Page:Tales by Musæus, Tieck, Richter, Volume 2.djvu/91

Rh ghosts: I die more innocent than thousands of tyrants and blasphemers, to whom ye yet appear not, but to unpolluted me.” Here I heard a sort of laugh, either on the street or in the side-room: at this warm human tone, I suddenly bloomed up again, as at the coming of a new Spring, in every twig and leaf. Wholly despising the winged coverlid, which was not now to be picked from the door, I laid myself down uncovered, but warm and perspiring from other causes, and soon fell asleep. For the rest, I am not the least ashamed, in the face of all refined capital cities, though they were standing here at my hand, that by this Devil-belief and Devil-address I have attained some likeness to our great German Lion, to Luther.

Early in the morning, I felt myself awakened by the well-known coverlid; it had laid itself on me like a nightmare: I gaped up; quiet, in a corner of the room, sat a red, round, blooming, decorated girl, like a full-blown tulip in the freshness of life, and gently rustling with gay ribbons as with leaves.

“Who’s there how came you in?” cried I, half-blind. “I covered thee softly, and thought to let thee sleep,” said Bergelchen; “I have walked all night to be here early; do but look!”

She showed me her boots, the only remnant of her travelling-gear, which, in the moulting process of the toilette, she had not stript at the gate of Flatz.

“Is there,” said I, alarmed at her coming six hours sooner, and the more, as I had been alarmed all night, and was still so, at her mysterious entrance, “is there some fresh woe come over us, fire, murder, robbery?”

She answered: “The old Rat thou hast chased so long died yesterday; farther, there was nothing of importance.”