The Ruins of Fürstenberg
The
mother's Ghost
Lambert of Fürstenberg was a hearty
jovial knight,
and had married Wiltrud, a daughter of the Florsheim family. He was
attached
to his gentle wife, who had just presented him with a son and heir. But
an
evil genius entered the castle in the person of a noble maiden called
Luckharde.
This maiden who had suddenly been left an orphan, belonged to a family
long
befriended by the house of Fürstenberg. She was only eighteen,
but possessed
a lascivious beauty, very dangerous to men.
The lady of the castle, who had been in delicate
health
since the birth of her child, gave Luckharde a warm-hearted welcome
into
the bosom of her family, trusting that the young woman would be of
great
service to her in the management of her little realm, and would repay
her
kindness by sisterly love and sympathy. Luckharde however was of a vain
and
frivolous disposition, and had little love for household affairs, or
womanly
duties.
As the months passed, Luckharde's ripening and
dangerous
beauty gained gradually and almost imperceptibly more and more
influence
over the susceptible heart of the lord of the castle, and soon the day
came
when he yielded himself entirely to the charms of this beautiful woman.
Wiltrud's
eyes were by no means blind to the shameful ingratitude of the
adulteress,
and the godless conduct of her husband. Her weakness however, prevented
her
from calling down the judgment of heaven on the sinners. Luckharde, led
on
by her unbridled passion, now formed a devilish design which would
enable
her to take the place of the lawful wife of Lambert. One night she
slipped
into the chamber of the lady of the castle, approached the bed of the
sleeping
woman with a cat-like step, and smothered her with the pillows, the
poor
invalid offering but a feeble and ineffective resistance.
Wiltrud's death was deeply mourned by the
household,
who believed that she had died of a broken heart. Lambert too might be
grieved,
but in the arms of his raven-locked enchantress he soon forgot his
deceased
wife, and in a few weeks Luckharde was made lady of
Fürstenberg. The
little boy whom Wiltrud had borne to her unfaithful husband was hateful
to
the second wife, who fondled her lord, and flattered him with the hope
of
the children she would bear him. Then it was arranged that the knight's
first-born should be handed over to the care of an old crone who lived
in
a remote tower of the castle.
One night this old woman awoke suddenly, and was
terrified
to see a female form dressed in a flowing white robe, bending over the
cradle
of the little boy, who slept near. The woman seemed to be tending the
child,
and after blessing him, she vanished. The old woman crossed herself,
and
in terror muttered many prayers. In the early morning she hurried to
her
new mistress in great agitation and with white lips told her of her
strange
visitor. Luckharde at first laughed in her usual frivolous manner at
this
ridiculous ghost story, but soon she became more serious and alarmed.
Then
she ordered the old woman to arrange her bed beside the other servants,
but
still to leave the child in the tower-chamber. A dreadful fear had
taken
possession of Luckharde's guilty soul. Perhaps people were deceived
when
they believed Wiltrud to be dead, and it was thus that she returned at
night
to nurse her child.
Then this daring and sinful woman prepared a bed
for
herself in the lonely tower beside the child. She also brought with her
a
formidable dagger, and thus she awaited what the night might bring
forth.
At midnight the female figure dressed in the flowing white robe
appeared
once more. It approached the cradle of the child, tended him and
blessed
him. Then the terror-stricken Luckharde stared motionless at the
apparition
as it rose and approached her bed. Towering there above her were the
pallid
features of the dead Wiltrud, and the lifeless entreating eyes looked
steadily
at this sinful woman who had taken the place of her benefactress. To
Luckharde
it seemed as if a great precipice was slowly bending over to overwhelm
her.
With a last mad effort the wretched woman seized the dagger, and struck
at
the apparition; but she might as well have struck at a misty cloud. Now
Luckharde
perceived that she was in the presence of the murdered lady of the
Fürstenberg, and harrowed with the thought of her guilt she
seemed to
hear a voice as if from another world saying, "Do penance for thy
sins."
Next morning Lambert waited in vain for his wife
to appear.
On looking around however he noticed a piece of parchment. On it
Luckharde
had confessed with deep sorrow, how she had murdered his first wife in
order
to further her evil designs, and how the spirit of the dead had
appeared
to her in the night, and warned her of her great guilt. She was going
to
fly to a cloister to do penance during the remainder of her days, and
she
recommended her sinful accomplice to do the same. Lambert of
Fürstenberg
was deeply grieved on receiving this revelation. He handed over his
castle
and child to a younger brother, and spent the rest of this life as a
solitary
hermit.
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