FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4359   4360   4361   4362   4363   4364   4365   4366   4367   4368   4369   4370   4371   4372   4373   4374   4375   4376   4377   4378   4379   4380   4381   4382   4383  
4384   4385   4386   4387   4388   4389   4390   4391   4392   4393   4394   4395   4396   4397   4398   4399   4400   4401   4402   4403   4404   4405   4406   4407   4408   >>   >|  
atred and ill-will. When at a later day, I saw the old knight, with his ruddy steel-eaters' face and great lip-beard, and was told that in his youth he had been a doughty free booter and highway robber, who by his wealth and power had made himself to be a mainstay of the Elector in Altmark, I could well imagine how his threats had sounded, and that all men had been swift to lend ear to his words. Yet that just King to whom he accused Herdegen gave a hearing to von Rochow and the other witnesses; they could but declare that all had been done by rule, and that Rochow had said from the first that of a certainty the devil himself guided Herdegen's sword. Muschwitz, indeed, was sure that he had seen his blade flash forth fire. Hereupon the father was urgent on the King's Majesty that he should seek to seize my brother, pronounce him a banished outlaw, and that whenever his person should be taken he was to be punished with death. All this I learnt not till some time after, inasmuch as folks would not add new cause of grief to my present sorrow. The way I was going could lead no-whither save to madness or the cloister; I had so lost my wits in self, that I weened that I had done my part for my brother when I had humbly entreated their Majesties to vouchsafe him their gracious pardon, and had signed my name to certain petitions in favor of the accused. Of a truth I wist not yet in what peril he stood, and rarely enquired for him when Uncle Conrad had assured me that he lay in safe hiding. Sometimes, indeed, meseemed as though Ann and the others kept somewhat privy from me; but even all care to enquire was gone from me, nor cared I for aught but to be left in peace. And thus matters stood till rumor waxed loud and roused me from my leaden slumber. I had passed the day for myself alone, refusing to see our noble guests; I was sitting in silence and dreaming by my spinning-wheel, which I had long ceased to turn, when on a sudden there were heavy steps and wrathful voices on the stairs. The door of the room was thrown open and, in spite of old Susan's resistance, certain beadles of the city came in, with two of the Emperor's men-at-arms. My cousin was not within doors, as had become common of late, and I was vexed and grieved to be thus unpleasantly surprised. I rose to meet the strangers, making sharp enquiry by what right they broke the peace of a Nuremberg patrician's household. Hereupon their chief made answer roundly
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4359   4360   4361   4362   4363   4364   4365   4366   4367   4368   4369   4370   4371   4372   4373   4374   4375   4376   4377   4378   4379   4380   4381   4382   4383  
4384   4385   4386   4387   4388   4389   4390   4391   4392   4393   4394   4395   4396   4397   4398   4399   4400   4401   4402   4403   4404   4405   4406   4407   4408   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Rochow
 

Hereupon

 

accused

 
Herdegen
 

brother

 
slumber
 
passed
 

leaden

 

roused

 

matters


petitions
 

Conrad

 

assured

 

enquired

 

rarely

 

hiding

 
enquire
 

meseemed

 

Sometimes

 

sudden


common

 

unpleasantly

 

grieved

 

Emperor

 

cousin

 

surprised

 

patrician

 

Nuremberg

 

household

 

roundly


answer

 
strangers
 

making

 

enquiry

 

beadles

 

spinning

 

ceased

 

dreaming

 

silence

 

guests


sitting

 

thrown

 

resistance

 

stairs

 

wrathful

 
voices
 

refusing

 
imagine
 
threats
 

sounded