The Nine on the Weather-vane
Hans Winkelman, poacher and outlaw, had for some
time
carried on his depredations on the lands belonging to the city of
Frankfort,
and had given more annoyance to the worthy citizens than any ten such
scamps.
After a long pursuit Hans however was captured, and as he had shot down
one
of the rangers who tried to apprehend him he was condemned to the
gallows.
The miserable wretch now lay in the citadel gloomily watching the
flight
of his last hours on earth.
In the gray light of morning a priest entered the
cell
to give Hans some spiritual advice, but found him sulky and impenitent.
That
the bullet had pierced the heart of his pursuer, instead of the leg as
he
intended, seemed to him an accident in a fair fight, and by no means a
crime
for which he ought to die.
The Capuchin friar rebuked Hans for his sinful
obduracy,
and pointed out to him, that every child in Frankfort knew that Hans
Winkelman
was a godless Freischütz who had sold his soul to the evil
one, and
that it was well known that Satan himself guided the bullets so that
every
one found its billet. Then the gallant freebooter swore a sacred oath
maintaining
that this was a falsehood, and that he owed his great accuracy of aim
to
no Prince of Hell, but merely to his own skill. Further, he offered to
demonstrate this before the magistrates, by any test of his skill they
might
suggest. With reluctance the friar agreed to aid him by presenting his
strange
petition to the authorities. "All right!" said Hans, "give me my
musket,
as a last act of grace, and allow me three times three shots at that
creaking
weathercock up there on the tower, and if you do not then find the
number
nine wrought in it artistically, as if by the hand of an artificer,
I'll
willingly submit to be hanged."
When the friar related this to the worthy city
fathers
they received the request favourably, and it was agreed that should
Hans
Winkelman accomplish what he proposed to do, then the sentence of death
should
not be carried out.
A large crowd had collected to witness the
execution
of the notorious freebooter, and great was the astonishment when Hans
appeared
at the side of the gallows and levelled his rifle at the weathercock
which
creaked in the autumn wind on the top of the lofty tower. Bang went the
musket,
and amidst the breathless stillness of the throng other eight shots
resounded
in rapid succession. Then. a great shout of approbation broke the
oppressive
silence – up there on the weather-vane was a large
nine wrought as
perfectly
as if by an artificer's hand.
Calmly the freebooter delivered up his rifle to
the
executioner, while a magistrate stepped forward and announced to the
amazed
crowd that the condemned man had gained his freedom, and turning to
Hans
he offered him the Post of head-ranger to the Free City of Frankfort.
But
Hans shook his shaggy head and thanked the magistrate for the
honourable
position offered to him. Then, after thanking the city fathers for
pardon,
he slipped through the crowd and soon disappeared into the woods which
had
now become his home. To himself he made a vow that never again would
the
people of Frankfort lay hands on him. And so it was. The nine can be
seen
to this day on the weather-vane of the high tower which rises over the
citadel
of Frankfort.
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