had our crusader enjoyed in Syria with lion-hearted Richard; with his coadjutor, 
   Godfrey of Bouillon; nay, with the dauntless Saladin himself. 
   "You knew Gottfried in Palestine?" asked the Margrave. 
   "I did." 
   "Why did ye not greet him then, as ancient comrades should, with the warm grasp 
   of friendship? It is not because Sir Gottfried is poor? You know well that he is 
   of race as noble as thine own, my early friend!" 
   "I care not for his race nor for his poverty," replied the blunt crusader. "What 
   says the Minnesinger? 'Marry, that the rank is but the stamp of the guinea; the 
   man is the gold.' And I tell thee, Karl of Godesberg, that yonder Gottfried is 
   base metal." 
   "By Saint Buffo, thou beliest him, dear Ludwig." 
   "By Saint Bugo, dear Karl, I say sooth. The fellow was known i' the camp of the 
   crusaders?disreputably known. Ere he joined us in Palestine, he had sojourned in 
   Constantinople, and learned the arts of the Greek. He is a cogger of dice, I 
   tell thee?a chanter of horseflesh. He won five thousand marks from bluff Richard 
   of England the night before the storming of Ascalon, and I caught him with false 
   trumps in his pocket. He warranted a bay mare to Conrad of Mont Serrat, and the 
   rogue had fired her." 
   "Ha! mean ye that Sir Gottfried is a LEG?" cried Sir Karl, knitting his brows. 
   "Now, by my blessed patron, Saint Buffo of Bonn, had any other but Ludwig of 
   Hombourg so said, I would have cloven him from skull to chine." 
   "By Saint Bugo of Katzenellenbogen, I will prove my words on Sir Gottfried's 
   body?not on thine, old brother-in-arms. And to do the knave justice, he is a 
   good lance. Holy Bugo! but he did good service at Acre! But his character was 
   such that, spite of his bravery, he was dismissed the army; nor even allowed to 
   sell his captain's commission." 
   "I have heard of it," said the Margrave; "Gottfried hath told me of it. 'Twas 
   about some silly quarrel over the wine-cup?a mere silly jape, believe me. Hugo 
   de Brodenel would have no black bottle on the board. Gottfried was wroth, and to 
   say sooth, flung the black bottle at the county's head. Hence his dismission and 
   abrupt return. But you know not," continued the Margrave, with a heavy sigh, "of 
   what use that worthy Gottfried has been to me. He has uncloaked a traitor to 
   me." 
   "Not YET," answered Hombourg, satirically. 
   "By Saint Buffo! a deep-dyed dastard! a dangerous, damnable traitor!?a nest of 
   traitors. Hildebranndt is a traitor?Otto is a traitor?and Theodora (O heaven!) 
   she?she is ANOTHER." The old Prince burst into tears at the word, and was almost 
   choked with emotion. 
   "What means this passion, dear friend?" cried Sir Ludwig, seriously alarmed. 
   "Mark, Ludwig! mark Hildebrandt and Theodora together: mark Hildebrandt and OTTO 
   together. Like, like I tell thee as two peas. O holy saints, that I should be 
   born to suffer this!?to have all my affections wrenched out of my bosom, and to 
   be left alone in my old age! But, hark! the guests are arriving. An ye will not 
   empty another flask of claret, let us join the ladyes i' the withdrawing 
   chamber. When there, mark HILDEBRANDT AND OTTO!" 
   CHAPTER III. THE FESTIVAL.
   The festival was indeed begun. Coming on horseback, or in their caroches, 
   knights and ladies of the highest rank were assembled in the grand saloon of 
   Godesberg, which was splendidly illuminated to receive them. Servitors, in rich 
   liveries, (they were attired in doublets of the sky-blue broadcloth of Ypres, 
   and hose of the richest yellow sammit?the colors of the house of Godesberg,) 
   bore about various refreshments on trays of silver?cakes, baked in the oven, and 
   swimming in melted butter; manchets of bread, smeared with the same delicious 
   condiment, and carved so thin that you might have expected them to take wing and 
   fly to the ceiling; coffee, introduced by Peter the Hermit, after his excursion 
   into Arabia, and tea such as only Bohemia could produce, circulated amidst the 
   festive throng, and were eagerly devoured by the guests. The Margrave's gloom 
   was unheeded by them?how little indeed is the smiling crowd aware of the pangs 
   that are lurking in the breasts of those who bid them to the feast! The 
   Margravine was pale; but woman knows how to deceive; she was more than 
   ordinarily courteous to her friends, and laughed, though the laugh was hollow, 
   and talked, though the talk was loathsome to her. 
   "The two are together," said the Margrave, clutching his friend's shoulder. "NOW 
   LOOK!" 
   Sir Ludwig turned towards a quadrille, and there, sure enough, were Sir 
   Hildebrandt and young Otto standing side by side in the dance. Two eggs were not 
   more like! The reason of the Margrave's horrid suspicion at once flashed across 
   his friend's mind. 
   "'Tis clear as the staff of a pike," said the poor Margrave, mournfully. "Come, 
   brother, away from the scene; let us go play a game at cribbage!" and retiring 
   to the Margravine's boudoir, the two warriors sat down to the game. 
   But though 'tis an interesting one, and though the Margrave won, yet he could 
   not keep his attention on the cards: so agitated was his mind by the dreadful 
   secret which weighed upon it. In the midst of their play, the obsequious 
   Gottfried came to whisper a word in his patron's ear, which threw the latter 
   into such a fury, that apoplexy was apprehended by the two lookers-on. But the 
   Margrave mastered his emotion. "AT WHAT TIME, did you say?" said he to 
   Gottfried. 
   "At daybreak, at the outer gate." 
   "I will be there." 
   "AND SO WILL I TOO," thought Count Ludwig, the good Knight of Hombourg. 
   CHAPTER IV. THE FLIGHT.
   How often does man, proud man, make calculations for the future, and think he 
   can bend stern fate to his will! Alas, we are but creatures in its hands! How 
   many a slip between the lip and the lifted wine-cup! How often, though seemingly 
   with a choice of couches to repose upon, do we find ourselves dashed to earth; 
   and then we are fain to say the grapes are sour, because we cannot attain them; 
   or worse, to yield to anger in consequence of our own fault. Sir Ludwig, the 
   Hombourger, was NOT AT THE OUTER GATE at daybreak. 
   He slept until ten of the clock. The previous night's potations had been heavy, 
   the day's journey had been long and rough. The knight slept as a soldier would, 
   to whom a featherbed is a rarity, and who wakes not till he hears the blast of 
   the reveille. 
   He looked up as he woke. At his bedside sat the Margrave. He had been there for 
   hours watching his slumbering comrade. Watching?? no, not watching, but awake by 
   his side, brooding over thoughts unutterably bitter?over feelings inexpressibly 
   wretched. 
   "What's o'clock?" was the first natural exclamation of the Hombourger. 
   "I believe it is five o'clock," said his friend. It was ten. It might have been 
   twelve, two, half-past four, twenty minutes to six, the Margrave would still 
   have said, "I BELIEVE IT IS FIVE O'CLOCK." The wretched take no count of time: 
   it flies with unequal pinions, indeed, for THEM. 
   "Is breakfast over?" inquired the crusader. 
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   "Ask the butler," said the Margrave, nodding his head wildly, rolling his eyes 
   wildly, smiling wildly. 
   "Gracious Bugo!" said the Knight of Hombourg, "what has ailed thee, my friend? 
   It is ten o'clock by my horologe. Your regular hour is nine. You are not?no, by 
   heavens! you are not shaved! You wear the tights and silken hose of last 
   evening's banquet. Your collar is all rumpled?'tis that of yesterday. YOU HAVE 
   NOT BEEN TO BED! What has chanced, brother of mine: what has chanced?" 
   "A common chance, Louis of Hombourg," said the Margrave: "one that chances every 
   day. A false woman, a false friend, a broken heart. THIS has chanced. I have not 
   been to bed." 
   "What mean ye?" cried Count Ludwig, deeply affected. "A false friend? I am not a 
   false friend. A false woman? Surely the lovely Theodora, your wife?" 
   "I have no wife, Louis, now; I have no wife and no son." 
   . . . . . . 
   In accents broken by grief, the Margrave explained what had occurred. 
   Gottfried's information was but too correct. There was a CAUSE for the likeness 
   between Otto and Sir Hildebrandt: a fatal cause! Hildebrandt and Theodora had 
   met at dawn at the outer gate. The Margrave had seen them. They walked long 
   together; they embraced. Ah! how the husband's, the father's, feelings were 
   harrowed at that embrace! They parted; and then the Margrave, coming forward, 
   coldly signified to his lady that she was to retire to a convent for life, and 
   gave orders that the boy should be sent too, to take the vows at a monastery. 
   Both sentences had been executed. Otto, in a boat, and guarded by a company of 
   his father's men-at-arms, was on the river going towards Cologne, to the 
   monastery of Saint Buffo there. The Lady Theodora, under the guard of Sir 
   Gottfried and an attendant, were on their way to the convent of Nonnenwerth, 
   which many of our readers have seen?the beautiful Green Island Convent, laved by 
   the bright waters of the Rhine! 
   "What road did Gottfried take?" asked the Knight of Hombourg, grinding his 
   teeth. 
   "You cannot overtake him," said the Margrave. "My good Gottfried, he is my only 
   comfort now: he is my kinsman, and shall be my heir. He will be back anon." 
   "Will he so?" thought Sir Ludwig. "I will ask him a few questions ere he 
   return." And springing from his couch, he began forthwith to put on his usual 
   morning dress of complete armor; and, after a hasty ablution, donned, not his 
   cap of maintenance, but his helmet of battle. He rang the bell violently. 
   "A cup of coffee, straight," said he, to the servitor who answered the summons; 
   "bid the cook pack me a sausage and bread in paper, and the groom saddle 
   Streithengst; we have far to ride." 
   The various orders were obeyed. The horse was brought; the refreshments disposed 
   of; the clattering steps of the departing steed were heard in the court-yard; 
   but the Margrave took no notice of his friend, and sat, plunged in silent grief, 
   quite motionless by the empty bedside. 
   CHAPTER V. THE TRAITOR'S DOOM.
   The Hombourger led his horse down the winding path which conducts from the hill 
   and castle of Godesberg into the beautiful green plain below. Who has not seen 
   that lovely plain, and who that has seen it has not loved it? A thousand sunny 
   vineyards and cornfields stretch around in peaceful luxuriance; the mighty Rhine 
   floats by it in silver magnificence, and on the opposite bank rise the seven 
   mountains robed in majestic purple, the monarchs of the royal scene. 
   A pleasing poet, Lord Byron, in describing this very scene, has mentioned that 
   "peasant girls, with dark blue eyes, and hands that offer cake and wine," are 
   perpetually crowding round the traveller in this delicious district, and 
   proffering to him their rustic presents. This was no doubt the case in former 
   days, when the noble bard wrote his elegant poems?in the happy ancient days! 
   when maidens were as yet generous, and men kindly! Now the degenerate peasantry 
   of the district are much more inclined to ask than to give, and their blue eyes 
   seem to have disappeared with their generosity. 
   But as it was a long time ago that the events of our story occurred, 'tis 
   probable that the good Knight Ludwig of Hombourg was greeted upon his path by 
   this fascinating peasantry; though we know not how he accepted their welcome. He 
   continued his ride across the flat green country until he came to Rolandseck, 
   whence he could command the Island of Nonnenwerth (that lies in the Rhine 
   opposite that place), and all who went to it or passed from it. 
   Over the entrance of a little cavern in one of the rocks hanging above the 
   Rhine-stream at Rolandseck, and covered with odoriferous cactuses and silvery 
   magnolias, the traveller of the present day may perceive a rude broken image of 
   a saint: that image represented the venerable Saint Buffo of Bonn, the patron of 
   the Margrave; and Sir Ludwig, kneeling on the greensward, and reciting a censer, 
   an ave, and a couple of acolytes before it, felt encouraged to think that the 
   deed he meditated was about to be performed under the very eyes of his friend's 
   sanctified patron. His devotion done (and the knight of those days was as pious 
   as he was brave), Sir Ludwig, the gallant Hombourger, exclaimed with a loud 
   voice:? 
   "Ho! hermit! holy hermit, art thou in thy cell?" 
   "Who calls the poor servant of heaven and Saint Buffo?" exclaimed a voice from 
   the cavern; and presently, from beneath the wreaths of geranium and magnolia, 
   appeared an intensely venerable, ancient, and majestic head?'twas that, we need 
   not say, of Saint Buffo's solitary. A silver beard hanging to his knees gave his 
   person an appearance of great respectability; his body was robed in simple brown 
   serge, and girt with a knotted cord: his ancient feet were only defended from 
   the prickles and stones by the rudest sandals, and his bald and polished head 
   was bare. 
   "Holy hermit," said the knight, in a grave voice, "make ready thy ministry, for 
   there is some one about to die." 
   "Where, son?" 
   "Here, father." 
   "Is he here, now?" 
   "Perhaps," said the stout warrior, crossing himself; "but not so if right 
   prevail." At this moment he caught sight of a ferry-boat putting off from 
   Nonnenwerth, with a knight on board. Ludwig knew at once, by the sinople 
   reversed and the truncated gules on his surcoat, that it was Sir Gottfried of 
   Godesberg. 
   "Be ready, father," said the good knight, pointing towards the advancing boat; 
   and waving his hand by way of respect to the reverend hermit, without a further 
   word, he vaulted into his saddle, and rode back for a few score of paces; when 
   he wheeled round, and remained steady. His great lance and pennon rose in the 
   air. His armor glistened in the sun; the chest and head of his battle-horse were 
   similarly covered with steel. As Sir Gottfried, likewise armed and mounted (for 
   his horse had been left at the ferry hard by), advanced up the road, he almost 
   started at the figure before him?a glistening tower of steel. 
   "Are you the lord of this pass, Sir Knight?" said Sir Gottfried, haughtily, "or 
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   do you hold it against all comers, in honor of your lady-love?" 
   "I am not the lord of this pass. I do not hold it against all comers. I hold it 
   but against one, and he is a liar and a traitor." 
   "As the matter concerns me not, I pray you let me pass," said Gottfried. 
   "The matter DOES concern thee, Gottfried of Godesberg. Liar and traitor! art 
   thou coward, too?" 
   "Holy Saint Buffo! 'tis a fight!" exclaimed the old hermit (who, too, had been a 
   gallant warrior in his day); and like the old war- horse that hears the 
   trumpet's sound, and spite of his clerical profession, he prepared to look on at 
   the combat with no ordinary eagerness, and sat down on the overhanging ledge of 
   the rock, lighting his pipe, and affecting unconcern, but in reality most deeply 
   interested in the event which was about to ensue. 
   As soon as the word "coward" had been pronounced by Sir Ludwig, his opponent, 
   uttering a curse far too horrible to be inscribed here, had wheeled back his 
   powerful piebald, and brought his lance to the rest. 
   "Ha! Beauseant!" cried he. "Allah humdillah!" 'Twas the battle- cry in Palestine 
   of the irresistible Knights Hospitallers. "Look to thyself, Sir Knight, and for 
   mercy from heaven! I will give thee none." 
   "A Bugo for Katzenellenbogen!" exclaimed Sir Ludwig, piously: that, too, was the 
   well-known war-cry of his princely race. 
   "I will give the signal," said the old hermit, waving his pipe. "Knights, are 
   you ready? One, two, three. LOS!" (let go.) 
   At the signal, the two steeds tore up the ground like whirlwinds; the two 
   knights, two flashing perpendicular masses of steel, rapidly converged; the two 
   lances met upon the two shields of either, and shivered, splintered, shattered 
   into ten hundred thousand pieces, which whirled through the air here and there, 
   among the rocks, or in the trees, or in the river. The two horses fell back 
   trembling on their haunches, where they remained for half a minute or so. 
   "Holy Buffo! a brave stroke!" said the old hermit. "Marry, but a splinter 
   wellnigh took off my nose!" The honest hermit waved his pipe in delight, not 
   perceiving that one of the splinters had carried off the head of it, and 
   rendered his favorite amusement impossible. "Ha! they are to it again! O my! how 
   they go to with their great swords! Well stricken, gray! Well parried, piebald! 
   Ha, that was a slicer! Go it, piebald! go it, gray!?go it, gray! go it, pie? 
   Peccavi! peccavi!" said the old man, here suddenly closing his eyes, and falling 
   down on his knees. "I forgot I was a man of peace." And the next moment, 
   muttering a hasty matin, he sprung down the ledge of rock, and was by the side 
   of the combatants. 
   The battle was over. Good knight as Sir Gottfried was, his strength and skill 
   had not been able to overcome Sir Ludwig the Hombourger, with RIGHT on his side. 
   He was bleeding at every point of his armor: he had been run through the body 
   several times, and a cut in tierce, delivered with tremendous dexterity, had 
   cloven the crown of his helmet of Damascus steel, and passing through the 
   cerebellum and sensorium, had split his nose almost in twain. 
   His mouth foaming?his face almost green?his eyes full of blood? his brains 
   spattered over his forehead, and several of his teeth knocked out,?the 
   discomfited warrior presented a ghastly spectacle, as, reeling under the effects 
   of the last tremendous blow which the Knight of Hombourg dealt, Sir Gottfried 
   fell heavily from the saddle of his piebald charger; the frightened animal 
   whisked his tail wildly with a shriek and a snort, plunged out his hind legs, 
   trampling for one moment upon the feet of the prostrate Gottfried, thereby 
   causing him to shriek with agony, and then galloped away riderless. 
   Away! ay, away!?away amid the green vineyards and golden cornfields; away up the 
   steep mountains, where he frightened the eagles in their eyries; away down the 
   clattering ravines, where the flashing cataracts tumble; away through the dark 
   pine-forests, where the hungry wolves are howling away over the dreary wolds,