Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Charlotte M. Yonge > Text of George The Triller
A short story by Charlotte M. Yonge |
||
George The Triller |
||
________________________________________________
Title: George The Triller Author: Charlotte M. Yonge [More Titles by Yonge] 1455 'Why, Lady dear, so sad of cheer? 'From the dark glades of forest shades 'Ah, Lady dear, dismiss thy fear 'My Lord, o'erbold, hath kept his gold, 'See, o'er the plain, with all his train, 'The warder waits before the gates,
'T is night's full noon, fair shines the moon Within their tower the midnight hour What sudden sound is stirring round? Swift from her bed, in sudden dread, And from yon tower, her children's bower, 'Oh! hear my prayer, my children spare, With mocking grace he bowed his face: Oh! double fright, a second knight Would she had wings! She wildly springs No mortal ear her calls can hear, A cry below, 'Oh! let me go, With anguish sore she shakes the door. Her second child in terror wild 'I greet thee well, the Elector tell
'Swift, swift, good steed, death's on thy speed, 'There Konrad's den and merry men 'But hark! but hark! how through the dark 'The peal rings out! echoes the shout! Far on before, of men a score The clanging bell with distant swell The morn's fresh beam lights a cool stream, 'Sir Konrad good, be mild of mood, Kunz' savage heart feels pity's smart, A deep-toned bark! A figure dark, 'Oh, to my aid, I am betrayed, 'Peace, if thou 'rt wise,' the false groom cries, See, turned aside, the weapon glide Loud the hound's note as at the throat The robber lord with mighty sword, Unequal fight! Yet for the right His whistle clear rings full of cheer, His horse's rein he grasps amain His frightened steed with wildest speed The peasants round lift from the ground 'Our dear young lord, what may afford
Three mournful days the mother prays, The mother hears, her head she rears, See, cap in hand the woodman stand-- Cries, 'Father dear, my friend is here! Oh! who the joy that greets the boy, [Footnote: Trillen, to shake; a word analogous to our rill, to shake the voice in singing] 'I trilled him well,' he still will tell That mother sad again is glad, That cave within, these men of sin Another day and Earnest lay, The giant knight was judged aright, But all to late, and o'er the gate The scullion Hans who wrought their plans,
Behold how gay the wood to-day, A goodly train--the parents twain, High swells the chant, all jubilant, Beside them lay a smock of grey, 'What prize would'st hold, thou 'Triller bold', 'Nay, Triller mine, the land be thine, Years hundred four, and half a score, The child rescued by George the Triller's Golden Deed was the ancestor of the late Prince Consort, and thus of our future line of kings. He was the son of the Elector Friedrich the mild of Saxony, and of Margarethe of Austria, whose dream presaged her children's danger. The Elector had incurred the vengeance of the robber baron, Sir Konrad of Kauffingen, who, from his huge stature, was known as the Giant Ritter, by refusing to make up to him the sum of 4000 gulden which he had had to pay for his ransom after being made prisoner in the Elector's service. In reply to his threats, all the answer that the robber knight received was the proverbial one, 'Do not try to burn the fish in the ponds, Kunz.' Stung by the irony, Kunz bribed the elector's scullion, by name Hans Schwabe, to admit him and nine chosen comrades into the Castle of Altenburg on the night of the 7th of July, 1455, when the Elector was to be at Leipzig. Strange to say, this scullion was able to write, for a letter is extant from him to Sir Konrad, engaging to open the window immediately above the steep precipice, which on that side was deemed a sufficient protection to the castle, and to fasten a rope ladder by which to ascend the crags. This window can still be traced, though thenceforth it was bricked up. It gave access to the children's apartments, and on his way to them, the robber drew the bolt of their mother's door, so that though, awakened by the noise, she rushed to her window, she was a captive in her own apartment, and could not give the alarm, nor do anything but join her vain entreaties to the cries of her helpless children. It was the little son of the Count von Bardi whom Wilhelm von Mosen brought down by mistake for young Albrecht, and Kunz, while hurrying up to exchange the children, bade the rest of his band hasten on to secure the elder prince without waiting for him. He followed in a few seconds with Albrecht in his arms, and his servant Schweinitz riding after him, but he never overtook the main body. Their object was to reach Konrad's own Castle of Isenburg on the frontiers of Bohemia, but they quickly heard the alarm bells ringing, and beheld beacons lighted upon every hill. They were forced to betake themselves to the forests, and about half-way, Prince Ernst's captors, not daring to go any father, hid themselves and him in a cavern called the Devil's Cleft on the right bank of the River Mulde. Kunz himself rode on till the sun had risen, and he was within so few miles of his castle that the terror of his name was likely to be a sufficient protection. Himself and his horse were, however, spent by the wild midnight ride, and on the border of the wood of Eterlein, near the monastery of Grunheim, he halted, and finding the poor child grievously exhausted and feverish, he lifted him down, gave him water, and went himself in search of wood strawberries for his refreshment, leaving the two horses in the charge of Schweinitz. The servant dozed in his saddle, and meanwhile the charcoal-burner, George Schmidt, attracted by the sounds, came out of the wood, where all night he had been attending to the kiln, hollowed in the earth, and heaped with earth and roots of trees, where a continual charring of wood was going on. Little Albrecht no sooner saw this man than he sprang to him, and telling his name and rank, entreated to be rescued from these cruel men. The servant awaking, leapt down and struck a deadly blow at the boy's head with his pole-ax, but it was parried by the charcoal-burner, who interposing with one hand the strong wooden pole he used for stirring his kiln, dragged the little prince aside with the other, and at the same time set his great dog upon the servant. Sir Konrad at once hurried back, but the valiant charcoal- burner still held his ground, dangerous as the fight was between the peasant unarmed except for the long pole, and the fully accoutered knight of gigantic size and strength. However, a whistle from George soon brought a gang of his comrades to his aid, and Kunz, finding himself surrounded, tried to leap into his saddle, and break through the throng by weight of man and horse, but his spur became entangled, the horse ran away, and he was dragged along with his head on the ground till he was taken up by the peasants and carried to the convent of Grunheim, whence he was sent to Zwickau, and was thence transported heavily ironed to Freiburg, where he was beheaded on the 14th of July, only a week after his act of violence. The Elector, in his joy at the recovery of even one child, was generous enough to send a pardon, but the messenger reached Freiburg too late, and a stone in the marketplace still marks the place of doom, while the grim effigy of Sir Konrad's head grins over the door of the Rathhaus. It was a pity Friedrich's mildness did not extend to sparing torture as well as death to his treacherous scullion, but perhaps a servant's power of injuring his master was thought a reason for surrounding such instances of betrayal with special horrors. The party hidden in the Devil's Cleft overheard the peasants in the wood talking of the fall of the giant of Kauffingen, and, becoming alarmed for themselves, they sent to the Governor of the neighboring castle of Hartenstein to offer to restore Prince Ernst, provided they were promised a full pardon. The boy had been given up as dead, and intense were the rejoicings of the parents at his restoration. The Devil's Cleft changed its name to the Prince's Cleft, and the tree where Albrecht had lain was called the Prince's Oak, and still remains as a witness to the story, as do the moth-eaten garments of the princely children, and the smock of the charcoal-burner, which they offered up in token of thanksgiving at the little forest church of Ebendorff, near the scene of the rescue. 'I trillirt the knaves right well,' was honest George's way of telling the story of his exploit, not only a brave one, but amounting even to self-devotion when we remember that the robber baron was his near neighbour, and a terror to all around. The word Triller took the place of his surname, and when the sole reward he asked was leave freely to cut wood in the forest, the Elector gave him a piece of land of his own in the parish of Eversbach. In 1855 there was a grand celebration of the rescue of the Saxon princes on the 9th of July, the four hundredth anniversary, with a great procession of foresters and charcoal-burners to the 'Triller's Brewery', which stands where George's hut and kiln were once placed. Three of his descendants then figured in the procession, but since that time all have died, and the family of the Trillers is now extinct. [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |