Aachen
The
Building of the Minster
Karl
der Grosse
Nach dem Gemalde von Albrecht Durer
As Charlemagne, the mighty ruler of the Franks,
rode
one day from his stronghold at Aix-la-Chapelle into the surrounding
forest,
his horse is said to have suddenly trodden upon a spring. On touching
the
water, the animal drew its foot back neighing loudly as if in great
pain.
The rider's curiosity was aroused. He alighted,
and dipping
his hand into the spring, found to his surprise that the water was very
hot.
Thus Charlemagne, as the legend records, discovered the hot spring
which
was to become the salvation of many thousands of ill and infirm
people.
The pious emperor recognised in this health-giving
spring
the kind gift of Providence, and he resolved to erect near the spot a
house
of God, the round shape of which should remind posterity of the horse's
hoof.
The building was soon begun, and Charlemagne saw
with
great satisfaction the walls of the new minster rising high into the
air.
He was not however destined to see its completion.
When he died, he had to leave the great Empire of
the
West to a feeble son, Lewis the Pious. The latter was compelled to draw
his
sword against his own children in order to assure for himself the crown
he
had inherited.
Many a great undertaking that Charlemagne had
begun,
remained unfinished.
The building of the minster too was interrupted.
The
ground was left desolate, and the wails and towers were threatened with
decay
before they were finished.
It was quite useless for the honourable magistrate
of
the town to apply for money to the charitable Christian inhabitants.
Contributions came in very slowly, and were never sufficient to finish
the
church.
The aldermen of Aix-la-Chapelle would very often
seriously
debate the question, and discuss how they could remedy the grievous
lack
of money and successfully effect the completion of the minster. They
found
however that good counsel was just as rare as building material.
Once when they were met thus together, a stranger
was
announced who said he had most important news to communicate. He was
allowed
to enter the session room. After having duly saluted the Council, he
said
modestly but without any shyness, "Gentlemen, my business, in a word,
is
to offer you the money for the completion of the church." The worthy
aldermen
looked in wonder first at the speaker, then at each other.
They silently agreed in the opinion that the man
before
them looked very suspicious in his quaint outlandish clothes and his
sharp
pointed beard.
But the newcomer was not at all abashed by their
suspicious
looks. On the contrary he repeated politely but firmly his proposal,
saying:
"Honourable Sirs, I should like to help you out of your difficulty, and
will
advance you the necessary thousands without even wishing to be paid
back."
At this frank offer the councillors pricked up
their
ears and opened their eyes wide in astonishment. Before they could
recover
from their amazement, the stranger continued: "I know well, you are all
far
too proud to accept this great offer of mine without giving me a
reward
of some sort. Therefore I require a small compensation. I demand the
first
living being, body and soul, that enters the new minster on the
inauguration
day."
On hearing this the honourable aldermen rose
horrified
from their seats. Many of them made the sign of the cross or uttered a
short
prayer, because nobody but the devil himself could require anything so
monstrous.
The eyes of the chairman shot a reproachful glance
at
the strange speaker, and he muttered between his teeth: "Be off! your
words
are giving offence."
But Master Satan, the stranger, stood calmly in
his place:
"Sirs", said he, "let me answer you with a word from the scriptures,
"Why
are you so fearful, oh ye of little faith?" On the field of battle the
sword
mows down thousands of brave men. They fall often as victims to the
ravening
ambition of a single man. You can even see fathers fighting against
their
sons, brothers against their brothers, and nobody thinks it unjust. Now
you
cry out, when I only ask for one single living soul to be sacrificed
for
the welfare of the whole community."
The eyes of the stranger looked round in
triumphant joy
when he had finished, for he read a favourable reply in the puzzled
faces
of the aldermen.
Many of them at once gave up their scruples, and
after
a few minutes even the most cautious among them had no more objections
to
urge.
The offer was closed with, and Master Satan left
the
Town Hall with a proud smile.
The next day the council was again gathered together
anxiously
waiting for the promised sum.
It arrived promptly, rightly weighed and in good
honest
coin.
The joy of the aldermen was boundless.
______________________________________________
Once more the workmen began the work of building
the
minster. They worked very busily as if to make up for the long
interruption,
and after three years the cathedral was finished.
On the day when the new church was to be
consecrated,
a great festival was held in the town.
The distinguished company, secular as well as
clerical,
who appeared at the inauguration ceremony, praised the magnificence of
the
minster, the great liberality of the citizens, and more than all, the
wisdom
of the Town Council.
The
aldermen listened to the general praise with pleasure, and accepted it
as their due. They felt however bound to confess to each other that
they
did not feel easy when they thought of the inauguration day. None of
them
had spoken to anybody of Master Satan's condition.
Only one of them, a henpecked fellow as malicious
people
said, confessed the whole transaction to his wife. It is needless to
say
that from that moment the whole town knew about the affair. On the
important day of the consecration of the minster many venerable
prelates,
abbots,
and monks, thousands of noble knights and lords who had come as guests,
and
the whole population of Aix-la-Chapelle looked forward to the fatal
hour
with beating hearts. It was a grand Procession indeed that marched on
in
ceremonious solemnity through the streets. The gaily coloured flags
waved
merrily in the air, the trumpets and clarions sounded cheerily. The
nobility
and clergy were in their most gorgeous attire. On every side were the
signs
of joy and thanksgiving.
But the hearts of the people were all oppressed,
and
many a sorrowful eye gazed at the morning sky, as if expecting to see
Satan
flying down with his bat-like wings.
When the aldermen in their bright robes joined the
procession,
the general anxiety rose to the highest pitch.
Before the worthy councillors a bulky cage was
carried
by four stout footmen. What was hidden under the covering nobody knew,
but
everybody felt sure that it contained the victim.
When the procession reached the minster it
stopped, the
cage being carried foremost.
At a sign from the mayor, one of the footmen
quickly
stripped off the cover and exposed to view a howling hideous wolf. Two
of
the men pushed the church door wide open with their long halberds, and
the
fourth pushed the wolf skillfully through the open door. A terrible
noise
arose suddenly within.
The devil had been waiting for his spoil, as a
tiger
that watches for his prey.
When the wolf entered the devil darted towards it,
but
seeing that it was only a beast he burst into a wild howl of rage.
He wrung the poor wolf's neck with the quickness
of lightning
and disappeared suddenly, leaving nothing behind him but a strong smell
of
sulphur.
A few minutes later the bells rang, and the whole
magnificent
procession thronged into the church, duly to celebrate its
consecration.
While divine service was being held in the new
minster,
and hymns of praise and thanksgiving were offered at God's altar, the
devil
flew with horrible maledictions over the country.
He swore an oath to punish with the utmost
severity the
population of Aix-la-Chapelle who had So. cunningly outwitted him.
In his flight he came to the sea-shore where he
stopped
a little, in order to consider how he could best destroy the town. As
he
looked at the sandy dunes the thought struck him, that he might bury
the
whole town with all its prelates and abbots under such a hill. With a
mighty
pull he tore one of the dunes from the shore, piled it on his
shoulders,
and flew rapidly towards the doomed city. But the way was much longer
than
Master Satan had thought. He began to perspire very freely under his
unwonted
burden, and when from time to time the wind blew a rain of loose sand
into
his eyes, he swore most horribly.
In the valley of the Soers not far from
Aix-la-Chapelle
he was obliged to rest, as he was very tired after his exertions.
While he was thus sitting by the wayside wiping his forehead
and looking hot and weary, an old wrinkled woman came limping along,
who
looked with suspicion at the man and his strange burden.
She wanted to pass by without saying a word, but
the
stranger stopped her and said: "How far is it from here to
Aix-la-Chapelle?"
The woman cast a sharp look at the speaker.
As she had reached years of discretion, being now
in
her seventy-second year, she was shrewd enough to recognise in the man
before
her the very devil in person. She was also quite sure, that he must
have
some wicked plan in his head against the good town, Aix-la-Chapelle.
Therefore assuming a very sad expression she
answered
in a complaining voice: "Kind sir, I am so sorry for you, the way to
the
town is still very long. Only look at my boots, they are quite worn
from
the long way, and yet I got them new from the shoemaker at
Aix-la-Chapelle."
Master Satan uttered Something that sounded like a
bitter
curse. Then he shook off the sandy dune from his shoulders and flew
away
in a fury.
The old woman was for a moment terror-stricken,
but when
she saw the fatal figure of the stranger disappearing, she was
inexpressibly
glad at having saved the town and outwitted the devil himself.
If he had only looked a little more carefully he
could
have seen the tower of the new minster not a mile off.
The sandy dune is still lying in the very same
place
where the devil dropped it. Its name is "Losberg" or "Rid mountain," so
called
because the town Aix-la-Chapelle got rid of a great danger.
The memory of the poor wolf is also still
preserved.
Its image is engraved on the middle of the minster door, where you can
also
see the big cracks produced by the devil's hammering it in his impotent
anger.
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