Hammerstein
The
old Knight and his Daughters
Above Rheinbrohl, on a dreary sandstone rock,
stand the
ruins of the old imperial fortress of Hammerstein. For a thousand years
the
storms have beat on those desolate wails. One of the first owners was
Wolf
von Hammerstein, a faithful vassal of tire Emperor. It was Henry IV.
who
then ruled, and partly by his own faults, partly by those of others,
the
crown had indeed become to this sovereign one of thorns. Wolf of
Hammerstein
had made the historic pilgrimage to Canossa alone with his master. Now,
on
account of the infirmities of age the venerable knight seldom descended
the
castle-hill, and only from afar, the loud trumpet call of the world
fell
upon his ears. His wife, now for several years deceased, had born him
six
daughters, all attractive maidens and tenderly attached to their
surviving
parent, but their filial affection met with the roughest and most
ungrateful
responses from the sour old fellow. It was a sore grievance to Wolf of
Hammerstein that he had no son.
He would willingly have exchanged his half-dozen
daughters
for a single male heir. The girls were only too well aware of this
fact,
and tried all the more, by constant love and tender care to reconcile
their
ungracious parent to his lot.
One evening it thus befell. The autumn wind
grumbled
round the castle like a croaking raven, and the old knight, Wolf of
Hammerstein,
sat by a cheerful fire and peevishly nursed his gouty limbs. In spite
of
the most assiduous attentions of his daughters he remained in a most
surly
mood. The pretty maidens however kept hovering round the ill-tempered
old
fellow like so many tender doves. Then the porter announced two
strangers.
Both were wrapped in their knightly mantles, and in spite of his
troubles
the hospitable lord of the castle prepared to welcome his guests. Into
the
comfortable room two shivering and weary travellers advanced, and as
outlaws
they craved shelter and protection for the night. At the sound of one
of
the voices the knight started up, listening eagerly, and when the
stranger
raised his visor and threw back his mantle, Wolf of Hammerstein sank on
his
knees at the stranger's feet, and seizing his hand he pressed it to his
lips,
exclaiming: "Henry, my lord and king!" Then, with trembling voice the
Emperor
told his old comrade-in-arms that he was a fugitive, and before one who
had
torn from him the imperial crown and mantle. And when the old knight,
trembling
with excitement, demanded who this impious and dishonourable man might
be,
the Emperor murmured the words, "My son," and then buried his face in
his
hands.
Rigid as a marble statue stood the old knight.
Like a
bolt from heaven the consciousness of his past ignoble conduct had
flashed
upon him. Suddenly he seemed to feel how tenderly the loving arms of
his
daughters had enfolded him. He spread out his hands towards them, as if
anxious
to atone by the tenderness of a minute for the harshness of years. Then
the
Emperor, deeply touched, thus addressed the old man. "Dear
comrade-in-arms,
your position is indeed enviable. The faithful love of your daughters
will
tend you in your declining years. No misguided son, impatient for your
end,
will hunt you from your home. Alas, for me, to-morrow accompanied by a
few
faithful followers, I must go down to battle against my own flesh and
blood."
Towards midnight the unhappy monarch was conducted
to
a room prepared with care for his reception; and, while he sank into a
troubled
sleep, the old knight overwhelmed his daughters with long-delayed
caresses.
In his heart, he silently entreated for pardon for the deep grudge he
had
long cherished against the God who had been pleased to grant him no
son.
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