effected their reconciliation with the Bearnese, and
for a handsome price paid down on the nail having
acknowledged him to be their legitimate and Catholic
sovereign, now turned their temporary attention to
the Turk. The sweepings of the League—Frenchmen,
Walloons, Germans, Italians, Spaniards—were
tossed into Hungary, because for a season the war
had become languid in Flanders. And the warriors
grown grey in the religious wars of France astonished
the pagans on the Danube by a variety of crimes and
cruelties such as Christians only could imagine.
Thus, while the forces of the Sultan were besieging
Buda, a detachment of these ancient Leaguers lay in
Pappa, a fortified town not far from Raab, which Archduke
Maximilian had taken by storm two years before.
Finding their existence monotonous and payments unpunctual,
they rose upon the governor; Michael Maroti, and then
entered into a treaty with the Turkish commander outside
the walls. Bringing all the principal citizens
of the town, their wives and children, and all their
moveable property into the market-place, they offered
to sell the lot, including the governor, for a hundred
thousand rix dollars. The bargain was struck,
and the Turk, paying him all his cash on hand and
giving hostages for the remainder, carried off six
hundred of the men and women, promising soon to return
and complete the transaction. Meantime the imperial
general, Schwartzenberg, came before the place, urging
the mutineers with promises of speedy payment, and
with appeals to their sense of shame, to abstain from
the disgraceful work. He might as well have preached
to the wild swine swarming in the adjacent forests.
Siege thereupon was laid to the place. In a sortie
the brave Schwartzenberg was killed, but Colonitz
coming up in force the mutineers were locked up in
the town which they had seized, and the Turk never
came to their relief. Famine drove them at last
to choose between surrender and a desperate attempt
to cut their way out. They took the bolder course,
and were all either killed or captured. And now—the
mutineers having given the Turk this lesson in Christian
honour towards captives—their comrades and
the rest of the imperial forces showed them the latest
and most approved Christian method of treating mutineers.
Several hundred of the prisoners were distributed
among the different nationalities composing the army
to be dealt with at pleasure. The honest Germans
were the most straightforward of all towards their
portion of the prisoners, for they shot them down at
once, without an instant’s hesitation.
But the Lorrainers, the remainder of the French troops,
the Walloons, and especially the Hungarians—whose
countrymen and women had been sold into captivity—all
vied with each other in the invention of cruelties
at which the soul sickens, and which the pen almost
refuses to depict.