Rheinfels
St.
George's Linden
The ruins of Castle Rheinfels, which stand above
the
pretty little town of St. Goar, are the most extensive of their kind on
the
Rhine. The castle was erected in the middle of the 13th century by
Count
Dietherr, a nobleman belonging to the famous Rhenish family of
Katzenelnbogen.
It was a strongly fortified burg, and within ten years of its
completion
the mighty ramparts witnessed several bloody encounters. Twenty-six
Rhenish
cities once combined to carry the invulnerable fortress, but though
some
4000 lives were sacrificed the army retreated baffled. For centuries
after
this, the banner of the Hessian Landgraf waved from its battlements,
none
daring to attack it. Then the fanatic Gallic forces of the Revolution
entered
the Rhineland, and laid the magnificent castle in ruins.
There is a legend associated with Rheinfels which
dates
from that age of chivalry when noble knights and their squires trod its
courts,
and this legend seems touched with the sadness of the history of the
castle
itself. The Count of Rheinfels was the proud father of a lovely
daughter,
and among her numerous wooers it was George Brömser of
Rüdesheim
who had won the maiden's heart. No one was more incensed at this than
the
knight of Berg. This knight belonged indeed to a race said to have been
descended
from an archbishop of Cologne, but his disposition was evil, and his
covetousness
and avarice made him wish to increase what earthly possessions he had.
But
the lord of Rheinfels was shrewd enough and hesitated before entrusting
his
pretty daughter and her large dowry to such a man. As already remarked
this
entirely agreed with the maiden's desire. She was really deeply in love
with
the chivalrous young knight of Rüdesheim, but shrank, almost
with aversion,
from the impetuous wooing of the harsh and selfish knight of Berg.
Some time after the betrothal of the lovers the
date
of the marriage was fixed. Before the marriage had been celebrated
however
young Brömser appeared at Rüdesheim in the early dawn
on his steaming
war-horse, having ridden during the night from Rüdesheim to
bring the
following sad intelligence to his beloved. The Emperor Albrecht had
summoned
the nobles to do battle against the Swiss confederates, who had
renounced
their allegiance, driven the imperial representatives from their land,
and
finally declared war against their overlord. The knights of the
Rhineland
were called upon to suppress the flames of rebellion. On receiving the
pressing
call of the Emperor, Brömser did not hesitate for a moment but
resolved
to obey his feudal superior.
At first the young bride wept, but when her lover comforted
her with words of endearment, and her father praised the soldierly
resolution
of the young man, the maiden calmly submitted to the will of God.
Before
the young knight rode off he took a young linden-tree which he had
pulled
up in a grove, and having removed the soil with his sword, he planted
the
sapling in front of the castle. Then he spoke as follows to his bride.
"Tend
this budding linden which I have planted here to the honour of my
patron
saint. You shall keep troth with me so long as it flourishes, but if it
fade
(and may St. George in his grace prevent it) then you may forget me,
for
I shall be dead." The weeping bride threw herself in her lover's arms,
and
while he enfolded her gently with his right, with his left he raised
his
sword, and showed her .engraved upon it in ancient letters, for daily
repetition,
the words: "Preserve O everlasting God, the body here, the soul
hereafter.
Help, knight St. George." Then, after receiving many kind wishes from
his
sorrowing friends, the young soldier rode in the morning mist down
through
the woods to join the imperial forces.
Several months passed. Then the melancholy news
got abroad
in the German land. that something disastrous had happened in the
campaign
against the Swiss peasants. At last came a trustworthy report to the
effect
that a bloody defeat had overtaken the proud army of Albrecht. It was
at
Morgarten, where the noble hero called Arnold of Winkelried had opened
up
to his countrymen a pathway to freedom over his spear-pierced body.
Many
counts and barons found on that day a grave in the land of the Swiss,
and
sounds of mourning were to be heard in many a German castle. But to
Castle
Rheinfels no traveller brought any tidings either of weal or woe, and
we
can imagine with what sickness of heart the maiden waited, and how her
hope
faded as the days and weeks slipped past. It was so long since the
ill-fated
army had set out against the Forest Cantons, and now the thoughts of
men
were turned in other directions, while the Swiss peasants were quietly
allowed
to reap the fruits of their bravery. The most sanguine found it
difficult
to cheer the drooping maiden of Castle Rheinfels.
Then one day her former wooer, the mean avaricious
Dietrich
of Berg, presented himself. It was certain that George Brömser
must
be dead, and he was come again to sue for the hand of so desirable a
young
lady. The dejected maiden informed her eager wooer that she had
plighted
her troth to her absent lover beside the linden-tree flourishing in
front
of the castle. Only when this tree, consecrated to St. George, should
fade
would she be released from her promise. The knight of Berg departed in
anger,
and immediately betook himself to a wood and there selected a decayed
linden,
as similar as possible to the green one growing before Castle
Rheinfels.
In the night he cautiously approached the castle, tore up the linden,
flung
it with a curse into the Rhine, and then planted in its place the
withered
sapling. Next morning, a morning bright with the promise of spring, the
fair
daughter of Rheinfels stepped out on the lawn. A cry of pain escaped
her
lips when she perceived the faded tree. The days and weeks that
followed
were spent in deep grief. After a suitable time had elapsed, the knight
of
Berg again put in an appearance at Rheinfels, mightily pleased with
himself.
Again he sought the hand of the maiden now released from her solemn
promise.
Sadly, but firmly however she told her importunate wooer that she would
keep
troth with her lover in death as in life. Then the wrath of the
despised
knight drove him to commit a horrible deed. In his savage anger he drew
his
sword and buried it in the maiden's breast. Fleeing from the scene of
his
dreadful crime he was suddenly seized with remorse, and like Our Lord's
avaricious disciple, he went and hanged himself. Deep was the sorrow in
Castle
Rheinfels over the sacrifice of this innocent young bride, who had kept
her
troth so nobly. But grief and tears could not replace the lost one. In
the
midst of the mourning a stranger was announced. He came from the Swiss
land.
After the battle of Morgarten a brave Swiss had
found
George Brömser with broken limbs and many bleeding wounds
amongst a
heap of slain. In a peasant's hut the wounded man lay long in pain and
weakness.
His broken limbs required long and patient attention. Finally, after
much
suffering, George Brömser, the last of all three campaigners
rode back
to the Rhineland, with his lover's name on his lips and her image in
his
heart.
With uncovered head the lord of Rheinfels showed
the
young man the grave of his beloved, and there the two men embraced each
other
long and silently. The young soldier pulled up the faded linden-tree
and
hurled it into the Rhine, while on the newly-made grave he planted
white
lilies. George Brömser did not a second time fall in love, but
remained
true to his chosen bride to the end of his days. We are told that in
the
company of knightly minstrels he sought to forget his great sorrow, and
that
later he composed many pretty songs. One of them has survived the
centuries,
and was recently discovered, along with the melody, in an old
manuscript.
It begins:
"A
linden stands in yonder vale,
Ah God! what does it there?"
Click
to go to the next
section of
the Legends of the Rhine
|