OUR HOME IN THE TYROL.
 VIEW OF TAUFERS VALLEY.
CHAPTER VII.
We left the Hof one August Friday—we were not
superstitious—a goodly company, sufficient to freight the
rumbling old stage-wagon which jolted daily between Bruneck and
Taufers, a distance of nine miles. At this village the sedater
portion of the party were to settle down with books, pencils and
drawing-paper until the Alpine visit should have been paid.
The valley of Taufers, running northward with a grand vista to the
north-west of the vast Zillerthal snow-fields, suggests at a distance
the idea of a stern, joyless district. When in the broader Pusterthal
the sunshine floods upland plain and slope, this important but narrow
tributary valley lies steeped in its gloomy shade, the dark sides of
the Sambock frowning grimly on the opposite shadowy Tesselberg.
Great, therefore, was the surprise of some of the party to find, as
we drove along, instead of melancholy solitude, prosperous villages
basking in sunshine, whilst little children skipped merrily, and men
and women worked amongst the golden stooks as if enjoying the labor
of their hands. Yes, strange to say, effulgent sunshine everywhere on
acre and meadow, and slanting down upon a wayside cottage garden,
where a freshly-painted Christ lay drying between tall sunflowers.
This cottage seemed the only shadow in this unexpectedly bright
picture, for, occupied by a religious image-maker, crucifixes and
wooden saints peeped wholesale out of the windows. Is it a want of
sensibility in these poor Tyrolese peasants which causes them to
cling tenaciously to such frightful material forms of religion,
making them give prominence to every conceivable sign of sacred
sorrow and suffering? But the jolting stage-wagon allowed us no time
to analyze this painful, ever-recurring feature of the Tyrol. When we
next looked up we saw above us, on a wooded crag, a square gray
tower, which, once a stronghold, appears, as if exhausted with old
age, to be tottering into the midst of lesser ruins.
It was Neuhaus, once a fortress of the rigid old barons of Tuvers.
Hugo, the sixth lord, died there in 1309, and in the chapel, which
still stands, mass is said at stated periods for the salvation of his
soul and the souls of his relations. The whole place would
undoubtedly have been given over to the owls and the bats had not two
adjacent springs—one of iron, the other of chalk and
alum—been considered, a quarter of a century since, either as
preventives or as cures for the cholera, then raging. A chalet was
therefore planted on the rocks between the chapel and the castle, and
a bath-house opened, which would probably be still much frequented on
account of the beauty of the situation were the bath-owner only a
little more attentive to the comfort of his humble guests.
The valley, apparently so gloomy, proved not only cheerful, but
full of romance and old-world memories. Other castles there were,
perched gracefully on their crags; and thus, much sooner than we had
anticipated, we found ourselves stopping at the Post in Taufers.
Rather Sand in Taufers, the single appellation being used chiefly for
the parent church, which, with a mortuary chapel and a house for the
"young and sick," stands apart. Sand and Moritz, two
prosperous villages, cluster with this group of buildings at the head
of the valley, gathering like fiefs at the foot of the fine old
castle, still one of the grandest feudal remains in ruin-bestrewn
Tyrol. A third village, Müklen, though quite distinct, lies
sufficiently near to deserve being included in the circle.
The Post, in prospect of the increase of custom occasioned by the
Pusterthal railway, had enlarged its borders during the past winter.
Nor had it been deceived in the speculation, for, although only one
up-and-down train in the day crawls along the valley, the news of the
comfortable inn in the midst of beautiful scenery had already brought
custom enough. Thus all our powers of persuasion were lost upon the
handsome sister of the young wirth, a noted beauty of the
neighborhood. "Their house was full already. Nine guests, who
had never sent word beforehand, were quite out of the question, but
the Herrschaft could be accommodated at the Elephant opposite, which was related to the
Post."
So, crossing over to the Elephant, the house being entirely empty,
we found space and cleanliness, and might have found perfect comfort
withal, had not the landlord and landlady proved in a perpetual state
of somnolency, their few waking intervals being barely sufficient for
the supply of the simplest wants. In spite of these and other
unsatisfactory auspices, such as the tea being served in a
soup-tureen, the stayers voted to remain at the Elephant in our
absence, making up for all inward deficiencies by outdoor
enjoyment.
A country clown with an honest face, Ignaz by name, agreed for a
trifle to carry our bundles and ample provision of food to the Olm.
He made a serious matter of it, however, when he pertinaciously
insisted on four in the morning being the hour for starting. The
dispute finally ended by the agreement to allow Ignaz to carry our
belongings at the hour he chose, seeing that all the village was
ready to take an affidavit as to his honesty, and we being allowed
the same freedom of choice for ourselves. All having thus been
comfortably arranged, we sallied forth for an evening stroll.
A turn in the quiet village street soon revealed the great massive
castle on its plateau of rock—shattered towers, broken
battlements, oriel and bay windows jutting out here and there, its
bulwarks running down the precipice, but not, as formerly, shutting
in the narrow gorge leading into the Ahrnthal, a busy, populous
valley, closed in its turn by the snow-clad bulk of the Tauern, down
which, on the farther side, the noted Kriml waterfall plunges.
Remembering, from a visit paid to the castle in the former year, that
an easy winding road, shaded by trees and commanding splendid
mountain-views, led through the fortifications by the back of the
castle to the great gateway, we chose it in preference to the steep,
perpendicular path, which, always taken by the natives, led equally
to the drawbridge and main entrance. To our extreme regret, however,
we soon found our course
impeded by the huge trunks of mighty pine trees lying in a perfect
pell-mell above and on both sides of us. A glance up the hillside
showed scores more of these slain giants. To proceed was almost
hopeless, and we were forced to rest upon some timber and mark our
future course between piles oozing with turpentine.
Whilst we were engaged in our calculations, an old crone, who had
been groping about in the crevices for chips and sticks, stopped, and
seeing us thus penned in by tree boles, eyed us with a compassionate
look. "Ja, ja!" said she, "with fallen trees all
jumbled together it is hard for the Herrschaft to move on; but
it's harder for us poor folks, who have seen the trees growing
here ever since we were born, to hear day and night the axe going
hack, hack, and the trees come thudding down. Sixteen strong
Welschers from a distance do the work: they knew well enough a
Taufern would have looked long at the sixers (ten-kreuzer pieces)
before he would have shorn the mighty forests. Look you!" and
she pointed to the sky. "As far as you can see they are
felling."
We looked, and sure enough the vast woods that clothed the lofty
mountainsides were being ruthlessly cleared away. We suggested that a
protest should be made.
"Oh, na, na! The woods are none of ours. The graf de Ferraris
too has sold the estate to a gesellschaft from Vienna. They care
nothing for the castle, but are hungry for timber. The count lives a
long way off, and does not feel it, but it must eat the heart of his
aged lady mother to the fibres—she lives in the
village—to know that foreigners are sweeping down masses of
trees by wholesale—trees that have always kept the poor
man's noodles boiling. And where are the planks to come from for
our houses, our barns, our stables? And how can the cattle be kept
from straying without fences of wood? Then, too, avalanches of snow
and of stones will fall, and maybe overwhelm the village. Thanks to
the Mother of God! they will drop on my grave, but, Lord Jesus, the
children and the children's children!"
Having given us these sad scraps of information, and heaving a big
sigh, the poor old soul lifted up her bundle of chips and went
fumbling forward over her stumbling-blocks.
Sad and true was the picture which she had drawn. Nor does it,
alas! belong exclusively to Taufers, but to the whole Tyrol. In many
instances the people are themselves eager for this reckless clearing.
They hope thereby to secure more pasturage, the feeding and rearing
of cattle being the great idea of wealth to the Tyroler. So they make
ready money of their timber, which now in the form of masts floats on
the Mediterranean and the Suez Canal. The Venetians, requiring
timber, have turned the once beautiful, richly-wooded Dalmatia into a
dreary, barren land. In the Tyrol it is not generally foreigners, but
the natives, who unhesitatingly sweep away woods, which, causing
grass and plants to grow, have enabled human habitations to be
erected on spots that would otherwise be but dreary wildernesses, the
battle-fields of chilling winds and scorching sunshine. The precious
timber, which like refuse they cart into the clumsy yawning craters
called stoves, or else sell out of the country for economy so called,
might not only supply the land for centuries with a proper amount of
fuel, either as wood or charcoal, but bring prosperity to many a
sequestered village if turned into tools and kitchen utensils, whilst
still leaving thousands of trees for export. "The supply has
never failed yet," say the Tyrolese: "why should we replant
forests to have to cut them down again, when the ground, too, is good
for grass or corn?" So the axe lies ruthlessly at the root of
every tree, for a heavy reckoning hereafter to the Tyroler.
With a weighing and balancing over every step which we took worthy
of a diplomatist, we finally stood upon the drawbridge of the castle.
Here the savage customs of the rude days in which it was built
immediately impress the beholder. Traces remain of the ponderous iron
portcullis, heavy wooden bars, arrow-holes, and slits in the masonry
for the pouring of boiling water or oil upon adverse knight or lordly
freebooter. A steep path leads through two great entrance-gates into
the large inner court, which is erected upon the virgin rock. A roof
of old wooden shingles shelters the well, and ancient rotting timber
mingles everywhere with the impervious stone in the massive buildings
of the castle, conveying a sense of weakness and decay in the midst
of the strongest durability.
Not only was the old castle dismantled, but apparently entirely
abandoned this summer evening. We were preparing to return without
seeing the interior when a little maiden arrived from the village,
who with flushed face and timid mien drew the castle key from under a
big stone, stood on tiptoe and turned the heavy lock, and the door
creaking on its hinges we were left to wander at our will through old
wainscoted rooms in the dreamy twilight. No spirit of modern
restoration had ever reached them: they were allowed to remain just
as inconvenient, but also just as quaint, as on the day of their
erection. There were gloomy recesses enough, but there were likewise
graceful carvings, mottoes, rare tracery and wood-work; while,
strange to say, in several chambers grotesque wooden birds were
suspended from the ceiling like malformed ducks, conveying at first
no idea of the Holy Dove which the old lords had desired to
symbolize, yet probably in those unquiet days their best conception
of this emblem of peace.
The barons not only fought, squabbled and feasted, but prayed too
in their fashion; so we came upon the chapel, disfigured by barbaric
effigies, tawdry ornamentation and flimsy modern artificial flowers.
It is still used for the weekly mass which, as at Neuhaus, is read
here for the peace of the turbulent lords of Tuvers. Still, within
the memory of man a hermit occupied some narrow chambers adjoining
the chapel. He had retired amongst these ruins of transitory
greatness to warn his fellow-creatures against carnal passions,
prayed for the dead and shrived
the living. The old anchorite has passed, we hope, into heavenly
repose, but cinders, which may almost be called holy ashes, still lie
scattered on his deserted little hearth.
The banqueting-hall, a fine though low room, supported on solid
rounded arches, contains innumerable flour-and corn-bins, which,
though dating from the Middle Ages, are still in perfect condition.
Here knight and baron caroused, here mummers have played and bears
have danced, whilst sword and spur clanked upon the rude stone floor.
In the ladies' bower above many a minne-singer has struck his
lyre. Nay, Oswald von Wolkenstein, a prince amongst troubadours,
wearing his golden chain and brilliant orders, has brought tears from
many a gentle eye as he sang to his harp his pathetic elegies, the
cruelty of Sabina his lady, and his adventures in England, Spain and
Persia. He was a noble, courtly knight, conversing in French,
Moorish, Catalonian, Castilian, German, Latin, Wendisch, Lombardic
and Russian; and his bones lie in the great cloister of Neustift, not
half a day's journey from Taufers.
How often, too, has the shrill sound of the bugle called to feats
of arms in the court, to hawking and hunting in valley and
mountain-forest! How many a crusader against Turk, infidel,
Prussian and Hussite has crossed the wooden drawbridge
upon his war-horse! Yes, and what an excitement in the noble Catholic
household when in the adjoining Ahrnthal the peasants, becoming
enamored of Lutheranism, rose in the peasant war of 1525! How darkly,
too, must they have painted the fanatical bauer Barthlmä Duregger of
St. Peter's in the Ahrnthal, who, after being taken prisoner,
escaped near their postern gate to circulate threats of fire and
murder throughout the neighborhood, vowing to reduce Bruneck to
ashes! Reappearing with a band of twelve poachers and twenty-six
laborers, and accompanied by Peter Baszler of Antholz, he robbed and
plundered the clergy, stripping the worthy priest Andreas Spaat of
all his worldly goods, so that
he died in the utmost poverty. Although much blood was shed in their
pursuit, this lawless, misguided man and his band were never taken.
Great as their sin would naturally seem to the noble family at the
castle, no less lamentable and equally worthy of torture and death
would the heretics of Bruneck appear. About the same time the
sacrilegious books, as they were called, of Zwingli and Luther were
sold there openly, conventicle hymns were sung in the streets, and
the priest Stephan Gobi preached against the holy doctrine of
confession and the invocation of saints; whilst the schoolmaster
Bartholomew Huber, though he could not find time to teach the
children the catechism, puzzled their innocent minds with
Virgil's Georgics and Cicero's Letters. Toward
the end of the sixteenth century the heresy was suppressed, when the
lords and ladies of Taufers Castle sang no doubt a triumphant Te Deum
in their chapel. The inmates were not then barons of Tuvers proper,
for the title having early become extinct the castle passed into many
noble hands, sometimes reaching those of royalty. Such a booty never
remained unoccupied, until, coming into the possession of Hieronymus,
count of Ferraris, in 1685, his descendants gradually permitted it to
fall into ruin, its evil days culminating under the present count,
who sold the estate a few years since to a speculating company, who
merely value it for the timber. The rooms which still remain
habitable are tenanted by peasants and by the sixteen pitiless
wood-cutters.
Seven o'clock the next morning found Frau Anna,
E——, the two Margarets and our good Moidel bound full of
life and spirits for the Eder Olm. We had soon left the village of
Moritz behind us, and were climbing a shady wood-path, when we met a
peasant-woman with her daughter, and she exclaimed, "What!
Herrschaft going to Rein! What big eyes they will make over the
stones!"
Sure enough, very big eyes were made by some of the Herrschaft.
After ascending to a meadow amphitheatre, then resting in a sunny
wood, redolent of pine odors, near the foundations of a ruined
stronghold, the Burgkofel, we came upon a realm of gigantic boulders.
Some, in the shape of huge granite slabs, formed a rude, continuous
broadway; others, scarred and furrowed, but softened and beautified
by golden and silver lichen, torn by storms and snow from the
cyclopean mountain-walls, were scattered topsy-turvy on either hand;
many had become lodged in the river, where they carried on a steady
defence against the tumultuous Giessbach, which, having its rise in
mountains ten thousand feet high, leapt, foaming milky white, over
and between them, forming a long series of bold cascades for a
distance of half a dozen miles. The road continued by the boisterous
rapids, hemmed in on the other hand by woods and threatening
mountain-walls. The thunder of the waters prevented continuous
conversation: we therefore admired in silence the grandeur of the
scene and the magnificent glimpses which slight curves in the road
afforded ever and anon of neighboring mountain-peaks and wooded
valleys below.
No carriage of any kind can ascend this road. It would be
difficult indeed for horses; nevertheless, the herds of cattle
traverse it in the journey to and from the Olm, their hoofs being
able to find foothold on the rock. Moidel said that the cattle were
so delighted to go to the Alps for the summer after the winter's
confinement in the stall that they made the journey with a kind of
joyful impatience, going on still more eagerly as they approached the
end. "Not so, however," added Moidel, "with the pigs.
I have often sat and cried on these rocks at their perverse ways when
I have had to bring them up. They would only stand still and grunt
while I begged and prayed and pushed. When they reached the top a new
spirit soon seized them: they were here, there and
everywhere—in a week's time leaping like goats, as if they
had taken to wine."
We made the climb slowly, and noon was long passed when we
reached the saw-mills, the first houses in the mountain parish of St.
Wolfgang or Rein. The busy, purring mills stood on the edge of the
Sarine at the extremity of a flat mountain-valley intersected by
innumerable brooks, which, continually overflowing, turn it
constantly into a lake. The grass had been under water a week
previously, but was now sufficiently dry for us to sit and rest.
Whilst we were so doing, Ignaz, our träger, stood before us,
his empty basket on his back.
"The barn is swept and garnished in readiness for the
Herrschaft, and their bundles and parcels are arranged there in
beautiful order—many bundles, and far heavier than they looked
last night." Ignaz, however, was of opinion that though the pay
was small the gentry meant well by him, and therefore he had not
scrupled to take the food the worthy farmer's wife had offered
him, leaving the Christian soul to be repaid by the gentlefolks when
they came. And, moreover, he had advised the landlord at Rein that
the gentry were passing through, so that they should not fail to find
eatables ready, seeing hunger and weariness were best consoled by
food.
After which communication we regarded Ignaz as much less a clown
than he looked. Pushing forward, we soon saw the little inn shining
forth a mile farther up the valley—a small white chalet, with
the pink-checked feather beds hanging to air in the upper
gallery.
Moidel looked grave over the dinner which the interposition of
Ignaz had prepared for us. "The place is called Rein
(clean)," she said, "but it is none of the cleanest. A Graf
once reached Rein, and he thought it so pastoral that he asked at the
inn for a drink of new milk, but the landlord shook his head and
asked for other orders, seeing there was none in the house. Then the
Graf said he would take cream, but the landlord shook his head and
asked for other orders. Fresh eggs? Yes, the landlord said there were
eggs, and begged him to step into the zechstube until they were
boiled. When they came they made the very room smell, and the Graf in
disgust ordered wine. This was speedily forthcoming, but with so dirty a glass that the Graf,
making a long face, angrily called for the reckoning and
departed."
After Moidel's tale, and certain recollections of our own
concerning the little hostel last year, we all approached the house
with very humble expectations. The wirth, already on the lookout,
received Moidel and two of the party as old friends, and hearing no
nay he marshaled us up stairs, and flinging open a bed-room door,
looked proudly triumphant as even Moidel uttered an exclamation of
surprise.
Whether constant reminders from his neighbors of the Graf's
unfortunate visit, or a wave of civilization from the Pusterthal had
reached this secluded mountain-inn, certain it is that twelve months
had wrought a marvelous change here. Whilst the rest of the house
remained rough, dirty and primitive, the landlord had devoted all his
powers of taste and judgment upon this upper chamber. Leaning
complacently against the door, he received our congratulations on the
pretty ceiling and walls of carved deal wainscot, on the grand new
bed, and the bouquet of fresh Edelweiss in a wash-basin, but showed
surprise that the fiery tigers and gliding serpents which in a couple
of gilt frames adorned the walls received no flattering comments from
our lips. He next displayed a visitors' book, containing already
some half dozen names, watching closely the astonishment it should
produce in us as he prepared the table for our meal. But even the
study of the names had to be interrupted, for he had purchased some
steel knives and forks, which were, he considered, to bring him great
credit and reputation; nor could he complete his work without hinting
at the superiority of his table-cloth and napkins. Fortunately, a
call from below that the pancakes were ready enabled us to have a
little laugh to ourselves. Linen being used in all peasant houses, he
had discarded it as vulgar, wearing himself an unbleached cotton
shirt with an incipient frill, and supplying his guests with a
table-cloth and napkins of the same material from an empty
wash-basin.
We had already discussed two dishes of hot pancakes—really
worthy of commendation—enjoyed an hour's rest, taken
coffee, and were rising to depart, when the landlady appeared with a
hop, skip and jump. She was a lively, voluble little woman, who,
though she had attired herself for us in two enormous cloth
petticoats, a stuff bodice and yards of Bohemian lace in frills and
ruffles, by way of displaying the wealth of her wardrobe, bobbed and
curtseyed as if set on wires. Great was the difficulty, between the
amusing, friendly wife and the husband proud of her and his inn,
either to pay our bill or get away. They declared there was no hurry
about the reckoning, and pressed us still to stay. Seeing our
resolution, the wirth with a sigh produced a brown painted board from
under his arm, a piece of chalk from his pocket, made the bill, gave
us change out of a tea-cup, and amidst reiterated invitations to
return if not satisfied with the barn, we tore ourselves away, their
friendly good-byes and good wishes floating after us.
CHAPTER VIII.
We now left the Reinthal and turned into the side-valley of
Bachernthal. It was the 17th of August, but the little plots of corn
still waved long and green, giving a feeling of early summer. We were
in a perfect paradise of an Alpine valley. Before us the great
near-lying mountains, the princely Hoch Gall and the Gross Lengstein
Glacier, shone like molten silver against the intense blue sky,
whilst the Schnebige Nock rose pure and isolated across the narrow
valley, suggesting to one of the party the simile of the
swan-breasted maiden of Northern mythology.
After passing several chalets we came to that of the Eder Olm. It
belonged to the Hofbauer, and was occupied by his pächter or
bailiff the year round. Here, too, was the barn which we were to use
as our night-quarters during our stay. It was a great wooden
building, divided into three compartments, one being two-thirds
filled with hay, on which we were intended to sleep. It was true that
Josef the pächter had succeeded by means of sweeping and a little
arrangement in making the barn really attractive; but, alas! alas! we
had hardly begun preparing our beds when the horrible discovery was
made that under the surface the hay was soaking wet. Josef could
hardly be blamed for not telling us, as in the Tyrol the people
regard lying on wet or dewy grass as a natural system of
hydropathy.
We had not shawls and cloaks enough to construct beds upon the
barn floor, and the pächter's house, though substantial, was but
a dark den, already stuffed full with wife and children. Must we,
then, really return to the inn at Rein with its ornamental snakes and
lions?
It was dusk out of doors, but pitch dark within, save for the dim,
uncertain light of a horn lantern, and, all regularly worn out with
our ten miles' climb, we sighed for bed. It was futile, however,
simply to exchange expressions of dismay; so, groping about, to our
joy we alighted suddenly upon several bundles of clean, fresh straw
stowed away in the farthest recess of the opposite division. In a
trice a dangerous corn-chopping machine had been removed, the straw
loosened and spread out, and, covered with shawls and water-proof, it
formed as comfortable a great bed of Ware as ever weary bones could
desire. Forming a row, the tired wanderers were soon sleeping the
sleep of five just persons, the sound of several neighboring
waterfalls soothing rather than disturbing slumber.
In the early morning it was put to the vote and carried that eider
down and spring mattresses were useless innovations after luxurious
straw, and that whilst some benighted people might regard us as
having been in purgatory, we had been in paradise, and hoped to be
there again within twenty-four hours. And the barn, too! How poor in
comparison seemed a conventional house on this sweet Sunday morning!
We had prudently filled all the large apertures in the eaves and
wooden sides the night before
with hay, but there were plenty of crevices for the sun to peep in
by, whilst with wafts of mountain-air it entered freely by the
folding barn door as Moidel gently passed in and out, on breakfast
matters intent. Corn- and grain-bins, sieves, flails and ladders
pleased us better for the nonce than formal furniture, although none
the less convenient did we find the great square wooden table and the
benches which the pächter had thoughtfully placed on the
threshing-floor which formed the central division.
 SCHLOSS TAUFERS.
On one side of the barn a small room had been boarded off. It
contained empty milk-pans, ox-bells, old ropes and cords, together
with two chests and two pairs of men's strong leather boots. This, Moidel suggested, should
be used as joint store-room and dressing-room. Fortunately, however,
we had applied it to neither requirement, when a singular occurrence
took place which might be classed as a ghost-story at night or an
optical delusion by day. The great barn-door quietly opened, Moidel
having gone out and shut it, and two figures—one in soiled
homespun shirt and loden trousers, wooden clogs, with a little
black leather skull-cap on his head and a pipe in his mouth; the
other older, in leather breeches, brown knitted worsted jacket, and
an old black silk handkerchief tied round his neck—glided in.
We could have sworn that they were Jakob and the old senner Franz,
but no response came to our exclamation of recognition, and in a
second they had vanished into the said little room, where all
remained, however, as silent as before. Two of us now began even to
doubt, but the other two were positive, that figures had floated in.
Ten minutes later the mystery was solved by the identical Jakob,
attended by Franz, reappearing from the chamber, not, however, in the
hard-working dress in which they had entered, but in full Sunday
array, the leather boots upon their feet and broad-brimmed,
flower-bedecked beavers in their hands. Poor Jakob! sore must have
been his perplexity when, in the hope of slinking into his
wardrobe-room unobserved, we had come open-eyed upon him in his
soiled array. At the cost of apparent rudeness, arising chiefly from
shyness, he had silently disappeared, the old servant following his
example. Now, however, they could both freely welcome us to the Olm,
expressing the pleasure it would give them to accompany us to the
senner huts on their return with Moidel at ten o'clock from
church.
This was Jakob's first introduction to Frau Anna and
E——. He eyed them closely and silently for some minutes;
then said, "I like them: they look good!" and so they went
to mass.
The barn and chalet called Eder formed part of the Hofbauer's
lower Alp, where a little later in the season the cattle were brought
down for several weeks of pasturage before they descended to their
winter home. We were now bound in company with the returning
church-goers for the group of senner huts belonging to the larger
still more elevated tract, which the Hofbauer rented in company with
five other bauers. Leaving the meadows very shortly after quitting
our night-quarters, where we seemed already in the very bosom of the
snow-mountains, we began again to ascend through a wood of primeval
pines and fir trees, long gray moss hanging from their hoary branches
like patriarchs' beards, whilst round their stems, amidst a chaos
of rocks, were spread the softest carpets of moss and lichen. In the
centre of the wood, where an opening covered with the finest turf
afforded an agreeable resting-place, as usual a cross—that most
familiar object in a Tyrolese landscape—had been erected. In
this instance, more striking and melancholy than ever, for this
general point of attraction to peasants seemed here, in the very
heart of the mountains, to be forgotten and despised. Small in size,
as if wood had been grudged in this land of wood, the writing on the
cross erased by storms, the dissevered arms and limbs were painfully
scattered on the sward below—type indeed as of a powerless
Saviour unable to save or to bless. Indeed, so offensive and
discordant did this pitiable emblem appear, and in such mocking
contrast to the sublimity of the scene, that we spoke of it to
Moidel, as, laden with our eatables, she came slowly up behind.
"Ah," she replied, "it is not that the cross is left
unregarded, nor is it age which has thus damaged it, but the wild
storms and lasting snows. A new cross is often erected, but it has
not long been exposed before it is again utterly defaced. The
herdsmen and senners, however, see the meaning under it, and it keeps
them straight, Fräulein."
Well-intentioned but slow of apprehension, these poor peasants
cling to a carved Christ, and feel a horrible alarm, as if you were
offering them a vacant creed, when you touch upon anything higher. Thus Moidel, though
very intelligent, looked somewhat grave and quiet until the woods
opened and she had to point out the senner huts. These were rude but
very picturesque log cabins, built in a clearing amongst a steep
chaos of rocks, with the glaciers and the majestic peak of the Hoch
Gall shining above all. Five were dwelling-houses, the rest
cattle-sheds and barns: our people's hut was the highest of the
group, and we had a long climb over the boulders before we reached
it.
Seeing us approaching, good old Franz, who had gone forward in
advance, fastened on his apron and fried marvelous monograms and
circles of cream batter, of which we, the guests, were soon partaking
in the best room, otherwise the store-room and dairy. The hut was
divided into two compartments, both entered by adjoining doors from
the outside. Seated on milking-stools in somewhat dangerous proximity
to pans of rich cream, balls of butter and cheeses, the salt and
meal-bin served as our dining table. In the kitchen, Franz, resting
from his successful culinary labors, sat with Moidel and Jakob by the
hearth, where huge blocks of stone kept the fire in compass, the
smoke curling out of the door, and enjoyed in return some of our ham,
wine and almond cake.
 HAPPY SOULS IN PARADISE.
The hut was close quarters, even for the two ordinary inmates:
there were, however, innumerable contrivances for stowing away all
kinds of useful things, besides notches in the thick wooden partition
for hands and feet when at night they crept to their burrow of hay
under the low eaves. Everything with the exception of the old stone
floor was scrupulously clean: without, the pigs dabbled in the mire
between the rugged rocks, and nettles grew, but beyond, mountains,
woods and illimitable space were spread in uninterrupted
fullness.
Resting after dinner at a little distance from the huts, we
learned from Jakob, who was full of excitement on the subject, that
shortly after we left the inn at Rein the preceding evening a
gentleman from Bohemia arrived. He immediately communicated to the
wirth his intention of ascending one of the three great mountains
rising from the Bachernthal, either the Hoch Gall (11,283 feet high),
the Wild Gall or the Schnebige Nock, both some thousand feet lower,
but perhaps even more attractive, as still possessing the charm of
untrodden summits. The wirth consequently sent for a fine, clever
young fellow, Johann Ausserkofer, a friend of Jakob's, and whose home we had passed on
the previous night before reaching the Eder Olm. He had ascended the
Hoch Gall with two gentlemen in the August of the former year, and
now recommended an attempt at the still virgin Wild Gall. The
arrangement being speedily made, for extra help and security Johann
fetched his younger brother, Josef, as a companion, and the little
party started by torchlight at two o'clock in the morning.
Jakob now produced a telescope, through which he hoped we might
detect moving figures amongst the snow of the Wild Gall. In vain we
strained our eyes through the greasy old telescope, for neither
moving figures nor stationary black dots were visible. Even Jakob
with his eagle eye confessed to seeing no trace of man either amongst
the irregular ash-colored rocks or upon the snowy curves of the Wild
Gall, which, like a huge white-crested breaker at sea, upheaved
itself in the air as in the very act of turning. Quite as solitary
and untrodden did it look as its still more stately sister, the Hoch
Gall, a mountain deservedly the especial pride of the district, its
lofty pinnacle piercing the sky, whilst a vast sheet of thick, pure
snow hung straight and smooth down its concave sides, a huge
mountain-buttress linking the lower portion of this snow pyramid to
the white, glittering expanse of the Gross Lengstein Glacier—a
buttress of many thousand feet, standing prominently forth like an
antediluvian monster, on whose gigantic pachydermatous flanks the
shattered, blasted stems of dead uniform fir trees shone out a
silvery gray, mingling in color with the loose, glittering débris
which had slidden into the upland valley just below. Two silver
threads descending from the glaciers of the Hoch Gall wound through
these fallen stones into the green turf of the Bachernthal, but
whether formed of snow or water it would have been difficult to
decide, had not ever and anon a sound as of a distant train been
borne upon the breeze, proving them to be brooks, which helped to
swell the roaring, tumbling Giessbach, whose boisterous acquaintance
we had already made.
The Hoch Gall, which has been twice ascended, was first attempted
in 1869 by a very adventurous, clever young Alpine climber, Karl
Hofmann, the only son of a well-known physician of Munich—a
youth of whom it is said that no study was too difficult, no danger
too great, no peak too high for him. Innumerable were the mountains
which he scaled between 1866 and 1870, and of which he wrote
excellent, accurate descriptions: then laying down his young
life—he was but twenty-three—on September 2, 1870, in the
fierce battle of Sedan, his spirit passed away to mightier slopes, to
more delectable mountains.
Again, in the August of 1871, after our first visit to the Olm,
the ascent was repeated by two other members of the Tyrolese Alpine
Club, Herr Richter and Herr Strüdl. They brought with them two
experienced men—one the chief guide of the Gross Glockner, the
other of the Venediger Spitze—and, except for Hofmann's
written description, had to plan and calculate for themselves, there
being no local knowledge of the mountain attainable, as the two
guides who accompanied the young explorer were also dead.
Although well provided with their own guides, they thought it
right to take some active young man of the neighborhood with them, in
order that he in his turn might help future climbers. At the
recommendation of the landlord of Rein—who on this important
occasion commenced his visitors' book—they chose for the
purpose Jakob's friend, Johann Ausserkofer. They started by
torchlight one Monday morning, and after a steep climb through a wild
mountain-forest on the opposite side of the Bachernthal, crossing a
vast glacier and the crevasse between the Hoch Gall and the Wild
Gall, began the real ascent, which proved so perpendicular as to be
achieved principally with the aid of ropes. After a toilsome nine
hours and a quarter they had the good fortune to reach the summit in
safety. The weather was favorable, and the view, in Richter's opinion, far surpassed the
much-vaunted panorama from the Kriml Tauern. A long rest, and raising
a cromlech in memory of their bold achievement, and then the steep
descent over snow and glaciers was effected, and St. Wolfgang reached
after fourteen hours of toil and great danger.
 CROSSING THE TORRENT.
At half-past four, Jakob, having crossed the valley in search of
his oxen, came upon the Bohemian gentleman—whose name afterward
proved to be Dr. Hecht—with the two Ausserkofers, and learned
their adventures in the ascent of the Wild Gall. After clambering
over steep, slippery glaciers they had begun the climb proper at five
o'clock in the morning, Dr. Hecht pushing forward in order to be
the first human being who had ever placed his foot upon the summit of
the mountain. He had indeed almost reached the highest point when a
dark, terrific chasm suddenly yawned beneath him, entirely cutting
off all farther progress. The three explorers, although considerably
dejected by the disagreeable check and the waste of labor and time
which it had involved, determining not to be baffled, resolved to
make a considerable détour. After having, with much trouble, reached
a lower plateau, they attacked the precipitous, almost invincible
mountain from another side, the still early hour of the day alone
permitting the renewal of the attempt. Leaving their telescope and
provisions to await their return, they boldly scrambled, crept and
worked their way up the scaly side, and finally reached the summit in
safety. The view thence they declared to be magnificent. They too
raised a cromlech, and then a giddy descent followed. However, all
three were full of spirits when Jakob met them, and the Ausserkofers
declared that they were ready henceforth to pilot any other tourist
to the summit for a moderate four or five gulden apiece.
Jakob, as herdsman, had left us at three o'clock to look after
the cattle, we strolling with him as far as a wild old wood which
formed a strange contrast to this Sunday afternoon, as lovely an
August day as ever rejoiced the earth. The near yet unattainable Hoch
Gall glittered coldly white between the stems and branches of
gigantic pines, which, scathed and bleached by lightning and storm,
rose in the form of ruined towers or lay tumbled about in the
wildest, dreariest confusion amongst the rugged enormous rocks, fit
emblems of the forest in the Inferno inhabited by the souls of the
lost. Nor was this stern,
forbidding scene enlivened when a melancholy man, carrying the dead
body of a goat across his shoulders, crossed the torrent on a fallen
tree and advanced slowly up the craggy path, followed by a little boy
timidly picking his way behind.
"Ach, Mathies, in God's name, another goat!" said
Moidel, lifting her eyes from a little book, the life of the odd,
humane Joseph II., which, bought for a few kreuzers at a fair, was
worth as many guldens in the pleasure which it gave her.
The man glanced from under his eyebrows, and answered with a sigh,
"Gott hat's so wölln, Diendl" ("God would
have it so, maiden"); and then he added in dialect, "It was
a beautiful creature. I missed it in the reckoning last night. After
mass I strode far and wide searching it, until an hour since I found
the body hanging by a hind hoof from a cleft in the Auvogl Nock. See,
it has broken its leg in its struggles. Ah, poor beast! A solitary,
cruel death, und hast ma g'nomma mei Ruah" ("and
it has taken my rest from me").
"Poor Mathies! his half dozen goats are all that he has in
the world. He rents one of father's huts, but since he has
brought them to the Olm two or three are already dead." This
Moidel explained to us as he moved dejectedly forward. "Father,
however, told him that our Olm was bad for goats. They not only slip
from the rocks, but grow thin and weakly. Just the reverse of the
cattle. Onkel Johann—there is no one so deep as he in
cattle—says that every blade of grass on our Olm is worth half
a pint of milk. And it's not the air, nor the water, nor the
winds that make it wholesome, but some law that he cannot understand.
Who can? There is Jagdhaus, a wonderfully fertile sennerei an
hour beyond Rein. It is far finer than our Olm, which is so
mountainous that timid new-comers amongst the cattle must first teach
themselves to walk about; but at Jagdhaus, which is as large as a
village, all the land is smooth, fat pasturage for miles. Yet a curse
rests on the place for which neither priests nor farmers can account.
Some seasons, it is true, all goes well, but in others the cattle are
suddenly bitten, fall dead, and their flesh then turns black and
rustles like paper. Some say that it is an insect or animal that
attacks them; others, that it is caused by the grass which they eat;
and there are again others who are sure that it is a phantom which,
touching them, blasts them. And there seems reason in the idea,
because when the priest of Taufers, who has an Olm there, goes and
says mass and prays for the cattle, or when the Sterniwitz
(landlord of the Stern), who has acres of pasturage and many heads of
cattle at Jagdhaus, pays a Capuchin to go thither and pray, the
murrain ceases."
In Moidel's tale we had almost forgotten our long walk back to
the barn and the arrangement for supper previously at the huts. Now,
it curiously happened that whilst waiting for the
tea-pan—rather than tea-kettle—to boil, I accidentally
alighted upon a people's calendar, published at Brixen for the
current year, protruding its somewhat greasy pages from behind a
churn; and after turning over long black-and red-lettered lists of
fasts and feasts, came upon some pertinent advice to the Tyrolese
farmers by Adolph Trientl, concerning Milzbrand. He described
it as a dreadful pestilence, the scourge of many a mountain-pasture.
Hundreds of cattle, he tells them, are sacrificed to it yearly. Even
the deer and lesser game die from the contagion, as well as human
beings; death in the latter case being occasioned either by eating
the meat of diseased animals or by having cuts or wounds which have
come in contact with the victims. Even the bite of a fly which has
fed on the contaminated meat will propagate the malady. Hides or
reins made of the skins are known years after to reproduce Milzbrand.
Where the body of an affected animal has been buried the ground
becomes contagious for a long run of years, the cattle pasturing
there being attacked. The only remedy consists in burning the
contaminated body, and then keeping the live-stock from the place
where the victim fell. When Milzbrand appears the farmer feels he has
no option between sacrificing his cattle and abandoning for a season
his rich pastures. And yet a little attention might soon cause a
remedy, the evil often arising from the water of a particular pool or
brook, which if carefully guarded against makes the rest of the Alp
perfectly secure.
When I ventured to quote from the calendar to Moidel, suggesting
that at Jagdhaus it might certainly be the water, she remained
impervious to any new views on the subject. "There was
Milzbrand, and that might arise from the water, for all she knew, but
at Jagdhaus it was a rod of God, which only prayer averted."
Adolf Trientl appears to be a Tyrolese priest, who travels
annually through his native land watching closely the agriculture and
domestic economy, and trying, countenanced by government, to help his
country people to an easier working life, healthier houses and more
profitable land. To the credit of the clergy of Brixen, his practical
often pithy remarks are published in their church calendar. He and
his colleagues must, however, use almost supernatural patience and
energy before they can move a Tyroler one jot from the beaten path
which his ancestors have taken for a thousand years before him. The
people are perfectly content, it is pleaded, with the existing state
of things: why should they change their sowing or ploughing any more
than the sun his course or the mountains their position? Changes,
like bad weather, breed discontent.
We had brought no books with us for our five days at the Olm, and
in the pauses of our out-door enjoyment the calendar, greasy rather
from contact with butter and milk than with fingers, afforded
amusing, profitable reading: a lecture may often be pleasant to hear
when not addressed to one's self.
Moidel, Jakob and Franz, though they had looked with blind eyes on
the print, did not turn deaf ears when we spoke; only we had to
manage that all we said and thought did not come as a quoted sermon, but as suggestions and
inquiries from us, who did not know half as much about a dairy and
farm-life as they did. First of all, we tried to make them believe
that the staff of life need not of necessity be rye bread of so hard
and flinty a nature as to require in every house a square wooden
board and iron chopper to cut it.
"Yes," said Moidel, "it is very hard for old
people, who must needs sop it, but while one's teeth are good the
crunching is a pleasure. And then it must needs be dry, because the
oven can only be heated once in three months. I wish it could come
round oftener, for there is no going to bed on baking nights, with
some three hundred loaves to pop into the oven."
"How could the poor bake often," suggested Jakob,
"when there is only one oven amongst them in the
village?"
"Why," said we, looking very learned, "you have a
common schoolmaster, and a common swineherd, and a common goose-boy:
why not have a common baker, who knew how to make good, light dough,
and could bake a good batch of bread for each family
weekly?"
To Franz, eating good bread only a few days old appeared woeful
extravagance. "Bread," he said, "should be like rocks
to last, not like snow to melt away. The rye meal would fly before
the wind at that rate, and where would the poor man then
be?"
Butter and cheese-making, however, involved hours of deep
discussion. You would indeed have thought that man merely came into
the world to make butter and cheese. Personal experience after two
summers in the Tyrol had made us reflect very much upon the butter
and cheese question. Whether regarded as a luxury or a necessity, the
Swiss Gruyère and Emmenthal cheese and the fresh dainty pats of
butter made the contrast striking in the Tyrol. The milk and cream
were rich and delicious, but became simply loathsome when transformed
into butter or cheese. We wondered how and why it was that we could
never obtain perfectly palatable butter, until we discovered the
universal practice of churning
it, without salt, into huge oblong balls, large as the nave of a
wheel, which naturally soon turn rancid. It does not on this account
lose its value to the natives, who use very little butter, melting it
down into a clarified dripping called Schmalz for their endless
fryings and frizzlings. This badly made butter is, however, often
adorned with the emblems of the Passion, such as the cross, ladder,
crown of thorns and nails. It was so at the Hofbauer's Olm. It is
considered to enhance the value of the butter Kugel or ball,
especially when given to the priest in payment for masses said for
dead relations. The Ursuline Sisters were paid for Moidel's
education in butter.
And the native cheese!—meagre cheese, as it is justly
called—a poor, insipid, not overclean curd cheese. The curds
are often merely squeezed in a cloth, then turned out and placed upon
an upper shelf to dry, where they look like the back portions of
gigantic skulls until damp and mould somewhat destroy the
resemblance. The kind called fat cheese is not much better. It is,
however, made with greater care, and dried in bands of pine bark in
the Alpine kitchen. This distasteful butter and cheese, the sole
result of gallons of rich milk and cream and many a long summer week
upon the lofty Alp, becomes still more distasteful when the milk and
cream are kept in the one hot, over-crowded sleeping-room, or in a
dairy where the goatherd sleeps amongst the milk-dishes. The mountain
dwellings are dark and badly constructed, and if furnished with a
proper dairy, the prejudiced housewife often refuses to use it,
believing that cream will not set unless the milk is warm; thus, much
becomes sour, and is either thrown away or turned into a still more
inferior cheese. Or she purposely lets the cream become rancid before
she churns, that the children may not take too great a fancy to the
Schmalz, and thus it may last longer!
We had tasted already too much of this milky tree of knowledge not
to learn with pleasure from the Brixen calendar that in different
parts of the Tyrol co-operative sennereien had been started
with the greatest success. A manager was employed in each who
understood perfectly the Swiss mode of cheese-making and the best
manner of churning. Thus, the most excellent produce was gained from
the same, or rather from a smaller, quantity of milk, when the
reckless waste was deducted. Each shareholder had the right of
skimming the milk from his own cows, taking what he required for his
personal use, or he might send his entire share of butter, cheese,
whey and goats' milk with the common stock to market, where such
co-operative wares already brought the highest price. Thus, the
farmer gained both ways, not only receiving more money, but saving in
dairy utensils, house room and fuel, and his wife in labor.
Great was our glee over these enlightened and successful efforts;
but a friendly dispute immediately arose when one amongst us
expressed a surprise that the half dozen bauers who shared the Olm in
common did not manage matters on this improved principle. They would
find themselves richer, more care-free men. Moidel declared her
inability to form an opinion. Old Franz, however, had much to say. He
thought it would be foolish. Why need the Hofbauer mix himself up
with others, when he only wanted to make meagre cheese for family
use, while if there were any over it always brought its worth in
kreuzers at the market? And then the pounds and pounds of butter were
all wanted for Schmalz. It might be sweeter, it is true, if they
could melt it down at the hut, but then there was the fear of setting
the place on fire, and the home-melted Schmalz went fast enough, as
Moidel knew. And as for the artificial Schmalz which was being sold
in the towns now, it was made of palm-oil, fresh suet and butter, and
colored with the yellow dye called Orleans; and people praised this
machine-made Schmalz and talked of progress! But he hoped, so long as
he handled a frying-pan, to stick to good old Schmalz and good old
ways.
MARGARET HOWITT.
[TO BE CONTINUED.] |