ZigZag Journeys in Northern Lands;
iegfried and the Dragon.-Mayence.-Boat Journey.-Stories of the Cast
ravel at the fifth meeting of the Cl
n forests, and past fields which had heaped up harvests for a thousand years. Spires gleamed o
Attila drove his cavalry of devastation over the Rhine. Here lived the hero of German classic song,-Siegfried. The cathedral has a monumen
cannot do otherw
e. It is lofty and gloomy. Worms itself is a sh
figure. He stands with his Bible in his hands, and his face upturned to heaven. Around him are the figures of the great reformers before the Reformation: Wycliffe, of England; Waldo, of France; Huss, of Bohemia; and Sa
TWEEN FRANK
beneath a tree, when his companions sou
, 'were there as many devils as
e tiles on them everywhere met our eye
R'S H
here tel
RIED AND THE N
em. These latter tribes called themselves Deutsch, or the people. They settled between the Alps and the Baltic Sea. In time they ca
ERMANS ON AN
is day of worship was the fourth of th
news from earth. His temples were stone altars on des
ll, and thither he transported the soul
The heavens were peopled with minor gods, as well as the great gods, and the spirits
r and Virgil. The early German hero was Siegfried, and the song or epic that
of them was accustomed to change himself into an otter when he went to the river to fish. As he was fishing one d
ed Loki severely, and demanded of him that he should fill the otter's s
u the treasure you ask," said Loki;
er to secure it to himself, and then turned into a dragon or
nd. He was so strong that he could catch wild lions and hang them by the tail over the
d the birds told him that Reginn intended to kill him
in Old Deutsch, and the Germans calle
is skin so hard that nothing could hurt him except in one spot. A leaf
this woman would fill a volume. She had learned where his one vulnerable spot lay.
the latter sought to destroy Siegfried's life. His wife went
is invulnerabl
cept in
know th
es
ent over it, and I shall
sewed a patch on her husband's garment between
ER OF SI
ed entered into it as a champion. He rode forth in
hat the wine shou
wn on their breasts to drink from the streams when
ht in his
. He threw himself on his breast to drink, exposing his ba
ed by a conspirato
rifted on. The scene has been portrayed in art and song, and has left its impress on the poetic associ
de, near the landing-place of the Rhine steamers. The balconies and windows
ristian era. Here the Twenty-second Roman legion came, after its return from the conquest of Jerusalem, and brought Christianity with it, through some of its early converts. It was one
waldsen's statue of the great inventor announces to the trave
elightful zigzag we had ever ma
e world lies between Mayence and Cologne. If you take the railroad you will merely escape it in a few hours; if a steamboat, your
ndred islands. Its banks are continuous vineyards. Here is the famous district called the R
YE
ide ruins and convents, as well as on their low artificial trellises, a
ght hangs over the scene; the river is calm, and the boat drifts along in an atmosphere in wh
in sight
there,' said
I asked
ause-
t Bingen,-at Bing
p, tender voice the beginning of a po
he Legion lay d
's nursing, there was d
eside him, while his
ing glances, to hea
altered, as he took
ermore shall see my
a token to some dis
Bingen,-at Binge
visited the chapel of St. Rochus, on a hill near the town, because one of our party had so
island meadow fringed with osier twigs. It is little better than a square tower of a common village church, nor is there any truth in the story that Southey's poem has associated with it. Poor Bishop Hatto,
dignity of Archbishop of Mayence. He built a strong tower on t
they importuned him. He bade them go into a large granary, one day, promising them relief. When they had entered the buildin
cries of the dying for mercy
aid, 'hear th
ins to the bishop's palace. They filled all the rooms an
tower on the Rhi
afest place
igh, and the sh
is strong, and
o fearfully
d the Rhine w
s tower, and b
doors, and lo
down and cl
scream made
and saw two
from whence the
d looked; it wa
he grew more fe
screaming, m
rats that wer
swam over the
climbed the sh
tower their
k for which t
o be told by th
y come, and by m
ad never been
had never been w
s knees the
d faster his
and louder
f their teeth
windows, and
walls, helter-sk
ceiling, and up
d the left, from
without, from
nce to the b
ed their teeth a
pick the bi
the flesh fr
sent to do jud
in which the boatman sai
mean by robber cas
t passed their estates. The tax was regarded as unjust, and hence the l
stone ship at anchor in the river. It was formerly a rock, with one litt
felt that his end was near. He desired to die where he could hear the waves of the Rhine.
ls. They are in the Middle Rhine, or between Mayence and Bonn. The Middle Rhine has some thirty conspicuous castle
N THE
seemed a gateway to some new scene
ed. Dark rocks projected into th
h me, and I looked up to a high rock with an
to us quiet
the Lore
sently
is the
LORE
UL STORY OF
, repeated it in ver
iated with the noblest scenery of the river, with poetry and music. It is hardly equal to such legends a
e mere song would indicate. The origin and de
see at night the form of a beautiful nymph on the "Lei," or high rock of the river. Her limbs were moulded of air; a veil of mist and gems covered her face; her hair was long and golde
Lore, the enchantress. They believed that her fav
think that they saw a form of mist, very bright and lovely, a
rstition such a sto
e boatmen displeased her, she entranced them by her song, and drew them into the whirlpools under the rocks, where they disappeared forever. To the landsmen who offend
en summers, was delicate in health. Instead of devoting himself
ry and flute-like, and breathed the emotional sentiment of the heart of youth. As the boat drew near the Lei, Lore, the encha
swer him, but h
cter changed. He became rugged and manly, and abandoned the arts fo
t steeds, and ventured into places and merrily
ared from the rocks. The change that came over his person and chara
When alone, crossing a wild mountain or a ravine, he would se
o-ho-
sweet voice
-o-
follow
o-ho-
-o-
ed him towa
by a spirit, and that a spell was upon him, which boded destruction.
purple mist lay on the forests and river, and the moon poured he
rose and went into the woods. The song filled the air like a shower of golden notes. He followed it. It retreated. He went on
s being thrill with love. He was about to enter the grotto, when, oh thought of darkness and horror! the recollectio
o him. He was never himself again. He dreamed co
to follow the voice. It inflamed his love. His will, his senses,
good priest
ter, what s
ell, or it will e
he boat drifted near the Lei. The moon rose in full splend
te and filled th
r seemed entranced with the spiritual melody. Herman wa
e of the Virgin, let
xed on the rock. Ther
the oar, to tur
er drifted the b
and n
her white ligh
and n
was a
s shivered
lf, and floated on t
he was neve
ories were told by other members of the Club, but they w
meeting with a free transl
ic school of poets, and his illustrations of the power of mind over matter, in both prose and poetry, are often
OLD CAT
ts of the d
aming, wei
fins of old
t, renown
once sat
in pomp
wn still re
lchion rus
to the ki
red in dar
in his hands,
of immo
the castl
s the war
rch's sword
he vaults o
he vernal
e minstrel
t's song the
poet liv
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