Oberwesel
The
Seven Maidens
The scattered ruins of an old knight's tower are still
to be seen on one of the heights near Oberwesel. The castle was called
Schönberg, after the seven virgins who once lived there, and
whose beauty
was renowned throughout all the Rhine countries.
Their father had died early, some say of grief,
because
Heaven had denied him a son, and an elderly aunt had striven in vain to
guide
the seven wild sisters; but her influence had not been sufficiently
strong
to lead them in the right way. After the death of this relative the
seven
beautiful maidens were left to themselves, and now their longing after
liberty
and the pleasures of the world broke out even stronger than before.
Many a tale was told about them, how they used to
ride
out hunting and hawking, how many a magnificent banquet was given by
them,
and how their beauty, their riches, and the gay and joyous life led by
them
attracted many knights from near and far; how many a stately noble came
to
their castle to woo one of the sisters, and how these maidens at first
ensnared
and enchanted him with a thousand attractive charms, only in the end to
reject
the enamoured suitor with scorn and mockery.
Ashamed and very wrathful many a great knight had left the
castle, and with indignation and disdain had blotted out of his memory
the
names of these bewitching sirens who at first had listened with
deceitful
modesty to his honest wooing, only afterwards to declare with scornful
laughter
that their liberty was so dear to them, that they would not give it up
for
the sake of any man.
Alas! there were always youths to be found who put
no
faith in such speeches and, trusting to their great names and peculiar
merits,
sought their happiness among these maidens. But all the trials ended in
the
same mournful manner; no suitor succeeded in winning the heart !of
these
seductive beings. Thus they continued their dangerous and contemptible
life
for some years.
Once again there was a great banquet and feasting
in
the hails of the castle. A circle of knightly figures sat round the
brilliant
board among the seven sisters, who were quite conscious of their
charms,
one rivaling the other in gaiety and liveliness.
The joyous scene was disturbed for a short time by
two
knights who were disputing about one of the sisters, and had angered
each
other by their growing jealousy.
The scene excited general attention and was looked on at
first
as a most amusing one, but when the youths were about to draw their
swords,
it was thought necessary to separate them.
Seizing this opportunity one of the other knights
proposed,
that to guard against further discord, the castle maidens should be
urged
to make a final decision, so that each suitor
– they all recognised
one
another
as such
– might know what he
had to expect.
The proposal met with general applause, only the
sisters
showed discontentment, declaring they could not agree to such a
presumptuous
plan. However the wooers tried every imaginable means of persuading
them,
and at last one of the sisters wavered, a second followed her example,
and
the remaining ones, after whispering to each other for some time,
declared
with laughing countenances that they would decide the fate of their
suitors
the next day.
The expected hour arrived, and the knights in
great suspense
assembled in the large hall. Every eye was riveted on the door through
which
these Graces should enter, bringing a sweet surprise to some or a
bitter
disappointment to others.
The folding-doors were suddenly thrown open, and
an attendant
announced that the mistresses of the castle were waiting to receive the
knights
in the garden near the river.
The numerous suitors all hurried out. To their
great
astonishment they saw the fair ones all seated in a boat on the Rhine.
With
a peculiar smile they beckoned the knights to approach, and the eldest
sister,
standing up in her seat, made the following speech.
"You may all throw your hopes to the winds, for
not one
of us would dream of falling in love with you, much less of marrying
you.
Our liberty is much too precious to us, and we shall not sacrifice it
for
any man. We are going to sail down to Cologne to the property of a
relation,
and there we shall disappoint other suitors, just as we have misled
you,
my noble lords. Good-bye, good-bye!"
The scornful speech was accompanied by a scoffing
laugh
which was re-echoed by the other sisters, and the boat set sail.
The rejected suitors stood speechless with shame
and
anger.
Suddenly a terrible storm arose, the boat was
agitated
violently, and the laughter of the seven sisters was turned to cries
for
help. But the roaring of the waves drowned their voices, and the
billows
rushed over the boat, burying it and the seven sisters in the depths
below.
Just on the spot where these stony-hearted maidens
met
their deaths, seven pointed rocks appeared above the surface of the
water,
which up to the present day are still to be seen, a salutary warning to
all
the young maidens of the country.
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