Tegelstein on the Lake of Boden
Flowers
for the Dead
The ruins of the castle of Ingelstein which raised
its
proud head near the lake of Boden, have long since disappeared. The
legend
however about its haughty mistress, Mechtildis, a member of the race
who
lived in this castle, is still related by the folks of the
neighbourhood.
This great lady was an extremely beautiful woman,
but
so uncharitable of heart that the poor and needy kept away from her,
never
venturing to beg for her bounty. Heaven had presented her with one son
and
three daughters. Wonderful to relate the youth had a loving good
nature,
always having pity and compassion on those in want, whereas his three
sisters
had inherited their mother's haughtiness and coldness towards others.
One day a farmer's wife from the adjoining village appeared
at the castle asking to see the great lady; she was dressed in mourning
and
seemed to be in great affliction.
"My only daughter died yesterday," said she
weeping bitterly,
"she was seventeen years of age and was the one joy and happiness of my
life.
I would so much like to make a wreath of white roses for her hair, for
now
she has become Heaven's bride. Noble lady, let me go into the garden of
your
castle where the flowers are so plentiful, and pluck some roses for
her."
"You may weave a wreath of nettles for your
daughter,"
was the answer, "roses are only fit for such as we, not for common
people."
"Then may your roses adorn your daughters on their
death-beds!" exclaimed the woman who had been so scornfully rejected,
turning to
go
away.
Haughty mistress Mechtildis laughed disdainfully,
abusing
these beggars who came about the castle.
But the words of the farmer's wife were fulfilled.
A
year had hardly passed, when the three proud daughters of the castle
fell
ill and died. Each one wore a wreath of white roses from the garden as
she
lay in her coffin. Mistress Mechtildis' grief knew no bounds, and she
murmured
against her fate and against Heaven for having sent it. Her soul,
however,
had to do penance for her many sins. When death was threatening any
female
member of this family, the spirit of mistress Mechtildis was always
seen
at midnight sitting in the garden of the castle, weaving a wreath of
white
roses.
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