Part 5 (1/2)
”No,” was the answer, ”they are in profound peace, but have no money.
Believe me, before a week pa.s.ses over our heads, messengers will arrive to order the whole army home.”
”But will they go? they came to the Duke's a.s.sistance of their own accord; who can order them to leave his colours?”
”That's very easily managed; do you suppose they will disobey the orders of their magistrates at the risk of the loss of their property, and imprisonment? Ulerich has too little money to retain them, and they will not serve him upon mere promises.”
”But you cannot call that behaving honourably,” remarked Albert, ”to deprive the enemy of the arms with which he wishes to meet you in fair contest.”
”In politics, as we call it,” answered the scribe, thinking to establish his knowledge of state affairs in the mind of the inexperienced young soldier, ”in politics, honour at best is a.s.sumed but for appearance sake; for example, the Swiss will explain to the Duke, in excuse for deserting him, that it would be against their conscience to allow their troops to serve against the independence of the free towns; but the truth is, that we can fill the pockets of the bears with more gold florins in order to keep them at home, than the Duke can to a.s.sist him.”
”Well, after all, let the Swiss desert the Duke,” said Albert, ”Wurtemberg will still be able of herself to send forth valiant and ready hearts sufficient to prevent any dog pa.s.sing the Alb.”
”We have thought of an expedient in that case also,” replied the scribe, in explanation; ”we will address a letter to the states of Wurtemberg, and warn them against the insufferable government of their Duke, exhorting them at the same time to cast off their allegiance to him, and join the League in the laudable undertaking of crus.h.i.+ng his tyrannous conduct.”
”How!” cried Albert, with horror, whose generous mind was as yet unacquainted with the intrigues of politics: ”I call that playing the traitor. Would you force the Duke out of his country by such underhand, unworthy means, and corrupt his confiding subjects to induce them to become his bitterest enemies?”
”I believe you have been thinking, all along, that we wish nothing more than that he should restore Reutlingen again to its former rank of a town of the empire? But how then is Hutten, with his forty-two a.s.sociates, to be remunerated? In what way is Sickingen to satisfy the demands of his thousand cavalry and twelve thousand infantry, if he does not get a good slice of the country to pay them? And the Duke of Bavaria, do you suppose he will not require a share of it also? And we Ulmers, our frontier borders on Wurtemberg----”
”But the Princes of Germany,” interrupted Albert, impatiently, ”do you suppose they will quietly look on and see you parcel out his rightful possession among strangers? The Emperor, surely, will not suffer you to hunt a Duke of the empire out of his country!”
Herr Dieterick had a ready answer to this question also. ”There is no doubt,” said he, ”that Charles succeeds his father the Emperor: we shall then offer to place the country under his protection, and, should Austria throw her mantle over it, who can resist her power? But what makes you look so downcast? if you thirst for war, you will readily find means to gratify your wish. The n.o.bility still hold to the Duke, and many a one will have his head broken before his castle walls. But we shall lose our dinner if we go on talking thus, come soon, and we'll see what old Sabina has provided for us.” Upon which the secretary left the room of his guest with a proud step, as if he himself were already installed in the office of protector of Wurtemberg.
Albert did not send the most friendly look after his host as he withdrew. He replaced his helmet again in the corner, which he had but an hour ago taken such pleasure in polis.h.i.+ng; with sorrow he looked at his sword, that faithful piece of steel, which his father had proved in many a hard conflict, and which he had sent to his orphan son from the field of battle, as his sole legacy. ”Fight honourably,” was the device engraved on its blade, and he asked himself, could he now draw it in a cause, which bore injustice on its front? Instead of the contest being decided by the military talents of experienced men, and the bravery of individuals, as he had supposed, he now learned that secret intrigue, designated by Herr Dieterick ”politics,” was to settle the question!
Instead of the exhilirating clash of arms, and the prospect of glory, which had induced him to take part in the struggle, he perceived that he was to promote the covetous plans of designing men! Would his honour permit him to a.s.sist these low-minded Philistines of townsfolk, in expelling an ancient princely house from its rights, which his ancestors had served with willing arm? No, the thought was intolerable; and to be tutored by this Kraft was still more repugnant to his feelings.
He could not however long entertain any ill-will against his kind-hearted host, when he considered that this plan was not concocted by his own brain, and that men, like this political scribe, when they get hold of a state secret, or some great political scheme, foster it as their own, and as such try to instil it into the minds of their adopted children, as if the wisdom of Minerva had sprung out of their own thick heads.
He therefore met his friend in good humour, when dinner was announced.
The conversation between them was dull and common-place. The scribe's thoughts appeared to be occupied with some important project; and Albert taking a review in his mind of the whole state of affairs as they stood, consoled himself with the idea that, as the father of Bertha had sided with the League as he supposed, and such men as Fronsberg had proffered their services in the same cause, there might be less reason to doubt the justice of it than he imagined.
Youth's ever ready with its word; it seizes The first that comes to hand, as 'twould a knife: And thus ye cry or ”shame,” or ”n.o.bly done,”
On every thing--all's either good or bad.
These words of the poet well describe the feelings of Albert at this moment, and the sudden change in his sentiments was also to be attributed to his inexperienced mind in worldly affairs, acting as he did alone, without the aid and advice of any tried friend.
Antic.i.p.ating, therefore, the happy moment of meeting his love at the ball in the evenings where he would be able to speak with her, and from her lips have his doubts cleared up respecting her father's intentions, the gloom with which his mind had been overcast in his conversation with his friend the secretary gave away to the pleasing prospect of seeing her again.
FOOTNOTE TO CHAPTER V.:
[Footnote 1: Beer-soup was a mixture of beer, eggs, sugar, cinnamon, and a little milk, with crums of bread, in quant.i.ty according to the taste.]
CHAPTER VI.
”And in the merry dance, she whispers, to impart, In soft accents, the sorrows of her heart.”
L. UHLAND.
If we had ransacked all the p.a.w.nbrokers' shops, and attended the auction of an antiquary's goods, to find ”a pocket-book giving a description of the social pleasures, with the fas.h.i.+onable figure dances, of the year 1519,” we could not have been more fortunate than in the fund of information which chance has thrown in our way upon that subject.