Part 25 (2/2)
”And what does the commander-in-chief order me to do with my company of women?” asked Eliza Wallner.
”Captain Lizzie, you are to escort with your company and thirty Tyrolese sharpshooters the three hundred and eighty Bavarians to Castle Steinach. Your arms you will take from the wagon yonder, which Captain Lizzie drove so heroically toward the enemy. Will you undertake to escort the prisoners safely to Steinach?”
”I will, commander. But after that I should like to return to my father. He must be uneasy about me by this time, acid he would like also to know how the Tyrolese have succeeded on this side. Oh! he will be exceedingly glad when I bring him greetings from his beloved Andreas Hofer.”
”Go, then, my dear child,” said Andreas Hofer, nodding to her tenderly, and laying his hand on her beautiful head.
”Go, with G.o.d's blessing, and greet your father in my name. Tell him that G.o.d and the Holy Virgin are with us and have blessed our cause; therefore we will never despond, but always fight bravely and cheerfully for our liberty and our dear emperor. Go, Lizzie; escort the prisoners to Steinach, and then return to your father.”
Eliza kissed his hand; then left him and communicated Andreas Hofer's order to the women. They received it joyously, and hastened to the wagon to get the arms.
Half an hour afterward a strange procession was seen moving along the road leading to Castle Steinach. A long column of soldiers, without arms, with heads bent down and gloomy faces, marched on the road. On both sides of them walked the women, with heads erect, and proud, triumphant faces, each shouldering a musket or a sword. Here and there marched two Tyrolese sharpshooters, who were watching with the keen and distrustful eyes of shepherds' dogs the soldiers marching in their midst.
CHAPTER XVIII.
CAPTURE OF INNSPRUCK.
General Kinkel, governor of Innspruck, had just finished his dinner, and repaired to his cabinet, whither he had summoned some of the superior officers to give them fresh instructions. To-day, the 11th of April, all sorts of news had arrived from the Tyrol; and although this news did not alarm the Bavarian general, he thought it nevertheless somewhat strange and unusual. He had learned that Lieutenant-Colonel von Wreden, despite General Kinkel's express orders, had rashly evacuated his position at Brunecken and destroyed the bridge of Laditch. Besides, vague rumors had reached him about an insurrection among the peasants in the neighborhood of Innspruck; and even on the surrounding mountains, it was said, bands of armed insurgents had been seen.
”We have treated these miserable peasants by far too leniently and kindly,” said General Kinkel, with a shrug; when his officer communicated this intelligence to him. ”We shall adopt a more rigorous course, make examples of a few, and all will be quiet and submissive again. What do these peasants want? Are they already so arrogant as to think themselves capable of coping with our brave regular troops?”
”They count upon the a.s.sistance of Austria,” replied Colonel Dittfurt; ”and General von Chasteler is said to have promised the peasants that he will invade the Tyrol one of these days.”
”It is a miserable lie!” cried the general, with a disdainful smile.
”The Austrians will not be so bold as to take the offensive, for they know full well that the great Emperor Napoleon will consider every invasion of Bavarian territory an attack upon France herself, and that we ourselves should drive the impudent invaders from our mountains.”
”That is to say, so long as the mountains are still ours, and not yet occupied by the peasants, your excellency,” said Major Beim, who entered the room at this moment.
”What do you mean?” asked the general.
”I mean that larger and larger bands of peasants are advancing upon Innspruck, that they have already attacked and driven in our pickets, and that the latter have just escaped from them into the city.”
”Then it is time for us to resort to energetic and severe steps,”
cried General Kinkel, angrily. ”Colonel Dittfurt, send immediately a dispatch to Lieutenant-Colonel von Wreden, who is stationed at Brixen. Write to him in my name that I am highly indignant at his evacuating his position at Brunecken and destroying the bridge of Laditch. Tell him I order him to act with the utmost energy; every peasant arrested with arms in his hands is to be shot; every village partic.i.p.ating in the insurrection is to be burned down; and he is to advance his patrols again to and beyond Brunecken. These patrols are to ascertain if Austrian troops are really following the insurgent peasants. Bring this dispatch to me that I may sign it, and then immediately send off a courier with it to Lieutenant-Colonel von Wreden.” [Footnote: General Kinkel sent of this dispatch a day after Wreden had been defeated by the Tyrolese, and after the Austrians had invaded the Tyrol. The Bavarian authorities at Innspruck were in complete ignorance of all these events.]
Colonel Dittfurt went to the desk and commenced writing the dispatch. ”Miserable peasants!” he murmured, on handing the dispatch to the general; ”it is already a humiliation that we must devote attention to them and occupy ourselves with them.”
”Yes, you are right,” sighed the general, signing the dispatch; ”these people, who know only how to handle the flail, become every day more impudent and intolerable; and I am really glad that I shall now at length have an opportunity to humiliate them and reduce them to obedience. Henceforth we will no longer spare them. No quarter!
He who is taken sword in hand, will be executed on the spot. We must nip this insurrection in the bud, and chastise the traitors with inexorable rigor. Well, what is it?” he asked vehemently, turning to the orderly who entered the room at this moment.
”Your excellency, I have to inform you that all our pickets have been driven into the city. The peasants have a.s.sembled in large ma.s.ses on the neighboring mountains and opened thence a most murderous fire upon our pickets. Only a few men of each picket have returned; the others lie dead outside the city.”
”Matters seem to become serious,” murmured General Kinkel. ”All our pickets driven in! That is to say, then, the peasants are in the immediate neighborhood of the city?”
”All the environs of Innspruck are in full insurrection, your excellency, and the citizens of Innspruck seem likewise strongly inclined to join the insurrection. There are riotous groups in the streets, and on my way hither I heard all sorts of menacing phrases, and met everywhere with sullen, defiant faces.”
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