<h2><SPAN name="THE_WILD_WOODSMAN" id="THE_WILD_WOODSMAN"></SPAN>THE WILD WOODSMAN.</h2>
<ANTIMG src="images/drop-o.jpg" width-obs="74" height-obs="74" alt="O" title="O" class="split">
<p class="minus"><span class="hide">O</span><b>NCE</b>
there lived a peasant whose only daughter,
Martha, had eyes as blue as corn-flowers and
long hair like the silk around an ear of corn.
All the lads of the village were after her, but she cared
only for John, a young huntsman, who was called by
her father an idle vagabond, and sent away from his
cottage in disdain. Now, the village where they lived
was at the foot of a high mountain covered with a
dense forest, into certain portions of which few were
found to venture, so wild and lonely they were. One
day Martha went, unknown to her father and mother,
to ramble in the forest. She said to some of her friends
that she meant to gather flowers and pick berries, to
sell to a rich lady who lived near them; but the truth<span class="pagenum">[179]</span>
was, that a week had passed without John having set
foot in the village, and she was anxious and uneasy,
and wished to visit some of her lover's favorite haunts,
to see if he might be there. It was no uncommon
thing for John to be absent for several days, while
trapping and hunting. He could sleep as well on a
bank of moss as on his pallet at home, and he loved to
go to rest under the broad canopy of the sky, studded
with bright stars, and to be lulled by the music of
falling waters.</p>
<p>Martha, dressed in her brown cotton frock, with
the scarlet handkerchief knotted over her fair hair,
was seen to go up a rocky pathway on the mountain-side,
where the firs and larches made a bower overhead;
but that night she did not come home, and
next day, when John came into the village with a
splendid string of birds he had shot miles away from
there, in an opposite direction to the one Martha had
taken, it was to hear the sad news of the poor girl's
disappearance.</p>
<p>John's face grew pale and his stout heart grew faint;
he thought of what all the others were thinking of—the
Wild Woodsman, against whose magic his gun and
staff might avail nothing!<span class="pagenum">[180]</span></p>
<p>The mountain above was believed to be the haunt
of a mysterious being, half man, half brute, fierce and
cruel, from whose den no living creature might ever
be rescued. The Wild Woodsman, for so the natives
called him, took many a shape to trap unwary travellers,
and a fair young girl like Martha would be a
rich prize for him. John had long vowed to capture
the Wild Woodsman; and now he was filled with a
mad thirst to seek him at once. Without stopping to
hear more, the young man rushed off up the steep
mountain path, bounding like a chamois from rock to
rock, as the villagers, awe-struck and tearful, gazed
after him and crossed themselves in superstitious fear.</p>
<p>Through brake and brier, John darted on; he was
soon in the dark recesses of the forest, where the
undergrowth was like a jungle. His fleet foot never
tired in the chase, and, erelong, he spied a little red
handkerchief upon the ground. Recognizing this to
be Martha's, he gazed about him, and saw, by the token
of broken bushes, that the girl had been dragged away
from that spot up a rocky wall, which it seemed to him
no foot could scale.</p>
<p>Struggling to keep down his sickening dread, John
determined to follow. He began to climb the steep<span class="pagenum">[181]</span>
rock. His faithful dog, who had kept close beside him,
suddenly gave a low fierce growl, and the hair on its
back bristled up in fury. John was already half-way
up the cliff, when, on looking down, there, just where
<ANTIMG src="images/i041.jpg" width-obs="319" height-obs="424" alt="" title="" class="split">
he had picked up the
handkerchief, he saw
a queer little old fellow,
making shoes as
quietly as if nothing
at all had happened.</p>
<p>"Hallo, there!"
roared John, for he
suspected mischief.</p>
<p>The old man
looked up, and John
saw that he had a
young and rosy face
with hair as gray as
a badger's. The odd
creature made signs
that he was stone deaf, and beckoned John to come
down. All this time, the dog was growling fearfully,
and John took warning from the sign. He levelled
his gun without more ado, and said:<span class="pagenum">[182]</span></p>
<p>"Answer, you fellow. Who are you that have cheeks
so fair, and an old man's locks?"</p>
<p>"I?" said the old man, hopping up with a dreadful
grin, "you will know me soon enough, sirrah, for I am
the devil's grandfather."</p>
<p>He stretched out an arm that grew longer every
minute, and his hands changed to the claws of a beast.
John lost no time, but taking aim fired at the Wild
Woodsman, for he it was, and none other. Bang!
The friendly bullet made straight for the creature's
heart, and though it did not kill him outright, the Wild
Woodsman was sorely wounded. He fell over a log,
groaning pitifully, and prayed John to come to the aid
of a poor old man. John said, "That I will with another
bullet," when the Wild Woodsman darted from
the spot, and was lost in the thicket.</p>
<p>After him went the dog, after the dog went John.
Such a hunt there never was! Through spots in the
woods where man's foot had never penetrated, into bogs,
and into serpents' lairs, past the caves where bears were
lurking; but no animal would touch John, for the Wild
Woodsman was their deadly enemy.</p>
<p>At last they came to a cleft in a little green hillock.
Here was a hut covered with moss, and the Wild Woodsman,<span class="pagenum">[183]</span>
uttering a frantic yell, fell dead upon the threshold.
John heard a shriek within the hut, and, dashing
down the door, saw Martha, lying, bound with ropes
made of plaited willow, in a corner.</p>
<p>He flew to set her free; but, to his surprise, Martha
did not appear to know him. She let him take her
by the hand and lead her from the fearful spot where
the inner walls were built of the bones of the Wild
Woodsman's victims. She looked up into his face
and smiled, and John saw she had lost her reason.
He did not stop to pick up the jewels and gold, stolen
from murdered travellers, with which the hut was
strewn, but made all speed to leave behind the horrid
place. He lifted Martha in his strong arms and carried
her down a path along the far side of the mountain.
A great storm arose, and the earth trembled under his
feet; but he kept bravely on his way, and looking back
saw the cleft in the hills widen; then a great gulf
opened, fire and smoke burst forth, and the hut of the
Wild Woodsman was swallowed forever from sight.</p>
<p>John gave a shout of joy, and began singing a hymn
in his clear young voice. The storm ceased. The clouds
parted. Down in the valley below was their own
peaceful village, and the sound of the evening bells<span class="pagenum">[184]</span>
came floating up to him. Martha, who had lain in his
arms as if asleep, stirred, and recognized him. Her
strength returned, and she asked to walk beside him.
Strangely enough, she said nothing of her late adventure,
then or ever afterward. Not a trace of it remained
in her memory.</p>
<p>When they reached the village, all the people came
out to meet them, rejoicing. John told them he had
rescued the lost girl, but the true history of his chase
of the Wild Woodsman he kept to himself. Martha's
father and mother greeted her with tears of thankfulness;
and before another year had gone by John and
Martha were married in the village church. From
that day forth, peace reigned upon the mountain-side;
but when stories of the Wild Woodsman were told to
Martha's grandchildren, they little knew the share their
hale old grandsire had in ridding the country-side of
such a scourge.</p>
<hr class="chapter">
<p><span class="pagenum">[185]</span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i042.jpg" width-obs="532" height-obs="122" alt="" title=""></div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />