Page:Weird Tales volume 38 number 03 CAN.djvu/54

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The Mad
Dancers
"The effects of the Black Plague had not yet subsided, and the graves of millions of its victims were scarcely closed, when a strange delusion arose in Germany ... called the dancing mania."—Epidemics of the Middle Ages.
—J. F. C. Hecker.

Though it was early of an evening in June, the horizontal rays of the sun still caught the cupola of the Octagonal Chapel in Aix-la-Chapelle. It was the eve of St. John's, 1374, and in the streets preparations for the festival were under way. Deserted, however, was the interior of the chapel, except for Christian and Mina, holding hands and standing quietly in the center, the boy gazing at the floor, the girl looking upward.

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