Tales of the Wonder Club - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel Tales of the Wonder Club Volume I Part 27 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
So saying, he lifted his tiny spouse from his helmet with finger and thumb, and showed her to the people. Then a great commotion arose. There were some among them who recognised the princess, and admitted her right to the throne. Others said nay; that it was a puppet, and voted for the Princess Clothilde. Others, again, shouted for the Princess Carlotta.
Presently the two first champions appeared who had fought together--one for Clothilde, and the other for Carlotta, and they both called out, "We ignore your Princess Bertha, for it is well known that she is dead. In vain you exhibit your dwarf or puppet, for we have seen her funeral."
"Then," said Hans, at the dictation of Bertha, "it is false; the body was never found, but one of her intriguing sisters, anxious to usurp the crown, gave out to her followers that she had found the body, and ordered a mock funeral."
"Thou liest, thou liest!" shouted the two knights, both at once.
"Let it be put to the proof," said Hans. "Let the coffin be disinterred, and if the body be found therein I will lose my head on the spot where I stand; but if the body of the princess be not found therein, then shall ye, the champions of the two usurpers, lose _your_ heads."
"It would be sacrilege to disturb the dead," said the knights. "We cannot agree to the proposition."
But the people called out, "It is well said; 'tis a fair trial."
The two knights began to remonstrate, but their voices were drowned by the herd, who wished the matter settled by the disinterment of the body.
When the commotion had ceased a little Hans lifted up his voice, and said to the mult.i.tude, being instructed, as usual, by his spouse, "It is the pleasure of the Princess Bertha, whom you now see before you, that she be taken instantly to the presence of the arch-priest of this city, who has known her well from infancy, and who baptised her. He, as you all know, citizens, is a man of good repute. Should he recognise the Princess Bertha, let her have her rights; but if he says it is another like to her, let the coffin of the supposed defunct be opened publicly, that all may be satisfied."
"Sacrilege, sacrilege!" cried the knights.
"No, no!" cried the populace; "the stranger knight has well said. It is most fair. To the arch-priest, to the arch-priest!"
The crowd made room for Hans, and conducted him to the palace of the arch-priest. When the good man saw this great crowd in front of his palace he came out to demand the reason, and was informed that the Princess Bertha, whom all believed to be dead, had returned to the city with a champion who was ready to maintain her right to the crown, provided that the arch-priest himself, who knew her well, should testify to her ident.i.ty.
"Show me this champion," said the priest.
Hans then rode up, and holding in his hand the diminutive princess, placed her in the hands of the arch-priest.
The crowd pressed hard together while the aged priest took out his spectacles and examined the tender form minutely.
"In good sooth," he exclaimed, "it is the Princess Bertha and none other. My fair princess, what treachery has been at work to deprive thee of thy rights?"
"You know me then, holy father?"
"Know thee, daughter," quoth the old man, tenderly. "Methinks it were difficult to make a mistake."
"You hear then, O people," cried the little princess, straining her feeble voice to its utmost pitch, till it resembled the squeaking of a fife; "you hear that the venerable arch-priest has recognised me."
"Ay, ay, your royal highness; long life to you, and welcome to the throne!" cried the populace.
Then a great cheering arose.
"Long live the Princess Bertha, our rightful queen!"
But some of the faction for the Princess Clothilde called out, "It is false; she is dead and buried, we will not be imposed upon by this man and his dwarf."
"The arch-priest recognises her," cried others. "The arch-priest dotes; he is mistaken," cried they for the Princess Clothilde.
"Let the coffin of the princess be exhumed!" cried the crowd, and they appealed to the priest, who consented that the coffin should be opened in the presence of all the people.
"Where is the undertaker?" cried one of the crowd.
"Here!" cried a voice.
"Let him come forward."
Then the crowd made room for the undertaker, and one amongst them asked him if he had placed the late princess in the coffin with his own hands.
He replied in the negative.
"Who closed the coffin, then?" asked the former questioner.
"The Princess Clothilde herself," answered the undertaker.
"That seems suspicious," said another; "she also is said to have found the body, which she concealed in her cloak and allowed n.o.body to see."
"Because," answered one of the faction, for Clothilde, "because the body, being already in an advanced state of decay, she was unwilling to make a disgusting exhibition of the remains of her sister, who she so dearly loved. We are witnesses of her emotion upon finding her sister's body."
"It is false," cried Hans; "the Princess Clothilde is a hypocrite and an usurper, and has plotted to obtain the crown for herself."
"Treason, treason!" cried the faction for Clothilde. But those in favour of the Princess Bertha applauded the words of Hans, and cried out, "We shall see if the remains be in the coffin."
After waiting some little time longer, the coffin was exhumed and given into the hands of the arch-priest, who, standing upon the balcony of his palace, opened the coffin with his penknife in the presence of all the crowd, and found therein nothing but cinders, which he emptied into the street below.
"I hope now, citizens, you are convinced that foul play is at the bottom of it all," said the old priest.
"Ay," cried the crowd, "most vile treachery--down with the Princess Clothilde; we will have none to reign over us but the Princess Bertha."
"Stay a moment," shouted the champion for the Princess Clothilde. "What was there in the coffin if not the body of the Princess Bertha?"
"Nothing but dust and ashes," answered the arch-priest.
"A sign that decomposition has already taken place," responded the former. "That is no proof that the princess Bertha was not buried in the coffin."
But the crowd laughed him to scorn, saying that it was scarce a fortnight ago since the princess was missed, and that it was impossible the body should have decomposed so rapidly.
The arch-priest then gave his word of honour to all present that he had found nothing in the coffin but cinders from the grate.
One of the crowd below picked up a cinder which had fallen from the coffin, and cried out, "The holy father speaks the truth, for the coffin contained nothing but cinders of burnt wood."
Then the champion for the Princess Clothilde, fearing that all were siding with Bertha, called out in a loud voice, "Long live the Princess Clothilde!"
But the crowd hissed, and showed signs of disapprobation.
Then the other champion for her twin sister called out, "Long live the Princess Carlotta!" but he, too, was hissed.
Then spake out Hans.
"Whoever objects to the Princess Bertha being queen, let him do battle with me."