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Thus the tale, in its altered shape, henceforth continued—no longer, however, as a truly national, but rather as a local Thuringian one— until it was given national prominence once more, in our century, by Rückert. This was in 1816, after the overthrow of Napoleon's dominion, which had destroyed the old German Empire. Since then it has generally been believed that the mythic Man in the Kyffhäuser Mountain had always been identified, in the legend, with Barbarossa. But this is now shown to be an error.

If we wanted to dig deeper in fabulous lore, some curious additional points might be given. One of the German folk-tales had it that some day a great battle would be fought on the Walser Field, where the famed withered tree-a pear tree-stands. On that tree the Kaiser was to hang his shield, and this battle was to herald in the World's End. A Twilight of the Gods, so to say, in heathen Teutonic prophecy. The bad are to be annihilated by the good; Truth and Right will be victorious. The political meaning of the tale here quite disappears. The great massacre, which is to take place, has only a religious significance. Though clothed in Christian garb, the original pagan kernel of the legend is, however, fully discernibleeven as in the christianised Nibelungenlied the Germanic heathens are recognisable, who in the corresponding Nibelung lays of the Norse Edda have no alloy yet at all from the later religion.

An Asiatic tradition has been quoted from the fourteenth century, to this effect, that the Dominion of the World would some day fall to a prince who would succeed in hanging his shield on a certain withered tree. The Tatars related that this tree stood in Tauris, that is, the Crimea. Other Oriental races spoke of it as standing in the grove of Mamre. of Mamre. It has been pointed out that this myth has some contact with the Hellenic one of the golden fleece which hangs in a sacred grove on a tree, and the acquisition of which was to confer glory, riches, and power.

However, it must not be forgotten that the tale about the withered tree, on which the coming Emperor's shield is to be hung, is an earlier one in Germany itself. Moreover, in the Crimea, which until the eighteenth century was still called Gothia in the official documents of the Greek Church, a population of Gothic descent had remained from olden times. Specimens of its Teutonic speech are traceable down to 1750. The ransomed prisoner from the Turkish galleys, a native of the Crimea, who in the middle of last century furnished these samples of Teutonic language to a learned Jesuit, declared that he knew nothing about Christianity, his countrymen worshipping an ancient tree. Can this have been a longforgotten symbol of the World Ash, the Teutonic Tree of Existence? And have we here, perhaps, the origin of the tale about the withered

See The Goths, by Henry Bradley (London, 1888).

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tree 'which is to grow green and to bear fruit once more,' when the Restorer of German power hangs his shield on it?

As Regenbogen has it, who mixes up this myth with the peaceful recovery of the Holy Sepulchre :

Sô wirt daz urliug alsô groz, niemant kan es gestillen;

Sô kumt sich keiser Vriderich, der hêr und ouch der milt
Er vert dort hin zem dürren boum ân allez widerhap,
Dar an sô henkt er sinen schilt; er gruonet unde birt.
Sô wirt gewunnen daz heilic
grap,

Daz nimmer swert dar umb gezogen wirt.

Actually, on the famous Walserfeld where the great battle was to take place, there stood, until quite recent days, a withered pear tree which in the folk-tale was connected with the old prophecy. After the re-establishment of the German Empire under William the First of Prussia, the tree was felled overnight-owing, it is said, to a suggestion made to the peasant proprietor by Ultramontanes. The cutting down of the old tree was considered almost a sacrilegious act at the time by those who cherish folk-lore traditions. But some observed that the withered trunk might well have gone, seeing that the prophecy had been fulfilled. There are, however, others who do not see such fulfilment in the foundation of an Empire shorn of its Austrian provinces, which had been an integral part of Germany from olden times down to 1866.

Taking all in all, it is manifest that the 'Barbarossa' myth is quite a late graft upon the stem of the original tale about Kaiser Friedrich the Second, the enlightened adversary of priestcraft, the antagonist of the Papacy, the expected Reformer of the Church, and Disestablisher of Monkhood. Many of the sayings attributed to him, which show him in the light of a man who would readily have assented, had he lived in our days, to the doctrines of Darwin, Huxley, and Häckel, would find little countenance, at present, in high quarters at Berlin. It remains a fact, nevertheless, that 600 years ago an elected ruler stood at the head of the German Empire, who held such advanced views, and that his cherished memory had for centuries sunk deep into the people's mind. Considering this earlier and long-sustained conception of the folk-tale, the recent Imperial celebration on the Kyffhäuser may be said to rest on an historical error.

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KARL BLIND.

The Editor of THE NINETEENTH CENTURY cannot undertake
to return unaccepted MSS.

INDEX TO VOL. XL

The titles of articles are printed in italics

ABD

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- Arbitration with, 320-337

The Cry for Fraudulent Money in,
516-532

America, hospital system of, 611-613
Animals, psychology of, 247-255

- modern cruelty to, 293–305
Antisemitism, the modern phase of
Jew persecution, 422-425
Arbitration with America, see America
in Labour Disputes, 743-758
Armenian massacres, see Turkey, Mas-
sacres in

Armenians, our pity for the, distrusted
by Russia, 511-512

troubles of the, caused by English
policy, 842

Armstrong (Lord), beginnings of, 463
Arnold-Forster (H. O.), Sisyphus in
Ireland, 345-359

Asia, the two competitors for supremacy
in, 2-5

Attila, ravages of, in Gaul, 372-373
Australasia, the Federation Move-
ment in, 156-172
Australia, Western, see Westralian

BAB, The, and Babism, 56-66

Babel, The Modern, 782-796
Bacteria in milk, 454-455

CEC

Balfour's 'Foundations of Belief' and
Professor Huxley, 288-291

Barbarossa, legend of, 1010-1011
Bayard (Thomas F.), 519

Bayreuth, The Influence of, 360-366
Bedouins, Red Sea, 585-586

Bejas, an ancient people of the Soudan,
585-586

Bellamont (Lord), duel of, with Lord
Townshend, 152

Benson (Archbishop), anecdote of, 281
Bent (J. Theodore), On the Dervish
Frontier, 580-595

Besant (Mrs.), The Conditions of Life
after Death, 816-828

Bewick (Thomas), anecdote of, 467
Bhowani, the Cholera-Goddess, 543–
558

Biography, On the Ethics of Sup-
pression in, 533-542

Birchenough (Mrs.), Noticeable Books:
Frederic's Illumination,' King's
Scripture Reader of St. Mark's,'
and Burnett's 'Lady of Quality,'
768-772

Birrell (Mr.), criticism of his essay on
the Reformation, 34-39

Blind (Karl), A Mistaken Imperial
Celebration, 1010-1018

Blunt (Wilfrid Scawen), Turkish Mis-
government, 838-845

Blyth (Mrs.), Sketches made in
Germany, 383-394, 729-742
Books, Noticeable, 759-776

On the Selling of, 937-943
Braddon (Sir E.), The Federation
Movement in Australasia, 156-172
Brassey (Hon. T. A.), Manning the
Navy in Time of War, 861-874
Brontë family, the, 772-776
Bulawayo, the road from Mafeking to,
196-197

Burnett (Frances Hodgson), her' Lady
of Quality,' noticed, 771-772
Burns (John), The Massacres in
Turkey, 665–671

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CHA

Chartered Company, Nature versus
the, 194-198

Chesterfield, A Seventeenth Century,
944-957

Chevalier (Albert), the comic singer,
131-132

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China, From the Emperor of, to King
George III., 45-55

China, official corruption in, 896-903
Cholera, the, at Newcastle in 1853, 468
Cholera-Goddess, Bhowani, 543-558
Churchill, Lord Randolph, as an
Official, 567-579

Clancy (J. J.), The Financial Griev-
ance of Ireland, 982-994

Dicey (Edward), his recent article on
South Africa, 338-340

Dillon (William), The Battle of the
Standards in America, 205-210
Diran Kélékian, La Turquie et son
Souverain, 689-698

Douglas (Professor Robert K.), Some
Peking Politicians, 896-906
Down (T. C.), The Story of the Mani-
toba Schools Question, 117-127
Du Cane (Sir Edmund), The Unavoid-
able Uselessness of Prison Labour,
632-642

CONOMISTS, commercial fallacies

Clarke (Rev. Father), The Training ECONO

of a Jesuit, 211-225

Cleveland (Grover), the late President

of the United States, his policy on
the currency question, 523-524
Clotilda, marriage of, with Clovis, 377
Clovis, The Baptism of, 367-382
Cobdenism, The Decline of, 173-186
Cockerell (S. P.), Lord Leighton's
Drawings, 809-815

Colonies, scheme for the improvement
of our trade with the, 29-33
Commercial Union of the Empire,
27-33

Continental Alliances, England and
the, 681-688

Coolgardie' mining region, 712

Coquet river, Northumberland, scenery
of the, 469-470

County Councils and Rural Educa-
tion, 596-608

Courthope (Professor W. J.), Life in
Poetry: Poetical Conception, 260-

273

Courtney (Leonard H.), his Free-trade
speech at the Cobden Club, 175
Cowen (Joseph), ex-member for New-
castle-on-Tyne, 465-466
Cows, danger from unsuspected disease
in, 456

Creyke (Mrs. Walter), Sailing for
Ladies in Highland Lochs, 478-486
Crouch (Archer P.), The World

beneath the Ocean, 881-895
Crowe (the late Sir Joseph), Fra
Filippo Lippi, 643-653
Curchod (Suzanne), Gibbon's courtship
of, 145, 147-148

Currency question, the, in America, see
America

Cyprus Convention, the double-dealing
connected with the, 839

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Education, Rural, County Councils
and, 596-608

- Local Support of, 919-924
Education, national, past abortive
legislation for, 700-702

-the Duke of Newcastle's Commission,
702-703

the Bill of 1870, 704-705
Elizabeth, Queen, a Visit to, 619-631
Elswick, origin of the Armstrong works
at, 463

Empire, Commercial Union of the,
27-33

England, Russia, Persia, and, 1-18
Why Russia distrusts, 509-515
and the Continental Alliances, 681-
688
English language, probable spread of
the, 791-794

Englishmen, manners of, compared
with those of foreigners, 137-142

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ERMANY, Sketches made in, 383–
394, 729-742

The Woman Movement in, 97-104

and England, The Commercial
War between, 925–931

Germany, reception of Li Hung Chang
in, 237-238

Ghost, a so-called, explained, 471–472
Gibbon, Edward, New Letters of, 143–
155

Gladstone (W. E.), his speech on the

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Irish Land Bill of 1870, 345

The Massacres in Turkey, 677-680
letter of, to Mr. Purcell, 541
Godley (Sir A.), testimony of, to Lord
R. Churchill, 568-569

Goldfields of Western Australia, charac-
teristics of the, 712-714
Gordon (General), his remedy for
Turkish misgovernment, 847-848
Gorst (Sir John), The Voluntary
Schools, 699-710

Graham (R. B. Cunninghame), Alvar
Nuñez, 105-116

Greek language, origin and purpose of
accents in the, 794-795
Griffin (Sir Lepel), Russia, Persia,
and England, 1-18
Guilbert (Yvette), 131

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KINGender of St. Mark's, noticed,

́ING (K. Douglas), her 'Scripture

770-771

Kropotkin (Prince), Recent Science,
246-259

Kyffhäuser, the, mistaken Imperial
celebration at, 1010-1018

LABOUR Disputes, Arbitration in,

743-758

Land Purchase in Ireland, 829-837
Land, theory of, 797-798

Land question in Ireland, twenty-five
Acts relating to the, in twenty-six
years, 345

Language, a universal, needed, 782-
785

Latin, how it ceased to be the language
Larkin (Charles), the Chartist, 466
of Europe, 788

Lecky (Mrs.), A Warning to Im-
perialists, 19-26

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Leigh (Hon. Dudley), Horse Ambu-
lances, 609-618
Leighton's (Lord) Drawings, 809–815
Life after Death, the Conditions of,
816-828

Li Hung Chang, 226-245

Lilly (W. S.), Noticeable Book: Cecil's
Primogeniture,' 765-768

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Lippi, Fra Filippo, 643–653

Low (Sidney), The Decline of Cob-
denism, 173-186

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The Olney Doctrine and America's
New Foreign Policy, 849-860

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