Barbara Blomberg — Volume 10
114 pages
English

Barbara Blomberg — Volume 10

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114 pages
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The Project Gutenberg EBook Barbara Blomberg, by Georg Ebers, Vol. 10. #131 in our series by Georg EbersCopyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the copyright laws for your country beforedownloading or redistributing this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do notchange or edit the header without written permission.Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom ofthis file. Included is important information about your specific rights and restrictions in how the file may be used. Youcan also find out about how to make a donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts****EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971*******These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****Title: Barbara Blomberg, Volume 10.Author: Georg EbersRelease Date: April, 2004 [EBook #5570] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was firstposted on August 6, 2002]Edition: 10Language: English*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARBARA BLOMBERG, BY EBERS, V10 ***This eBook was produced by David Widger [NOTE: There is a short list of bookmarks, or pointers, at the end of the file for those who may wish to sample theauthor's ideas before making an ...

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The Project Gutenberg EBook Barbara Blomberg,by Georg Ebers, Vol. 10. #131 in our series byGeorg EbersCopyright laws are changing all over the world. Besure to check the copyright laws for your countrybefore downloading or redistributing this or anyother Project Gutenberg eBook.This header should be the first thing seen whenviewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do notremove it. Do not change or edit the headerwithout written permission.Please read the "legal small print," and otherinformation about the eBook and ProjectGutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included isimportant information about your specific rights andrestrictions in how the file may be used. You canalso find out about how to make a donation toProject Gutenberg, and how to get involved.**Welcome To The World of Free Plain VanillaElectronic Texts****EBooks Readable By Both Humans and ByComputers, Since 1971*******These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousandsof Volunteers*****Title: Barbara Blomberg, Volume 10.
Author: Georg EbersRelease Date: April, 2004 [EBook #5570] [Yes, weare more than one year ahead of schedule] [Thisfile was first posted on August 6, 2002]Edition: 10Language: English*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERGEBOOK BARBARA BLOMBERG, BY EBERS, V10***This eBook was produced by David Widger<widger@cecomet.net>[NOTE: There is a short list of bookmarks, orpointers, at the end of the file for those who maywish to sample the author's ideas before makingan entire meal of them. D.W.]
BARBARA BLOMBERGBy Georg EbersVolume 10.CHAPTER XVI.On the way home Barbara often pressed her lefthand with her right to assure herself that she wasnot dreaming.This time she found her husband in the house. Atthe first glance Pyramus saw that somethingunusual had happened; but she gave him no timeto question her, only glanced around to see if theywere alone, and then cried, as if frantic: "I will bearit no longer. You must know it too. But it is a greatsecret." Then she made him swear that he, too,would keep it strictly, and in great anxiety heobeyed.He, like Barbara's father, had supposed that theEmperor's son had entered the world only to leaveit again. Barbara's "I no longer have a child; it wastaken from me," he had interpreted in the sameway as the old captain, and, from delicacy offeeling, had never again mentioned the subject inher presence.While taking the oath, he had been prepared forthe worst; but when his wife, in passionate
excitement, speaking so fast that the words fairtumbled over one another, told him how she hadbeen robbed of her boy; how his imperial fatherhad treated him; how she had longed for him; whatprayers she had uttered in his behalf; howmiserable she had been in her anxiety about thischild; and, now, that Dona Magdalena's letterpermitted her to cherish the highest and greatesthopes for the boy, the tall, strong man stoodbefore her with downcast eyes, like a detectedcriminal, his hand gripping the edge of the top ofthe table which separated her from him.Barbara saw his broad, arched chest rise and fall,and wondered why his manly features werequivering; but ere she had time to utter a singlesoothing word, he burst forth: "I made the vow andwill be silent; but to-morrow, or in a year or two, itwill be in everybody's mouth, and then, then Mygood name! Honour!"Fierce indignation overwhelmed Barbara, and, nolonger able to control herself, she exclaimed:"What did it matter whether Death or his fathersnatched the child from me? The question is,whether you knew that I am his mother, and it wasnot concealed from you. Nevertheless, you cameand sought me for your wife! That is whathappened! And—you know this —you are as muchor little dishonoured by me, the mother of the livingchild, as of the dead one. Out upon the honourwhich is harmed by gossip! What slanderoustongues say of me as a disgrace I deem thehighest honour; but if you are of a different opinion,
and held it when you wooed me, you would bewiser to prate less loudly of the proud word'honour,' and we will separate."Pyramus had listened to these accusations and thethreat with trembling lips. His simple but uprightmind felt that she was right, so far as he wasconcerned, and she was more beautiful in heranger than he had seen her since the brilliant daysof her youthful pride. The fear of losing her seizedhis poor heart, so wholly subject to her, withsudden power and, stammering an entreaty forforgiveness, he confessed that the surprise hadbewildered him, and that he thought he hadshowed in the course of the last ten years howhighly, in spite of people's gossip, he prized her.He held out his large honest hand with a pleadinglook as he spoke, and she placed hers in it for ashort time.Then she went to church to collect her thoughtsand relieve her overburdened heart. Boundlesscontempt for the man to whom she was unitedfilled it; yet she felt that she owed him a debt ofgratitude, that he was weak only through love, andthat, for her children's sake, she must continue towear the yoke which she had taken upon herself.His existence henceforth became of less and lessimportance to her feelings and actions, especiallyas he left the management of their two boys to her.He had reason to be satisfied with it, for sheprovided Conrad with the best instruction, that themight choose between the army and the legal
profession; his younger brother she intended forthe priesthood, and the boy's inclinationharmonized with her choice.The fear that the Emperor Charles might yetcommit the child she loved to the monastery neverleft her. But she thought that she might induceHeaven to relinquish its claim upon her John,whom, moreover, it seemed to have destined forthe secular life, by consecrating her youngest childto its service.While she did not forget her household, her mindwas constantly in Spain. Her walks were usuallydirected toward the palace, to inquire how therecluse in San Yuste was faring, and whether anyrumour mentioned her imperial son.After the great victory gained by Count Egmontagainst the military forces of France, elevenmonths after the battle of St. Quentin, there wasenough to be seen in Brussels. The successfulgeneral was greeted with enthusiastic devotion.Egmont's name was in every one's mouth, andwhen she, too, saw the handsome, proud younghero, the idol, as it were, of a whole nation,gorgeous in velvet, silk, and glittering gems,curbing his fiery steed and bowing to the shoutingpopulace with a winning smile, she thought shecaught a glimpse of the future, and beheld thepredecessor of him who some day would receivesimilar homage.Why should she not have yielded to such hopes?
Already there was a rumour that the daughter ofthe Emperor and that Johanna Van der Gheynst,who had been Charles's first love, Margaret ofParma, her own son's sister, had been chosen torule the Netherlands as regent.Why should less honours await Charles's son thanhis daughter?But the festal joy in the gay capital was suddenlyextinguished, for in the autumn of the year that, inMarch, had seen Ferdinand, the Emperor'sbrother, assume the imperial crown, a rumourcame that the recluse of San Yuste had closed hiseyes, and a few days after it was verified.It was Barbara's husband who told her of the losswhich had befallen her and the world. He did thiswith the utmost consideration, fearing the effect ofthis agitating news upon his wife; but Barbara onlyturned pale, and then, with tears glittering in hereyes, said softly, "He, too, was only a mortal man."Then she withdrew to her own room, and even onthe following day saw neither her husband nor herchildren. She had long expected Charles's death,yet it pierced the inmost depths of her being.This sorrow was something sacred, whichbelonged to her and to her alone. It would haveseemed a profanation to reveal it to her unlovedhusband, and she found strength to shut it withinherself.How desolate her heart seemed! It had lost its
most distinguished object of love or hate.Through long days she devoted herself in quietseclusion to the memory of the dead, but soon heractive imagination unfolded its wings again, andwith the new grief mingled faint hopes for the boyin Spain, which increased to lofty anticipations andtorturing anxiety.The imperial father was dead. What now awaitedthe omnipotent ruler's son?How had Charles determined his fate?Was it possible that he still intended him for themonastic life, now that he had become acquaintedwith his talents and tastes?Since Barbara had learned that her son had wonhis father's heart, and that the Emperor, as it were,had made him his own with a kiss, she had grownconfident in the hope that Charles would bestowupon him the grandeur, honours, and splendourwhich she had anticipated when she resigned himat Landshut, and to which his birth gave him aclaim. But her early experience that what sheexpected with specially joyful security rarelyhappened,—constantly forced upon her mind the,fear that the dead man's will would consign John tothe cloister.So the next weeks passed in a constant alternationof oppressive fears and aspiring hopes, the nightsin torturing terrors.
All the women of the upper classes wore mourning,and with double reason; for, soon after the news ofthe Emperor's death reached Brussels, KingPhilip's second wife, Mary Tudor, of England, alsodied. Therefore no one noticed that Barbara worewidow's weeds, and she was glad that she coulddo so without wounding Pyramus.A part of the elaborate funeral rites which KingPhilip arranged in Brussels during the latter part ofDecember in honour of his dead father was theprocession which afforded the authorities of theBrabant capital an opportunity to display theinventive faculty, the love of splendour, thelearning, and the wit which, as members offlourishing literary societies, they constantlyexercised. In the pageant was a ship with blacksails, at whose keel, mast, and helm stood Hopewith her anchor, Faith with her chalice, and Lovewith the burning heart. Other similar scenic piecesmade the sincerity of the grief for the deadquestionable, and yet many real tears were shedfor him. True, the wind which swelled the sails ofthe sable ship bore also many an accusation andcurse; among the spectators of the processionthere were only too many whose mourning robeswere worn not for the dead monarch, but their ownnearest relatives, whom his pitiless edicts hadgiven to the executioner as readers of the Bible orheterodox.These displays, so pleasing to the people of hertime and her new home, were by no means greator magnificent enough for Barbara. Even the most
superb show seemed to her too trivial for this deadman.She was never absent from any mass for therepose of his soul, and she not only took partoutwardly in the sacred ceremony, but followed itwith fervent devotion. As a transfigured spirit, hewould perceive how she had once hated him; buthe should also see how tenderly she still loved him.Now that he was dead, it would be proved in whatway he had remembered the son whom, in hissolitude, he had learned to love, what life pathJohn had been assigned by his father.But longingly as Barbara thought of Spain and ofher boy, often as she went to the Dubois houseand to the regent's home to obtain news, nothingcould be heard of her child.Many provisions of the imperial will were known,but there was no mention of her son. Yet Charlescould not have forgotten him, and Adrian protestedthat it would soon appear that he had not omittedhim in his last will, and this was done in a mannerwhich indicated that he knew more than he wouldor could confess.All this increased Barbara's impatience to thehighest degree, and induced her to watch andquestion with twofold zeal. On no account wouldshe have left the capital during this period ofdecision, and, though her husband earnestlyentreated her to go to the springs, whose watershad proved so beneficial, she remained in
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