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THE CHRISTMAS FAIRY OF STRASBURG
A GERMAN FOLK-TALE
BY J. STIRLING COYNE [ADAPTED]
ONCE, long ago, there lived near the ancient
city of Strasburg, on the river Rhine, a young and handsome count, whose
name was Otto. As the years flew by he remained unwed, and never so much
as cast a glance at the fair maidens of the country round; for this reason
people began to call him "Stone-Heart."
It chanced that Count Otto, on one Christmas
Eve, ordered that a great hunt should take place in the forest surrounding
his castle. He and his guests and his many retainers rode forth, and the
chase became more and more exciting. It led through thickets, and over
pathless tracts of forest, until at length Count Otto found himself separated
from his companions.
He rode on by himself until he came to
a spring of clear, bubbling water, known to the people around as the "Fairy
Well." Here Count Otto dismounted. He bent over the spring and began to
lave his hands in the sparkling tide, but to his wonder he found that though
the weather was cold and frosty, the water was warm and delightfully caressing.
He felt a glow of joy pass through his veins, and, as he plunged his hands
deeper, he fancied that his right hand was grasped by another, soft and
small, which gently slipped from his finger the gold ring he always wore.
And, lo! when he drew out his hand, the gold ring was gone.
Full of wonder at this mysterious event,
the count mounted his horse and returned to his castle, resolving in his
mind that the very next day he would have the Fairy Well emptied by his
servants.
He retired to his room, and, throwing himself
just as he was upon his couch, tried to sleep; but the strangeness of the
adventure kept him restless and wakeful.
Suddenly he heard the hoarse baying of
the watch-hounds in the courtyard, and then the creaking of the drawbridge,
as though it were being lowered. Then came to his ear the patter of many
small feet on the stone staircase, and next he heard indistinctly the sound
of light footsteps in the chamber adjoining his own.
Count Otto sprang from his couch, and as
he did so there sounded a strain of delicious music, and the door of his
chamber was flung open. Hurrying into the next room, he found himself in
the midst of numberless Fairy beings, clad in gay and sparkling robes.
They paid no heed to him, but began to dance, and laugh, and sing, to the
sound of mysterious music.
In the center of the apartment stood a
splendid Christmas Tree, the first ever seen in that country. Instead of
toys and candles there hung on its lighted boughs diamond stars, pearl
necklaces, bracelets of gold ornamented with colored jewels, aigrettes
of rubies and sapphires, silken belts embroidered with Oriental pearls,
and daggers mounted in gold and studded with the rarest gems. The whole
tree swayed, sparkled, and glittered in the radiance of its many lights.
Count Otto stood speechless, gazing at all this wonder, when suddenly the
Fairies stopped dancing and fell back, to make room for a lady of dazzling
beauty who came slowly toward him.
She wore on her raven-black tresses a golden
diadem set with jewels. Her hair flowed down upon a robe of rosy satin
and creamy velvet. She stretched out two small, white hands to the count
and addressed him in sweet, alluring tones:
"Dear Count Otto," said she, "I come to
return your Christmas visit. I am Ernestine, the Queen of the Fairies.
I bring you something you lost in the Fairy Well."
And as she spoke she drew from her bosom
a golden casket, set with diamonds, and placed it in his hands. He opened
it eagerly and found within his lost gold ring.
Carried away by the wonder of it all, and
overcome by an irresistible impulse, the count pressed the Fairy Ernestine
to his heart, while she, holding him by the hand, drew him into the magic
mazes of the dance. The mysterious music floated through the room, and
the rest of that Fairy company circled and whirled around the Fairy Queen
and Count Otto, and then gradually dissolved into a mist of many colors,
leaving the count and his beautiful guest alone.
Then the young man, forgetting all his
former coldness toward the maidens of the country round about, fell on
his knees before the Fairy and besought her to become his bride. At last
she consented on the condition that he should never speak the word "death"
in her presence.
The next day the wedding of Count Otto
and Ernestine, Queen of the Fairies, was celebrated with great pomp and
magnificence, and the two continued to live happily for many years.
Now it happened on a time, that the count
and his Fairy wife were to hunt in the forest around the castle. The horses
were saddled and bridled, and standing at the door, the company waited,
and the count paced the hall in great impatience; but still the Fairy Ernestine
tarried long in her chamber. At length she appeared at the door of the
hall, and the count addressed her in anger.
"You have kept us waiting so long," he
cried, "that you would make a good messenger to send for Death!"
Scarcely had he spoken the forbidden and
fatal word, when the Fairy, uttering a wild cry, vanished from his sight.
In vain Count Otto, overwhelmed with grief and remorse, searched the castle
and the Fairy Well, no trace could he find of his beautiful, lost wife
but the imprint of her delicate hand set in the stone arch above the castle
gate.
Years passed by, and the Fairy Ernestine
did not return. The count continued to grieve. Every Christmas Eve he set
up a lighted tree in the room where he had first met the Fairy, hoping
in vain that she would return to him.
Time passed and the count died. The castle
fell into ruins. But to this day may be seen above the massive gate, deeply
sunken in the stone arch, the impress of a small and delicate hand.
And such, say the good folk of Strasburg,
was the origin of the Christmas Tree.
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