Page:The Keepsake for 1838.djvu/231

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE SILVER LADY.
179

confidential, he confessed that he did not, himself, know the mystery; but that there was, undoubtedly, some connection between the preservation of the tower, and the Silver Lady. Such a connection did not appear very probable to me, from the experience I had had of the supposed apparition; but I allowed the old man to talk on; and I heard, from him, the following tale.

“In ancient times, when this domain was first inherited by the Bentheims, there lived a young lady of the family of the former possessor. She was of surpassing beauty, but also a cunning sorceress; and she terrified the new possessor to such a degree, by her necromantic arts, that he nearly lost his senses. The fair magician was consequently imprisoned in the old tower; and then, as she persisted in her incantations, she was accused of witchcraft, and condemned to justify herself, by a water ordeal.

“She was, according to custom, bound hand and foot, and laid on the surface of the lake of the castle; if she floated, the existence of her bond with the Evil One, was supposed to be established beyond a doubt. In the present case, indeed, she sank to the bottom, protesting her innocence; and thus was she clearly purified from all suspicion of having formed any connection with the devil. Yet her entire freedom from all blame, was not thought sufficiently proved; consequently, when her body was drawn from the lake, it was refused burial in the family vault, and ignominiously interred in a passage which led to the church. She now, therefore, it is said, finds no rest in her unholy grave; and incessantly persecutes the owner of the castle. She even tries to destroy the tower by her magic arts; because, during her imprisonment, she cursed the building, and prayed that, along with it, the new race of proprietors might be destroyed.”

The account of the trial for witchcraft made me a little

N 2