The Baroness von HexeA Poem by David Lewis PagetWe’d
ridden through Lower Bavaria And
our horses were fading fast, The
evening mist was rising, and We
knew that they couldn’t last. My
cousin, Dietrich, pulled on the reins, Then
he turned to me and said: ‘I
thought that we’d find an Inn by now But
there’s something up ahead!’ Then
up on the side of the mountain in The
mist, and deepening gloom, There
loomed the walls of a fortress there And
I felt a sense of doom, For
up on the ancient battlements There
were gargoyles peering down, With
their mediaeval, evil eyes, Grimacing
at the ground. And
under the ivy covered walls There
were spikes, from times before, When
soldiers, thrust from the castle walls Were
impaled, to rise no more, The
moat was merely an empty trench And
the drawbridge was let down, We
rode on up to the iron doors And
knocked, a metallic sound. From
deep within there were footsteps grim Like
a shuffle of ancient bones, And
Dietrich shuddered, as I did too When
we heard those ghostly tones, The
iron door on its hinges creaked And
opened enough to see, That
the man who stood in the doorway there Was
all of a hundred and three. His
cheeks were sallow, his face was gaunt And
his eyes were fiercely bright, ‘What
brings you travellers to my door At
the onset of the night?’ ‘We
beg for shelter,’ my cousin said, ‘And
feed for a weary horse, Our
mounts have carried us fifty miles Since
crossing the watercourse.’ He
stood aside, and motioned us in To
a long, dark flagstoned hall, Then
led us on to the kitchen through An
archway in the wall, ‘I
only offer you bread and cheese, For
we live like simple folk, But
we have a cask of home brewed ale And
eggs with a double yolk.’ ‘My
servant will see to the horses, and You
can sleep in the tower room, I
only ask that you stay in there, Not
wander around in the gloom, There’s
a catafalque in the chamber there And
I caution you with a word, The
Baroness von Hexe lies there And
never must be disturbed.’ The
name itself gave a chill to me For
in German, Hexe means witch, She’d
been condemned in the Wurzburg Trials In
sixteen twenty-six, She
should have been burned at the stake back then But
she was of noble line, So
they sealed her into a coffin alive In
the Castle of Frohmlinstein. We
ate most heartily, he and I For
we’d not stopped once for the day, I
said, ‘I’d happily eat your horse,’ And
Dietrich laughed, in his way, We
went to sleep on an old divan Each
wrapped around with a cloak, It
must have been during the early hours, I
heard a sound, and awoke. Dietrich
wasn’t asleep, he’d gone To
wander round in the gloom, I
saw him stand by the catafalque He
stared at the ancient tomb, I
saw him lift up the coffin lid Then
start back, in surprise, So
I went to see what my cousin did, And
stared at the woman’s eyes. She
seemed as if she’d been laid to rest Just
a day or two before, She
clutched an amulet to her breast, I
gasped at the jewels she wore, A
ruby pendant hung at her neck On
her hands were three gold rings, She
looked so beautiful lying there That
I stood there, wondering. But
Dietrich, he was smitten, I saw As
he stood there, holding his breath, He
said, ‘I’ve never seen loveliness So
cruelly put to death,’ And
then, before I could stop him there He’d
leant right over and kissed, The
cold remains of the Baroness, Right
there on her pale, white lips. A
moment passed as I held my breath Then
the corpse, it shuddered and sighed, Her
eyes just fluttered the lashes, then They
suddenly opened wide, She
sat up straight and she turned her head To
stare at my cousin’s face, While
he stood trembling by her side At
the thing that had taken place. She
climbed right out of the coffin then And
stood by the catafalque, Laughed,
in what was a high-pitched shriek, Spun
round, and started to dance, She
chanted something I’d never heard In
a strange and forgotten tongue, And
soldiers sprang from the cold stone walls, Their
death-throes now undone. The
old man came at a shuffle, cried: ‘Mein
Gott! She’s here, von Hexe! You’ve
raised the devil they put to rest In
sixteen twenty-six, The
soldiers seized him and built a pyre In
the centre of the hall, And
put a torch to the old man’s cries As
we cowered against the wall. The
Baroness turned to face us then And
pointed my cousin out, The
soldiers hurried to do her will But
Dietrich tried to shout: ‘I
was the one that brought you back, I
kissed your lips so fair!’ But
she just laughed, and beckoned them go To
the battlements, by the stair. And
me, she simply waved me away I
left by the iron door, I
took my horse and galloped on out, What
would I stay there for? I
turned to look at the battlements And
watched the end of a tryst, Saw
Dietrich scream, and fall on the spikes, The
price of a stolen kiss! I
heard the Castle was torched that day For
the villagers lived in dread, They
came together once they were told That
the witch was back from the dead, They
watched her leap from the battlements In
flames, and out of her mind, She
lay impaled on the spikes she’d laid At
the Castle of Frohmlinstein. David
Lewis Paget © 2013 David Lewis PagetFeatured Review
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