<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p class="center p6 b20">
WAVERLEY NOVELS</p>
<hr class="l15" />
<p class="center b13"><i>FORTY-EIGHT VOLUMES</i><br/>
<br/>
VOLUME XLIII.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i-002.jpg" width-obs="325" height-obs="242" alt="" /> <p class="caption"><span class="b12"><i>BORDER EDITION</i></span><br/> <i>The Introductory Essays and Notes by</i> <span class="smcap">Andrew Lang</span> <i>to this Edition of the Waverley Novels are Copyright</i></p>
</div>
<div class="figcenter p6"><SPAN name="i004" id="i004"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG src="images/i-004.jpg" width-obs="363" height-obs="550" alt="" />
<p class="caption">THE DUEL.<br/>
<span class="s08">Drawn and Etched by R de Los Rios</span></p>
</div>
<h1><span class="smcap">Anne of Geierstein</span></h1>
<p class="center p2">by</p>
<p class="center b13"><span class="smcap">Sir WALTER SCOTT, Bart.</span></p>
<p class="center p2 b13"><i>WITH INTRODUCTORY ESSAY AND NOTES</i><br/>
<span class="smcap">By</span> ANDREW LANG</p>
<p class="center p2 b13">TEN ETCHINGS</p>
<p class="center p2 b13">VOLUME I.</p>
<div class="figcenter p4">
<ANTIMG src="images/logo.jpg" width-obs="151" height-obs="142" alt="Printer's Logo" /></div>
<p class="center p4 b13">LONDON<br/>
JOHN C. NIMMO<br/>
14, KING WILLIAM STREET, STRAND<br/>
<span class="s08">MDCCCXCIV</span></p>
<p class="center p6">
<span class="smcap">Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co.</span><br/>
<i>At the Ballantyne Press, Edinburgh</i></p>
<p class="center p6">
THIS EDITION OF THE WAVERLEY NOVELS,<br/>
<br/>
THE BORDER EDITION,<br/>
<br/>
IS DEDICATED BY THE PUBLISHER<br/>
<br/>
TO<br/>
<br/>
<i>THE HON. MRS. MAXWELL SCOTT OF ABBOTSFORD</i><br/>
AND HER CHILDREN,<br/>
<i>WALTER</i>, <i>MARY</i>, <i>MICHAEL</i>, <i>ALICE</i>, <i>MALCOLM</i>,<br/>
<i>MARGARET</i>, <i>AND HERBERT</i>,<br/>
GREAT-GRANDDAUGHTER AND GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN<br/>
OF THE AUTHOR.</p>
<p class="center p6"><i>TO</i><br/>
<br/>
<span class="b12">The King's Most Gracious Majesty.</span></p>
<p><i><span class="smcap">Sire</span></i>,</p>
<p><i>The Author of this Collection of Works of Fiction would
not have presumed to solicit for them your Majesty's august patronage,
were it not that the perusal has been supposed in some instances
to have succeeded in amusing hours of relaxation, or relieving those
of languor, pain, or anxiety, and therefore must have so far aided the
warmest wish of your Majesty's heart, by contributing in however
small a degree to the happiness of your people.</i></p>
<p><i>They are therefore humbly dedicated to your Majesty, agreeably
to your gracious permission, by</i></p>
<p class="left25">
<i>Your Majesty's Dutiful Subject</i>,<br/>
<br/>
<span class="i10"><i>WALTER SCOTT</i>.</span></p>
<p><i><span class="smcap">Abbotsford</span></i>,<br/>
<span class="i2"><i>1st January, 1829</i>.</span></p>
<h2>LIST OF ETCHINGS.</h2>
<p class="center"><i>PRINTED BY F. GOULDING, LONDON.</i></p>
<p class="center p2">VOLUME THE FIRST.</p>
<table summary="List of Illustrations">
<tr>
<td><span class="smcap">The Duel.</span> Drawn and Etched by R. de Los Rios
<SPAN href="#Page_99">(p. 99)</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdr"><i><SPAN href="#i004">Frontispiece</SPAN></i></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><span class="smcap">Geierstein.</span> Drawn and Etched by R. de Los
Rios</td>
<td class="tdr"><i>To face page</i> <SPAN href="#i087">48</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><span class="smcap">In the Stable.</span> Drawn and Etched by R. de Los
Rios </td>
<td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#i235">192</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><span class="smcap">The Examination.</span> Drawn and Etched by R. de
Los Rios</td>
<td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#i303">256</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><span class="smcap">The Execution.</span> Drawn and Etched by R. de Los
Rios</td>
<td class="tdr"><SPAN href="#i355">304</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p class="center p6"><span class="b20">ANNE OF GEIERSTEIN;</span><br/>
<br/>
OR,<br/>
<br/>
<span class="b15">THE MAIDEN OF THE MIST.</span></p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>What! will the aspiring blood of Lancaster</p>
<p>Sink in the ground?</p>
<p class="i12"><span class="smcap">Shakspeare.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_IX" id="Page_IX">ix</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION<br/> <br/> <span class="s08">TO</span><br/> <br/> ANNE OF GEIERSTEIN.</h2>
<p>With "The Fair Maid of Perth" we take farewell
of Scott at his best, though "even from the stubble
one may tell what the grain has been." "Anne of
Geierstein" was no favourite of the author's, and, as
Mr. Matthew Arnold says, the world does not contemplate
with pleasure what the poet creates without joy.
The novel was begun in the late summer or autumn of
1828, but for part of the time Scott neglected his Diary.
He was become (June 19) "a writing automaton," and
suffered much pain from rheumatism and rheumatic headaches.
He feared that this affected "the quality of the
stuff," but he was not one who "waited for the spark
from heaven to fall." He plodded on, in these late years,
<i>invita Minerva</i>. Of old the goddess had generally been
willing; but now his task took the likeness of journalism,
the round had to be trodden, be he well or be he
ill. Masterpieces are not written thus: it is the moral
effort that we admire, and the contempt for fame, even
for art, compared with the respect for duty. Scott
believed in his duty and in his power of will, but
imagination will not obey a moral dictate. We find
Ballantyne "complaining of his manuscript": the
wearied hand no longer wrote legibly, despite the
mechanical supports which he used. "I cannot trace
my <i>pieds de mouche</i> but with great labour and trouble"
(June 22). He "wrought and endured," afflicted by a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_X" id="Page_X">x</SPAN></span>
hypochondriacal melancholy: "it may be chased away
by study or by exercise." He is nobly master of his
fate, in every event. In July we find him "beginning
Simond's 'Switzerland,'" in search of local colour, for
he did not know Switzerland, nor even the Rhine.
His description of a storm in the mountains is, in the
circumstances, wonderfully accurate. He simply drew
the hills above Loch Skene on a grander scale. Morritt
and Sir James Stuart of Allanbank, who were well
acquainted with the scenes, were "surprised at the
felicity with which he divined its character, and outdid,
by the force of imagination, all the efforts of a thousand
actual tourists." Their praise much encouraged Sir
Walter (Lockhart, ix. 279). Ballantyne "bored and
bothered me with his criticisms," he said, for he did not
pretend to be a geologist, and to describe the formation
of the rocks. In January he "muzzed on"—I can
call it little better—with "Anne of Geierstein." The
"materials are excellent, but the power of using them
is failing." In February (1829) he was better "pleased
with his work." The reason why he was better pleased
may perhaps be gathered from his Journal (Feb. 17):
"I called on Skene, and borrowed a volume of his journal
to get some information about Burgundy and
Provence. Something may be made out of King René,
but I wish I had thought of him sooner." This is
elucidated by a note of Mr. Skene's: "Sir Walter
wished to see a paper which I had some time before
contributed to the Memoirs of the Society of Antiquaries
on the subject of the secret tribunals of Germany,
and upon which, accordingly, he grounded his scene in
the novel." Mr. Skene now suggested the introduction
of King René of Provence, as he himself could
give topographical details. "He liked the idea much
... and the whole dénouement of the story was changed,
and the Provence part woven into it, in the form in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XI" id="Page_XI">xi</SPAN></span>
which it ultimately came forth" (Journal, ii. 235,
note). On March 8 "Cadell totally condemns 'Anne
of Geierstein' ... great dishonour in this, as Trinculo
says, besides an infinite loss. Yet worse has succeeded,
but it was while the fashion of the thing was fresh. I
retrenched a good deal about the Troubadours, which
was really <i>hors de place</i>" (April 14). After some weeks
of work and reflection, he came to the conclusion that
more pains would not serve his turn. Inspiration came
at once, if it came at all, and now his "braes and burn-sides"
were ceasing to inspire him. "I don't know why
or wherefore, but I hate 'Anne'" (April 27). "The
story will end, and shall end, because it must end, and
so here goes." He finished "Anne of Geierstein"
on April 29, and began an historical work for Dr. Lardner
on the same day. He had been writing reviews and
other trifles all the time. "Were necessity out of
the question, I would take the same literary labour
from choice—something more leisurely, though."</p>
<p>The book was published in the middle of May, and
was very popular in Switzerland. Lockhart praises
"occasional outbursts of the old poetic spirit," as in
the Alpine storm, the wild climb of Arthur, the duel,
the noble picture of the battle of Granson. No one
else then writing in England could have matched these
passages. Lockhart especially admired the sympathy
with which an old and weary man "depicts the feelings
of youth with all their original glow and purity."
"He was always living over again in his children,
young at heart whenever he looked on them, and the
world that was opening on them and their friends. But,
above all, he had a firm belief in the future reunion of
those whom death had parted."</p>
<p>The novel is unlucky, perhaps, in the period chosen,
which is not sufficiently familiar to most readers.
The forlorn cause of the House of Lancaster now affects
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XII" id="Page_XII">xii</SPAN></span>
us very little, and the passion of Margaret of Anjou is
remote—it cannot stir us like the last view of the
King, in "Redgauntlet." The mechanism of the
volume does suggest the favourite topics of Mrs.
Radcliffe, and the mysterious appearances and disappearances
of the heroine need a more plausible explanation
than they receive. The prophecy turning on the
drawing of the bow is rather dropped out of sight, and
the magic scenes connected with the opal and the mysterious
bride suffer from being explained away. The
miracle is more easy of belief than the explanation.
Though Charles the Bold is painted with power in his
pride and in his fall, he does not interest us like Louis
XI. or James VI., either in this novel or in "Quentin
Durward." It is probable enough that Scott, in his
intended continuation of "Quentin Durward," had this
very period in his eye: perhaps we need not regret
that, with failing powers, he left Quentin out of the
tale. His place is filled by the good dull Sigismund,
who always warms up into a kind of brilliance when
action is to be taken or described. The hero and
heroine do not differ much from Scott's usual characters,
in similar romantic circumstances, but Anne has less
of originality and charm, of course, than the women of
his earlier novels. The story, even on the least favourable
estimate, is a rapid novel of adventure: incident
follows incident, and, as a modern critic says, "the
novel of character is one we often take up, the novel of
incident is one we cannot lay down;" if it be written
with the spirit of Scott, or of Dumas. That friendly
master of romance was just about to take up the pen
which fell from the fingers of Sir Walter—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>Uno avulso non deficit alter.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Scott's imitators, in his lifetime, produced little or
nothing of merit: he was, however, to leave successors,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XIII" id="Page_XIII">xiii</SPAN></span>
the author of "Vingt Ans Après" first and greatest;
the author of "Esmond"; the author, we may surely
add, of "The Master of Ballantrae." Much as these
differ from Scott, both in quantity and quality of genius,
in method, in style, they are all "sealed of his tribe,"
like the spiritual children of Ben Jonson. Scott is he</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>Without whose life they had not been,</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>and thus his example has borne, and still bears, new
fruit in the most innocent of intellectual pleasures.
For a later generation Scott has done what the romances
and the epics did for chivalry, and fairy-tales for all
the world. In an unexpected place, the Memoirs of
Dr. Adam Clarke, we find a tribute to old romance and
fairy-tale. Had he not read these in boyhood, the
learned and excellent Doctor declares, his religion
would have lacked imagination, and his character the
courage which he displayed in face of many dangers.
Examples of lofty fancy, of chivalrous courage, all that
can attract and inspire youth, all that makes against
moody despair, and stolid commonplace, and creeping
prose, Scott gives, even in this late work, and
he enlightens all with humour, as in his admirable
description of the despotic German innkeeper, before
whom the Earl of Oxford has to lower his bonnet. While
youth is youth, and men have yet a smack of it, we can
be happy with Arthur Philipson in his duel, with
Sigismund in the fight, with the cheery maid of Anne
of Geierstein, and her honest ideas of love on first principles,
with that royal philosopher King René, with the
sagacious loyalty of Oxford, and the manly patriotism of
the peasant noble. That the conclusion is entangled,
and the knots rather broken than disengaged, is no
unusual fault in Scott: it haunted his works from the
beginning. Considering his health, his absence, in this
tale, from scenes familiar to him, and times familiar to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XIV" id="Page_XIV">xiv</SPAN></span>
his readers, the novel is remarkable for its interest.
What success and merit it possesses are mainly due,
however, to a determined effort of the will, not to
a delighted and conscious inspiration. In his last
essays, though the will was indomitable, the material
machinery of the brain was shattered, and we can
only criticise them as psychological examples of unconquered
courage. He had to see James Ballantyne,
broken by his wife's death, and "squandering his
thoughts and senses upon dowdy metaphysics, and
abstruse theology." It was better for Scott to work
on, and die at his task, at the labour of a life which
would not be complete, would not offer the same invigorating
spectacle, had he thrown his pen away
and confessed himself defeated.</p>
<p>The historical sources of "Anne of Geierstein" are
explained in Scott's own Introduction and Notes. All
the later part of the novel follows the narrative of
Commines closely, save for certain dramatic liberties,
as we shall point out in our additional annotations.</p>
<p class="left45">
<span class="smcap">Andrew Lang.</span></p>
<p class="i2"><i>May 1894.</i>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XV" id="Page_XV">xv</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>INTRODUCTION<br/> <br/> <span class="s08">TO</span><br/> <br/> ANNE OF GEIERSTEIN.</h2>
<p>This novel was written at a time when circumstances
did not place within my reach the stores of a library
tolerably rich in historical works, and especially the
memoirs of the Middle Ages, amidst which I had been
accustomed to pursue the composition of my fictitious
narratives. In other words, it was chiefly the work
of leisure hours in Edinburgh, not of quiet mornings
in the country. In consequence of trusting to a
memory, strongly tenacious certainly, but not less
capricious in its efforts, I have to confess on this
occasion more violations of accuracy in historical details,
than can perhaps be alleged against others of
my novels. In truth, often as I have been complimented
on the strength of my memory, I have through
life been entitled to adopt old Beattie of Meikledale's
answer to his parish minister when eulogising him
with respect to the same faculty. "No, doctor," said
the honest border-laird, "I have no command of my
memory; it only retains what happens to hit my fancy,
and like enough, sir, if you were to preach to me for a
couple of hours on end, I might be unable at the close
of the discourse to remember one word of it." Perhaps
there are few men whose memory serves them
with equal fidelity as to many different classes of subjects;
but I am sorry to say, that while mine has
rarely failed me as to any snatch of verse or trait of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XVI" id="Page_XVI">xvi</SPAN></span>
character that had once interested my fancy, it has
generally been a frail support, not only as to names,
and dates, and other minute technicalities of history,
but as to many more important things.</p>
<p>I hope this apology will suffice for one mistake which
has been pointed out to me by the descendant of one of
the persons introduced in this story, and who complains
with reason that I have made a peasant deputy of the
ancestor of a distinguished and noble family, none of
whom ever declined from the high rank to which, as
far as my pen trenched on it, I now beg leave to restore
them. The name of the person who figures as deputy
of Soleure in these pages, was always, it seems, as it is
now, that of a patrician house. I am reminded by the
same correspondent of another slip, probably of less
consequence. The Emperor of the days my novel
refers to, though the representative of that Leopold
who fell in the great battle of Sempach, never set up
any pretensions against the liberties of the gallant
Swiss, but, on the contrary, treated with uniform
prudence and forbearance such of that nation as had
established their independence, and with wise, as well
as generous kindness, others who still continued to
acknowledge fealty to the imperial crown. Errors
of this sort, however trivial, ought never, in my
opinion, to be pointed out to an author, without meeting
with a candid and respectful acknowledgment.</p>
<p>With regard to a general subject of great curiosity
and interest, in the eyes at least of all antiquarian
students, upon which I have touched at some length
in this narrative, I mean the <i>Vehmic</i> tribunals of Westphalia,
a name so awful in men's ears during many
centuries, and which, through the genius of Goethe,
has again been revived in public fancy with a full
share of its ancient terrors, I am bound to state my
opinion that a wholly new and most important light
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XVII" id="Page_XVII">xvii</SPAN></span>
has been thrown upon this matter since Anne of Geierstein
first appeared, by the elaborate researches of my
ingenious friend, Mr. Francis Palgrave, whose proof-sheets,
containing the passages I allude to, have been
kindly forwarded to me, and whose complete work will
be before the public ere this Introduction can pass
through the press.</p>
<p>"In Germany," says this very learned writer, "there
existed a singular jurisdiction, which claimed a <i>direct
descent from the Pagan policy and mystic ritual of
the earliest Teutons</i>.</p>
<p>"We learn from the Historians of Saxony, that the
'Frey Feld gericht,' or Free Field Court of Corbey,
was, in Pagan times, under the supremacy of the
Priests of the Eresburgh, the Temple which contained
the Irminsule, or pillar of Irmin. After the conversion
of the people, the possessions of the temple were conferred
by Louis the Pious upon the Abbey which arose
upon its site. The court was composed of sixteen
persons, who held their offices for life. The senior
member presided as the Gerefa or Graff; the junior
performed the humbler duties of 'Frohner,' or summoner;
the remaining fourteen acted as the Echevins,
and by them all judgments were pronounced or declared.
When any one of these died, a new member was
elected by the Priests, from amongst the twenty-two
septs or families inhabiting the Gau or district, and
who included all the hereditary occupants of the soil.
Afterwards, the selection was made by the Monks,
but always with the assent of the Graff and of the
'Frohner.'</p>
<p>"The seat of judgment, the King's seat, or 'Königs-stuhl,'
was always established on the greensward; and
we collect from the context, that the tribunal was also
raised or appointed in the common fields of the Gau,
for the purpose of deciding disputes relating to the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XVIII" id="Page_XVIII">xviii</SPAN></span>
land within its precinct. Such a 'King's seat' was
a plot sixteen feet in length, and sixteen feet in
breadth; and when the ground was first consecrated,
the Frohner dug a grave in the centre, into which each
of the Free Echevins threw a handful of ashes, a coal,
and a tile. If any doubt arose whether a place of
judgment had been duly hallowed, the Judges sought
for the tokens. If they were not found, then all the
judgments which had been given became null and
void. It was also of the very essence of the Court,
that it should be held beneath the sky, and by the
light of the sun. All the ancient Teutonic judicial
assemblies were held in the open air; but some relics
of solar worship may perhaps be traced in the usage
and in the language of this tribunal. The forms
adopted in the Free Field Court also betray a singular
affinity to the doctrines of the British Bards respecting
their Gorseddau, or Conventions, which were 'always
held in the open air, in the eye of the light, and in
face of the sun.'<SPAN name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</SPAN></p>
<p>"When a criminal was to be judged, or a cause to
be decided, the Graff and the Free Echevins assembled
around the 'Königs-stuhl;' and the 'Frohner,' having
proclaimed silence, opened the proceedings by reciting
the following rhymes:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>"Sir Graff, with permission,</p>
<p class="i2">I beg you to say,</p>
<p>According to law, and without delay,</p>
<p class="i2">If I, your Knave,</p>
<p class="i2">Who judgment crave,</p>
<p>With your good grace,</p>
<p>Upon the King's seat this seat may place.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>"To this address the Graff replied:
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XIX" id="Page_XIX">xix</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>"While the sun shines with even light</p>
<p>Upon Masters and Knaves, I shall declare</p>
<p>The law of might, according to right.</p>
<p>Place the King's seat true and square,</p>
<p>Let even measure, for justice' sake,</p>
<p>Be given in sight of God and man,</p>
<p>That the plaintiff his complaint may make,</p>
<p>And the defendant answer,—if he can.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>"In conformity to this permission, the 'Frohner'
placed the seat of judgment in the middle of the plot,
and then he spake for the second time:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>"Sir Graff, Master brave,</p>
<p>I remind you of your honour, here,</p>
<p>And moreover that I am your Knave;</p>
<p>Tell me, therefore, for law sincere,</p>
<p>If these mete-wands are even and sure,</p>
<p>Fit for the rich and fit for the poor,</p>
<p>Both to measure land and condition;</p>
<p>Tell me as you would eschew perdition.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>"And so speaking, he laid the mete-wand on the ground.
The Graff then began to try the measure, by placing
his right foot against the wand, and he was followed
by the other Free Echevins in rank and order, according
to seniority. The length of the mete-wand being
thus proved, the Frohner spake for the third time:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>"Sir Graff, I ask by permission,</p>
<p>If I with your mete-wand may mete</p>
<p>Openly, and without displeasure,</p>
<p>Here the king's free judgment seat.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>"And the Graff replied:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>"I permit right,</p>
<p>And I forbid wrong,</p>
<p>Under the pains and penalties</p>
<p>That to the old known laws belong.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>"Now was the time of measuring the mystic plot;
it was measured by the mete-wand along and athwart,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XX" id="Page_XX">xx</SPAN></span>
and when the dimensions were found to be true, the
Graff placed himself in the seat of judgment, and gave
the charge to the assembled Free Echevins, warning
them to pronounce judgment, according to right and
justice.</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>"On this day, with common consent,</p>
<p>And under the clear firmament,</p>
<p>A free field court is established here,</p>
<p class="i2">In the open eye of day;</p>
<p class="i2">Enter soberly, ye who may.</p>
<p>The seat in its place is pight,</p>
<p>The mete-wand is found to be right;</p>
<p>Declare your judgments without delay:</p>
<p>And let the doom be truly given,</p>
<p>Whilst yet the Sun shines bright in heaven.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>"Judgment was given by the Free Echevins according
to plurality of voices."</p>
<p>After observing that the author of Anne of Geierstein
had, by what he calls a "very excusable poetical
licence," transferred something of these judicial rhymes
from the Free Field Court of the Abbey of Corbey, to
the Free Vehmic Tribunals of Westphalia, Mr. Palgrave
proceeds to correct many vulgar errors, in which
the novel he remarks on no doubt had shared, with
respect to the actual constitution of those last-named
courts. "The protocols of their proceedings," he
says, "do not altogether realise the popular idea of
their terrors and tyranny." It may be allowed to me
to question whether the mere protocols of such tribunals
are quite enough to annul all the import of
tradition respecting them; but in the following details
there is no doubt much that will instruct the antiquary,
as well as amuse the popular reader.</p>
<p>"The Court," says Mr. Palgrave, "was held with
known and notorious publicity beneath the 'eye of
light;' and the sentences, though speedy and severe,
were founded upon a regular system of established
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXI" id="Page_XXI">xxi</SPAN></span>
jurisprudence, not so strange, even to England, as it
may at first sight appear.</p>
<p>"Westphalia, according to its ancient constitution,
was divided into districts called 'Freygraffschafften,'
each of which usually contained one, and sometimes
many, Vehmic tribunals, whose boundaries were accurately
defined. The right of the 'Stuhlherr,' or Lord,
was of a feudal nature, and could be transferred by the
ordinary modes of alienation; and if the Lord did not
choose to act in his own person, he nominated a
'Freigraff' to execute the office in his stead. The
Court itself was composed of 'Freyschöppfen,' Scabini,
or Echevins, nominated by the Graff, and who were
divided into two classes: the ordinary, and the 'Wissenden'
or 'Witan,' who were admitted under a strict
and singular bond of secrecy.</p>
<p>"The initiation of these, the participators in all the
mysteries of the tribunal, could only take place upon
the 'red earth,' or within the limits of the ancient
Duchy of Westphalia. Bareheaded and ungirt, the
candidate is conducted before the dread tribunal. He
is interrogated as to his qualifications, or rather as to
the absence of any disqualification. He must be free
born, a Teuton, and clear of any accusation cognisable
by the tribunal of which he is to become a member.—If
the answers are satisfactory, he then takes the oath,
swearing by the Holy Law, that he will conceal the
secrets of the Holy Vehme from wife and child—from
father and mother—from sister and brother—from
fire and water—from every creature upon which the
sun shines, or upon which the rain falls—from every
being between earth and heaven.</p>
<p>"Another clause relates to his active duties. He
further swears, that he will 'say forth' to the tribunal
all crimes or offences which fall beneath the secret ban
of the Emperor, which he knows to be true, or which
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXII" id="Page_XXII">xxii</SPAN></span>
he has heard from trustworthy report; and that he will
not forbear to do so, for love nor for loathing, for gold
nor for silver nor precious stones.—This oath being
imposed upon him, the new Freischopff was then
intrusted with the secrets of the Vehmic tribunal. He
received the password, by which he was to know his
fellows, and the grip or sign by which they recognised
each other in silence; and he was warned of the
terrible punishment awaiting the perjured brother.—If
he discloses the secrets of the Court, he is to expect
that he will be suddenly seized by the ministers of
vengeance. His eyes are bound, he is cast down on
the soil, his tongue is torn out through the back of his
neck—and he is then to be hanged seven times higher
than any other criminal. And whether restrained by
the fear of punishment, or by the stronger ties of
mystery, no instance was ever known of any violation
of the secrets of the tribunal.</p>
<p>"Thus connected by an invisible bond, the members
of the 'Holy Vehme' became extremely numerous. In
the fourteenth century, the league contained upwards
of one hundred thousand members. Persons of every
rank sought to be associated to this powerful community,
and to participate in the immunities which the
brethren possessed. Princes were eager to allow their
ministers to become the members of this mysterious
and holy alliance; and the cities of the Empire were
equally anxious to enrol their magistrates in the
Vehmic union.</p>
<p>"The supreme government of the Vehmic tribunals
was vested in the great or general Chapter, composed
of the Freegraves and all the other initiated members,
high and low. Over this assembly the Emperor might
preside in person, but more usually by his deputy, the
Stadtholder of the ancient Duchy of Westphalia; an
office which, after the fall of Henry the Lion, Duke
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXIII" id="Page_XXIII">xxiii</SPAN></span>
of Brunswick, was annexed to the Archbishopric of
Cologne.</p>
<p>"Before the general Chapter, all the members were
liable to account for their acts. And it appears that
the 'Freegraves' reported the proceedings which had
taken place within their jurisdictions in the course of
the year. Unworthy members were expelled, or sustained
a severer punishment. Statutes, or Reformations,
as they were called, were here enacted for the
regulation of the Courts, and the amendment of any
abuses; and new and unforeseen cases, for which the
existing laws did not provide a remedy, received their
determination in the Vehmic Parliament.</p>
<p>"As the Echevins were of two classes, uninitiated
and initiated, so the Vehmic Courts had also a twofold
character; the 'Offenbare Ding' was an Open Court
or Folkmoot; but the 'Heimliche Acht' was the far-famed
Secret Tribunal.</p>
<p>"The first was held three times in each year.
According to the ancient Teutonic usage, it usually
assembled on Tuesday, anciently called 'Dingstag,'
or court-day, as well as 'Diensttag,' or serving-day, the
first open or working day after the two great weekly
festivals of Sun-day and Moon-day. Here all the
householders of the district, whether free or bond,
attended as suitors. The 'Offenbare Ding' exercised
a civil jurisdiction; and in this Folkmoot appeared
any complainant or appellant who sought to obtain the
aid of the Vehmic tribunal, in those cases when it did
not possess that summary jurisdiction from which it
has obtained such fearful celebrity. Here also the
suitors of the district made presentments or 'wroge,'
as they are termed, of any offences committed within
their knowledge, and which were to be punished by
the Graff and Echevins.</p>
<p>"The criminal jurisdiction of the Vehmic Tribunal
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXIV" id="Page_XXIV">xxiv</SPAN></span>
took the widest range. The 'Vehme' could punish
mere slander and contumely. Any violation of the
Ten Commandments was to be restrained by the
Echevins. Secret crimes, not to be proved by the ordinary
testimony of witnesses, such as magic, witchcraft,
and poison, were particularly to be restrained by
the Vehmic Judges; and they sometimes designated
their jurisdiction as comprehending every offence
against the honour of man or the precepts of religion.
Such a definition, if definition it can be called, evidently
allowed them to bring every action of which an
individual might complain, within the scope of their
tribunals. The forcible usurpation of land became an
offence against the 'Vehme.' And if the property of
an humble individual was occupied by the proud
Burghers of the Hanse, the power of the Defendants
might afford a reasonable excuse for the interference
of the Vehmic power.</p>
<p>"The Echevins, as Conservators of the Ban of the
Empire, were bound to make constant circuits within
their districts, by night and by day. If they could
apprehend a thief, a murderer, or the perpetrator of
any other heinous crime in possession of the 'mainour,'
or in the very act—or if his own mouth confessed the
deed, they hung him upon the next tree. But to render
this execution legal, the following requisites were
necessary: fresh suit, or the apprehension and execution
of the offender before daybreak or nightfall;—the
visible evidence of the crime;—and lastly, that three
Echevins, at least, should seize the offender, testify
against him, and judge of the recent deed.</p>
<p>"If, without any certain accuser, and without the
indication of crime, an individual was strongly and
vehemently suspected; or when the nature of the
offence was such as that its proof could only rest upon
opinion and presumption, the offender then became
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXV" id="Page_XXV">xxv</SPAN></span>
subject to what the German jurists term the inquisitorial
proceeding; it became the duty of the Echevin
to denounce the 'Leumund,' or manifest evil fame, to
the secret tribunal. If the Echevins and the Freygraff
were satisfied with the presentment, either from their
own knowledge, or from the information of their compeer,
the offender was said to be 'verfämbt;'—his
life was forfeited; and wherever he was found by the
brethren of the tribunal, they executed him without
the slightest delay or mercy. An offender who had
escaped from the Echevins was liable to the same
punishment; and such also was the doom of the party
who, after having been summoned pursuant to an
appeal preferred in open court, made default in appearing.
But one of the 'Wissenden' was in no respect
liable to the summary process, or to the inquisitorial
proceeding, unless he had revealed the secrets of the
Court. He was presumed to be a true man; and if
accused upon vehement suspicion, or 'Leumund,' the
same presumption or evil repute which was fatal to
the uninitiated might be entirely rebutted by the compurgatory
oath of the free Echevin. If a party,
accused by appeal, did not shun investigation, he
appeared in the open court, and defended himself
according to the ordinary rules of law. If he absconded,
or if the evidence or presumptions were against him,
the accusation then came before the Judges of the
Secret Court, who pronounced the doom. The accusatorial
process, as it was termed, was also, in many
cases, brought in the first instance before the 'Heimliche
Acht.' Proceeding upon the examination of
witnesses, it possessed no peculiar character, and its
forms were those of the ordinary courts of justice. It
was only in this manner that one of the 'Wissenden,'
or Witan, could be tried; and the privilege of being
exempted from the summary process, or from the effects
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXVI" id="Page_XXVI">xxvi</SPAN></span>
of the 'Leumund,' appears to have been one of the
reasons which induced so many of those who did not
tread the 'red earth' to seek to be included in the
Vehmic bond.</p>
<p>"There was no mystery in the assembly of the
Heimliche Acht. Under the oak, or under the lime-tree,
the Judges assembled, in broad daylight, and
before the eye of heaven; but the tribunal derived its
name from the precautions which were taken, for the
purpose of preventing any disclosure of its proceedings
which might enable the offender to escape the
vengeance of the Vehme. Hence, the fearful oath
of secrecy which bound the Echevins. And if any
stranger was found present in the Court, the unlucky
intruder instantly forfeited his life as a punishment
for his temerity. If the presentment or denunciation
did chance to become known to the offender, the law
allowed him a right of appeal. But the permission
was of very little utility, it was a profitless boon, for
the Vehmic Judges always laboured to conceal the
judgment from the hapless criminal, who seldom was
aware of his sentence until his neck was encircled by
the halter.</p>
<p>"Charlemagne, according to the traditions of Westphalia,
was the founder of the Vehmic tribunal; and
it was supposed that he instituted the Court for the
purpose of coercing the Saxons, ever ready to relapse
into the idolatry from which they had been reclaimed,
not by persuasion, but by the sword. This opinion,
however, is not confirmed either by documentary evidence
or by contemporary historians. And if we
examine the proceedings of the Vehmic tribunal, we
shall see that, in principle, it differs in no essential
character from the summary jurisdiction exercised in
the townships and hundreds of Anglo-Saxon England.
Amongst us, the thief or the robber was equally liable
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXVII" id="Page_XXVII">xxvii</SPAN></span>
to summary punishment, if apprehended by the men
of the township; and the same rules disqualified them
from proceeding to summary execution. An English
outlaw was exactly in the situation of him who had
escaped from the hands of the Echevins, or who had
failed to appear before the Vehmic Court: he was
condemned unheard, nor was he confronted with his
accusers. The inquisitorial proceedings, as they are
termed by the German jurists, are identical with our
ancient presentments. Presumptions are substituted
for proofs, and general opinion holds the place of a
responsible accuser. He who was untrue to all the
people in the Saxon age, or liable to the malecredence
of the inquest at a subsequent period, was scarcely
more fortunate than he who was branded as 'Leumund'
by the Vehmic law.</p>
<p>"In cases of open delict and of outlawry, there was
substantially no difference whatever between the English
and the Vehmic proceedings. But in the inquisitorial
process, the delinquent was allowed, according
to our older code, to run the risk of the ordeal. He
was accused by or before the Hundred, or the Thanes
of the Wapentake; and his own oath cleared him, if a
true man; but he 'bore the iron' if unable to avail
himself of the credit derived from a good and fair reputation.
The same course may have been originally
adopted in Westphalia; for the 'Wissend,' when
accused, could exculpate himself by his compurgatory
oath, being presumed to be of good fame; and it is,
therefore, probable that an uninitiated offender, standing
a stage lower in character and credibility, was
allowed the last resort of the ordeal. But when the
'Judgment of God' was abolished by the decrees of
the Church, it did not occur to the Vehmic Judges to
put the offender upon his second trial by the visne,
which now forms the distinguishing characteristic of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXVIII" id="Page_XXVIII">xxviii</SPAN></span>
the English law, and he was at once considered as condemned.
The Heimliche Acht is a presentment not
traversable by the offender.</p>
<p>"<i>The Vehmic Tribunals can only be considered as
the original jurisdictions of the 'Old Saxons,' which
survived the subjugation of their country. The singular
and mystic forms of initiation, the system of
enigmatical phrases, the use of the signs and symbols
of recognition, may probably be ascribed to the period
when the whole system was united to the worship of
the Deities of Vengeance, and when the sentence was
promulgated by the Doomsmen, assembled, like the Asi
of old, before the altars of Thor or Woden.</i> Of this
connection with ancient pagan policy, so clearly to be
traced in the Icelandic Courts, the English territorial
jurisdictions offer some very faint vestiges; but the
mystery had long been dispersed, and the whole system
passed into the ordinary machinery of the law.</p>
<p>"As to the Vehmic Tribunals, it is acknowledged,
that in a truly barbarous age and country, their proceedings,
however violent, were not without utility.
Their severe and secret vengeance often deterred the
rapacity of the noble robber, and protected the humble
suppliant; the extent, and even the abuse, of their
authority was in some measure justified in an Empire
divided into numerous independent jurisdictions, and
not subjected to any paramount tribunal, able to
administer impartial justice to the oppressed. But as
the times improved, the Vehmic tribunals degenerated.
The Echevins, chosen from the inferior ranks, did not
possess any personal consideration. Opposed by the
opulent cities of the Hanse, and objects of the suspicion
and the enmity of the powerful aristocracy, the
tribunals of some districts were abolished by law, and
others took the form of ordinary territorial jurisdictions;
the greater number fell into desuetude. Yet, as
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXIX" id="Page_XXIX">xxix</SPAN></span>
late as the middle of the eighteenth century, a few
Vehmic tribunals existed in name, though, as it may
be easily supposed, without possessing any remnant of
their pristine power."—<span class="smcap">Palgrave</span> <i>on the Rise and
Progress of the English Commonwealth. Proofs and
Illustrations.</i> p. 157.</p>
<p>I have marked <i>by italic letters</i> the most important
passage of the above quotation. The view it contains
seems to me to have every appearance of truth and
justice—and if such should, on maturer investigation,
turn out to be the fact, it will certainly confer no
small honour on an English scholar to have discovered
the key to a mystery, which had long exercised in
vain the laborious and profound students of German
antiquity.</p>
<p>There are probably several other points on which I
ought to have embraced this opportunity of enlarging;
but the necessity of preparing for an excursion to
foreign countries, in quest of health and strength, that
have been for some time sinking, makes me cut short
my address upon the present occasion.</p>
<p>Although I had never been in Switzerland, and
numerous mistakes must of course have occurred in my
attempts to describe the local scenery of that romantic
region, I must not conclude without a statement highly
gratifying to myself, that the work met with a reception
of more than usual cordiality among the descendants
of the Alpine heroes whose manners I had
ventured to treat of; and I have in particular to
express my thanks to the several Swiss gentlemen who
have, since the novel was published, enriched my little
collection of armour with specimens of the huge weapon
that sheared the lances of the Austrian chivalry at
Sempach, and was employed with equal success on the
bloody days of Granson and Morat. Of the ancient
doublehanded <i>espadons</i> of the Switzer, I have, in this
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_XXX" id="Page_XXX">xxx</SPAN></span>
way, received, I think, not less than six, in excellent
preservation, from as many different individuals, who
thus testified their general approbation of these pages.
They are not the less interesting, that gigantic swords,
of nearly the same pattern and dimensions, were
employed, in their conflicts with the bold knights and
men-at-arms of England, by Wallace, and the sturdy
foot-soldiers who, under his guidance, laid the foundations
of Scottish independence.</p>
<p>The reader who wishes to examine with attention
the historical events of the period which the novel
embraces will find ample means of doing so in the valuable
works of Zschokké and M. de Barante—which
last author's account of the Dukes of Burgundy is
among the most valuable of recent accessions of European
literature—and in the new Parisian edition of
Froissart, which has not as yet attracted so much
attention in this country as it well deserves to do.</p>
<p class="left45">W.S.</p>
<p class="i2"><span class="smcap">Abbotsford</span>, <i>Sept. 17, 1831</i>.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="center p6"><span class="b15">ANNE OF GEIERSTEIN;</span><br/>
<br/>
OR,<br/>
<br/>
<span class="b12">THE MAIDEN OF THE MIST.</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />