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Griffen the High Flier
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GRIFFEN THE HIGH FLYER
I. THE WIZARD OF THE PYRENEES
[73]
LD Atlantes, the wizard of the Pyrenees, had built a
tower for his laboratory on the topmost peak of a gray
mountain. There was no magic about the tower at
first—only solid walls of masonry with one narrow door
and, at the top, a dome of glass, where the sage could
sit and gaze at the stars. But the wise wizard hoped
that by the exercise of his art he would be able to
bring magic out of the place by-and-by. And so, if you
could have looked in upon him on any fair night or
rainy day, you would have seen him surrounded by
retorts and alembics, and pots and vials, and wands,
and magic circles and books, and signs of the zodiac,
and the thousand and one things necessary to the
wizard's trade. Scattered about the room, in no very
orderly manner, were bundles of all kinds of herbs,
ingots of gold and silver, thin sheets of tin and
copper and zinc,
[74] curiously-shaped bits of colored
glass, rolls of wire, and many a strange instrument and
tool, the uses of which were known only to Atlantes
himself. Sometimes the people in the valley below saw
thick clouds of black smoke coming out of the chimney
of the wizard's den, as they called it; and belated
travelers, groping along the highway on dark nights,
reported that they had seen sheets of flame and balls
of red fire shooting from the high tower.
Atlantes had not been long in his lofty perch before he
was the terror of all the country round about. When he
ventured down into the valley, the poor folk who saw
him would cross themselves and mutter prayers to the
Virgin and look at his feet to see whether they were
not hoofed. Men would go miles out of their way rather
than venture along the highroad that ran directly
beneath his aery; and strange tales were told of
children and knights and ladies that had been spirited
away by his enchantments and held in captivity by him.
But old Atlantes cared little for what people said
about him, so long as they did not disturb him in his
studies and experiments.
Like other alchemists, he hoped that his experiments
would some day lead him to the
dis- [75] covery of the
philosopher's stone, which would transmute all the
baser metals into gold, and hence the most of his
studies were directed to that end. He thought that, if
he could only get the smallest vialful of the fluid
called lightning, and mix it with some other
ingredients which he had at hand, the secret would be
within his grasp. But how to obtain the lightning-fluid
was the puzzle—and having obtained it, how could he
control it until the mixture should be effected?
One night, when a great storm was raging in the
mountains, and the thunder was rolling from peak to
peak, and flashes of lightning filled the air with
terror, he tried a very odd experiment which he had
been thinking of for a long time. He understood very
well the terrible nature of the lightning-fluid in its
free state, and hence he was wise enough not to risk
bringing it into his laboratory until it was properly
confined. He had arranged, therefore, for trying the
experiment at some distance from his tower. There he
had hewn a deep cavity in the rock, within which he now
placed a huge jar and several pots containing some
objects the names of which he would never disclose. I
think that among them there were several strips of
copper and zinc, a
[76] solution of potash, a bar of soft
iron bent into the shape of a horseshoe, and possibly
some other things now well known to electricians. At
any rate, he arranged them very carefully, and having
laid a slab of marble over the cavity, went back to his
tower to await what might happen.
In the morning the storm had cleared away, the sky was
cloudless, and the wizard, as he stepped from his door,
could hear the peasants singing in the harvest-fields
far over the hills. When he called to mind the
experiment of the night before, he smiled at his
ludicrous folly, as it now seemed to him. And yet,
curious to know what the storm might have done with his
magic mixture, he went out and lifted the marble slab.
Had a flash of lightning really issued from the cavity,
he could not have been more astounded. For, from the
urn wherein he had placed, as I suppose, the zinc and
the copper, and the potash solution, there sprang a
white horse with great wings, from which the sunlight
reflected all the colors of the rainbow.
Any other man would have been much more astounded than
Atlantes. But you must know that he was acquainted with
all the lore of the ancients, and he recognized the
horse at once as
[77] the modern descendant of Pegasus, the
carrier of the thunderbolts of mighty Zeus. He was
happier than if he had really discovered the
philosopher's stone. He called the horse Griffen, and
the airy creature submitted itself at once to his
mastership.
II. THE CASTLE IN SPAIN
And now the wizard, with the aid of his winged steed,
began to build a marvelous castle of magic among the
mountains of Spain. The structure was finished in a day
and a night, and, viewed from the plains below, it
appeared to be as beautiful as a dream and as delicate
and ethereal as the white clouds of a midsummer day.
The country people were not more surprised to see the
shining walls and lofty turrets looming up from the
hitherto barren summit of the mountains than they were
astounded at the unwonted sight of a horse winging its
way in mid-air with the white-bearded wizard seated on
its back. Knights and soldiers riding through the
country wondered what feudal lord had built his
stronghold so high above the plain; but, search as
they would, they could find no road nor even so much
[78] as
a pathway by which any one could ascend to it. Nobody
would have been surprised to see the castle disappear
as suddenly as it had come into being; but there it
stood day after day, its roof and battlements gleaming
in the sunlight, and the blue smoke rising from its
tall chimneys. It seemed to have come to stay.
But what was the use of a noble castle without any
noble men or fair women to live in it? If Atlantes had
been less wise, this question would have given him some
concern; but he had built the palace for inhabitants,
and he understood exactly how to encourage immigration
into his territories. He might have filled his halls
with phantoms bred of his own fanciful dreams and as
unsubstantial as the castle itself; but he was too much
of a realist for that. He was himself a creature of
flesh and blood, of brawn and brains, and he felt that
only men and women of the same persuasion were fit to
enjoy the delights of his airy palace. To obtain the
kind of guests which he preferred, therefore, he had
recourse to a cunning stratagem.
Early every morning, with his great spectacles astride
his nose and a big book in his hands, he would mount
his winged horse and soar out over
[79] the country to some
spot where a noble cavalier or a fair, high-born dame
would be likely to pass during the day. There he would
wait until his unsuspecting victim drew near, when the
horse would suddenly alight and block up the road. Then
the wizard, still sitting in his saddle, would begin to
read aloud from the book. At the sound of the very
first word, the knight or fair lady would forget
everything that had ever happened before, would forget
home, friends, and name, and think only of the
honey-sweet tones that issued from the magician's
lips. When the last words were pronounced the victim
would come meekly forward, and, being lifted upon the
pillion behind Atlantes, would be firmly strapped to
the saddle. Then the good horse would spread his
rainbow wings, and carry his double burden to the great
air-castle on the Spanish mountain.
Thus the wizard filled his halls with the nobility of
France and Spain. Nobody who once entered the golden
gateway cared to go out again: each one lived in utter
forgetfulness of his past life, thinking only of the
delights of each passing hour. He could not even recall
his own name, and he never thought of asking for the
names of others.
[80] Everything was done that could be done for the comfort
and amusement of the wizard's guests. In the great
courtyard was a fountain playing in a huge marble basin
supported by crouching lions. Beyond it were pleasure
gardens filled with flowers and fruits. The interior
of the palace was in keeping with its marvelous
exterior. The floors were of marble or were covered
with the softest carpets, the walls were hung with the
finest tapestry, the ceilings glittered with many a
gem. Soft couches invited everyone to rest. The
sweetest music floated on the perfumed air. The tables
in the dining-hall were loaded with delicacies.
Servants moved hither and thither, attentive to every
call. What mortal would wish to awaken from such dreams
of enchantment, to return again to the world of war
and bloodshed and toil and trouble?
III. THE FOILED ENCHANTER
It is altogether possible that Atlantes would have
robbed all Europe of its chivalry and beauty, had not
something occurred to put an end to his schemes. But as
it often happens to mice and men, so also did it happen
to the wizard. The
[81] fact is that he had grown tired of
sallying out every day on Griffen's back in search of
new guests, and so he had planned another way of
entrapping unwary cavaliers into his prison-house.
After much labor and thought he cleared away a narrow
bridle-path from the highroad at the foot of the
mountain to the gates of his castle at the summit. The
lower end of this pathway was hidden in a thicket close
by a gushing spring of water, and so cunningly was the
whole thing constructed that nobody, looking up from
below, would notice the smallest sign of a path; and
yet if knight or footman once entered the hidden road,
he could follow it with the greatest ease to the end.
Old Atlantes, like a spider in his den, sat in his high
towers and kept a sharp lookout for his prey. Whenever
he saw any knight riding along the highroad who
appeared to be worthy of becoming his guest, he
devised some means of enticing him to enter the
bridle-path. After that, of course, it was very easy to
persuade him to ascend until he had safely entered the
great trap that had been set for him at the top. This
new scheme seemed to succeed wonderfully well, and in a
short time there was scarcely a horseman of
[82] any note in
all Spain who had not fallen into the snare.
It so happened one warm day in summer that a famous
English traveler named Astolpho stopped at the spring
to rest and to bathe his hot face in the flowing
stream. He rode a beautiful black horse named Rabican,
which the King of Cathay had lately given him as a
token of his esteem. This horse he left in the shade of
some trees at a little distance from the road, while he
returned to the spring to quench his thirst. He laid
his spear and shield down upon the ground, and by them
placed the heavy helmet that he had lifted from his
head. Then, on hands and knees, he leaned over to
drink. But scarcely had his lips touched the water,
when a noise caused him to look around.
A gawky countryman had loosened Rabican and was in the
act of leaping upon his back. Astolpho quickly seized
his spear and ran to save his horse and take the thief.
But the rogue was not so easily captured. He entered
the bridle-path and urged the horse up the steep
ascent. Astolpho followed, always upon the point of
laying hold of the horse, but always just a little too
far behind. Soon he was surprised to find
him- [83] self at
the top of the mountain and at the very entrance to the
great white castle whose towers he had seen and admired
from below. The gate was open, as if beckoning him to
enter, and Rabican and his rider had already
disappeared within. Astolpho, not minded to lose so
good a steed, ran boldly onward into the courtyard.
Some knights were there, pitching horseshoes, but they
were so busy with their game that they did not notice
his entrance. He looked into the banquet hall. A number
of lords and ladies were seated about the table,
feasting and making merry. He ran into the garden.
There was no Rabican there. He peeped into the cellars.
Hogsheads of wine and barrels of beef and pork were
ranged about the walls, and red-faced kitchen servants
were running here and there; but there were no signs of
either the horse or the thief. He asked a lubberly boy
to show him the way to the stables, but the fellow
merely stared at him and made no answer. As he went
into the courtyard again, an old man with long,
flowing beard came out with a book in his hand and
began to read.
But Astolpho, too, had a book—a book which a prince of
India had given him, and which he
[84] always carried with
him—and he was proof against all enchantments of that
kind. He knew at once that he had been entrapped in a
magic castle, and without heeding the wizard in the
least, he turned to his own book to learn from it how
he might escape. It was a kind of guidebook to all the
houses of enchantment in the world, and he soon found
the chapter that was devoted to the air-castles of
Spain. The directions were very plain:
"HOW TO FOIL THE ENCHANTER AND SET HIS PRISONERS FREE. Raise the white stone slab that lies beneath the
doorway. The spirit that is pent beneath will escape
and the palace will go up in smoke."
It was all very simple, certainly. Astolpho had no
trouble in finding the white stone, and he began
prying it up with his spear. Atlantes, greatly alarmed,
cried out to the watchman to open the gate and let the
intruder go; and in order to drive him out he tried all
the new enchantments that he could think of. The
guests, hearing the unwonted uproar, came crowding out
to see what new thing had been invented for their
amusement. All wore curious colored glasses that the
[85] wizard had given them, and to each of them Astolpho
appeared in a different form. To one he seemed a giant;
to another a dragon; to a third an ugly dwarf; and to
still another a savage beast. All with one purpose
rushed upon him with swords and sticks and stones,
anxious to drive him away from their palace of
pleasure.
It would have gone hard with Astolpho, had he not
thought of a magic horn which he wore suspended by a
gold chain about his neck. It was the gift of a famous
enchantress, and was worth a thousand swords. He put it
to his lips and blew a single blast. The sound was so
fearful that Atlantes and all his guests and servitors
took to their heels, and hastened to hide themselves
in the inner chambers of the palace. It was then but
the work of a few moments for Astolpho to raise the
white stone. It revealed the entrance to a spacious
chamber in which were a thousand curious things—burning
lamps, magic circles,
golden bridles, and the like—and at the farther end,
tethered by a golden cord, was our old friend Griffen,
fully caparisoned with saddle and bridle, ready for a
flight among the clouds. What was Rabican compared to
such a steed as this? Astolpho lost no time in leading
him from the chamber.
[86] At the very moment that Griffen emerged from the
underground chamber, a clap of thunder rent the air,
and lo! the wonderful palace of enchantment
disappeared. Not one sign of the beautiful structure
was left to show where it had stood. The barren rock,
which formed the summit of the mountain, was as smooth
and clean as if it had been swept by the winds and
polished by the hail. And there were the knights and
fair ladies who had so lately been the guests of
Atlantes, standing bewildered and frightened and cold
on the very edge of the dizzy cliff. Soon, as if by
instinct, they turned about and filed sadly and
silently down the narrow bridle-way to the plain. Once
safely on the highroad, they betook themselves their
several ways, but neither their memory nor their proper
senses came back to them until each had reached his own
home.
As for old Atlantes, he skulked down the mountain, and
made his way on foot across the country to the
high-built tower in the Pyrenees, where he was when we
first met him. And there, I have been told, he was
content to stay for the rest of his life, busy among
his retorts and alembics and herbs and minerals and
signs of the zodiac.
IV. THE FLIGHT TO THE MOON
And Griffen? You should have seen how proudly he soared
into the sky with brave Astolpho on his back. He and
his master became famous as the greatest travelers of
their time. Distances were nothing to them. Mountains
and seas and broad rivers were no barriers to hinder
them. At one time they journeyed northward above the
vineyards and fields of fair France, and stopped for an
hour in Paris, where Charlemagne was then reigning in
the height of his power. There Astolpho learned that
Orlando, the noblest of the men of his time, had lost
his senses and had wandered away to Africa, or
somewhere else, in search of them.
Astolpho set off at once to find him, resolved that he
would never rest until he had brought the lost hero
back to France. And so the gallant Griffen winged his
way back toward Spain; he hovered for a few minutes
above the wizard's high-built tower, while his rider
consulted with Atlantes about the direction he should
take; he turned eastward and skirted the vine-clad
hills of Provence; he floated high above the snow-clad
[88] Alps, and neighed shrilly as he passed over Genoa,
nestled between the mountains and the sea; he dropped
one of his quills in Florence, and whinnied with
delight as he saw the City of Seven Hills sleeping
beneath him; and, all the time, Astolpho sat astride of
him, with pen in hand, inditing wonderful stories of
his adventures in foreign lands.
They alighted only when they were hungry, for the horse
never tired, and Astolpho had only to look at a city to
know all about its history, its people and their
customs, its public buildings and its laws, and whether
any demented knight was wandering about its streets.
Leaving Italy, they passed over the Mediterranean,
flinging down another quill at Malta, and throwing side
glances toward Athens and Constantinople. Speeding over
old Egypt, from north to south, Astolpho read the
history of thirty centuries in the Pyramids, and wise
Griffen solved the mystery of the Sphinx. Finally,
after topping the Abyssinian mountains, they alighted
in the mythical land of Prester John, and Astolpho at
once introduced himself to that wise monarch, and
stated the business which had brought him thus to the
very ends of the earth.
[89] "Great king," he said, "we had in our country a
knight, noble, and brave, and kind, who in an unlucky
moment had the misfortune to lose the greater part of
his senses. I have searched for them in every nook and
corner of the known world, but, alas, I cannot find
them. The unfortunate knight himself is at this moment
somewhere in the Dark Continent, useless alike to
himself and his country. As a last resort I have come
to you, knowing how wise you are, to ask whether there
are not some superfluous senses lying about, unclaimed,
in your kingdom."
"That is a fine horse that you ride," said the king.
"He must be a swift traveler."
"He is very fleet, indeed," answered Astolpho. "Why,
sir, he can girdle the earth in forty minutes."
"Then, how long would it take him to fly to the moon?"
"He has never been there, but I suppose it would not
require very long—say, not more than twenty
minutes—half as long as to go round the earth."
"Then, if you are willing to make the journey," said
Prester John, "I doubt not but you will find there the
thing that you are looking for. For
[90] the moon, you must
know, is the attic chamber of the world, and everything
that is lost finds its way there sooner or later. Lost
pins, lost stitches, lost opportunities, lost sheep,
lost time, lost causes, lost money, lost senses—they
all go to the moon, where the three weird Sisters
bottle them up and label them, and lay them on the
shelf till called for. There is only one thing that is
never
given back again, no matter how loudly its owner
demands it."
"What is that?"
"Lost time," said old Prester, solemnly; "and I would
advise you to lose none of it if you would go to the
moon to recover your friend's senses."
Astolpho, taking the hint, threw himself astride of
Griffen, and the horse soared aloft toward the full
moon, which had just risen, round and bright, above the
eastern hills.
But why should I weary you with the story of that
marvelous flight? And why need I tell you how the brave
Astolpho found Orlando's senses just as the wise king
had said he would? Neither would you care to hear how
Griffen winged his flight back to the earth again; nor
how his master searched through darkest Africa until he
had found his demented friend; nor how Orlando took
[91] his recovered senses as a child takes nauseous medicine;
nor how good Griffen, with proud Astolpho on his back,
finally wended his way over the sea and land to the
noble island of Britain. I will not tell you of any of
these things, nor of any of the later journeys of the
two famous travelers. For you will find the whole story
truthfully narrated in the books which Astolpho wrote
with a pen plucked from the gallant Griffen's wing.
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