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Wilhelm Ruland - Legends of the Rhine

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LEGENDS OF THE RHINE BY WILHELM RULAND WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PAINTINGS BY - photo 1
LEGENDS OF THE RHINE
BY
WILHELM RULAND
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PAINTINGS
BY CELEBRATED ARTISTS
Graphic of Hoursch und Bechstedt publisher's device
KLN AM RHEIN
VERLAG VON HOURSCH & BECHSTEDT

"O, the pride of the German heart is this noble
river! And right it is; for of all the rivers of this
beautiful earth there is none so beautiful as this."
Longfellow.

Prefatory Note.
L ast year I made the journey between Mainz and Bonn on one of our splendid Rhine steamers. Our vessel glided along like a great water-bird. On the shore rose mountains, castles, and ruins, and over all the sun shined brightly from a blue August sky. It was twelve years since I had visited the scenes of my youth, and every Rhinelander will understand with what pleasure I saw again those smiling landscapes arrayed in their summer beauty. Wandering back to my deck-chair, I soon became absorbed in the ever-changing panorama.
Then the sound of a melodious female voice speaking English fell on my ears. I looked around. A girl was bending over a book, and entertaining her father and mother by reading something of special interest and beauty. I listened and recognised some of my own sentences rendered into the speech of Shakespeare. These three were learning to feel the charms of the Lorelei legend as I had felt it. I confess my pulse beat quicker as I heard my poor endeavours highly praised, and I could not refrain from advancing and thanking the young reader for her kindly appreciation of my endeavours. She seemed delighted when she discovered that I was the author, and rose to greet me in the most amiable manner. I complimented the travellers that during the past century the Rhine had become the home of romance for the English speaking nations, the same as Italy for the Germans. The girl smiled, and remarked that I must pay that compliment to her mother in particular, as she was by birth an Englishwoman. But the head of the family hastened to add that among Americans, whom he might speak for, the enthusiasm for the beauties of the Rhine was not less than among their Anglo-Saxon cousins. These two nations which are bound by so many ties to each other, and also to ourselves, were thus represented before me. The English-speaking people undoubtedly form by far the largest contingent of our Rhine travellers, and it was pleasant indeed to receive so fine a testimonial to the beauties of my birth place.
We had a most interesting conversation, and I was not a little moved, as I observed that these foreigners who had travelled over half the world, and had seen the grandeur of Switzerland and the charms of Italy, should have such an unaffected admiration for our grand old river. I am rather sorry for those who neglect the Rhine. "Aren't Lohengrin and Siegfried, immortalised by the great Master of Bayreuth, also heroic figures in your Rhine legends?" remarked the young Anglo-American enthusiastically. It was the first time I had seriously thought of this. I was indeed touched, and my thoughts travelled back to the days of "long, long ago" when as a little chap in my native Bonn, I had first listened with interest to the charming voices of the golden-haired daughters of old Albion who came in large numbers to reside in the famous Beethoven-town.
As I separated from my friends at the foot of the Drachenfels I gave them a small present to keep as a memento of the Rhine and one of its poets.
Mnchen, Mai 1906.Dr. Wilhelm Ruland.

Contents
St. Gotthard.The Petrified Alp
Thusis on the Hinter Rhine.The Last Hohenrtier
Bodensee.The Island of Mainau
Basle.One Hour in Advance
Castle Niedeck.The Toy of the young Giantess
Strassburg.The Cathedral Clock
The little Man at the Angel's Pillar
Worms.The Nibelungen Lied
Speyer.The Bells of Speyer
Frankfort.The Knave of Bergen
Mayence.Heinrich Frauenlob
Bishop Willigis
Johannisberg.
Ingelheim.Eginhard and Emma
Rdesheim.The Brmserburg
Bingen.The Mouse-Tower
Valley of the Nahe. Kreuznach.A mighty draught
The Foundation of Castle Sponheim
Assmannshausen.St. Clement's Chapel
Castle Rheinstein.The Wooing
Castle Sooneck.The Blind Archer
The Ruins of Frstenberg.The Mother's Ghost
Bacharach.Burg Stahleck
Kaub.Castle Gutenfels
Oberwesel.The Seven Maidens
St. Goar.Lorelei
Rheinfels.St. George's Linden
Sterrenberg and Liebenstein.The Brothers
Rhense.The Emperor Wenzel
Castle Lahneck.The Templars of Lahneck
Coblenz.Riza
Valley of the Moselle.The Doctor's wine of Bernkastel
Andernach.Genovefa
Hammerstein.The old Knight and his Daughters
Valley of the Ahr.The Last Knight of Altenahr
The Minstrel of Neuenahr
Eifel.The Arrow at Prm
Aachen.The Building of the Minster
The Ring of Fastrada
Rolandseck.Knight Roland
Siebengebirge.The Drachenfels
The Monk of Heisterbach
The Origin of the Seven Mountains
The Nightingale Valley at Honnef
Godesberg.The High Cross at Godesberg
Bonn.Lord Erich's Pledge
The Roman Ghosts
Cologne.Richmodis of Aducht
The Goblins
Jan and Griet
The Cathedral-Builder of Cologne
Xanten.Siegfried
Cleve.Lohengrin
Zuydersea.Stavoren

Decorative device indicating end of section

ST. GOTTHARD
The Petrified Alp
Aus dem Quellgebiet des Rheines
Near the Source of the Rhine
Au pays du Rhin
I n the region where the Rhine has its source there towered in ancient times a green Alp. This Alp belonged to an honest peasant, and along with a neat little house in the valley below formed his only possession.
The man died suddenly and was deeply mourned by his wife and child. Some days after an unexpected visitor was announced to the widow. He was a man who had much pastureland up in that region, but for a long time his one desire had been to possess the Alp of his neighbour now deceased, as by it his property would be rounded off to his satisfaction.
Quickly making his resolution he declared to the dismayed woman that the Alp belonged to him: her husband had secretly pledged it to him in return for a loan, after the bad harvest of the previous year. When the widow angrily accused him of being a liar the man produced a promissory note, spread it out, and with a hard laugh showed her his statement was confirmed in black and white. The distressed woman burst into tears and declared it was impossible that her late husband should have made a secret transaction of such a nature. The Alp was the sole inheritance of their son, and never would she willingly surrender it.
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