didst thou not tell me that thou knewest whom to invite to my
banquet?”
And Guido said: “Of a surety, my lord.”
“Did not I bid thee invite my friends? and how, then, hast thou summoned
all mine enemies?”
And Guido said: “May thy servant speak?”
So the emperor said: “Speak on.”
And the servant said: “My lord, there is no season or time that thy
friends may not visit thee, and be received with pleasure and honor; but
it is not so with thine enemies. Then I said to myself: ‘Conciliation
and kindness would go far to convert enemies into friends.’”
Now it turned out as Guido hoped; for ere the feast was ended, the king
and his enemies were reconciled to each other, and became friends even
unto the end of their days. So the emperor called Guido, and said: “With
God’s blessing, thy design has prospered. Come, now, make for my
reconciled enemies and me a fire that shall burn without smoke.”
And Guido answered: “It shall be done as thou hast required, O king.”
So he sent and gathered much green wood, and dried it in the sun until
it was quite dry, and therewith made a fire that did cast out much heat,
and yet did not smoke. So that the emperor and his friends rejoiced
greatly therein. And so it was when the emperor saw how well Guido had
performed his five ministries, he bade him execute his sixth
service—that he might attain to great honor in his kingdom.
“My lord,” said Guido, “he that would know the way to the Holy Land must
follow me to the sea-shore.”
So a proclamation went forth from the king to that effect; and great
multitudes of men and women flocked to the sea-shore after Guido. When
the people were come, Guido said: “My friends, do ye see in the ocean
the things that I see?”
And the people answered: “We know not.”
“See ye in the midst of the waves a huge rock?”
And the people answered: “It is even so. Why ask you this of us?”
“Know ye all,” replied Guido, “that on that rock liveth a bird, that
sitteth continually on her nest, in which are seven eggs. While she so
sitteth, behold the sea is calm, and men may pass to and fro over the
wide waters in safety. But when she doth quit her nest, the winds blow,
and the waves rise, and many perish on the waters.”
Then said the people: “How shall we know when this bird quitteth her
nest?”
And Guido answered: “She sitteth always, unless a sudden emergency
happen; and then when she is away there cometh another bird, great and
strong, that defileth her nest and breaketh her seven eggs, which, when
the first bird seeth, she flieth away, and the winds and storms arise;
then must the shipman remain in port.”
Then said the people: “Master, how may we prevent these things, and
defend the bird and her nest from her enemy?”
And Guido said: “The enemy hateth the blood of the lamb, and cannot come
where that is. Sprinkle, therefore, the inside and outside of the nest
with this blood; and so long as one drop remaineth the friendly bird
will sit in peace, and the waves will not rage and swell, and there
shall be safety on the waves of the sea.”
And the people did as Guido said. They took the blood of a lamb, and
sprinkled the nest and the rock therewith. Then passed the emperor and
all his people to the Holy Land, and returned in peace and safety. And
the emperor did as he had promised unto Guido, and rewarded the perfect
servant with great riches, promoting him to high honor among the people.
“I confess myself conquered,” said Henry Herbert, as soon as the
story was concluded. “Some points in the allegory are clear, as the
way to the Holy Land, and the sprinkling of the blood of the Lamb,
but the rest are beyond my discovering.”
“The explanation,” said Herbert, “is undoubtedly more recondite than
any we have read as yet. The great emperor is our Father in heaven;
the three blows on his gate are prayer, self-denial, charity; by
these three any one may become his faithful servant. Guido is a poor
Christian, by baptism made his servant. His first service is to
serve his God, and to prepare the heart for virtue. His second duty
is to watch; ‘for he knoweth not the day nor the hour when the Son
of Man cometh.’ His third task is to taste of repentance, which was
good to the saints who are departed, is good to such of us as it
brings to salvation, and will be good to all in the last day. The
fourth duty is to invite Christ’s enemies to be his friends, and to
come to the banquet of his love for he ‘came not to call the
righteous, but sinners to repentance.’ The fire that burneth without
smoke, is the fire of charity, which burneth free of all ill-will
and bad feeling. The way to the Holy Land is our course heavenward.
We are to sail over our sea, the world; in the midst of which
standeth our rock, even our heart, on which the holy bird of God’s
Spirit resteth. The seven eggs are the gifts of the Spirit. When the
Spirit leaves us, the Devil hasteth to defile our hearts; but the
blood of the Lamb which was slain for us, even our Saviour, will
ward off the attack of our enemy, so long as we are sprinkled
therewith.”
“The explanation is characteristic of the age,” said Herbert. “What
then,” rejoined Lathom, “will you say to the moral drawn by these
writers from the wonders that Pliny believed in, without seeing, and
Sir John de Mandeville tried to persuade the world he believed in,
from seeing?”
“What,” said Thompson, “the Anthropophagi, and men whose heads do
grow beneath their shoulders?”
“No creature is so monstrous, no fable so incredible, but that the
monkish writers could give it a moral form, and extract from its
crudities and quiddities some moral or religious lesson.”
“They believed in the words of the song,” said Thompson—
“‘Reason sure will always bring
Something out of every thing.’”
“Pliny’s dog-headed race,” said Lathom, “whom Sir John places in the
island of Macumeran, and at the same time gives to them a _quasi_
pope for a king, who says three hundred prayers per diem before he
either eats or drinks, were naturally regarded by the middle-age
writers as symbolical and priestly preachers of faithful hearts and
frugal habits; whilst of those other islanders, who ‘have but one
eye, and that in the middest of their front, and eat their flesh and
fish raw,’ the monk says, ‘These be they that have the eye of
prayer.’ The Astomes who have no mouths, ‘are all hairie over the
whole bodie, yet clothed with soft cotton and downe, that cometh
from the leaves of trees, and live only on aire, and by the smelling
of sweet odors, which they draw through their nose-thrills,’ are the
abstemious of this world, who die of the sin of gluttony, even as an
Astome by the accidental inhalation of bad odor. Humility is
signified by the absence of the head, and the placing of the face in
the breast; and a tendency to sin is foreshadowed by a desire and
habit of walking on all fours, or pride by short noses and goat’s
feet. The Mandevillean islanders, who had flat faces without noses,
and two round holes for their eyes, and thought whatsoever they saw
to be good, were earth’s foolish ones; as those foul men, who have
their lips so great, that when they sleep in the sun they cover all
their face therewith, are the just men, the salt of the earth.”
“One would as soon dream of allegorizing the Sciapodes of
Aristophanes, or Homer’s Cranes and Pigmies,” said Thompson.
“And so the monk has,” said Lathom.
“What, the old Greek’s parasol-footed people, of whom Mandeville
says with such gravity, ‘There be in Ethiope such men as have but
one foot, and they go so fast that it is a great marvel; and that is
a large foot, for the shadow thereof covereth the body from sun or
rain, when they lie upon their back’?”
“Both Aristophanes and his follower would doubtless be as surprised
in learning that their sciapodes were allegorical of the charitable
of this world, as Homer would in discovering in his crane-fighting
pigmies those mortals who begin well but cease to do well before
they attain perfection; or in their neighbors who boast of six
hands, and despise clothes in favor of long hair, and live in
rivers, the hardworking and laborious among men.”
“The last is decidedly the most intelligible,” remarked Herbert.
“The reason of the explanation is not always clear,” replied Lathom;
“it is not very easy to decide why those who have six fingers and
six toes are the unpolluted, and why virtuous men are represented by
a race of women with bald heads and beards flowing to their breast;
nor is it very clear that virtue is well represented by a double
allowance of eyes. But one curiosity remains—the beautiful men of
Europe who boast a crane’s head, neck, and beak. These, says the
author of the Gesta, represent judges, who should have long necks
and beaks, _that what the heart thinks, may be long before it reach
the mouth_.”
“That reminds me of long Jack Bannister,” said Thompson, “who was
always five minutes after every one else in laughing at a joke, as
it took that extra time for it to travel from his ears to his
midriff, and then back again to his mouth.”
And so the evening ended with a laugh.
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER III.
Progress of Fiction from the East to the West—The Early Christians—The
Monks—The Spanish Arabians—The Crusades—THE KNIGHT AND THE KING OF
HUNGARY—The English Gesta.
“Admitting the East as the immediate source of fiction,” said Henry
Herbert, when they were met once more, “you must still regard the
Spanish Arabians as the great disseminators of those extravagant
inventions which were so peculiar to their romantic and creative
genius.”
“Less, perhaps, than many other sources. The absence of Moorish
subjects from the earliest tales of chivalry, if it proves no more,
at least shows how prevalent the tales of Charlemagne and his peers
were in the eighth century, that a nation of conquerors could do
little to infect them with legends of their own.”
“How and when, then, Lathom, would you introduce Eastern invention?”
asked Thompson.
“I would refer it to much earlier ages, to the earliest of the
Christian centuries, and contend that it was gradual, and therefore
more natural; was the production of times and of ages, not the
sudden birth and growth of one age; gradually augmenting until it
attained to full and perfect stature.”
“Still,” rejoined Herbert, “we want the means by which this
knowledge of Eastern fable was introduced.”
“Some share may be due to the return of those primitive Christians
who sought refuge in the East from the persecutions of the pagan
rulers of the West. Their minds were well prepared to adopt the
fervent expressions of the East, and their condition prevented them
from investigating the tales they heard. Hence, in the lives of
these saints they were as ready to interweave the prodigies of
another land, hoping, perhaps, to conciliate the minds of the
Eastern Oriental to the tenets of their faith, by introducing
fictitious incidents of Oriental structure, as, to conciliate the
heathen, they placed their gods and goddesses in the Christian
temple, dignifying them with a new name, and serving them with novel
ceremonies.”
“Admitting the probability, still your machinery seems deficient.”
“It is but a portion of my machinery. Much more was due to the
clouds of monks, who, during the third and fourth centuries,
wandered over the face of the habitable world.”
“When Gibbon admits that the progress of monachism was co-extensive
with that of Christianity,” suggested Frederick Thompson.
“The disciples of Antony,” said Herbert, “we are assured, spread
themselves beyond the tropic, over the Christian empire of
Ethiopia.”
“Their distribution was universal,” said Lathom; “every province,
almost every city of the empire, had its ascetics; they feared no
dangers, and deemed no seas, mountains, or deserts a barrier to
their progress.”
“The roving character of the monks, therefore,” says the last
translator of the Gesta, “is another link of the chain by which I
introduce Oriental fiction into the West; and it is utterly
impossible (maturely weighing the habits and propensities of this
class of people) that they should not have picked up and retained
the floating traditions of the countries through which they passed.
Some of the early romances, as well as the legends of the saints,
were undoubtedly fabricated in the deep silence of the cloister.
Both frequently sprung from the warmth of fancy which religious
seclusion is so well tended to nourish; but the former were adorned
with foreign embellishments.”
“Did it ever occur to you,” said Thompson, “that the story of
Ulysses and Circe bears a wondrous likeness to that of Beder the
prince of Persia and Giahame princess of Samandal, and that the
voyages of Sindbad afford the counterpart of the Cyclops of the
Odysee?”
“It would be but consistent with the reported travels of Homer, to
allow an Eastern origin to a portion of his fable,” said Lathom.
“After your banished Christians and roving monks,” said Herbert,
“you would admit the Spanish Arabians.”
“As one means, certainly,” replied Lathom; “and after them the
Crusaders.”
“It were almost superfluous,” rejoined Herbert, “to allude to the
Crusades as further sources of romantic and didactic fiction. No one
will dispute their right to a place in the system. About the period
of the third crusade this kind of writing was at its height.”
“Undoubtedly,” rejoined Lathom, “that age was the full tide of
chivalry. Twenty years elapsed between that and the fourth and fifth
expeditions into the east; and nearly a generation passed before,
for the sixth and the last time, the wealth and blood of Europe was
poured upon the plains of the East. Enough of money and life had
been now spent to satisfy the most enthusiastic of the crusading
body, and to check, if not to stem, the tide of popular feeling
which had formerly run so strong in favor of the restoration of the
sepulchre and the holy city to the guardianship of the faithful.
Time was now at last beginning to allay the Anti-Saracenic passion.
With the decline of these remarkable expeditions romantic fiction
began to be regarded. For though originally extraneous and
independent, romantic fictions had of late years become incorporated
with chivalry and its institutions, and, with them, they naturally
fell into decay.”
“Come, come, we must break off this discussion,” said Thompson, “or
else we shall have no time to judge of Lathom’s performance this
evening.”
“The story I selected to begin with is one replete with
eccentricity, and peculiarly characteristic of this age; it is
entitled
“THE KNIGHT AND THE KING OF HUNGARY.”
There was a merry feast in the palace of Philonimus, the emperor of
Rome, and his fair child, the maiden Aglae, sat by his side, whilst a
brave knight, that loved the maiden dearly, sat on the other hand of the
emperor. For the knight was bound for Palestine, to aid in rescuing the
holy city from the power of the infidels and the emperor held a high
festival in honor of that knight.
The feast was over in the hall, and the knight led the maiden from
beside her father’s throne to the floor of the hall, and danced with
her, whilst the king’s minstrels played a measure.
And as he danced, the knight talked with the lady, and the lady talked
with the knight, and often sighed she when he spoke of his voyage to the
Holy Land, and the great deeds he would perform for the glory of God,
and the love of the fair lady. Then said the knight: “Lady, fair lady!
to-morrow’s dawn sees me on my way to Palestine, and for seven years I
bind myself to fight for the holy city. Plight me, dearest, thy troth,
that this seven years you take no other husband, and I will plight thee
my troth that for that time I will take no wife; and if this day seven
years I come not again, then art thou free from thy promise.”
The lady was pleased with the words of the knight, and they vowed their
vow, the one to the other.
Then sailed the knight for Palestine, and for years they wist not where
he was. At length, the king of Hungary came to the emperor’s court, and
he looked on the beauty of Aglae, and sought her of her father for his
queen. And the emperor was glad; for the king was a great and good king.
Then said he: “So be it, if my daughter consent.”
And Aglae bowed her head, when the king of Hungary spoke to her, and
said: “Oh lord, the king, I am not free to be thy wife; for lo, these
six years past I vowed to marry no man, and lo, one year more remains of
my vow; until the end of which, I cannot accept the honor of my lord the
king.”
Then said the father: “Since thou hast so vowed, I will not break thy
vow. Wait then, my lord, yet one year, and then my daughter shall be thy
bride.”
So the king of Hungary returned to his kingdom.
* * * * *
Aglae sat at her chamber window, and looked out upon the road that led
towards her father’s palace. “Alas, alas!” she said, “it wants but one
day to complete the seven years of my vow. To-morrow, my love promised
to be with me again from the Holy Land. To-morrow, the king of Hungary
comes to claim me. Ah me, what shall I do, if my love comes not, I must
be the king’s bride”; and she bent her face on her hand, and wept
sorely.
As the day drew near, the king of Hungary prepared to seek his bride. A
great company was gathered together, and many wagons of presents were
prepared to accompany the king. But when he saw them, and how slowly
they journeyed, he left all his company, and went his way alone, eager
to claim Aglae as his bride, so soon as the seven years were ended. The
king was royally arrayed in purple, and his steed was clothed in
gorgeous trappings. Now, as he drew nigh to Rome, a knight rode after
him, who was covered from head to foot in a long black cloak, and bore
on his shoulder a white embroidered cross. “Hail, Sir Knight,” said the
king, “whither travellest thou; what news from the Holy Land?”
“To Rome, my lord,” rejoined the knight, halting his steed alongside of
the king’s, “the Cross has gained the victory.”
“Thither, too, do I travel, Sir Knight; I am the king of Hungary, I go
to seek my bride, the emperor’s fair daughter; I pray thee bear me
company on the road.”
The knight acceded to the king’s proposal, and as they journeyed, they
talked of the holy war in Palestine, and rejoiced that the city of the
holy sepulchre was free from the power of the Saracens. As they thus
talked together, the sky became cloudy, the wind howled through the
woods, and the rain fell so fast, that the king’s apparel was wet
through.
“My lord,” said the knight, “ye have done foolishly in that ye have not
brought your house with you.”
“My house, Sir Knight! how meanest thou? my house is large and broad,
made of stones and mortar; how should I bring with me my house; thou art
beside thyself, Sir Knight!”
But the knight said nothing until they came to the bank of a broad
stream, into which the king, being out of humor, plunged his horse, at
the same time striking his spurs deeply into him, so he missed the ford,
and would have been drowned but for the knight’s help.
“My lord,” said the knight, when they were safe on the river’s bank,
“thou shouldest have brought thy bridge with thee.”
“My bridge,” said the king, “how strangely thou speakest, Sir Knight; my
bridge is made of stones and mortar, and is half a mile long, and yet
thou sayest, why have I not my bridge? Thou art foolish, Sir Knight!”
“Perhaps,” replied the knight, “my folly may turn thee to wisdom.”
And as they rode on, the king asked of the knight what hour of the day
it was.
“For those that are hungry,” replied the knight, “it is time to eat;
dismount therefore, my lord, and honor me by partaking of the food I
have with me.”
So they both sat down under a tree, and ate of the food that was in the
knight’s wallet, and drank of the clear stream that ran beside them.
When their meal was finished, and they were once more mounted, the
knight said:
“O king, why didst not thou bring with thee thy father and thy mother?”
“My father, Sir Knight, is dead, and my mother is old and cannot travel;
how then could I bring them? Verily, thou art the most foolish man that
I did ever meet with.”
“That is as it may be,” said the knight with a smile, “every thing is
judged by its end. Now, O king, farewell! I may not ride with thee to
the emperor’s palace, thither lies thy road, farewell.”
“But stay, Sir Knight,” said the king, “whither ridest thou then?”
“Seven years ago, I left a net in a place, and now I go to see. If I
find it not broken, then will I take it home, and keep it, as a precious
jewel; if it be broken, I will leave it to thee. O king, once more,
farewell.”
So speaking, the knight turned away from the high road, and went by a
shorter way toward Rome, to the emperor’s palace. The king rode upon the
highway. Now, as the king drew near to Rome, one of the emperor’s
servants met him, and went and told the emperor, how that the King of
Hungary was riding all alone towards the city, and was wet and weary
with his journey. Then the emperor set out to meet the king, and
received him royally, and took his wet clothes off him, and clothed him
with his own imperial robes. Then the trumpets sounded for dinner, and
the emperor and the king descended to the hall; but Aglae was not there,
for she kept her chamber, and her father refused her not, as it was the
last day of her seven years’ vow.
“Brother,” said the emperor, as soon as the meats were removed from the
table, “I pray thee tell me of thy journey.”
Then the king told him how he left his own company to come after, and
fell in with the Crusader on his journey, and how he was dressed, and
what he said as they rode together.
“Surely,” said the emperor, “that knight was a wise man: for the house
of which he spoke was thy cloak; the bridge was thy squire, that should
have ridden before thee to try the depth of the stream; and what was thy
father and mother save bread and wine, which thou shouldest have brought
with thee? But why did he leave thee?”
“When we came where two roads met,” rejoined the king, “he left me,
saying, that seven years since he left a net in a private place, and he
went to see whether it were broken or not, that he might treasure it as
a jewel if it were unbroken, and if broken, resign it to me.”
Then the emperor cried with a loud voice, “Ho! my knights and servants,
go ye to my daughter’s chamber.”
So the knights and servants went, and found not the lady, for her lover
had stolen her away while the kings dined.
“Even so, as I expected,” said the emperor; “brother, the knight’s folly
has taught thee wisdom.”
“Yea, brother,” rejoined the king, sorrowfully, “truly said the knight,
every deed is judged by its end.”
So the king returned to Hungary ashamed; and when the knight and the
maiden returned to her father, his heart yearned toward her, and he wept
over her, and received them with joy.
“This last tale,” said Lathom, as soon as he had concluded his
manuscripts, “comes not from the old Latin books, but from what is
called the English Gesta.”
“An imitation of the original, I suppose,” said Thompson.
“So thought that antiquarian, Mr. Douce,” replied Lathom.
“Is it not natural, that a work so remarkable as this old Latin
Gesta seems to have been, should have stimulated some person to
compose a similar work for this country?” suggested Herbert.
“If the English version was not intended for the same work as the
original, it is difficult to account for the striking identity
between the stories in each of the Gesta; whilst the difference
between the two works is in no respect greater than is consistent
with that great latitude which the old transcribers and translators
gave themselves.”
“It is, therefore, Lathom, in your opinion as much an original work
as Donne’s Satires modernized by Pope, or Horace’s Art of Poetry
translated by Roscommon,” said Thompson.
“Yes, or as Dr. Johnson’s version of the Tenth Satire of Juvenal.”
“We must be thinking of adjourning,” said Herbert, as the college
clock began to strike eight.
“Or we may find ourselves inscribed among St. Peter’s madmen,” said
Lathom.
“St. Peter’s madmen—who were they?” exclaimed Herbert and Thompson
together.
“Five men St. Peter deemed to be madmen,” rejoined their host. “One
ate the sand of the sea so greedily that it ran out of his mouth:
verily he was the covetous man of this world. The next madman stood
over a pit filled with sulphur and pitch, and strove to inhale the
noxious vapor that rose from the burning mass; he was the glutton
and the debauchee. A third lay on a burning furnace, and endeavored
to catch the sparks that rose from it, that he might feast on them:
for he was rich, and would have fed on gold, though it would have
been his death. The next lunatic sat on the pinnacle of the temple,
with his mouth open to catch the wind, for he was a hypocrite;
whilst the last madman devoured every finger and toe of his own he
could get into his mouth, and laughed at others; for he was a
calumniator of the good, and devoured his own kind.”
“And the sixth stayed up to read in a Christmas vacation,” suggested
Thompson.
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER IV.
Modern Conversions of the Old Tales—THE THREE BLACK CROWS—King
Lear—THE EMPEROR OF ROME AND HIS THREE DAUGHTERS—The Merchant of
Venice—THE THREE CASKETS.
“What a mine must these tales of the old monks have been to writers
of every age,” said Herbert, as the friends returned to their old
book for the fourth evening.
“The purloiners of gems from their writings have been innumerable,
and of all ages. Gower, Lydgate, Chaucer, Shakspeare, of olden days;
and in our own times, Parnell, Schiller, Scott, and Southey have
been indebted to the didactic fictions of the old monks for many a
good plot and many an effective incident.”
“As the old monks themselves were indebted to the earlier legends of
other lands, the traditions of their own convent, or the meagre
pages of an old chronicle.”
“Even the veteran joker, Mr. Joe Miller, has been indebted to the
Gesta for one of his standard tales,” said Lathom; “The Three Black
Crows dates back to the middle ages.”
“The moral, however, was hardly so polite as that now attached to
the story; for the monk boldly headed his tale with this
inscription:
“‘Of women who not only betray secrets and lie fearfully.’”
“Pray let us hear the original Joe Miller,” said Thompson.
“Here then you have,” replied Lathom, “the original—
“Tale that will raise the question, I suppose,
What can the meaning be of three black crows?”
THE THREE BLACK CROWS.
Once upon a time, there lived two brothers, the one a cleric, the other
a layman. The former was always saying that no woman could keep a
secret, and as his brother was married, he bade him test the truth of
this assertion on his own wife. The layman agreed; and one night, when
they were alone, he said, with a sorrowful face, to his spouse:
“My dear wife, a most dreadful secret hangs over me; oh that I could
divulge it to you; but no, I dare not; you never could keep it, and, if
once divulged, my reputation is gone.”
“Fear not, love,” rejoined the wife; “are we not one body and one mind?
Is not your advantage my benefit, and your injury my loss?”
“Well, then,” said the husband, “when I left my room this morning a
deadly sickness came upon me, and after many a pang, a huge black crow
flew out of my mouth, and, winging its way from the room, left me in
fear and trembling.”
“Is it possible?” asked the wife; “yet why should you fear, my life? be
thankful rather that you have been freed from so noxious and troublesome
an occupant.”
Here the conversation ended. As soon as it was day, up got the wife,
with her thoughts full of the black crow, and hastened to a neighbor’s
house.
“Dear friend,” said she, “can I trust you with a secret?”
“As with your life,” rejoined the confidante.
“Oh, such a marvellous accident happened to my husband!”
“What? what?” asked the anxious friend.
“Only last night, he felt deadly sick, and, after a great deal of pain,
two black crows flew out of his mouth, and took wing from the room.”
Away went the wife home, with her mind disburthened of the awful secret;
whilst her friend hastened to her next neighbor, and retailed the story,
only with the addition of one more crow. The next edition of the legend
rose to four; and at last, when the story had gone round the gossips of
the village, a flock of forty crows were reported to have flown from the
poor man’s mouth; and there were not a few who remembered seeing the
black legion on the wing from the man’s window. The consequence of all
this was, that the poor husband found himself saddled with the very
questionable reputation of a wizard, and was obliged to call together
the village, and explain to them the true origin of the fable. On this
his wife and her confidantes were overwhelmed with ridicule and shame,
and the men of the village were the more impressed with the truth of the
cleric’s maxim.
“Did the old monk attempt a further interpretation of his ungallant
fable?” asked Herbert.
“Undoubtedly,” replied Lathom. “The unfortunate husband typified the
worldly man, who, thinking to do one foolish act without offence,
falls into a thousand errors, and has, at last, to purge his
conscience by a public confession.”
“Let us now pass on to Shakspeare’s plagiarisms,” said Herbert.
“Improvements—new settings of old jewels, which only heighten their
lustre—not plagiarisms,” replied Lathom. “King Lear dates back to
the Gesta. Theodosius of Rome occupies the place of the British
king; his child Theodosia is Shakspeare’s Cordelia.”
THE EMPEROR OF ROME AND HIS THREE DAUGHTERS.
Theodosius was emperor of Rome, mighty in power, and wise in counsel. He
had no son, but three daughters, whom he loved exceedingly. Now when
they were come of full age, the emperor called unto him the eldest and
said: “How much lovest thou me?”
“More than mine ownself,” replied the eldest.
“It is good,” rejoined her father; “thou shalt be rewarded for thy
love.”
So he married her unto a neighboring king of great power and wealth.
Then he sent for his second daughter, and asked her the same question.
“Even as I do myself,” was the reply.
At this the emperor was well pleased, and he kissed his child, and said:
“I will reward thee for this thy love.” So he married her unto one of
the greatest nobles of his realm.
At last he sent for his youngest daughter, and when she was come into
his presence, he asked her likewise how much she loved him.
Theodosia bowed her head, and bent her knee to her father, as she mildly
replied: “Even as my father deserveth.”
Then was the emperor hurt with her reply, and he said: “Lovest thou me
no more than this? thy reward shall be less than thy sisters.” So he
married her unto a poor but good lord, who was one of the lesser nobles
of his kingdom.
Time passed away, misfortune came upon the emperor, and his kingdom was
all but taken from him by the king of Egypt. Then said he to himself: “I
will appeal to my children.” So he wrote to his eldest daughter for aid.
“My lord, the king, I have here a letter from my father,” said the
eldest daughter to her husband, “he asketh help of us in his
misfortunes.”
“Is it not just that we should aid him?” replied the king; “we will
raise an army, and go and fight for him.”
“Nay, my lord,” rejoined his wife, “consider the expense; send my father
five knights to keep him company in his wanderings.”
“Alas, alas!” said the aged emperor when he read his eldest child’s
answer, “in her was my chief trust; she, that loved me more than
herself, hath done only this much, how then shall I trust the other
two?”
Then wrote he to the second daughter, who, when she read her father’s
letter, advised her husband to grant him food, lodging, and raiment,
during the time of his need. The emperor was sore grieved at this reply.
“Now have I tried my two daughters, and have found them wanting, let me
try the third,” so he wrote to his youngest child.
When the messenger brought the emperor’s letter to Theodosia, she wept
sorely as she read how that her father was driven from his capital, and
was become a wanderer in his own kingdom. Then went she to her husband
and said:
“Oh, my dear lord, by thy love towards me, succor me in this great
distress; my father is driven from his capital by the king of Egypt, and
even now wanders up and down his own kingdom, homeless and unattended.”
“As thou wiliest, Theodosia,” replied the noble, “so will I do.”
“Gather then a great army, raise again my father’s banner, and go, my
lord, fight for my father’s throne, and under God’s blessing thou shalt
conquer.”
Gladly the noble obeyed the wishes of his wife; gladly did he summon his
retainers and friends, and raise the royal standard. His example was all
that was required; numbers flocked to the royal standard, for they
wished well to the emperor, but lacked a leader. Then led he his forces
against the king of Egypt, and long and fierce was the battle; but at
length the emperor’s friends prevailed, the Egyptian was driven from the
land, and the emperor reseated on his throne. It was a happy day for his
people when Theodosius reascended his throne: round him stood all his
nobles, and on his right hand his youngest daughter, and on his left her
noble husband, to whom he was indebted for his restoration. Before his
footstool stood his other children and their husbands, and sought to do
him homage. But the emperor forbade them, and turning to his nobles he
said:
“The child that loved me but as I deserved, hath succored me in this my
time of trouble; the twain that professed to love me more abundantly,
have failed in the trial God ordained to them and to me. I pray ye, my
nobles and knights, to ratify this my wish. When I die, let the kingdom
pass to her and to her husband, for she succored her father and her
country; but for these other two, let them go hence.”
And the nobles and knights with one accord said: “It is well said; be it
so.”
“Is the Merchant of Venice among the list of plots borrowed from the
Gesta?” asked Herbert.
“It is inscribed as a debtor to two tales: to the one, for the
incident of the bond; to the other, for that of the three caskets.”
“I thought,” said Frederick Thompson, “the incident of Shylock’s
bond came from the Italian of Fiorentino, a novelist of the
fourteenth century.”
“It is found there, and is generally translated from his work in the
preface to the play, but is also found, in almost the same words, in
the English Gesta, in the story of Selestinus, the Wise Emperor, who
had a Fair Daughter.”
“You claim also the incident of the Three Caskets.”
“I claim one form of it for my old monks in the story of The
Carpenter and the Owner of the Lost Treasure, and another form in
the tale found in the English Gesta of the emperor Anselmus.”
“What is the legend of the carpenter?” asked Herbert.
“He is supposed to have found some gold, and to be doubting whether
he should restore it to its owner, whom chance has led to the
carpenter’s cottage in his inquiries after his lost treasure. To
satisfy his mind he makes three cakes; one he fills with earth,
another with bones, and the third has a piece of gold within it. On
giving his guest the choice, the traveller is led by the weight to
choose the one full of earth, and claiming a portion of that
containing bones, should the first not satisfy his hunger, he gives
the lightest to his host. Thus convinced that the man does not
deserve his lost treasure, the carpenter drives him from his hut,
and distributes the money to the poor.”
“This is but a slight hint,” said Herbert; “the choice is exactly
contrary to that of the play.”
“In the latter story, whether original or copied, the choice is
identical with that in the Merchant of Venice. The moral the writer
intended to read was the deceitfulness of outward appearances.”
“The old proverb,” suggested Thompson, “all is not gold that
glitters.”
“I will read now the form of the story in the English Gesta.”
THE TALE OF THE THREE CASKETS.
Centuries have passed since Anselmus reigned in Rome, whose empress was
the fair daughter of the king of Jerusalem, and gracious in the sight of
every man. Long had they lived happily together, but were not blest with
a child, to comfort their lives, and to inherit their power and honors.
And it came to pass that as the emperor walked in his garden, he
bethought him of the constant wars of the king of Ampluy, his neighbor,
who ceased not to trouble him, because he had no son to defend his
dominions. And as he walked and mused, he looked on the moon, and fell
into a trance, and dreamed a dream, how that the morning was very
bright, and the moon looked paler on the one side than on the other. And
then there flew towards him a bird of two colors; two beasts came and
stood by the bird, and warmed the little creature with their heat. And
lo, other beasts, mighty and terrible, came, and bowed themselves before
the little bird, and went their way; and then followed these many other
birds of bright plumage and sweet song, and they sang pleasantly, and
waked the emperor.
Anselmus was troubled with his dream, and he called for his wise men,
his nobles, and his counsellors, and told them of his vision, and sought
from them the interpretation of his dream. When the wise men, the
nobles, and the counsellors had considered of these things, they spoke
cheerfully unto the king.
“Sire,” said they, “the vision betokens good to the empire, its glory
shall be clearer than it is. The loss of color in the moon prefigures
the loss of strength to our empress when a child is born unto you. The
little bird is this child, our prince. The two beasts that warmed him,
are the good and the great of our empire, who will give of their
substance to sustain and cherish their prince. And whilst the other
nations, mighty and strong, shall bow down before him, as the beasts did
in the vision, so shall our people rejoice and sing with exceeding joy,
as the birds sang sweetly and pleasantly in thy dream. Such, O king, is
the interpretation of the vision.”
Exceeding glad was the emperor at these words, and his joy was the more
increased when a son was born unto him, according to the words of the
wise men.
When the king of Ampluy heard of the birth of the prince, he was afraid,
remembering the wrong he had done to Anselmus, and foreseeing the
vengeance he would experience from the prince when he should come of age
and lead the armies of his father. So he turned his mind to peace, and
wrote humbly unto the emperor. When Anselmus read the king’s letter he
replied in peaceful terms, and promised him his protection and
friendship, if he would give securities for his conduct, and acknowledge
his sovereignty by a small tribute.
King Ampluy read the emperor’s letter to his council, and prayed their
counsel as touching the matter. Then said the counsellors: “The
emperor’s words are good, and to be obeyed. As for the surety that he
asks; is there not to our lord one daughter, a maiden fair and goodly
withal, and is there not to the emperor one son, a noble prince?
Contract, therefore, marriage between thy child and his, that there may
be a perpetual peace.”
The king obeyed the advice of his counsellors; he wrote their words unto
the emperor, who received them gladly, and the marriage contract was
signed.
So the king sent his child by sea to the emperor’s court. The ship was a
great ship, with fair masts, and able pilots, glittering with gay
pennants and costly ornaments, and it bore a goodly company of nobles,
knights, and titled dames, with many and rich presents to do honor to
the marriage of the maiden and the prince.
And it came to pass that as they sailed towards Rome, a storm rose, and
drove the ship hither and thither over the waves, until she brake
against a rock, and sank into the waters. And all they that were in her
were drowned, save the daughter of the king, who put her trust in God
and was saved. At length the storm abated, and the ship, broken and
helpless, rose from beneath the waves and floated. But, lo, a great
whale followed after the ship, to swallow up it and the maiden. So the
maiden struck a light, and lighted a fire, that terrified the whale,
which dared not to approach the ship for fear of the fire. At break of
dawn, she fell asleep, for she was weary of watching; and as she slept,
the fire ceased for want of fuel, and the whale came and devoured the
maiden.
When she awoke, darkness was around her on every side, for she was in
the belly of the whale; but she feared not, but struck with the stone
until the fire came, and thrust with a knife into the sides of the
whale, that he made towards the shore, for he felt that he was wounded.
In that country dwelt a noble, a servant of the emperor, who for his
recreation walked on the shore the time the whale was making towards the
land. When he saw the monster, he turned homeward, summoned his
servants, and returning to the shore fought with the whale until it was
sore wounded and like to die. And even as they smote the fish, the
maiden cried with a loud voice from within the whale:
“Mercy, gentle friends; mercy on me, for I am a king’s daughter.”
Wondering greatly at these words, the noble hauled the fish ashore, and
opening the side of the whale, released the lady from her prison. And
when he heard her story, he pitied her sore, and took her to his own
castle to comfort her until he could convey her to the court of the
emperor.
When Anselmus heard of the maiden’s safety, he rejoiced greatly, and
came to her, and had compassion on her.
“Fair maiden,” said the emperor, “sorely as thou hast been tried, and
great woe as thou hast suffered for the love of my son, still must thou
endure another trial ere thou be proclaimed worthy to be his wife! Let
the caskets be brought hither.”
Then the king’s servants brought three caskets. The first was of pure
gold, richly set about with precious stones; but within was full of dead
men’s bones. On this was inscribed: “WHOSO CHOOSETH ME SHALL FIND WHAT
HE DESERVETH.” The second casket was made of fine silver, filled with
earth and worms; and its inscription was: “WHOSO CHOOSETH ME SHALL FIND
THAT WHICH HIS NATURE DESIRETH.” But the last vessel was made of lead,
and without was dull and useless; but within were precious stones. On
this casket was written: “WHOSO CHOOSETH ME SHALL FIND THAT WHICH GOD
HATH DISPOSED FOR HIM.”
Then said the emperor: “Maiden, look on these three vessels, they be
rich vessels; if thou choose that wherein is profit to thee and to
others, then thou shalt marry my son; but if thou choose that in which
is no profit to thee or to others, then in peace return to thy father.”
The king’s daughter lifted up her hands to God, and prayed for his grace
in the hour of her trial. First she looked upon the golden casket, and
as she read the words of its inscription, she said: “Full, precious, and
gay, art thou, O casket, but I know not what is within; therefore, dear
lord, I choose not this.”
Then looked she on the silver casket, and its inscription, “Whoso
chooseth me shall find that which his nature desireth.” “Alas!” said the
maiden, “I know not what is herein; but this I know, that I shall
therein find that which my nature desireth, even the wickedness of the
flesh. Casket of silver, I will have none of thee.”
Lastly she looked on the leaden casket.
“Poor art thou, O casket, to look upon, and yet thy inscription giveth
comfort; thou promisest, ‘that which God hath disposed’; and God never
disposeth any thing harmful; by his permission, I take thee, O casket.”
Then cried the emperor: “Well done, thou fair and good maiden; open thy
casket, for it is full of precious gifts. Well hast thou chosen.”
Then appointed he the day of the wedding; and the maiden and the prince
were married with great solemnity, and with much honor among all the
nation lived they until their lives’ end.
“Your title is, I think, perfected,” said Herbert.
“And yet there are those that can put in an earlier claim,” said
Lathom.
“An earlier claim; how far back then would you carry it?”
“Nearly to the eighth century; one link between the East and the
West. Damascenus, the Greek monk, who wrote the spiritual romance of
Barlaam and Josaphat, makes the hermit Barlaam, late the king of a
brother monarch, who commanded four chests to be made, two covered
with gold, and two overlaid with pitch, and bound with common cords.
In the former he placed dead men’s bones, in the latter jewels,
gold, and precious ointments. He then gave his courtiers the choice;
and when they chose the golden coffers, the king said: ‘I
anticipated your decision, for ye look with the eyes of sense. To
discern the good or evil that lies within, we must look with the
eyes of the mind.’ Then he opened the chests, and showed his
courtiers their error.”
“It is that kind of tale that would be most acceptable to all
writers,” said Herbert.
“The general use they have made of it, in one form or other, is
evidence of its popularity. Boccaccio has dressed it up under the
story of The King and Signor Rogiero, and Gower has versified it,
filling the unlucky chest with earth, stone, and rubbish, instead of
men’s bones. To-morrow evening, I will give you some more instances
of this kind of conversion of the old monks’ stories.”
[Illustration]
CHAPTER V.
The Probable Author of the Gesta—Modern Conversions—Parnell
and Schiller—THE ANGEL AND THE HERMIT—The Poet’s
Improvements—FULGENTIUS AND THE WICKED STEWARD—Irving’s Vision in
the Museum—The Claims of the Old Writers on the New.
“On what nation have the antiquaries endeavored to fix the
authorship of these tales?” replied Herbert.
“Here doctors disagree: Wharton contends for a Poitevin prior of the
Benedictine convent of St. Eloi at Paris: whilst Douce argues for a
German origin, because in the moralization attached to one tale
there is a German proverb, and in another the names of some dogs are
partly German, partly Saxon.”
“Might not this arise from the pen of a translator or adapter?”
suggested Thompson.
“More than probably it did. The fact of the scenes in one or two of
the tales being laid in England, may tend to show that the copy in
which they appear was prefaced by a writer of that country: as the
introduction of the German proverb would lead us to suppose that the
editor of that copy was a German.”
“Is it not probable,” said Herbert, “that this book may have been a
mere collection of the popular tales of the age in which it was
written, confined to no particular country, drawn from every
available source; thus leaving to the reputed author, the task of
arrangement and transcription, rather than of origination?”
“It is now useless to endeavor to determine this point: as in the
history of fiction it is far more easy to upset prior theories, than
to set up new ones,” replied Lathom.
“Whose conversions, as you kindly denominate them, do you propose
illustrating this evening?” asked Thompson.
“Parnell and Schiller,” rejoined Lathom, “The Lay of the Hermit, and
The Ballad of Fridolin. We will begin with Parnell.”
THE ANGEL AND THE HERMIT.
Far in a wild, unknown to public view, in a cell which he had hollowed
out with his own hands on the edge of an open down, from youth to age a
reverend hermit grew. The neighboring lord’s shepherd was wont to feed
his sheep on short but sweet pasture of the hermit’s down.
One day the poor shepherd, fatigued with watching, fell asleep, and a
robber came and stole the lord’s flock. When he awoke, he discovered the
loss, and stoutly maintained that the sheep had been stolen, but the
lord would not believe the shepherd, and commanded him to be put to
death.
The hermit saw the deed, and thus communed with himself:
“Merciful God, seest thou what this man hath done, and how the innocent
suffers for the guilty? Why permittest thou these things? If injustice
is to triumph, why remain I here? Verily I will re-enter the world, and
do as other men do.”
Impressed with these thoughts, the hermit left his cell, and wandered
back to the world and the abodes of men, and on his way, an angel, sent
from God, met him, and being in the form of a traveller, he joined
himself to the hermit, and asked him which way he journeyed.
“To the city that lieth before us,” rejoined the hermit.
“I will accompany you,” replied his companion; “I am an angel sent from
God, to be the associate of your wanderings.”
So they walked onwards to the city. When they entered the gates, they
sought the house of a soldier, and entreated him, by God’s love, to give
them harborage during the night. The veteran complied with cheerfulness,
and spared not of the best of his substance, for the entertainment of
the travellers. The hospitable soldier had but one child, an infant in
the cradle. And so it happened, that when supper was ended, the veteran
lighted the guests to his best chamber, and the angel and the hermit
retired to rest. About midnight the hermit awoke, and saw the angel rise
from the bed, enter the chamber where the infant slept, and strangle it
with his own hands.
“Surely,” said the hermit to himself, “this cannot be an angel of God;
did not the good soldier give us every thing that we required? and now,
lo, the only child that he had, is slain by this, his guest.” And yet he
feared to reprove his companion.
With the morning, the hermit and the angel arose, and sought a
neighboring city, where they found a hospitable reception in the house
of one of its chief persons. This man had a valuable drinking cup of
gold, which the angel purloined during the night, but the hermit yet was
silent, for he feared more than he doubted. On the morrow the travellers
continued their journey, and on their way they came to a river, over
which was a bridge thrown. They ascended the bridge, and met, midway, a
poor and aged pilgrim.
“My friend,” said the angel to the old man, “show us the way to yonder
city.”
As the pilgrim turned him to show the angel the road, he seized him by
the shoulders, and cast the old man headlong into the river that ran
beneath.
“Alas, alas!” cried the hermit to himself, “it is the Evil One himself.
Why? what evil had the poor man done?” and yet, with all his thoughts,
the hermit feared to give utterance to his fears.
About the hour of vespers, the travellers reached another city, in which
they sought shelter for the night; but the master of the house refused
them rudely.
“For the love of heaven,” said the angel, “spare us of thy house for
shelter against the wolves and other wild beasts.”
“That,” rejoined the man, “is my pigsty, lie ye there, if it so please
ye; for ye come no other whither.”
“Necessity,” replied the angel, “forces us to accept your ungracious
offer.”
On the morrow, the angel called the host, and said, “Friend, I give you
this goblet,” presenting to him the cup he had stolen from his former
host.
“Now,” said the hermit, “know I that this is no angel; doth he not
reward evil for good, and good for evil? No longer will I travel with
you; fare thee well, I commend thee to God.”
“Dear friend,” rejoined the angel, “hear me ere you depart. Whilst thou
wert in thy hermitage, the lord of the flock unjustly slew his careless
but innocent servant. For his innocence he will be in a fit state to
enter another world; but had he lived, he would have fallen into sin,
and died before repentance could have followed. Eternal punishment shall
follow them who stole the sheep; but repentance and acts of faith shall
repair the error which the owner of the flock committed in his
ignorance. Truly the soldier was hospitable, but he loved his son
overmuch; ere then, he was charitable and merciful, but on the birth of
his child he grew parsimonious and covetous, that he might leave a
fortune to his son. With his child’s death hath returned his Christian
virtues to his parent. Before that cup was made, which I stole from our
host who owned it, there was not a more abstemious person in this world;
but with that cup came the love of indulgence and inebriety. I took away
the temptation, and our host is once more abstemious. Again, I cast the
poor pilgrim into the river. He whom I drowned was a good Christian; but
had he proceeded further, he would have fallen into mortal sin: now he
is saved and is reigning in heaven. Neither did I bestow the cup on the
unhospitable citizen without reason: he gave us his swine’s house; he
has received his reward—the temptation of gluttony and pleasure. Guard,
therefore, thy lips; detract not from the Almighty; to him all things
are known.”
At these words, the hermit fell at the feet of the angel, and besought
his pardon. It was acceded to him, and he returned to his hermitage a
wiser and a better Christian.
“Admitting, of course, the identity of the main incidents, Parnell
must have the credit of heightening those he has used with many
masterly touches of poetic coloring, and of a happier arrangement of
circumstances,” said Herbert, who had been following the story in
the poet’s works.
“Many indeed are the proofs of his genius and address in the
treatment of the subject,” said Lathom. “And no one more striking,
than his delaying the discovery of the angelic nature of the
visitant until the close of the story; and thus introducing a
beautiful description and interesting surprise.”
“Read us the part,” said Thompson.
“It is where the angel has just thrown the guide into the river—
“‘Wild, sparkling rage inflames the hermit’s eyes,
He bursts the bands of fear, and madly cries,
Detested wretch—but scarce his speech began,
When the strange partner seem’d no longer man.
His youthful face grew more serenely sweet;
His robe turn’d white, and flow’d upon his feet;
Fair rounds of radiant points invest his hair;
Celestial odors breathe thro’ purple air;
And wings, whose colors glitter’d on the day,
Wide at his back their gradual plumes display.
The form ethereal bursts upon his sight,
And moves in all the majesty of light.’”
“Do you suppose that the Gesta was known to the poet?” asked
Frederick Thompson.
“Hardly—he is far more likely to have taken the incidents of his
poem from the Divine Dialogues of the Platonist Moore; who affixes
to his version of the tale some reflections well worth reading. ‘The
affairs of this world,’ says the old Platonist, ‘are like a curious
but intricately contrived comedy; and we cannot judge of the
tendency of what is past—or acting at present, before the entrance
of the last act, which shall bring in righteousness in triumph; who
though she hath abided many a brunt, and has been very cruelly and
despitefully used in the world, yet at last, according to our
desires, we shall see the knight overcome the giant.’ ... But
impatiently to call for vengeance upon every enormity before that
time, is rudely to overturn the stage before the entrance of the
fifth act, out of ignorance of the plot of the comedy; and to
prevent the solemnity of the general judgment, by more paltry and
particular executions.”
“Thanks for the old Platonist’s remarks,” said Herbert. “I could
have wished them more elaborate, were not Schiller’s Fridolin
waiting for the conclusion of them, to come upon our stage.”
“I will give you, then, one form of Schiller’s ballad.”
FULGENTIUS AND THE WICKED STEWARD.
When Martin was emperor of Rome, his uncle Malitius was steward of his
household, and his nephew Fulgentius, his only sister’s son, an orphan,
was his constant attendant, his cup-bearer at meals, and his page of his
chamber. For Martin loved his nephew, and was kind to him; and regarded
him as his own child, for he was not a father. Malitius hated this
Fulgentius; seeing that if he should succeed to the kingdom, his own son
would lose that crown which he had so long regarded as his by right of
inheritance. Day and night he thought how he might cause Martin to
discard Fulgentius.
“My lord,” said he with a face of assumed distress, one day to the
emperor, “it is with great pain, my lord, that I speak unto you, but in
that I am thy true servant, it is my duty to warn my sovereign of any
thing that lessens his honor and repute.”
“Speak on,” said the emperor.
“Will my lord,” rejoined the steward with apparent anxiety, “keep what I
shall tell him a secret between him and me?”
“If thou wishest it, Malitius,” said the emperor.
“Oh, my dear lord, how ungrateful is the world,” began the steward.
“Well, well, that is as it may be,” rejoined the emperor; “but to your
secret, the sun is rising high in the heavens, and my horses wait me.”
“Your nephew, Fulgentius—”
“Ha!” said Martin, “Fulgentius; what of him?”
“I grieve to say, my lord, he most ungratefully defames you among his
companions, speaking ill of your habits, and especially of your breath,
and saying that it is death to him to serve you.”
“If I could but prove this,” muttered the emperor.
“Remark him, my lord, when he next serves you with the cup, and if he
turns away his head when he gives you the goblet, be sure that he so
accuses, and thus endeavors to make the bystanders believe that his
accusation is true.”
“It is well,” replied the emperor; “go, good Malitius, we will remember
your advice.”
Then went the steward unto Fulgentius, and spoke kindly to him, and
professed, as a friend and a near relative, to warn him how nearly he
was about to lose the good wishes of Martin, and perhaps forfeit his
succession to the throne.
“Fulgentius, my dear relative,” said he with a fawning smile, “thy
breath is sadly displeasing to the emperor, and he talks of removing you
from near attendance on his person.”
“Oh! good sir,” replied the youth, “can this be true?”
“Alas! I fear it is so. I have experienced it myself; but be sure it is
merely temporary ill health, it will soon pass off.”
“And before then I shall have lost my uncle’s good opinion. What shall I
do, Malitius?”
“There is but one thing,” replied the steward; “when you hand the cup to
the emperor, turn away your head from him; then will he not be
incommoded by your breath, and will see that you do your best to please
him.”
“Thanks, good Malitius. Your advice has made me feel happy.”
“Thy happiness be thy ruin,” muttered Malitius to himself as he turned
away.
That day Fulgentius attended on his uncle at dinner; and as he handed to
him the cup he held it far off, and turned away his face, lest he should
distress the emperor.
“Wretch!” cried the emperor, at the same time striking Fulgentius on the
breast; “now know I that it is true what I have heard of thee; go, go
from my sight, thou varlet, I thought to have made thee a king; but now
see my face no more.”
Sorely wept Fulgentius as he passed from the hall, amid the jeers and
scoffs of his former companions; for he was now disgraced, and they
cared not for him.
“Malitius,” said the emperor, “let thy son supply the place of this
ingrate. Come, my good lord, counsel me how I may rid myself of this
varlet, that disgraces me before the world.”
“Sire, this would I propose; some miles from this city your workmen burn
lime in a vast forge in the forest; send to them this night, and bid
them cast into their furnace whoever first comes to them to-morrow
morning, and asks of them ‘Have you performed the emperor’s will?’ Call
also Fulgentius to thee, and bid him early on the morrow go to the
lime-burners, and ask them whether they have fulfilled your commands;
then will they cast him into the fire, and his evil words will perish
with him.”
And the emperor did so. He bade Fulgentius be at the kilns before
sunrise; and that night sent a horseman to the lime-burners, bidding
them burn the first man that on the morrow should inquire of them
whether they had performed the emperor’s will.
Long before sunrise Fulgentius rose from his sleepless couch, and
hastened to perform his uncle’s commands, hoping by this means to regain
the good-will of the emperor. As he went on his way with a heavy heart,
and drew near to the wood within the depths of which the lime-burners
dwelt, the sound of the matin bell of a neighboring chapel arrested his
steps. The tones of the bell seemed to bring peace to his troubled mind,
and he turned from the path towards the way-side chapel, and offered up
his prayers and thanksgivings to his God. But as the service was ending,
the fatigue he had undergone disposed him to rest himself; so he sat
himself down in the porch of the chapel and fell asleep.
“Poor child,” said the good priest as he passed through the porch, “thou
lookest wearied and careworn; sleep on, no one shall disturb thee.” When
he awoke the sun was going down in the heaven.
Malitius was as sleepless during the night as the poor youth, and his
anxiety drove him early from his bed, and suffered him not to be at
peace all the day. Now when it was noon the steward could no longer
remain in the palace, but he hastened to the lime-kilns, and demanded of
the lime-burners “whether they had performed the emperor’s will.”
“Not yet,” cried they, with hoarse voices, “but no fear, master; it
shall be done forthwith.”
With these words, the men seized Malitius, and hurried with him in their
arms to the mouth of the kiln.
“Mercy, mercy, good sirs,” cried the steward, “it is Fulgentius you
should burn; not me.”
“Ha! ha!” laughed the lime-burners; “we know neither thee nor
Fulgentius; thou art the first man that has come here this day and asked
us: ‘Whether we have done the emperor’s will’; so peace, man, peace. Ha!
ha! his will is done.”
So Malitius died in the fire.
It was past noon when Fulgentius awoke, and the sun was going down in
its course.
“Alas! alas!” he said, “I have delayed to perform my lord’s will.”
And he hastened through the wood, and came to the lime-kilns.
“What wantest thou, boy?” asked the chief of the lime-burners.
“Tell me, tell me, sirs,” asked Fulgentius, anxiously, “hast thou
performed the command of the emperor?”
“Ay, my lad, right well; come, look into the furnace—and see, his bones
yet burn.”
“His bones; whose bones, sirs?” asked Fulgentius, aghast with fear.
Then they told him all that had been commanded them, and how Malitius
coming first to the lime-kilns had been cast into the fire and burnt.
“Thanks be to God,” said the youth, devoutly kneeling, “who hath saved
me from this terrible death.” With these words he bade the burners
farewell, and returned to his uncle’s palace.
“Ha!” said the emperor, when Fulgentius bowed himself before his uncle’s
throne, “thou here, sir varlet; hast thou not been to my lime-burners?”
“Verily, my lord, I have been there and performed thy commandment; but
before I came your will had been performed.”
“Performed,” rejoined the emperor, “how performed? Malitius; is he not
here?”
“No, my lord, he is burnt in the lime-kiln,” replied the youth; “he came
first to the kiln, and the burners obeyed your commands, and he is dead,
and I have escaped. But, O my dear uncle, how couldst thou contrive such
a death for thy poor nephew?” and he wept bitterly.
Then did they each declare to the other the deceits of the wicked
steward; and the emperor raised up the youth, and acknowledged him
before all his people as his very true and good nephew, his heir and
successor to the throne; rendering thanks to God who had preserved the
uncle from so deadly a sin against his relative, and the nephew from so
horrible a death.
“The German poet has been equally successful in his amendments with
Parnell,” said Herbert.
“In none more so,” said Thompson, “than in substituting in the place
of the unpleasant bodily affection, the more courtly failing of
jealousy excited in the mind of the knight by the malice of the
huntsman Robert.”
“Was it then from this old book, or from some similar tradition of
his own country, that Schiller obtained his incidents?” asked
Herbert.
“It is impossible to determine; it is said that Schiller learnt his
plot from an Alsatian legend that he heard at Manheim; and yet the
similarity of the incident renders it more than probable that the
poet was acquainted with this form of the tale. The story as it
appears in the monks’ books, and the tradition of Alsatia, most
probably started from the same original, which, being immediately
written down by the monk, we now have in its original form. The
tradition went on from mouth to mouth, and became gradually varied
to suit the popular feelings.”
“Your instances of conversion, Lathom,” said Thompson, “remind me of
Washington Irving’s vision in the library of the British Museum,
when all the old writers leapt down from their shelves and despoiled
the moderns of the patchwork garments, made of the shreds of
countless writers, and left them plucked of their borrowed plumes.”
“Nay,” replied Lathom, “rather of those few who had borrowed gems
from the writers of old, and by new setting and repolishing so
improved their original lustre that the former owner was eager to
tender his thanks to his modern adapter, who had renewed his
long-lost glories.”
“I am afraid your old monks would have had as many to pluck of their
borrowed plumes as to compliment on their ingenuity as working
jewellers,” said Thompson.
“The process of recovery would be curious in some cases,” said
Herbert: “the modern adapter would have to settle with Lydgate or
Gower; the old poet would resign his title to the middle-age monk or
chronicler; and he perhaps be finally stripped of his gem by some
Eastern fabler.”
“Be sure that Shakspeare, Parnell, and Schiller would meet with more
thanks than reproaches,” was Lathom’s reply, as he closed his book
for that evening.
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER VI.
Curiosities of the Gesta—THE WICKED PRIEST—The Qualities of the
Dog—THE EMPEROR’S DAUGHTER—Curious Application—THE EMPEROR LEO AND
THE THREE IMAGES—An Enigma.
“The use Shakespeare has made of your monks’ tales would seem to
augur a certain popularity of the work in the days in which he
wrote,” said Herbert, when the friends met on their sixth evening.
“A greater popularity than will now be credited: in the reign of
Elizabeth and her successor, the Gesta Romanorum seems to have been
sufficiently well known to admit of a frequent reference to it on
the stage,” replied Lathom.
“Allusions to the work, not incidents from it?” asked Herbert.
“Yes, in the anonymous comedy of Sir Giles’ Goose Cap, published
early in James’ reign, one of the characters speaks of the ‘quips
and quick jests of his lordship as so good that Gesta Romanorum were
nothing to them’; whilst Chapman in his ‘May-Day,’ which dates in
1611, says, ‘one that has read Marcus Aurelius, Gesta Romanorum, and
the Mirror of Magistrates, to be led by the nose like a blind bear
that has read nothing!’”
“The slightest knowledge of the accomplishments of the Tudor and
early Stuart times compels us to admit the extensive acquaintance
with Latin writers possessed by classes to whom now they seem so
little fitted,” remarked Herbert.
“An acquaintance arising in all probability from the absence of a
native literature, as well as from the position held by the Latin
language in that age; the French of the present generation,”
rejoined Thompson.
“Whose conversions have we to-night?” asked Herbert.
“Not any: not that my catalogue is run out, but partly because I
have not been able to keep up with the speed of our reading; and
partly because I wished to illustrate the moralizations attached to
the tales, which we have lately rather lost sight of.”
“What peculiar doctrine are you intending to illustrate?” asked
Herbert.
“The 26th article of our Church, that the effect of the ordinance is
not taken away, nor the grace of God’s gifts diminished by the
ministration of evil men; it is the story of
“THE WICKED PRIEST.”
In the reign of Otho there was a certain wicked priest who created much
dissatisfaction among his parishioners; and many were extremely
scandalized. One of them, in particular, always absented himself from
the mass when it was the turn of this priest to celebrate it. Now it
happened on a festival day, during the time of mass, that as this person
was walking alone through a meadow, a sudden thirst came upon him,
insomuch that he was persuaded, unless present relief could be obtained,
he should die.
In this extremity continuing his walk, he discovered a rivulet of the
purest water, of which he copiously drank; but the more he drank the
more violent became his thirst. Surprised at so unusual a circumstance,
he said to himself:
“I will find out the source of this rivulet, and there will I satisfy my
thirst.”
With these thoughts he went up the stream. And as he went a venerable
old man met and asked him whither he was going.
“Father,” he replied, “I am oppressed with an unquenchable thirst, and
even now I drank of this rivulet; and lo, the more I drink, so much the
more I thirst; and I now seek its source, if, perchance, I may there
quench my thirst, and not die.”
The old man pointed with his finger: “There,” said he, “is the
spring-head of the rivulet. But tell me, my honest friend, why are you
not at church, and, with other good Christians, hearing mass?”
“Truly, master,” answered the man, “our priest leads such an execrable
life that I think it utterly impossible that he should celebrate it so
as to please God.”
“Suppose what you say is true,” replied the old man; “observe this
fountain, from which so much excellent water issues, and from which you
have so lately drunk.”
He looked in the direction pointed out, and beheld a putrid dog, with
its mouth wide open, and its teeth black and decayed, through which the
whole fountain gushed in a surprising manner. The man regarded the
stream with terror and confusion of mind, ardently desirous of quenching
his thirst, but apprehensive of poison from the fetid and loathsome
carcass, with which, to all appearance, the water was imbued.
“Be not afraid,” said the old man, observing his repugnance, “thou hast
already drank of the rivulet, drink again; it will not harm thee.”
Encouraged by these assurances, and impelled by the intensity of his
thirst, he partook of it once more, and instantly recovered from the
drought.
“Master, dear master,” exclaimed the man, “never man drank of such
delicious water.”
“See now,” the old man answered, “as this water, gushing through the
mouth of a putrid dog, is neither polluted, nor loses aught of its
natural taste or color, so is the celebration of the mass by a worthless
minister; and, therefore, though the vices of such men may displease and
disgust, yet should you not forsake the duties of which they are the
appointed organ.”
Saying these words, the old man disappeared; and what the other had seen
he communicated to his neighbors, and ever after punctually attended
mass. He brought this unstable and transitory life to a good end, and
passed from that which is corruptible to inherit incorruption.
“There is but one fiction,” said Herbert, “in this legend which
requires further explanation; why the stream of the fountain of life
is made to flow through the rank jaws of a putrid dog rather than
that of any other animal.”
“The incident is intentional,” rejoined Lathom; “an old couplet
ascribes to the dog four special qualities: a healing tongue, a
distinguishing sense of smell, a perfect love, and unremitting
watchfulness.”
“You allude to the lines—
“‘In cane bis bina sunt, et lingua medicina,
Naris odoratus, amor integer, atque latratus,’”
said Thompson.
“Yes,” rejoined Lathom, “these four qualities, say the old writers,
ought to be diligently cultivated by a priest. By his tongue he
should heal the sick at heart, and probe the wounds of sin, careful
not to heal with roughness the soul’s wounds, but to lick them as
the dog does those of the body. His keenness of perception should be
able to distinguish the true confession from the false one; to see
what is due to cunningness, what to internal struggles, what to
reckless contempt of consequences. He, too, should have as unshaken
a love for the Church and the faith as the dog for its master or its
charge; ready to lay down his life for his flock. As the watch-dog
of the great King, his warning voice must be raised against enemies
from without, preventing, by his diligence in his calling, the
machinations of the world and its master against the soul.”
“The mass is a slight anachronism in the reign of Otho,” said
Herbert.
“You must not mind such trifles. Otho has as little to do with the
wicked priest, as Pompey, whether the great or an unknown namesake
of his, with the incidents of the story of
“THE EMPEROR’S DAUGHTER.”
Many centuries ago there reigned a great and good emperor, whose name
was Pompey. He had an only daughter, of remarkable beauty, whom he loved
so dearly, that day and night he ordered five of his most valiant
knights to watch over her; and on pain of their lives to guard her from
harm. Day and night did these brave men keep watch and ward over the
lady’s chamber. A lamp burned above the door, that the approach of an
enemy might be more readily detected; and a faithful mastiff lay on the
threshold, whose watchfulness was as unremitting as his bark was loud
and shrill. But all these precautions were fruitless. The princess loved
the world and its pleasures; and sighed to mingle in its busy scenes,
and gaze upon its gorgeous pageants. One day as she looked from her
window a certain duke rode by, and he looked upon her beauty, and loved
her with a false love.
Day after day did the duke endeavor to withdraw the princess from her
guardians, and numerous were the devices by which he sought to
accomplish his designs upon her and her father’s throne. At length by
the promise of unbounded pleasure, the duke persuaded the princess to
overturn the lamp that burned at her chamber door, and to poison the dog
that lay at her threshold.
That same night, when the lamp was quenched, and the mastiff silenced,
the duke stole upon the guard and bore away with him the maiden.
On the morrow, great was the confusion at the emperor’s court. Men rode
hither and thither in pursuit of the fugitives, for no one knew which
way they had fled. One knight alone hit upon their track; a great and
terrible knight he was, the emperor’s champion; and he came upon them
and slew the duke, and brought the maiden back to her father.
Very wroth was the emperor with his daughter, and he left her to bewail
her sins in solitude. Time and reflection brought repentance, and the
princess bewailed her sins bitterly.
Now there was a good old man at Pompey’s court, who was ever ready to
intercede with the emperor on behalf of penitent offenders, and to whose
words Pompey listened willingly. This lord came to the emperor and told
him of his daughter’s repentance; and his words were pleasant to the
emperor, so that the father was reconciled to his child, and she was
betrothed by him to a nobleman of worth and power.
Many and precious were the bridal gifts the princess received.
The good old lord gave her a robe of the finest and richest wool, on
which was worked this moral: “I have raised thee up, beware how thou
fall again.” He gave her also a ring, of which the legend was: “What
have I done? How much? Why?”
From her father she received a golden coronet, on which was engraved:
“Thy dignity is from me.”
From the king’s champion, who rescued her from her seducer, she received
a ring, and the legend was: “I have loved thee, do thou return my love.”
The king’s son gave her a ring, and on it was written: “Thou art noble,
despise not thy nobility.” Whilst on that which her brother presented to
her was engraved: “Approach, fear not, I am thy brother.”
The last gift was from her husband, a golden signet that confirmed her
inheritance, and which bore this motto: “Now thou art espoused, be
faithful.”
The princess received these gifts with gratitude, and parted not with
them but with her life.
“The meanings of some of these presents are clearly too recondite to
be guessed at,” remarked Herbert on the conclusion of the tale.
“You will say so, when we read them. But first of the actors in the
tale,” rejoined Lathom, “the emperor is _our Heavenly Father_, and
his daughter, the _human soul_ which he delivers to the _five
senses_, armed by the powers of baptism, to guard from injury. The
burning lamp is the _will_, shining brilliantly in good works and
dispelling the gloom of sin. The watchful dog is _conscience_; as
often as the soul breaks any of the commands of God, it may be said
to look abroad on the world and its dangers. Then comes the devil,
the great seducer, whose triumph over the soul is easy, when the
lamp of the will is extinguished, and the barking of conscience is
silenced. Then God arises as our champion, and fights for us against
the world, the flesh, and the devil, and leads back the sinning soul
to the palace of the heavenly king. The sage Lord, the Mediator, is
our Saviour: ‘for he is our peace, who hath made both one.’”
“This is tolerably clear and probable,” said Thompson.
“The marriage presents will compensate for it. From him, continues
the moral, we received the aforesaid gifts: first a cloak descending
to the ankle, that is, his most precious skin; and said to be of
delicate texture, because it was woven with stripes, blood, bruises,
and other various instances of malice; of which texture nothing more
is meant than this: ‘I have raised thee up, because I have redeemed
thee; do not throw thyself into further evil.’ That same Christ, our
king, gave to us a glorious crown, that is, when he submitted to be
crowned for our sakes. And of a truth, ‘thy dignity is from me,’
even from that crown. Christ is our champion, who gave us a
sign—that is, the hole in his right hand; and we ourselves can see
how faithfully it is written: ‘I have loved thee, do thou also
love.’ He gave us another ring, which is the puncture in his left
hand, where we see written: ‘What have I done? How much? Why?’ ‘What
have I done?’ I have despoiled myself, receiving the form of a
servant. ‘How much?’ I have made God and man. ‘Why?’ To redeem the
lost. Concerning these three, Zechariah xiii., ‘What are the wounds
in the middle of thy hands?’ and he answered, saying: ‘I am wounded
by these men in their house, who loved me.’ Christ is our brother,
and son of the Eternal King. He gave us a third ring,—to wit, the
hole in his right foot; and what can be understood by it, but, ‘Thou
art noble, despise not thy nobility?’ In like manner, Christ is our
brother-german. And he gave us a fourth ring, the puncture in his
left foot, on which is written, ‘Approach, fear not, I am thy
brother.’ Christ is also our spouse; he gave us a signet, with which
he confirmed our inheritance: that is, the wound made in his side by
the spear, on account of the great love with which he loved us. And
what can this signify, but, ‘Thou art joined to me through mercy.
Sin no more.’”
“You have established the character of the Gesta for recondite
moralization,” said Thompson, “will you give us a tale rather more
intelligible?”
“Willingly,” rejoined Lathom, “you shall have the tale that Gower
has versified.”
THE EMPEROR LEO AND THE THREE IMAGES.
A certain Roman emperor, Leo, was so fond of looking upon a pretty face,
that he made three fair female images, and placed them in a temple, that
all his subjects might look on them and worship. One statue stood with
its hand extended towards the worshippers, and bore on its finger a
golden ring, on which was the legend, “My finger is generous.” The
second figure had a beard of beaten gold, and on its brow was written:
“I have a beard; if any one be beardless, let him come to me, and I will
give him one.” The third figure had a cloak of gold and a purple tunic,
and on its breast was written, “I fear no one.” With so many temptations
came a law, that whosoever stole either the ring, the beard, or the
cloak, should surely die. A thief was soon found. According to the poet:
“There was a clerk, one Lucius,
A comely, famous man;
Of every wit some what he can,
Out-take that him lacketh rule,
His own estate to guide and rule—”
So he took to riotous living, “and was not wise in his doing”; _ergo_—
“After the need of his desert,
So fell this clerke in poverte.”
The thief, whether poor man or ruined clerk, removed the treasures, was
seen by the people, and brought before the emperor, on the charge of
breaking the royal edict.
But the thief said: “Good my lord—suffer me to speak.”
And the emperor said, “Speak on.”
Then said the man: “Lo, as I entered the temple of the three images, the
first image extended to me its finger, as though it would say, ‘Take
this ring’; but yet I doubted of its wishes, until I read the
superscription, ‘My finger is generous’; then knew I that it was the
pleasure of the statue to give the ring, and I obeyed and took it. Then
came I to the image with the beard of gold. Methinks the maker of this
had no beard; shall the creature be better than the creator? that were a
plain and manifest wrong. But still I was modest, and hesitated, until
the words of the inscription, ‘Let him that is beardless come to me, and
I will give him one,’ forbade me to refuse to supply my own wants by the
statue’s gift. As for the golden cloak, it was in pure charity that I
took it away. Stone is cold, and metal is cold; the image is of the
former, the cloak of the latter. In winter it was adding cold to cold,
in summer it was too heavy and warm for the season. Still should I have
forborne to rob the statue of its cloak, had I not seen the words, ‘I
fear no one.’ Such intolerable arrogance, in a woman too, was to be
punished. I took the cloak to humble the statue’s pride.” But all these
excuses were useless.
“Fair sir,” replied Leo, “do you not know the law, that he who robs the
statues shall die?—let the law be obeyed”; and it was as the emperor
said.
“Your tale reminds me strongly of the witticisms by which the elder
Dionysius justified his theft of the golden cloak of Jupiter and the
beard of Æsculapius,” said Herbert.
“What, when he exchanged the cold gold garment for the warm woollen
robe, and took off the beard of the son of the beardless?” remarked
Thompson; “but let us hear the moral.”
“The moral of this tale,” said Lathom, “is the least strained, and
perhaps the best of all the applications attached to the legends.
The emperor is God. The three images the three sorts of mankind in
whom God takes delight. The first image, with its extended hand and
proffered gift, is no bad symbol of the poor and simple of this
world, who prevail little among the great and powerful unless their
gift is ready in the extended hand.”
“Why fleecest thou the poor?” asks conscience. “May I not receive
the proffered gift when freely offered?” replies the wicked man.
“Did I not take it, men would laugh at me—to curb their tongues I
take.”
“A bitter and too often true lesson in all times and all nations,”
remarked Herbert. “We seldom want for a good excuse.”
“The second image,” continued Lathom, “is the symbol of those who
are raised to wealth by God’s especial blessing, and from whom the
wicked seek to take away their property by every pretext. ‘We are
bald,’ cry they; ‘we are poor; let us divide this man’s riches among
us.’”
“There were chartists in those days as well as now; levelling comes
natural to some minds,” said Thompson. “But to the third figure.”
“The image with the golden cloak,” continued Lathom, “represents the
good man in power and authority, who fears not the evil man,
encourages virtue, and eradicates vice. ‘He is proud; he is a
tyrant,’ cry the people; ‘we will not have this man to reign over
us.’ But, says the old monk, ‘The end of these men is according to
the law of the Lord, for they perish miserably.’”
“The old priest’s moral has so well satisfied me, that I am sorry
that our evening is come to a close,” said Herbert.
“Well—it must be so; but come,” replied Lathom, “you shall have an
enigma to discover. An emperor found a sarcophagus on which were
three circles with these words: ‘_I have expended—I have given—I
have kept—I have possessed—I do possess—I have lost—I am punished._’
Whilst on the front of the chest was written: ‘_What I have expended
I have; what I gave away I have._’ Read me this inscription.”
“Read it, read it,” remarked Thompson, with a smile; “‘it is very
easy to say, Read it, read it,’ as Liston used to say; ‘but do it,
do it’—that is a different matter. Well! it is a good night-cap at
the worst.”
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER VII.
Curiosities of the Gesta—Byrkes’ Epitaph—THE LAY OF THE LITTLE BIRD—OF
THE BURDENS OF THIS LIFE—Ancient Fairs—Winchester—Modern
Continental Fairs—Russia—Nischnei-Novgorod.
“We confess ourselves conquered,” said Herbert, when the next
evening was come; “your old monk’s learning is too recondite for
us.”
“First, then, comes ‘I have expended’: what?—my life—in judgment, in
advice, in authority. ‘I have given’—equipments to my servants and
warriors, charity to the needy. ‘I have kept’—exact justice. ‘I have
possessed’—a generous and true heart. ‘I do possess’—a hand to
bestow, to protect, to punish. ‘I have lost’—my folly, the
friendship of my foes, the desires of the flesh. ‘I am punished’—for
my sins.”
“So far, so good; but the most abstruse remains unexplained,” said
Thompson; “on the front of the sarcophagus was written: ‘What I have
expended, I have; what I gave away, I have.’ How do you read these
sayings?”
“I am afraid I cannot help you,” rejoined Lathom; “the story seems
to be defective at this point, and we must fall back on the
suggestions of the translator, of whom I have spoken before. Mr.
Swan refers the words ‘What I have expended, I have’ to a judicious
outlay of property, by which various benefits are reaped by the
expender in the persons of his descendants; whilst the other words,
‘What I have given away, I have,’ he explains of the thanks of the
poor and the blessings of heaven consequent on charitable gifts.”
“Your story reminds me of the old epitaph in Doncaster Church,” said
Herbert, “which Gough gives in these words:
“‘Howe, howe, who is heare?
I, Robert of Doncaster, and Margaret my feare (wife),
_That I spent, that I had_;
_That I gave, that I have_;
_That I left, that I lost_:
A.D. 1579.
Quoth Robertus Byrkes,
Who in this worlde
Did reygne three
Score yeares and seven
And yet lived not one?’”
“The three centre lines of his epitaph, indeed, bear a curious
likeness to some of the inscriptions on the sarcophagus; perhaps the
wise man who composed the epitaph may have seen your old monk’s
book, or heard its moralities in many an old pulpit exhortation in
his early days,” said Thompson.
“Coincidences are oftentimes just as remarkable as plagiarisms,”
said Herbert. “But come, Sir Tale-teller, What entertainment have
you for us this evening?”
“A little poetry, not of my own, but so closely resembling the old
tale of the Gesta, that I prefer this poetic version, of The Lay of
the Little Bird, to my own stiff prose.”
THE LAY OF THE LITTLE BIRD.
“In days of yore, at least a century since,
There liv’d a carle as wealthy as a prince:
His name I wot not, but his wide domain
Was rich with stream and forest, mead and plain;
To crown the whole, one manor he possess’d
In choice delight so passing all the rest,
No castle, burgh, or city might compare
With the quaint beauties of that mansion rare.
The sooth to say, I fear my words may seem
Like some strange fabling, or fantastic dream,
If, unadvis’d, the portraiture I trace,
And each brave pleasure of that peerless place.
Foreknow ye, then, by necromantic might
Was rais’d this paradise of all delight:
A good knight own’d it first; he, bow’d with age,
Died, and his son possess’d the heritage:
But the lewd stripling, all to riot bent
(His chattles quickly wasted and forespent),
Was driven to see this patrimony sold
To the base carle of whom I lately told.
Ye wot right well there only need be sought
One spendthrift heir, to bring great wealth to nought.
A lofty tower and strong, the building stood
’Midst a vast plain surrounded by a flood;
And hence one pebble-paved channel stray’d,
That compass’d in a clustering orchard’s shade;
’Twas a choice, charming plat; abundant round;
Flowers, roses, odorous spices cloth’d the ground;
Unnumber’d kinds, and all profusely shower’d
Such aromatic balsam as they flower’d,
Their fragrance might have stay’d man’s parting breath,
And chased the hovering agony of death.
The sward one level held, and close above,
Tall shapely trees their leafy mantles wove,
All equal growth, and low their branches came,
Thick set with goodliest fruits of every name.
In midst, to cheer the ravish’d gazer’s view,
A gushing fount its waters upward threw,
Thence slowly on with crystal current pass’d,
And crept into the distant flood at last:
But nigh its source a pine’s umbrageous head
Stretch’d far and wide in deathless verdure spread,
Met with broad shade the summer’s sultry gleam,
And through the livelong year shut out the beam.
Such was the scene: yet still the place was bless’d
With one rare pleasure passing all the rest:
A wondrous bird of energies divine
Had fix’d his dwelling in the tufted pine;
There still he sat, and there with amorous lay
Waked the dim morn, and closed the parting day:
Match’d with these strains of linked sweetness wrought,
The violin and full-toned harp were nought;
Of power they were with new-born joy to move
The cheerless heart of long-desponding love;
Of power so strange, that should they cease to sound,
And the blithe songster flee the mystic ground,
That goodly orchard’s scene, the pine-tree’s shade,
Trees, flowers, and fount, would all like vapor fade.
‘Listen, listen to my lay!’
Thus the merry notes did chime,
‘All who mighty love obey,
Sadly wasting in your prime,
Clerk and laic, grave and gay!
Yet do ye, before the rest,
Gentle maidens, mark me tell!
Store my lesson in your breast,
Trust me it shall profit well:
Hear, and heed me, and be bless’d!’
So sang the bird of old; but when he spied
The carle draw near, with alter’d tone he cried—
‘Back, river, to thy source! and thee, tall tower,
Thee, castle strong, may gaping earth devour!
Bend down your heads, ye gaudy flowers, and fade!
And wither’d be each fruit-tree’s mantling shade!
Beneath these beauteous branches once were seen,
Brave gentle knights disporting on the green,
And lovely dames; and oft, these flowers among,
Stray’d the blithe bands, and joyed to hear my song:
Nor would they hence retire, nor quit the grove,
Till many a vow were pass’d of mutual love;
These more would cherish, those would more deserve;
Cost, courtesy, and arms, and nothing swerve.
O bitter change! for master now we see
A faitour villain carle of low degree;
Foul gluttony employs his livelong day,
Nor heeds, nor hears he my melodious lay.’
So spake the bird; and, as he ceas’d to sing,
Indignantly he clapp’d his downy wing,
And straight was gone; but no abasement stirr’d
In the clown’s breast at his reproachful word:
Bent was his wit alone by quaint device
To snare, and sell him for a passing price.
So well he wrought, so craftily he spread
In the thick foliage green his slender thread,
That when at eve the little songster sought
His wonted spray, his little foot was caught.
‘How have I harm’d you?’ straight he ’gan to cry,
‘And wherefore would you doom me thus to die?’
‘Nay, fear not,’ quoth the clown, ‘for death or wrong;
I only seek to profit by thy song:
I’ll get thee a fine cage, nor shalt thou lack
Good store of kernels and of seeds to crack;
But sing thou shalt; for if thou play’st the mute,
I’ll spit thee, bird, and pick thy bones to boot.’
‘Ah, woe is me!’ the little thrall replied.
‘Who thinks of song, in prison doomed to bide?
And, were I cook’d, my bulk might scarce afford
One scanty mouthful to my hungry lord.’
What may I more relate?—the captive wight
Assay’d to melt the villain all he might;
And fairly promis’d, were he once set free,
In gratitude to teach him secrets three;
Three secrets, all so marvellous and rare,
His race knew nought that might with these compare.
The carle prick’d up his ears amain; he loos’d
The songster thrall, by love of gain seduc’d;
Up to the summit of the pine-tree’s shade
Sped the blithe bird, and there at ease he stay’d,
And trick’d his plumes full leisurely, I trow,
Till the carle claim’d his promise from below:
‘Right gladly,’ quoth the bird; ‘now grow thee wise:
All human prudence few brief lines comprise:
First then, lest haply in the event it fail,
YIELD NOT A READY FAITH TO EVERY TALE.’
‘Is this thy secret?’ quoth the moody elf.
‘Keep then thy silly lesson for thyself;
I need it not.’—‘How be ’tis not amiss
To prick thy memory with advice like this,
But late, meseems, thou hadst forgot the lore;
Mark next my second rule, and sadly know,
WHAT’S LOST, ’TIS WISE WITH PATIENCE TO FOREGO.’
The carle, though rude of wit, now chafed amain;
He felt the mockery of the songster’s strain.
‘Peace,’ quoth the bird; ‘my third is far the best;
Store thou the precious treasure in thy breast:
WHAT GOOD THOU HAST, NE’ER LIGHTLY FROM THEE CAST.’
—He spoke, and twittering fled away full fast.
Straight sunk in earth, the gushing fountain dries,
Down fall the fruits, the wither’d pine-tree dies,
Fades all the beauteous plat, so cool, so green,
Into thin air, and never more is seen.
‘Such was the meed of avarice:—bitter cost!
The carle who all would gather, all has lost.’”
“There is something very Eastern about this tale,” remarked Herbert
at its conclusion.
“It is found in the old Greek monk’s legend of Barlaam and
Josaphat,” replied Lathom, “to whom it is more probable that it came
from the East than from any other source.”
“Such a story, I should suppose, has been freely used by later
writers,” said Thompson.
“It appears in the Disciplina Clericalis of Alphonsus, in The Golden
Legend of Caxton, and in Lydgate under the title of ‘The Chorle and
the Bird’; but besides these and Mr. Way, whose version I have just
read you, I cannot discover any other writers who have made use of
this fiction.”
“The moral of this fiction explains itself,” said Herbert. “I
presume the author is content with the plain meaning.”
“Yes, for this once,” rejoined Lathom; “but be content, the next
story will satisfy the greatest lover of allegories; for curious,
indeed, is it as an instance, even among curiosities, of the once
common practice of converting every thing into allegory.”
“How is it entitled?” asked Thompson.
“‘Of the Burdens of this Life’; in form it is a dialogue between a
scholar and his master, who might well be supposed to change places
with each other. You must be content with Mr. Swan’s version.”
OF THE BURDENS OF THIS LIFE.
A certain king once went to a fair, and took with him a preceptor and
his scholar. Standing in the market-place they perceived eight packages
for sale. The scholar questioned his teacher respecting the first of
them. “Pray,” said he, “what is the price of poverty? that is, of
tribulation for the love of God?”
_Preceptor._ The kingdom of heaven.
_Scholar._ It is a great price indeed. Open the second package and let
us see what it contains.
_Preceptor._ It contains meekness: Blessed are the meek.
_Scholar._ Meekness indeed is a very illustrious thing, and worthy of
divine majesty. What is its price?
_Preceptor._ Neither gold nor silver will be taken; they are too
contemptible. I demand earth for it; and nothing but earth will I
receive.
_Scholar._ There is a spacious tract of uninhabited country between
India and Great Britain. Take as much of it as you please.
_Preceptor._ No; this land is the land of the dying; the land which
devours its inhabitants. Men die there. I demand the land of the living.
_Scholar._ I muse at what you say. All die, and would you alone be
exempt? Would you live for ever? Behold, blessed are the meek, for they
shall inherit the earth. What is there in the third package?
_Preceptor._ Hunger and thirst.
_Scholar._ For how much may these be purchased?
_Preceptor._ For righteousness. Blessed are they who hunger and thirst
after righteousness, for they shall be filled.
_Scholar._ Therefore you shall possess righteousness, provided there be
no neglect. What does the fourth contain?
_Preceptor._ Tears, wailings, and woe;
Moisture above, and moisture below.
_Scholar._ It is not customary to buy tears and wailings, yet I will buy
it; because the saints desire it at this price. Blessed are they who
mourn, for they shall be comforted. What is the fifth package?
_Preceptor._ It is a divided parcel, and contains _mercy_, which I will
weigh to please you. At a word, I will take mercy for mercy; eternity
for time.
_Scholar._ You were a bad umpire to ask this, unless mercy should plead
for you. Nevertheless, she shall become your surety. And blessed are the
merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. In this life we abound in poverty
and wretchedness and hardship. Undo the sixth package, perhaps it may
contain something better.
_Preceptor._ It is clearly full, but it loves not, like a purple robe,
to be exposed before the common eye; you shall see it in private, and
then we will agree about the price.
_Scholar._ Very well; what is next?
_Preceptor._ Purity; which is extremely valuable. That gold and silver
vase contains piety, goodness, charity, and spiritual joy. Now then let
us open these precious garments. Here are lectures, meditations,
prayers, and contemplations. The judgments of the Lord are justified in
themselves, and more to be desired than gold and precious stones.
_Scholar._ There is a great reward in the possession. Ask, therefore,
what you will.
_Preceptor._ To see God.
_Scholar._ Therefore, Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see
God. Open the seventh package.
_Preceptor._ It contains _peace_.
_Scholar._ What! are you going to _sell_ me your peace?
_Preceptor._ It does not accord with my poverty, nor would it with your
justice and great wealth, to take any thing of me for nothing. But your
liberality will make me rich. What then? I am a mean country fellow, and
made of clay; formed of the very dust of the earth. My want of nobility
oppresses me, and I would no longer bear the reproach which says: “You
are earth, and to earth you shall go.” I would rather have it said to
me: “You are heaven, and to heaven you shall go.” I eagerly desire to
fulfil the destiny of the sons of God; I would become a son of God.
_Scholar._ I have done; I confess the truth, and distrust you no longer.
Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the sons of God.
If, therefore, you preserve the love of a son, you shall receive the
paternal inheritance. Now what is contained in the last package? Explain
it.
_Preceptor._ It contains only tribulation and persecution for the sake
of righteousness.
_Scholar._ What do you want for it?
_Preceptor._ The kingdom of heaven.
_Scholar._ I gave you that as the price of poverty!
_Preceptor._ True; but month after month, week after week, man wanders
in his wishes. Before the present week or month expires, what will
remain of it?
_Scholar._ I marvel at your sagacity in making a bargain. Now hear, good
and faithful servant! because thou hast been faithful over a few things,
I will appoint thee lord over many.
“The allusion to the king’s visit to the fair,” said Herbert,
“reminds me of what Wharton says of the royal booth at the fair of
St. Botolph, at Boston, in Lincolnshire, from which stall or booth
the king drew revenue.”
“Before roads were general and passable, and the communication
between town and town was frequent, the concourse of people at the
various fairs must have been very great,” said Thompson.
“As great as even now in many parts of the East, where the fairs are
still regarded as the great emporia of merchandise, the universal
mart of extensive districts, dependent on such meetings for their
chief supplies.”
“Wharton,” said Herbert, “gives a curious account of St. Giles’ fair
at Winchester, which dated back to the Conquest, was held for three
days, and, by later grants, extended to sixteen; and was given by
William the Conqueror to the bishops of Winchester as a source of
revenue.”
“Doubtless no mean revenue was derived from it,” said Lathom.
“For those days, very great: the jurisdiction of the fair extended
for seven miles round, including the port of Southampton; and every
merchant who sold wares within that circuit, except at the fair, or
refused to pay the bishop’s toll, had his goods forfeited to the
bishop. In the middle of St. Giles’ Down stood the bishop’s
pavilion, where sat his court, supreme, so long as the fair lasted,
within the seven miles’ jurisdiction.”
“What, over other existing jurisdictions, the lords of the
neighborhood, or the corporation of Winchester?” asked Thompson.
“Yes, supreme for the time. Even the city was for the time under the
bishop’s rule; on St. Giles’ eve the keys were delivered to him, and
during the fair toll was exacted in his name on all goods that went
through the city gate. No baron within the circuit could hold his
manor-court without a license from the bishop’s pavilion. The bishop
appointed a mayor, bailiff, and coroner of his own during the fair.”
“Being so near the coast, foreigners must have often resorted to the
great Winchester fair, I presume?”
“Yes,” rejoined Herbert. “So numerous and powerful that they had
their separate street in the fair, as the drapers, and
spice-dealers, and potters had theirs; and the toll to the bishop
from the foreign merchants formed no mean portion of the revenue he
derived from the fair.”
“It was an old custom for merchants to meet from all countries at
the different fairs,” said Lathom. “I remember to have read that in
1314, Philip of France remonstrated with our second Edward on the
great loss his subjects had received from the merchants of England
desisting from frequenting the fairs in France.”
“Yes,” remarked Frederick Thompson; “in the days of the Edwards and
Henrys a fair was as great a panacea for evils, as public meetings
in this century. If a village was sacked or destroyed by fire or
flood, the grant of a fair was an established means of restoring it
to its pristine vigor.”
“We must look abroad for the old fairs, such as they were in the
middle ages,” said Herbert. “Frankfort and Leipzig still remind us
of such fairs as that at Winchester; thirty to forty thousand buyers
and sellers are not uncommonly seen at Leipzig, the last great fair
of Central Europe.”
“And yet,” said Lathom, “both of these are but children to the great
fair of Nischnei-Novgorod, where merchants from the banks of the
Baltic and the Caspian interchange goods with Khivans, Chinese, the
mountaineers of Central Asia, and the merchants of Western Europe.”
“It is, indeed, almost difficult to believe Kohl’s account of the
meeting at Nischnei-Novgorod,” said Herbert.
“Wonderful, but of admitted truth. How curious must be the scenes: a
town of vast emporia, mingled with nearly three thousand shops,
almost without an inhabitant, save a few government officials, until
the flag is raised on the 29th of June; then the town is alive like
an ant-hill. Every magazine and booth is filled with merchandise,
the produce of the most diverse countries; thousands of boats are
landing goods, or taking them to other vessels; piles of merchandise
stand on all sides, even in the open country; and amidst all this
treasury of wealth, three hundred thousand of nearly all nations
under heaven are trafficking.”
“The value of goods exposed at such fairs must be startling, if
capable of being calculated,” said Herbert.
“The system of fair-tolls makes this an easy matter. In 1839, the
value of goods exposed at twenty-two of the fairs of Russia, reached
fifteen millions and a half, of which Novgorod contributed nearly
one half.”
“Roubles,” suggested Thompson.
“No, sterling pounds.” With this digressive conversation, the
evening closed.
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER VIII.
Southey’s Thalaba—THE SUGGESTIONS OF THE EVIL ONE—COTONOLAPES, THE
MAGICIAN—THE GARDEN OF ALOADDIN—The Old Man of the Mountain—The
Assassins—Their Rise and Fall—Gay’s Conjurer—SIR GUIDO, THE
CRUSADER—Guy, Earl of Warwick.
“Are you going to give us a specimen of the late Laureate’s
conversions,” said Thompson, “that you borrowed my Southey?”
“Even so—to claim for the magic garden of Aloaddin, the gem of the sixth
book of Thalaba, at least a Latin form, if it must not be regarded as a
striking instance of my Eastern theory.”
“Southey did not come to your book for this idea; he was content with
the apparently historical account of Purchas in his Pilgrims, or the
more elaborate description of the notorious Mandeville,” rejoined
Thompson.
“I am very much at a loss to appreciate your account,” said Herbert, “as
Southey, Purchas, and Mandeville are nearly all equally unknown to me.”
“The best means of showing the progress of the story and its conversion
by the poet,” said Lathom, “will be to commence with the old monk’s very
short version; let that be followed by Mandeville, and that veritable
author by Southey’s description. The monk’s tale is,
“THE SUGGESTIONS OF THE EVIL ONE.”
There was a celebrated magician who had a vast castle surrounded by a
very beautiful garden, in which grew flowers of the most fragrant smell,
and fruits not only fair to look upon but most delicious to the taste.
In short, it was a garden of Paradise; no one was allowed to see its
glories, or taste its pleasures, but fools or personal enemies of the
magician. When the gate was opened to any one, great was his wonder and
delight; and few who entered ever wished to return. Nay, the pleasures
they there enjoyed so affected their minds, that they yielded forthwith
to the will of the magician, and were ready to resign to him every thing
that they had.
To the fools this garden appeared to be Paradise itself: its flowers and
its fruits they looked upon as of immortal growth, and regarded
themselves as chosen from among the inhabitants of the world as the
happy possessors of the land. Beyond this they gave not one thought. Day
and night they revelled in pleasure, and surrendered their minds and
their bodies to lawless gratifications.
At last the day of reckoning came, and the magician prepared to reap the
fruits of his scheme. Their inheritances once placed in his power, he
waited but for some moment when his victim was steeped in sensual
intoxication, and then fell upon him and slew him. Thus, by his
fictitious Paradise, he acquired great wealth and power.
“I admire the moderation of your old monk,” said Thompson, “in not
assigning a particular locality to his magician’s paradise. Purchas
and Mandeville are not so moderate; the former puts Aloaddin’s abode
in the northeast parts of Persia, and Mandeville locates him in the
island of Milsterak, a portion of the kingdom of Prester John.”
“No bad illustration,” said Herbert, “of the difference between a
writer who tells a fiction as a fiction, and one who records it with
the intention of making his readers believe it to be true.”
“Great particularity as to time, place, and persons is the sure mark
of a mendacious traveller,” remarked Lathom; “both Purchas and
Mandeville have altered the object of the magician’s plot; making it
his means of destroying his enemies, by persuading his victims that
death in his service was only a step to a more beautiful paradise. I
will read Mandeville’s tale of
“COTONOLAPES, THE MAGICIAN.”
In the isle of Pentexoire, that is in the land of Prester John, is a
great isle, long and broad, and men call that isle Milsterak. There was
a man there that was called Cotonolapes; he was full rich, and had a
fair castle on a hill, and strong, and he made a wall all about the hill
right strong and fair; within he had a fair garden, wherein were many
trees bearing all manner of fruits that he might find, and he had
planted therein all manner of herbs of good smell, and that bare
flowers, and there were many fair wells, and by them were made many
halls and chambers well dight with gold and azure, and he had made there
divers stories of beasts and birds, that sung and turned by engine and
orbage as they had been quick; and he had in his garden all things that
might be to man solace and comfort; he had also in that garden maidens
within the age of fifteen years, the fairest that he might find, and men
children of the same age, and they were clothed with cloth of gold, and
he said that they were angels; and he caused to be made certain hills,
and inclosed them about with precious stones of jasper and crystal, and
set in gold and pearls, and other manner of stones; and he had made a
conduit under the earth, so that when he would, the walls ran sometimes
with milk, sometimes with wine, sometimes with honey, and this place is
called Paradise; and when any young bachelor of the country, knight or
esquire, cometh to him for solace and disport, he leadeth them into his
paradise and showeth them these things, as the songs of birds, and his
damsels and wells; and he did strike divers instruments of music in a
high tower that might be heard, and said they were angels of God, and
that place was Paradise that God had granted to those who believe, when
he said thus: _Dabo vobis terram fluentem lacte et melle_; that is to
say, I shall give you land flowing with milk and honey. And then this
rich man made these men drink a manner of drink of which they were
drunken; and he said to them, if they would die for his sake, when they
were dead they should come to his paradise, and they should be of the
age of those maidens, and should dwell always with them, and he should
put them in a fairer paradise, where they should see God in joy and in
his majesty: and then they granted to do that he would, and he bade them
go and slay such a lord, or a man of the country that he was wroth with,
and that they should have dread of no man. And if they were slain
themselves for his sake, he should put them in his paradise when they
were dead. And so went these bachelors to slay great lords of the
country, and were slain themselves in hope to have that paradise; and
thus he was avenged of his enemies through his desert; and when rich men
of the country perceived this cautel and malice, and the will of this
Cotonolapes, they gathered them together and assailed the castle, and
slew him, and destroyed all his goods and his fair places and riches
that were in his paradise; and the place of the walls there is yet, and
some other things, but the riches are not, and it is not long ago since
it was destroyed.
“The variation made by this worthy story-teller seems to me to be an
incorporation of the history of the Assassins,” said Herbert.
“Perhaps their ‘Old Man of the Mountain,’ as the chief of the
Assassins was called, may have given rise to the entire fable,”
rejoined Lathom. “Now, Thompson, read the poet’s conversion.”
THE GARDEN OF ALOADDIN.
—Thalaba stood mute,
And passively receiv’d
The mingled joy which flowed in every sense.
Where’er his eye could reach,
Fair structures, rainbow hued, arose;
And rich pavilions through the opening woods
Gleam’d from their waving curtains sunny gold;
And winding through the verdant vale
Went stream of liquid light,
And fluted cypresses rear’d up
Their living obelisks;
And broad-leaved plane-trees, in long colonnades,
O’erarched delightful walks,
Where round their trunks the thousand tendrill’d vine
Wound up, and hung the trees with greener wreaths,
And clusters not their own.
Wearied with endless beauty, did his eyes
Return for rest? beside him teems the earth
With tulips like the ruddy evening streak’d.
And here the lily hangs her head of snow;
And here amid her sable cup
Shines the red eye spot, like one brightest star,
The solitary twinkle of the night;
And here the rose expands
Her paradise of leaves.
Then on his ear what sounds
Of harmony arose!
Far music and the distance-mellow’d song
From bowers of merriment;
The waterfall remote:
The murmuring of the leafy groves,
The single nightingale.
* * * * *
And oh what odors the voluptuous vale
Scatters from jasmine bowers,
From yon rose wilderness,
From cluster’d henna, and from orange groves.
* * * * *
Full of the bliss, yet still awake
To wonder, on went Thalaba:
On every side the song of mirth,
The music of festivity,
Invite the passing youth.
Wearied at length with hunger and with heat,
He enters in a banquet room;
Where round a fountain’s brink
On silken carpets sat the festive train.
Instant, through all his frame
Delightful coolness spread;
The playing fount refresh’d
The agitated air;
The very light came cool through silvering panes
Of pearly shell, like the pale moonbeam tinged.
“I think I must stop here,” said Thompson, “though the entire book
seems but the poet’s amplification of the tale of Mandeville.”
“The more I think on the subject, the more certain I feel that the
Assassins of the eleventh century are the origin, if not of your
tradition, at least of the tales of Purchas and Mandeville,” said
Herbert.
“I know too little of their history, to agree with you or not;
surely, theirs was a purely political association,” answered Lathom.
“Their original and avowed object was the placing a caliph of the
race of Ismael on the throne of Bagdad; but their sacred doctrines
are supposed to have embraced a wider sphere, and are known to have
been converted into the means of private revenge by the adept, who
afterwards became known as the ‘old man of the mountain.’”
“Where did the old man reign?” asked Thompson.
“On the mountain of Alamoot, in the north of Persia. The Vulture’s
Rest, as its name imported, was not unlike the hill of Cotonolapes,
or the Castle of the Magician of the Gesta. There Hassan ben Sabah
gathered round him an independent society of seven degrees, with
himself as their head, by the title of Sheikh of the Mountain.”
“What was the date of that event?”
“Within a few years of the close of the eleventh century,” replied
Herbert. “His seven degrees commenced with the three grand priors,
under him, the practical rulers of the society. Then came the
_dais_, or initiated ministers; and fourthly, the _refeeks_, or
companions. Below these were the _fedavees_, or devoted, who were
followed by the _laseeks_, the aspirants, the novices of European
orders. The profane, the common people, formed the last of the seven
orders of the Assassins.”
“The mysteries, I suppose, were not revealed to any below the third
class?” remarked Lathom.
“No, the _dais_ were alone acquainted with these; what they were,
besides implicit obedience to their chief, and the principle of
interpreting the Koran allegorically, it is impossible to discover.
By the rest of the society, the text of the Koran was to be observed
in its strict letter. The _fedavees_ were, however, the support of
the society. They were composed, too often, of youths stolen from
their parents, and educated in such a system as recognized the
sheikh as omnipotent, and impressed on them the moral and religious
duty of obeying his commands.”
“From this order, then, the common idea of the Assassins arose?”
said Lathom.
“Undoubtedly,” rejoined Herbert. “They were led to look to his
mandates as direct from heaven, and as impossible to be evaded. They
were clothed in white, with red bonnets and girdles, and armed with
sharp daggers; but when a secret and dangerous mission was imposed,
the disguises of the _fedavees_ were appropriated to the task
enjoined.”
“Is any thing known of their initiatory ceremonies?”
“But little; Marco Polo, indeed, gives us a curious account of the
garden of Alamoot bearing a very strong likeness to that of
Aloaddin, whither the _fedavee_ was borne under the influence of
opiates, before being sent on any important mission; and where, on
awakening, he found himself surrounded with every earthly pleasure.
This, he was persuaded, is but a foretaste of the joys of paradise,
which were to be the reward of his faithful performance of the
mission. And thus buoyed up, the _fedavees_ confronted danger in
every form, and executed the commands of their chief in despite of
countless difficulties.”
“Their name, I suppose, is but the corruption of that of their
leader, Hassan,” remarked Thompson.
“Here doctors disagree,” replied Herbert; “some are content with
this origin; whilst others, explaining the visions in the garden of
Alamoot as the effects of an intoxicating herb, derive the name of
the society from hashish, the opiate of hemp-leaves, supposed to
have been so freely used by the sheikh in deluding his victims.”
“How long did this strange society exist?” asked Lathom.
“After a time they divided into two branches; the eastern one
remaining at Alamoot, whilst the western spread into Syria. Both
branches became too powerful and dangerous to be endured. After
repeated attempts, the eastern branch was destroyed by the Monguls,
about a century and a half after its foundation; whilst the western
branch lasted only fourteen years longer, and fell about 1270, under
the power of the Mamluke sultans of Egypt.”
“It was far easier to root out their strongholds than their
principles,” remarked Lathom.
“It was so found by their conquerors: the mountains of Syria,
especially, gave shelter to many of the society, and the tenets of
the order are still believed to linger among a branch of the Koords.
But come, we are wandering from our tales, and if we do not leave
off our remarks Lathom will close the evening without another
specimen of the old story-teller.”
“We have not yet heard the moral of the magician’s garden,” said
Thompson.
“The application is plain,” replied Lathom: “the magician is the
world; the luxuries and beauties of his garden are the world’s
rewards and riches; worldly people think that they have grasped its
gifts; anon, they open their hands, and find them empty.”
“But a short application, though over true,” remarked Herbert.
“I have rather condensed the old monk, and perhaps wrongly, as the
latter part of his moral reminds me strongly of a passage in Gay’s
fables. ‘The conjurer,’ says the old monk, ‘puts down a dish, but
places nothing in it. Then he begins to prate and mock the
spectators with fair words and long speeches. Soon he inquires of
them: What is in the dish? they look, and it is full of pennies.
These he distributes among the bystanders; with thanks they receive
his gifts, and eagerly close their hands on them; anon, they open
their hands, and lo, there is nothing.’”
“You allude,” said Herbert, “to Gay’s lines, where he describes his
conjurer performing his tricks.
“‘Trick after trick deludes the train,
He shakes his bag, and shows all fair,
His fingers spread, and nothing there,
Then bids it rain with showers of gold;
And now his ivory eggs are told.’”
“Hardly so much,” replied Lathom, “as the four lines where he says
of FORTUNE:
“‘A purse she to the thief exposed;
At once his ready fingers closed.
He opes his fist, his treasure’s fled,
He sees a halter in its stead.’
And now,” continued Lathom, “now for the original of Guy, Earl of
Warwick.”
“The original of a romance, that was a celebrated piece in the time
of Chaucer, and usually sung to the harp at Christmas dinners and
bridals, is indeed a curiosity,” remarked Herbert.
“But how comes Sir Guy in the Latin stories?” said Thompson; “does
not Bishop Percy say it was of English growth?”
“I cannot resolve the difficulty,” answered Lathom; “we must admit
that it was in French before the end of the thirteenth century; when
it came into its Latin dress, must depend on that most difficult of
all points, the date and authorship of my volume of stories. But
come from where he will, you have here the story of the Champion of
Warwick.”
SIR GUIDO, THE CRUSADER.
Centuries have gone by since the court of the king of England was
adorned by two valorous knights named Guido and Tyrius. Many a hard
battle had they fought side by side against the enemies of their king,
for the sake of the smiles of the fair ladies to whom they had dedicated
themselves. After several years of brilliant deeds of daring and
numerous perils, Sir Guido married the lady of his devotions. Happy were
the early days of his marriage, for the knight and the lady loved each
other greatly. One night Sir Guido saw a vision, as it were an angel of
God talking with him, and he was afraid.
Then said the angel: “Why weepest thou, Sir Guido? arise, put on thy
arms, and fight for the holy cross.”
“Verily, Lord,” replied Sir Guido, “much and often have I fought.”
“Yes,” replied the angel, “much, often, and valiantly hast thou fought
for the love of woman; now fight for the love of God, the glory of the
holy cross. Contend against God’s enemies, as thou hast against those of
men.”
With these words the vision faded away, and Sir Guido knew that he was
called to battle in the Holy Land against the infidels. Then he turned
to his wife and said:
“Felicia, we must part, but for a time; I am called to the Holy Land to
fight under the banner of the cross.”
“Alas! alas! my lord,” replied Felicia, clasping her husband in her arms
and weeping hot tears upon his neck; “alas! and wilt thou leave me?
death were to be preferred; then welcome death.”
As she spoke she snatched up a dagger that lay beside her, and would
have killed herself had not Sir Guido wrenched it from her grasp.
“Felicia,” said the knight, “be comforted; I am vowed to go to the Holy
Land; bear with it, my love; it is but for a time; be comforted.”
“God’s will be done,” murmured the lady. “Take this ring, and as often
as you look upon it, in happiness or in misery, in joy or in woe, think
of Felicia.”
Sir Guido gathered together his vassals, and his friend, Sir Tyrius,
added his to those of Sir Guido, and thus combined they marched for the
Holy Land, and journeyed by land and not by sea until they came to the
borders of Dacia, a Christian country overrun by the infidels.
“Brother,” said Sir Guido, “go thou to the king of the country, and with
thy good sword rescue his kingdom from the power of the Saracen; I will
proceed to the Holy Land, and when the foes of God are vanquished will
rejoin you here, and so together we will return to England.”
“Even as you wish,” said Sir Tyrius; “I will await your return here.”
Thus did the friends separate. Sir Guido reached the Holy Land, and
fought valiantly against the Saracens. Many and dire were his conflicts
with the infidels, but in all of them he bore aloft the cross, and in
his hands it never bowed before the crescent. Every one spoke of his
deeds of arms, of his charity, and of his kindness; the minstrels made
songs of his exploits, and spread his fame over the whole Christian
world. Sir Tyrius, too, was successful in Dacia; by his aid the king
regained his throne, and the infidels were driven from the kingdom.
Rewards and thanks followed his successes; the king regarded him as the
preserver of his throne, and considered no rewards too great or too good
for the Christian warrior. The rewards of the good are ever sources of
envy to the wicked. So was it at the court of the Dacian king. The
prosperity of Sir Tyrius was gall and wormwood to a knight of Dacia, Sir
Plebeus, who, until the coming of this stranger, had been looked upon as
the greatest warrior of the Dacian people. To envy succeeded hatred, to
hatred falsehood. Treason, he insinuated was in the mind of Tyrius; he
aspired to the crown which he had recovered from the infidel.
Alas! how easily do we credit falsehood, how readily do we believe that
every one is as wicked as ourselves. The king believed the words of
Plebeus. He called his preserver before him, charged him with treason,
and upbraided him with ingratitude.
“Go,” said he, “leave my court. I have honored thee much, I would have
honored thee yet more. Now I give thee thy life in return for the
valiant blows you struck for me; go in peace, but in poverty.”
“Miserable creature that I am,” murmured Sir Tyrius; “whither shall I
flee in this my abject poverty?”
Sadly and slowly he wandered on, his eyes cast down, his hands crossed
upon his breast. At last he sat down by the way-side.
“Friend,” said a tall pilgrim, whose careworn look showed how long he
had been journeying, “friend, whence comest thou?”
“Father,” replied Tyrius, “I am of Rome; years have I lived in this
land, and now I seek another home. Years have passed since my companion
parted with me but a few miles from here; he sought the Holy Land, and
whether he be dead or alive I know not.”
“Friend,” replied the palmer, “I am wearied; suffer me, by the memory of
your friend, I pray you, suffer me to repose my head on your knees, that
I may sleep awhile.”
Tyrius pitied the poor pilgrim, and acceded to his request. The palmer’s
cloak was drawn over his face, so that he could distinguish but a
portion of his features.
As the palmer slept, of a sudden a weasel, small and white, leapt from
out of his mouth, and ran to a neighboring hill-side, where it entered a
small hole; after a time the creature returned, and appeared to enter
into the mouth of the sleeping man. At that moment the palmer awoke.
“Friend,” said he to Tyrius, “I have dreamed a strange dream. Methought
a weasel, small, and white as snow, ran from out my mouth to a hole in
yonder hill, and thence returning, re-entered my open mouth.”
“Father,” replied Tyrius, “it was no dream; so did it appear to me also,
as I sat and watched you. What the weasel did in yonder hill I cannot
conjecture.”
“Come, let us arise and look, peradventure we may find some good
treasure.”
“Even as I thought,” continued the palmer, when they entered the hole in
the hill-side, that led to a large cave; “see, a dragon dead, and filled
with gold; the treasure he was thus guarding is our own; ay, too, a
sword. What do we read on its bright blade? ‘_By me shall Guido overcome
the enemies of Tyrius._’”
“Alas, Guido,” said Tyrius, “where art thou, O my friend?”
“Come,” said the palmer, “we will divide the treasures; to you the piles
of gold and jewels; to me this sword.”
“To thee the sword of Guido!” exclaimed Tyrius; “nay.”
“To me the sword of Guido,” said the pilgrim, interrupting the knight in
his words, and gradually raising the cowl of his dress from off his
face. “Yes, to me, Tyrius.”
“Guido, my friend, my brother!” cried the knight, as he looked on the
pilgrim’s features. “And have we met, my brother? It is enough, O my
brother!” and the tears came in the eyes of both.
“Courage, courage, Tyrius; weep not, for I will do battle with your
enemy; with this sword will I beat down thy foes; do you go to your own
home, and leave me to deal with your traducers.”
The friends embraced and parted. Tyrius went to his home with his
treasure, and Guido repaired to the Dacian king’s palace.
“Who art thou, and from whence?” asked the porter, as Sir Guido knocked
at the king’s gate.
“A humble pilgrim from the holy sepulchre.”
“Enter, father, I crave thy blessing,” said the porter, as he knelt
before Sir Guido.
“Thou hast it, my son; peace be on thee and this house; I seek the
king.”
The king sat at meat, and all his nobles were round him.
“Is the Holy Land at peace?” inquired the king, as the pilgrim entered.
“At peace, my lord; the holy sepulchre is delivered from the infidel.”
“Ho, give place; sit, father; bring wine and bread. Father, hast thou
heard of a Christian knight named Guido?”
“Both heard and seen him, my lord: we have eaten of the same bread, and
shared the same couch.”
“What say they of the Christian kings?”
“They say the Dacian king has regained his kingdom and crown by the aid
of a brave knight of Rome, whom he promoted to great honor and riches.”
“They say true, sir pilgrim,” said the king, on whose brow an angry spot
began to show.
“They further say, that thou, O king, hast driven away this good and
brave knight, seduced by the malice of one Plebeus, who has poisoned
your royal ear with his falsehoods.”
“False pilgrim,” cried Plebeus, who stood by the king’s chair; “false
pilgrim, thou utterest lies that thou darest not to defend with thy
life. That Tyrius was a traitor; he would have dethroned our king.”
“Sir knight,” replied Guido, “I have both spoken the truth, and dare
prove it; if thou art Sir Plebeus, and sayest Tyrius was a traitor; go
to, thou art a liar, and by the king’s leave I will prove thy falsehood
on thy body.”
“It is well,” said the king; “let the wager of battle decide the truth,
and God defend the right.”
“Give me, my lord, such arms as be necessary for the field, and the
ordeal of battle shall prove the truth. Save this sword, I have no
armor.”
“Be it so as you desire; to-morrow, at noon, we will see this combat.
Daughter, to thy care I commit this pilgrim knight; see that he be
forthcoming by to-morrow’s noon.”
It was a bright day when the lists were prepared for the contest; before
the hour appointed drew nigh, all the population of the royal city
poured towards the scene of the approaching combat. Some trusted to the
known prowess of the Dacian knight; others sided with the pilgrim,
speculated upon who he was, and wished him success for the sake of
Tyrius.
“Haste thee, haste thee, sir pilgrim knight,” said the king’s daughter,
“thy adversary even now stands in the lists, and exclaims: ‘False
pilgrim! why tarriest thou?’”
Sir Guido hastened to put on his armor, and to gird his sword about him.
At noon the king entered the lists, the combatants took oath to the
justice of their quarrel, and prepared to engage. Long and arduous was
the battle; Guido pressed upon his adversary so fiercely that he
thirsted almost to death.
“Good pilgrim,” he said, “if thou wilt courteously permit me to quench
my thirst this once, I will do the like to thee, shouldst thou require
it of me.”
“I consent,” replied Guido.
His thirst thus quenched, Plebeus renewed the combat with redoubled
animation. At length Guido also thirsted, and claimed of his adversary
his promise.
“Go to, fool! you shall taste no water but by the strong hand,” replied
the Dacian.
“By the strong hand then,” rejoined Guido, “be it so.”
With these words he made towards the water, guarding himself with his
shield. As soon as he gained the edge of the pond he jumped in, drank
freely of the water, and rushed out refreshed and reinvigorated against
his treacherous foe. His prowess and his courage alike deserted the
Dacian, and he turned and fled.
At that moment the king threw down his sceptre, and the combat closed
for that day.
The king’s daughter led the knight to his chamber, bound up his wounds,
tended him softly, prepared his evening meal, and smoothed his bed with
her own hands: a deep sleep soon came over Sir Guido, for he was wearied
with the exertions of the combat.
“My sons,” said Plebeus to the seven stout warriors that called him
father, “my sons, if to-morrow’s sun sees yonder pilgrim in the lists, I
die; never yet did I meet so stout an opponent.”
“Fear not, sir,” replied they all, “we will take care of the pilgrim.”
Sir Guido slept heavily; at midnight his chamber door was carefully
opened, and the sons of Plebeus crept into his room.
“He sleeps soundly,” whispered the eldest, “how shall we dispose of him?
if we slay him here as he sleeps, what are we but dead men on the
morrow?”
“Does not the sea flow beneath the window?” asked one of the sons.
“Yes, but if we touch him he will wake.”
“Nay, let us take him bed and all and throw him into the sea.”
Sir Guido slept on, and knew not what was plotting against him.
It was midnight, and the moon shone brightly on the sea. A fisherman
beneath the wall of the Dacian king’s palace was casting his nets, when
a sudden splash in the water arrested his attention. “Halloa!” said he
to himself, “what villany is this? a bed floating on the sea, and a man
on it; ho, friend! ho, I say! awake, or be drowned!”
“Where am I?” exclaimed Sir Guido, as he awoke with the fisherman’s
clamor. “Help; friend,—I am sinking: I am the pilgrim that fought
yesterday in the lists—thanks—thanks,” he continued, as he reached the
fisherman’s boat; “but how got I here?”
“I hardly know: just now I heard a splash, looked round, and by the
moon’s light saw you and your bed floating on the water.”
“Ah! well, the treachery has failed, good friend; to-morrow will
confound the traitors.”
The morrow came in fair and bright; again the people hastened to the
lists, eager to see the issue of this wondrous combat. The king was
seated, the lists were ready, and the heralds sounded. Then stept forth
Sir Plebeus with his visor up, and a fair and smiling countenance.
“My lord the king,” said the Dacian champion, as he bowed before the
king’s throne, “I demand the combat with the pilgrim.”
“It is well, Sir Plebeus—ho, herald! go to my daughter, and demand of
her the pilgrim knight.”
“The princess is even now coming to the royal presence,” replied the
herald, as the crowd formed a lane, through which the king’s daughter
was seen approaching her father’s throne, with a meek and sorrowful
aspect.
“My child,” said the Dacian king, “where is the pilgrim knight, the
champion of Sir Tyrius? We await his coming forth.”
“Father, and dear lord,” replied the maiden, “I know not whither he is
gone; but last night I left him in deep sleep in his chamber, and now
neither he nor his bed whereon he slept are to be found.”
“Cowardly boaster!” exclaimed Sir Plebeus, “dares he not meet me in the
list? The coward has fled.”
“That is not so, my lord,” exclaimed a poor man in the crowd; “he has
not fled.”
“Ah! how sayest thou?”
“Even now he sleeps at my hut; last night I found him floating on his
bed beneath the palace wall; I took him into my boat, and he is safe.”
“Thou hast done well; summon him to the list. Sir Plebeus, you shall not
be disappointed of your combat. See, even now your adversary comes. Now,
marshals, arm the stranger.”
“Nay, my good lord,” said the Dacian knight, “press not on the pilgrim;
I pray you, my lord, give him time to recruit his strength.”
“Not for a minute, sir knight,” exclaimed the pilgrim as he entered the
lists and hastened to don his armor; “not for a minute—I have much to
reckon with you: remember last night.”
The combat was short: each knight struck twice without fatal effect; the
pilgrim’s third blow ended the battle, and the Dacian rolled on the
ground a headless corpse.
“Sir Pilgrim,” said the king, as he knelt before the throne, “God has
defended the right; even now have I been told of the treachery of that
senseless corpse, and of the villany of his sons towards thee; they now
are going to their reward—to death. Come, sir knight, for thy sake I
restore Sir Tyrius, renew his honors, and add to them those which you so
steadfastly refuse. One boon I ask before you leave our court and our
kingdom: disclose thy name; let me and my people know to whom they owe
the punishment of a traitor and the defence of their best friend, their
former preserver.”
“My lord,” replied the pilgrim, “my name is not unknown to you; I am the
knight of the Holy Land—the Guido of whom men speak.”
Loud were the exclamations with which that famous name was hailed by the
assembled Dacians, as their king fell on the pilgrim’s neck and embraced
him as a brother.
Seven years had passed since Guido left his castle and sailed for the
Holy Land. Day by day did Felicia minister to the poor and bestow alms
on every applicant, with this one request, that they would pray for the
safety of her husband, Sir Guido, and that once more before her death
she might rejoice in his presence. Felicia stood at her castle gate, and
the inner court-yard was filled with her poor pensioners. One by one she
accosted them and bade her almoner give to each his accustomed alms. Her
young son ran by his mother’s side.
“Mother, dear mother,” said the child, as he heard Felicia commend Sir
Guido to the prayers of the poor men, “is it not my father for whom you
ask these poor people to pray?”
“Yes, my child; seven years have passed since he left me; but a few
months had we been married before God summoned him to the Holy Land, and
he took the cross and went against the infidel.”
As she thus spoke to her son, Felicia drew nigh to a tall pilgrim who
stood apart from the rest of the poor people. She gave him the alms, and
asked of him his prayers for her husband’s return. Low bowed the pilgrim
his head, but not a word did he speak as the lady passed onwards. Her
son followed after Felicia; as he passed the pilgrim, he bowed himself
forward and embraced the youth.
“God give thee grace,” said he with a trembling voice, “God give thee
grace to do his will.”
“Thanks, father, for thy blessing,” said Felicia; “can I do aught to
reward thy good wishes?”
“Lady,” said the pilgrim in a low, stifled voice, “I crave the small
hermitage below the eagle’s rock; there let me live and die.”
“Ha!” exclaimed Felicia, “the eagle’s rock; art thou of this place, good
father, that thou knowest the name so well?”
“I was of thy people once, fair lady; now I am God’s poor servant.”
“Be it as thou desirest; go, father, and pray for this house and its
long-lost master.”
Those who could see the pilgrim’s face saw the tears start in his eyes
as he accepted Felicia’s gift and turned towards his lonely hermitage.
Many years did he live there, many a time did he come to the castle
yard, and his daily companion was Felicia’s child, Sir Guido’s son. Day
after day did he talk to him of adventures of knights in the Holy Land,
of those that had fallen fighting for the sepulchre, and those who had
passed through the fiery ordeal of that expedition. At last death came
upon him.
“Dear boy,” said he to Sir Guido’s son, “take this ring to thy mother,
and bid her, if she would see me ere I die, come hither quickly.”
“Mother, dear mother,” said the youth when he entered Felicia’s chamber,
“the good pilgrim is sorely ill; he sends you this ring, and bids you
see him ere he die.”
Felicia cast one look upon the ring. “Haste, haste, my child!” she
exclaimed, “it is my lord’s, your father’s ring; come, come to the
forest!”
Quickly as she rushed to the hermitage, she found but the dead body of
her husband.
“Woe, woe is me!” she exclaimed, casting herself on the cold corpse,
“woe, woe is me! where are now my alms? My husband asked charity of me
and I knew him not; thy father talked with thee, my child, he embraced
thee, and thou knewest him not. O Guido! thou didst look upon thy wife,
and didst not tremble; thou didst look upon thy child, and kissed him,
and blessed him; alas, alas! my husband.”
“I should be loth to agree with Percy, that so beautiful a tale
should have been resigned to children,” said Herbert, as soon as
Lathom had concluded his version of the old tale.
“No wonder that the pilgrimage of the warrior was such a favorite
with all nations, as to be claimed by nearly all as peculiarly their
own,” said Thompson.
“It was very early translated into French, and is alluded to in a
Spanish romance, written somewhere about 1430. But now, that, as the
old ballad says,
“‘The story is brought to an end,
Of Guy, the bold baron of price,
And of the fair maid Felice,’
we will conclude our evening with some account of its applications,
as intended by the monk. Sir Guido was symbolical of our Saviour,
Felicia of the soul, and Tyrius of man in general. By the weasel was
meant the prophets, and especially the Baptist, as prophesying the
coming of the Saviour. The mountain is the world, the dead dragon
the old law of Moses, and the gold within it the Ten Commandments.
The sword represented authority, the seven deadly sins were
symbolized in the sons of Plebeus, and the good fisherman was the
representative of the Holy Spirit.”
“There remains one character yet unexplained—the king’s daughter,”
remarked Herbert.
“The explanation of her duties is peculiar to the religion of the
age in which the tale was written; the Roman Catholic easily
recognized in the king’s daughter the Virgin Mary.”
“Come, Herbert, we are over our time; to work; goodnight.”
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER IX.
Illustrations of Early Manners—Sorcery—THE KNIGHT AND THE
NECROMANCER—Waxen Figures—Degeneracy of Witches—THE CLERK AND THE
IMAGE—Gerbert and Natural Magic—Elfin Chivalry—THE DEMON KNIGHT OF
THE VANDAL CAMP—Scott’s Marmion—Assumption of Human Forms by
Spirits—THE SEDUCTIONS OF THE EVIL ONE—Religious Origin of Charges
of Witchcraft.
“The attention of the king’s daughter to the wounded knight,”
remarked Herbert, “reminds me strongly of the patriarchal habits
described by Homer in his Odyssey. The daughter of Nestor thinks it
no disgrace or indelicacy to attend to the bath of the wandering
Telemachus, and Helen herself seems to have performed a like office
for his father.”
“The tales of chivalry are replete with instances of these simple
manners,” rejoined Lathom; “the king’s daughter, the fair virgin
princess, is ever the kind attendant on the honored guest, prepares
his bath after the fatigues of the day, and ministers to his wounds
by her medicinal skill.”
“Your old monk’s tales,” said Thompson, “have no little merit, as
illustrations of the manners and habits of the middle ages.”
“Indeed, the light is curious that is thrown by these tales on the
habits of the middle ages,” answered Lathom; “in these vivid and
strongly delineated fictions, I seem to fight, to tilt, to make love
and war, to perform penances, and to witness miracles with the
actors themselves.”
“We cannot but feel, however,” remarked Herbert, “that we are more
inclined to laugh at the regulations of their chivalry, than to
appreciate them. The absurd penances with which imaginable crimes
were visited in those days cannot but raise a smile, whilst the
utter carelessness with which enormous sins were committed, excites
extreme regret.”
“What fragrant viands furnish forth
Our evening’s entertainment?”
said Thompson.
“Some illustrations of witchcraft and sorcery; that most prevalent
belief, from the middle ages, to the days of the sapient James the
First.”
“Among all curious discoveries, this would be the most curious,”
said Herbert: “to find a people in whom there never has existed a
belief that human beings could be gifted with supernatural powers,
for the purpose of accomplishing some good or evil object of their
desire.”
“Wherever Christianity spread, witchcraft must be regarded as a
recognized form in which the powers of evil contended with the
Almighty.”
“Of what sex is your witch?” asked Thompson.
“Oh, in this case, the good and the bad sorcerers are both of the
male sex.”
“Your writer, therefore,” replied Thompson, “does not seem to have
held the ungallant notions of Sprenger, that from the natural
inferiority of their minds, and wickedness of their hearts, the
Devil always preferred women for his agents. But to the story.”
“Well, then, as the old chronicler would say, here begins the tale
of
“THE KNIGHT AND THE NECROMANCER.”
Among the knights that graced the court of the Emperor Titus, there was
one whom all men agreed in calling the GOOD KNIGHT. For some years he
had been married to one whose beauty was her fairest portion, for she
loved not the knight, her husband, but delighted in the company of
others, and would gladly have devised his death, that she might marry
another courtier.
The good knight could not fail of discovering the wickedness of his
wife. Ofttimes did he remonstrate with her; but to all he said, she
turned a deaf ear, and would not return the affection he felt, for one
so unworthy of his love.
“My dear wife,” said the good knight, “I go to the Holy Land, to perform
a vow: I leave you to your own discretion.”
The knight had no sooner embarked, than the lady sent for one of her
lovers, a clever sorcerer.
“Know,” said she to him, when he arrived at the house, “my husband has
sailed for the Holy Land; we live together; ay, and for all our lives,
if you will but compass his death; for I love him not.”
“There is danger,” replied the necromancer; “but, for the sake of thee
and thy love, I will endeavor to perform your wishes.”
Then took he wax and herbs, gathered at dead of night in secret places,
and unguents made of unknown ingredients, and moulded a figure of the
good knight, inscribing it with his name, placing it before him, against
the wall of the lady’s chamber.
The good knight commenced his pilgrimage towards the Holy Land, and wist
not what the lady and her lover were plotting against him and his dear
life. As he descended towards the vessel in which he was to embark, he
observed a man of some age, and of lofty and commanding stature,
regarding him with interest. A long robe covered him, and its hood drawn
over the face, concealed, in a great degree, the features of the wearer.
At last the old man approached the knight.
“Good friend,” said he, “I have a secret to communicate to thee.”
“Say on, good father,” rejoined the knight, “what wouldest thou with
me?”
“I would preserve thee from death.”
“Nay, father, that is in God’s hands; I fight not against his will.”
“To-day, then, thou diest; unless thou obeyest my commands:—and, listen,
the lover of thy unfaithful wife is thy murderer.”
“Good sir,” replied the knight, “I perceive thou art a wise man; what
shall I do to escape this sudden death?”
“Follow, and obey me.”
Many and winding were the streets through which the good knight followed
his mysterious guide. At last they reached a dark, dismal-looking house,
apparently without any inhabitant. The guide pressed his foot on the
doorstep, and the door slowly opened, closing again as the knight
followed the old man into the house. All was darkness, but the guide
seized the knight’s hand and led him up the tottering staircase to a
large room, in which were many strange books and figures of men and
animals, interspersed with symbolic emblems of triangles and circles,
whose meaning was known to that aged man alone. In the midst of the room
was a table, on which burned a lamp without a wick or a reservoir of
oil, for it fed on a vapor that was lighter than air, and was invisible
to the eye. The old man spoke some words, to the knight unknown; in a
moment the floor clave asunder, and a bath, on whose sides the same
mystic symbols were written as on the walls of the room, arose from
beneath.
“Prepare to bathe,” said the old man, opening a book on the table, and
taking a bright mirror from a casket.
No sooner had the knight entered the bath than the old man gave him a
mirror and bid him look into it.
“What seest thou?” asked he of the knight.
“I see my own chamber; my wife is there, and Maleficus, the greatest
sorcerer in Rome.”
“What does the sorcerer?”
“He kneads wax and other ingredients; he hath made a figure of me, and
written under it my name; even now he fastens it against the wall of my
chamber.”
“Look again,” said the old man; “what does he?”
“He takes a bow; he fits an arrow to the string; he aims at the effigy.”
“Look on: as you love your life, when that arrow leaves the string,
plunge beneath the water till you hear me call.”
“He shoots!” exclaimed the knight as he dived beneath the water.
“Come out; look again at the mirror; what seest thou?”
“An arrow is sticking in the wall, by the side of the figure. The
sorcerer seems angry; he draws out the arrow, and prepares to shoot
again from a nearer place.”
“As you value your life, do as before.”
Again the good knight plunged, and at the old man’s call resumed his
inspection of the mirror.
“What seest thou now?” asked the old man.
“Maleficus has again missed the image; he makes great lamentations; he
says to my wife: ‘If I miss the third time, I die’; he goes nearer to
the image, and prepares to shoot.”
“Plunge!” cried the old man; and then, after a time: “Raise thyself, and
look again; why laughest thou?”
“To see the reward of the wicked; the arrow has missed, rebounded from
the wall, and pierced the sorcerer; he faints, he dies, my wife stands
over his body, and weeps; she digs a hole under the bed, and buries the
body.”
“Arise, sir knight: resume your apparel, and give God thanks for your
great deliverance.”
A year and more elapsed before the good knight returned from his
pilgrimage. His wife welcomed him with smiles and every appearance of
pleasure. For a few days the knight concealed his knowledge of his
wife’s conduct. At length he summoned all his and her kinsfolk, and they
feasted in commemoration of his return from his dangerous pilgrimage.
“Brother,” said the knight during the feast, “how is it that I neither
hear nor see aught of Maleficus, the great magician?”
“He disappeared, we know not whither, the very day that you departed for
your pilgrimage.”
“And where did he die?” asked the knight, with a look at his wife.
“We know not that he is dead,” replied the guests.
“How should a sorcerer die?” asked the knight’s wife with a sneer.
“If not dead, why did you bury him?” rejoined the knight.
“Bury him! what meanest thou, my lord? I bury him!”
“Yes, you bury him,” said the knight, calmly.
“Brothers, he is mad,” exclaimed the lady, turning pale and trembling.
“Woman,” replied the knight, rising, and seizing the lady by the wrist,
“woman, I am not mad. Hear ye all: this woman loved Maleficus; she
called him here the day I sailed; she devised with him my death; but God
struck him with that death he would have prepared for me, and now he
lies buried in my chamber. Come, let us see this great wonder.”
The hiding-place of the body was opened, and the remains found where the
knight had said; then did he declare before the judges and the people
the great crimes of his wife; and the judges condemned her to death at
the stake, and bade the executioner scatter her ashes to the four winds
of heaven.
“Few practices were more prevalent among the witches than that which
your tale illustrates, of effecting the death of an enemy through
the medium of an enchanted image of the person intended to be
affected,” said Herbert.
“As old Ben Jonson sings:
“‘With pictures full,
Of wax and wool,
Their livers I stick,
With needles quick.’”
“Yes,” said Herbert; “it was a very approved method to melt a waxen
image before the fire, under the idea that the person by it
represented would pine away, as the figure melted; or to stick pins
and needles into the heart or less vital parts of the waxen
resemblance, with the hopes of affecting, by disease and pain, the
portions of the human being thus represented and treated.”
“In one of the old ballad romances in which Alexander is celebrated,
we find a full account of the wondrous puppets of a king and
magician named Nectabanus. I will read you the old verses.
“‘Barons were whilhome wise and good,
That this art well understood;
And one there was, Nectabanus,
Wise in this art, and malicious;
When king or earl came on him to war,
Quick he looked on the star;
Of wax, made him puppets,
And made them fight with bats (_clubs_);
And so he learned _Je vous dis_,
Aye to quell his enemy
With charms and with conjurisons:
Thus he assayed the regions,
That him came for to assail,
In very manner of battail;
By clear candle in the night,
He made each one with other fight.’”
“No bad way,” said Thompson, “of testing the advantage of that royal
and national luxury—war.”
“The rhymer makes his charms successful, especially in the case of
one King Philip, a great and powerful prince, who brought
nine-and-twenty great lords to battle against Nectabanus. Once put
into his charmed basin, the magician saw the end of the battle, the
defeat and death of his enemy.”
“The old Romans had as much fear of the waxen image, as good King
James,” remarked Herbert; “and were as firm believers in the feats
of Canidia over the enchanted model, as the Scottish King in the
modelling of his national wiches, and the secret cavern on the hill,
where Satan and his imps manufacture devils’ arrows to shoot at the
enemies of the witches.”
“‘Sympathia Magica works wondrous charms,’ says Scott; and so before
him dreamt the Arabian philosophers, and the royal witch-finder, who
founds his arguments against waxen images on the doctrine of
sympathy,” said Thompson.
“It is worth remarking,” said Herbert, “how witchcraft degenerated,
not in its powers, but in its persons of the supposed witches. Joan
of Arc, the wife of the protector Somerset, the mistress of Richard
III., were in early days deemed worthy of being punished as witches.
In later days, the charge was confined to the oldest, the ugliest,
and generally the poorest crone in the neighborhood.”
“With the fashion of political-witchcraft, the custom of charging
persons of rank with the crime, died away,” replied Lathom. “Instead
of torturing images, or raising spirits for the sake of crowns and
thrones, the witches became content to tease a neighbor’s child, or
render a farmer’s cow barren. The last instance of such a charge
against a person of rank, is the case of the Countess of Essex. The
charges of sorcery, however, formed but a small portion of the
accusations against the countess.”
“We are forgetting the moral,” said Thompson.
“It is short and plain,” answered Lathom, “and intended to be
illustrative of the advantage of the confession of sins. The good
knight is the soul of man, and his wicked wife the flesh of his
body. The pilgrimage represents our good deeds. The wise magician, a
prudent priest. Maleficus stands as the representative of the Devil,
and the image is human pride and vanity; add to these the bath of
confession, and the mirror of the sacred writings, by which the
arrows of sin are warded off, and the allegory is complete.”
“Does your storehouse afford another magical tale?” asked Thompson.
“Many more; I will read one that is short, but curious, from its
being founded on a generally received legend of the monk Gerbert,
afterwards Pope Sylvester. I will call it, for want of a better
name,
“THE CLERK AND THE IMAGE.”
In the city of Rome stood an image: its posture was erect, with the
right hand extended; on the middle finger of the outstretched hand was
written: “STRIKE HERE.” Years and years had the image stood there, and
no one knew the secret of the inscription. Many wise men from every land
came and looked at the statue, and many were the solutions of the
mystery attempted by them; each man was satisfied with his own
conclusion, but no one else agreed with him.
Among the many that attempted to unravel the mystery of the figure was a
certain priest. As he looked at the image, he noticed that when the sun
shone on the figure, the shadow of the outstretched finger was
discernible on the ground at some distance from the statue. He marked
the spot, and waited until the night was come; at midnight, he began to
dig where the shadow ceased; for three feet he found nothing but earth
and stones; he renewed his labor, and felt his spade strike against
something hard; he continued his work with greater zeal, and found a
trap-door, which he soon cleared, and proceeded to raise.
Below the door, a flight of marble steps descended into the earth, and a
bright light streamed upward from below. Casting down his spade, the
priest descended; at the foot of the stairs he entered a vast hall; a
number of men, habited in costly apparel, and sitting in solemn silence,
occupied the centre; around, and on every side, were riches innumerable:
piles of gold and enamelled vases; rich and glittering robes, and heaps
of jewels of the brightest hue.
The hall was lighted by one jewel alone; a carbuncle so bright, so
dazzling, that the priest could hardly bear to gaze upon it, where it
stood in a corner of the hall. At the opposite end of the hall stood an
armed archer; his bow was strung, and the arrow fitted to the string,
and he seemed to take aim at the carbuncle; his brow blazed with
reflected light, and on it was written: “_I am, that I am; my shaft is
inevitable: yon glittering jewel cannot escape its stroke._”
Beyond the great hall appeared another chamber, into which the priest,
amazed at what he saw, entered. It was fitted as a bedchamber, couches
of every kind ornamented it, and many beautiful women, arrayed in robes
as costly as those worn in the great hall, occupied the chamber. Here
too all was mute; the beautiful damsels sat in silence.
Still the priest went onward. There were rooms after rooms, stables
filled with horses and asses, and granaries stored with abundant forage.
He placed his hand on the horses, they were cold, lifeless stone.
Servants stood round about, their lips were closed—all was silent as the
grave; and yet what was there wanting—what but life?
“I have seen to-day what no man wall believe,” said the priest, as he
re-entered the great hall; “let me take something whereby to prove the
credit of my story.”
As he thus spake to himself, he saw some vases and jewel-handed knives
on a marble table beside him; he raised his hand, he clasped them, he
placed them in the bosom of his garment—all was dark.
The archer had shot with his arrow; the carbuncle was broken into a
thousand pieces—a thick darkness covered the place; hour after hour he
wandered about the halls and passages—all was dark—all was cold—all was
desolate; the stairs seemed to have fled, he found no opening, and he
laid him down and died a miserable death, amid those piles of gold and
jewels, his only companions the lifeless images of stone. His secret
died with him.
“Spenser in his Fairy Queen seems to have had some such tale as this
in his mind, in his scene in the House of Riches,” remarked Herbert.
“You allude to the fiend watching Sir Gouyon, and hoping that he
will be tempted to snatch some of the treasures of the subterraneous
palace, so freely displayed to his view.”
“Sir Gouyon fares better than your priest,” replied Herbert; he
resists the temptation, and escapes the threatened doom; as the poet
says:
“‘Thereat the fiend his gnashing teeth did grate,
And grieved so long to lack his greedy prey;
For well he weened, that so glorious bait
Would tempt his guest to take thereof assay;
Had he so done, he had him snatched away,
More light than Culver in the falcon’s fist.’”
“Pope Sylvester, I presume,” said Thompson, “was a clever
mechanician, and a good astronomer, as far as knowledge extended in
his day.”
“Precisely so, and hence all the wondrous tales of his magic,”
rejoined Lathom. “Born in France, and naturally of an acquisitive
mind, he proceeded to Spain, to gain in the Saracenic university of
Seville some little of the Eastern sciences. Arithmetic and
astronomy, or, as Malmesbury calls the last, astrology, were then
flourishing in Spain, and when introduced by him into his native
country, soon gained for him the reputation of a magician.”
“Friar Bacon experienced in this country,” remarked Herbert, “that a
knowledge of mechanics sufficient to create automatons, of acoustics
to regulate the transmission of sounds through long, concealed
pipes, and of astronomy to attempt some predictions of the weather
from planetary movements, was quite enough to ensure him the name of
magician among our rude ancestors.”
“One of the magic arts attributed to Gerbert,” remarked Lathom,
“clearly indicates, that a knowledge of mechanism was the source of
this reputation in his case. Malmesbury tells us that Gerbert framed
a bridge, beyond which were golden horses of gigantic size, with
riders of gold, richly glittering with jewels and embroidery. A
party attempted to pass the bridge, in order to steal the treasures
on the further side. As the first stept on the bridge, it rose
gradually in the air, and stood perpendicularly on one end. A brazen
man rose from beneath, and as he struck the water with a mace of
brass, the sky was overshadowed, and all was thick darkness.”
“Setting aside the darkness,” said Thompson, “the result of
accident, or an addition of the chroniclers, a little clever
mechanism will account for the movable bridge of Gerbert.”
“The same explanation applies to the ever-burning lamp of the
Rosicrucians, held in the hand of a figure armed with a mace, with
which he dashes the lamp to atoms, on the entrance of any person
into the secret vault.”
“Most undoubtedly, Herbert,” said Thompson; “for in this instance,
the legend describes the figure as raising his hand at the first
step of the intruder, preparing to strike as he draws nearer and
nearer, and at last, when almost within reach, the secret springs on
which he is walking dash down the armed hand of the figure, and the
lamp and the secret perish in darkness.”
“The tales of natural magic,” said Herbert, “remind me of the
legends of one of the Jameses of Scotland, in the subterraneous
cavern of Halidon Hill.”
“I hardly know to what legend you allude,” replied Lathom.
“The one in which the king enters a long hall, where a hundred
knights stand on either side, each with his armor on, and his horse
ready caparisoned by his side. At the end of the hall stand a bugle
and a sword. All is silence; the knights stand as statues, and their
warhorses do not seem to breathe. The whole charm depends upon which
is performed first, the bugle blown, or the sword drawn from its
scabbard. The king seizes the bugle; the effect is that the whole
melts into darkness, and the charm is gone.”
“As you have led the way to traditions of the northern part of our
island,” said Lathom, “one form, if not the original one of the
legend, which Scott has worked up in his Marmion, will not be out of
place. I allude to the encounter of Marmion with De Wilton, under
the guise of the spectral champion of the Pictish camp.”
“Your old monk’s book would have been a treasure to Sir Walter
Scott,” said Herbert.
“That he would duly have appreciated its contents, no one can
doubt,” replied Lathom, “but he was so well read in the later forms
of the legends, which he would have found in its pages, that though
apparently unknown to him, he required but little of its aid. Our
writer would wish his readers to see in this legend an allegory of
the discomfiture of the Devil armed with pride, by the Christian
armed with faith. I will call it by the name of
“THE DEMON KNIGHT OF THE VANDAL CAMP.”
On the borders of the diocese of Ely, stands an old castle, now
crumbling into ruins, below which is a place called by the people
Wandlesbury; commemorating by this name the camp of the Vandals, which
they pitched hard by this castle, after laying waste the country and
cruelly slaughtering the inhabitants. The camp was on the summit of a
hill, on a round plain; round about it ran a trench which
“The Vandal race
——long since in blood did trace;
The moor around was brown and bare,
The space within was green and fair,
The spot the village children knew,
For there the wild flowers earliest grew;
But wo betide the wandering wight,
That treads its circle in the night!
The breadth across, a bow-shot clear,
Gives ample space for full career:
Opposed to the four points of heaven,
By four deep gaps was entrance given.”
Wo indeed to the adventurous man who dared to go armed into that camp,
and call upon an adversary to meet him! Even as he called, another
knight rode into the camp, armed at all points, and met the challenger
in combat. The encounter was always fatal to one of the combatants.
The knight Albert sat in the hall of the castle of Wandlesbury, and
shared the hospitality of the lord. At night, after supper, the
household closed round the great fire, and each man in his turn told his
tale of arms, love, or sorcery. The demon knight of the Vandal camp
figured in many a tale, and Albert hastened to prove the truth of the
legend. It was in vain that the lord of the castle endeavored to
dissuade his guest from seeking the phantom knight. Armed at all points,
the English knight sallied from the castle gate; and his trusty squire,
a youth of noble blood, rode by his master’s side.
Some hours passed: the hall was sadly silent during the knight’s
absence, for they all feared the worst for him; anon, a horn was heard
at the gate, the warder hastened to open the doors, and the knight rode
into the castle court; his squire followed him close, and he led by the
bridle a horse of perfect form and figure, of enormous size, and
coal-black.
The knight hastened to the hall; all clustered round him to hear his
tale; but the good lord of the castle bade them first release him of his
armor, and bring in refreshment. One by one the pieces of his armor were
taken off, and neither wound nor bruise appeared; at last they proceeded
to take off one of his cuishes; it was filled with blood, and even then
a few drops were seen to ooze from a slight wound in the thigh. His
wound dressed, his fatigue refreshed with good wine and meat, the lord
of the castle requested the knight’s account of his meeting with the
demon champion.
“My lord,” replied the English knight, “you know how, in despite of your
earnest remonstrances, I rode from your castle gate. The moon was bright
and clear, and I soon reached the entrance of the Vandal camp; without a
pause I rode in and blew my bugle.
‘Methought an answer met my ear,—
Yet was the blast so low and drear,
So hollow and so faintly blown,
It might be echo of my own.’
I waited for a moment in doubt.
‘Then sudden in the ring I view,
In form distinct of shape and hue,
A mounted champion rise.’
Without a word the demon prepared for the charge; I raised my shield,
couched my lance, and rushed to the attaint; we both staggered with the
charge; our lances broke in half, but the points glided harmlessly from
our armor. I still pressed on, and my adversary’s horse stumbled and
fell; the demon was rolled on the ground. In a moment I was by his side,
and seized his horse’s rein; the demon seemed to revive; he saw my
action, snatched a portion of his broken lance, and darted it at me as a
javelin. It struck me on my thigh, but in my eagerness I felt it not. In
a moment
‘He seem’d to vanish from my sight:
The moonbeam droop’d, and deepest night
Sunk down upon the heath.’
Had I not that dark black horse as a witness of the combat, I should
begin to doubt whether I had met the demon.”
“Let us see the demon’s steed,” said the old lord, after he had thanked
the knight for his relation of the adventure; “even now the dawn is
about to break, and we must seek some little rest before day shines
out.”
In the court-yard they found the black steed; his eye lustrous, his neck
proudly arched, his coat of shining black, and a glittering war saddle
on his back. The first streaks of the dawn began to appear as they
entered the castle yard; the black steed grew restless, and tried to
break from the hands of the groom; he champed his bit, snorted as in
pain and anger, and struck the ground with his feet, until the sparks
flew. The cock crowed—the black steed had disappeared.
Every year, on the self-same night, at that self-same hour, did the
wound of the English knight burst out afresh, and torment him with
severe anguish; to his dying day he bore this memorial of his encounter
with the demon champion of the Vandal camp.
“You have made good use of Scott’s version of the tale in Marmion,”
said Thompson, “to whom I should think your version of the story was
hardly known.”
“No; if I remember rightly, he gives the old Durham tale of Ralph
Bulmer as its immediate source, and the strange tale of the Bohemian
knights as related by Heywood, in his Hierarchie of the Blessed
Angels.”
“The introduction to the story recalls the custom so adroitly used
by Chaucer to introduce his Canterbury tales,” remarked Herbert;
“tale-telling round the fire.”
“When there was neither juggler nor minstrel present,” replied
Lathom, “it seems to have been the custom of our ancestors to
entertain themselves by relating or hearing a series of adventures.”
“So that Chaucer’s plan, at first sight so ingenious an invention,
is in truth an equally ingenious adaptation of an ancient fashion.”
“But to return to our demonology,” said Lathom; “what notion was
more common than that spirits could assume the human form, and live
on earth, and mingle as mortals in social life? This belief we find
illustrated by the author or authors of the Gesta.”
“The stay, however, of these spirits is generally but a lease of
life for so many years,” remarked Herbert.
“Generally; but not in the case which my author gravely lays down as
true, under the title of
“THE SEDUCTIONS OF THE EVIL ONE.”
It often happens that the devils are permitted to transform themselves
into angels of light, or to assume the human form, in order to foster in
human hearts whatever is wicked. So did it happen in France, when
Valentine was bishop of Arles.
On the very borders of his diocese stood a knight’s castle, with lofty
and strong battlements. The knight had travelled in many lands, and seen
many nations that none others had looked upon or heard of. He was a good
man, and a constant attendant on the services of the Church. His wife
was very fair to look upon; her figure was light and tall; her face
delicately white, and her eyes ever bright, and sparkling with almost
unearthly brilliancy. Attracted by cries of distress, whilst on one of
his distant pilgrimages, he had hastened into a dark wood, where he
discovered this fair lady, almost denuded of her garments, bound to a
tree, and being beaten with rods by two men of fierce countenances and
powerful frames.
His sword flashed in the air as the knight rode against the men; with
one blow he struck down the nearest of the lady’s torturers; with the
second he pierced the breast of the other monster; whilst with a third
stroke of his trenchant blade he cut in pieces the cords that bound the
lady to the tree.
The lady’s tale was simple: she was the daughter of a powerful prince of
a far-off land; had been seized by those in whose hands the knight
discovered her; carried for days and months over seas and lands, and at
last bound to the tree, and scourged because she would not yield to the
desires of her tormentors. She knew not where her father’s kingdom lay,
and its name was unknown even to the knight, though he had travelled far
and often.
After a time, the knight married the lady of the wood; happy were they
by their union, for he loved her dearly, and the lady seemed to return
his love. One thing alone grieved the good knight. Every day that she
came to the service of the Church, she stayed no longer than the
beginning of the consecration of the elements of the Sacrament. Often
and often had the good knight remonstrated with his wife on her conduct,
and sought from her some reason for her action. There was ever some
excuse, but it was always unsatisfactory.
One holiday the knight and the lady were at church. The priest was
proceeding to the celebration of the Sacrament, and the lady rose as
usual.
“Nay,” said the knight, forcibly arresting his wife’s departure; “nay,
not for this once.”
The lady struggled, her eyes gleamed with redoubled brilliancy, and her
whole body seemed wrung with violent pain.
“In the name of God, depart not,” said the knight.
That holy name was all-powerful. The bodily form of the lady melted
away, and was seen no more; whilst, with a cry of anguish and of terror,
an evil spirit of monstrous form rose from the ground, clave the chapel
roof asunder, and disappeared in the air.
“Such stories might be multiplied by hundreds,” said Herbert. “Every
country has its good and evil angels that live among men and assume
their forms.”
“It illustrates the curious fact,” remarked Lathom, “that the
earliest accusations of sorcery in Christian ages are connected with
relapses from the faith of Christ. The Anglo-Saxon laws against
witchcraft are levelled against those who still adhered to the
heathen practices of their ancestors, or sought to combine the pure
faith of the Bible with the superstitions of their ancestral
idolatry.”
“Was not such the fact in the south of Europe?” said Herbert; “the
still lingering worship of the gods and goddesses of the woods was
visited as sorcery. The demons do but occupy their places under
forms, and with opinions, gradually adapted to the religious
opinions of the age.”
“Many a secret meeting for the worship of God has been made the
foundation of the mysteries of a witch’s Sabbath,” said Lathom;
“sorcery was a common charge against the early Christians when they
met in their secret caves and hiding-places; it was an equally
current accusation centuries afterwards, when the Albigenses and
Waldenses held their religious assemblages in secret, for fear of
the power of that Church whose teaching they seceded from.”
“The same charges were made, in Sweden and Scotland, in the
seventeenth century, against witches, as four centuries before, so
little changed is superstition,” said Herbert.
“We must beat a truce,” said Lathom, “and be content to leave the
rest of our illustrations of natural magic, witchcraft, and
demoniacal agency, until our next meeting.”
“Good-night, then,” said Thompson; “remember, the witches’ time of
night approaches—
“‘The owl is abroad, the bat, and the toad,
And so is the cat-a-mountain,
The ant and the mole, sit both in a hole,
And the frog peeps out of the fountain.’”
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER X.
THE THREE MAXIMS—The Monk’s Errors in History—THE TRIALS OF
EUSTACE—Sources of its Incidents—Colonel Gardiner—St.
Herbert—Early English Romance of Sir Isumbras.
“What marvellous tale of sorcery are we to be regaled with
to-night?” asked Thompson, when the tenth evening with the old
story-tellers came round.
“We must adjourn that subject for to-night; for I have chanced on a
point, in illustration of one of the tales intended for this
evening’s reading, that will require another day’s looking up.”
“Are we to go to bed supperless, then?”
“No, no; not quite; here are two specimens that will both amuse and,
I hope, instruct us. To those who remember the Turkish tales, and
have not forgotten the story of The King, The Sofi, and The Surgeon,
the three maxims of Domitian will hardly appear a novelty. But
without further preface, I will commence the monk’s account of the
three maxims, for each of which Domitian thankfully gave a thousand
florins.”
THE THREE MAXIMS.
There was an emperor of Rome named Domitian, a good and a wise prince,
who suffered no offenders to escape. There was a high feast in his hall,
the tables glittered with gold and silver, and groaned with plenteous
provision; his nobles feasted with him—
“And ’twas merry with all
In the king’s great hall,
When his nobles and kinsmen, great and small,
Were keeping their Christmas holiday.”
The porter in his lodge made his fire blaze brightly, and solaced
himself with Christmas cheer, every now and then grumbling at his
office, that kept him from the gayeties of the retainers’ hall. The wind
blew cold, the sleet fell quick, as the bell of the king’s gate sounded
heavy and dull.
“Who comes now?” grumbled the porter; “a pretty night to turn out from
fire and food. Why, the very bell itself finds it too cold to clank
loudly. Well, well—duty is duty; some say it’s a pleasure—humph! Hilloa,
friend, who are you? what do you want, man?”
The traveller whom the porter thus addressed was a tall, weather-beaten
man, with long white hair that fluttered from beneath his cap of furs,
and whose figure, naturally tall and robust, seemed taller and larger
from the vast cloak of bearskins with which he was enveloped.
“I am a merchant from a far country,” said the man; “many wonderful
things do I bring to your emperor, if he will purchase of my valuables.”
“Well, come in, come in, man,” said the porter; “the king keeps high
Christmas feast, and on this night all men may seek his presence. Wilt
take some refreshment, good sir?”
“I am never hungry, nor thirsty, nor cold.”
“I’m all,—there—straight before you, good sir—the hall porter will usher
you in—straight before,” muttered the old porter, as he returned to his
fire and his supper. “Never hungry, thirsty, nor cold—what a good poor
man he would make; humph! he loses many a pleasure, though,” continued
the porter, as he closed the door of the lodge.
The strange merchant presented himself to the hall porter, and was
ushered by him into the presence of the emperor.
“Whom have we here?” said Domitian, as the strange visitor made his
obeisance. “What seekest thou of me?”
“I bring many things from far countries. Wilt thou buy of my
curiosities?”
“Let us see them,” rejoined Domitian.
“I have three maxims of especial wisdom and excellence, my lord.”
“Let us hear them.”
“Nay, my lord; if thou hearest them, and likest not, then I have lost
both my maxims and my money.”
“And if I pay without hearing them, and they are useless, I lose my time
and my money. What is the price?”
“A thousand florins, my lord.”
“A thousand florins for that of which I know not what it is,” replied
the king.
“My lord,” rejoined the merchant, “if the maxims do not stand you in
good stead, I will return the money.”
“Be it so then; let us hear your maxims.”
“The first, my lord, is on this wise: NEVER BEGIN ANY THING UNTIL YOU
HAVE CALCULATED WHAT THE END WILL BE.”
“I like your maxim much,” said the king; “let it be recorded in the
chronicles of the kingdom, inscribed on the walls and over the doors of
my palaces and halls of justice, and interwoven on the borders of the
linen of my table and my chamber.”
“The second, my lord, is: NEVER LEAVE A HIGHWAY FOR THE BYE-WAY.”
“I see not the value of this maxim; but to the third.”
“NEVER SLEEP IN THE HOUSE WHERE THE MASTER IS AN OLD MAN AND THE WIFE A
YOUNG WOMAN. These three maxims, if attended to, my lord, will stand you
in good stead.”
“We shall see,” said the king; “a year and a day for the trial of each,
at the end of this time we will settle accounts.”
“Good master,” said the king’s jester, “wilt sell thy chance of the
thousand florins for my fool’s cap?”
“Wait, and see what the end will be,” rejoined the merchant; “a year and
a day hence I will return to see how my first maxim has fared. Farewell,
my lord....”
* * * * *
The year and a day were nearly elapsed, and yet the first maxim had not
been clearly proved. Domitian remained severely just, and the
ill-intentioned of his nobles plotted his destruction in the hopes of
indulging their vices more freely under the rule of his successor. Many
were the plots they concocted to put him to death, but all were foiled
by his foresight and prudence.
“Every failure,” said the conspirators at a midnight meeting, “brings
danger nearer to ourselves.”
“Even so, brothers, but this time we will not fail,” said one of the
number; “do ye not mind that I am the king’s barber; every day he bares
his throat to my razor, it is but one slash, and we are free; promise me
the crown: in return for this, I will give you freedom by the king’s
death, and free license during my reign.”
“It is well spoken,” cried all the conspirators; “the barber shall be
our king.”
On the next morning, the barber entered the chamber of Domitian, and
prepared to shave the king. The razor was stropped, the lather spread
upon the royal chin, and the towel fastened round the royal breast. On
the edge of the napkin were these words in letters of gold: “_Never
begin any thing until you have calculated what the end will be._”
The barber’s eye fell on these words, they arrested his attention, he
paused in his labors.
“What am I about to do?” thought he to himself, “to kill the king, to
gain his crown; am I sure of the crown? shall I not rather be slain
miserably, and die amid unheard-of tortures and infamy? whilst those
that plot with me will turn against me, and make me their scape-goat.”
“Art dreaming, sir barber?” exclaimed the king.
At the king’s voice, the barber trembled exceedingly, he dropt the razor
from his hand, and fell at his sovereign’s feet.
“What means all this?”
“Oh, my good lord!” exclaimed the barber, as he knelt trembling at
Domitian’s feet, “this day was I to have killed thee; but I saw the
maxim written on the napkin; I thought of the consequences, and now
repent me of my wickedness. Mercy, my good lord, mercy!”
“Be faithful, and fear not,” replied the king.
“The merchant, my lord the king,” said a servant of the chamber, who
entered at that moment, followed by the old merchant.
“Thou art come at a good time, sir merchant; the first maxim has been
proved; it has saved my life; it was worthy of its price.”
“Even as I expected, my lord; a year and a day hence expect me again.”
* * * * *
“We will trust no more to a single hand,” said one of the conspirators,
when they met again after the barber’s repentance; “this time we will
all share.”
“I propose,” said one of the rebel lords, “an ambush on the road to
Naples. Every year, on the day after Christmas, the king journeys
thither; the bye-path near to the city gates is the nearest road,
peradventure he will go that way.”
When the Christmas night was over, the king prepared to journey to
Naples; a great company of nobles, knights, and men-at-arms, went with
him. Not far from the city, he came to the place where the highway and
bye-path diverged.
“My lord,” said an old noble, “the day is far spent, the sun sinks fast
in the horizon; will not my lord turn by the bye-path, as it is far
shorter than the high-road?”
“Nay,” said the king, “it’s a year and a day since the merchant’s first
maxim saved my life; now will I test the second admonition, ‘_never
leave a highway for a bye-path_,’ but go part of ye by that path, and
prepare for me in the city; I and the rest will pursue the highway.”
Onward rode the knights and the soldiers by the bye-path, and hastened
towards the city; as they neared the ambush, the traitors sprang upon
them, for they thought the king was among them. Every man slew his
opponent, and there remained not one of the king’s company, to bear the
tidings to the king, but a youth, a little page whom the conspirators
did not remark during the attack.
At the city gates, the king found the merchant who had sold him his
maxims.
“Halt, O king!” said he, “the second maxim has been proved.”
“How so?” replied the king.
“The company that rode by the bye-path are slain, every one of them save
this little page, who is here to tell the sad tale.”
“Is this so, good youth?”
“Alas, my lord, it is too true; from behind the trees they rushed upon
our company as we rode lightly and merrily, and no one, save your poor
page, lives to tell the tale.”
“For a second time is my life saved by thy maxim; let it be inscribed in
gold: ‘NEVER LEAVE A HIGHWAY FOR A BYE-WAY.’”
“For a year and a day, O king, fare thee well.”
* * * * *
“A murrain on the old fool’s maxims,” grumbled the chief of the
conspirators, when they discovered that the king had escaped their
design; “we are beaten out of every plot, and had best submit to his
dominion.”
“Nay,” exclaimed a young and licentious noble, “there is luck in odd
numbers, let us have one more trial, a sink or a swim.”
“I care not if we try once more,” said the old rebel; “but come, who
suggests a scheme?”
“I, and I, and I!” exclaimed several at once; but their schemes were
pronounced futile.
“What say ye to this?” said the young man who had spoken before: “every
year the king goes to the small village town where his old nurse lives;
there is but one house in the village where he can be lodged, let us
bribe the master of the house, that he slay our tyrant while he sleeps.”
The plan was approved by the rebel lords, the bribe offered and accepted
by the old man, to whose house the king always came. The king came as
usual to the village town, and to his old lodgings. As he entered, the
old man received him with humility and feigned delight, and a young
damsel, not eighteen years of age, attended at the door step. The king
noticed the damsel, he arrested his steps, and called to the old man.
“Good father,” asked he, “is yonder damsel thy daughter or thy niece?”
“Neither, my lord,” replied the old man; “she is my newly married wife.”
“Away, away,” said the king to his chamberlain, “prepare me a bed in
another house, for I will not sleep here to-night.”
“Even as my lord wishes,” rejoined the chamberlain; “but my lord knows
there is no other house in this place fit for a king’s residence, save
this one; here every thing is prepared, every thing commodious.”
“I have spoken,” replied the king; “remain thou here; I will sleep
elsewhere.”
In the night, the old man and his wife arose, stole on tiptoe to the
chamber which was prepared for the king, and where the chamberlain now
slept in the royal bed; all was dark as they approached the bed, and
plunged a dagger into the breast of the sleeping noble.
“It is done,” said they; “to bed, to bed.”
Early the next morning the king’s page knocked at the door of the humble
abode where the king had passed the night.
“Why so early, good page?” asked the king.
“My lord, the old merchant waits thy rising; and even now strange news
is come from the village.”
“Let the merchant and the messenger come in.”
The merchant seemed greatly elated, his eye glistened with joy, and his
figure appeared dilated beyond its ordinary height. The messenger was
pale and trembling, and staring aghast with fear.
“My lord, my good lord,” exclaimed the pallid messenger, “a horrible
murder has been committed on your chamberlain; he lies dead in the royal
bed.”
“The third maxim is tried and proved,” said the merchant.
“Give God the praise,” said the king; “thy reward is earned: a robe of
honor, and thrice thy bargained price; to the old man and his wife,
immediate death.”
“What theological application does the author append to this clever
tale?” said Herbert, “for moral it wants not, as it tells its own.”
“The emperor is any good Christian; the porter, none other than
_free will;_ whilst the merchant represents our blessed Saviour. The
florins are virtues, given in exchange for the maxims; the grace and
favor of God. The conspirators are devils; the highway is the Ten
Commandments; the bye-way, a bad life; the rebels in ambush,
heretics.”
“So far as it goes, I do not object to the explanation; it requires
great additions, however,” replied Herbert.
“Which the author considered to be compensated for by adding more
characters than the tale contained, in several of his other
explanations.”
“Domitian is obliged to the old monk,” said Thompson, “for such a
pretty character of justice and mercy.”
“See again the system of compensation; in the next story Adrian is
as much traduced, as Domitian flattered in this. But, remember, the
old monk was writing neither histories nor biographies; any name
that occurred to him served his purpose; he looks more to the effect
of his incidents than to the names of his characters. With this
prelude I will give you
“THE TRIALS OF EUSTACE.”
When Trajan was emperor of Rome, Sir Placidus, a knight of great
prowess, and a most skilful commander, was chief of the armies of the
empire. Like his imperial master, he was merciful, just, and charitable,
but a worshipper of idols, a despiser of the Christian faith. His wife
was worthy of his virtues, and was of one accord with him in his
religion. Two sons had he, educated in all the magnificence that
befitted their father’s station; but, as was to be expected, the faith
of the parents was the faith of their children; they were idolaters.
It was a fair, soft day, the southerly wind blew lightly over the
meadows, and the fleecy clouds, ever and anon obscuring the sun,
proclaimed the hunters’ day. Sir Placidus rode to the chase. His friends
and his retainers were with him, and a right gallant company were they.
A herd of deer was soon found, the dogs loosed from their leashes, the
bugles sounded, and the whole of the company in full and eager pursuit.
One stag of lofty stature, and many-branching antlered head, separated
itself from the rest of the herd, and made for the depths of the
neighboring forest. The company followed the herd, but Sir Placidus gave
his attention to the noble animal, and tracked it through the mazes of
the wood.
Swift and long was the chase. Sir Placidus rode after the stag, ever
gaining just near enough to the noble animal to inspire him with a hope
of its ultimate capture, yet never so near as to strike it with his
hunting spear. On, on they went with untiring speed. The wood and its
thickets were passed, a lofty hill rose to the view. He pressed the stag
up its sides, and gained rapidly on the chase. In a moment the stag
turned and faced the knight; he prepared to strike, but his hand was
stayed as he saw between the horns of the creature a cross encircled
with a ring of glorious light. Whilst he mused on the wonder, a voice
addressed him. The stag seemed to speak thus to the knight:
“Why persecutest thou me, Placidus? for thy sake have I assumed this
shape; I am the God whom thou ignorantly worshippest; I am Christ. Thine
alms and thy prayers have gone up before me, and therefore am I now
come. As thou dost hunt this stag; even so will I hunt thee.”
Placidus swooned at these words, and fell from his horse. How long he
lay on the ground he knew not. When his senses returned, he cried in
anguish:
“Tell me thy will, O Lord, that I may believe in thee, and perform it.”
Then replied the voice: “I am Christ, the son of the living God. I
created heaven and earth, caused the light to arise, and divided it from
the darkness. I appointed days, and seasons, and years. I formed man out
of the dust of the earth, and for his sake took upon me his form.
Crucified, and buried, on the third day I arose again.”
“All this I believe, Lord,” replied Placidus; “yea, and that thou art he
who bringest back the wandering sinner.”
Then said the voice: “If thou believest, go into the city and be
baptized.”
“Shall I reveal this unto my wife and children, Lord, that they also may
believe?”
“Yea,” replied the voice; “return here on the morrow’s dawn, that thou
mayest know of thy future life.”
Placidus returned to his wife, and told her all that had happened unto
him; then did they believe, and were baptized, and their children with
them. The knight was called Eustace, his wife Theosbyta, whilst to his
two sons the names of Theosbytus and Agapetus were given in their
baptism. On the morrow, the knight returned to the place where he had
seen the vision.
“I implore thee, O Lord, to manifest thyself according to thy word,”
prayed the knight.
Then the voice was heard, saying: “Blessed art thou, Eustace, in that
thou hast been washed with the laver of my grace, and thereby overcome
the Devil. Now hast thou trodden him to dust, who beguiled thee. Now
will thy fidelity be shown; for he whom thou hast forsaken will rage
continually against thee. Many things must thou undergo for my sake.
Thou must become another Job; fear not; persevere; my grace is
sufficient for thee. In the end thou shalt conquer; choose then, whether
thou wilt experience thy trials in thine old age, or forthwith.”
“Even as thou willest, O Lord; yet, if it may be so, try me now, and
help me in my trial.”
“Be bold, Eustace; my grace can support you.” With these words, the
voice died away, and was no more heard; and Eustace, after prayer and
praise to God, rose from his knees, and returned to his own house.
But a few days had elapsed, ere the trials of Job came upon Eustace and
his family; pestilence carried off his flocks and his herds, and his
servants fled away, or died with their charges. Robbers plundered his
palace, driving away the knight, his wife, and his sons, in poverty and
nakedness. It was in vain that the emperor sought everywhere for the
knight, for not the slightest trace of him could be found.
At length the unhappy fugitives, covered with such rags as they could
obtain, reached the sea-shore, and besought a passage across the waters.
The captain of the vessel was captivated with the beauty of Theosbyta,
and consented to carry them over. No sooner were they on the further
side, than he demanded of them money for their voyage.
“Good master,” said Eustace, “I am poor and destitute, and have no
money.”
“Very well,” replied the captain; “thy wife will do as well; I take her
as my slave; she will sell for the passage money.”
“With my life only will I part with her,” exclaimed the knight, as his
wife clung to him in her distress.
“As you please, master; ho, men! seize the woman, and take her to my
cabin; as for the man and his brats, heave them overboard.”
“Leave me, leave me, Eustace,” murmured Theosbyta; “save thyself and our
children; I can but die once.”
With many a hard struggle, Eustace consented; he clasped his two boys by
their hands, and led them from the ship.
“Ah, my poor children!” he cried; “your poor mother is lost; in a
strange land and in the power of a strange lord must she lament her
fate.”
A few hours’ travelling brought Eustace and his children to the bank of
a broad and rapid river, the water of which ran so deep, that he feared
to cross its stream with both his boys at one time; placing one
therefore on the bank, under the shade of a bush, he clasped the eldest
in his arms and plunged into the river. The stream ran swiftly, and the
bottom was treacherous; but at length he reached the further side, and
placed Theosbytus on the bank. Again he plunged into the river. The
middle of the stream was but fairly gained, when he saw a wolf creep
from the wood close to which his younger son was placed, and approach
the child. It was all in vain that he shouted, and strove to reach the
shore; the wolf seized the child and bore it off, before its father’s
eyes. At that moment a loud roar from the other bank startled the
bereaved father; he turned, and saw a lion carrying away his eldest son.
“Alas, alas!” exclaimed Eustace, as soon as he had reached the further
bank of the river. “Once was I flourishing like a luxuriant tree, but
now I am altogether blighted. Military ensigns were around me, and bands
of armed men. Now I am alone in the world. My wife, my children are
taken from me; the one to slavery, the others to death. O Lord, thou
didst warn me that I must endure the perils of Job, are not these worse
than that holy man’s? In his greatest misery he had a couch whereon to
rest his wearied limbs, and friends to compassionate him in his
misfortunes. His wife, too, remained to him—mine is gone from me: place
a bridle on my lips, lest I utter foolishness, and stand up against
thee, O my God.”
His heart relieved by these passionate expressions, the knight continued
his travel; after many days of want and fatigue, he reached a far-off
village, where he abode with one of the villagers as his hired servant.
For fifteen years he served his master faithfully, and at his death he
succeeded to his cottage and his land.
Trajan still lived, but his fortunes did not prosper; his enemies became
daily stronger and stronger, for Placidus no longer directed the
movements of the imperial army, or urged on the soldiers, by his
example, to deeds of valor against the enemy. Often and often did the
emperor think of his lost commander, and ceaseless were his endeavors to
discover the place of his concealment.
Eustace was working in his fields about this time, little thinking of
Trajan, or of Rome, when two men drew near, and after observing him for
some time, and communing with each other, accosted the knight.
“Friend,” said one of the men, “dost know in these parts a knight named
Placidus and his two sons?”
The heart of Eustace was sore tried, when he saw the emissaries of
Trajan. The sight of them recalled his previous honors in the world, and
he still felt a lingering wish to retrace his steps. “Nay,” he thought,
“were I not alone, it were well to return; but for a solitary, this
place is best.” Then said he to the two men:
“There is no one about here, good sirs, of the name you ask after.”
“It is but a fool’s errand we are on, master, I fear,” said the man; “we
have travelled far and near after our old general, but no one knows
aught of him.”
“It is years since he left Rome, friends, is it not?” rejoined Eustace.
“Fifteen years and more; but come, comrade, we must go onwards.”
“Nay, sirs, come to my poor abode; what I have is at your service.”
The emissaries of Trajan gladly acceded to Eustace’s request. The homely
repast was soon placed on the board, and the men sat down to refresh
themselves, while Eustace waited upon them. Again the thoughts of his
old home came thickly upon him, and he could not restrain his tears. He
left the room where his guests were, bathed his face with water, and
returned to wait on the two men.
“I have a strange presentiment,” remarked one of the men during
Eustace’s absence, “that our good host is even he whom we search after.
Marked you not how he hesitated when we first addressed him?”
“Ay, and even now he has left us with his eyes red with suppressed
tears.”
“Let us try the last test, the sabre mark on his head, which he received
in the passage of the Danube, when he struck down the northern
champion.”
As soon as Eustace returned the soldiers examined his head, and finding
the wished-for mark, embraced their old general; the neighbors, too,
came in, and the exploits of Eustace were soon in the mouths of the
villagers.
For fifteen days they journeyed towards Rome, Eustace and his two
guides; as they neared the imperial capital, the emperor came out to
meet his old commander. Eustace would have fallen at his master’s feet,
but Trajan forbade him; and side by side, amid the congratulations and
applauses of the people, the emperor and his long-lost servant entered
Rome.
The return of Eustace inspired the people with confidence; thousands
hurried from every village to volunteer as soldiers, and his only
difficulty was to select who should be rejected. One contingent from a
far-off village arrested his attention; it was headed by two youths of
wonderful likeness the one to the other, and apparently within a year of
the same age. They were tall in stature, of commanding features, and
their selection as leaders, by their comrades, did justice to their
attainments and the superiority of their manners. Pleased with the
youths, Eustace placed them in the van of his army, and began his march
against the invaders, who had reached within a few miles of the coast
whereon he had disembarked from the ship of the barbarous captain.
Pitching his camp within sight of that of the enemy, the commander
billeted the best of his troops in a small village that formed the rear
of his position. A widow lady, of but few years, but sorely worn with
grief, received the two youths into her house. About the mid-day meal,
the youths conversed the one with the other of their early life.
“Of what I was when a child,” said the elder, “I know only this, that my
father carried me over a broad river, and laid me under a bush whilst he
returned to fetch my brother; but whilst he was gone a lion came, seized
me by the clothes, and bore me into a wood hard by. My mother we lost on
our journey nigh to a great sea, where she remained with a cruel captain
who had seized her for his slave. As I was carried away by the lion,
methought a wolf seized on my brother, whom my father had left on the
other bank. The lion soon dropped me, for men with loud cries and stones
pursued him and drove him from me. Then did they take me to the village
where we have lived together so long.”
“My brother, O my brother!” exclaimed the other youth, hardly able to
restrain his emotions during the recital, “I am he whom the wolf carried
off, saved from his jaws by the shepherds, as thou wast from the jaws of
the lion.”
The widow had listened to the wonderful story of the two young men. Much
she marvelled at their preservation; on the morrow she sought the
commander of the imperial forces; she found him in his tent; his
officers were around him, and the two young men stood within the circle.
The widow craved permission to return to her own country.
“Sir,” she said, “I am a stranger in these parts; fifteen years have
passed since I left Rome with my husband, once high in power, and rich,
but then poor and in misery; we reached yonder sea, our two sons were
with us, we crossed in a shipman’s boat, but when we arrived on this
side he demanded money of my husband, and when he had it not to give him
he seized on me and carried me into slavery. Years lived I beneath his
roof in sorrow and in pain; but it was in vain that he sought to do me
evil, for God preserved me from his devices. At length my master died,
and I became free; since then I have labored honestly, and would now
return to Rome, if, perchance, I may find my husband and my children.”
“Theosbyta!” said the general, in a low voice, raising his helmet as he
spoke.
“Eustace! my husband!”
The general raised his fainting wife, and kissed her gently on her
forehead. “Our sons, Theosbyta, we shall see no more; a lion and a wolf
carried them off before mine eyes, as we crossed the river not many
leagues from hence.”
“Father! our father!” said the two youths, as they knelt before the
general.
“Nay, doubt not, Eustace,” said his wife, “last night I overheard the
tale of their adventures; this is he whom the lion took; this one did
the shepherds rescue from the jaws of the wolf.”
The tale was soon retold, and Eustace convinced that he had recovered in
one day his wife and his sons. Then loud blew the trumpets through the
camp, and cheer upon cheer rang from the good soldiers, when their
general came from his tent, leading his long-lost wife, and supported on
either side by his sons. The enthusiasm aided them in obtaining the
victory over the enemy. Every one loved their general, and rejoiced in
his joy; and that day they fought for their home, their emperor, and
their commander.
Trajan lived not to welcome home his honored general; his successor,
however, spared not to receive Eustace with the honors his achievements
deserved. The banquet-hall was gorgeous with ornaments; and the banquet
replete with delicacies and curiosities. On the emperor’s right hand sat
Eustace, and his sons occupied no mean place in the banquet-hall.
“To-morrow,” said the emperor, “we will sacrifice to the great gods of
war, and offer our thanks for this thy victory.”
“As my lord pleases,” said Eustace; “one thing I pray, that my lord will
not regard my absence from the temple as an intentional slight on his
royal person.”
“Absence, sir!” exclaimed the emperor; “I command your attendance; see
that you and yours are before the altar of Mars at noon to-morrow; thou
shalt offer there with thine own hands.”
“I will cut off the hand that so offends,” replied Eustace.
“Ah! a Christian—be it so—sacrifice or die!”
“Death then, my lord; I worship Christ, not idols.”
“Let him save thee from the lions’ mouths,” exclaimed the impious
emperor. “Ho, guards! this Christian and his sons to the beasts’ den;
come, my guests, to the arena.”
“And me to my lord,” said Theosbyta, advancing from the lower part of
the hall.
“As thou wilt: come, sirs; our lions will be well fed.”
The party reached the amphitheatre; it was crowded with spectators.
Rumor had soon carried abroad the tidings that the triumphant general
was to die by the lion’s mouth, for his Christianity. Some pitied him
for what they called his folly: “What, die for a little incense thrown
on the fire!” Others gloried in his expected death, for they hated the
new faith. A few in secret prayed to God, to give their brother strength
to undergo his fearful martyrdom, for they were Christians.
Eustace stood in the arena; his wife knelt by his side, his sons stood
before him to meet the lion’s first bound. The crowd grew impatient—a
sudden silence; a sound as of revolving hinges, and then a sullen roar,
as with a bound the lion sprang into the centre of the amphitheatre. One
look he cast on the youths; and then he bowed his head, crept to their
feet and licked them; another, and another, was let loose; but the old
lion kept guard over the family, and fought with the other lions, and
drove them back to their dens.
“It is enough,” said the emperor, “he has a charm against the teeth of
beasts; we will test his powers against the heat of fire; prepare the
brazen ox.”
A fire was lighted beneath the animal, a vast hollow frame that
represented an ox, and into the belly of which the victims were
introduced through a door in the right side. As soon as it was heated to
its utmost heat, the executioners hastened to throw their victims in;
Eustace forbade them, and then clasping his wife in his arms, and
followed by his sons, he moved slowly up the ladder that led to the
horrid cell, and entered the belly of the brazen ox calmly and without
fear.
For three days the fire was kept burning beneath the creature. On the
third evening the beast was opened; within lay Eustace, his wife, and
his sons, as it were in a deep and placid sleep. Not a hair of their
heads was burnt, nor was the smell of fire upon their persons.
So died they all: the father, the wife, and the children. The people
buried them with honor, and remembered with sorrow the martyrdom of the
Christian general.
“The scene of the conversion,” said Thompson, “recalls to my mind
Doddridge’s account of Colonel Gardiner, converted from his
licentious life by an almost similar vision of our Saviour on the
cross, and by an address not less effective than the words heard by
the Eustace of your tale.”
“Few of my old monk’s tales are more true, in their leading
features,” said Herbert, “than this of the trials of Eustace and his
family. It has been told more than once as an authentic history, and
you will find it alluded to in Butler’s ‘Lives of the Saints,’ where
it is stated that a church at Rome was dedicated to the memory of
St. Eustachius.”
“Surely the incident of the stag and the cross is very similar to
that in the legend of St. Herbert.”
“Almost identical, Thompson,” rejoined Herbert; “in the foreign
pictures the two incidents are generally depicted in nearly the same
manner.”
“Another curious similarity occurs in the early English romance of
Sir Isumbras,” said Lathom. “That knight’s misfortunes came upon him
in a very similar manner to poor Eustace’s: the knight, his wife,
and his three children wander on their pilgrimage to the Holy Land;
she wrapped in his surcoat, his scarlet mantle being divided among
his three children. They so reach a river, and two of their children
are carried off by a lion and a leopard ; one child, however, and
the mother are left: then sings the old poet:
“‘Through the forest they went days three,
Till they came to the Greekish sea;
They grieved and were full wo!
As they stood upon the land
They saw a fleet come sailand (_sailing_),
Three hundred ships and mo. (_more_),
With top castles set on loft,
Richly then were they wrought,
With joy and mickle pride:
A heathen king was therein,
That Christendom came to win,
His power was full wide.’”
“The king, of course, plays the part of the cruel ship-captain,”
said Herbert.
“Yes. Seven days’ hunger drives the knight and his lady to the
sultan’s galley, to ask for bread: taken for spies, they are at
first driven off, until the noble stature of the knight, and the
fair complexion of the wife, ‘bright as a blossom on a tree,’
convince the Saracens that their piteous tale is true. To the knight
the sultan offers rank, honors, and wealth, if he will renounce
Christianity and fight under the Moslem banners. Sir Isumbras
refuses, and renews his petition for bread. Then, continues the
poet,
“‘The sultan beheld that lady there,
Him thought an angel that she were,
Comen a-down from heaven:
Man—I will give thee gold and fee,
An thou that woman will sellen me,
More than thou can _never_ (name).
I will give thee a hundred pounds
Of pennies that be whole and round,
And rich robes seven.
She shall be queen of my land;
And all men bow unto her hand;
And none withstand her steven (voice).
Sir Isumbras said—Nay;
My wife I will not sell away,
Though ye me for her sloo (slew).
I wedded her in goddis lay
To hold her to my ending day,
Both for weal and wo.’”
“A decided refusal to complete the bargain,” said Thompson.
“Yet not so taken by the sultan; the money is counted into the
knight’s cloak, the lady taken forcible possession of, and Sir
Isumbras and his child carried on shore, and beat until hardly able
to move, but here we must stop with the early English romance,
having already gone beyond its similarity to the old monk’s story.
And now I must break off for to-night; I know it is but a short
allowance, and shall be compensated for when we next meet.”
[Illustration]
CHAPTER XI.
Another Chat about Witches and Witchcraft—Late Period of the Existence
of Belief in Witches—QUEEN SEMIRAMIS—Elfin Armorers—The Sword of
the Scandinavian King—Mystical Meaning of Tales of
Magic—Anglo-Saxon Enigmas—CELESTINUS AND THE MILLER’S HORSE—THE
EMPEROR CONRAD AND THE COUNT’S SON—Legend of “The Giant with the
Golden Hairs.”
“Your stories about sorcerers and sorcery, Lathom,” said Herbert,
“have made me consider a little as to the amount of truth on which
such fictions may have been founded.”
“Perhaps you believe in witches, magicians, and all that tribe, that
gather deadly herbs by moonlight, and ride through the air on
broomsticks,” said Thompson, with a smile.
“May not Herbert fairly ask you,” said Lathom, “whether there is any
antecedent improbability in mortal beings obtaining, from the spirit
of evil, a temporary superhuman power; or in the idea of Satan
awarding the riches and honors of this world to those who will fall
down and worship him?”
“Selden’s apology for the law against witches in his time shows a
lurking belief,” remarked Herbert. “‘If,’ says that sour old lawyer,
‘one man believes that by turning his hat thrice and crying “buz,”
he could take away a fellow-creature’s life, this were a just law
made by the state, that whosoever should do so, should forfeit his
life.’”
“He must have believed, or his logical mind would have seen, that a
law waging war with intentions which are incapable of fulfilment, is
both wrong and mischievous.”
“Well,” said Herbert, “as good a lawyer as Selden and a better man,
did not fear to profess his belief in witchcraft, and to give his
judicial countenance to trials for sorcery:—Sir Matthew Hale was
ever ready to admit his belief in witches and witchcraft.”
“To the lawyers you may add the learned antiquary and physician, Sir
Thomas Brown, the author of the ‘Religio Medici.’”
“But surely, Lathom, all this belief, as well as the practice of
witch-tormenting, ceased about 1682,” said Thompson.
“The belief in witchcraft has never yet been extinct, and the
practice of witch-burning lasted forty years after that, at least in
Scotland. The act of James, so minutely describing witches and their
acts, and so strenuously inciting the people to burn them, remained
on the statute-book until the ninth year of George the Second; and
as late as 1722 the hereditary sheriff of Sutherlandshire condemned
a poor woman to death as a witch.”
“I believe I can carry down the belief at least a few years later
than the date even of the last witch execution,” remarked Herbert.
“Among the poor and uneducated, undoubtedly?”
“Nay, Thompson, with them it remains even now; I speak not only of
the educated, but of that class of men which is most conversant with
evidence, and most addicted to discredit fictitious stories.”
“What, the lawyers?”
“Even so,” replied Lathom; “in 1730, William Forbes, in his
‘Institutes of the Law of Scotland,’ published in that year, makes
this remark: ‘Nothing seems plainer to me, than that there have been
witches, and that, perhaps, such are now actually existing; which I
intend, God willing, to clear in a larger work concerning the
criminal law.’”
“Did this large work appear?” said Thompson.
“I should think not; at least, it is not known.”
“The old Jesuit from whom you got your version of The Ungrateful
Man, has a story illustrative of a kind of witchcraft that all will
admit to have been very prevalent in every age,” said Thompson.
“What, will you believe in witchcraft in any form?”
“At all events, in one form—the witchcraft of love; my instance is
the story of Semiramis and Ninus. I will read it you from the same
version that Lathom used for his tale of Vitalis and Massaccio.”
THE QUEEN SEMIRAMIS.
“Of all my wives,” said King Ninus to Semiramis, “it is you I love the
best. None have charms and graces like you, and for you I would
willingly resign them all.”
“Let the king consider well what he says,” replied Semiramis. “What if I
were to take him at his word?”
“Do so,” returned the monarch; “whilst beloved by you, I am indifferent
to all others.”
“So, then, if I asked it,” said Semiramis, “you would banish all your
other wives, and love me alone? I should be alone your consort, the
partaker of your power, and queen of Assyria?”
“Queen of Assyria! Are you not so already,” said Ninus, “since you
reign, by your beauty, over its king?”
“No—no,” answered his lovely mistress; “I am at present only a slave
whom you love. I reign not; I merely charm. When I give an order, you
are consulted before I am obeyed.”
“And to reign, then, you think so great a pleasure?”
“Yes, to one who has never experienced it.”
“And do you wish, then, to experience it? Would you like to reign a few
days in my place?”
“Take care, O king! do not offer too much.”
“No, I repeat it,” said the captivated monarch. “Would you like, for one
whole day, to be sovereign mistress of Assyria? If you would, I consent
to it.”
“And all which I command, then, shall be executed?”
“Yes, I will resign to you, for one entire day, my power and my golden
sceptre.”
“And when shall this be?”
“To-morrow if you like.”
“I do,” said Semiramis; and let her head fall upon the shoulder of the
king, like a beautiful woman asking pardon for some caprice which has
been yielded to.
The next morning, Semiramis called her women, and commanded them to
dress her magnificently. On her head she wore a crown of precious
stones, and appeared thus before Ninus. Ninus, enchanted with her
beauty, ordered the officers of the palace to assemble in the state
chamber, and his golden sceptre to be brought from the treasury. He then
entered the chamber, leading Semiramis by the hand. All prostrated
themselves before the aspect of the king, who conducted Semiramis to the
throne, and seated her upon it. Then ordering the whole assembly to
rise, he announced to the court that they were to obey, during the whole
day, Semiramis as himself. So saying, he took up the golden sceptre, and
placing it in the hands of Semiramis—“Queen,” said he, “I commit to you
the emblem of sovereign power; take it, and command with sovereign
authority. All here are your slaves, and I myself am nothing more than
your servant for the whole of this day. Whoever shall be remiss in
executing your orders, let him be punished as if he had disobeyed the
commands of the king.”
Having thus spoken, the king knelt down before Semiramis, who gave him,
with a smile, her hand to kiss. The courtiers then passed in succession,
each making oath to execute blindly the orders of Semiramis. When the
ceremony was finished, the king made her his compliments, and asked her
how she had managed to go through it with so grave and majestical an
air.
“Whilst they were promising to obey me,” said Semiramis, “I was thinking
what I should command each of them to do. I have but one day of power,
and I will employ it well.”
The king laughed at this reply. Semiramis appeared more _piquante_ and
amiable than ever. “Let us see,” said he, “how you will continue your
part. By what orders will you begin?”
“Let the secretary of the king approach my throne,” said Semiramis, in a
loud voice.
The secretary approached; two slaves placed a little table before him.
“Write,” said Semiramis: “‘Under penalty of death, the governor of the
citadel of Babylon is ordered to yield up the command of the citadel to
him who shall bear to him this order.’ Fold this order, seal it with the
king’s seal, and give it to me. Write now: ‘Under penalty of death, the
governor of the slaves of the palace is ordered to resign the command of
the slaves into the hands of the person who shall present to him this
order.’ Fold, seal it with the king’s seal, and deliver to me this
decree. Write again: ‘Under penalty of death, the general of the army
encamped under the walls of Babylon is ordered to resign the command of
the army to him who shall be the bearer of this order.’ Fold, seal, and
deliver to me this decree.”
She took the three orders, thus dictated, and put them in her bosom. The
whole court was struck with consternation; the king himself was
surprised.
“Listen,” said Semiramis. “In two hours hence let all the officers of
the state come and offer me presents, as is the custom on the accession
of new princes, and let a festival be prepared for this evening. Now,
let all depart. Let my faithful servant Ninus alone remain. I have to
consult him upon affairs of state.”
When all the rest had gone out—“You see,” said Semiramis, “that I know
how to play the queen.”
Ninus laughed.
“My beautiful queen,” said he, “you play your part with astonishment.
But, if your servant may dare question you, what would you do with the
orders you have dictated?”
“I should be no longer queen were I obliged to give an account of my
actions. Nevertheless, this was my motive. I have a vengeance to execute
against the three officers whom these orders menace.”
“Vengeance—and wherefore?”
“The first, the governor of the citadel, is one-eyed, and frightens me
every time I meet him; the second, the chief of the slaves, I hate,
because he threatens me with rivals; the third, the general of the army,
deprives me too often of your company,—you are constantly in the camp.”
This reply, in which caprice and flattery were mingled, enchanted Ninus.
“Good,” said he, laughing. “Here are the three first officers of the
empire dismissed for very sufficient reasons.”
The gentlemen of the court now came to present their gifts to the queen.
Some gave precious stones; others, of a lower rank, flowers and fruits;
and the slaves, having nothing to give, gave nothing but homage. Among
these last, there were three young brothers, who had come from the
Caucasus with Semiramis, and had rescued the caravan in which the women
were, from an enormous tiger. When they passed before the throne—
“And you,” said she to the three brothers, “have you no present to make
to your queen?”
“No other,” replied the first, Zopire, “than my life to defend her.”
“None other,” replied the second, Artaban, “than my sabre against her
enemies.”
“None other,” replied the third, Assar, “than the respect and admiration
which her presence inspires.”
“Slaves,” said Semiramis, “it is you who have made me the most valuable
present of the whole court, and I will not be ungrateful. You who have
offered me your sword against my enemies, take this order, carry it to
the general of the army encamped under the walls of Babylon, give it to
him, and see what he will do for you. You who have offered me your life
for my defence, take this order to the governor of the citadel, and see
what he will do for you; and you who offer me the respect and admiration
which my presence inspires, take this order, give it to the commandant
of the slaves of the palace, and see what will be the result.”
Never had Semiramis displayed so much gayety, so much folly, and so much
grace, and never was Ninus so captivated. Nor were her charms lessened
in his eyes, when a slave not having executed promptly an insignificant
order, she commanded his head to be struck off, which was immediately
done.
Without bestowing a thought on this trivial matter, Ninus continued to
converse with Semiramis till the evening and the _fête_ arrived. When
she entered the saloon which had been prepared for the occasion, a slave
brought her a plate, in which was the head of the decapitated
eunuch.—“’Tis well,” said she, after having examined it. “Place it on a
stake in the court of the palace, that all may see it, and be you there
on the spot to proclaim to every one, that the man to whom this head
belonged lived three hours ago, but that having disobeyed my will, his
head was separated from his body.”
The _fête_ was magnificent; a sumptuous banquet was prepared in the
gardens, and Semiramis received the homage of all with a grace and
majesty perfectly regal; she continually turned to and conversed with
Ninus, rendering him the most distinguished honor. “You are,” said she,
“a foreign king, come to visit me in my palace. I must make your visit
agreeable to you.”
Shortly after the banquet was served, Semiramis confounded and reversed
all ranks. Ninus was placed at the bottom of the table. He was the first
to laugh at this caprice; and the court, following his example, allowed
themselves to be placed, without murmuring, according to the will of the
queen. She seated near herself the three brothers from the Caucasus.
“Are my orders executed?” she demanded of them.
“Yes,” replied they.
The _fête_ was very gay. A slave having, by the force of habit, served
the king first, Semiramis had him beaten with rods. His cries mingled
with the laughter of the guests. Every one was inclined to merriment. It
was a comedy, in which each played his part. Towards the end of the
repast, when wine had added to the general gayety, Semiramis rose from
her elevated seat, and said: “My lords, the treasurer of the empire has
read me a list of those who this morning have brought me their gifts of
congratulation on my joyful accession to the throne. One grandee alone
of the court has failed to bring his gift.”
“Who is it?” cried Ninus. “He must be punished severely.”
“It is yourself, my lord—you who speak; what have you given to the queen
this morning?”
Ninus rose, and came with a smiling countenance to whisper something
into the ear of the queen. “The queen is insulted by her servant!”
exclaimed Semiramis.
“I embrace your knees to obtain my pardon, beautiful queen,” said he;
“pardon me, pardon me”; and he added in a lower tone, “I wish this
_fête_ were finished.”
“You wish, then, that I should abdicate?” said Semiramis. “But no—I have
still two hours to reign”; and at the same time she withdrew her hand,
which the king was covering with kisses. “I pardon not,” said she, with
a loud voice, “such an insult on the part of a slave. Slave, prepare
thyself to die.”
“Silly child that thou art,” said Ninus, still on his knees, “yet will I
give way to thy folly; but patience, thy reign will soon be over.”
“You will not then be angry,” said she, in a whisper, “at some thing I
am going to order at this moment.”
“No,” said he.
“Slaves!” said she aloud, “seize this man—seize this Ninus!”
Ninus, smiling, put himself into the hands of the slaves.
“Take him out of the saloon, lead him into the court of the seraglio,
prepare every thing for his death, and wait my orders.”
The slaves obeyed, and Ninus followed them, laughing, into the court of
the seraglio. They passed by the head of the disobeying eunuch. Then
Semiramis placed herself on a balcony. Ninus had suffered his hands to
be tied.
“Hasten,” said the queen, “hasten, Zopire, to the fortress; you to the
camp, Artaban; Assar, do you secure all the gates of the palace.”
The orders were given in a whisper, and executed immediately.
“Beautiful queen,” said Ninus, laughing, “this comedy wants but its
conclusion; pray, let it be a prompt one.”
“I will,” said Semiramis. “Slaves, recollect the eunuch. Strike!”
They struck; Ninus had hardly time to utter a cry; when his head fell
upon the pavement, the smile was still upon his lips.
“Now, I am queen of Assyria,” exclaimed Semiramis; “and perish every
one, like the eunuch and Ninus, who dare disobey my orders.”
“The discovery of the sword by Sir Guido, in your tale of the
Crusader,” said Herbert, “reminds me of the elfin swords so common
among the Scandinavian heroes.”
“Such as the enchanted sword taken by a pirate from the tomb of a
Norwegian monarch,” suggested Lathom.
“Rather, perhaps, of those manufactured by the elves under
compulsion, or from gratitude to some earthly warrior; the famous
sword _Tyrfing_, the weapon of the Scandinavian monarch Suafurlami,
was one of these. This is the story as given by Scott, in the second
volume of his Scottish Minstrelsy: ‘The Scandinavian king, returning
from hunting, bewildered himself among the mountains; about sunset
he beheld a large rock, and two dwarfs sitting before the mouth of a
cavern. The king drew his sword, and intercepted their retreat by
springing between them and their recess, and imposed upon them the
following condition of safety:—That they should make him a falchion,
with a baldric and scabbard of pure gold, and a blade which would
divide stones and iron as a garment, and which would render the
wielder of it ever victorious in battle. The elves complied with his
demand, and Suafurlami pursued his way home. Returning at the time
appointed, the dwarfs delivered to him the famous sword _Tyrfing_;
then standing in the entrance to the cavern, spoke thus: “This
sword, O king, shall destroy a man every time it is brandished; but
it shall perform three atrocious deeds, and shall be thy bane.” The
king rushed forward with the charmed sword, and buried both its
edges in the rock, but the dwarfs escaped into their recesses. This
enchanted sword emitted rays like the sun, dazzling all against whom
it was brandished; it divided steel like water, and was never
unsheathed without slaying a man.’”
“The supernatural skill in the fabrication of arms attributed to the
Northern elves,” remarked Lathom, “seems to indicate some traces of
historical truth. The Fins, who inhabited Scandinavia when Odin and
his Asiatics invaded the country, retired to the mountains to avoid
the tyranny of the new people. Far better acquainted than the
invaders could have been with the mines of their country, a superior
knowledge in the manufacture of arms may be fairly awarded to them.
And thus, in time, the oppressed Fins would come to be the dwarfish
armorers of Scandinavian mythology.”
“As theory is the fashion,” said Thompson, “what say you to a
geological foundation to many of your mythological wonders? Were not
the great dragons of stone suddenly released from their rocky
beds—the long serpents guarding treasures in deep pits—the closely
coiled snake of the cavern—were not many of these the gigantic
antediluvian relics of our caves? Has not many an ichthyosaurus, in
his earthly bed, been transformed into a deputy fiend, or even into
the father of evil himself, keeping watch over some hoard of
ill-gotten wealth; whilst the strange form of the huge pterodactyl,
with its wings and claws, has been metamorphosed into the dragon of
Wantley and his compeers?”
“Your theory, Thompson,” rejoined Herbert, “may not be so baseless
as you regard it. The entire series of the heathen mythology has
been of old, and still is, in Germany, regarded as a mere mystical
delineation of the phenomena of nature. The elements are said to
have suggested the nature of the gods and their origin; the specific
phenomena of nature may have suggested the various forms under which
the divine race appears and acts. It was a very common practice
among the astronomers of the days of Galileo, and even to a later
period, to conceal their discoveries in enigmas. May we not, with
some little appearance of reason, regard the fables of our
ancestors, the knights, the dragons, the giants, the magicians and
their followers, as in some respect an esoteric teaching of the
philosophy of physics, a mystical setting forth of natural
phenomena?”
“The love of our Anglo-Saxon ancestors for philosophical enigmas, as
they may be called, was undoubtedly very great,” rejoined Lathom. “I
remember one given by Mr. Wright, in his introduction to Anglo-Saxon
literature. It was in these words:
“‘I saw tread over the turf
Ten in all,
Six brothers
And their sister with them,
They had a living soul:
They hanged their skins,
Openly and manifestly,
On the wall of the hall:
To any one of them all
It was none the worse,
Nor his side the sorer:
Although they should thus,
Bereaved of covering,
And awakened by the might
Of the guardian of the skies,
Bite, with their mouths,
The rough leaves;
Clothing is renewed
To those, who, before coming forth,
Left their ornaments,
Lying in their track,
To depart over the earth.’”
“I shall not attempt to guess such an enigma,” said Thompson.
“Its solution is the butterfly; the various transformations through
which it passes from the grub until it rises with its beautiful
wings, are intended to be described. But come, as we are on enigmas,
what say you to this: ‘We are a family of seventeen, all sisters;
six others claim to belong to our race, but we account them
illegitimate. We are born of iron, or of the feather that bears the
bird heavenward; by iron we die. Our fathers were three brothers,
our mother’s nature is uncertain. We teach him who desires to learn,
and quickly and silently give words to him who requires them of
us.’”
“I see the solution,” said Herbert, “but yet cannot work it out; it
is, doubtless, the alphabet, in that day confined to seventeen true
and six false letters; what puzzles me is the iron, and the natures
of the mother and the father.”
“The iron,” said Lathom, “is the style used in writing; the sharp
point for marking, and the broad end to rub out with; the
uncertainty of the mother’s race arises from the pen being either of
reed, or quill, or even of iron; the three brothers are the thumb
and two fingers employed in writing.”
“The ‘uncertain mother’ is peculiarly applicable to these times,”
said Thompson, with a smile, “when you may vary your pen from goose
to swan, and from swan to crow; or choose between steel pens of
every size and shape, and delicate nibs of gold tipped with rubies.”
“Come, we must leave our theories and enigmas, and return to our old
story-tellers,” said Herbert. “What tale is in preparation for us?”
“A little more demonology, as we have it in the story of
“CELESTINUS AND THE MILLER’S HORSE.”
Alexander had an only son, named Celestinus, who was very dear to him;
desirous of having him well instructed, he sent for a certain sage, and
proffered his son to him for a pupil, promising a bountiful remuneration
for his labor. The sage agreed, and took the boy home with him.
Celestinus was a diligent scholar, and made great and satisfactory
progress under the tuition of the philosopher.
One day, as the tutor and pupil were walking together through a meadow,
their attention was directed to a horse grievously afflicted with the
mange. He lay on the ground in the middle of the field, and on either
side of him two sheep were feeding, tied together by a rope which
chanced to hang over the horse’s back; irritated by the rubbing of the
cord, the poor horse rose, and naturally drew with him the two sheep.
The weight of the sheep made the rope press more and more upon his poor
back, and galled him dreadfully. Unable to endure the pain, the horse
ran towards his master’s home; the faster he ran, the more the sheep
knocked against his flanks, and by their weight ground the cord into the
sores on his back; with every struggle of the horse and his living
burdens, the cord sank deeper into the wound.
On went the horse maddened with pain; at last he reached the hut of his
master, the miller, and dashed in with his burdens through the open
door. No one was within, but a fire of logs burned brightly on the
hearth; plunging and striking with his hoofs, the horse scattered the
burning logs about the house; the flames caught the building, and soon
surrounded the poor animal. Unable to move from the terror of the
flames, there died the poor horse and the unlucky sheep, amid the ruins
of the miller’s hut.
“My son,” said the tutor, when from afar he saw the end of the accident,
“you have seen the beginning, the middle, and the end of this incident;
when you return to your study, make me some verses upon it, and show me
wherefore the house was burned. If you fail, beware of the punishment.”
It was all in vain that Celestinus tried to coin a verse or two on such
a curious subject. He felt more than usually unpoetical; and as for
assigning a cause for the fire, he so puzzled himself with his own
arguments, as at last to begin to doubt whether there was any cause at
all. At length he left his room, and tried what a walk would do towards
making him able to poetize.
“My son,” said a venerable-looking man that met him on his solitary
ramble, “what makes you so sorrowful?”
“Pray do not trouble yourself,” replied the youth; “it is quite useless
to tell you of my trouble; you cannot help me.”
“Nay, but my son—how can we decide until we hear the cause?”
“Well, then, good father, I have got to make some verses on a mangy
horse and two sheep, and I do not know how.”
“And to decide wherefore the hut, the horse, and the sheep were burnt.”
“Why, father, how do you know that?” exclaimed Celestinus.
“Though human to look at, I am not of this world,” replied the old man;
“come, make a contract with me, henceforth to serve me, and care not for
your master; and I will make you such a copy of verses as never were yet
seen. Come, choose; you know the alternative—the philosopher flogs
sharply.”
Celestinus hesitated a long time, but at last, through fear, he agreed
to the Devil’s proposal.
“Now, then, my son,” said the Devil, “write what I tell you. Are you
ready to begin?”
A mangy horse lay in a field,
A sheep on either side;
Across his back a rope was hung,
To which the sheep were tied.
Teas’d by the rope, up rose the horse,
With him the sheep up swung,
On either flank, thus weighted well,
The rope his withers wrung.
Clogg’d by his living load, he seeks
Yon miller’s hut to gain;
The rope wears deeper, and his pace
Is quicken’d with the pain.
He minds not bolts, nor bars, nor logs
That on the hearthstone burn;
Nor fears with ready, scattering hoof,
The flaming pile to spurn.
Wide flies the fire, above, around,
The rafters catch the flame;
Poor Dobbin, and his fleecy load,
Are roasted in the same.
Had but that miller deigned at home,
His careful watch to keep,
He had not burnt his house, or horse,
Nor roasted both his sheep.
Delighted with the verses, Celestinus hastened to his master on his
return home. The philosopher read them with astonishment.
“Boy,” said he, “whence did you steal these verses?”
“I did not steal them, sir.”
“Come, come, boy—they are clearly not your own; tell me who made them
for you.”
“I dare not, master,” replied the boy.
“Dare not, why dare not? Come boy, tell me the truth, or abide a worse
punishment than would have awaited you had you not brought me any
verses.”
Terrified at his master’s threats, Celestinus revealed his interview
with the Devil in a human form, and his contract of service with him.
Deeply grieved at the occurrence, the preceptor ceased not to talk with
his pupil, until he had persuaded him, humbly and heartily, on his
knees, to confess to God his grievous sin in his compact with the Devil.
His confederacy with the Evil One thus renounced, Celestinus became a
good and holy man, and, after a well-spent life, resigned his soul to
God.
“Pray, Lathom, what moral did your old monk intend to draw from this
diabolical poetry?” asked Thompson.
“His application is very recondite; the preceptor is a prelate of
the Church; the mangy horse, a sinner covered with sins; the two
sheep represent two preachers bound by the cord of charity; the
miller’s house is the world, and the fire, detraction. I must admit
that the application, in this case, is far less valuable or
intelligible than the story itself.”
“In an old book of moral advice,” said Herbert, “I found a
description of three madmen, that reminded me much of the five kinds
described by St. Peter, as related by your old writer. The first
carried a fagot of wood, and because it was already too heavy for
him, he added more wood to it, in the hopes of thereby making it
lighter.”
“And he,” rejoined Lathom, “was a sinner, daily adding new sins to
old, because unable to bear the weight of his original errors.”
“The very same. The second madman drew water from a deep well with a
sieve; his labor was incessant, and his progress just as slow. Can
you explain the nature of his sin?”
“I can read the explanation,” rejoined Lathom, “for I have this
moment found out the source of your extract in my old monk’s book.
This madman was the man who does good, but does it sinfully, and
therefore it is of no benefit. The third madman was far worse: he
carried a beam in his chariot; and wishing to enter his court-yard,
and finding the gate so narrow that it would not admit the beam, he
whipped his horse until it tumbled both itself and its master into a
deep well. The beam was worldly vanities, with which their possessor
sought to enter into heaven, but by which he was cast down into
hell.”
“The belief in witchcraft,” began Herbert, “is very well illustrated
by a late publication of the Camden Society of London.”
“Nay, nay, Reginald, no more of witches now,” rejoined Lathom; “the
subject deserves far more time, attention, and illustration than we
can now afford it, and must be adjourned for the present. Let me
conclude this evening with the tale of
“THE EMPEROR CONRAD AND THE COUNT’S SON.”
During the reign of the Emperor Conrad, there lived a certain count of
the name of Leopold, who had risen to high commands by his bravery and
his knowledge. Every one regarded the count with favor, and loved him
for his kindness to suitors, and his prowess against the enemies of the
emperor. Conrad alone looked on his servant with an evil eye; for he
envied his reputation, and would have taken to himself the glories he
had acquired, and ascribed to himself those victories which Leopold had
won.
The count, unable to endure the evil looks and hard words of the
emperor, and fearful that in time his present anger would be turned into
bitter hatred, suddenly left the court of Rome, and fled with his wife
into the forest of the Apennines. There he toiled all day, and labored
diligently to support himself and his spouse. There he knew not what the
fear of impending evil was; he had no one to envy him, no one to covet
his position or his property.
It was a bright sunny day, and the meridian sun glared with unwonted
fierceness, even through the thick trees of the forest, and rendered the
air close and heavy from lack of a breeze to move even the highest
leaves of the loftiest pines. The emperor pursued the chase with ardor;
urged on by the exhilarating cry of the hounds, he thought not of the
denseness of the forest, or the tangled nature of its winding ways,
until at last, tired and thirsty, he checked his horse in a dark, close
glade, and looked around for some hut where he might obtain rest and
refreshment.
Many were the paths which the emperor and his attendants followed before
they reached the cottage where Leopold lived in solitude; the count
recognized the sovereign, but Conrad knew not his old servant, nor was
he recognized by any of the hunting train; refreshments, such as the
homely store could furnish, were soon placed before the emperor. It was
now nigh to evening; already the glades of the forest were growing dark,
and the devious paths more and more difficult to track out, even to the
experienced eye of a woodman. It was useless to attempt to escape from
the forest before the next morning. The attendants soon formed for
themselves sylvan beds on the soft grass, and beneath the
broad-spreading trees, their cloaks for coverlids, and the green mossy
grass for their beds. The emperor fared better. One low tressel bed
Leopold had in the lower room of his hut; this he resigned to the
emperor.
Fatigued with his hard day’s riding, Conrad soon fell asleep; how long
he slept he knew not; but when all was dark and still, both within and
without the hut, a voice broke upon his ear.
“Take—take—take,” said the voice.
Conrad rose and listened. “What,” said he to himself, as he thought on
the words, “what am I to take? Take—take—take: what can the voice mean?”
As he reflected on the singularity of the words, the emperor again fell
asleep; again a voice awoke him from his slumbers.
“Restore—restore—restore,” said the mysterious voice.
“What means all this mystery?” exclaimed the emperor. “First I was to
take, take, take, and there is nothing for me to take; and now I am to
restore. What can I restore, when I have taken nothing?”
Again the emperor slept, and again the voice seemed to speak to him.
“Fly—fly—fly,” said the voice this time, “for a child is now born, who
shall become thy son-in-law.”
It was early dawn when Conrad heard the voice the third time. He
immediately arose, and inquired of his squires if they had heard a
noise, and what had happened in the night.
“Naught,” replied they, “my lord, but that a son was born to the poor
woodman whilst you slept.”
“Hah!” exclaimed Conrad, “a son—to mount—to horse—we will away.”
The emperor and his train had hardly found their way out of the wood,
when Conrad called two of his knights to him.
“Go,” said he, “to the woodman’s hut, take away the new-born child, kill
it; and bring its heart to me, that I may know that you have performed
my commands.”
With sorrowful hearts the two knights returned towards the woodman’s
cottage. The babe was nestled in its mother’s breast, and smiled on them
as they seized it. Vain was the resistance of its mother, for she was
alone; Leopold had gone into the wood, to his daily labor.
“I cannot strike the poor babe,” said one knight to the other, as they
left the hut in the forest, “do you play the butcher.”
“Not I,” replied the other; “I can strike down my adversary in fair
fight, but not this poor babe.”
At this moment a hare sprang across the path so close to the foremost of
the knights, that he raised his hunting pole and struck it down.
“Comrade,” said the other knight, “I perceive how we may make the
emperor believe that we have obeyed his commands, and yet not take this
poor babe’s life—open the hare, take out its heart. As for the babe, we
will place it on yonder high branch, where the wild beasts cannot get at
it, until we have done our message to the emperor, then will I return
and take this poor babe to my home, for I am childless.”
Leaving the babe, the two knights went on their message to the emperor;
but before they could return, a good duke rode by the tree where the
babe was, and took compassion on it, and carried the child to his own
house, where it was nurtured as his own son. As for the child, he grew
up a man of fine form, the joy of his adopted parents, eloquent in
speech, and a general favorite at the emperor’s court. For a time,
Conrad was as pleased with the attainments of the young Henry, as he had
been with those of his poor father; but time brought with it envy, and
he soon hated the youth, as he had before the unfortunate count. A
dreadful suspicion haunted Conrad’s mind that he had been deceived by
his knights, and that the youthful favorite of the people was the
woodman’s child, against whom he had been warned by the secret voice.
The most cruel thoughts entered his mind, and he determined, this time,
not to be deceived by his agents.
“Henry,” said he to the young count, “I have a letter of the utmost
importance that I wish to be delivered to my wife; to you I commit it,
for you I can trust; haste, then, prepare for your journey, whilst I
write the letter.”
Henry retired to his apartments to prepare for his ride he chose his
best riding suit, and his strongest horse, desirous in every way to do
honor to the emperor’s mission. Conrad went to his private room to
prepare the letter.
“As soon as this letter reaches you,” he wrote, “I command you to cause
the bearer thereof to be put to death. See that this be done, as you
value my love.”
Henry received the letter, and prepared to commence his journey. As it
happened, his horse cast one of its shoes, and he was compelled to wait
until another could be forged. Unwilling that the emperor should know of
the delay, the young man wandered into the royal chapel, and seating
himself in one of the royal stalls, fell asleep.
There was a prying, crafty priest in the chapel, who had heard the
message given to the young count, and wished very much to discover the
secret of the message. Seeing the young man asleep, he silently
approached the youth, and extracting the letter from the little silken
bag in which it was enclosed, opened its folds, and read, with
astonishment, the proposed wickedness.
“Poor youth,” murmured the priest, “thou little thinkest on what errand
you are riding. But, come, I will deceive this cruel emperor,” continued
he, as he erased the passage in which Henry’s death was commanded, and
inserted these words: “Give him our daughter in marriage.”
The letter altered and replaced, his horse reshod, Henry set out on his
journey, and soon arrived at the city where the queen dwelt. Presenting
his letter to the queen, he was greatly surprised when she hailed him as
her son-in-law, by virtue of the royal commands, and bade the priests
and nobles of her court to assist in rendering the celebration of the
nuptials as gorgeous as befitted the occasion.
It was in vain that Conrad raged against the deceit thus practised on
him; one by one the wonderful facts of the young man’s deliverance were
revealed to him, and he could not but recognize in them all the hand of
a protecting Providence. Deeply penitent for his many offences against
God and man, he confirmed the marriage of his daughter, recalled the old
count from his forest hut, and proclaimed the young Henry heir to his
empire.
“There is a great family likeness between this tale of yours, and
the German story of The Giant with the Golden Hair.”
“In what respect?”
“In the manner in which the fortunate youth obtains the princess as
his wife. In that legend, a king discovers the babe after a manner
very similar to that in which Henry is found by Conrad, and—warned
that the child is to be his son-in-law—he sends him on a message to
his queen, with a letter of the same import as in your tale.
Fatigued with his journey, the youth arrived at a robber’s cottage,
falls asleep, and during his rest the thieves alter the letter, as
the priest does that borne by Henry. The effect is, of course,
similar.”
“But what of the golden-haired giant?” asked Herbert.
“He does not appear until the second part of the legend, and this is
doubtless added on from some other tradition. You will find the
whole story in Grimm’s most amusing collection of German popular
stories.”
“With this tale, then, we conclude our evening’s amusement.”
“I am afraid it must be so, Herbert,” rejoined Lathom; “I should not
like to be left without material for to-morrow, our last meeting;
and between this and then I am unable to prepare any more tales.”
[Illustration]
[Illustration]
CHAPTER XII.
Love and Marriage—THE KNIGHT AND THE THREE QUESTIONS—Racing for a
Wife—JONATHAN AND THE THREE TALISMANS—Tale of the Dwarf and the
Three Soldiers—Conclusion.
“I have been very much surprised at the almost entire absence of
compulsory marriages from your tales; marriage, indeed, is the
staple incident of the story, but the course of love seems to be
allowed to run almost too smooth.”
“Why, Herbert,” said Frederick Thompson, with a smile, “were it not
rank heresy to suppose that power, and wealth, and policy influenced
marriages in those romantic days, when knights performed
impossibilities, and ladies sang love ditties from high towers?”
“You must not delude yourselves that ladies were married in the
tenth and eleventh centuries on principles very widely differing
from those now prevailing. I could give you far worse examples than
the wondrous nineteenth century furnishes.”
“What!” exclaimed Herbert, “worse examples than eighty linked to
eighteen because their properties adjoined? or a spendthrift title
propped up by a youthful heiress, because the one wanted money and
the other rank?”
“Hilloa, Master Reginald Herbert, methinks we speak feelingly; is
there not something of the accepted lover and disappointed
son-in-law in that exalted burst of indignation, eh, Lathom? can it
be true that
“‘The lady she was willing.
But the baron he say NO’?”
“Be it as it may,” said Lathom, “we will solace our friend with an
example or two of the approved ways of lady-winning in the tenth
century. Which shall it be, the case of a successful racer or a
clever resolver of riddles?”
“Oh, I will answer for Reginald; pray leave Miss Atalanta for the
present, and favor us with the resolver of hard questions.”
Here begins the tale of
THE KNIGHT AND THE THREE QUESTIONS.
A certain emperor had a very beautiful, but wilful daughter, and he much
wished to marry her, for she was his heir, but to all his wishes she was
deaf. At last she agreed to marry that person who should answer
succinctly these three questions. The first question was: “What is the
length, breadth, and depth of the four elements?” The second required a
means of changing the north wind; and the third demanded by what means
fire might be carried to the bosom without injury to the person.
Many and many were the nobles, knights, and princes that endeavored to
answer the princess’s questions. It was all in vain: some answered one,
some another, but no one resolved all three, and each reserved his
secret from his competitor, in the hopes of another and more successful
trial. The emperor began to grow angry with his daughter, but she still
persisted in her intentions, and her father did not like to compel her.
At length, after many years, came a soldier from a foreign land, and
when he heard of the questions of the princess, he volunteered for the
trial. On the appointed day, the soldier entered the court of the palace
accompanied by one attendant, who led an extremely fiery horse by the
bridle. The king descended to the gate of the inner court-yard, and
demanded the soldier’s wishes.
“I come, my lord, to win thy daughter, by rightly answering her three
questions; I pray thee propose them to me.”
“Right willingly,” rejoined the emperor. “If thou succeedest, my
daughter and the succession to my throne are thine; but mark me, if thou
failest, a sound whipping awaits thee as an impudent adventurer. Shall I
propose the questions?”
“Even so, my lord—I am ready; a crown and a wife, or the whipping-post.”
“Tell me, then, succinctly, how many feet there are in the length,
breadth, and depth of the elements.”
“Launcelot,” said the soldier to his servant, “give the horse to a
groom, and lie down on the ground.”
The servant obeyed his master’s orders, and the soldier carefully
measured his length, his breadth, and the thickness of his body.
“My lord,” said the soldier, as soon as the measuring was complete, “the
length of the elements is scarcely seven feet, the breadth is nearly
three, and the depth does not exceed one.”
“How mean you, sir; what has this to do with the elements?”
“My lord,” rejoined the soldier, “man is made of the four elements; I
have given you the measure of man, and therefore of those parts of which
he is composed.”
“You have answered well, sir soldier; now resolve this difficulty—how
can the north wind be changed?”
“Launcelot, bring up Niger.”
The servant brought up the horse at his master’s command, and the
soldier placed it with its head to the north; after a few minutes he
administered to it a potion, and at the same moment turned its head to
the east; the horse that before had breathed fiercely now became quiet,
and its breathing was soft and quiet.
“See, my lord, the wind is changed.”
“How, sir soldier?” asked the emperor, “What has this to do with the
wind?”
“My lord,” rejoined the soldier, “who knows not that the life of every
animal is in its breath, and that breath is air? When my horse looked
northward, he breathed fiercely and snorted excessively. Lo, I gave him
a potion and turned his head to the east, and now the same breath comes
softly and quietly, for the wind is changed.”
“Well done—well done, soldier! for these two answers thou shalt escape
the whipping-post. Now resolve me this difficulty: How can fire be
carried in the bosom without injury to the person?”
“Look and see, my lord.”
With these words, the soldier stooped towards a fire that burned in the
court-yard, and hastily seizing some of the burning wood, placed it in
his bosom. Every one expected to see him injured, but after the fire had
burned out the soldier threw the wood from his breast and there was
neither scar nor burn on his breast.
“Well hast thou performed thy task, O soldier,” said the king. “My
daughter is thine according to promise—the inheritance of my kingdom is
also thine and hers; now tell me the secret whereby thou didst prevent
the fire from burning thee.”
“This stone is the talisman,” replied the soldier, showing a small
bright stone that he carried in his right hand. “Whosoever bears this
about him shall be able to resist the hottest fire that man can light.”
Loaded with riches and honors, the soldier married the princess, and
they succeeded to the throne and the wealth of her father.
“Your princess, Lathom, seems to have been one of those young
ladies, who never dream that husbands and wives are born for each
other, but regard the former as especially provided for the benefit
of the latter.”
“I suspect the old monk, Thompson, thought very little about love
matters, but rather looked to the appropriateness of his story for a
religious application.”
“Exactly so, Herbert,” remarked Lathom, “the moral is decidedly the
best part of this tale. The emperor is our Saviour; the daughter,
the human soul. Measuring the elements, is typical of subduing the
lust of the flesh. The fiery horse is a sinner changed by
repentance; and the small bright stone, that conquers the power of
fire, is a true and lively faith in our Saviour, utterly subjugating
the fire of pride, luxury, and avarice.”
“What is the tale of the marriage by racing?” asked Thompson.
“Hardly worth relating at length.”
“Except as a hint to our poor friend Reginald.”
“The lady is to be won by no one who cannot outrun her. After many
failures, comes one called Abibas, a poor, but shrewd fellow.
Knowing the failings of the young lady, he prepares a garland of
roses, a beautiful silken girdle, and a golden ball, on which was
written, ‘whosoever plays with me, shall never be tired.’ The race
begins, and the lady is just passing her competitor, when he
skilfully jerks the rose garland on to her head. Attracted by the
smell of the flowers, and despising the slow pace of Abibas, the
lady stops to admire, and Abibas gets well ahead. She soon throws
away the garland, and is off again after her competitor; nearer and
nearer she comes, when Abibas slily drops the embroidered girdle in
her path. She stops—admires—takes it up, and again loses ground.
Again she throws away the tempting bait, and renews the race; the
distance between her and her suitor is soon lessened, and the race
draws towards its end. As a last resource, he casts the golden ball
before her. She stops—reads the inscription—determines to try it for
a moment—goes on and on with her pleasure, and is only awakened from
her folly by the cries that hail Abibas as the winner of the race
and the lady.”
“What makes you look so solemn, Herbert? Can you not persuade the
repudiating father in your case, to run a race with you for the
lady.”
“Tut-tut, Thompson; I was thinking whether any of those persons who
promote or sanction what the world calls marriages of convenience,
in which every one admits that love, or identity of feelings, has
nothing at all to do, ever read the commencement of the exhortation
in the marriage service. Surely it can never occur to them, that we
are there told that marriage signifies unto us the mystical union
between our Saviour and his Church.”
“It were charity to suppose they were ignorant,” replied Lathom;
“but let us leave these speculations; we are by no means in a proper
tone of mind for them, and are more ready to laugh than to reason.”
“Let us then return to our sorcerers and witches,” said Thompson.
“Nay, rather let me demand your attention for a tale of some length,
but not less interest, and which combines just sufficient magic in
its incidents to satisfy Herbert’s love of the marvellous. I will
read you the story of
“JONATHAN AND THE THREE TALISMANS.”
Darius was a wise and prudent king; he had three sons whom he loved
much, and amongst whom he divided his possessions. To the eldest he gave
his kingdom; to the second, his personal wealth; to the third, a ring, a
necklace, and a valuable carpet. These three gifts were charmed. The
ring rendered any one who wore it beloved, and obtained for him
whatsoever he desired. The necklace, if worn on the breast, enabled the
wearer to realize every wish; whilst the cloth had such virtue that
whosoever sat upon it, and thought where he would be carried, found
himself there almost before his thought was expressed. These three
precious gifts the king conferred upon Jonathan, his youngest son, to
aid him in his studies; but his mother retained them during the earlier
years of his youth; after a time his mother delivered to him the ring.
“Jonathan,” she said, “take the first of thy father’s bequests—this
ring; guard it as a treasure. So long as you wear it, every one shall
love you, and whatsoever you wish shall be obtained by you; of one thing
beware—an artful woman.”
Jonathan, with many thanks and protestations, took the ring. Its magic
effects were soon evident. Every one sought his society, and every one
loved him. Though he had neither silver nor gold, house nor fields, he
had but to wish for them, and lo, one gave him fields, and another
houses, a third gold, a fourth merchandise. Walking one day in the
streets of Rome, he met a lady so beautiful to look at that he could not
restrain himself from following her, and eventually he had no happiness
but in her society. She loved Jonathan, and Jonathan loved her.
“Dearest,” said the lady one day, as Jonathan was enjoying her society,
“how comes it that you immediately obtain every thing you but wish for,
and yet the good king did not leave thee his wealth, or his power?”
“It is a secret, Subtilia; a secret that I may not reveal, lest it lose
its value.”
“And do you profess to love me, Jonathan, and yet keep from me the
secret of your power, your wealth, and your life?”
“Ask me not, dearest, for it may not be.”
“Farewell, then, Jonathan—thou lovest me not—never more will I love thee
again.”
“Nay, Subtilia, but thou canst not prevent thyself loving me as long as
I wear this ring.”
“Ah, Jonathan, the secret, the secret! you wear a magic ring.”
“Fool that I was,” exclaimed Jonathan, “in my haste I forgot my
discretion; well, you know my secret—be honest, and keep it yourself.”
“You have not told me all the properties of the ring; I must know all if
thou wouldst have it kept a secret.”
Subtilia at length elicited the secret from her lover. The source of his
power once known to her, the next object of her plans was to obtain that
power for herself.
“Thou art very wrong, Jonathan,” said she, looking up into his face,
with her dark black eyes; “surely thou art wrong to wear so precious a
jewel on thy finger; some day, in the hurry of your occupation, you will
lose the ring, and then your power is gone.”
“There is some sense in what you say, Subtilia,” replied Jonathan; “yet
where shall I place it in security?”
“Let me be its guardian, dearest,” said Subtilia, with a look of deep
affection. “No one will seek such a treasure of me; and whensoever you
wish for it, it will be ready to your hand; among the rest of my jewels
it will be perfectly secure.”
Jonathan acceded to her request, and placed the ring in her possession.
For a time all went well; the ring was safe, and ready to his use, and
the lady’s love did not decrease. One day, when he came to visit her as
usual, he found Subtilia sitting on a couch, bathed in tears.
“Oh, my dear, dear lord!” exclaimed she, casting herself at his feet;
“how can I dare to approach my lord?”
“Why this anxiety, this sorrow, Subtilia?” said Jonathan, as he raised
her from the ground, and strove to kiss away her tears.
“Oh, my lord! pardon me—the ring,” ejaculated Subtilia.
“Ah! the ring—what of the ring?”
“It is gone, my lord—stolen.”
“Gone! how gone, woman?” rejoined Jonathan, in anger.
“Ah, my good lord; this morning I went to my jewel-box to take out such
ornaments as might best please my lord, and lo, the ring was not there;
and now where it is I know not.”
“Farewell, Subtilia—I am ruined.”
With these words Jonathan left the lady. It was all in vain that he
searched everywhere for the ring; it was of but a common form, and he
dared not to reveal its secret, as once known no one would dream of
resigning such a treasure. In his distress he returned to his mother,
and told her all his misfortunes.
“My son,” said his lady mother, “did I not warn thee of this very
danger? by the subtlety of this woman thou hast lost thy charmed jewel.
Receive now thy father’s second bequest—this necklace; so long as you
wear this on your breast, every wish of yours shall be fulfilled; go in
peace, and, once more, beware of female subtlety.”
Overjoyed with his new acquisition, and unable to believe that Subtilia
had deceived him about the loss of the ring, Jonathan returned to the
city, and to the society of that fair but deceitful lady. For a time his
secret remained within his own breast; at length, however, he yielded to
the blandishments of his lady-love, and disclosed to her the source of
his prosperity. Long and subtle were the means by which Subtilia gained
the knowledge of the secret of the necklace, and longer and more subtle
the plans by which she at last gained it to her own possession. This too
was lost, as the ring; and Jonathan returned a second time to his
mother.
“My son,” said she, “these two times you have fallen a victim to female
subtlety, the ring and the necklace are not lost; Subtilia has them
both, and if you would succeed, you must regain them from her. Receive
this, the third and last bequest of your royal father; seated on this
carpet, you have but to wish to find yourself forthwith in whatever
place you desire; go in peace, my son—for the third time, beware of
female subtlety.”
“I will be revenged on this faithless woman,” muttered Jonathan, as he
entered Subtilia’s house bearing the last bequest of Darius. “Subtilia,”
he said, “come, see the third bequest of the good king: this splendid
carpet—here sit down with me on it.”
Subtilia was hardly seated on the carpet, ere Jonathan wished that they
were in a desert place, far, far from the abode of man. His wish was
hardly complete before they were both in a drear solitude, many hundreds
of miles from a human abode, and where wild beasts and deadly serpents
abounded.
“Subtilia!” exclaimed Jonathan, “thou art now in my power: restore the
ring and the necklace, or die by the mouths of beasts, or the slow
torture of famine; no human footstep ever treads these solitudes.”
“We perish together, Jonathan.”
“Delude not thyself so, false woman,” rejoined Jonathan, in anger; “I
have but to wish myself away, and find my wish accomplished; choose
therefore—death, or the restoration of the ring and the necklace.”
“I have his secret,” muttered Subtilia to herself; and then, with a most
piteous voice, “my dear lord, I pray thee give me time—but an hour, or
even less—before I decide.”
“As you wish; until the sun touches the top of yonder pine tree,
consider your choice.”
Whilst the time was passing away, the heat of the day seduced Jonathan
into a slight sleep. Subtilia saw the advantage; slowly, and softly, she
drew away the carpet from beneath him, and as, awakened by her last
efforts, he would have regained the magic carpet, she wished herself
again at Rome, and passed from his sight. He was alone in the desert,
whilst she revelled in every luxury that could be obtained through the
means of the three gifts of his royal father.
Jonathan meditated on his situation, and upbraided himself for his own
foolishness: whether to bend his steps from that dreadful wilderness he
knew not, but committing himself by prayer to God’s especial protection,
he followed a narrow path, and at length reached the banks of a large
river. The river was not deep, and Jonathan essayed to pass it. Though
the water was so hot that it burnt the flesh off his bones, he
persevered, and at length reached the opposite bank. He essayed to taste
of the stream, but it was sore bitter, and burned the roof of his mouth
as he drank of it. Astonished at the properties of the river, Jonathan
placed a small quantity of it in a glass vessel, and proceeded, with
great pain, on his journey.
Hunger soon succeeded to thirst, and the solitary wanderer wist not how
to assuage his bitter craving. As he wandered on, limping with pain, he
suddenly cast his eyes on a fair and tempting tree, abounding in fruit
of a rich and golden hue. Without one thought of thanks to God, Jonathan
limped to the tree, and plucked eagerly of the fruit. The fair meal had
hardly concluded, ere he was a leper from head to foot, the foul disease
broke out over his body. Weeping and mourning for his misfortunes, he
gathered of the hurtful fruit, and renewed his miserable wanderings.
Another hour of painful travel brought Jonathan to the bank of a
troubled, turbid stream, whose depth appeared unfathomable, and whose
waters were repugnant even to the thirsty man. Careless of his life,
with one prayer to God, the wanderer stept into the river, unconscious
of its depth. It was shallow, and offered little resistance to his
passage, though its stream seemed to roll onward with headlong violence.
His burnt flesh, too, came again in all its original purity. Jonathan
reached the bank, and on his bended knees gave thanks to God for his
great kindness in relieving him from his pains. Of this stream, also, he
took a small vase full, as a treasured medicine.
Still the wanderer continued his journey, hungry and a leper. No tree on
either side of him gave any promise of sustenance, and he despaired of
sustaining his fast-fleeting strength. Anon he came to a low, crooked,
cankerous-looking bush, with two or three withered, and apparently
rotten, apples on one of its branches. Desperate with hunger, he seized
one of the wretched fruits and ate it. His hunger was assuaged; his
leprosy was departed from him. Strength, health, and a free spirit
seemed renewed in him, and plucking another of the withered fruits, he
went on his way rejoicing.
By the virtue of that food he wandered on without feeling hunger; by the
virtue of that water his flesh suffered not from his journey, and he
knew not what fatigue was. After many days he neared the gates of a
walled city, and made as though he would have entered.
“Ho! sir traveller,” said the gatekeeper, “whence comest thou—what art
thou—and whither goest thou?”
“From Rome, good porter—a physician—”
“Stay,” interrupted the porter; “a physician—you are in good
fortune—canst cure a leprosy?”
“I can but try my skill.”
“If you succeed with this case your fortune is made, friend; our king is
ill of a leprosy. Whoever will cure him will receive great rewards, but
death if he fails.”
“I will undertake the cure,” replied Jonathan; “lead me to the king.”
Jonathan entered the palace, and was led to the chamber of the king,
where lie lay on his couch, wasted with disease, and covered from head
to foot with a leprosy of the most virulent kind.
“A physician, my lord the king,” said the attendant, “who would try to
cure your disease.”
“What, another victim?” rejoined the royal leper; “does he know the
alternative?”
“My lord,” said Jonathan, “I am aware of the terms, and accept them
freely; by God’s help I will cure my lord, or perish in the attempt. I
pray my lord the king to eat of this fruit.”
“What, this withered, rotten apple?” exclaimed the king.
“Even this, my lord.”
The king took the fruit of the second tree, and ate it as Jonathan
advised. In a moment his leprosy began to disappear, and the pimples to
sink and become hardly visible.
“Thou art, indeed, a physician,” exclaimed the king; “the promised
reward is thine.”
“Stay, my lord,” said Jonathan, “we must restore the flesh to its
original state.”
With these words, he touched every mark on the king’s body with the
water of the second river, and the flesh returned fair and white as
before the leprosy.
“Blessed physician, thy reward is doubled; stay, I pray thee, in our
country.”
“Nay, my lord, I may not. I must seek my own land, and all I ask is that
my lord will divide the half of my reward amongst the poor of this
city.”
Soon after this Jonathan sailed from this city for Rome; arrived there,
he circulated a report that a great physician had arrived. Now it
happened that Subtilia, in despite of all the talismans, lay grievously
sick, and nigh unto death. The report of the arrival of the great
physician comforted her, and she sent for Jonathan. He knew her again,
but she knew him not, for he was greatly altered and disguised.
“Great master,” said she, in a faint voice, “I die.”
“Death, lady, comes ever to those who confess not their sins against God
and man, and defraud their friends; if thou hast done this my help is
vain, without confession and restoration.”
Then did Subtilia confess all her treachery against Jonathan, and how
she had deprived him by her subtlety, of the three talismans, and left
him to die in a desert place.
“Woman,” said Jonathan, “thy ill-used lover yet lives, and is
prosperous; the talismans must be restored to him—where be they?”
“In yonder chest; here, take the keys, restore them to Jonathan, and
give me of your medicine.”
“Take this fruit—drink of this water.”
“Mercy, mercy!” exclaimed Subtilia, “I am a leper—the flesh is burning
away from my bones—I die—I die.”
“Subtilia, thou hast met with thy reward—thou diest—and Jonathan is thy
physician.”
With one fearful look at Jonathan, and one agonized scream, the wretched
woman fell back a corpse, her diseased flesh already mouldering to
destruction.
Jonathan regained his father’s bequests, and returned to his mother; the
whole kingdom rejoiced at his return. Until his life’s end he remembered
the lessons he had learnt in his prosperity and his poverty, and he
lived and died in peace with God and with man.
“Your tale, of course, boasts of a moral?”
“Yes; a moral far from unreasonable. The Emperor Darius is typical
of our Saviour, as is generally the case in these tales; and the
queen-mother is the Church. The two sons are the men of this world;
the third son typifies the good Christian. The lady, his great
temptation and source of all his evils, is the flesh. She first
obtains from him the ring of faith, and after that deprives him, by
her devices, of the necklace of hope; and in despite of these
warnings, steals front him, at last, the cloth of charity. The
bitter water, that burneth away the flesh from the bouts, is
repentance, and the first fruit is heartfelt remorse; the second
river is repentance before God, and the unpromising fruit represents
the deeds of faith, prayer, self-denial, and charity.”
“You have left the leprous king and the ship still unexplained.”
“The former is but a type of a sinful man, the other is intended to
represent the Divine command, but the application seems forced and
inappropriate.”
“You have another link between the East and West in this tale,”
remarked Herbert. “The talisman of the magic cloth may be found in
the ‘Arabian Nights,’ in the story of Prince Ahmed, and the Fairy
Pari Banou.”
“All the three talismans proclaim the Eastern origin of the story,”
remarked Lathom; “and besides this, its entire structure resembles
the tale of Fortunatus, to which few have hesitated to assign an
Eastern origin.”
“Many of the incidents of your story are to be found in the old
German nursery tale of The Dwarf and the Three Soldiers.”
“Not unlikely; but the tale in question is so little known to me
that I cannot trace the likeness.”
“The tale, in a few words, is this,” replied Thompson. “Three poor
soldiers obtain from a dwarf three gifts: a cloak, a purse, and a
horse—one and all equally useful in promoting their worldly
advantage. A crafty princess steals all these gifts, and the
soldiers are once more poor. Driven by hunger, one of the three eats
of an apple-tree by the road-side, and forthwith his nose grows, not
by inches, but by miles. The friendly dwarf, in pity of his misery,
cures him by administering another kind of apple; and the nose
shrinks as quickly as it had grown.
“Now comes the revenge on the princess. The old soldier offers some
of the fatal apples for sale; the princess buys and eats; her nose
grows without ceasing. Under pretence of curing her, the old
soldier, disguised as a doctor, makes her nose grow more and more,
and at length, having terrified her into restoring the dwarf’s
gifts, kindly gives her a piece of the second kind of apples, and
cures her of the nasal protuberance.”
“And now that we have concluded our criticisms,” said Herbert, “let
us give all due praise to the admirable instruction contained in
this last narrative.”
“May we not extend our praise to all the tales?”
“As critics, well intentioned towards the writers, and especially
towards this translation, we must not set much store on our
criticism. We need not, however, fear to give our own opinions, and
therefore I agree with you that great praise may with reason be
given to all the tales we have heard, and to no one more than that
with which our last evening, I fear, must now conclude. One thing I
would ask you, Lathom; you spoke of the want of the usual
accessories in these old monks’ stories. One or two slips have not
escaped me; but unless you have re-produced many of the tales, the
credit of great experience in writing fictions must be allowed to
the authors of the Gesta.”
“I do not mean to deny that I have re-written many of these tales,
and in some places introduced a little embroidery, but nowhere have
I done more than re-set the old jewels, and put old pictures into
new frames.”
“This, then, is our last evening with the old story-tellers,” said
Thompson; “to-morrow Herbert and I are off for a week of home,
whilst you are left here to——”
“To re-set some more old jewels, should these, through your report,
obtain favor and acceptance with my friends.”
THE END.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE STORIES OF THE AGES.
TALES FROM THE GESTA ROMANORUM.
HEADLONG HALL AND NIGHTMARE ABBEY.
BY THOMAS LOVE PEACOCK.
CRANFORD. BY MRS. GASKELL.
TALES BY HEINRICH ZSCHOKKE.
THE ROSE AND THE RING.
BY W. M. THACKERAY.
UNDINE AND SINTRAM. BY FOUQUÉ.
G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS
NEW YORK AND LONDON
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
1. Moved Advertising page from the beginning to the end.
2. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
3. Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as
printed.
4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
End of Project Gutenberg's Tales from the Gesta Romanorum, by Anonymous
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 58655 ***
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