One stormy season about the beginning
of the present century, a great tree came down among
certain moss-covered ridges of old masonry which break
the surface of the Rosenmold heath, exposing, together
with its roots, the remains of two persons. Whether
the bodies (male and female, said German bone-science)
had been purposely buried there was questionable.
They seemed rather to have been hidden away by the
accident, whatever it was, which had caused death crushed,
perhaps, under what had been the low wall of a garden being
much distorted, and lying, though neatly enough discovered
by the upheaval of the soil, in great confusion.
People’s attention was the more attracted to
the incident because popular fancy had long run upon
a tradition of buried treasures, golden treasures,
in or about the antiquated ruin which the garden boundary
enclosed; the roofless shell of a small but solidly-built
stone house, burnt or overthrown, perhaps in the time
of the wars at the beginning of the eighteenth century.
Many persons went to visit the remains lying out on
the dark, wild plateau, which stretches away above
the tallest roofs of the old grand-ducal town, very
distinctly outlined, on that day, in deep fluid grey
against a sky still heavy with coming rain. No
treasure, indeed, was forthcoming among the masses
of fallen stone. But the tradition was so far
verified, that the bones had rich golden ornaments
about them; and for the minds of some long-remembering
people their discovery set at rest an old query.
It had never been precisely known what was become of
the young Duke Carl, who disappeared from the world
just a century before, about the time when a great
army passed over those parts, at a political crisis,
one result of which was the final absorption of his
small territory in a neighbouring dominion. Restless,
romantic, eccentric, had he passed on with the victorious
host, and taken the chances of an obscure soldier’s
life? Certain old letters hinted at a different
ending love-letters which provided for a
secret meeting, preliminary perhaps to the final departure
of the young Duke (who, by the usage of his realm,
could only with extreme difficulty go whither, or
marry whom, he pleased) to whatever worlds he had chosen,
not of his own people. The minds of those still
interested in the matter were now at last made up,
the disposition of the remains suggesting to them the
lively picture of a sullen night, the unexpected passing
of the great army, and the two lovers rushing forth
wildly at the sudden tumult outside their cheerful
shelter, caught in the dark and trampled out so, surprised
and unseen, among the horses and heavy guns.
Time, at the court of the Grand-duke
of Rosenmold, at the beginning of the eighteenth century
might seem to have been standing still almost since
the Middle Age since the days of the Emperor
Charles the Fifth, at which period, by the marriage
of the hereditary Grand-duke with a princess of the
Imperial house, a sudden tide of wealth, flowing through
the grand-ducal exchequer, had left a kind of golden
architectural splendour on the place, always too ample
for its population. The sloping Gothic roofs
for carrying off the heavy snows still indented the
sky a world of tiles, with space uncurtailed
for the awkward gambols of that very German goblin,
Hans Klapper, on the long, slumberous, northern nights.
Whole quarryfuls of wrought stone had been piled along
the streets and around the squares, and were now grown,
in truth, like nature’s self again, in their
rough, time-worn massiveness, with weeds and wild
flowers where their decay accumulated, blossoming,
always the same, beyond people’s memories, every
summer, as the storks came back to their platforms
on the remote chimney-tops. Without, all was
as it had been on the eve of the Thirty Years’
War: the venerable dark-green mouldiness, priceless
pearl of architectural effect, was unbroken by a single
new gable. And within, human life its
thoughts, its habits, above all, its etiquette had
keen put out by no matter of excitement, political
or intellectual, ever at all, one might say, at any
time. The rambling grand-ducal palace was full
to overflowing with furniture, which, useful or useless,
was all ornamental, and none of it new. Suppose
the various objects, especially the contents of the
haunted old lumber-rooms, duly arranged and ticketed,
and their Highnesses would have had a historic museum,
after which those famed “Green Vaults”
at Dresden would hardly have counted as one of the
glories of Augustus the Strong. An immense heraldry,
that truly German vanity, had grown, expatiating,
florid, eloquent, over everything, without and within windows,
house-fronts, church walls, and church floors.
And one-half of the male inhabitants were big or little
State functionaries, mostly of a quasi decorative order the
treble-singer to the town-council, the court organist,
the court poet, and the like each with
his deputies and assistants, maintaining, all unbroken,
a sleepy ceremonial, to make the hours just noticeable
as they slipped away. At court, with a continuous
round of ceremonies, which, though early in the day,
must always take place under a jealous exclusion of
the sun, one seemed to live in perpetual candle-light.
It was in a delightful rummaging of
one of those lumber-rooms, escaped from that candle-light
into the broad day of the uppermost windows, that
the young Duke Carl laid his hand on an old volume
of the year 1486, printed in heavy type, with frontispiece,
perhaps, by Albert Duerer Ars Versificandi:
The Art of Versification: by Conrad Celtes.
Crowned poet of the Emperor Frederick the Third, he
had the right to speak on that subject; for while
he vindicated as best he might old German literature
against the charge of barbarism, he did also a man’s
part towards reviving in the Fatherland the knowledge
of the poetry of Greece and Rome; and for Carl, the
pearl, the golden nugget, of the volume was the Sapphic
ode with which it closed To Apollo, praying
that he would come to us from Italy, bringing his lyre
with him: Ad Apollinem, Ut ab Italis
cum lyra ad Germanos veniat. The
god of light, coming to Germany from some more favoured
world beyond it, over leagues of rainy hill and mountain,
making soft day there: that had ever been the
dream of the ghost-ridden yet deep-feeling and certainly
meek German soul; of the great Duerer, for instance,
who had been the friend of this Conrad Celtes,
and himself, all German as he was, like a gleam of
real day amid that hyperborean German darkness a
darkness which clave to him, too, at that dim time,
when there were violent robbers, nay, real live devils,
in every German wood. And it was precisely the
aspiration of Carl himself. Those verses, coming
to the boy’s hand at the right moment, brought
a beam of effectual daylight to a whole magazine of
observation, fancy, desire, stored up from the first
impressions of childhood. To bring Apollo with
his lyre to Germany! It was precisely that he,
Carl, desired to do was, as he might flatter
himself, actually doing.
The daylight, the Apolline aurora,
which the young Duke Carl claimed to be bringing to
his candle-lit people, came in the somewhat questionable
form of the contemporary French ideal, in matters of
art and literature French plays, French
architecture, French looking-glasses Apollo
in the dandified costume of Lewis the Fourteenth.
Only, confronting the essentially aged and decrepit
graces of his model with his own essentially youthful
temper, he invigorated what he borrowed; and with
him an aspiration towards the classical ideal, so
often hollow and insincere, lost all its affectation.
His doating grandfather, the reigning Grand-duke,
afforded readily enough, from the great store of inherited
wealth which would one day be the lad’s, the
funds necessary for the completion of the vast unfinished
Residence, with “pavilions” (after the
manner of the famous Mansard) uniting its scattered
parts; while a wonderful flowerage of architectural
fancy, with broken attic roofs, passed over and beyond
the earlier fabric; the later and lighter forms being
in part carved adroitly out of the heavy masses of
the old, honest, “stump Gothic” tracery.
One fault only Carl found in his French models, and
was resolute to correct. He would have, at least
within, real marble in place of stucco, and, if he
might, perhaps solid gold for gilding. There
was something in the sanguine, floridly handsome youth,
with his alertness of mind turned wholly, amid the
vexing preoccupations of an age of war, upon embellishment
and the softer things of life, which soothed the testy
humours of the old Duke, like the quiet physical warmth
of a fire or the sun. He was ready to preside
with all ceremony at a presentation of Marivaux’s
Death of Hannibal, played in the original, with such
imperfect mastery of the French accent as the lovers
of new light in Rosenmold had at command, in a theatre
copied from that at Versailles, lined with pale yellow
satin, and with a picture, amid the stucco braveries
of the ceiling, of the Septentrional Apollo himself,
in somewhat watery red and blue. Innumerable wax
lights in cut-glass lustres were a thing of course.
Duke Carl himself, attired after the newest French
fashion, played the part of Hannibal. The old
Duke, indeed, at a council-board devoted hitherto to
matters of state, would nod very early in certain
long discussions on matters of art magnificent
schemes, from this or that eminent contractor, for
spending his money tastefully, distinguishings of the
rococo and the baroque. On the other hand, having
been all his life in close intercourse with select
humanity, self-conscious and arrayed for presentation,
he was a helpful judge of portraits and the various
degrees of the attainment of truth therein a
phase of fine art which the grandson could not value
too much. The sergeant-painter and the deputy
sergeant-painter were, indeed, conventional performers
enough; as mechanical in their dispensation of wigs,
finger-rings, ruffles, and simpers, as the figure
of the armed knight who struck the bell in the Residence
tower. But scattered through its half-deserted
rooms, state bed-chambers and the like, hung the works
of more genuine masters, still as unadulterate as
the hock, known to be two generations old, in the
grand-ducal cellar. The youth had even his scheme
of inviting the illustrious Antony Coppel to the court;
to live there, if he would, with the honours and emoluments
of a prince of the blood. The illustrious Mansard
had actually promised to come, had not his sudden
death taken him away from earthly glory.
And at least, if one must forgo the
masters, masterpieces might be had for their price.
For ten thousand marks day ever to be remembered! a
genuine work of “the Urbinate,” from
the cabinet of a certain commercially-minded Italian
grand-duke, was on its way to Rosenmold, anxiously
awaited as it came over rainy mountain-passes, and
along the rough German roads, through doubtful weather.
The tribune, the throne itself, were made ready in
the presence-chamber, with hangings in the grand-ducal
colours, laced with gold, together with a speech and
an ode. Late at night, at last, the waggon was
heard rumbling into the courtyard, with the guest
arrived in safety, but, if one must confess one’s
self, perhaps forbidding at first sight. From
a comfortless portico, with all the grotesqueness
of the Middle Age, supported by brown, aged bishops,
whose meditations no incident could distract, Our
Lady looked out no better than an unpretending nun,
with nothing to say the like of which one was used
to hear. Certainly one was not stimulated by,
enwrapped, absorbed in the great master’s doings;
only, with much private disappointment, put on one’s
mettle to defend him against critics notoriously wanting
in sensibility, and against one’s self.
In truth, the painter whom Carl most unaffectedly enjoyed,
the real vigour of his youthful and somewhat animal
taste finding here its proper sustenance, was Rubens Rubens
reached, as he is reached at his best, in well-preserved
family portraits, fresh, gay, ingenious, as of privileged
young people who could never grow old. Had not
he, too, brought something of the splendour of a “better
land” into those northern regions; if not the
glowing gold of Titian’s Italian sun, yet the
carnation and yellow of roses or tulips, such as might
really grow there with cultivation, even under rainy
skies? And then, about this time something was
heard at the grand-ducal court of certain mysterious
experiments in the making of porcelain; veritable alchemy,
for the turning of clay into gold. The reign
of Dresden china was at hand, with one’s own
world of little men and women more delightfully diminutive
still, amid imitations of artificial flowers.
The young Duke braced himself for a plot to steal
the gifted Herr Boettcher from his enforced residence,
as if in prison, at the fortress of Meissen. Why
not bring pots and wheels to Rosenmold, and prosecute
his discoveries there? The Grand-duke, indeed,
preferred his old service of gold plate, and would
have had the lad a virtuoso in nothing less costly
than gold gold snuff-boxes.
For, in truth, regarding what belongs
to art or culture, as elsewhere, we may have a large
appetite and little to feed on. Only, in the things
of the mind, the appetite itself counts for so much,
at least in hopeful, unobstructed youth, with the
world before it. “You are the Apollo you
tell us of, the northern Apollo,” people were
beginning to say to him, surprised from time to time
by a mental purpose beyond their guesses expressions,
liftings, softly gleaming or vehement lights,
in the handsome countenance of the youth, and his effective
speech, as he roamed, inviting all about him to share
the honey, from music to painting, from painting to
the drama, all alike florid in style, yes! and perhaps
third-rate. And so far consistently throughout
he had held that the centre of one’s intellectual
system must be understood to be in France. He
had thoughts of proceeding to that country, secretly,
in person, there to attain the very impress of its
genius.
Meantime, its more portable flowers
came to order in abundance. That the roses, so
to put it, were but excellent artificial flowers,
redolent only of musk, neither disproved for Carl the
validity of his ideal nor for our minds the vocation
of Carl himself in these matters. In art, as
in all other things of the mind, again, much depends
on the receiver; and the higher informing capacity,
if it exist within, will mould an unpromising matter
to itself, will realise itself by selection, and the
preference of the better in what is bad or indifferent,
asserting its prerogative under the most unlikely
conditions. People had in Carl, could they have
understood it, the spectacle, under those superficial
braveries, of a really heroic effort of mind at a
disadvantage. That rococo seventeenth-century
French imitation of the true Renaissance, called out
in Carl a boundless enthusiasm, as the Italian original
had done two centuries before. He put into his
reception of the aesthetic achievements of Lewis the
Fourteenth what young France had felt when Francis
the First brought home the great Da Vinci
and his works. It was but himself truly, after
all, that he had found, so fresh and real, among those
artificial roses.
He was thrown the more upon such outward
and sensuous products of mind architecture,
pottery, presently on music because for
him, with so large intellectual capacity, there was,
to speak properly, no literature in his mother-tongue.
Books there were, German books, but of a dulness,
a distance from the actual interests of the warm, various,
coloured life around and within him, to us hardly conceivable.
There was more entertainment in the natural train
of his own solitary thoughts, humoured and rightly
attuned by pleasant visible objects, than in all the
books he had hunted through so carefully for that
all-searching intellectual light, of which a passing
gleam of interest gave fallacious promise here or
there. And still, generously, he held to the
belief, urging him to fresh endeavour, that the literature
which might set heart and mind free must exist somewhere,
though court librarians could not say where.
In search for it he spent many days in those old book-closets
where he had lighted on the Latin ode of Conrad Celtes.
Was German literature always to remain no more than
a kind of penal apparatus for the teasing of the brain?
Oh for a literature set free, conterminous with the
interests of life itself.
In music, it might be thought, Germany
had already vindicated its spiritual liberty.
One and another of those North-german towns were already
aware of the youthful Sebastian Bach. The first
notes had been heard of a music not borrowed from
France, but flowing, as naturally as springs from
their sources, out of the ever musical soul of Germany
itself. And the Duke Carl was a sincere lover
of music, himself playing melodiously on the violin
to a delighted court. That new Germany of the
spirit would be builded, perhaps, to the sound of music.
In those other artistic enthusiasms, as the prophet
of the French drama or the architectural taste of
Lewis the Fourteenth, he had contributed himself generously,
helping out with his own good-faith the inadequacy
of their appeal. Music alone hitherto had really
helped him, and taken him out of himself.
To music, instinctively, more and more he was dedicate;
and in his desire to refine and organise the court
music, from which, by leave of absence to official
performers enjoying their salaries at a distance,
many parts had literally fallen away, like the favourite
notes of a worn-out spinet, he was ably seconded by
a devoted youth, the deputy organist of the grand-ducal
chapel. A member of the Roman Church amid a people
chiefly of the Reformed religion, Duke Carl would
creep sometimes into the curtained court pew of the
Lutheran Church, to which he had presented its massive
golden crucifix, to listen to the chorales, the execution
of which he had managed to time to his liking, relishing,
he could hardly explain why, those passages of a pleasantly
monotonous and, as it might seem, unending melody which
certainly never came to what could rightly be called
an ending here on earth; and having also a sympathy
with the cheerful genius of Dr. Martin Luther, with
his good tunes, and that ringing laughter which sent
dull goblins flitting.
At this time, then, his mind ran eagerly
for awhile on the project of some musical and dramatic
development of a fancy suggested by that old Latin
poem of Conrad Celtes the hyperborean
Apollo, sojourning, in the revolutions of time, in
the sluggish north for a season, yet Apollo still,
prompting art, music, poetry, and the philosophy which
interprets man’s life, making a sort of intercalary
day amid the natural darkness; not meridian day, of
course, but a soft derivative daylight, good enough
for us. It would be necessarily a mystic piece,
abounding in fine touches, suggestions, innuendoes.
His vague proposal was met half-way by the very practical
executant power of his friend or servant, the deputy
organist, already pondering, with just a satiric flavour
(suppressible in actual performance, if the time for
that should ever come) a musical work on Duke Carl
himself; Balder, an Interlude. He was contented
to re-cast and enlarge the part of the northern god
of light, with a now wholly serious intention.
But still, the near, the real and familiar, gave precision
to, or actually superseded, the distant and the ideal.
The soul of the music was but a transfusion from the
fantastic but so interesting creature close at hand.
And Carl was certainly true to his proposed part in
that he gladdened others by an intellectual radiance
which had ceased to mean warmth or animation for himself.
For him the light was still to seek in France, in
Italy, above all in old Greece, amid the precious things
which might yet be lurking there unknown, in art, in
poetry, perhaps in very life, till Prince Fortunate
should come.
Yes! it was thither, to Greece, that
his thoughts were turned during those romantic classical
musings while the opera was made ready. That,
in due time, was presented, with sufficient success.
Meantime, his purpose was grown definite to visit
that original country of the Muses, from which the
pleasant things of Italy had been but derivative; to
brave the difficulties in the way of leaving home at
all, the difficulties also of access to Greece, in
the present condition of the country.
At times the fancy came that he must
really belong by descent to a southern race, that
a physical cause might lie beneath this strange restlessness,
like the imperfect reminiscence of something that had
passed in earlier life. The aged ministers of
heraldry were set to work (actually prolonging their
days by an unexpected revival of interest in their
too well-worn function) at the search for some obscure
rivulet of Greek descent later Byzantine
Greek, perhaps, in the Rosenmold genealogy.
No! with a hundred quarterings, they were as indigenous,
incorruptible heraldry reasserted, as the old yew-trees’
asquat on the heath.
And meantime those dreams of remote
and probably adventurous travel lent the youth, still
so healthy of body, a wing for more distant expeditions
than he had ever yet inclined to, among his own wholesome
German woodlands. In long rambles, afoot or on
horseback, by day and night, he flung himself, for
the resettling of his sanity, on the cheerful influences
of their simple imagery; the hawks, as if asleep on
the air below him; the bleached crags, evoked by late
sunset among the dark oaks; the water-wheels, with
their pleasant murmur, in the foldings of the hillside.
Clouds came across his heaven, little
sudden clouds, like those which in this northern latitude,
where summer is at best but a flighty visitor, chill
out the heart, though but for a few minutes at a time,
of the warmest afternoon. He had fits of the gloom
of other people their dull passage through
and exit from the world, the threadbare incidents
of their lives, their dismal funerals which,
unless he drove them away immediately by strenuous
exercise, settled into a gloom more properly his own.
Yet at such times outward things also would seem to
concur unkindly in deepening the mental shadow about
him, almost as if there were indeed animation in the
natural world, elfin spirits in those inaccessible
hillsides and dark ravines, as old German poetry pretended,
cheerfully assistant sometimes, but for the most part
troublesome, to their human kindred. Of late these
fits had come somewhat more frequently, and had continued.
Often it was a weary, deflowered face that his favourite
mirrors reflected. Yes! people were prosaic,
and their lives threadbare: –all but
himself and organist Max, perhaps, and Fritz the treble-singer.
In return, the people in actual contact with him thought
him a little mad, though still ready to flatter his
madness, as he could detect. Alone with the doating
old grandfather in their stiff, distant, alien world
of etiquette, he felt surrounded by flatterers, and
would fain have tested the sincerity even of Max,
and Fritz who said, echoing the words of the other,
“Yourself, Sire, are the Apollo of Germany!”
It was his desire to test the sincerity
of the people about him, and unveil flatterers, which
in the first instance suggested a trick he played
upon the court, upon all Europe. In that complex
but wholly Teutonic genealogy lately under research,
lay a much-prized thread of descent from the fifth
Emperor Charles, and Carl, under direction, read with
much readiness to be impressed all that was attainable
concerning the great ancestor, finding there in truth
little enough to reward his pains. One hint he
took, however. He determined to assist at his
own obsequies.
That he might in this way facilitate
that much-desired journey occurred to him almost at
once as an accessory motive, and in a little while
definite motives were engrossed in the dramatic interest,
the pleasing gloom, the curiosity, of the thing itself.
Certainly, amid the living world in Germany, especially
in old, sleepy Rosenmold, death made great parade
of itself. Youth even, in its sentimental mood,
was ready to indulge in the luxury of decay, and amuse
itself with fancies of the tomb; as in periods of
decadence or suspended progress, when the world seems
to nap for a time, artifices for the arrest or disguise
of old age are adopted as a fashion, and become the
fopperies of the young. The whole body of Carl’s
relations, saving the drowsy old grandfather, already
lay buried beneath their expansive heraldries:
at times the whole world almost seemed buried thus made
and re-made of the dead its entire fabric
of politics, of art, of custom, being essentially
heraldic “achievements,” dead men’s
mementoes such as those. You see he was a sceptical
young man, and his kinsmen dead and gone had passed
certainly, in his imaginations of them, into no other
world, save, perhaps, into some stiffer, slower, sleepier,
and more pompous phase of ceremony the
last degree of court etiquette as they
lay there in the great, low-pitched, grand-ducal vault,
in their coffins, dusted once a year for All Souls’
Day, when the court officials descended thither, and
Mass for the dead was sung, amid an array of dropping
crape and cobwebs. The lad, with his full red
lips and open blue eyes, coming as with a great cup
in his hands to life’s feast, revolted from
the like of that, as from suffocation. And still
the suggestion of it was everywhere. In the garish
afternoon, up to the wholesome heights of the Heiligenberg
suddenly from one of the villages of the plain came
the grinding death-knell. It seemed to come out
of the ugly grave itself, and enjoyment was dead.
On his way homeward sadly, an hour later, he enters
by chance the open door of a village church, half
buried in the tangle of its churchyard. The rude
coffin is lying there of a labourer who had but a
hovel to live in. The enemy dogged one’s
footsteps! The young Carl seemed to be flying,
not from death simply, but from assassination.
And as these thoughts sent him back
in the rebounding power of youth, with renewed appetite,
to life and sense, so, grown at last familiar, they
gave additional purpose to his fantastic experiment.
Had it not been said by a wise man that after all
the offence of death was in its trappings? Well!
he would, as far as might be, try the thing, while,
presumably, a large reversionary interest in life was
still his. He would purchase his freedom, at
least of those gloomy “trappings,” and
listen while he was spoken of as dead. The mere
preparations gave pleasant proof of the devotion to
him of a certain number, who entered without question
into his plans. It is not difficult to mislead
the world concerning what happens to those who live
at the artificial distance from it of a court, with
its high wall of etiquette. However the matter
was managed, no one doubted, when, with a blazon of
ceremonious words, the court news went forth that,
after a brief illness, according to the way of his
race, the hereditary Grand-duke was deceased.
In momentary regret, bethinking them of the lad’s
taste for splendour, those to whom the arrangement
of such matters belonged (the grandfather now sinking
deeper into bare quiescence) backed by the popular
wish, determined to give him a funeral with even more
than grand-ducal measure of lugubrious magnificence.
The place of his repose was marked out for him as
officiously as if it had been the delimitation of
a kingdom, in the ducal burial vault, through the
cobwebbed windows of which, from the garden where he
played as a child, the young Duke had often peered
at the faded glories of the immense coroneted coffins,
the oldest shedding their velvet tatters around them.
Surrounded by the whole official world of Rosenmold,
arrayed for the occasion in almost forgotten dresses
of ceremony as if for a masquerade, the new coffin
glided from the fragrant chapel where the Requiem
was sung, down the broad staircase lined with peach-colour
and yellow marble, into the shadows below. Carl
himself, disguised as a strolling musician, had followed
it across the square through a drenching rain, on
which circumstance he overheard the old people congratulate
the “blessed” dead within, had listened
to a dirge of his own composing brought out on the
great organ with much bravura by his friend, the new
court organist, who was in the secret, and that night
turned the key of the garden entrance to the vault,
and peeped in upon the sleepy, painted, and bewigged
young pages whose duty it would be for a certain number
of days to come to watch beside their late master’s
couch.
And a certain number of weeks afterwards
it was known that “the mad Duke” had reappeared,
to the dismay of court marshals. Things might
have gone hard with the youth had the strange news,
at first as fantastic rumour, then as matter of solemn
enquiry, lastly as ascertained fact, pleasing or otherwise,
been less welcome than it was to the grandfather,
too old, indeed, to sorrow deeply, but grown so decrepit
as to propose that ministers should possess themselves
of the person of the young Duke, proclaim him of age
and regent. From those dim travels, presenting
themselves to the old man, who had never been fifty
miles away from home, as almost lunar in their audacity,
he would come back come back “in
time,” he murmured faintly, eager to feel that
youthful, animating life on the stir about him once
more.
Carl himself, now the thing was over,
greatly relishing its satiric elements, must be forgiven
the trick of the burial and his still greater enormity
in coming to life again. And then, duke or no
duke, it was understood that he willed that things
should in no case be precisely as they had been.
He would never again be quite so near people’s
lives as in the past a fitful, intermittent
visitor almost as if he had been properly
dead; the empty coffin remaining as a kind of symbolical
“coronation incident,” setting forth his
future relations to his subjects. Of all those
who believed him dead one human creature only, save
the grandfather, had sincerely sorrowed for him; a
woman, in tears as the funeral train passed by, with
whom he had sympathetically discussed his own merits.
Till then he had forgotten the incident which had
exhibited him to her as the very genius of goodness
and strength; how, one day, driving with her country
produce into the market, and, embarrassed by the crowd,
she had broken one of a hundred little police rules,
whereupon the officers were about to carry her away
to be fined, or worse, amid the jeers of the bystanders,
always ready to deal hardly with “the gipsy,”
at which precise moment the tall Duke Carl, like the
flash of a trusty sword, had leapt from the palace
stair and caused her to pass on in peace. She
had half detected him through his disguise; in due
time news of his reappearance had been ceremoniously
carried to her in her little cottage, and the remembrance
of her hung about him not ungratefully, as he went
with delight upon his way.
The first long stage of his journey
over, in headlong flight night and day, he found himself
one summer morning under the heat of what seemed a
southern sun, at last really at large on the Bergstrasse,
with the rich plain of the Palatinate on his left
hand; on the right hand vineyards, seen now for the
first time, sloping up into the crisp beeches of the
Odenwald. By Weinheim only an empty tower remained
of the Castle of Windeck. He lay for the night
in the great whitewashed guest-chamber of the Capuchin
convent.
The national rivers, like the national
woods, have a family likeness: the Main, the
Lahn, the Moselle, the Neckar, the Rhine. By help
of such accommodation as chance afforded, partly on
the stream itself, partly along the banks, he pursued
the leisurely winding course of one of the prettiest
of these, tarrying for awhile in the towns, grey, white,
or red, which came in his way, tasting their delightful
native “little” wines, peeping into their
old overloaded churches, inspecting the church furniture,
or trying the organs. For three nights he slept,
warm and dry, on the hay stored in a deserted cloister,
and, attracted into the neighbouring minster for a
snatch of church music, narrowly escaped detection.
By miraculous chance the grimmest lord of Rosenmold
was there within, recognised the youth and his companions visitors
naturally conspicuous, amid the crowd of peasants around
them and for some hours was upon their
traces. After unclean town streets the country
air was a perfume by contrast, or actually scented
with pinewoods. One seemed to breathe with it
fancies of the woods, the hills, and water of
a sort of souls in the landscape, but cheerful and
genial now, happy souls! A distant group of pines
on the verge of a great upland awoke a violent desire
to be there seemed to challenge one to
proceed thither. Was their infinite view thence?
It was like an outpost of some far-off fancy land,
a pledge of the reality of such. Above Cassel,
the airy hills curved in one black outline against
a glowing sky, pregnant, one could fancy, with weird
forms, which might be at their old diableries
again on those remote places ere night was quite come
there. At last in the streets, the hundred churches,
of Cologne, he feels something of a “Gothic”
enthusiasm, and all a German’s enthusiasm for
the Rhine.
Through the length and breadth of
the Rhine country the vintage was begun. The
red ruins on the heights, the white-walled villages,
white Saint Nepomuc upon the bridges, were but isolated
high notes of contrast in a landscape, sleepy and
indistinct under the flood of sunshine, with a headiness
in it like that of must, of the new wine. The
noise of the vineyards came through the lovely haze,
still, at times, with the sharp sound of a bell death-bell,
perhaps, or only a crazy summons to the vintagers.
And amid those broad, willowy reaches of the Rhine
at length, from Bingen to Mannheim, where the brown
hills wander into airy, blue distance, like a little
picture of paradise, he felt that France was at hand.
Before him lay the road thither, easy and straight. That
well of light so close! But, unexpectedly, the
capricious incidence of his own humour with the opportunity
did not suggest, as he would have wagered it must,
“Go, drink at once!” Was it that France
had come to be of no account at all, in comparison
of Italy, of Greece? or that, as he passed over the
German land, the conviction had come, “For you,
France, Italy, Hellas, is here!” that
some recognition of the untried spiritual possibilities
of meek Germany had for Carl transferred the ideal
land out of space beyond the Alps or the Rhine, into
future time, whither he must be the leader? A
little chilly of humour, in spite of his manly strength,
he was journeying partly in search of physical heat.
To-day certainly, in this great vineyard, physical
heat was about him in measure sufficient, at least
for a German constitution. Might it be not otherwise
with the imaginative, the intellectual, heat and light;
the real need being that of an interpreter Apollo,
illuminant rather as the revealer than as the bringer
of light? With large belief that the Éclaircissement,
the Aufklaerung (he had already found the name for
the thing) would indeed come, he had been in much
bewilderment whence and how. Here, he began to
see that it could be in no other way than by action
of informing thought upon the vast accumulated material
of which Germany was in possession: art, poetry,
fiction, an entire imaginative world, following reasonably
upon a deeper understanding of the past, of nature,
of one’s self an understanding of
all beside through the knowledge of one’s self.
To understand, would be the indispensable first step
towards the enlargement of the great past, of one’s
little present, by criticism, by imagination.
Then, the imprisoned souls of nature would speak as
of old. The Middle Age, in Germany, where the
past has had such generous reprisals, never far from
us, would reassert its mystic spell, for the better
understanding of our Raffaelle. The spirits of
distant Hellas would reawake in the men and women of
little German towns. Distant times, the most
alien thoughts, would come near together, as elements
in a great historic symphony. A kind of ardent,
new patriotism awoke in him, sensitive for the first
time at the words national poesy, national
art and literature, german philosophy. To
the resources of the past, of himself, of what was
possible for German mind, more and more his mind opens
as he goes on his way. A free, open space had
been determined, which something now to be created,
created by him, must occupy. “Only,”
he thought, “if I had coadjutors! If these
thoughts would awake in but one other mind?”
At Strasbourg, with its mountainous
goblin houses, nine stories high, grouped snugly,
in the midst of that inclement plain, like a great
stork’s nest around the romantic red steeple
of its cathedral, Duke Carl became fairly captive
to the Middle Age. Tarrying there week after
week he worked hard, but (without a ray of light from
others) in one long mistake, at the chronology and
history of the coloured windows. Antiquity’s
very self seemed expressed there, on the visionary
images of king or patriarch, in the deeply incised
marks of character, the hoary hair, the massive proportions,
telling of a length of years beyond what is lived
now. Surely, past ages, could one get at the
historic soul of them, were not dead but living, rich
in company, for the entertainment, the expansion,
of the present; and Duke Carl was still without suspicion
of the cynic afterthought that such historic soul
was but an arbitrary substitution, a generous loan
of one’s self.
The mystic soul of Nature laid hold
on him next, saying, “Come! understand, interpret
me!” He was awakened one morning by the jingle
of sledge-bells along the street beneath his windows.
Winter had descended betimes from the mountains:
the pale Rhine below the bridge of boats on the long
way to Kehl was swollen with ice, and for the first
time he realised that Switzerland was at hand.
On a sudden he was captive to the enthusiasm of the
mountains, and hastened along the valley of the Rhine
by Alt Breisach and Basle, unrepelled by
a thousand difficulties, to Swiss farmhouses and lonely
villages, solemn still, and untouched by strangers.
At Grindelwald, sleeping at last in the close neighbourhood
of the greater Alps, he had the sense of an overbrooding
presence, of some strange new companions around him.
Here one might yield one’s self to the unalterable
imaginative appeal of the elements in their highest
force and simplicity light, air, water,
earth. On very early spring days a mantle was
suddenly lifted; the Alps were an apex of natural
glory, towards which, in broadening spaces of light,
the whole of Europe sloped upwards. Through them,
on the right hand, as he journeyed on, were the doorways
to Italy, to Como or Venice, from yonder peak Italy’s
self was visible! as, on the left hand,
in the South-german towns, in a high-toned, artistic
fineness, in the dainty, flowered ironwork for instance,
the overflow of Italian genius was traceable.
These things presented themselves at last only to remind
him that, in a new intellectual hope, he was already
on his way home. Straight through life, straight
through nature and man, with one’s own self-knowledge
as a light thereon, not by way of the geographical
Italy or Greece, lay the road to the new Hellas, to
be realised now as the outcome of home-born German
genius. At times, in that early fine weather,
looking now not southwards, but towards Germany, he
seemed to trace the outspread of a faint, not wholly
natural, aurora over the dark northern country.
And it was in an actual sunrise that the news came
which finally put him on the directest road homewards.
One hardly dared breathe in the rapid uprise of all-embracing
light which seemed like the intellectual rising of
the Fatherland, when up the straggling path to his
high beech-grown summit (was one safe nowhere?) protesting
over the roughness of the way, came the too familiar
voices (ennui itself made audible) of certain high
functionaries of Rosenmold, come to claim their new
sovereign, close upon the runaway.
Bringing news of the old Duke’s
decease! With a real grief at his heart, he hastened
now over the ground which lay between him and the
bed of death, still trying, at quieter intervals, to
snatch profit by the way; peeping, at the most unlikely
hours, on the objects of his curiosity, waiting for
a glimpse of dawn through glowing church windows,
penetrating into old church treasuries by candle-light,
taxing the old courtiers to pant up, for “the
view,” to this or that conspicuous point in
the world of hilly woodland. From one such at
last, in spite of everything with pleasure to Carl,
old Rosenmold was visible the attic windows
of the Residence, the storks on the chimneys, the
green copper roofs baking in the long, dry German summer.
The homeliness of true old Germany! He too felt
it, and yearned towards his home.
And the “beggar-maid”
was there. Thoughts of her had haunted his mind
all the journey through, as he was aware, not unpleased,
graciously overflowing towards any creature he found
dependent upon him. The mere fact that she was
awaiting him, at his disposition, meekly, and as though
through his long absence she had never quitted the
spot on which he had said farewell, touched his fancy,
and on a sudden concentrated his wavering preference
into a practical decision. “King Cophetua”
would be hers. And his goodwill sunned her wild-grown
beauty into majesty, into a kind of queenly richness.
There was natural majesty in the heavy waves of golden
hair folded closely above the neck, built a little
massively; and she looked kind, beseeching also, capable
of sorrow. She was like clear sunny weather,
with bluebells and the green leaves, between rainy
days, and seemed to embody Die Ruh auf dem
Gipfel all the restful hours he had
spent of late in the wood-sides and on the hilltops.
One June day, on which she seemed to have withdrawn
into herself all the tokens of summer, brought decision
to our lover of artificial roses, who had cared so
little hitherto for the like of her. Grand-duke
perforce, he would make her his wife, and had already
re-assured her with lively mockery of his horrified
ministers. “Go straight to life!”
said his new poetic code; and here was the opportunity; here,
also, the real “adventure,” in comparison
of which his previous efforts that way seemed childish
theatricalities, fit only to cheat a little the profound
ennui of actual life. In a hundred stolen interviews
she taught the hitherto indifferent youth the art of
love.
Duke Carl had effected arrangements
for his marriage, secret, but complete and soon to
be made public. Long since he had cast complacent
eyes on a strange architectural relic, an old grange
or hunting-lodge on the heath, with he could hardly
have defined what charm of remoteness and old romance.
Popular belief amused itself with reports of the wizard
who inhabited or haunted the place, his fantastic
treasures, his immense age. His windows might
be seen glittering afar on stormy nights, with a blaze
of golden ornaments, said the more adventurous loiterer.
It was not because he was suspicious still, but in
a kind of wantonness of affection, and as if by way
of giving yet greater zest to the luxury of their
mutual trust that Duke Carl added to his announcement
of the purposed place and time of the event a pretended
test of the girl’s devotion. He tells her
the story of the aged wizard, meagre and wan, to whom
she must find her way alone for the purpose of asking
a question all-important to himself. The fierce
old man will try to escape with terrible threats, will
turn, or half turn, into repulsive animals. She
must cling the faster; at last the spell will be broken;
he will yield, he will become a youth once more, and
give the desired answer.
The girl, otherwise so self-denying,
and still modestly anxious for a private union, not
to shame his high position in the world, had wished
for one thing at least to be loved amid
the splendours habitual to him. Duke Carl sends
to the old lodge his choicest personal possessions.
For many days the public is aware of something on hand;
a few get delightful glimpses of the treasures on
their way to “the place on the heath.”
Was he preparing against contingencies, should the
great army, soon to pass through these parts, not
leave the country as innocently as might be desired?
The short grey day seemed a long one
to those who, for various reasons, were waiting anxiously
for the darkness; the court people fretful and on
their mettle, the townsfolk suspicious, Duke Carl full
of amorous longing. At her distant cottage beyond
the hills, Gretchen kept herself ready for the trial.
It was expected that certain great military officers
would arrive that night, commanders of a victorious
host making its way across Northern Germany, with
no great respect for the rights of neutral territory,
often dealing with life and property too rudely to
find the coveted treasure. It was but one episode
in a cruel war. Duke Carl did not wait for the
grandly illuminated supper prepared for their reception.
Events precipitated themselves. Those officers
came as practically victorious occupants, sheltering
themselves for the night in the luxurious rooms of
the great palace. The army was in fact in motion
close behind its leaders, who (Gretchen warm and happy
in the arms, not of the aged wizard, but of the youthful
lover) are discussing terms for the final absorption
of the duchy with those traitorous old councillors.
At their delicate supper Duke Carl amuses his companion
with caricature, amid cries of cheerful laughter, of
the sleepy courtiers entertaining their martial guests
in all their pedantic politeness, like people in some
farcical dream. A priest, and certain chosen
friends to witness the marriage, were to come ere nightfall
to the grange. The lovers heard, as they thought,
the sound of distant thunder. The hours passed
as they waited, and what came at last was not the
priest with his companions. Could they have been
detained by the storm? Duke Carl gently re-assures
the girl bids her believe in him, and wait.
But through the wind, grown to tempest, beyond the
sound of the violent thunder louder than
any possible thunder nearer and nearer
comes the storm of the victorious army, like some disturbance
of the earth itself, as they flee into the tumult,
out of the intolerable confinement and suspense, dead-set
upon them.
The Enlightening, the Aufklaerung,
according to the aspiration of Duke Carl, was effected
by other hands; Lessing and Herder, brilliant precursors
of the age of genius which centered in Goethe, coming
well within the natural limits of Carl’s lifetime.
As precursors Goethe gratefully recognised them, and
understood that there had been a thousand others,
looking forward to a new era in German literature with
the desire which is in some sort a “forecast
of capacity,” awakening each other to the permanent
reality of a poetic ideal in human life, slowly forming
that public consciousness to which Goethe actually
addressed himself. It is their aspirations I have
tried to embody in the portrait of Carl.
“A hard winter had covered the
Main with a firm footing of ice. The liveliest
social intercourse was quickened thereon. I was
unfailing from early morning onwards; and, being lightly
clad, found myself, when my mother drove up later
to look on, fairly frozen. My mother sat in the
carriage, quite stately in her furred cloak of red
velvet, fastened on the breast with thick gold cord
and tassels.
“‘Dear mother,’
I said, on the spur of the moment, ’give me your
furs, I am frozen.’
“She was equally ready.
In a moment I had on the cloak. Falling below
the knee, with its rich trimming of sables, and enriched
with gold, it became me excellently. So clad
I made my way up and down with a cheerful heart.”
That was Goethe, perhaps fifty years
later. His mother also related the incident to
Bettina Brentano; “There, skated my
son, like an arrow among the groups. Away he
went over the ice like a son of the gods. Anything
so beautiful is not to be seen now. I clapped
my hands for joy. Never shall I forget him as
he darted out from one arch of the bridge, and in
again under the other, the wind carrying the train
behind him as he flew.” In that amiable
figure I seem to see the fulfilment of the Resurgam
on Carl’s empty coffin the aspiring
soul of Carl himself, in freedom and effective, at
last.