Autobiography eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about Autobiography.

Autobiography eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about Autobiography.
It proceeds from three pipers, one of whom plays an old shawm, another a sackbut, and the third a pommer, or oboe.  They wear blue mantles trimmed with gold, having the notes made fast to their sleeves, and their heads covered.  Having thus left their inn at ten o’clock, followed by the deputies and their attendants, and stared at by all, natives and strangers, they enter the hall.  The law proceedings are stayed, the pipers and their train halt before the railing, the deputy steps in and stations himself in front of the Schultheiss.  The emblematic presents, which were required to be precisely the same as in the old precedents, consisted commonly of the staple wares of the city offering them.  Pepper passed, as it were, for every thing else; and, even on this occasion, the deputy brought a handsomely turned wooden goblet filled with pepper.  Upon it lay a pair of gloves, curiously slashed, stitched, and tasselled with silk,—­a token of a favor granted and received,—­such as the emperor himself made use of in certain cases.  Along with this was a while staff, which in former times could not easily be dispensed with in judicial proceedings.  Some small pieces of silver money were added:  and the city of Worms brought an old felt hat, which was always redeemed again; so that the same one had been a witness of these ceremonies for many years.

After the deputy had made his address, handed over his present, and received from the Schultheiss assurance of continued favor, he quitted the enclosed circle, the pipers blew, the train departed as it had come, the court pursued its business, until the second and at last the third deputy had been introduced.  For each came some time after the other, partly that the pleasure of the public might thus be prolonged, and partly because they were always the same antiquated virtuosi whom Nuremburg, for itself and its co-cities, had undertaken to maintain, and produce annually at the appointed place.

We children were particularly interested in this festival, because we were not a little flattered to see our grandfather in a place of so much honor; and because commonly, on the self-same day, we used to visit him, quite modestly, in order that we might, when my grandmother had emptied the pepper into her spice-box, lay hold of a cup or small rod, a pair of gloves, or an old Raeder Albus. [Footnote:  An old silver coin.] These symbolical ceremonies, restoring antiquity as if by magic, could not be explained to us without leading us back into past times, and informing us of the manners, customs, and feelings of those early ancestors who were so strangely made present to us by pipers and deputies seemingly risen from the dead, and by tangible gifts which might be possessed by ourselves.

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Autobiography from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.