Evil powers
Rudy left Bex, and took his way home along the mountain path. The air
was fresh, but cold; for here amidst the deep snow, the Ice Maiden reigned.
He was so high up that the large trees beneath him, with their thick foliage,
appeared like garden plants, and the pines and bushes even less. The Alpine
roses grew near the snow, which lay in detached stripes, and looked like
linen laid out to bleach. A blue gentian grew in his path, and he crushed
it with the butt end of his gun. A little higher up, he espied two chamois.
Rudy's eyes glistened, and his thoughts flew at once in a different direction;
but he was not near enough to take a sure aim. He ascended still higher,
to a spot where a few rough blades of grass grew between the blocks of
stone and the chamois passed quietly on over the snow-fields. Rudy walked
hurriedly, while the clouds of mist gathered round him. Suddenly he found
himself on the brink of a precipitous rock. The rain was falling in torrents.
He felt a burning thirst, his head was hot, and his limbs trembled with
cold. He seized his hunting-flask, but it was empty; he had not thought
of filling it before ascending the mountain. He had never been ill in his
life, nor ever experienced such sensations as those he now felt. He was
so tired that he could scarcely resist lying down at his full length to
sleep, although the ground was flooded with the rain. Yet when he tried
to rouse himself a little, every object around him danced and trembled
before his eyes. Suddenly he observed in the doorway of a hut newly built
under the rock, a young maiden. He did not remember having seen this hut
before, yet there it stood; and he thought, at first, that the young maiden
was Annette, the schoolmaster's daughter, whom he had once kissed in the
dance. The maiden was not Annette; yet it seemed as if he had seen her
somewhere before, perhaps near Grindelwald, on the evening of his return
home from Interlachen, after the shooting-match. "How did you come here?"
he asked. "I am at home," she replied; "I am watching my flocks." "Your
flocks!" he exclaimed; "where do they find pasture? There is nothing here
but snow and rocks." "Much you know of what grows here," she replied, laughing.
"not far beneath us there is beautiful pasture-land. My goats go there.
I tend them carefully; I never miss one. What is once mine remains mine."
"You are bold," said Rudy. "And so are you," she answered. "Have you any
milk in the house?" he asked; "if so, give me some to drink; my thirst
is intolerable." "I have something better than milk," she replied, "which
I will give you. Some travellers who were here yesterday with their guide
left behind them a half a flask of wine, such as you have never tasted.
They will not come back to fetch it, I know, and I shall not drink it;
so you shall have it." Then the maiden went to fetch the wine, poured some
into a wooden cup, and offered it to Rudy. "How good it is!" said he; "I
have never before tasted such warm, invigorating wine." And his eyes sparkled
with new life; a glow diffused itself over his frame; it seemed as if every
sorrow, every oppression were banished from his mind, and a fresh, free
nature were stirring within him. "You are surely Annette, the schoolmaster's
daughter," cried he; "will you give me a kiss?" "Yes, if you will give
me that beautiful ring which you wear on your finger." "My betrothal ring?"
he replied. "Yes, just so," said the maiden, as she poured out some more
wine, and held it to his lips. Again he drank, and a living joy streamed
through every vein. "The whole world is mine, why therefore should I grieve?"
thought he. "Everything is created for our enjoyment and happiness. The
stream of life is a stream of happiness; let us flow on with it to joy
and felicity." Rudy gazed on the young maiden; it was Annette, and yet
it was not Annette; still less did he suppose it was the spectral phantom,
whom he had met near Grindelwald. The maiden up here on the mountain was
fresh as the new fallen snow, blooming as an Alpine rose, and as nimble-footed
as a young kid. Still, she was one of Adam's race, like Rudy. He flung
his arms round the beautiful being, and gazed into her wonderfully clear
eyes,- only for a moment; but in that moment words cannot express the effect
of his gaze. Was it the spirit of life or of death that overpowered
him? Was he rising higher, or sinking lower and lower into the deep, deadly
abyss? He knew not; but the walls of ice shone like blue-green glass; innumerable
clefts yawned around him, and the water-drops tinkled like the chiming
of church bells, and shone clearly as pearls in the light of a pale-blue
flame. The Ice Maiden, for she it was, kissed him, and her kiss sent a
chill as of ice through his whole frame. A cry of agony escaped from him;
he struggled to get free, and tottered from her. For a moment all was dark
before his eyes, but when he opened them again it was light, and the Alpine
maiden had vanished. The powers of evil had played their game; the sheltering
hut was no more to be seen. The water trickled down the naked sides of
the rocks, and snow lay thickly all around. Rudy shivered with cold; he
was wet through to the skin; and his ring was gone,- the betrothal ring
that Babette had given him. His gun lay near him in the snow; he took it
up and tried to discharge it, but it missed fire. Heavy clouds lay on the
mountain clefts, like firm masses of snow. Upon one of these Vertigo sat,
lurking after his powerless prey, and from beneath came a sound as if a
piece of rock had fallen from the cleft, and was crushing everything that
stood in its way or opposed its course. But, at the miller's, Babette sat
alone and wept. Rudy had not been to see her for six days. He who was in
the wrong, and who ought to ask her forgiveness; for did she not love him
with her whole heart?