The Legend of the Devil’s Pillar
Cold wind smelled of wet stone, bells muffled across cobbles; moonlight turned the half-built spire into a black tooth. Master Vojtěch stood in the cathedral courtyard, hands raw and eyes sleepless—if the tower failed, the city’s pride and his name would crumble. He would do anything to finish it.
Every city has its legends, and in Brno one of the oldest carries the weight of both warning and wonder. At the heart of that tale is the Devil’s Pillar, a massive stone that leans against the earth near the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul. The story threads through generations: a mason’s desperation, a whispered bargain in the dark, and a morning when bells and faith altered a fate that seemed sealed.
Ambitions of the Cathedral
In medieval Brno the marketplace never slept long; voices rose and fell like waves, and the tang of tallow and stew mingled with the metallic tang of tools. The cathedral dominated the skyline, its Gothic lines casting shadows over rooftops. The clergy dreamed of a tower that would lift not just stone but the city’s prestige toward heaven. Such ambition required skill, time, and coin—and when any of those ran thin, projects stalled.
Scaffolds creaked. A mason’s misstep could mean shattered pride and a broken promise. Stones split along veins unseen until they were set in place. Superstitions circulated in hearth-side whispers: some blamed bad luck, others a curse. The repeated setbacks fed a dread that the very fabric of the undertaking had been tampered with by forces beyond human ken.
The Desperation of Master Vojtěch
Master Vojtěch, the chief mason, belonged to the tower as much as mortar belonged to stone. He knew how to read grain and grain; he could coax balance from the most cantankerous lintel. Yet skill faltered when confronted by chronic misfortune. Each delay tightened the noose around his reputation. The bishop’s expectations narrowed into accusing glances, and payments dwindled.
At night Vojtěch would pace the courtyard, listening to the city breathe and the distant bleat of dogs. Exhaustion pestered his limbs; shame gnawed at his resolve. Once, anger slipped into despair and he spoke against the indifferent sky: “I would give anything to see this tower finished.†The cold answered him, and shadows lengthened like fingers.
A figure emerged from the dark as if the night itself had taken form: tall, neatly dressed in black, with a presence that felt like velvet over steel. His voice slid into the courtyard, unsettlingly intimate. “Good evening, Master Vojtěch,†he said. Vojtěch felt both invitations and threats in the words.
A Deal with the Devil
The stranger’s proposal unfolded with the careful polish of a craftsman: Lucifer—name spoken in fear by many, yet here as a calm negotiator—offered completion by dawn in exchange for the mason’s soul. The terms were simple, the price absolute. Lucifer painted a scene where the tower rose whole and shining, where Vojtěch’s name would be sung alongside prayers.
For a night or two Vojtěch resisted. He wrestled with images of a life after death that might be full of darkness and regret. He imagined the faces of the poor who depended on work, the bishop’s pride, the town’s newfound renown. Each passing day of delay was another blade in his chest.
Finally, the ache of failure overwhelmed fear. Late one evening, under a vault of bruised clouds and a trembling moon, VojtÄ›ch called into the empty courtyard, “Lucifer! I accept!â€
A contract appeared as if conjured: smooth parchment inked in a shade that drank the light. The pen Vojtěch used trembled in his fingers as he signed with blood—an old ritual to bind more than signatures. The devil’s laugh rolled through the square, low and pleased, and the city felt the first tremor of unnatural labor. Stones rose and arranged themselves with a precision no human crew had achieved; by midnight the scaffolds groaned under impossible progress.
Temptation Wins
By the hour Vojtěch’s awe curdled into terror. The tower climbed in a manner that denied reason; each placed stone felt heavier in his memory because it had not been touched by human hands. Pride warred with dread in his chest. He knew his choice had consequences that would stretch into eternity.
While the infernal workmanship continued, the clergy—unaware of the pact—gathered for vespers, their prayers a fragile armor against the darkness that had edged into the city. As hope and fear intertwined on that night, a sound began to roll across Brno: the cathedral bells, calloused hands ringing out in urgent, resonant peals.


















