<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h2><span class="GutSmall">THE</span><br/> DOVE IN THE EAGLE’S NEST</h2>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BY</span></p>
<p style="text-align: center">CHARLOTTE M. YONGE</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/tpb.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Sitting at the desk" title= "Sitting at the desk" src="images/tps.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall"><i>ILLUSTRATED BY W. J. HENNESSY</i></span></p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center">London<br/>
MACMILLAN AND CO.<br/>
<span class="GutSmall">AND NEW YORK</span><br/>
1890</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall"><i>The Right
of Translation is Reserved</i></span></p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center"><i>First Edition</i> (2 vols.
Crown 8vo), 1866. <i>New Edition</i> (1 vol. Crown
8vo), 1869.</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><i>Reprinted</i> 1871; January and
November 1873; 1875; 1876; 1879; 1882; 1883;<br/>
1884; 1888. <i>New Edition</i>, 1889.
<i>Reprinted</i> 1890.</p>
<h2>INTRODUCTION</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">In</span> sending forth this little book,
I am inclined to add a few explanatory words as to the use I have
made of historical personages. The origin of the whole
story was probably Freytag’s first series of pictures of
German Life: probably, I say, for its first commencement was a
dream, dreamt some weeks after reading that most interesting
collection of sketches. The return of the squire with the
tidings of the death of the two knights was vividly depicted in
sleep; and, though without local habitation or name, the scene
was most likely to have been a reflection from the wild scenes so
lately read of.</p>
<p>In fact, waking thoughts decided that such a catastrophe could
hardly have happened anywhere but in Germany, or in Scotland; and
the contrast between the cultivation in the free cities and the
savagery of the independent barons made the former the more
suitable region for the adventures. The time could only be
before the taming and bringing into order of the empire, when the
Imperial cities were in their greatest splendour, the last free
nobles in course of being reduced from their lawless liberty, and
the House of Austria beginning to acquire its preponderance over
the other princely families.</p>
<p>M. Freytag’s books, and Hegewisch’s History of
Maximilian, will, I think, be found fully to bear out the picture
I have tried to give of the state of things in the reign of the
Emperor Friedrich III., when, for want of any other law, <i>Faust
recht</i>, or fist right, ruled; <i>i.e.</i> an offended
nobleman, having once sent a <i>Fehde-brief</i> to his adversary,
was thenceforth at liberty to revenge himself by a private war,
in which, for the wrong inflicted, no justice was exacted.</p>
<p>Hegewisch remarks that the only benefit of this custom was,
that the honour of subscribing a feud-brief was so highly
esteemed that it induced the nobles to learn to write! The
League of St. George and the Swabian League were the means of
gradually putting down this authorized condition of deadly
feud.</p>
<p>This was in the days of Maximilian’s youth. He is
a prince who seems to have been almost as inferior in his foreign
to what he was in his domestic policy as was Queen
Elizabeth. He is chiefly familiar to us as failing to keep
up his authority in Flanders after the death of Mary of Burgundy,
as lingering to fulfil his engagement with Anne of Brittany till
he lost her and her duchy, as incurring ridicule by his
ill-managed schemes in Italy, and the vast projects that he was
always forming without either means or steadiness to carry them
out, by his perpetual impecuniosity and slippery dealing; and in
his old age he has become rather the laughing-stock of
historians.</p>
<p>But there is much that is melancholy in the sight of a man
endowed with genius, unbalanced by the force of character that
secures success, and with an ardent nature whose intention
overleapt obstacles that in practice he found insuperable.
At home Maximilian raised the Imperial power from a mere cipher
to considerable weight. We judge him as if he had been born
in the purple and succeeded to a defined power like his
descendants. We forget that the head of the Holy Roman
Empire had been, ever since the extinction of the Swabian line, a
mere mark for ambitious princes to shoot at, with everything
expected from him, and no means to do anything.
Maximilian’s own father was an avaricious, undignified old
man, not until near his death Archduke of even all Austria, and
with anarchy prevailing everywhere under his nominal rule.
It was in the time of Maximilian that the Empire became as
compact and united a body as could be hoped of anything so
unwieldy, that law was at least acknowledged, <i>Faust recht</i>
for ever abolished, and the Emperor became once more a real
power.</p>
<p>The man under whom all this was effected could have been no
fool; yet, as he said himself, he reigned over a nation of kings,
who each chose to rule for himself; and the uncertainty of
supplies of men or money to be gained from them made him so often
fail necessarily in his engagements, that he acquired a
shiftiness and callousness to breaches of promise, which became
the worst flaw in his character. But of the fascination of
his manner there can be no doubt. Even Henry VIII.’s
English ambassadors, when forced to own how little they could
depend on him, and how dangerous it was to let subsidies pass
through his fingers, still show themselves under a sort of
enchantment of devotion to his person, and this in his old age,
and when his conduct was most inexcusable and provoking.</p>
<p>His variety of powers was wonderful. He was learned in
many languages—in all those of his empire or hereditary
states, and in many besides; and he had an ardent love of books,
both classical and modern. He delighted in music, painting,
architecture, and many arts of a more mechanical description;
wrote treatises on all these, and on other subjects, especially
gardening and gunnery. He was the inventor of an improved
lock to the arquebus, and first divined how to adapt the
disposition of his troops to the use of the newly-discovered
fire-arms. And in all these things his versatile head and
ready hand were personally employed, not by deputy; while coupled
with so much artistic taste was a violent passion for hunting,
which carried him through many hairbreadth ’scapes.
“It was plain,” he used to say, “that God
Almighty ruled the world, or how could things go on with a rogue
like Alexander VI. at the head of the Church, and a mere huntsman
like himself at the head of the Empire.” His
<i>bon-mots</i> are numerous, all thoroughly characteristic, and
showing that brilliancy in conversation must have been one of his
greatest charms. It seems as if only self-control and
resolution were wanting to have made him a Charles, or an Alfred,
the Great.</p>
<p>The romance of his marriage with the heiress of Burgundy is
one of the best known parts of his life. He was scarcely
two-and-twenty when he lost her, who perhaps would have given him
the stability he wanted; but his tender hove for her endured
through life. It is not improbable that it was this still
abiding attachment that made him slack in overcoming difficulties
in the way of other contracts, and that he may have hoped that
his engagement to Bianca Sforza would come to nothing, like so
many others.</p>
<p>The most curious record of him is, however, in two books, the
materials for which he furnished, and whose composition and
illustration he superintended, <i>Der Weise King</i>, and
<i>Theurdank</i>, of both of which he is well known to be the
hero. The White, or the Wise King, it is uncertain which,
is a history of his education and exploits, in prose. Every
alternate page has its engraving, showing how the Young White
King obtains instruction in painting, architecture, language, and
all arts and sciences, the latter including magic—which he
learns of an old woman with a long-tailed demon sitting, like
Mother Hubbard’s cat, on her shoulder—and
astrology. In the illustration of this study an
extraordinary figure of a cross within a circle appears in the
sky, which probably has some connection with his scheme of
nativity, for it also appears on the breast of Ehrenhold, his
constant companion in the metrical history of his career, under
the name of Theurdank.</p>
<p>The poetry of <i>Theurdank</i> was composed by
Maximilian’s old writing-master, Melchior Pfinznig; but the
adventures were the Kaisar’s own, communicated by himself,
and he superintended the wood-cuts. The name is explained
to mean “craving
glory,”—Gloriæmemor. The Germans laugh to
scorn a French translator, who rendered it
“Chermerci.” It was annotated very soon after
its publication, and each exploit explained and accounted
for. It is remarkable and touching in a man who married at
eighteen, and was a widower at twenty-two, that, in both books,
the happy union with his lady love is placed at the end—not
at the beginning of the book; and in <i>Theurdank</i>, at least,
the eternal reunion is clearly meant.</p>
<p>In this curious book, König Römreich, by whom every
contemporary understood poor Charles of Burgundy—thus
posthumously made King of Rome by Maximilian, as the only honour
in his power, betroths his daughter Ehrenreich (rich in honour)
to the Ritter Theurdank. Soon after, by a most mild version
of Duke Charles’s frightful end, König Römreich
is seen on his back dying in a garden, and Ehrenreich (as Mary
really did) despatches a ring to summon her betrothed.</p>
<p>But here Theurdank returns for answer that he means first to
win honour by his exploits, and sets out with his comrade,
Ehrenhold, in search thereof. Ehrenhold never appears of
the smallest use to him in any of the dire adventures into which
he falls, but only stands complacently by, and in effect may
represent Fame, or perhaps that literary sage whom Don Quixote
always supposed to be at hand to record his deeds of prowess.</p>
<p>Next we are presented with the German impersonation of Satan
as a wise old magician, only with claws instead of feet,
commissioning his three captains (<i>hauptleutern</i>),
Fürwitz, Umfallo, and Neidelhard, to beset and ruin
Theurdank. They are interpreted as the dangers of youth,
middle life, and old age—Rashness, Disaster, and Distress
(or Envy). One at a time they encounter him,—not
once, but again and again; and he has ranged under each head, in
entire contempt of real order of time, the perils he thinks owing
to each foe. Fürwitz most justly gets the credit of
Maximilian’s perils on the steeple of Ulm, though,
unfortunately, the artist has represented the daring climber as
standing not much above the shoulders of Fürwitz and
Ehrenhold; and although the annotation tells us that his
“hinder half foot” overhung the scaffold, the danger
in the print is not appalling. Fürwitz likewise
inveigles him into putting the point (<i>schnäbel</i>) of
his shoe into the wheel of a mill for turning stone balls, where
he certainly hardly deserved to lose nothing but the beak of his
shoe. This enemy also brings him into numerous unpleasant
predicaments on precipices, where he hangs by one hand; while the
chamois stand delighted on every available peak, Fürwitz
grins malevolently, and Ehrenhold stands pointing at him over his
shoulder. Time and place are given in the notes for all
these escapes. After some twenty adventures Fürwitz is
beaten off, and Umfallo tries his powers. Here the
misadventures do not involve so much folly on the hero’s
part—though, to be sure, he ventures into a lion’s
den unarmed, and has to beat off the inmates with a shovel.
But the other adventures are more rational. He catches a
jester—of admirably foolish expression—putting a
match to a powder-magazine; he is wonderfully preserved in
mountain avalanches and hurricanes; reins up his horse on the
verge of an abyss; falls through ice in Holland and shows nothing
but his head above it; cures himself of a fever by draughts of
water, to the great disgust of his physicians, and escapes a fire
bursting out of a tall stove.</p>
<p>Neidelhard brings his real battles and perils. From this
last he is in danger of shipwreck, of assassination, of poison,
in single combat, or in battle; tumults of the people beset him;
he is imprisoned as at Ghent. But finally Neidelhard is
beaten back; and the hero is presented to Ehrenreich.
Ehrenhold recounts his triumphs, and accuses the three
captains. One is hung, another beheaded, the third thrown
headlong from a tower, and a guardian angel then summons
Theurdank to his union with his Queen. No doubt this
reunion was the life-dream of the harassed, busy, inconsistent
man, who flashed through the turmoils of the early sixteenth
century.</p>
<p>The adventures of Maximilian which have been adverted to in
the story are all to be found in Theurdank, and in his early life
he was probably the brilliant eager person we have tried in some
degree to describe. In his latter years it is well known
that he was much struck by Luther’s arguments; and, indeed,
he had long been conscious of need of Church reform, though his
plans took the grotesque form of getting himself made Pope, and
taking all into his own hands.</p>
<p>Perhaps it was unwise to have ever so faintly sketched
Ebbo’s career through the ensuing troubles; but the history
of the star and of the spark in the stubble seemed to need
completion; and the working out of the character of the survivor
was unfinished till his course had been thought over from the
dawn of the Wittenberg teaching, which must have seemed no
novelty to an heir of the doctrine of Tauler, and of the
veritably Catholic divines of old times. The idea is of the
supposed course of a thoughtful, refined, conscientious man
through the earlier times of the Reformation, glad of the hope of
cleansing the Church, but hoping to cleanse, not to break away
from her—a hope that Luther himself long cherished, and
which was not entirely frustrated till the re-assembly at Trent
in the next generation. Justice has never been done to the
men who feared to loose their hold on the Church Catholic as the
one body to which the promises were made. Their loyalty has
been treated as blindness, timidity, or superstition; but that
there were many such persons, and those among the very highest
minds of their time, no one can have any doubt after reading such
lives as those of Friedrich the Wise of Saxony, of Erasmus, of
Vittoria Colonna, or of Cardinal Giustiniani.</p>
<p><i>April</i> 9, 1836.</p>
<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
<table>
<tr>
<td><p>“She was too young and too delicate to reject
civilization, and she let Christina braid her hair, bathe her,
and arrange her dress, with sensations of comfort that were
almost like health” <i>Front</i></p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><i>Page</i> <span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page37">37</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p>Henceforth mine own lady-mother is the mistress of this
castle, and whoever speaks a rude word to her offends the
Freiherr von Adlerstein</p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page126">126</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><p>“‘No; only I saw that you stayed here all
alone,’ she said, clasping her hands”</p>
</td>
<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><SPAN href="#page269">269</SPAN></span></p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />