<p><SPAN name="Chapter3" id="Chapter3"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER 3 </h3>
<p>The rays of the sun shining brightly into the room awoke Sintram, and
raising himself up, he looked angrily at the chaplain, and said, "So there
is a priest in the castle! And yet that accursed dream continues to
torment me even in his very presence. Pretty priest he must be!"</p>
<p>"My child," answered the chaplain in the mildest tone, "I have prayed for
thee most fervently, and I shall never cease doing so—but God alone
is Almighty."</p>
<p>"You speak very boldly to the son of the knight Biorn," cried Sintram.
"'My child!' If those horrible dreams had not been again haunting me, you
would make me laugh heartily."</p>
<p>"Young Lord Sintram," said the chaplain, "I am by no means surprised that
you do not know me again; for in truth, neither do I know you again." And
his eyes filled with tears as he spoke.</p>
<p>The good Rolf looked sorrowfully in the boy's face, saying, "Ah, my dear
young master, you are so much better than you would make people believe.
Why do you that? Your memory is so good, that you must surely recollect
your kind old friend the chaplain, who used formerly to be constantly at
the castle, and to bring you so many gifts— bright pictures of
saints, and beautiful songs?"</p>
<p>"I know all that very well," replied Sintram thoughtfully. "My sainted
mother was alive in those days."</p>
<p>"Our gracious lady is still living, God be praised," said the good Rolf.</p>
<p>"But she does not live for us, poor sick creatures that we are!" cried
Sintram. "And why will you not call her sainted? Surely she knows nothing
about my dreams?"</p>
<p>"Yes, she does know of them," said the chaplain; "and she prays to God for
you. But take heed, and restrain that wild, haughty temper of yours. It
might, indeed, come to pass that she would know nothing about your dreams,
and that would be if your soul were separated from your body; and then the
holy angels also would cease to know anything of you."</p>
<p>Sintram fell back on his bed as if thunderstruck; and Rolf said, with a
gentle sigh, "You should not speak so severely to my poor sick child,
reverend sir."</p>
<p>The boy sat up, and with tearful eyes he turned caressingly towards the
chaplain: "Let him do as he pleases, you good, tender-hearted Rolf; he
knows very well what he is about. Would you reprove him if I were slipping
down a snow-cleft, and he caught me up roughly by the hair of my head?"</p>
<p>The priest looked tenderly at him, and would have spoken his holy
thoughts, when Sintram suddenly sprang off the bed and asked after his
father. As soon as he heard of the knight's departure, he would not remain
another hour in the castle; and put aside the fears of the chaplain and
the old esquire, lest a rapid journey should injure his hardly restored
health, by saying to them, "Believe me, reverend sir, and dear old Rolf,
if I were not subject to these hideous dreams, there would not be a bolder
youth in the whole world; and even as it is, I am not so far behind the
very best. Besides, till another year has passed, my dreams are at an
end."</p>
<p>On his somewhat imperious sign Rolf brought out the horses. The boy threw
himself boldly into the saddle, and taking a courteous leave of the
chaplain, he dashed along the frozen valley that lay between the snow-clad
mountains. He had not ridden far, in company with his old attendant, when
he heard a strange indistinct sound proceeding from a neighbouring cleft
in the rock; it was partly like the clapper of a small mill, but mingled
with that were hollow groans and other tones of distress. Thither they
turned their horses, and a wonderful sight showed itself to them.</p>
<p>A tall man, deadly pale, in a pilgrim's garb, was striving with violent
though unsuccessful efforts, to work his way out of the snow and to climb
up the mountain; and thereby a quantity of bones, which were hanging
loosely all about his garments, rattled one against the other, and caused
the mysterious sound already mentioned. Rolf, much terrified, crossed
himself, while the bold Sintram called out to the stranger, "What art thou
doing there? Give an account of thy solitary labours."</p>
<p>"I live in death," replied that other one with a fearful grin.</p>
<p>"Whose are those bones on thy clothes?"</p>
<p>"They are relics, young sir."</p>
<p>"Art thou a pilgrim?"</p>
<p>"Restless, quietless, I wander up and down."</p>
<p>"Thou must not perish here in the snow before my eyes."</p>
<p>"That I will not."</p>
<p>"Thou must come up and sit on my horse."</p>
<p>"That I will." And all at once he started up out of the snow with
surprising strength and agility, and sat on the horse behind Sintram,
clasping him tight in his long arms. The horse, startled by the rattling
of the bones, and as if seized with madness, rushed away through the most
trackless passes. The boy soon found himself alone with his strange
companion; for Rolf, breathless with fear, spurred on his horse in vain,
and remained far behind them. From a snowy precipice the horse slid,
without falling, into a narrow gorge, somewhat indeed exhausted, yet
continuing to snort and foam as before, and still unmastered by the boy.
Yet his headlong course being now changed into a rough irregular trot,
Sintram was able to breathe more freely, and to begin the following
discourse with his unknown companion.</p>
<p>"Draw thy garment closer around thee, thou pale man, so the bones will not
rattle, and I shall be able to curb my horse."</p>
<p>"It would be of no avail, boy; it would be of no avail. The bones must
rattle."</p>
<p>"Do not clasp me so tight with thy long arms, they are so cold."</p>
<p>"It cannot be helped, boy; it cannot be helped. Be content. For my long
cold arms are not pressing yet on thy heart."</p>
<p>"Do not breathe on me so with thy icy breath. All my strength is
departing."</p>
<p>"I must breathe, boy; I must breathe. But do not complain. I am not
blowing thee away."</p>
<p>The strange dialogue here came to an end; for to Sintram's surprise he
found himself on an open plain, over which the sun was shining brightly,
and at no great distance before him he saw his father's castle. While he
was thinking whether he might invite the unearthly pilgrim to rest there,
this one put an end to his doubts by throwing himself suddenly off the
horse, whose wild course was checked by the shock. Raising his forefinger,
he said to the boy, "I know old Biorn of the Fiery Eyes well; perhaps but
too well. Commend me to him. It will not need to tell him my name; he will
recognize me at the description." So saying, the ghastly stranger turned
aside into a thick fir-wood, and disappeared rattling amongst the tangled
branches.</p>
<p>Slowly and thoughtfully Sintram rode on towards his father's castle, his
horse now again quiet and altogether exhausted. He scarcely knew how much
he ought to relate of his wonderful journey, and he also felt oppressed
with anxiety for the good Rolf, who had remained so far behind. He found
himself at the castle-gate sooner than he had expected; the drawbridge was
lowered, the doors were thrown open; an attendant led the youth into the
great hall, where Biorn was sitting all alone at a huge table, with many
flagons and glasses before him, and suits of armour ranged on either side
of him. It was his daily custom, by way of company, to have the armour of
his ancestors, with closed visors, placed all round the table at which he
sat. The father and son began conversing as follows:</p>
<p>"Where is Rolf?"</p>
<p>"I do not know, father; he left me in the mountains."</p>
<p>"I will have Rolf shot if he cannot take better care than that of my only
child."</p>
<p>"Then, father, you will have your only child shot at the same time, for
without Rolf I cannot live; and if even one single dart is aimed at him, I
will be there to receive it, and to shield his true and faithful heart."</p>
<p>"So!—Then Rolf shall not be shot, but he shall be driven from the
castle."</p>
<p>"In that case, father, you will see me go away also; and I will give
myself up to serve him in forests, in mountains, in caves."</p>
<p>"So!—Well, then, Rolf must remain here."</p>
<p>"That is just what I think, father."</p>
<p>"Were you riding quite alone?"</p>
<p>"No, father; but with a strange pilgrim. He said that he knew you very
well—perhaps too well." And thereupon Sintram began to relate and to
describe all that had passed with the pale man.</p>
<p>"I know him also very well," said Biorn. "He is half crazed and half wise,
as we sometimes are astonished at seeing that people can be. But do thou,
my boy, go to rest after thy wild journey. I give you my word that Rolf
shall be kindly received if he arrive here; and that if he do not come
soon, he shall be sought for in the mountains."</p>
<p>"I trust to your word, father," said Sintram, half humble, half proud; and
he did after the command of the grim lord of the castle.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Chapter4" id="Chapter4"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER 4 </h3>
<p>Towards evening Sintram awoke. He saw the good Rolf sitting at his
bedside, and looked up in the old man's kind face with a smile of
unusually innocent brightness. But soon again his dark brows were knit,
and he asked, "How did my father receive you, Rolf? Did he say a harsh
word to you?"</p>
<p>"No, my dear young lord, he did not; indeed he did not speak to me at all.
At first he looked very wrathful; but he checked himself, and ordered a
servant to bring me food and wine to refresh me, and afterwards to take me
to your room."</p>
<p>"He might have kept his word better. But he is my father, and I must not
judge him too hardly. I will now go down to the evening meal." So saying,
he sprang up and threw on his furred mantle.</p>
<p>But Rolf stopped him, and said, entreatingly: "My dear young master, you
would do better to take your meal to-day alone here in your own apartment;
for there is a guest with your father, in whose company I should be very
sorry to see you. If you will remain here, I will entertain you with
pleasant tales and songs."</p>
<p>"There is nothing in the world which I should like better, dear Rolf,"
answered Sintram; "but it does not befit me to shun any man. Tell me, whom
should I find with my father?"</p>
<p>"Alas!" said the old man, "you have already found him in the mountain.
Formerly, when I used to ride about the country with Biorn, we often met
with him, but I was forbidden to tell you anything about him; and this is
the first time that he has ever come to the castle."</p>
<p>"The crazy pilgrim!" replied Sintram; and he stood awhile in deep thought,
as if considering the matter. At last, rousing himself, he said, "Dear old
friend, I would most willingly stay here this evening all alone with you
and your stories and songs, and all the pilgrims in the world should not
entice me from this quiet room. But one thing must be considered. I feel a
kind of dread of that pale, tall man; and by such fears no knight's son
can ever suffer himself to be overcome. So be not angry, dear Rolf, if I
determine to go and look that strange palmer in the face." And he shut the
door of the chamber behind him, and with firm and echoing steps proceeded
to the hall.</p>
<p>The pilgrim and the knight were sitting opposite to each other at the
great table, on which many lights were burning; and it was fearful,
amongst all the lifeless armour, to see those two tall grim men move, and
eat, and drink.</p>
<p>As the pilgrim looked up on the boy's entrance, Biorn said: "You know him
already: he is my only child, and fellow-traveller this morning."</p>
<p>The palmer fixed an earnest look on Sintram, and answered, shaking his
head, "I know not what you mean."</p>
<p>Then the boy burst forth, impatiently, "It must be confessed that you deal
very unfairly by us! You say that you know my father but too much, and now
it seems that you know me altogether too little. Look me in the face: who
allowed you to ride on his horse, and in return had his good steed driven
almost wild? Speak, if you can!"</p>
<p>Biorn smiled, shaking his head, but well pleased, as was his wont, with
his son's wild behaviour; while the pilgrim shuddered as if terrified and
overcome by some fearful irresistible power. At length, with a trembling
voice, he said these words: "Yes, yes, my dear young lord, you are surely
quite right; you are perfectly right in everything which you may please to
assert."</p>
<p>Then the lord of the castle laughed aloud, and said: "Why, thou strange
pilgrim, what is become of all thy wonderfully fine speeches and warnings
now? Has the boy all at once struck thee dumb and powerless? Beware, thou
prophet-messenger, beware!"</p>
<p>But the palmer cast a fearful look on Biorn, which seemed to quench the
light of his fiery eyes, and said solemnly, in a thundering voice,
"Between me and thee, old man, the case stands quite otherwise. We have
nothing to reproach each other with. And now suffer me to sing a song to
you on the lute." He stretched out his hand, and took down from the wall a
forgotten and half-strung lute, which was hanging there; and, with
surprising skill and rapidity, having put it in a state fit for use, he
struck some chords, and raised this song to the low melancholy tones of
the instrument:</p>
<p>"The flow'ret was mine own, mine own,<br/> But I have lost its fragrance
rare,<br/> And knightly name and freedom fair,<br/> Through sin, through
sin alone.</p>
<p>The flow'ret was thine own, thine own,<br/> Why cast away what thou didst
win?<br/> Thou knight no more, but slave of sin,<br/> Thou'rt fearfully
alone!"</p>
<p>"Have a care!" shouted he at the close in a pealing voice, as he pulled
the strings so mightily that they all broke with a clanging wail, and a
cloud of dust rose from the old lute, which spread round him like a mist.</p>
<p>Sintram had been watching him narrowly whilst he was singing, and more and
more did he feel convinced that it was impossible that this man and his
fellow-traveller of the morning could be one and the same. Nay, the doubt
rose to certainty, when the stranger again looked round at him with the
same timid, anxious air, and with many excuses and low reverences hung the
lute in its old place, and then ran out of the hall as if bewildered with
terror, in strange contrast with the proud and stately bearing which he
had shown to Biorn.</p>
<p>The eyes of the boy were now directed to his father, and he saw that he
had sunk back senseless in his seat, as if struck by a blow. Sintram's
cries called Rolf and other attendants into the hall; and only by great
labour did their united efforts awake the lord of the castle. His looks
were still wild and disordered; but he allowed himself to be taken to
rest, quiet and yielding.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Chapter5" id="Chapter5"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER 5 </h3>
<p>An illness followed this sudden attack; and during the course of it the
stout old knight, in the midst of his delirious ravings, did not cease to
affirm confidently that he must and should recover. He laughed proudly
when his fever-fits came on, and rebuked them for daring to attack him so
needlessly. Then he murmured to himself, "That was not the right one yet;
there must still be another one out in the cold mountains."</p>
<p>Always at such words Sintram involuntarily shuddered; they seemed to
strengthen his notion that he who had ridden with him, and he who had sat
at table in the castle, were two quite distinct persons; and he knew not
why, but this thought was inexpressibly awful to him. Biorn recovered, and
appeared to have entirely forgotten his adventure with the palmer. He
hunted in the mountains; he carried on his usual wild warfare with his
neighbours; and Sintram, as he grew up, became his almost constant
companion; whereby each year a fearful strength of body and spirit was
unfolded in the youth. Every one trembled at the sight of his sharp pallid
features, his dark rolling eyes, his tall, muscular, and somewhat lean
form; and yet no one hated him—not even those whom he distressed or
injured in his wildest humours. This might arise in part out of regard to
old Rolf, who seldom left him for long, and who always held a softening
influence over him; but also many of those who had known the Lady Verena
while she still lived in the world affirmed that a faint reflection of her
heavenly expression floated over the very unlike features of her son, and
that by this their hearts were won.</p>
<p>Once, just at the beginning of spring, Biorn and his son were hunting in
the neighbourhood of the sea-coast, over a tract of country which did not
belong to them; drawn thither less by the love of sport than by the wish
of bidding defiance to a chieftain whom they detested, and thus exciting a
feud. At that season of the year, when his winter dreams had just passed
off, Sintram was always unusually fierce and disposed for warlike
adventures. And this day he was enraged at the chieftain for not coming in
arms from his castle to hinder their hunting; and he cursed, in the
wildest words, his tame patience and love of peace. Just then one of his
wild young companions rushed towards him, shouting joyfully: "Be content
my dear young lord! I will wager that all is coming about as we and you
wish; for as I was pursuing a wounded deer down to the sea-shore, I saw a
sail and a vessel filled with armed men making for the shore. Doubtless
your enemy purposes to fall upon you from the coast."</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/sintram5.jpg" alt="sintram5" width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<p>Joyfully and secretly Sintram called all his followers together, being
resolved this time to take the combat on himself alone, and then to rejoin
his father, and astonish him with the sight of captured foes and other
tokens of victory.</p>
<p>The hunters, thoroughly acquainted with every cliff and rock on the coast,
hid themselves round the landing-place; and soon the strange vessel hove
nearer with swelling sails, till at length it came to anchor, and its crew
began to disembark in unsuspicious security. At the head of them appeared
a knight of high degree, in blue steel armour richly inlaid with gold. His
head was bare, for he carried his costly golden helmet hanging on his left
arm. He looked royally around him; and his countenance, which dark brown
locks shaded, was pleasant to behold; and a well-trimmed moustache fringed
his mouth, from which, as he smiled, gleamed forth two rows of pearl-white
teeth.</p>
<p>A feeling came across Sintram that he must already have seen this knight
somewhere; and he stood motionless for a few moments. But suddenly he
raised his hand, to make the agreed signal of attack. In vain did the good
Rolf, who had just succeeded in getting up to him, whisper in his ear that
these could not be the foes whom he had taken them for, but that they were
unknown, and certainly high and noble strangers.</p>
<p>"Let them be who they may," replied the wild youth, "they have enticed me
here to wait, and they shall pay the penalty of thus fooling me. Say not
another word, if you value your life." And immediately he gave the signal,
a thick shower of javelins followed from all sides, and the Norwegian
warriors rushed forth with flashing swords. They found their foes as
brave, or somewhat braver, than they could have desired. More fell on the
side of those who made than of those who received the assault; and the
strangers appeared to understand surprisingly the Norwegian manner of
fighting. The knight in steel armour had not in his haste put on his
helmet; but it seemed as if he in no wise needed such protection, for his
good sword afforded him sufficient defence even against the spears and
darts which were incessantly hurled at him, as with rapid skill he
received them on the shining blade, and dashed them far away, shivered
into fragments.</p>
<p>Sintram could not at the first onset penetrate to where this shining hero
was standing, as all his followers, eager after such a noble prey,
thronged closely round him; but now the way was cleared enough for him to
spring towards the brave stranger, shouting a war-cry, and brandishing his
sword above his head.</p>
<p>"Gabrielle!" cried the knight, as he dexterously parried the heavy blow
which was descending, and with one powerful sword-thrust he laid the youth
prostrate on the ground; then placing his knee on Sintram's breast, he
drew forth a flashing dagger, and held it before his eyes as he lay
astonished. All at once the men-at-arms stood round like walls. Sintram
felt that no hope remained for him. He determined to die as it became a
bold warrior; and without giving one sign of emotion, he looked on the
fatal weapon with a steady gaze.</p>
<p>As he lay with his eyes cast upwards, he fancied that there appeared
suddenly from heaven a wondrously beautiful female form in a bright attire
of blue and gold. "Our ancestors told truly of the Valkyrias," murmured
he. "Strike, then, thou unknown conqueror."</p>
<p>But with this the knight did not comply, neither was it a Valkyria who had
so suddenly appeared, but the beautiful wife of the stranger, who, having
advanced to the high edge of the vessel, had thus met the upraised look of
Sintram.</p>
<p>"Folko," cried she, in the softest tone, "thou knight without reproach! I
know that thou sparest the vanquished."</p>
<p>The knight sprang up, and with courtly grace stretched out his hand to the
conquered youth, saying, "Thank the noble lady of Montfaucon for your life
and liberty. But if you are so totally devoid of all goodness as to wish
to resume the combat, here am I; let it be yours to begin."</p>
<p>Sintram sank, deeply ashamed, on his knees, and wept; for he had often
heard speak of the high renown of the French knight Folko of Montfaucon,
who was related to his father's house, and of the grace and beauty of his
gentle lady Gabrielle.</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/sintram3a.jpg" alt="sintram3a" width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
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