Legends of the Rhine | Page 2

Wilhelm Ruland
of the Nahe. Kreuznach.= A mighty draught 62
The Foundation of Castle Sponheim 65
=Assmannshausen.= St. Clement's Chapel 69
=Castle Rheinstein.= The Wooing 72

=Castle Sooneck.= The Blind Archer 76
=The Ruins of Fürstenberg.= The Mother's Ghost 79
=Bacharach.= Burg Stahleck 83
=Kaub.= Castle Gutenfels 88
=Oberwesel.= The Seven Maidens 93
=St. Goar.= Lorelei 97
=Rheinfels.= St. George's Linden 103
=Sterrenberg and Liebenstein.= The Brothers 109
=Rhense.= The Emperor Wenzel 117
=Castle Lahneck.= The Templars of Lahneck 120
=Coblenz.= Riza 123
=Valley of the Moselle.= The Doctor's wine of Bernkastel 125
=Andernach.= Genovefa 128
=Hammerstein.= The old Knight and his Daughters 138
=Valley of the Ahr.= The Last Knight of Altenahr 142
The Minstrel of Neuenahr 145
=Eifel.= The Arrow at Prüm 152
=Aachen.= The Building of the Minster 154
The Ring of Fastrada 162
=Rolandseck.= Knight Roland 167

=Siebengebirge.= The Drachenfels 177
The Monk of Heisterbach 182
The Origin of the Seven Mountains 188
The Nightingale Valley at Honnef 190
=Godesberg.= The High Cross at Godesberg 192
=Bonn.= Lord Erich's Pledge 200
The Roman Ghosts 203
=Cologne.= Richmodis of Aducht 208
The Goblins 212
Jan and Griet 216
The Cathedral-Builder of Cologne 220
=Xanten.= Siegfried 231
=Cleve.= Lohengrin 237
=Zuydersea.= Stavoren 244

ST. GOTTHARD
The Petrified Alp
[Illustration: Aus dem Quellgebiet des Rheines--Near the Source of the
Rhine--Au pays du Rhin]
In the region where the Rhine has its source there towered in ancient
times a green Alp. This Alp belonged to an honest peasant, and along
with a neat little house in the valley below formed his only possession.

The man died suddenly and was deeply mourned by his wife and child.
Some days after an unexpected visitor was announced to the widow. He
was a man who had much pastureland up in that region, but for a long
time his one desire had been to possess the Alp of his neighbour now
deceased, as by it his property would be rounded off to his satisfaction.
Quickly making his resolution he declared to the dismayed woman that
the Alp belonged to him: her husband had secretly pledged it to him in
return for a loan, after the bad harvest of the previous year. When the
widow angrily accused him of being a liar the man produced a
promissory note, spread it out, and with a hard laugh showed her his
statement was confirmed in black and white. The distressed woman
burst into tears and declared it was impossible that her late husband
should have made a secret transaction of such a nature. The Alp was
the sole inheritance of their son, and never would she willingly
surrender it.
"I will pay you compensation for the renunciation of your claim,
although nothing obliges me to do so," declared the visitor with
apparent compassion, in the meantime producing his purse.
The weeping woman motioned to him to put back his gold and told him
to go, which he did.
Three days later the widow was summoned before the judge. There the
neighbour produced his document and repeated his demand for the
possession of the disputed Alp.
The judge, who had been shamefully bribed, declared the document
valid and awarded the Alp to the pursuer. The broken-hearted widow
staggered home.
The new possessor of the Alp on the other hand hastened up to the
mountains at full gallop. The man could no longer master his
impatience to see for the first time as his legally recognised property
the pastureland he had acquired by deceit.
There, for three days a storm had raged uninterruptedly. As quickly as

the soaked ways would permit he ascended to the high country.
Having arrived he stared around with horrified eyes, and fell in a swoon
to the earth, overcome with consternation.
Upon the soft green Alp an unseen hand had rolled a mountain of ice.
Of the possession which the unjust judge had assigned to him nothing
was now to be seen. His own pastures too which adjoined were covered
with snow and ice, whilst the meadows of the other Alpsmen below,
lay spread out in the morning light like a velvet carpet.
Towards noon a broken man rode home into the valley cursing himself
and the wicked magistrate who had consented to such an evil
transaction.
The people there however said to each other: "The Fronfasten Mütterli
(the little mother of the Emberweeks) Frau Sälga passed over our valley
last night with her train of maidens. Over the house of that greedy rich
man the ghostly company stopped, and by that it is fixed which one
must die in the course of the year."
And so it happened. Up there where the youthful Rhine rushes down
through deep rocky chasms the petrified Alp stands to this day, a silent
warning from by-gone days.

THUSIS ON THE HINTER
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