canton, which found its institutions venerable, just,
and, and if one might judge from their language, almost
sacred, simply because it had been in possession of
certain exclusive privileges under their authority,
that were not only comfortable in their exercise but
fecund in other worldly advantages. This Peter
Hofmeister was, in the main, a hearty, well-meaning,
and somewhat benevolent person, but, living as he did
under the secret consciousness that all was not as
it should be, he pushed his opinions on the subject
of vested interests, and on the stability of temporal
matters, a little into extremes, pretty much on the
same principle as that on which the engineer expends
the largest portion of his art in fortifying the weakest
point of the citadel, taking care that there shall
be a constant flight of shot, great and small, across
the most accessible of its approaches. By one
of the exclusive ordinances of those times, in which
men were glad to get relief from the violence and rapacity
of the baron and the satellite of the prince, ordinances
that it was the fashion of the day to term liberty,
the family of Hofmeister had come into the exercise
of a certain charge, or monopoly, that, in truth, had
always constituted its wealth and importance, but
of which it was accustomed to speak as forming its
principal claim to the gratitude of the public, for
duties that had been performed not only so well, but
for so long a period, by an unbroken succession of
patriots descended from the same stock. They
who judged of the value attached to the possession
of this charge, by the animation with which all attempts
to relieve them of the burthen were repelled, must
have been in error; for, to hear their friends descant
on the difficulties of the duties, of the utter impossibility
that they should be properly discharged by any family
that had not been in their exercise just one hundred
and seventy-two years and a half, the precise period
of the hard servitude of the Hofmeisters, and the rare
merit of their self-devotion to the common good, it
would seem that they were so many modern Curtii, anxious
to leap into the chasm of uncertain and endless toil,
to save the Republic from the ignorance and peculations
of certain interested and selfish knaves, who wished
to enjoy the same high trusts, for a motive so unworthy
as that of their own particular advantage. This
subject apart, however, and with a strong reservation
in favor of the supremacy of Berne, on whom his importance
depended, a better or a more philanthropic man than
Peter Hofmeister would not have been easily found.
He was a hearty laugher, a hard drinker, a common and
peculiar failing of the age, a great respecter of the
law, as was meet in one so situated, and a bachelor
of sixty-eight, a time of life that, by referring
his education to a period more remote by half a century,
than that in which the incidents of our legend took
place, was not at all in favor of any very romantic
predilection in behalf of the rest of the human race.
In short, the Herr Hofmeister was a bailiff, much as
Balthazar was a headsman, on account of some particular
merit or demerit, (it might now be difficult to say
which,) of one of his ancestors, by the laws of the
canton, and by the opinions of men. The only material
difference between them was in the fact, that the
one greatly enjoyed his station, while the other had
but an indifferent relish for his trust.