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Etext prepared by Dagny, dagnyj@hotmail.com
and John Bickers, jbickers@ihug.co.nz
THE WITCH OF PRAGUE
A FANTASTIC TALE
BY
F. MARION CRAWFORD
CHAPTER I
A great multitude of people filled the church, crowded together in the
old black pews, standing closely thronged in the nave and aisles,
pressing shoulder to shoulder even in the two chapels on the right and
left of the apse, a vast gathering of pale men and women whose eyes
were sad and in whose faces was written the history of their nation.
The mighty shafts and pilasters of the Gothic edifice rose like the
stems of giant trees in a primeval forest from a dusky undergrowth,
spreading out and uniting their stony branches far above in the upper
gloom. From the clerestory windows of the nave an uncertain light
descended halfway to the depths and seemed to float upon the darkness
below as oil upon the water of a well. Over the western entrance the
huge fantastic organ bristled with blackened pipes and dusty gilded
ornaments of colossal size, like some enormous kingly crown long
forgotten in the lumber room of the universe, tarnished and overlaid
with the dust of ages. Eastwards, before the rail which separated the
high altar from the people, wax torches, so thick that a man might not
span one of them with both his hands, were set up at irregular
intervals, some taller, some shorter, burning with steady, golden
flames, each one surrounded with heavy funeral wreaths, and each
having a tablet below it, whereon were set forth in the Bohemian
idiom, the names, titles, and qualities of him or her in whose memory
it was lighted. Innumerable lamps and tapers before the side altars
and under the strange canopied shrines at the bases of the pillars,
struggled ineffectually with the gloom, shedding but a few sickly
yellow rays upon the pallid faces of the persons nearest to their
light.
Suddenly the heavy vibration of a single pedal note burst from the
organ upon the breathing silence, long drawn out, rich, voluminous,
and imposing. Presently, upon the massive bass, great chords grew up,
succeeding each other in a simple modulation, rising then with the
blare of trumpets and the simultaneous crash of mixtures, fifteenths
and coupled pedals to a deafening peal, then subsiding quickly again
and terminating in one long sustained common chord. And now, as the
celebrant bowed at the lowest step before the high altar, the voices
of the innumerable congregation joined the harmony of the organ,
ringing up to the groined roof in an ancient Slavonic melody,
melancholy and beautiful, and rendered yet more unlike all other music
by the undefinable character of the Bohemian language, in which tones
softer than those of the softest southern tongue alternate so oddly
with rough gutturals and strident sibilants.
The Wanderer stood in the midst of the throng, erect, taller than the
men near him, holding his head high, so that a little of the light
from the memorial torches reached his thoughtful, manly face, making
the noble and passionate features to stand out clearly, while losing
its power of illumination in the dark beard and among the shadows of
his hair. His was a face such as Rembrandt would have painted, seen
under the light that Rembrandt loved best; for the expression seemed
to overcome the surrounding gloom by its own luminous quality, while
the deep gray eyes were made almost black by the wide expansion of the
pupils; the dusky brows clearly defined the boundary in the face
between passion and thought, and the pale forehead, by its slight
recession into the shade from its middle prominence, proclaimed the
man of heart, the man of faith, the man of devotion, as well as the
intuitive nature of the delicately sensitive mind and the quick,
elastic qualities of the man's finely organized, but nervous bodily
constitution. The long white fingers of one hand stirred restlessly,
twitching at the fur of his broad lapel which was turned back across
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