<h2>CHAPTER XII<br/> <span class="GutSmall">BACK TO THE DOVECOTE</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">For</span> the first time in her residence
at Adlerstein, now full half her life, the Freiherrinn Christina
ventured to send a messenger to Ulm, namely, a lay brother of the
convent of St. Ruprecht, who undertook to convey to Master
Gottfried Sorel her letter, informing him of the death of her
mother-in-law, and requesting him to send the same tidings to the
Freiherr von Adlerstein Wildschloss, the kinsman and godfather of
her sons.</p>
<p>She was used to wait fifty-two weeks for answers to her
letters, and was amazed when, at the end of three, two stout
serving-men were guided by Jobst up the pass; but her heart
warmed to their flat caps and round jerkins, they looked so like
home. They bore a letter of invitation to her and her sons
to come at once to her uncle’s house. The King of the
Romans, and perhaps the Emperor, were to come to the city early
in the summer, and there could be no better opportunity of
presenting the young Barons to their sovereign. Sir Kasimir
of Adlerstein Wildschloss would meet them there for the purpose,
and would obtain their admission to the League, in which all
Swabian nobles had bound themselves to put down robbery and
oppression, and outside which there was nothing but outlawry and
danger.</p>
<p>“So must it be?” said Ebbo, between his teeth, as
he leant moodily against the wall, while his mother was gone to
attend to the fare to be set before the messengers.</p>
<p>“What! art not glad to take wing at last?”
exclaimed Friedel, cut short in an exclamation of delight.</p>
<p>“Take wing, forsooth! To be guest of a greasy
burgher, and call cousin with him! Fear not, Friedel;
I’ll not vex the motherling. Heaven knows she has had
pain, grief, and subjection enough in her lifetime, and I would
not hinder her visit to her home; but I would she could go alone,
nor make us show our poverty to the swollen city folk, and listen
to their endearments. I charge thee, Friedel, do as I do;
be not too familiar with them. Could we but sprain an ankle
over the crag—”</p>
<p>“Nay, she would stay to nurse us,” said Friedel,
laughing; “besides, thou art needed for the matter of
homage.”</p>
<p>“Look, Friedel,” said Ebbo, sinking his voice,
“I shall not lightly yield my freedom to king or
Kaiser. Maybe, there is no help for it; but it irks me to
think that I should be the last Lord of Adlerstein to whom the
title of Freiherr is not a mockery. Why dost bend thy brow,
brother? What art thinking of?”</p>
<p>“Only a saying in my mother’s book, that
well-ordered service is true freedom,” said Friedel.
“And methinks there will be freedom in rushing at last into
the great far-off!”—the boy’s eye expanded and
glistened with eagerness. “Here are we
prisoners—to ourselves, if you like—but prisoners
still, pent up in the rocks, seeing no one, hearing scarce an
echo from the knightly or the poet world, nor from all the
wonders that pass. And the world has a history going on
still, like the <i>Chronicle</i>. Oh, Ebbo, think of being
in the midst of life, with lance and sword, and seeing the
Kaiser—the Kaiser of the holy Roman Empire!”</p>
<p>“With lance and sword, well and good; but would it were
not at the cost of liberty!”</p>
<p>However Ebbo forbore to damp his mother’s joy, save by
the one warning—“Understand, mother, that I will not
be pledged to anything. I will not bend to the yoke ere I
have seen and judged for myself.”</p>
<p>The manly sound of the words gave a sweet sense of exultation
to the mother, even while she dreaded the proud spirit, and
whispered, “God direct thee, my son.”</p>
<p>Certainly Ebbo, hitherto the most impetuous and least
thoughtful of the two lads, had a gravity and seriousness about
him, that, but for his naturally sweet temper, would have seemed
sullen. His aspirations for adventure had hitherto been
more vehement than Friedel’s; but, when the time seemed at
hand, his regrets at what he might have to yield overpowered his
hopes of the future. The fierce haughtiness of the old
Adlersteins could not brook the descent from the crag, even while
the keen, clear burgher wit that Ebbo inherited from the other
side of the house taught him that the position was untenable, and
that his isolated glory was but a poor mean thing after
all. And the struggle made him sad and moody.</p>
<p>Friedel, less proud, and with nothing to yield, was open to
blithe anticipations of what his fancy pictured as the home of
all the beauty, sacred or romantic, that he had glimpsed at
through his mother. Religion, poetry, learning, art,
refinement, had all come to him through her; and though he had a
soul that dreamt and soared in the lonely grandeur of the
mountain heights, it craved further aliment for its yearnings for
completeness and perfection. Long ago had Friedel come to
the verge of such attainments as he could work out of his present
materials, and keen had been his ardour for the means of
progress, though only the mountain tarn had ever been witness to
the full outpouring of the longings with which he gazed upon the
dim, distant city like a land of enchantment.</p>
<p>The journey was to be at once, so as to profit by the escort
of Master Sorel’s men. Means of transport were
scanty, but Ebbo did not choose that the messengers should report
the need, and bring back a bevy of animals at the burgher’s
expense; so the mother was mounted on the old white mare, and her
sons and Heinz trusted to their feet. By setting out early
on a May morning, the journey could be performed ere night, and
the twilight would find them in the domains of the free city,
where their small numbers would be of no importance. As to
their appearance, the mother wore a black woollen gown and
mantle, and a black silk hood tied under her chin, and sitting
loosely round the stiff frame of her white cap—a nun-like
garb, save for the soft brown hair, parted over her brow, and
more visible than she sometimes thought correct, but her sons
would not let her wear it out of sight.</p>
<p>The brothers had piece by piece surveyed the solitary suit of
armour remaining in the castle; but, though it might serve for
defence, it could not be made fit for display, and they must
needs be contented with blue cloth, spun, woven, dyed, fashioned,
and sewn at home, chiefly by their mother, and by her embroidered
on the breast with the white eagle of Adlerstein. Short
blue cloaks and caps of the same, with an eagle plume in each,
and leggings neatly fashioned of deerskin, completed their
equipments. Ebbo wore his father’s sword, Friedel had
merely a dagger and crossbow. There was not a gold chain,
not a brooch, not an approach to an ornament among the three,
except the medal that had always distinguished Ebbo, and the
coral rosary at Christina’s girdle. Her own trinkets
had gone in masses for the souls of her father and husband; and
though a few costly jewels had been found in Frau
Kunigunde’s hoards, the mode of their acquisition was so
doubtful, that it had seemed fittest to bestow them in alms and
masses for the good of her soul.</p>
<p>“What ornament, what glory could any one desire better
than two such sons?” thought Christina, as for the first
time for eighteen years she crossed the wild ravine where her
father had led her, a trembling little captive, longing for wings
like a dove’s to flutter home again. Who would then
have predicted that she should descend after so long and weary a
time, and with a gallant boy on either side of her, eager to aid
her every step, and reassure her at each giddy pass, all joy and
hope before her and them? Yet she was not without some
dread and misgiving, as she watched her elder son, always
attentive to her, but unwontedly silent, with a stern gravity on
his young brow, a proud sadness on his lip. And when he had
come to the Debateable Ford, and was about to pass the boundaries
of his own lands, he turned and gazed back on the castle and
mountain with a silent but passionate ardour, as though he felt
himself doing them a wrong by perilling their independence.</p>
<p>The sun had lately set, and the moon was silvering the Danube,
when the travellers came full in view of the imperial free city,
girt in with mighty walls and towers—the vine-clad hill
dominated by its crowning church; the irregular outlines of the
unfinished spire of the cathedral traced in mysterious dark
lacework against the pearly sky; the lofty steeple-like
gate-tower majestically guarding the bridge. Christina
clasped her hands in thankfulness, as at the familiar face of a
friend; Friedel glowed like a minstrel introduced to his fair
dame, long wooed at a distance; Ebbo could not but exclaim,
“Yea, truly, a great city is a solemn and a glorious
sight!”</p>
<p>The gates were closed, and the serving-men had to parley at
the barbican ere the heavy door was opened to admit the party to
the bridge, between deep battlemented stone walls, with here and
there loopholes, showing the shimmering of the river
beneath. The slow, tired tread of the old mare sounded
hollow; the river rushed below with the full swell of evening
loudness; a deep-toned convent-bell tolled gravely through the
stillness, while, between its reverberations, clear, distinct
notes of joyous music were borne on the summer wind, and a
nightingale sung in one of the gardens that bordered the
banks.</p>
<p>“Mother, it is all that I dreamt!” breathlessly
murmured Friedel, as they halted under the dark arch of the great
gateway tower.</p>
<p>Not however in Friedel’s dreams had been the hearty
voice that proceeded from the lighted guard-room in the thickness
of the gateway. “Freiherrinn von Adlerstein! Is
it she? Then must I greet my old playmate!” And
the captain of the watch appeared among upraised lanterns and
torches that showed a broad, smooth, plump face beneath a plain
steel helmet.</p>
<p>“Welcome, gracious lady, welcome to your old city.
What! do you not remember Lippus Grundt, your poor
Valentine?”</p>
<p>“Master Philip Grundt!” exclaimed Christina,
amazed at the breadth of visage and person; “and how fares
it with my good Regina?”</p>
<p>“Excellent well, good lady. She manages her trade
and house as well as the good man Bartoläus Fleischer
himself. Blithe will she be to show you her goodly ten, as
I shall my eight,” he continued, walking by her side;
“and Barbara—you remember Barbara Schmidt,
lady—”</p>
<p>“My dear Barbara?—That do I indeed! Is she
your wife?”</p>
<p>“Ay, truly, lady,” he answered, in an odd sort of
apologetic tone; “you see, you returned not, and the
housefathers, they would have it so—and Barbara is a good
housewife.”</p>
<p>“Truly do I rejoice!” said Christina, wishing she
could convey to him how welcome he had been to marry any one he
liked, as far as she was concerned—he, in whom her fears of
mincing goldsmiths had always taken form—then signing with
her hand, “I have my sons likewise to show her.”</p>
<p>“Ah, on foot!” muttered Grundt, as a not
well-conceived apology for not having saluted the young
gentlemen. “I greet you well, sirs,” with a
bow, most haughtily returned by Ebbo, who was heartily wishing
himself on his mountain. “Two lusty, well-grown
Junkern indeed, to whom my Martin will be proud to show the
humours of Ulm. A fair good night, lady! You will
find the old folks right cheery.”</p>
<p>Well did Christina know the turn down the street, darkened by
the overhanging brows of the tall houses, but each lower window
laughing with the glow of light within that threw out the heavy
mullions and the circles and diamonds of the latticework, and
here and there the brilliant tints of stained glass sparkled like
jewels in the upper panes, pictured with Scripture scene, patron
saint, or trade emblem. The familiar porch was reached, the
familiar knock resounded on the iron-studded door. Friedel
lifted his mother from her horse, and felt that she was quivering
from head to foot, and at the same moment the light streamed from
the open door on the white horse, and the two young faces, one
eager, the other with knit brows and uneasy eyes. A kind of
echo pervaded the house, “She is come! she is come!”
and as one in a dream Christina entered, crossed the well-known
hall, looked up to her uncle and aunt on the stairs, perceived
little change on their countenances, and sank upon her knees,
with bowed head and clasped hands.</p>
<p>“My child! my dear child!” exclaimed her uncle,
raising her with one hand, and crossing her brow in benediction
with the other. “Art thou indeed returned?” and
he embraced her tenderly.</p>
<p>“Welcome, fair niece!” said Hausfrau Johanna, more
formally. “I am right glad to greet you
here.”</p>
<p>“Dear, dear mother!” cried Christina, courting her
fond embrace by gestures of the most eager affection, “how
have I longed for this moment! and, above all, to show you my
boys! Herr Uncle, let me present my sons—my Eberhard,
my Friedmund. O Housemother, are not my twins well-grown
lads?” And she stood with a hand on each, proud that
their heads were so far above her own, and looking still so
slight and girlish in figure that she might better have been
their sister than their mother. The cloud that the sudden
light had revealed on Ebbo’s brow had cleared away, and he
made an inclination neither awkward nor ungracious in its free
mountain dignity and grace, but not devoid of mountain rusticity
and shy pride, and far less cordial than was Friedel’s
manner. Both were infinitely relieved to detect nothing of
the greasy burgher, and were greatly struck with the fine
venerable head before them; indeed, Friedel would, like his
mother, have knelt to ask a blessing, had he not been under
command not to outrun his brother’s advances towards her
kindred.</p>
<p>“Welcome, fair Junkern!” said Master Gottfried;
“welcome both for your mother’s sake and your
own! These thy sons, my little one?” he added,
smiling. “Art sure I neither dream nor see
double! Come to the gallery, and let me see thee
better.”</p>
<p>And, ceremoniously giving his hand, he proceeded to lead his
niece up the stairs, while Ebbo, labouring under ignorance of
city forms and uncertainty of what befitted his dignity,
presented his hand to his aunt with an air that half-amused,
half-offended the shrewd dame.</p>
<p>“All is as if I had left you but yesterday!”
exclaimed Christina. “Uncle, have you pardoned
me? You bade me return when my work was done.”</p>
<p>“I should have known better, child. Such return is
not to be sought on this side the grave. Thy work has been
more than I then thought of.”</p>
<p>“Ah! and now will you deem it begun—not
done!” softly said Christina, though with too much
heartfelt exultation greatly to doubt that all the world must be
satisfied with two such boys, if only Ebbo would be his true
self.</p>
<p>The luxury of the house, the wainscoted and tapestried walls,
the polished furniture, the lamps and candles, the damask linen,
the rich array of silver, pewter, and brightly-coloured glass,
were a great contrast to the bare walls and scant necessaries of
Schloss Adlerstein; but Ebbo was resolved not to expose himself
by admiration, and did his best to stifle Friedel’s
exclamations of surprise and delight. Were not these
citizens to suppose that everything was tenfold more costly at
the baronial castle? And truly the boy deserved credit for
the consideration for his mother, which made him merely reserved,
while he felt like a wild eagle in a poultry-yard. It was
no small proof of his affection to forbear more interference with
his mother’s happiness than was the inevitable effect of
that intuition which made her aware that he was chafing and ill
at ease. For his sake, she allowed herself to be placed in
the seat of honour, though she longed, as of old, to nestle at
her uncle’s feet, and be again his child; but, even while
she felt each acceptance of a token of respect as almost an
injury to them, every look and tone was showing how much the same
Christina she had returned.</p>
<p>In truth, though her life had been mournful and oppressed, it
had not been such as to age her early. It had been all
submission, without wear and tear of mind, and too simple in its
trials for care and moiling; so the fresh, lily-like sweetness of
her maiden bloom was almost intact, and, much as she had
undergone, her once frail health had been so braced by the
mountain breezes, that, though delicacy remained, sickliness was
gone from her appearance. There was still the exquisite
purity and tender modesty of expression, but with greater
sweetness in the pensive brown eyes.</p>
<p>“Ah, little one!” said her uncle, after duly
contemplating her; “the change is all for the better!
Thou art grown a wondrously fair dame. There will scarce be
a lovelier in the Kaiserly train.”</p>
<p>Ebbo almost pardoned his great-uncle for being his
great-uncle.</p>
<p>“When she is arrayed as becomes the Frau
Freiherrinn,” said the housewife aunt, looking with concern
at the coarse texture of her black sleeve. “I long to
see our own lady ruffle it in her new gear. I am glad that
the lofty pointed cap has passed out; the coif becomes my child
far better, and I see our tastes still accord as to
fashion.”</p>
<p>“Fashion scarce came above the Debateable Ford,”
said Christina, smiling. “I fear my boys look as if
they came out of the <i>Weltgeschichte</i>, for I could only
shape their garments after my remembrance of the gallants of
eighteen years ago.”</p>
<p>“Their garments are your own shaping!” exclaimed
the aunt, now in an accent of real, not conventional respect.</p>
<p>“Spinning and weaving, shaping and sewing,” said
Friedel, coming near to let the housewife examine the
texture.</p>
<p>“Close woven, even threaded, smooth tinted! Ah,
Stina, thou didst learn something! Thou wert not quite
spoilt by the housefather’s books and carvings.”</p>
<p>“I cannot tell whose teachings have served me best, or
been the most precious to me,” said Christina, with clasped
hands, looking from one to another with earnest love.</p>
<p>“Thou art a good child. Ah! little one, forgive
me; you look so like our child that I cannot bear in mind that
you are the Frau Freiherrinn.”</p>
<p>“Nay, I should deem myself in disgrace with you, did you
keep me at a distance, and not <i>thou</i> me, as your little
Stina,” she fondly answered, half regretting her fond eager
movement, as Ebbo seemed to shrink together with a gesture
perceived by her uncle.</p>
<p>“It is my young lord there who would not forgive the
freedom,” he said, good-humouredly, though gravely.</p>
<p>“Not so,” Ebbo forced himself to say; “not
so, if it makes my mother happy.”</p>
<p>He held up his head rather as if he thought it a fool’s
paradise, but Master Gottfried answered: “The noble
Freiherr is, from all I have heard, too good a son to grudge his
mother’s duteous love even to burgher kindred.”</p>
<p>There was something in the old man’s frank, dignified
tone of grave reproof that at once impressed Ebbo with a sense of
the true superiority of that wise and venerable old age to his
own petulant baronial self-assertion. He had both head and
heart to feel the burgher’s victory, and with a deep blush,
though not without dignity, he answered, “Truly, sir, my
mother has ever taught us to look up to you as her kindest and
best—”</p>
<p>He was going to say “friend,” but a look into the
grand benignity of the countenance completed the conquest, and he
turned it into “father.” Friedel at the same
instant bent his knee, exclaiming, “It is true what Ebbo
says! We have both longed for this day. Bless us,
honoured uncle, as you have blessed my mother.”</p>
<p>For in truth there was in the soul of the boy, who had never
had any but women to look up to, a strange yearning towards
reverence, which was called into action with inexpressible force
by the very aspect and tone of such a sage elder and counsellor
as Master Gottfried Sorel, and he took advantage of the first
opening permitted by his brother. And the sympathy always
so strong between the two quickened the like feeling in Ebbo, so
that the same movement drew him on his knee beside Friedel in
oblivion or renunciation of all lordly pride towards a kinsman
such as he had here encountered.</p>
<p>“Truly and heartily, my fair youths,” said Master
Gottfried, with the same kind dignity, “do I pray the good
God to bless you, and render you faithful and loving sons, not
only to your mother, but to your fatherland.”</p>
<p>He was unable to distinguish between the two exactly similar
forms that knelt before him, yet there was something in the
quivering of Friedel’s head, which made him press it with a
shade more of tenderness than the other. And in truth tears
were welling into the eyes veiled by the fingers that Friedel
clasped over his face, for such a blessing was strange and sweet
to him.</p>
<p>Their mother was ready to weep for joy. There was now no
drawback to her bliss, since her son and her uncle had accepted
one another; and she repaired to her own beloved old chamber a
happier being than she had been since she had left its wainscoted
walls.</p>
<p>Nay, as she gazed out at the familiar outlines of roof and
tower, and felt herself truly at home, then knelt by the little
undisturbed altar of her devotions, with the cross above and her
own patron saint below in carved wood, and the flowers which the
good aunt had ever kept as a freshly renewed offering, she felt
that she was happier, more fully thankful and blissful than even
in the girlish calm of her untroubled life. Her prayer that
she might come again in peace had been more than fulfilled; nay,
when she had seen her boys kneel meekly to receive her
uncle’s blessing, it was in some sort to her as if the work
was done, as if the millstone had been borne up for her, and had
borne her and her dear ones with it.</p>
<p>But there was much to come. She knew full well that,
even though her sons’ first step had been in the right
direction, it was in a path beset with difficulties; and how
would her proud Ebbo meet them?</p>
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