The Minstrel of
Neuenahr
I
He was called Ronald, this tall handsome man with
blue
eyes and fair hair; he had a noble bearing and was a master of song.
The knight at the Castle of Neuenahr had made a
great
feast, and Ronald was sitting on the drawbridge playing his harp and
singing.
The guests stopped their noisy conversation within doors, and knights
as
well as noble ladies listened breathless to the unseen singer. The
proud
lord of the castle bade his page bring the traveller in. Thus the tall
handsome
man, the blue-eyed, fair-haired stranger with the noble bearing,
appeared
before the high company. The knights looked at him with wonder, and
many
a handsome lady regarded him with admiration covertly.
Among the high company there was a beautiful young
girl,
the daughter of the knight, whose birthday was being celebrated. The
lord
of the castle rose from his richly carved stool, and made a sign to the
singer
who was bowing graciously to the knights and ladies and lower still to
the
master of the castle.
"Give us a song, musician, in honour of our child
who
is seventeen years old to-day."
The musician fixed his glance in silent admiration
on
the maiden. She dropped her eyes, and a lovely blush covered her
cheeks.
He seized his harp, and after a few chords, began to sing a song of
homage.
Sweetly sounded the music, and even sweeter the flattering words. The
maiden
flushed a deeper crimson and cast down her eyes. Once when the harper
in
his song compared her to a star lighting a wanderer's path, she glanced
up,
and their eyes met; but hers sank quickly again. She seemed to waken
out
of a dream when the song ended amid loud applause. She saw her father
lifting
up a massive goblet and handing it to the singer, saw how the latter
raised
it first to her, afterwards to her father and his guests, and then put
it
to his own lips. The maiden felt she was no longer mistress of her
heart
which was beating as it had never done before.
II.
"You might teach my Rothtraut to play
the harp,"
cried the proud lord of the castle, who was in a very lively humour,
having
partaken freely of wine. She heard it as in a dream, and the musician
bowed,
murmuring that he was not worthy to receive so signal an honour.
He remained however at the castle. Lovely
Rothtraut felt
afraid in her heart like a trembling child crossing a bridge leading to
flowery
meadows; she had no mother in whom she could confide those fears for
which
she could find no words. She therefore yielded to her father's desire,
wishing
to amuse him during the long, lonely evenings by playing and singing.
Singing
came naturally to her, for a nightingale seemed to slumber in her
bosom,
but she found more difficulty with the harp. Her slender fingers drew
many
a discordant sound from the strings, and often her father, comfortably
seated
in his armchair, laughed heartily at her, which made the maiden blush
with
shame. Her large eyes would wander from the harp to the musician's
face;
but her confusion only became worse when her eyes timidly met his. He
was
very patient with all her imperfect efforts, never blaming her but on
the
contrary praising all her modest attempts beyond their merits. Then he
would
sing a song of his own and play some deep chords which seemed to thrill
the
air. The knight would listen entranced, and the maiden felt love's
blissful
pain in her heart. She did not know what it was, or how he had long
since
sung himself into her soul, and her tender heart trembled at love's
first
revelation. The passion possessed her more and more; it spread its
power
over these two hearts, and soon in the quiet garden of the castle,
Ronald
clasped the daughter of the proud knight to his heart.
III.
Love's first rapture is often followed by sorrow
however,
and beautiful Rothtraut had yet to experience it.
It once happened that the knight surprised his child in the
musician's arms. His anger knew no bounds, and like a beast of prey he
rushed
at the singer, when his daughter, suddenly become a woman, placed
herself
bravely between her father and her lover. Her confession went to his
heart
like a dagger, for with trembling lips and glowing cheeks, the maiden
acknowledged the secret of her love.
Pale but firm the singer stood before the knight.
"I am only a wanderer but not a dishonourable one.
Do
not destroy with a rough hand the flower which God has planted in our
hearts,
but give me time. I will set out on my journey and will take up arms
for
my beloved. And when I come back as a nobleman, you will give me your
daughter
who loves me. Either I shall return as a knight, or you will never see
me
again."
The lord of the castle looked at him sternly,
while his
daughter stood weeping, holding Ronald's hand. "Good-bye, maiden. Do
not
forget me, Rothtraut!" He was gone, and a wailing cry burst from the
lips
of the unhappy girl.
IV.
To atone for many a wrong against Pope and Church,
and
also to fulfill a solemn vow, the Emperor Barbarossa started on a
crusade
in his old age. Many knights and heroes joined him. and his great army
marched
through several countries until they came to the Levant. Then they
journeyed
on to Syria where the great hero's career ,ended. Barbarossa was
drowned,
and the eyes of his followers turned to Henry, his son, as their
leader.
The latter, who became emperor under the name of Henry VI. was a very
capable
general; he was also a lover of music, and is said to have composed
many
a melody which remains with us to the present day.
Many supposed that it was not the royal minstrel
who
composed the songs, but that they came from the hand of Ronald who was
now
as skilled with his sword as with his harp, and who had become a great
favourite
of the emperor. He was a powerful warrior, and had already overthrown
many
a Saracen. Once when the crusaders had gained a glorious victory, he
composed
a song in honour of it, and sang it himself on his harp. The song went
the
round of the camp, and the singer became a great friend of the emperor.
But
even such favour did not drive the shadow from Ronald's soul, and often
when
he was singing one .of his most beautiful songs to Henry, he would
suddenly
break off and rush out of the tent in great grief. One day the emperor
found
out what he had long guessed, and made Ronald confess his story to him.
Some days afterwards the crusaders began the
storming
of Acre, the impregnable fortress of the Saracens. Ronald was fighting
by
Henry's side. A Saracen dashed his falchion at the king's head, but
Ronald
with a mighty blow clove the infidel's skull in two. In the evening of
the
same day Henry called all his warriors together, and dubbed the brave
champion
knight with his own hand. Ronald of Harfenstein was to be his name, and
a
lyre lying on a falchion and a sword, were to be his arms. The emperor
promised
to build him a castle on the borders of the Rhine, which was to be
called
Harfeneck.
Plague
broke out in the camp, and many a gallant crusader fell victim to
it. Among them was the emperor himself, whose death caused unspeakable
grief
to Ronald.
V.
One day a weary crusader was seen riding along the
banks
of the Rhine. Wherever he passed, the people asked him if it were true
that
Barbarossa was not drowned in the Holy Land, but was living in the
Kyffhäuser Mountain, and would soon come back to his own
neglected kingdom.
The crusader barely answered their questions, but urged on his tired
steed
along the Rhine. At last the silvery waters of the Ahr appeared before
him,
and he saw the gables of the castle. The rider joyously spurred on his
horse,
and rode up through the forest to the fortress where once he had sat on
the
drawbridge as a poor traveller.
The late guest was ushered up to the lord of the
castle.
The knight, now a bent old man, rose from a
melancholy
reverie to greet the unknown stranger.
"I am Ronald, and have become a knight through the
grace
of the Emperor Henry in the camp at Acre, and how I have come to win
your
daughter Rothtraut."
"Win her from death, for it robbed me of her two
months
ago," said the proud lord of the castle, turning his head aside in deep
grief.
Then a despairing groan thrilled through the chamber. Harsh words
passed
between those two, one a man in his disconsolate sorrow, the other a
repentant
father.
Ronald strode off to the lonely corner of the
garden,
and the newly dug up earth showed him the place where Rothtraut lay.
There
he remained late into the night, till darkness had surrounded him and
black
night had settled on his soul. Then he turned and went away, never to
come
back again.
In the East whence the crusaders had now returned,
.everyone
talked of the heroic deeds accomplished by Richard the Lion-hearted.
The
Saracens well knew the fearless leader and the German knight who fought
at
his side. Richard valued his bravery, even though he was still a young
knight.
He meant to make him one of his vassals when he returned to his own
country.
But his desire was never fulfilled, for the thrust of a hostile lance
which
he had so often escaped, pierced the knight's heart. So the minstrel of
Neuenahr
found a grave in the Holy Land; the race of Harfenstein became extinct
with
the first of the line, and the castle was never built.
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