Wake Not the Dead/Tieck
WAKE NOT THE DEAD
by
Johann Ludwig Tieck
"Wilt thou for ever sleep? Wilt thou never more awake, my
beloved, but henceforth repose for ever from thy short
pilgrimage on earth? O yet once again return! and bring back
with thee the vivifying dawn of hope to one whose existence
hath, since thy departure, been obscured by the dunnest shades.
What! dumb? for ever dumb? Thy friend lamenteth, and thou
heedest him not? He sheds bitter, scalding tears, and thou
reposest unregarding his affliction? He is in despair, and thou
no longer openest thy arms to him as an asylum from his grief?
Say then, doth the paly shroud become thee better than the
bridal veil? Is the chamber of the grave a warmer bed than the
couch of love? Is the spectre death more welcome to thy arms
than thy enamoured consort? Oh! return, my beloved, return once
again to this anxious disconsolate bosom."
Such were the lamentations which Walter poured forth for
his Brunhilda, the partner of his youthful passionate love; thus
did he bewail over her grave at the midnight hour, what time the
spirit that presides in the troublous atmosphere, sends his
legions of monsters through mid-air; so that their shadows, as
they flit beneath the moon and across the earth, dart as wild,
agitating thoughts that chase each other o'er the sinner's
bosom: -- thus did he lament under the tall linden trees by her
grave, while his head reclined on the cold stone.
Walter was a powerful lord in Burgundy, who, in his
earliest youth, had been smitten with the charms of the fair
Brunhilda, a beauty far surpassing in loveliness all her rivals;
for her tresses, dark as the raven face of night, streaming over
her shoulders, set off to the utmost advantage the beaming
lustre of her slender form, and the rich dye of a cheek whose
tint was deep and brilliant as that of the western heaven; her
eyes did not resemble those burning orbs whose pale glow gems
the vault of night, and whose immeasurable distance fills the
soul with deep thoughts of eternity. but rather as the sober
beams which cheer this nether world, and which, while they
enlighten, kindle the sons of earth to joy and love. Brunhilda
became the wife of Walter, and both being equally enamoured and
devoted, they abandoned themselves to the enjoyment of a passion
that rendered them reckless of aught besides, while it lulled
them in a fascinating dream. Their sole apprehension was lest
aught should awaken them from a delirium which they prayed might
continue for ever. Yet how vain is the wish that would arrest
the decrees of destiny! as well might it seek to divert the
circling planets from their eternal course. Short was the
duration of this phrenzied passion; not that it gradually
decayed and subsided into apathy, but death snatched away his
blooming victim, and left Walter to a widowed couch. Impetuous,
however, as was his first burst of grief, he was not
inconsolable, for ere long another bride became the partner of
the youthful nobleman.
Swanhilda also was beautiful; although nature had formed
her charms on a very different model from those of Brunhilda.
Her golden locks waved bright as the beams of morn: only when
excited by some emotion of her soul did a rosy hue tinge the
lily paleness of her cheek: her limbs were proportioned in the
nicest symmetry, yet did they not possess that luxuriant
fullness of animal life: her eye beamed eloquently, but it was
with the milder radiance of a star, tranquillizing to tenderness
rather than exciting to warmth. Thus formed, it was not
possible that she should steep him in his former delirium,
although she rendered happy his waking hours -- tranquil and
serious, yet cheerful, studying in all things her husband's
pleasure, she restored order and comfort in his family, where
her presence shed a general influence all around. Her mild
benevolence tended to restrain the fiery, impetuous disposition
of Walter: while at the same time her prudence recalled him in
some degree from his vain, turbulent wishes, and his aspirings
after unattainable enjoyments, to the duties and pleasures of
actual life. Swanhilda bore her husband two children, a son and
a daughter; the latter was mild and patient as her mother, well
contented with her solitary sports, and even in these
recreations displayed the serious turn of her character. The
boy possessed his father's fiery, restless disposition,
tempered, however, with the solidity of his mother. Attached by
his offspring more tenderly towards their mother, Walter now
lived for several years very happily: his thoughts would
frequently, indeed, recur to Brunhilda, but without their former
violence, merely as we dwell upon the memory of a friend of our
earlier days, borne from us on the rapid current of time to a
region where we know that he is happy.
But clouds dissolve into air, flowers fade, the sands of
the hourglass run impeceptibly away, and even so, do human
feelings dissolve, fade, and pass away, and with them too, human
happiness. Walter's inconstant breast again sighed for the
ecstatic dreams of those days which he had spent with his
equally romantic, enamoured Brunhilda -- again did she present
herself to his ardent fancy in all the glow of her bridal
charms, and he began to draw a parallel between the past and the
present; nor did imagination, as it is wont, fail to array the
former in her brightest hues, while it proportionably obscured
the latter; so that he pictured to himself, the one much more
rich in enjoyment, and the other, much less so than they really
were. This change in her husband did not escape Swanhilda;
whereupon, redoubling her attentions towards him, and her cares
towards their children, she expected, by this means, to reunite
the knot that was slackened; yet the more she endeavoured to
regain his affections, the colder did he grow, -- the more
intolerable did her caresses seem, and the more continually did
the image of Brunhilda haunt his thoughts. The children, whose
endearments were now become indispensable to him, alone stood
between the parents as genii eager to affect a reconciliation;
and, beloved by them both, formed a uniting link between them.
Yet, as evil can be plucked from the heart of man, only ere its
root has yet struck deep, its fangs being afterwards too firm to
be eradicated; so was Walter's diseased fancy too far affected
to have its disorder stopped, for, in a short time, it
completely tyrannized over him. Frequently of a night, instead
of retiring to his consort's chamber, he repaired to Brunhilda's
grave, where he murmured forth his discontent, saying: "Wilt
thou sleep for ever?"
One night as he was reclining on the turf, indulging in his
wonted sorrow, a sorcerer from the neighbouring mountains,
entered into this field of death for the purpose of gathering,
for his mystic spells, such herbs as grow only from the earth
wherein the dead repose, and which, as if the last production of
mortality, are gifted with a powerful and supernatural
influence. The sorcerer perceived the mourner, and approached
the spot where he was lying.
"Wherefore, fond wretch, dost thou grieve thus, for what is
now a hideous mass of mortality -- mere bones, and nerves, and
veins? Nations have fallen unlamented; even worlds themselves,
long ere this globe of ours was created, have mouldered into
nothing; nor hath any one wept over them; why then should'st
thou indulge this vain affliction for a child of the dust -- a
being as frail as thyself, and like thee the creature but of a
moment?"
Walter raised himself up: -- "Let yon worlds that shine in
the firmament" replied he, "lament for each other as they
perish. It is true, that I who am myself clay, lament for my
fellow-clay: yet is this clay impregnated with a fire, -- with
an essence, that none of the elements of creation possess --
with love: and this divine passion, I felt for her who now
sleepeth beneath this sod."
"Will thy complaints awaken her: or could they do so, would
she not soon upbraid thee for having disturbed that repose in
which she is now hushed?"
"Avaunt, cold-hearted being: thou knowest not what is love.
Oh! that my tears could wash away the earthy covering that
conceals her from these eyes; -- that my groan of anguish could
rouse her from her slumber of death! -- No, she would not again
seek her earthy couch."
"Insensate that thou art, and couldst thou endure to gaze
without shuddering on one disgorged from the jaws of the grave?
Art thou too thyself the same from whom she parted; or hath time
passed o'er thy brow and left no traces there? Would not thy
love rather be converted into hate and disgust?"
"Say rather that the stars would leave yon firmament, that
the sun will henceforth refuse to shed his beams through the
heavens. Oh! that she stood once more before me; -- that once
again she reposed on this bosom! -- how quickly should we then
forget that death or time had ever stepped between us."
"Delusion! mere delusion of the brain, from heated blood,
like to that which arises from the fumes of wine. It is not my
wish to tempt thee; -- to restore to thee thy dead; else wouldst
thou soon feel that I have spoken truth."
"How! restore her to me," exclaimed Walter casting himself
at the sorcerer's feet. "Oh! if thou art indeed able to effect
that, grant it to my earnest supplication; if one throb of human
feeling vibrates in thy bosom, let my tears prevail with thee;
restore to me my beloved; so shalt thou hereafter bless the
deed, and see that it was a good work."
"A good work! a blessed deed!" -- returned the sorcerer
with a smile of scorn; "for me there exists nor good nor evil;
since my will is always the same. Ye alone know evil, who will
that which ye would not. It is indeed in my power to restore
her to thee: yet, bethink thee well, whether it will prove thy
weal. Consider too, how deep the abyss between life and death;
across this, my power can build a bridge, but it can never fill
up the frightful chasm."
Walter would have spoken, and have sought to prevail on
this powerful being by fresh entreaties, but the latter
prevented him, saying: "Peace! bethink thee well! and return
hither to me tomorrow at midnight. Yet once more do I warn
thee, 'Wake not the dead.' "
Having uttered these words, the mysterious being
disappeared. Intoxicated with fresh hope, Walter found no sleep
on his couch; for fancy, prodigal of her richest stores,
expanded before him the glittering web of futurity; and his eye,
moistened with the dew of rapture, glanced from one vision of
happiness to another. During the next day he wandered through
the woods, lest wonted objects by recalling the memory of later
and less happier times, might disturb the blissful idea. that
he should again behold her -- again fold her in his arms, gaze
on her beaming brow by day, repose on her bosom at night: and,
as this sole idea filled his imagination, how was it possible
that the least doubt should arise; or that the warning of the
mysterious old man should recur to his thoughts?
No sooner did the midnight hour approach, than he hastened
before the grave-field where the sorcerer was already standing
by that of Brunhilda. "Hast thou maturely considered?" inquired
he.
"Oh! restore to me the object of my ardent passion,"
exclaimed Walter with impetuous eagerness. "Delay not thy
generous action, lest I die even this night, consumed with
disappointed desire; and behold her face no more."
"Well then," answered the old man, "return hither again
tomorrow at the same hour. But once more do I give thee this
friendly warning, 'Wake not the dead.' "
All in the despair of impatience, Walter would have
prostrated himself at his feet, and supplicated him to fulfil at
once a desire now increased to agony; but the sorcerer had
already disappeared. Pouring forth his lamentations more wildly
and impetuously than ever, he lay upon the grave of his adored
one, until the grey dawn streaked the east. During the day,
which seemed to him longer than any he had ever experienced, he
wandered to and fro, restless and impatient, seemingly without
any object, and deeply buried in his own reflections, inquest as
the murderer who meditates his first deed of blood: and the
stars of evening found him once more at the appointed spot. At
midnight the sorcerer was there also.
"Hast thou yet maturely deliberated?" inquired he, "as on
the preceding night?"
"Oh what should I deliberate?" returned Walter impatiently.
"I need not to deliberate; what I demand of thee, is that which
thou hast promised me -- that which will prove my bliss. Or
dost thou but mock me? if so, hence from my sight, lest I be
tempted to lay my hand on thee."
"Once more do I warn thee." answered the old man with
undisturbed composure, " 'Wake not the dead' -- let her rest."
"Aye, but not in the cold grave: she shall rather rest on
this bosom which burns with eagerness to clasp her."
"Reflect, thou mayst not quit her until death, even though
aversion and horror should seize thy heart. There would then
remain only one horrible means."
"Dotard!" cried Walter, interrupting him, 'how may I hate
that which I love with such intensity of passion? how should I
abhor that for which my every drop of blood is boiling?"
"Then be it even as thou wishest," answered the sorcerer;
"step back."
The old man now drew a circle round the grave, all the
while muttering words of enchantment. Immediately the storm
began to howl among the tops of the trees; owls flapped their
wings, and uttered their low voice of omen; the stars hid their
mild, beaming aspect, that they might not behold so unholy and
impious a spectacle; the stone then rolled from the grave with a
hollow sound, leaving a free passage for the inhabitant of that
dreadful tenement. The sorcerer scattered into the yawning
earth, roots and herbs of most magic power, and of most
penetrating odour. so that the worms crawling forth from the
earth congregated together, and raised themselves in a fiery
column over the grave: while rushing wind burst from the earth,
scattering the mould before it, until at length the coffin lay
uncovered. The moonbeams fell on it, and the lid burst open
with a tremendous sound. Upon this the sorcerer poured upon it
some blood from out of a human skull, exclaiming at the same
time, "Drink, sleeper, of this warm stream, that thy heart may
again beat within thy bosom." And, after a short pause,
shedding on her some other mystic liquid, he cried aloud with
the voice of one inspired: "Yes, thy heart beats once more with
the flood of life: thine eye is again opened to sight. Arise,
therefore, from the tomb."
As an island suddenly springs forth from the dark waves of
the ocean, raised upwards from the deep by the force of
subterraneous fires, so did Brunhilda start from her earthy
couch, borne forward by some invisible power. Taking her by the
hand, the sorcerer led her towards Walter, who stood at some
little distance, rooted to the ground with amazement.
"Receive again," said he, "the object of thy passionate
sighs: mayest thou never more require my aid; should that,
however, happen, so wilt thou find me, during the full of the
moon, upon the mountains in that spot and where the three roads
meet."
Instantly did Walter recognize in the form that stood
before him, her whom he so ardently loved; and a sudden glow
shot through his frame at finding her thus restored to him: yet
the night-frost had chilled his limbs and palsied his tongue.
For a while he gazed upon her without either motion or speech,
and during this pause, all was again become hushed and serene;
and the stars shone brightly in the clear heavens.
"Walter!" exclaimed the figure; and at once the well-known
sound, thrilling to his heart, broke the spell by which he was
bound.
"Is it reality? Is it truth?" cried he, "or a cheating
delusion?"
"No, it is no imposture; I am really living: -- conduct me
quickly to thy castle in the mountains."
Walter looked around: the old man had disappeared, but he
perceived close by his side, a coal-black steed of fiery eye,
ready equipped to conduct him thence; and on his back lay all
proper attire for Brunhilda, who lost no time in arraying
herself. This being done, she cried; "Haste, let us away ere
the dawn breaks, for my eye is yet too weak to endure the light
of day." Fully recovered from his stupor, Walter leaped into
his saddle, and catching up, with a mingled feeling of delight
and awe, the beloved being thus mysteriously restored from the
power of the grave, he spurred on across the wild, towards the
mountains, as furiously as if pursued by the shadows of the
dead, hastening to recover from him their sister.
The castle to which Walter conducted his Brunhilda, was
situated on a rock between other rocks rising up above it. Here
they arrived, unseen by any save one aged domestic, on whom
Walter imposed secrecy by the severest threats.
"Here will we tarry," said Brunhilda, "until I can endure
the light, and until thou canst look upon me without trembling
as if struck with a cold chill." They accordingly continued to
make that place their abode: yet no one knew that Brunhilda
existed, save only that aged attendant, who provided their
meals. During seven entire days they had no light except that
of tapers: during the next seven, the light was admitted through
the lofty casements only while the rising or setting-sun faintly
illumined the mountain-tops, the valley being still enveloped in
shade.
Seldom did Walter quit Brunhilda's side: a nameless spell
seemed to attach him to her; even the shudder which he felt in
her presence, and which would not permit him to touch her, was
not unmixed with pleasure, like that thrilling awful emotion
felt when strains of sacred music float under the vault of some
temple; he rather sought, therefore, than avoided this feeling.
Often too as he had indulged in calling to mind the beauties of
Brunhilda, she had never appeared so fair, so fascinating, so
admirable when depicted by his imagination, as when now beheld
in reality. Never till now had her voice sounded with such
tones of sweetness; never before did her language possess such
eloquence as it now did, when she conversed with him on the
subject of the past. And this was the magic fairy-land towards
which her words constantly conducted him. Ever did she dwell
upon the days of their first love, those hours of delight which
they had participated together when the one derived all
enjoyment from the other: and so rapturous, so enchanting, so
full of life did she recall to his imagination that blissful
season, that he even doubted whether he had ever experienced
with her so much felicity, or had been so truly happy. And,
while she thus vividly portrayed their hours of past delight,
she delineated in still more glowing, more enchanting colours,
those hours of approaching bliss which now awaited them, richer
in enjoyment than any preceding ones. In this manner did she
charm her attentive auditor with enrapturing hopes for the
future, and lull him into dreams of more than mortal ecstasy; so
that while he listened to her siren strain, he entirely forgot
how little blissful was the latter period of their union, when
he had often sighed at her imperiousness, and at her harshness
both to himself and all his household. Yet even had he recalled
this to mind would it have disturbed him in his present
delirious trance? Had she not now left behind in the grave all
the frailty of mortality? Was not her whole being refined and
purified by that long sleep in which neither passion nor sin had
approached her even in dreams? How different now was the
subject of her discourse! Only when speaking of her affection
for him, did she betray anything of earthly feeling: at other
times, she uniformly dwelt upon themes relating to the invisible
and future world; when in descanting and declaring the mysteries
of eternity, a stream of prophetic eloquence would burst from
her lips.
In this manner had twice seven days elapsed, and, for the
first time, Walter beheld the being now dearer to him than ever,
in the full light of day. Every trace of the grave had
disappeared from her countenance; a roseate tinge like the ruddy
streaks of dawn again beamed on her pallid cheek; the faint,
mouldering taint of the grave was changed into a delightful
violet scent; the only sign of earth that never disappeared. He
no longer felt either apprehension or awe, as he gazed upon her
in the sunny light of day: it was not until now, that he seemed
to have recovered her completely; and, glowing with all his
former passion towards her, he would have pressed her to his
bosom, but she gently repulsed him, saying: -- "Not yet -- spare
your caresses until the moon has again filled her horn."
Spite of his impatience, Walter was obliged to await the
lapse of another period of seven days: but, on the night when
the moon was arrived at the full, he hastened to Brunhilda, whom
he found more lovely than she had ever appeared before. Fearing
no obstacles to his transports, he embraced with all the fervour
of a deeply enamoured and successful lover. Brunhilda, however,
still refused to yield to his passion. "What!" exclaimed she,
"is it fitting that I who have been purified by death from the
frailty of mortality, should become thy concubine, while a mere
daughter of the earth bears the title of thy wife: never shall
it be. No, it must be within the walls of thy palace, within
that chamber where I once reigned as queen, that thou obtainest
the end of thy wishes, -- and of mine also," added she,
imprinting a glowing kiss on the lips, and immediately
disappeared.
Heated with passion, and determined to sacrifice everything
to the accomplishment of his desires, Walter hastily quitted the
apartment, and shortly after the castle itself. He travelled
over mountain and across heath, with the rapidity of a storm, so
that the turf was flung up by his horse's hoofs; nor once
stopped until he arrived home.
Here, however, neither the affectionate caresses of
Swanhilda, or those of his children could touch his heart, or
induce him to restrain his furious desires. Alas! is the
impetuous torrent to be checked in its devastating course by the
beauteous flowers over which it rushes, when they exclaim: --
"Destroyer, commiserate our helpless innocence and beauty, nor
lay us waste?" -- the stream sweeps over them unregarding, and a
single moment annihilates the pride of a whole summer.
Shortly afterwards did Walter begin to hint to Swanhilda
that they were ill-suited to each other; that he was anxious to
taste that wild, tumultuous life, so well according with the
spirit of his sex, while she, on the contrary, was satisfied
with the monotonous circle of household enjoyments: -- that he
was eager for whatever promised novelty, while she felt most
attached to what was familiarized to her by habit: and lastly,
that her cold disposition, bordering upon indifference, but ill
assorted with his ardent temperament: it was therefore more
prudent that they should seek apart from each other that
happiness which they could not find together. A sigh, and a
brief acquiescence in his wishes was all the reply that
Swanhilda made: and, on the following morning, upon his
presenting her with a paper of separation, informing her that
she was at liberty to return home to her father, she received it
most submissively: yet, ere she departed, she gave him the
following warning: "Too well do I conjecture to whom I am
indebted for this our separation. Often have I seen thee at
Brunhilda's grave, and beheld thee there even on that night when
the face of the heavens was suddenly enveloped in a veil of
clouds. Hast thou rashly dared to tear aside the awful veil
that separates the mortality that dreams, from that which
dreameth not? Oh! then woe to thee, thou wretched man, for thou
hast attached to thyself that which will prove thy destruction."
She ceased: nor did Walter attempt any reply, for the similar
admonition uttered by the sorcerer flashed upon his mind, all
obscured as it was by passion, just as the lightning glares
momentarily through the gloom of night without dispersing the
obscurity.
Swanhilda then departed, in order to pronounce to her
children, a bitter farewell, for they, according to national
custom, belonged to the father; and, having bathed them in her
tears, and consecrated them with the holy water of maternal
love, she quitted her husband's residence, and departed to the
home of her father's.
Thus was the kind and benevolent Swanhilda driven an exile
from those halls where she had presided with grace; -- from
halls which were now newly decorated to receive another
mistress. The day at length arrived on which Walter, for the
second time, conducted Brunhilda home as a newly made bride.
And he caused it to be reported among his domestics that his new
consort had gained his affections by her extraordinary likeness
to Brunhilda, their former mistress. How ineffably happy did he
deem himself as he conducted his beloved once more into the
chamber which had often witnessed their former joys, and which
was now newly gilded and adorned in a most costly style: among
the other decorations were figures of angels scattering roses,
which served to support the purple draperies whose ample folds
o'ershadowed the nuptial couch. With what impatience did he
await the hour that was to put him in possession of those
beauties for which he had already paid so high a price, but,
whose enjoyment was to cost him most dearly yet! Unfortunate
Walter! revelling in bliss, thou beholdest not the abyss that
yawns beneath thy feet, intoxicated with the luscious perfume of
the flower thou hast plucked, thou little deemest how deadly is
the venom with which it is fraught, although, for a short
season, its potent fragrance bestows new energy on all thy
feelings.
Happy, however, as Walter was now, his household were far
from being equally so. The strange resemblance between their
new lady and the deceased Brunhilda filled them with a secret
dismay, -- an undefinable horror; for there was not a single
difference of feature, of tone of voice, or of gesture. To add
too to these mysterious circumstances, her female attendants
discovered a particular mark on her back, exactly like one which
Brunhilda had. A report was now soon circulated, that their
lady was no other than Brunhilda herself, who had been recalled
to life by the power of necromancy. How truly horrible was the
idea of living under the same roof with one who had been an
inhabitant of the tomb, and of being obliged to attend upon her,
and acknowledge her as mistress! There was also in Brunhilda
much to increase this aversion, and favour their superstition:
no ornaments of gold ever decked her person; all that others
were wont to wear of this metal, she had formed of silver: no
richly coloured and sparkling jewels glittered upon her; pearls
alone, lent their pale lustre to adorn her bosom. Most
carefully did she always avoid the cheerful light of the sun,
and was wont to spend the brightest days in the most retired and
gloomy apartments: only during the twilight of the commencing or
declining day did she ever walk abroad, but her favourite hour
was when the phantom light of the moon bestowed on all objects a
shadowy appearance and a sombre hue; always too at the crowing
of the cock an involuntary shudder was observed to seize her
limbs. Imperious as before her death, she quickly imposed her
iron yoke on every one around her, while she seemed even far
more terrible than ever, since a dread of some supernatural
power attached to her, appalled all who approached her. A
malignant withering glance seemed to shoot from her eye on the
unhappy object of her wrath, as if it would annihilate its
victim. In short, those halls which, in the time of Swanhilda
were the residence of cheerfulness and mirth, now resembled an
extensive desert tomb. With fear imprinted on their pale
countenances, the domestics glided through the apartments of the
castle; and in this abode of terror, the crowing of the cock
caused the living to tremble, as if they were the spirits of the
departed; for the sound always reminded them of their mysterious
mistress. There was no one but who shuddered at meeting her in
a lonely place, in the dusk of evening, or by the light of the
moon, a circumstance that was deemed to be ominous of some evil:
so great was the apprehension of her female attendants, they
pined in continual disquietude, and, by degrees, all quitted
her. In the course of time even others of the domestics fled,
for an insupportal horror had seized them.
The art of the sorcerer had indeed bestowed upon Brunhilda
an artificial life, and due nourishment had continued to support
the restored body: yet this body was not able of itself to keep
up the genial glow of vitality, and to nourish the flame whence
springs all the affections and passions, whether of love or
hate; for death had for ever destroyed and withered it: all that
Brunhilda now possessed was a chilled existence, colder than
that of the snake. It was nevertheless necessary that she
should love, and return with equal ardour the warm caresses of
her spell-enthralled husband, to whose passion alone she was
indebted for her renewed existence. It was necessary that a
magic draught should animate the dull current in her veins and
awaken her to the glow of life and the flame of love -- a potion
of abomination -- one not even to be named without a curse --
human blood, imbibed whilst yet warm, from the veins of youth.
This was the hellish drink for which she thirsted: possessing no
sympathy with the purer feelings of humanity; deriving no
enjoyment from aught that interests in life and occupies its
varied hours; her existence was a mere blank, unless when in the
arms of her paramour husband, and therefore was it that she
craved incessantly after the horrible draught. It was even with
the utmost effort that she could forbear sucking even the blood
of Walter himself, reclined beside her. Whenever she beheld
some innocent child whose lovely face denoted the exuberance of
infantine health and vigour, she would entice it by soothing
words and fond caresses into her most secret apartment, where,
lulling it to sleep in her arms, she would suck form its bosom
the war, purple tide of life. Nor were youths of either sex
safe from her horrid attack: having first breathed upon her
unhappy victim, who never failed immediately to sink into a
lengthened sleep, she would then in a similar manner drain his
veins of the vital juice. Thus children, youths, and maidens
quickly faded away, as flowers gnawn by the cankering worm: the
fullness of their limbs disappeared; a sallow line succeeded to
the rosy freshness of their cheeks, the liquid lustre of the eye
was deadened, even as the sparkling stream when arrested by the
touch of frost; and their locks became thin and grey, as if
already ravaged by the storm of life. Parents beheld with
horror this desolating pestilence devouring their offspring; nor
could simple or charm, potion or amulet avail aught against it.
The grave swallowed up one after the other; or did the miserable
victim survive, he became cadaverous and wrinkled even in the
very morn of existence. Parents observed with horror this
devastating pestilence snatch away their offspring -- a
pestilence which, nor herb however potent, nor charm, nor holy
taper, nor exorcism could avert. They either beheld their
children sink one after the other into the grave, or their
youthful forms, withered by the unholy, vampire embrace of
Brunhilda, assume the decrepitude of sudden age.
At length strange surmises and reports began to prevail; it
was whispered that Brunhilda herself was the cause of all these
horrors; although no one could pretend to tell in what manner
she destroyed her victims, since no marks of violence were
discernible. Yet when young children confessed that she had
frequently lulled them asleep in her arms, and elder ones said
that a sudden slumber had come upon them whenever she began to
converse with them, suspicion became converted into certainty,
and those whose offspring had hitherto escaped unharmed, quitted
their hearths and home -- all their little possessions -- the
dwellings of their fathers and the inheritance of their
children, in order to rescue from so horrible a fate those who
were dearer to their simple affections than aught else the world
could give.
Thus daily did the castle assume a more desolate
appearance; daily did its environs become more deserted; none
but a few aged decrepit old women and grey-headed menials were
to be seen remaining of the once numerous retinue. Such will in
the latter days of the earth be the last generation of mortals,
when childbearing shall have ceased, when youth shall no more be
seen, nor any arise to replace those who shall await their fate
in silence.
Walter alone noticed not, or heeded not, the desolation
around him; he apprehended not death, lapped as he was in a
glowing elysium of love. Far more happy than formerly did he
now seem in the possession of Brunhilda. All those caprices and
frowns which had been wont to overcloud their former union had
now entirely disappeared. She even seemed to doat on him with a
warmth of passion that she had never exhibited even during the
happy season of bridal love; for the flame of that youthful
blood, of which she drained the veins of others, rioted in her
own. At night, as soon as he closed his eyes, she would breathe
on him till he sank into delicious dreams, from which he awoke
only to experience more rapturous enjoyments. By day she would
continually discourse with him on the bliss experienced by happy
spirits beyond the grave, assuring him that, as his affection
had recalled her from the tomb, they were now irrevocably
united. Thus fascinated by a continual spell, it was not
possible that he should perceive what was taking place around
him. Brunhilda, however, foresaw with savage grief that the
source of her youthful ardour was daily decreasing, for, in a
short time, there remained nothing gifted with youth, save
Walter and his children, and these latter she resolved should be
her next victims.
On her first return to the castle, she had felt an aversion
towards the offspring of another, and therefore abandoned them
entirely to the attendants appointed by Swanhilda. Now,
however, she began to pay considerable attention to them, and
caused them to be frequently admitted into her presence. The
aged nurses were filled with dread at perceiving these marks of
regard from her towards their young charges, yet dared they not
to oppose the will of their terrible and imperious mistress.
Soon did Brunhilda gain the affection of the children, who were
too unsuspecting of guile to apprehend any danger from her; on
the contrary, her caresses won them completely to her. Instead
of ever checking their mirthful gambols, she would rather
instruct them in new sports: often too did she recite to them
tales of such strange and wild interest as to exceed all the
stories of their nurses. Were they wearied either with play or
with listening to her narratives, she would take them on her
knees and lull them to slumber. Then did visions of the most
surpassing magnificence attend their dreams: they would fancy
themselves in some garden where flowers of every hue rose in
rows one above the other, from the humble violet to the tall
sunflower, forming a parti-coloured broidery of every hue,
sloping upwards towards the golden clouds where little angels
whose wings sparkled with azure and gold descended to bring them
delicious cakes or splendid jewels; or sung to them soothing
melodious hymns. So delightful did these dream in short time
become to the children that they longered for nothing so eagerly
as to slumber on Brunhilda's lap, for never did they else enjoy
such visions of heavenly forms. They were they most anxious for
that which was to prove their destruction: -- yet do we not all
aspire after that which conducts us to the grave -- after the
enjoyment of life? These innocents stretched out their arms to
approaching death because it assumed the mask of pleasure; for,
which they were lapped in these ecstatic slumbers, Brunhilda
sucked the life-stream from their bosoms. On waking, indeed,
they felt themselves faint and exhausted, yet did no pain nor
any mark betray the cause. Shortly, however, did their strength
entirely fail, even as the summer brook is gradually dried up:
their sports became less and less noisy; their loud, frolicsome
laughter was converted into a faint smile; the full tones of
their voices died away into a mere whisper. Their attendants
were filled with horror and despair; too well did they
conjecture the horrible truth, yet dared not to impart their
suspicions to Walter, who was so devotedly attached to his
horrible partner. Death had already smote his prey: the
children were but the mere shadows of their former selves, and
even this shadow quickly disappeared.
The anguished father deeply bemoaned their loss, for,
notwithstanding his apparent neglect, he was strongly attached
to them, nor until he had experienced their loss was he aware
that his love was so great. His affliction could not fail to
excite the displeasure of Brunhilda: "Why dost thou lament so
fondly," said she, "for these little ones? What satisfaction
could such unformed beings yield to thee unless thou wert still
attached to their mother? Thy heart then is still hers? Or
dost thou now regret her and them because thou art satiated with
my fondness and weary of my endearments? Had these young ones
grown up, would they not have attached thee, thy spirit and thy
affections more closely to this earth of clay -- to this dust
and have alienated thee from that sphere to which I, who have
already passed the grave, endeavour to raise thee? Say is thy
spirit so heavy, or thy love so weak, or thy faith so hollow,
that the hope of being mine for ever is unable to touch thee?"
Thus did Brunhilda express her indignation at her consort's
grief, and forbade him her presence. The fear of offending her
beyond forgiveness and his anxiety to appease her soon dried up
his tears; and he again abandoned himself to his fatal passion,
until approaching destruction at length awakened him from his
delusion.
Neither maiden, nor youth, was any longer to be seen,
either within the dreary walls of the castle, or the adjoining
territory: -- all had disappeared; for those whom the grave had
not swallowed up had fled from the region of death. Who,
therefore, now remained to quench the horrible thirst of the
female vampire save Walter himself? and his death she dared to
contemplate unmoved; for that divine sentiment that unites two
beings in one joy and one sorrow was unknown to her bosom. Was
he in his tomb, so was she free to search out other victims and
glut herself with destruction, until she herself should, at the
last day, be consumed with the earth itself, such is the fatal
law to which the dead are subject when awoke by the arts of
necromancy from the sleep of the grave.
She now began to fix her blood-thirsty lips on Walter's
breast,when cast into a profound sleep by the odour of her
violet breath he reclined beside her quite unconscious of his
impending fate: yet soon did his vital powers begin to decay;
and many a grey hair peeped through his raven locks. With his
strength, his passion also declined; and he now frequently left
her in order to pass the whole day in the sports of the chase,
hoping thereby to regain his wonted vigour. As he was reposing
one day in a wood beneath the shade of an oak, he perceived, on
the summit of a tree, a bird of strange appearance, and quite
unknown to him; but, before he could take aim at it with his
bow, it flew away into the clouds; at the same time letting fall
a rose-coloured root which dropped at Walter's feet, who
immediately took it up and, although he was well acquainted with
almost every plant, he could not remember to have seen any at
all resembling this. Its delightfully odoriferous scent induced
him to try its flavour, but ten times more bitter than wormwood
it was even as gall in his mouth; upon which, impatient of the
disappointment, he flung it away with violence. Had he,
however, been aware of its miraculous quality and that it acted
as a counter charm against the opiate perfume of Brunhilda's
breath, he would have blessed it in spite of its bitterness:
thus do mortals often blindly cast away in displeasure the
unsavoury remedy that would otherwise work their weal.
When Walter returned home in the evening and laid him down
to repose as usual by Brunhilda's side, the magic power of her
breath produced no effect upon him; and for the first time
during many months did he close his eyes in a natural slumber.
Yet hardly had he fallen asleep, ere a pungent smarting pain
disturbed him from his dreams; and. opening his eyes, he
discerned, by the gloomy rays of a lamp, that glimmered in the
apartment what for some moments transfixed him quite aghast, for
it was Brunhilda, drawing with her lips, the warm blood from his
bosom. The wild cry of horror which at length escaped him,
terrified Brunhilda, whose mouth was besmeared with the warm
blood. "Monster!" exclaimed he, springing from the couch, "is
it thus that you love me?"
"Aye, even as the dead love," replied she, with a malignant
coldness.
"Creature of blood!" continued Walter, "the delusion which
has so long blinded me is at an end: thou are the fiend who hast
destroyed my children -- who hast murdered the offspring of my
vassels." Raising herself upwards and, at the same time,
casting on him a glance that froze him to the spot with dread,
she replied. "It is not I who have murdered them; -- I was
obliged to pamper myself with warm youthful blood, in order that
I might satisfy thy furious desires -- thou art the murderer!" --
These dreadful words summoned, before Walter's terrified
conscience, the threatening shades of all those who had thus
perished; while despair choked his voice.
"Why," continued she, in a tone that increased his horror,
"why dost thou make mouths at me like a puppet? Thou who hadst
the courage to love the dead -- to take into thy bed, one who
had been sleeping in the grave, the bed-fellow of the worm --
who hast clasped in thy lustful arms, the the corruption of the
tomb -- dost thou, unhallowed as thou art, now raise this
hideous cry for the sacrifice of a few lives? -- They are but
leaves swept from their branches by a storm. -- Come, chase
these idiot fancies, and taste the bliss thou hast so dearly
purchased." So saying, she extended her arms towards him; but
this motion served only to increase his terror, and exclaiming:
"Accursed Being," -- he rushed out of the apartment.
All the horrors of a guilty, upbraiding conscience became
his companions, now that he was awakened from the delirium of
his unholy pleasures. Frequently did he curse his own obstinate
blindness, for having given no heed to the hints and admonitions
of his children's nurses, but treating them as vile calumnies.
But his sorrow was now too late, for, although repentance may
gain pardon for the sinner, it cannot alter the immutable
decrees of fate -- it cannot recall the murdered from the tomb.
No sooner did the first break of dawn appear, than he set out
for his lonely castle in the mountains, determined no longer to
abide under the same roof with so terrific a being; yet vain was
his flight, for, on waking the following morning, he perceived
himself in Brunhilda's arms, and quite entangled in her long
raven tresses, which seemed to involve him, and bind him in the
fetters of his fate; the powerful fascination of her breath held
him still more captivated, so that, forgetting all that had
passed, he returned her caresses, until awakening as if from a
dream he recoiled in unmixed horror from her embrace. During
the day he wandered through the solitary wilds of the mountains,
as a culprit seeking an asylum from his pursuers; and, at night,
retired to the shelter of a cave; fearing less to couch himself
within such a dreary place, than to expose himself to the horror
of again meeting Brunhilda; but alas! it was in vain that he
endeavoured to flee her. Again, when he awoke, he found her the
partner of his miserable bed. Nay, had he sought the centre of
the earth as his hiding place; had he even imbedded himself
beneath rocks, or formed his chamber in the recesses of the
ocean, still had he found her his constant companion; for, by
calling her again into existence, he had rendered himself
inseparably hers; so fatal were the links that united them.
Struggling with the madness that was beginning to seize
him, and brooding incessantly on the ghastly visions that
presented themselves to his horror-stricken mind, he lay
motionless in the gloomiest recesses of the woods, even from the
rise of sun till the shades of eve. But, no sooner was the
light of day extinguished in the west, and the woods buried in
impenetrable darkness, than the apprehension of resigning
himself to sleep drove him forth among the mountains. The storm
played wildly with the fantastic clouds, and with the rattling
leaves, as they were caught up into the air, as if some dread
spirit was sporting with these images of transitoriness and
decay: it roared among the summits of the oaks as if uttering a
voice of fury, while its hollow sound rebounding among the
distant hills, seemed as the moans of a departing sinner, or as
the faint cry of some wretch expiring under the murderer's hand:
the owl too, uttered its ghastly cry as if foreboding the wreck
of nature. Walter's hair flew disorderly in the wind, like
black snakes wreathing around his temples and shoulders; while
each sense was awake to catch fresh horror. In the clouds he
seemed to behold the forms of the murdered; in the howling wind
to hear their laments and groans; in the chilling blast itself
he felt the dire kiss of Brunhilda; in the cry of the screeching
bird he heard her voice; in the mouldering leaves he scented the
charnel-bed out of which he had awakened her. "Murderer of thy
own offspring," exclaimed he in a voice making night, and the
conflict of the element still more hideous, "paramour of a
blood-thirsty vampire, reveller with the corruption of the
tomb!" while in his despair he rent the wild locks from his
head. Just then the full moon darted from beneath the bursting
clouds; and the sight recalled to his remembrance the advice of
the sorcerer, when he trembled at the first apparition of
Brunhilda rising from her sleep of death; -- name]y, to seek him
at the season of the full moon in the mountains, where three
roads met. Scarcely had this gleam of hope broke in on his
bewildered mind than he flew to the appointed spot.
On his arrival, Walter found the old man seated there upon
a stone as calmly as though it had been a bright sunny day and
completely regardless of the uproar around. "Art thou come
then?" exclaimed he to the breathless wretch, who, flinging
himself at his feet, cried in a tone of anguish: -- "Oh save me
-- succour me -- rescue me from the monster that scattereth
death and desolation around her.
"Wherefore a mysterious warning? why didst thou not rather
disclose to me at once all the horrors that awaited my
sacrilegious profanation of the grave?"
"And wherefore a mysterious warning? why didst thou not
perceivest how wholesome was the advice -- 'Wake not the dead.'
"Wert thou able to listen to another voice than that of thy
impetuous passions? Did not thy eager impatience shut my mouth
at the very moment I would have cautioned thee?"
"True, true: -- thy reproof is just: but what does it avail
now; -- I need the promptest aid."
"Well," replied the old man, "there remains even yet a
means of rescuing thyself, but it is fraught with horror and
demands all thy resolution."
"Utter it then, utter it; for what can be more appalling,
more hideous than the misery I now endure?"
"Know then," continued the sorcerer, "that only on the
night of the new moon does she sleep the sleep of mortals; and
then all the supernaturural power which she inherits from the
grave totally fails her. 'Tis then that thou must murder her."
"How! murder her!" echoed Walter.
"Aye," returned the old man calmly, "pierce her bosom with
a sharpened dagger, which I will furnish thee with; at the same
time renounce her memory for ever, swearing never to think of
her intentionally, and that, if thou dost involuntarily, thou
wilt repeat the curse."
"Most horrible! yet what can be more horrible than she
herself is? -- I'll do it."
"Keep then this resolution until the next new moon."
"What, must I wait until then?" cried Walter, "alas ere
then. either her savage thirst for blood will have forced me
into the night of the tomb, or horror will have driven me into
the night of madness."
"Nay," replied the sorcerer, "that I can prevent;" and, so
saying, he conducted him to a cavern further among the
mountains. "Abide here twice seven days," said he; "so long can
I protect thee against her deadly caresses. Here wilt thou find
all due provision for thy wants; but take heed that nothing
tempt thee to quit this place. Farewell, when the moon renews
itself, then do I repair hither again." So saying, the sorcerer
drew a magic circle around the cave, and then immediately
disappeared.
Twice seven days did Walter continue in this solitude,
where his companions were his own terrifying thoughts, and his
bitter repentance. The present was all desolation and dread;
the future presented the image of a horrible deed which he must
perforce commit; while the past was empoisoned by the memory of
his guilt. Did he think on his former happy union with
Brunhilda, her horrible image presented itself to his
imagination with her lips defiled with dropping blood: or, did
he call to mind the peaceful days he had passed with Swanhilda,
he beheld her sorrowful spirit with the shadows of her murdered
children. Such were the horrors that attended him by day: those
of night were still more dreadful, for then he beheld Brunhilda
herself, who, wandering round the magic circle which she could
not pass, called upon his name till the cavern reechoed the
horrible sound. "WaIter, my beloved," cried she, "wherefore
dost thou avoid me? art thou not mine? for ever mine -- mine
here, and mine hereafter? And dost thou seek to murder me? --
ah! commit not a deed which hurls us both to perdition --
thyself as well as me." In this manner did the horrible
visitant torment him each night, and, even when she departed,
robbed him of all repose.
The night of the new moon at length arrived, dark as the
deed it was doomed to bring forth. The sorcerer entered the
cavern; "Come," said he to Walter, "let us depart hence, the
hour is now arrived:" and he forthwith conducted him in silence
from the cave to a coal-black steed, the sight of which recalled
to Walter's remembrance the fatal night. He then related to the
old man Brunhilda's nocturnal visits and anxiously inquired
whether her apprehensions of eternal perdition would be
fulfilled or not. "Mortal eye," exclaimed the sorcerer, "may
not pierce the dark secrets of another world, or penetrate the
deep abyss that separates earth from heaven." Walter hesitated
to mount the steed. "Be resolute," exclaimed his companion,
"but this once is it granted to thee to make the trial, and,
should thou fail now, nought can rescue thee from her power."
"What can be more horrible than she herself? -- I am
determined:" and he leaped on the horse, the sorcerer mounting
also behind him.
Carried with a rapidity equal to that of the storm that
sweeps across the plain they in brief space arrived at Walter's
castle. All the doors flew open at the bidding of his
companion, and they speedily reached Brunhilda's chamber, and
stood beside her couch. Reclining in a tranquil slumber; she
reposed in all her native loveliness, every trace of horror had
disappeared from her countenance; she looked so pure, meek and
innocent that all the sweet hours of their endearments rushed to
Walter's memory, like interceding angels pleading in her behalf.
His unnerved hand could not take the dagger which the sorcerer
presented to him. "The blow must be struck even now:" said the
latter, "shouldst thou delay but an hour, she will lie at
daybreak on thy bosom, sucking the warm life drops from thy
heart."
"Horrible! most horrible!" faltered the trembling Walter,
and turning away his face, he thrust the dagger into her bosom,
exclaiming -- "I curse thee for ever! -- and the cold blood
gushed upon his hand. Opening her eyes once more, she cast a
look of ghastly horror on her husband, and, in a hollow dying
accent said -- "Thou too art doomed to perdition."
"Lay now thy hand upon her corpse," said the sorcerer, "and
swear the oath." -- Walter did as commanded, saying, "Never will
I think of her with love, never recall her to mind
intentionally, and, should her image recur to my mind
involuntarily, so will I exclaim to it: be thou accursed."
"Thou hast now done everything," returned the sorcerer; --
"restore her therefore to the earth, from which thou didst so
foolishly recall her; and be sure to recollect thy oath: for,
shouldst thou forget it but once, she would return, and thou
wouldst be inevitably lost. Adieu -- we see each other no
more." Having uttered these words he quitted the apartment, and
Walter also fled from this abode of horror, having first given
direction that the corpse should be speedily interred.
Again did the terrific Brunhilda repose within her grave;
but her image continually haunted Walter's imagination, so that
his existence was one continued martyrdom, in which he
continually struggled, to dismiss from his recollection the
hideous phantoms of the past; yet, the stronger his effort to
banish them, so much the more frequently and the more vividly
did they return; as the night-wanderer, who is enticed by a
fire-wisp into quagmire or bog, sinks the deeper into his damp
grave the more he struggles to escape. His imagination seemed
incapable of admitting any other image than that of Brunhilda:
now he fancied he beheld her expiring, the blood streaming from
her beautiful bosom: at others he saw the lovely bride of his
youth, who reproached him with having disturbed the slumbers of
the tomb; and to both he was compelled to utter the dreadful
words, "I curse thee for ever." The terrible imprecation was
constantly passing his lips; yet was he in incessant terror lest
he should forget it, or dream of her without being able to
repeat it, and then, on awaking, find himself in her arms. Else
would he recall her expiring words, and, appalled at their
terrific import, imagine that the doom of his perdition was
irrecoverably passed. Whence should he fly from himself? or how
erase from his brain these images and forms of horror? In the
din of combat, in the tumult of war and its incessant pour of
victory to defeat; from the cry of anguish to the exultation of
victory -- in these he hoped to find at least the relief of
distraction: but here too he was disappointed. The giant fang
of apprehension now seized him who had never before known fear;
each drop of blood that sprayed upon him seemed the cold blood
that had gushed from Brunhilda's wound; each dying wretch that
fell beside him looked like her, when expiring, she exclaimed, --
"Thou too art doomed to perdition"; so that the aspect of
death seemed more full of dread to him than aught beside, and
this unconquerable terror compelled him to abandon the
battle-field. At length, after many a weary and fruitless
wandering,
he returned to his castle. Here all was deserted and silent, as
if the sword, or a still more deadly pestilence had laid
everything waste: for the few inhabitants that still remained,
and even those servants who had once shewn themselves the most
attached, now fled from him, as though he had been branded with
the mark of Cain. With horror he perceived that, by uniting
himself as he had done with the dead, he had cut himself off
from the living, who refused to hold any intercourse with him.
Often, when he stood on the battlements of his castle, and
looked down upon desolate fields, he compared their present
solitude with the lively activity they were wont to exhibit,
under the strict but benevolent discipline of Swanhilda. He now
felt that she alone could reconcile him to life, but durst he
hope that one, whom he so deeply aggrieved, could pardon him,
and receive him again? Impatience at length got the better of
fear; he sought Swanhilda, and, with the deepest contrition,
acknowledged his complicated guilt; embracing her knees as he
beseeched her to pardon him, and to return to his desolate
castle, in order that it might again become the abode of
contentment and peace. The pale form which she beheld at her
feet, the shadow of the lately blooming youth, touched
Swanhilda. "The folly," said she gently, "though it has caused
me much sorrow, has never excited my resentment or my anger.
But say, where are my children?" To this dreadful interrogation
the agonized father could for a while frame no reply: at length
he was obliged to confess the dreadful truth. "Then we are
sundered for ever," returned Swanhilda; nor could all his tears
or supplications prevail upon her to revoke the sentence she had
given.
Stripped of his last earthly hope, bereft of his last
consolation, and thereby rendered as poor as mortal can possibly
be on this side of the grave. Walter returned homewards; when,
as he was riding through the forest in the neighbourhood of his
castle, absorbed in his gloomy meditations, the sudden sound of
a horn roused him from his reverie. Shortly after he saw appear
a female figure clad in black, and mounted on a steed of the
same colour: her attire was like that of a huntress, but,
instead of a falcon, she bore a raven in her hand; and she was
attended by a gay troop of cavaliers and dames. The first
salutations bring passed, he found that she was proceeding the
same road as himself; and, when she found that Walter's castle
was close at hand, she requested that he would lodge her for
that night, the evening being far advanced. Most willingly did
he comply with this request, since the appearance of the
beautiful stranger had struck him greatly; so wonderfully did
she resemble Swanhilda, except that her locks were brown, and
her eye dark and full of fire. With a sumptous banquet did he
entertain his guests, whose mirth and songs enlivened the lately
silent halls. Three days did this revelry continue, and so
exhilarating did it prove to Walter that he seemed to have
forgotten his sorrows and his fears; nor could he prevail upon
himself to dismiss his visitors, dreading lest, on their
departure, the castle would seem a hundred times more desolate
than before hand his grief be proportionally increased. At his
earnest request, the stranger consented to stay seven, and again
another seven days. Without being requested, she took upon
herself the superintendence of the household, which she
regulated as discreetly and cheerfully as Swanhilda had been
wont to do, so that the castle, which had so lately been the
abode of melancholy and horror, became the residence of pleasure
and festivity, and Walter's grief disappeared altogether in the
midst of so much gaiety. Daily did his attachment to the fair
unknown increase; he even made her his confidant; and, one
evening as they were walking together apart from any of her
train, he related to her his melancholy and frightful history.
"My dear friend," returned she, as soon as he he had finished
his tale, "it ill beseems a man of thy discretion to afflict
thyself on account of all this. Thou hast awakened the dead
from the sleep of the grave and afterwards found, -- what might
have been anticipated, that the dead possess no sympathy with
life. What then? thou wilt not commit this error a second time.
Thou hast however murdered the being whom thou hadst thus
recalled again to existence -- but it was only in appearance,
for thou couldst not deprive that of life which properly had
none. Thou hast, too, lost a wife and two children: but at thy
years such a loss is most easily repaired. There are beauties
who will gladly share thy couch, and make thee again a father.
But thou dreadst the reckoning of hereafter: -- go, open the
graves and ask the sleepers there whether that hereafter
disturbs them." In such manner would she frequently exhort and
cheer him, so that, in a short time. his melancholy entirely
disappeared. He now ventured to declare to the unknown the
passion with which she had inspired him, nor did she refuse him
her hand. Within seven days afterwards the nuptials were
celebrated, and the very foundations of the castle seemed to
rock from the wild tumultuous uproar of unrestrained riot. The
wine streamed in abundance; the goblets circled incessantly;
intemperance reached its utmost bounds, while shouts of laughter
almost resembling madness burst from the numerous train
belonging to the unknown. At length Walter, heated with wine
and love, conducted his bride into the nuptial chamber: but, oh!
horror! scarcely had he clasped her in his arms ere she
transformed herself into a monstrous serpent, which entwining
him in its horrid folds, crushed him to death. Flames crackled
on every side of the apartment; in a few minutes after, the
whole castle was enveloped in a blaze that consumed it entirely:
while, as the walls fell in with a tremendous crash, a voice
exclaimed aloud -- "Wake not the dead!"
The Library
Wake Not the Dead/Tieck
WAKE NOT THE DEAD
by
Johann Ludwig Tieck
"Wilt thou for ever sleep? Wilt thou never more awake, my
beloved, but henceforth repose for ever from thy short
pilgrimage on earth? O yet once again return! and bring back
with thee the vivifying dawn of hope to one whose existence
hath, since thy departure, been obscured by the dunnest shades.
What! dumb? for ever dumb? Thy friend lamenteth, and thou
heedest him not? He sheds bitter, scalding tears, and thou
reposest unregarding his affliction? He is in despair, and thou
no longer openest thy arms to him as an asylum from his grief?
Say then, doth the paly shroud become thee better than the
bridal veil? Is the chamber of the grave a warmer bed than the
couch of love? Is the spectre death more welcome to thy arms
than thy enamoured consort? Oh! return, my beloved, return once
again to this anxious disconsolate bosom."
Such were the lamentations which Walter poured forth for
his Brunhilda, the partner of his youthful passionate love; thus
did he bewail over her grave at the midnight hour, what time the
spirit that presides in the troublous atmosphere, sends his
legions of monsters through mid-air; so that their shadows, as
they flit beneath the moon and across the earth, dart as wild,
agitating thoughts that chase each other o'er the sinner's
bosom: -- thus did he lament under the tall linden trees by her
grave, while his head reclined on the cold stone.
Walter was a powerful lord in Burgundy, who, in his
earliest youth, had been smitten with the charms of the fair
Brunhilda, a beauty far surpassing in loveliness all her rivals;
for her tresses, dark as the raven face of night, streaming over
her shoulders, set off to the utmost advantage the beaming
lustre of her slender form, and the rich dye of a cheek whose
tint was deep and brilliant as that of the western heaven; her
eyes did not resemble those burning orbs whose pale glow gems
the vault of night, and whose immeasurable distance fills the
soul with deep thoughts of eternity. but rather as the sober
beams which cheer this nether world, and which, while they
enlighten, kindle the sons of earth to joy and love. Brunhilda
became the wife of Walter, and both being equally enamoured and
devoted, they abandoned themselves to the enjoyment of a passion
that rendered them reckless of aught besides, while it lulled
them in a fascinating dream. Their sole apprehension was lest
aught should awaken them from a delirium which they prayed might
continue for ever. Yet how vain is the wish that would arrest
the decrees of destiny! as well might it seek to divert the
circling planets from their eternal course. Short was the
duration of this phrenzied passion; not that it gradually
decayed and subsided into apathy, but death snatched away his
blooming victim, and left Walter to a widowed couch. Impetuous,
however, as was his first burst of grief, he was not
inconsolable, for ere long another bride became the partner of
the youthful nobleman.
Swanhilda also was beautiful; although nature had formed
her charms on a very different model from those of Brunhilda.
Her golden locks waved bright as the beams of morn: only when
excited by some emotion of her soul did a rosy hue tinge the
lily paleness of her cheek: her limbs were proportioned in the
nicest symmetry, yet did they not possess that luxuriant
fullness of animal life: her eye beamed eloquently, but it was
with the milder radiance of a star, tranquillizing to tenderness
rather than exciting to warmth. Thus formed, it was not
possible that she should steep him in his former delirium,
although she rendered happy his waking hours -- tranquil and
serious, yet cheerful, studying in all things her husband's
pleasure, she restored order and comfort in his family, where
her presence shed a general influence all around. Her mild
benevolence tended to restrain the fiery, impetuous disposition
of Walter: while at the same time her prudence recalled him in
some degree from his vain, turbulent wishes, and his aspirings
after unattainable enjoyments, to the duties and pleasures of
actual life. Swanhilda bore her husband two children, a son and
a daughter; the latter was mild and patient as her mother, well
contented with her solitary sports, and even in these
recreations displayed the serious turn of her character. The
boy possessed his father's fiery, restless disposition,
tempered, however, with the solidity of his mother. Attached by
his offspring more tenderly towards their mother, Walter now
lived for several years very happily: his thoughts would
frequently, indeed, recur to Brunhilda, but without their former
violence, merely as we dwell upon the memory of a friend of our
earlier days, borne from us on the rapid current of time to a
region where we know that he is happy.
But clouds dissolve into air, flowers fade, the sands of
the hourglass run impeceptibly away, and even so, do human
feelings dissolve, fade, and pass away, and with them too, human
happiness. Walter's inconstant breast again sighed for the
ecstatic dreams of those days which he had spent with his
equally romantic, enamoured Brunhilda -- again did she present
herself to his ardent fancy in all the glow of her bridal
charms, and he began to draw a parallel between the past and the
present; nor did imagination, as it is wont, fail to array the
former in her brightest hues, while it proportionably obscured
the latter; so that he pictured to himself, the one much more
rich in enjoyment, and the other, much less so than they really
were. This change in her husband did not escape Swanhilda;
whereupon, redoubling her attentions towards him, and her cares
towards their children, she expected, by this means, to reunite
the knot that was slackened; yet the more she endeavoured to
regain his affections, the colder did he grow, -- the more
intolerable did her caresses seem, and the more continually did
the image of Brunhilda haunt his thoughts. The children, whose
endearments were now become indispensable to him, alone stood
between the parents as genii eager to affect a reconciliation;
and, beloved by them both, formed a uniting link between them.
Yet, as evil can be plucked from the heart of man, only ere its
root has yet struck deep, its fangs being afterwards too firm to
be eradicated; so was Walter's diseased fancy too far affected
to have its disorder stopped, for, in a short time, it
completely tyrannized over him. Frequently of a night, instead
of retiring to his consort's chamber, he repaired to Brunhilda's
grave, where he murmured forth his discontent, saying: "Wilt
thou sleep for ever?"
One night as he was reclining on the turf, indulging in his
wonted sorrow, a sorcerer from the neighbouring mountains,
entered into this field of death for the purpose of gathering,
for his mystic spells, such herbs as grow only from the earth
wherein the dead repose, and which, as if the last production of
mortality, are gifted with a powerful and supernatural
influence. The sorcerer perceived the mourner, and approached
the spot where he was lying.
"Wherefore, fond wretch, dost thou grieve thus, for what is
now a hideous mass of mortality -- mere bones, and nerves, and
veins? Nations have fallen unlamented; even worlds themselves,
long ere this globe of ours was created, have mouldered into
nothing; nor hath any one wept over them; why then should'st
thou indulge this vain affliction for a child of the dust -- a
being as frail as thyself, and like thee the creature but of a
moment?"
Walter raised himself up: -- "Let yon worlds that shine in
the firmament" replied he, "lament for each other as they
perish. It is true, that I who am myself clay, lament for my
fellow-clay: yet is this clay impregnated with a fire, -- with
an essence, that none of the elements of creation possess --
with love: and this divine passion, I felt for her who now
sleepeth beneath this sod."
"Will thy complaints awaken her: or could they do so, would
she not soon upbraid thee for having disturbed that repose in
which she is now hushed?"
"Avaunt, cold-hearted being: thou knowest not what is love.
Oh! that my tears could wash away the earthy covering that
conceals her from these eyes; -- that my groan of anguish could
rouse her from her slumber of death! -- No, she would not again
seek her earthy couch."
"Insensate that thou art, and couldst thou endure to gaze
without shuddering on one disgorged from the jaws of the grave?
Art thou too thyself the same from whom she parted; or hath time
passed o'er thy brow and left no traces there? Would not thy
love rather be converted into hate and disgust?"
"Say rather that the stars would leave yon firmament, that
the sun will henceforth refuse to shed his beams through the
heavens. Oh! that she stood once more before me; -- that once
again she reposed on this bosom! -- how quickly should we then
forget that death or time had ever stepped between us."
"Delusion! mere delusion of the brain, from heated blood,
like to that which arises from the fumes of wine. It is not my
wish to tempt thee; -- to restore to thee thy dead; else wouldst
thou soon feel that I have spoken truth."
"How! restore her to me," exclaimed Walter casting himself
at the sorcerer's feet. "Oh! if thou art indeed able to effect
that, grant it to my earnest supplication; if one throb of human
feeling vibrates in thy bosom, let my tears prevail with thee;
restore to me my beloved; so shalt thou hereafter bless the
deed, and see that it was a good work."
"A good work! a blessed deed!" -- returned the sorcerer
with a smile of scorn; "for me there exists nor good nor evil;
since my will is always the same. Ye alone know evil, who will
that which ye would not. It is indeed in my power to restore
her to thee: yet, bethink thee well, whether it will prove thy
weal. Consider too, how deep the abyss between life and death;
across this, my power can build a bridge, but it can never fill
up the frightful chasm."
Walter would have spoken, and have sought to prevail on
this powerful being by fresh entreaties, but the latter
prevented him, saying: "Peace! bethink thee well! and return
hither to me tomorrow at midnight. Yet once more do I warn
thee, 'Wake not the dead.' "
Having uttered these words, the mysterious being
disappeared. Intoxicated with fresh hope, Walter found no sleep
on his couch; for fancy, prodigal of her richest stores,
expanded before him the glittering web of futurity; and his eye,
moistened with the dew of rapture, glanced from one vision of
happiness to another. During the next day he wandered through
the woods, lest wonted objects by recalling the memory of later
and less happier times, might disturb the blissful idea. that
he should again behold her -- again fold her in his arms, gaze
on her beaming brow by day, repose on her bosom at night: and,
as this sole idea filled his imagination, how was it possible
that the least doubt should arise; or that the warning of the
mysterious old man should recur to his thoughts?
No sooner did the midnight hour approach, than he hastened
before the grave-field where the sorcerer was already standing
by that of Brunhilda. "Hast thou maturely considered?" inquired
he.
"Oh! restore to me the object of my ardent passion,"
exclaimed Walter with impetuous eagerness. "Delay not thy
generous action, lest I die even this night, consumed with
disappointed desire; and behold her face no more."
"Well then," answered the old man, "return hither again
tomorrow at the same hour. But once more do I give thee this
friendly warning, 'Wake not the dead.' "
All in the despair of impatience, Walter would have
prostrated himself at his feet, and supplicated him to fulfil at
once a desire now increased to agony; but the sorcerer had
already disappeared. Pouring forth his lamentations more wildly
and impetuously than ever, he lay upon the grave of his adored
one, until the grey dawn streaked the east. During the day,
which seemed to him longer than any he had ever experienced, he
wandered to and fro, restless and impatient, seemingly without
any object, and deeply buried in his own reflections, inquest as
the murderer who meditates his first deed of blood: and the
stars of evening found him once more at the appointed spot. At
midnight the sorcerer was there also.
"Hast thou yet maturely deliberated?" inquired he, "as on
the preceding night?"
"Oh what should I deliberate?" returned Walter impatiently.
"I need not to deliberate; what I demand of thee, is that which
thou hast promised me -- that which will prove my bliss. Or
dost thou but mock me? if so, hence from my sight, lest I be
tempted to lay my hand on thee."
"Once more do I warn thee." answered the old man with
undisturbed composure, " 'Wake not the dead' -- let her rest."
"Aye, but not in the cold grave: she shall rather rest on
this bosom which burns with eagerness to clasp her."
"Reflect, thou mayst not quit her until death, even though
aversion and horror should seize thy heart. There would then
remain only one horrible means."
"Dotard!" cried Walter, interrupting him, 'how may I hate
that which I love with such intensity of passion? how should I
abhor that for which my every drop of blood is boiling?"
"Then be it even as thou wishest," answered the sorcerer;
"step back."
The old man now drew a circle round the grave, all the
while muttering words of enchantment. Immediately the storm
began to howl among the tops of the trees; owls flapped their
wings, and uttered their low voice of omen; the stars hid their
mild, beaming aspect, that they might not behold so unholy and
impious a spectacle; the stone then rolled from the grave with a
hollow sound, leaving a free passage for the inhabitant of that
dreadful tenement. The sorcerer scattered into the yawning
earth, roots and herbs of most magic power, and of most
penetrating odour. so that the worms crawling forth from the
earth congregated together, and raised themselves in a fiery
column over the grave: while rushing wind burst from the earth,
scattering the mould before it, until at length the coffin lay
uncovered. The moonbeams fell on it, and the lid burst open
with a tremendous sound. Upon this the sorcerer poured upon it
some blood from out of a human skull, exclaiming at the same
time, "Drink, sleeper, of this warm stream, that thy heart may
again beat within thy bosom." And, after a short pause,
shedding on her some other mystic liquid, he cried aloud with
the voice of one inspired: "Yes, thy heart beats once more with
the flood of life: thine eye is again opened to sight. Arise,
therefore, from the tomb."
As an island suddenly springs forth from the dark waves of
the ocean, raised upwards from the deep by the force of
subterraneous fires, so did Brunhilda start from her earthy
couch, borne forward by some invisible power. Taking her by the
hand, the sorcerer led her towards Walter, who stood at some
little distance, rooted to the ground with amazement.
"Receive again," said he, "the object of thy passionate
sighs: mayest thou never more require my aid; should that,
however, happen, so wilt thou find me, during the full of the
moon, upon the mountains in that spot and where the three roads
meet."
Instantly did Walter recognize in the form that stood
before him, her whom he so ardently loved; and a sudden glow
shot through his frame at finding her thus restored to him: yet
the night-frost had chilled his limbs and palsied his tongue.
For a while he gazed upon her without either motion or speech,
and during this pause, all was again become hushed and serene;
and the stars shone brightly in the clear heavens.
"Walter!" exclaimed the figure; and at once the well-known
sound, thrilling to his heart, broke the spell by which he was
bound.
"Is it reality? Is it truth?" cried he, "or a cheating
delusion?"
"No, it is no imposture; I am really living: -- conduct me
quickly to thy castle in the mountains."
Walter looked around: the old man had disappeared, but he
perceived close by his side, a coal-black steed of fiery eye,
ready equipped to conduct him thence; and on his back lay all
proper attire for Brunhilda, who lost no time in arraying
herself. This being done, she cried; "Haste, let us away ere
the dawn breaks, for my eye is yet too weak to endure the light
of day." Fully recovered from his stupor, Walter leaped into
his saddle, and catching up, with a mingled feeling of delight
and awe, the beloved being thus mysteriously restored from the
power of the grave, he spurred on across the wild, towards the
mountains, as furiously as if pursued by the shadows of the
dead, hastening to recover from him their sister.
The castle to which Walter conducted his Brunhilda, was
situated on a rock between other rocks rising up above it. Here
they arrived, unseen by any save one aged domestic, on whom
Walter imposed secrecy by the severest threats.
"Here will we tarry," said Brunhilda, "until I can endure
the light, and until thou canst look upon me without trembling
as if struck with a cold chill." They accordingly continued to
make that place their abode: yet no one knew that Brunhilda
existed, save only that aged attendant, who provided their
meals. During seven entire days they had no light except that
of tapers: during the next seven, the light was admitted through
the lofty casements only while the rising or setting-sun faintly
illumined the mountain-tops, the valley being still enveloped in
shade.
Seldom did Walter quit Brunhilda's side: a nameless spell
seemed to attach him to her; even the shudder which he felt in
her presence, and which would not permit him to touch her, was
not unmixed with pleasure, like that thrilling awful emotion
felt when strains of sacred music float under the vault of some
temple; he rather sought, therefore, than avoided this feeling.
Often too as he had indulged in calling to mind the beauties of
Brunhilda, she had never appeared so fair, so fascinating, so
admirable when depicted by his imagination, as when now beheld
in reality. Never till now had her voice sounded with such
tones of sweetness; never before did her language possess such
eloquence as it now did, when she conversed with him on the
subject of the past. And this was the magic fairy-land towards
which her words constantly conducted him. Ever did she dwell
upon the days of their first love, those hours of delight which
they had participated together when the one derived all
enjoyment from the other: and so rapturous, so enchanting, so
full of life did she recall to his imagination that blissful
season, that he even doubted whether he had ever experienced
with her so much felicity, or had been so truly happy. And,
while she thus vividly portrayed their hours of past delight,
she delineated in still more glowing, more enchanting colours,
those hours of approaching bliss which now awaited them, richer
in enjoyment than any preceding ones. In this manner did she
charm her attentive auditor with enrapturing hopes for the
future, and lull him into dreams of more than mortal ecstasy; so
that while he listened to her siren strain, he entirely forgot
how little blissful was the latter period of their union, when
he had often sighed at her imperiousness, and at her harshness
both to himself and all his household. Yet even had he recalled
this to mind would it have disturbed him in his present
delirious trance? Had she not now left behind in the grave all
the frailty of mortality? Was not her whole being refined and
purified by that long sleep in which neither passion nor sin had
approached her even in dreams? How different now was the
subject of her discourse! Only when speaking of her affection
for him, did she betray anything of earthly feeling: at other
times, she uniformly dwelt upon themes relating to the invisible
and future world; when in descanting and declaring the mysteries
of eternity, a stream of prophetic eloquence would burst from
her lips.
In this manner had twice seven days elapsed, and, for the
first time, Walter beheld the being now dearer to him than ever,
in the full light of day. Every trace of the grave had
disappeared from her countenance; a roseate tinge like the ruddy
streaks of dawn again beamed on her pallid cheek; the faint,
mouldering taint of the grave was changed into a delightful
violet scent; the only sign of earth that never disappeared. He
no longer felt either apprehension or awe, as he gazed upon her
in the sunny light of day: it was not until now, that he seemed
to have recovered her completely; and, glowing with all his
former passion towards her, he would have pressed her to his
bosom, but she gently repulsed him, saying: -- "Not yet -- spare
your caresses until the moon has again filled her horn."
Spite of his impatience, Walter was obliged to await the
lapse of another period of seven days: but, on the night when
the moon was arrived at the full, he hastened to Brunhilda, whom
he found more lovely than she had ever appeared before. Fearing
no obstacles to his transports, he embraced with all the fervour
of a deeply enamoured and successful lover. Brunhilda, however,
still refused to yield to his passion. "What!" exclaimed she,
"is it fitting that I who have been purified by death from the
frailty of mortality, should become thy concubine, while a mere
daughter of the earth bears the title of thy wife: never shall
it be. No, it must be within the walls of thy palace, within
that chamber where I once reigned as queen, that thou obtainest
the end of thy wishes, -- and of mine also," added she,
imprinting a glowing kiss on the lips, and immediately
disappeared.
Heated with passion, and determined to sacrifice everything
to the accomplishment of his desires, Walter hastily quitted the
apartment, and shortly after the castle itself. He travelled
over mountain and across heath, with the rapidity of a storm, so
that the turf was flung up by his horse's hoofs; nor once
stopped until he arrived home.
Here, however, neither the affectionate caresses of
Swanhilda, or those of his children could touch his heart, or
induce him to restrain his furious desires. Alas! is the
impetuous torrent to be checked in its devastating course by the
beauteous flowers over which it rushes, when they exclaim: --
"Destroyer, commiserate our helpless innocence and beauty, nor
lay us waste?" -- the stream sweeps over them unregarding, and a
single moment annihilates the pride of a whole summer.
Shortly afterwards did Walter begin to hint to Swanhilda
that they were ill-suited to each other; that he was anxious to
taste that wild, tumultuous life, so well according with the
spirit of his sex, while she, on the contrary, was satisfied
with the monotonous circle of household enjoyments: -- that he
was eager for whatever promised novelty, while she felt most
attached to what was familiarized to her by habit: and lastly,
that her cold disposition, bordering upon indifference, but ill
assorted with his ardent temperament: it was therefore more
prudent that they should seek apart from each other that
happiness which they could not find together. A sigh, and a
brief acquiescence in his wishes was all the reply that
Swanhilda made: and, on the following morning, upon his
presenting her with a paper of separation, informing her that
she was at liberty to return home to her father, she received it
most submissively: yet, ere she departed, she gave him the
following warning: "Too well do I conjecture to whom I am
indebted for this our separation. Often have I seen thee at
Brunhilda's grave, and beheld thee there even on that night when
the face of the heavens was suddenly enveloped in a veil of
clouds. Hast thou rashly dared to tear aside the awful veil
that separates the mortality that dreams, from that which
dreameth not? Oh! then woe to thee, thou wretched man, for thou
hast attached to thyself that which will prove thy destruction."
She ceased: nor did Walter attempt any reply, for the similar
admonition uttered by the sorcerer flashed upon his mind, all
obscured as it was by passion, just as the lightning glares
momentarily through the gloom of night without dispersing the
obscurity.
Swanhilda then departed, in order to pronounce to her
children, a bitter farewell, for they, according to national
custom, belonged to the father; and, having bathed them in her
tears, and consecrated them with the holy water of maternal
love, she quitted her husband's residence, and departed to the
home of her father's.
Thus was the kind and benevolent Swanhilda driven an exile
from those halls where she had presided with grace; -- from
halls which were now newly decorated to receive another
mistress. The day at length arrived on which Walter, for the
second time, conducted Brunhilda home as a newly made bride.
And he caused it to be reported among his domestics that his new
consort had gained his affections by her extraordinary likeness
to Brunhilda, their former mistress. How ineffably happy did he
deem himself as he conducted his beloved once more into the
chamber which had often witnessed their former joys, and which
was now newly gilded and adorned in a most costly style: among
the other decorations were figures of angels scattering roses,
which served to support the purple draperies whose ample folds
o'ershadowed the nuptial couch. With what impatience did he
await the hour that was to put him in possession of those
beauties for which he had already paid so high a price, but,
whose enjoyment was to cost him most dearly yet! Unfortunate
Walter! revelling in bliss, thou beholdest not the abyss that
yawns beneath thy feet, intoxicated with the luscious perfume of
the flower thou hast plucked, thou little deemest how deadly is
the venom with which it is fraught, although, for a short
season, its potent fragrance bestows new energy on all thy
feelings.
Happy, however, as Walter was now, his household were far
from being equally so. The strange resemblance between their
new lady and the deceased Brunhilda filled them with a secret
dismay, -- an undefinable horror; for there was not a single
difference of feature, of tone of voice, or of gesture. To add
too to these mysterious circumstances, her female attendants
discovered a particular mark on her back, exactly like one which
Brunhilda had. A report was now soon circulated, that their
lady was no other than Brunhilda herself, who had been recalled
to life by the power of necromancy. How truly horrible was the
idea of living under the same roof with one who had been an
inhabitant of the tomb, and of being obliged to attend upon her,
and acknowledge her as mistress! There was also in Brunhilda
much to increase this aversion, and favour their superstition:
no ornaments of gold ever decked her person; all that others
were wont to wear of this metal, she had formed of silver: no
richly coloured and sparkling jewels glittered upon her; pearls
alone, lent their pale lustre to adorn her bosom. Most
carefully did she always avoid the cheerful light of the sun,
and was wont to spend the brightest days in the most retired and
gloomy apartments: only during the twilight of the commencing or
declining day did she ever walk abroad, but her favourite hour
was when the phantom light of the moon bestowed on all objects a
shadowy appearance and a sombre hue; always too at the crowing
of the cock an involuntary shudder was observed to seize her
limbs. Imperious as before her death, she quickly imposed her
iron yoke on every one around her, while she seemed even far
more terrible than ever, since a dread of some supernatural
power attached to her, appalled all who approached her. A
malignant withering glance seemed to shoot from her eye on the
unhappy object of her wrath, as if it would annihilate its
victim. In short, those halls which, in the time of Swanhilda
were the residence of cheerfulness and mirth, now resembled an
extensive desert tomb. With fear imprinted on their pale
countenances, the domestics glided through the apartments of the
castle; and in this abode of terror, the crowing of the cock
caused the living to tremble, as if they were the spirits of the
departed; for the sound always reminded them of their mysterious
mistress. There was no one but who shuddered at meeting her in
a lonely place, in the dusk of evening, or by the light of the
moon, a circumstance that was deemed to be ominous of some evil:
so great was the apprehension of her female attendants, they
pined in continual disquietude, and, by degrees, all quitted
her. In the course of time even others of the domestics fled,
for an insupportal horror had seized them.
The art of the sorcerer had indeed bestowed upon Brunhilda
an artificial life, and due nourishment had continued to support
the restored body: yet this body was not able of itself to keep
up the genial glow of vitality, and to nourish the flame whence
springs all the affections and passions, whether of love or
hate; for death had for ever destroyed and withered it: all that
Brunhilda now possessed was a chilled existence, colder than
that of the snake. It was nevertheless necessary that she
should love, and return with equal ardour the warm caresses of
her spell-enthralled husband, to whose passion alone she was
indebted for her renewed existence. It was necessary that a
magic draught should animate the dull current in her veins and
awaken her to the glow of life and the flame of love -- a potion
of abomination -- one not even to be named without a curse --
human blood, imbibed whilst yet warm, from the veins of youth.
This was the hellish drink for which she thirsted: possessing no
sympathy with the purer feelings of humanity; deriving no
enjoyment from aught that interests in life and occupies its
varied hours; her existence was a mere blank, unless when in the
arms of her paramour husband, and therefore was it that she
craved incessantly after the horrible draught. It was even with
the utmost effort that she could forbear sucking even the blood
of Walter himself, reclined beside her. Whenever she beheld
some innocent child whose lovely face denoted the exuberance of
infantine health and vigour, she would entice it by soothing
words and fond caresses into her most secret apartment, where,
lulling it to sleep in her arms, she would suck form its bosom
the war, purple tide of life. Nor were youths of either sex
safe from her horrid attack: having first breathed upon her
unhappy victim, who never failed immediately to sink into a
lengthened sleep, she would then in a similar manner drain his
veins of the vital juice. Thus children, youths, and maidens
quickly faded away, as flowers gnawn by the cankering worm: the
fullness of their limbs disappeared; a sallow line succeeded to
the rosy freshness of their cheeks, the liquid lustre of the eye
was deadened, even as the sparkling stream when arrested by the
touch of frost; and their locks became thin and grey, as if
already ravaged by the storm of life. Parents beheld with
horror this desolating pestilence devouring their offspring; nor
could simple or charm, potion or amulet avail aught against it.
The grave swallowed up one after the other; or did the miserable
victim survive, he became cadaverous and wrinkled even in the
very morn of existence. Parents observed with horror this
devastating pestilence snatch away their offspring -- a
pestilence which, nor herb however potent, nor charm, nor holy
taper, nor exorcism could avert. They either beheld their
children sink one after the other into the grave, or their
youthful forms, withered by the unholy, vampire embrace of
Brunhilda, assume the decrepitude of sudden age.
At length strange surmises and reports began to prevail; it
was whispered that Brunhilda herself was the cause of all these
horrors; although no one could pretend to tell in what manner
she destroyed her victims, since no marks of violence were
discernible. Yet when young children confessed that she had
frequently lulled them asleep in her arms, and elder ones said
that a sudden slumber had come upon them whenever she began to
converse with them, suspicion became converted into certainty,
and those whose offspring had hitherto escaped unharmed, quitted
their hearths and home -- all their little possessions -- the
dwellings of their fathers and the inheritance of their
children, in order to rescue from so horrible a fate those who
were dearer to their simple affections than aught else the world
could give.
Thus daily did the castle assume a more desolate
appearance; daily did its environs become more deserted; none
but a few aged decrepit old women and grey-headed menials were
to be seen remaining of the once numerous retinue. Such will in
the latter days of the earth be the last generation of mortals,
when childbearing shall have ceased, when youth shall no more be
seen, nor any arise to replace those who shall await their fate
in silence.
Walter alone noticed not, or heeded not, the desolation
around him; he apprehended not death, lapped as he was in a
glowing elysium of love. Far more happy than formerly did he
now seem in the possession of Brunhilda. All those caprices and
frowns which had been wont to overcloud their former union had
now entirely disappeared. She even seemed to doat on him with a
warmth of passion that she had never exhibited even during the
happy season of bridal love; for the flame of that youthful
blood, of which she drained the veins of others, rioted in her
own. At night, as soon as he closed his eyes, she would breathe
on him till he sank into delicious dreams, from which he awoke
only to experience more rapturous enjoyments. By day she would
continually discourse with him on the bliss experienced by happy
spirits beyond the grave, assuring him that, as his affection
had recalled her from the tomb, they were now irrevocably
united. Thus fascinated by a continual spell, it was not
possible that he should perceive what was taking place around
him. Brunhilda, however, foresaw with savage grief that the
source of her youthful ardour was daily decreasing, for, in a
short time, there remained nothing gifted with youth, save
Walter and his children, and these latter she resolved should be
her next victims.
On her first return to the castle, she had felt an aversion
towards the offspring of another, and therefore abandoned them
entirely to the attendants appointed by Swanhilda. Now,
however, she began to pay considerable attention to them, and
caused them to be frequently admitted into her presence. The
aged nurses were filled with dread at perceiving these marks of
regard from her towards their young charges, yet dared they not
to oppose the will of their terrible and imperious mistress.
Soon did Brunhilda gain the affection of the children, who were
too unsuspecting of guile to apprehend any danger from her; on
the contrary, her caresses won them completely to her. Instead
of ever checking their mirthful gambols, she would rather
instruct them in new sports: often too did she recite to them
tales of such strange and wild interest as to exceed all the
stories of their nurses. Were they wearied either with play or
with listening to her narratives, she would take them on her
knees and lull them to slumber. Then did visions of the most
surpassing magnificence attend their dreams: they would fancy
themselves in some garden where flowers of every hue rose in
rows one above the other, from the humble violet to the tall
sunflower, forming a parti-coloured broidery of every hue,
sloping upwards towards the golden clouds where little angels
whose wings sparkled with azure and gold descended to bring them
delicious cakes or splendid jewels; or sung to them soothing
melodious hymns. So delightful did these dream in short time
become to the children that they longered for nothing so eagerly
as to slumber on Brunhilda's lap, for never did they else enjoy
such visions of heavenly forms. They were they most anxious for
that which was to prove their destruction: -- yet do we not all
aspire after that which conducts us to the grave -- after the
enjoyment of life? These innocents stretched out their arms to
approaching death because it assumed the mask of pleasure; for,
which they were lapped in these ecstatic slumbers, Brunhilda
sucked the life-stream from their bosoms. On waking, indeed,
they felt themselves faint and exhausted, yet did no pain nor
any mark betray the cause. Shortly, however, did their strength
entirely fail, even as the summer brook is gradually dried up:
their sports became less and less noisy; their loud, frolicsome
laughter was converted into a faint smile; the full tones of
their voices died away into a mere whisper. Their attendants
were filled with horror and despair; too well did they
conjecture the horrible truth, yet dared not to impart their
suspicions to Walter, who was so devotedly attached to his
horrible partner. Death had already smote his prey: the
children were but the mere shadows of their former selves, and
even this shadow quickly disappeared.
The anguished father deeply bemoaned their loss, for,
notwithstanding his apparent neglect, he was strongly attached
to them, nor until he had experienced their loss was he aware
that his love was so great. His affliction could not fail to
excite the displeasure of Brunhilda: "Why dost thou lament so
fondly," said she, "for these little ones? What satisfaction
could such unformed beings yield to thee unless thou wert still
attached to their mother? Thy heart then is still hers? Or
dost thou now regret her and them because thou art satiated with
my fondness and weary of my endearments? Had these young ones
grown up, would they not have attached thee, thy spirit and thy
affections more closely to this earth of clay -- to this dust
and have alienated thee from that sphere to which I, who have
already passed the grave, endeavour to raise thee? Say is thy
spirit so heavy, or thy love so weak, or thy faith so hollow,
that the hope of being mine for ever is unable to touch thee?"
Thus did Brunhilda express her indignation at her consort's
grief, and forbade him her presence. The fear of offending her
beyond forgiveness and his anxiety to appease her soon dried up
his tears; and he again abandoned himself to his fatal passion,
until approaching destruction at length awakened him from his
delusion.
Neither maiden, nor youth, was any longer to be seen,
either within the dreary walls of the castle, or the adjoining
territory: -- all had disappeared; for those whom the grave had
not swallowed up had fled from the region of death. Who,
therefore, now remained to quench the horrible thirst of the
female vampire save Walter himself? and his death she dared to
contemplate unmoved; for that divine sentiment that unites two
beings in one joy and one sorrow was unknown to her bosom. Was
he in his tomb, so was she free to search out other victims and
glut herself with destruction, until she herself should, at the
last day, be consumed with the earth itself, such is the fatal
law to which the dead are subject when awoke by the arts of
necromancy from the sleep of the grave.
She now began to fix her blood-thirsty lips on Walter's
breast,when cast into a profound sleep by the odour of her
violet breath he reclined beside her quite unconscious of his
impending fate: yet soon did his vital powers begin to decay;
and many a grey hair peeped through his raven locks. With his
strength, his passion also declined; and he now frequently left
her in order to pass the whole day in the sports of the chase,
hoping thereby to regain his wonted vigour. As he was reposing
one day in a wood beneath the shade of an oak, he perceived, on
the summit of a tree, a bird of strange appearance, and quite
unknown to him; but, before he could take aim at it with his
bow, it flew away into the clouds; at the same time letting fall
a rose-coloured root which dropped at Walter's feet, who
immediately took it up and, although he was well acquainted with
almost every plant, he could not remember to have seen any at
all resembling this. Its delightfully odoriferous scent induced
him to try its flavour, but ten times more bitter than wormwood
it was even as gall in his mouth; upon which, impatient of the
disappointment, he flung it away with violence. Had he,
however, been aware of its miraculous quality and that it acted
as a counter charm against the opiate perfume of Brunhilda's
breath, he would have blessed it in spite of its bitterness:
thus do mortals often blindly cast away in displeasure the
unsavoury remedy that would otherwise work their weal.
When Walter returned home in the evening and laid him down
to repose as usual by Brunhilda's side, the magic power of her
breath produced no effect upon him; and for the first time
during many months did he close his eyes in a natural slumber.
Yet hardly had he fallen asleep, ere a pungent smarting pain
disturbed him from his dreams; and. opening his eyes, he
discerned, by the gloomy rays of a lamp, that glimmered in the
apartment what for some moments transfixed him quite aghast, for
it was Brunhilda, drawing with her lips, the warm blood from his
bosom. The wild cry of horror which at length escaped him,
terrified Brunhilda, whose mouth was besmeared with the warm
blood. "Monster!" exclaimed he, springing from the couch, "is
it thus that you love me?"
"Aye, even as the dead love," replied she, with a malignant
coldness.
"Creature of blood!" continued Walter, "the delusion which
has so long blinded me is at an end: thou are the fiend who hast
destroyed my children -- who hast murdered the offspring of my
vassels." Raising herself upwards and, at the same time,
casting on him a glance that froze him to the spot with dread,
she replied. "It is not I who have murdered them; -- I was
obliged to pamper myself with warm youthful blood, in order that
I might satisfy thy furious desires -- thou art the murderer!" --
These dreadful words summoned, before Walter's terrified
conscience, the threatening shades of all those who had thus
perished; while despair choked his voice.
"Why," continued she, in a tone that increased his horror,
"why dost thou make mouths at me like a puppet? Thou who hadst
the courage to love the dead -- to take into thy bed, one who
had been sleeping in the grave, the bed-fellow of the worm --
who hast clasped in thy lustful arms, the the corruption of the
tomb -- dost thou, unhallowed as thou art, now raise this
hideous cry for the sacrifice of a few lives? -- They are but
leaves swept from their branches by a storm. -- Come, chase
these idiot fancies, and taste the bliss thou hast so dearly
purchased." So saying, she extended her arms towards him; but
this motion served only to increase his terror, and exclaiming:
"Accursed Being," -- he rushed out of the apartment.
All the horrors of a guilty, upbraiding conscience became
his companions, now that he was awakened from the delirium of
his unholy pleasures. Frequently did he curse his own obstinate
blindness, for having given no heed to the hints and admonitions
of his children's nurses, but treating them as vile calumnies.
But his sorrow was now too late, for, although repentance may
gain pardon for the sinner, it cannot alter the immutable
decrees of fate -- it cannot recall the murdered from the tomb.
No sooner did the first break of dawn appear, than he set out
for his lonely castle in the mountains, determined no longer to
abide under the same roof with so terrific a being; yet vain was
his flight, for, on waking the following morning, he perceived
himself in Brunhilda's arms, and quite entangled in her long
raven tresses, which seemed to involve him, and bind him in the
fetters of his fate; the powerful fascination of her breath held
him still more captivated, so that, forgetting all that had
passed, he returned her caresses, until awakening as if from a
dream he recoiled in unmixed horror from her embrace. During
the day he wandered through the solitary wilds of the mountains,
as a culprit seeking an asylum from his pursuers; and, at night,
retired to the shelter of a cave; fearing less to couch himself
within such a dreary place, than to expose himself to the horror
of again meeting Brunhilda; but alas! it was in vain that he
endeavoured to flee her. Again, when he awoke, he found her the
partner of his miserable bed. Nay, had he sought the centre of
the earth as his hiding place; had he even imbedded himself
beneath rocks, or formed his chamber in the recesses of the
ocean, still had he found her his constant companion; for, by
calling her again into existence, he had rendered himself
inseparably hers; so fatal were the links that united them.
Struggling with the madness that was beginning to seize
him, and brooding incessantly on the ghastly visions that
presented themselves to his horror-stricken mind, he lay
motionless in the gloomiest recesses of the woods, even from the
rise of sun till the shades of eve. But, no sooner was the
light of day extinguished in the west, and the woods buried in
impenetrable darkness, than the apprehension of resigning
himself to sleep drove him forth among the mountains. The storm
played wildly with the fantastic clouds, and with the rattling
leaves, as they were caught up into the air, as if some dread
spirit was sporting with these images of transitoriness and
decay: it roared among the summits of the oaks as if uttering a
voice of fury, while its hollow sound rebounding among the
distant hills, seemed as the moans of a departing sinner, or as
the faint cry of some wretch expiring under the murderer's hand:
the owl too, uttered its ghastly cry as if foreboding the wreck
of nature. Walter's hair flew disorderly in the wind, like
black snakes wreathing around his temples and shoulders; while
each sense was awake to catch fresh horror. In the clouds he
seemed to behold the forms of the murdered; in the howling wind
to hear their laments and groans; in the chilling blast itself
he felt the dire kiss of Brunhilda; in the cry of the screeching
bird he heard her voice; in the mouldering leaves he scented the
charnel-bed out of which he had awakened her. "Murderer of thy
own offspring," exclaimed he in a voice making night, and the
conflict of the element still more hideous, "paramour of a
blood-thirsty vampire, reveller with the corruption of the
tomb!" while in his despair he rent the wild locks from his
head. Just then the full moon darted from beneath the bursting
clouds; and the sight recalled to his remembrance the advice of
the sorcerer, when he trembled at the first apparition of
Brunhilda rising from her sleep of death; -- name]y, to seek him
at the season of the full moon in the mountains, where three
roads met. Scarcely had this gleam of hope broke in on his
bewildered mind than he flew to the appointed spot.
On his arrival, Walter found the old man seated there upon
a stone as calmly as though it had been a bright sunny day and
completely regardless of the uproar around. "Art thou come
then?" exclaimed he to the breathless wretch, who, flinging
himself at his feet, cried in a tone of anguish: -- "Oh save me
-- succour me -- rescue me from the monster that scattereth
death and desolation around her.
"Wherefore a mysterious warning? why didst thou not rather
disclose to me at once all the horrors that awaited my
sacrilegious profanation of the grave?"
"And wherefore a mysterious warning? why didst thou not
perceivest how wholesome was the advice -- 'Wake not the dead.'
"Wert thou able to listen to another voice than that of thy
impetuous passions? Did not thy eager impatience shut my mouth
at the very moment I would have cautioned thee?"
"True, true: -- thy reproof is just: but what does it avail
now; -- I need the promptest aid."
"Well," replied the old man, "there remains even yet a
means of rescuing thyself, but it is fraught with horror and
demands all thy resolution."
"Utter it then, utter it; for what can be more appalling,
more hideous than the misery I now endure?"
"Know then," continued the sorcerer, "that only on the
night of the new moon does she sleep the sleep of mortals; and
then all the supernaturural power which she inherits from the
grave totally fails her. 'Tis then that thou must murder her."
"How! murder her!" echoed Walter.
"Aye," returned the old man calmly, "pierce her bosom with
a sharpened dagger, which I will furnish thee with; at the same
time renounce her memory for ever, swearing never to think of
her intentionally, and that, if thou dost involuntarily, thou
wilt repeat the curse."
"Most horrible! yet what can be more horrible than she
herself is? -- I'll do it."
"Keep then this resolution until the next new moon."
"What, must I wait until then?" cried Walter, "alas ere
then. either her savage thirst for blood will have forced me
into the night of the tomb, or horror will have driven me into
the night of madness."
"Nay," replied the sorcerer, "that I can prevent;" and, so
saying, he conducted him to a cavern further among the
mountains. "Abide here twice seven days," said he; "so long can
I protect thee against her deadly caresses. Here wilt thou find
all due provision for thy wants; but take heed that nothing
tempt thee to quit this place. Farewell, when the moon renews
itself, then do I repair hither again." So saying, the sorcerer
drew a magic circle around the cave, and then immediately
disappeared.
Twice seven days did Walter continue in this solitude,
where his companions were his own terrifying thoughts, and his
bitter repentance. The present was all desolation and dread;
the future presented the image of a horrible deed which he must
perforce commit; while the past was empoisoned by the memory of
his guilt. Did he think on his former happy union with
Brunhilda, her horrible image presented itself to his
imagination with her lips defiled with dropping blood: or, did
he call to mind the peaceful days he had passed with Swanhilda,
he beheld her sorrowful spirit with the shadows of her murdered
children. Such were the horrors that attended him by day: those
of night were still more dreadful, for then he beheld Brunhilda
herself, who, wandering round the magic circle which she could
not pass, called upon his name till the cavern reechoed the
horrible sound. "WaIter, my beloved," cried she, "wherefore
dost thou avoid me? art thou not mine? for ever mine -- mine
here, and mine hereafter? And dost thou seek to murder me? --
ah! commit not a deed which hurls us both to perdition --
thyself as well as me." In this manner did the horrible
visitant torment him each night, and, even when she departed,
robbed him of all repose.
The night of the new moon at length arrived, dark as the
deed it was doomed to bring forth. The sorcerer entered the
cavern; "Come," said he to Walter, "let us depart hence, the
hour is now arrived:" and he forthwith conducted him in silence
from the cave to a coal-black steed, the sight of which recalled
to Walter's remembrance the fatal night. He then related to the
old man Brunhilda's nocturnal visits and anxiously inquired
whether her apprehensions of eternal perdition would be
fulfilled or not. "Mortal eye," exclaimed the sorcerer, "may
not pierce the dark secrets of another world, or penetrate the
deep abyss that separates earth from heaven." Walter hesitated
to mount the steed. "Be resolute," exclaimed his companion,
"but this once is it granted to thee to make the trial, and,
should thou fail now, nought can rescue thee from her power."
"What can be more horrible than she herself? -- I am
determined:" and he leaped on the horse, the sorcerer mounting
also behind him.
Carried with a rapidity equal to that of the storm that
sweeps across the plain they in brief space arrived at Walter's
castle. All the doors flew open at the bidding of his
companion, and they speedily reached Brunhilda's chamber, and
stood beside her couch. Reclining in a tranquil slumber; she
reposed in all her native loveliness, every trace of horror had
disappeared from her countenance; she looked so pure, meek and
innocent that all the sweet hours of their endearments rushed to
Walter's memory, like interceding angels pleading in her behalf.
His unnerved hand could not take the dagger which the sorcerer
presented to him. "The blow must be struck even now:" said the
latter, "shouldst thou delay but an hour, she will lie at
daybreak on thy bosom, sucking the warm life drops from thy
heart."
"Horrible! most horrible!" faltered the trembling Walter,
and turning away his face, he thrust the dagger into her bosom,
exclaiming -- "I curse thee for ever! -- and the cold blood
gushed upon his hand. Opening her eyes once more, she cast a
look of ghastly horror on her husband, and, in a hollow dying
accent said -- "Thou too art doomed to perdition."
"Lay now thy hand upon her corpse," said the sorcerer, "and
swear the oath." -- Walter did as commanded, saying, "Never will
I think of her with love, never recall her to mind
intentionally, and, should her image recur to my mind
involuntarily, so will I exclaim to it: be thou accursed."
"Thou hast now done everything," returned the sorcerer; --
"restore her therefore to the earth, from which thou didst so
foolishly recall her; and be sure to recollect thy oath: for,
shouldst thou forget it but once, she would return, and thou
wouldst be inevitably lost. Adieu -- we see each other no
more." Having uttered these words he quitted the apartment, and
Walter also fled from this abode of horror, having first given
direction that the corpse should be speedily interred.
Again did the terrific Brunhilda repose within her grave;
but her image continually haunted Walter's imagination, so that
his existence was one continued martyrdom, in which he
continually struggled, to dismiss from his recollection the
hideous phantoms of the past; yet, the stronger his effort to
banish them, so much the more frequently and the more vividly
did they return; as the night-wanderer, who is enticed by a
fire-wisp into quagmire or bog, sinks the deeper into his damp
grave the more he struggles to escape. His imagination seemed
incapable of admitting any other image than that of Brunhilda:
now he fancied he beheld her expiring, the blood streaming from
her beautiful bosom: at others he saw the lovely bride of his
youth, who reproached him with having disturbed the slumbers of
the tomb; and to both he was compelled to utter the dreadful
words, "I curse thee for ever." The terrible imprecation was
constantly passing his lips; yet was he in incessant terror lest
he should forget it, or dream of her without being able to
repeat it, and then, on awaking, find himself in her arms. Else
would he recall her expiring words, and, appalled at their
terrific import, imagine that the doom of his perdition was
irrecoverably passed. Whence should he fly from himself? or how
erase from his brain these images and forms of horror? In the
din of combat, in the tumult of war and its incessant pour of
victory to defeat; from the cry of anguish to the exultation of
victory -- in these he hoped to find at least the relief of
distraction: but here too he was disappointed. The giant fang
of apprehension now seized him who had never before known fear;
each drop of blood that sprayed upon him seemed the cold blood
that had gushed from Brunhilda's wound; each dying wretch that
fell beside him looked like her, when expiring, she exclaimed, --
"Thou too art doomed to perdition"; so that the aspect of
death seemed more full of dread to him than aught beside, and
this unconquerable terror compelled him to abandon the
battle-field. At length, after many a weary and fruitless
wandering,
he returned to his castle. Here all was deserted and silent, as
if the sword, or a still more deadly pestilence had laid
everything waste: for the few inhabitants that still remained,
and even those servants who had once shewn themselves the most
attached, now fled from him, as though he had been branded with
the mark of Cain. With horror he perceived that, by uniting
himself as he had done with the dead, he had cut himself off
from the living, who refused to hold any intercourse with him.
Often, when he stood on the battlements of his castle, and
looked down upon desolate fields, he compared their present
solitude with the lively activity they were wont to exhibit,
under the strict but benevolent discipline of Swanhilda. He now
felt that she alone could reconcile him to life, but durst he
hope that one, whom he so deeply aggrieved, could pardon him,
and receive him again? Impatience at length got the better of
fear; he sought Swanhilda, and, with the deepest contrition,
acknowledged his complicated guilt; embracing her knees as he
beseeched her to pardon him, and to return to his desolate
castle, in order that it might again become the abode of
contentment and peace. The pale form which she beheld at her
feet, the shadow of the lately blooming youth, touched
Swanhilda. "The folly," said she gently, "though it has caused
me much sorrow, has never excited my resentment or my anger.
But say, where are my children?" To this dreadful interrogation
the agonized father could for a while frame no reply: at length
he was obliged to confess the dreadful truth. "Then we are
sundered for ever," returned Swanhilda; nor could all his tears
or supplications prevail upon her to revoke the sentence she had
given.
Stripped of his last earthly hope, bereft of his last
consolation, and thereby rendered as poor as mortal can possibly
be on this side of the grave. Walter returned homewards; when,
as he was riding through the forest in the neighbourhood of his
castle, absorbed in his gloomy meditations, the sudden sound of
a horn roused him from his reverie. Shortly after he saw appear
a female figure clad in black, and mounted on a steed of the
same colour: her attire was like that of a huntress, but,
instead of a falcon, she bore a raven in her hand; and she was
attended by a gay troop of cavaliers and dames. The first
salutations bring passed, he found that she was proceeding the
same road as himself; and, when she found that Walter's castle
was close at hand, she requested that he would lodge her for
that night, the evening being far advanced. Most willingly did
he comply with this request, since the appearance of the
beautiful stranger had struck him greatly; so wonderfully did
she resemble Swanhilda, except that her locks were brown, and
her eye dark and full of fire. With a sumptous banquet did he
entertain his guests, whose mirth and songs enlivened the lately
silent halls. Three days did this revelry continue, and so
exhilarating did it prove to Walter that he seemed to have
forgotten his sorrows and his fears; nor could he prevail upon
himself to dismiss his visitors, dreading lest, on their
departure, the castle would seem a hundred times more desolate
than before hand his grief be proportionally increased. At his
earnest request, the stranger consented to stay seven, and again
another seven days. Without being requested, she took upon
herself the superintendence of the household, which she
regulated as discreetly and cheerfully as Swanhilda had been
wont to do, so that the castle, which had so lately been the
abode of melancholy and horror, became the residence of pleasure
and festivity, and Walter's grief disappeared altogether in the
midst of so much gaiety. Daily did his attachment to the fair
unknown increase; he even made her his confidant; and, one
evening as they were walking together apart from any of her
train, he related to her his melancholy and frightful history.
"My dear friend," returned she, as soon as he he had finished
his tale, "it ill beseems a man of thy discretion to afflict
thyself on account of all this. Thou hast awakened the dead
from the sleep of the grave and afterwards found, -- what might
have been anticipated, that the dead possess no sympathy with
life. What then? thou wilt not commit this error a second time.
Thou hast however murdered the being whom thou hadst thus
recalled again to existence -- but it was only in appearance,
for thou couldst not deprive that of life which properly had
none. Thou hast, too, lost a wife and two children: but at thy
years such a loss is most easily repaired. There are beauties
who will gladly share thy couch, and make thee again a father.
But thou dreadst the reckoning of hereafter: -- go, open the
graves and ask the sleepers there whether that hereafter
disturbs them." In such manner would she frequently exhort and
cheer him, so that, in a short time. his melancholy entirely
disappeared. He now ventured to declare to the unknown the
passion with which she had inspired him, nor did she refuse him
her hand. Within seven days afterwards the nuptials were
celebrated, and the very foundations of the castle seemed to
rock from the wild tumultuous uproar of unrestrained riot. The
wine streamed in abundance; the goblets circled incessantly;
intemperance reached its utmost bounds, while shouts of laughter
almost resembling madness burst from the numerous train
belonging to the unknown. At length Walter, heated with wine
and love, conducted his bride into the nuptial chamber: but, oh!
horror! scarcely had he clasped her in his arms ere she
transformed herself into a monstrous serpent, which entwining
him in its horrid folds, crushed him to death. Flames crackled
on every side of the apartment; in a few minutes after, the
whole castle was enveloped in a blaze that consumed it entirely:
while, as the walls fell in with a tremendous crash, a voice
exclaimed aloud -- "Wake not the dead!"
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