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DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST

READING HALL

 

DIARY OF A SON OF GOD WALKING WITH JESUS

BLESSED BE THE PEACEFUL BECAUSE THEY WILL BE CALLED SONS OF GOD

 

THE HISTORY OF POLAND

 

CHAPTER II.

ZENITH AND DECLINE [1382-1696 a.d.]

 

HEDWIG (1382-1386 A.D.)

The death of Louis was speedily followed by troubles raised chiefly by the turbulent nobles. Sigismund advanced to claim his rights. Semowit, duke of Masovia, and a Piast, also aspired to the throne; a civil war desolated several provinces. The latter prince might have united the suffrages in his favour had he not exhibited great ferocity, rashness, impatience, and other qualities sufficient to disgust the Poles with his pretensions. The factions at length agreed that the crown should be offered to Hedwig, youngest daughter of the late king, and granddaughter of Casimir the Great, on condition that she should accept as husband any one of the princes whom her subjects might propose to her. As this princess was only in her fourteenth year, the deputies treated with her mother, Elizabeth. That queen, however, being bent on the succession of her eldest daughter, Maria, to whom the Poles had sworn obedience, had recourse to policy. She accepted the throne, indeed, for Hedwig; but, on the plea that the princess was too young to undertake the onerous duties of government, she despatched Sigismund to act as regent, in the view that he would be able to reconcile the people to his authority. Her stratagem failed; he was not even allowed to enter the country; and a messenger was sent to inform her that if Hedwig was not given to the nation in two months a new election would be made. This menace had the desired effect; Hedwig arrived in Poland, and was immediately crowned at Cracow.

The beauty of this princess, her affability, her virtues, discernible even at that tender age, and above all her crown, soon brought her many suitors. Among them was the duke of Masovia; but the evils his ambition had brought on the country (his ravages had never ceased since the death of Louis) caused his rejection. The most powerful was Jagello, son of Gedymin, duke of Lithuania, and his proposals most advantageous to the nation. He offered not only to abjure paganism, and to introduce the Christian faith into his hereditary dominions—Lithuania, Samogitia, and a portion of Russia—but to incorporate these dominions with the Polish crown, and even to reconquer Silesia, Pomerania, and the other territories formerly dependent on it. His pretensions were instantly supported by the whole nation; but a difficulty intervened which threatened to blast its fairest hopes.

Young as was the queen, she had long loved and been affianced to William, duke of Austria. She remembered his elegant form, his pleasing manners, and, above all, the tender affection he had shown her in her childhood, and she could not avoid contrasting him with the rude, savage, uncomely pagan. Her subjects well knew what passed in her mind; they knew, too, that she had written to hasten the arrival of Duke William; they watched her day and night, intercepted her letters, and kept her like a prisoner within her own palace. When her lover arrived he was not permitted to approach her. She wished to see him once—but once—to bid him a last adieu; in vain. Irritated, or perhaps desperate at the refusal, she one day seized a hatchet, with which she threatened to break open her iron gates to admit the duke, and it was not without difficulty that she was forced to desist from her purpose. This was a paroxysm of the passion scarcely to be wondered at in one of her strong feelings. But she was blessed with an understanding remarkably clear for her years: in her cooler moments she perceived the advantages that must accrue to her people from her acceptance of Jagello; and, after a few violent struggles with nature, she resolved to sec the formidable barbarian, and, if possible, to subdue the repugnance she felt for him. He arrived, and did not displease her. His baptism by the name of Wladislaw—a name dear to the Poles— his marriage, and coronation followed.

Through the marriage of Hedwig with Jagello Lithuania and Poland were united under one crown. This duchy was an immense accession to the geographical magnitude of Poland. It extended from Poland on the west, beyond the Dnieper or Borysthenes on the east, and from Livonia on the north. The Lithuanians and Samogitians, who are different clans of the same origin, are now generally believed to have sprung from a different stem from the Poles. They spoke a language widely dissimilar to the Polish or the Russian. Their religion was a singular medley of idolatry: they believed in a supreme god or Jupiter, whom they called the omnipotent and all-wise spirit. They worshipped the god of thunder under the name of Perkunas; they paid homage to a god of the harvests; there were also maintained priests who were continually feeding a sacred fire in honour of Parni, the god of the seasons; and their flamen was called Ziutz. Trees, form tarns, and plants all came in for a share of their veneration. They had sacred serpents called Givoite, and believed in guardian spirits of bees, cattle, etc. As to their government, it was, like that of all other barbarous nations, despotic; and the nobles were less numerous and more tyrannical to the lower orders than in Poland. Ringold was the first who united the various provinces, and assumed the title of grand duke of Lithuania in 1235.

In 1320 we find the famous Gedymin on the ducal throne. He wrested Volhinia, Severia, Kiev, and Tchernizov from the Russians. He divided this dukedom between his sons, but Olgerd made himself the sole possessor. Jagello, one of his thirteen sons, succeeded him in 1381. When raised to the throne of Poland, he appointed his cousin, Witold, to the government of Lithuania.

This province did not so readily coalesce with Poland as was expected. Jagello did not find the people very docile disciples; for, though the Romish faith was partially disseminated in Lithuania proper, and Vilna made the seat of a bishop, the districts which had been subject to Russia had long adopted the doctrines of the Greek church, and obstinately adhered to their tenets; while the Samogitians refused to accept any modification of the Christian religion; and though the episcopal city Miedniki was built at this time, they clung firmly for a long period to their own strange and wild superstitions. In the latter part of this reign (in 1434), however, the union of the Roman and Greek churches took place at the convent of Florence, and the bishop of Kiev adopted the Roman ritual, but the Greek clergy were allowed the privilege of marriage.

Nor was the political union effected without opposition. The Lithuanian nobles were afraid of losing their ascendency over their serfs by their connection with the less despotic Polish barons; and Witold, urged on by the emperor Sigismund, who was jealous of the growing power of Poland, revolted, and was making preparations for his coronation, when he suddenly died in 1430.

Jagello established the Polish law on a firmer foundation in the diets of 1422 and 1423, and gave an additional sanction to the code of Wislica, which Casimir had begun. To him the Poles are indebted for their famous law that no individual is to be imprisoned until convicted.

This monarch was obliged to fight as well as preach and legislate; he was in the early part of his reign continually occupied in checking the encroachments of the Teutonic knights. He defeated them in a great battle at Grunewala in 1410, and they were happy to obtain peace in 1422. Having thus laid the foundation of Poland’s greatness, he died in 1433.

His son, Wladislaw, was not much more than nine years old when the crown of Poland was placed on his head. His mother and some of the nobles were his guardians during his nonage. Scarcely had he escaped from his pupilage, when he served his maiden campaign against the Turks. The descendants of Osman, not content with their conquests in Asia, had crossed the Hellespont to lay low the tottering eastern empire. They ravaged Transylvania and a great portion of Hungary, and, the Hungarians opposing them in vain, conferred their crown on Wladislaw, who immediately took the field. Murad headed the Moslem army, and Wladislaw the Poles; an experienced warrior was thus pitted against a boy. But the battle is not always to the strong; like a spent wave, as if exhausted with victory, the Turks made but a feeble attack on that Polish army. The Moslems were defeated with the loss of 30,000 men, and were obliged to sue for peace. A treaty was concluded with mutual oaths, and Wladislaw was presented with the Hungarian crown which he had so nobly defended.

But this success only urged him, like the gamester, to try the chance of another cast. Treaties were nothing, oaths were nothing; the pope’s legate, who accompanied the youthful king, produced his authority, and silenced all scruples of conscience. But the Turkish swords, which before were blunt with service, were now whetted with revenge, and for once the Moslem crescent was the banner of justice. Murad regained his laurels on the plains of Varna; the Poles were routed, and Wladislaw fell a victim to his own rashness and perfidy. Thus perished this young Polish king, in his twenty-first year, 1444 a.d., an event which spared the lives of many thousands of human beings.

THE DEFEAT OF THE TEUTONIC KNIGHTS

The reign of Casimir IV, who succeeded his brother, forms a brighter era in Polish history. His predecessor’s fate seems to have given him a distaste for the dangers of war, and the early part of his reign was passed in rather disgraceful peace. His first undertaking was against those inveterate and formidable enemies of his kingdom, the Teutonic knights, whom he defeated. The Prussians, wearied with the oppression of these fanatical brigands, rebelled against them, and placed themselves under the protection of Casimir in 1454. The knights did not surrender their conquests without a struggle, and the war was prolonged twelve years. The Poles overran all the Prussian territory which continued to side with the oppressors. So great was the devastation that out of twenty-one thousand villages which are said to have existed before this time in Prussia, scarcely more than thirteen thousand survived the flames, and nearly two thousand churches were destroyed.

The knights were at length obliged to submit; and a treaty was concluded, by which they surrendered all Polish Prussia and held the remaining portion as a fief of Poland. Casimir formed this new addition of territory into four palatinates, under the same government as the rest of his kingdom, excepting certain commercial privileges granted to the trading towns. Dantzic, Thorn, Elbing, and Kulm were important acquisitions, being of great mercantile consequence. Dantzic was one of the principal Hanse towns, commanding the commerce of the Baltic, and Casimir conferred on it the exclusive privilege of navigation on the Vistula. Moldavia, also, was now tributary to Poland, so that this kingdom had then the means of uniting the commerce of northern Europe with that of the south.

INTERNAL ADMINISTRATION

The system of internal policy was also undergoing several changes. In the early part of this reign the senate confirmed the decree that the king was not to make war without their permission. In the year 1467 the foundation of the Polish diet, or parliament, was laid. Before that period the senate con­sisted only of the bishops and great officers of the kingdom, who formed the king’s council, subject also to the interference of the nobility.

Learning began to be cultivated by the Polish gentlemen in this reign, and the Latin language was now generally introduced. It Is said that, in a conference with the king of Sweden, Casimir, being addressed in Latin, was obliged to employ a monk as interpreter; and, ashamed of his ignorance, he enjoined the study of that language among the gentlemen of Poland by an edict. It has continued ever since almost a living language in that country.

The first printing-press was erected at Cracow in 1474. The Polish lan­guage began to be cultivated and used by authors, and even written elegantly. Schools were generally established, to which the sons of the citizens, or even serfs, had the same access as the nobles. Kromer, the historian, called the Livy of Poland, son of a peasant, and raised to the bishopric of Ermland (Warmia), and Janicki, of the same origin, noted for his Latin poems, and crowned with the laurel wreath by Pope Clement VII were among the numerous authors who lived in this reign. The name of Gregory of Sanok, the Polish Bacon, must not pass unnoticed. He held a professorship in the University of Cracow' some time, in which office he introduced a spirit of liberal and independent inquiry, for which we could scarcely give the age credit. He hated the scholastic dialect, says his biographer, ridiculed astrology, and introduced a simple mode of reasoning. He was also a great admirer and patron of elegant learning, and was the first who introduced the works of Vergil into notice in Poland.

The diets, up to this period, had been general assemblies of all the nobles, that is, of the army; but the inconvenience of holding meetings of more than a hundred thousand horsemen obliged the Poles to adopt the form of representation which had become almost universal in Europe. Dietines, or Colloquia, had long been held by each of the palatines in their palatinates, for the administration of justice, and these now began to appoint deputies for the management of the public business. In the course of time every district assumed the same privilege, and at length, in 1468, sent two deputies to a general diet. This first diet was convened to debate on the propriety of renewing the war against the Teutonic knights, of which we have already seen the conclusion. The system, however, was only gradually introduced. The nobles of many of the provinces refused to give up their rights to a deputy, and Regal Prussia, in particular, was so tenacious of this privilege, that it has reserved, even to modern times, the power of sending as many nobles to the diet as it pleases. The deputies also were bound to act precisely according to the instructions of their constituents, and the nobles still maintained their custom of general meetings, or confederations, when occasion required. The towns also at this time enjoyed the elective franchise.

Casimir, having thus spent nearly forty-eight years in the service of his kingdom, extending its territory, conquering its enemies, framing its constitution, and civilising it with arts and learning, left it to the care of his third son, John Albert, 1492 a.d.

Good fortune and faction raised John Albert above his two elder brothers, but courage and policy maintained him in his elevation. The latter of these cardinal virtues in a king was not, however, always exhibited in the present monarch’s counsels. He had admitted an Italian, Buono Accorso, formerly his tutor, into his confidence, and showed much deference to his opinions. According to his advice he attempted to lessen the preponderance of the nobility in the political scale. The plan was prudent, and if it could have been effected and their power withheld till the tiers-état was sufficiently strengthened with wealth and arts to counteract its undue influence, Poland might, like England, have enjoyed a firmly balanced constitution, in which the dissentient ranks are so well adjusted that disorder and its remedy are always produced simultaneously.

Albert impoliticly gave publicity to a design in which concealment was the principal requisite to insure success. Unfortunately, a circumstance which happened shortly after the disclosure rendered the king still more an object of suspicion to the nobles. The Polish troops were waylaid by an ambuscade, during a campaign against the Wallachians, and a great number of nobles, who almost entirely composed the army, were put to the sword. This event, coupled with the king’s denouement, engendered a suspicion of treachery, and made the nobles the more on the alert, not only to preserve their privileges, but to intrench on those of the king and the people. The Lithuanian nobles, in particular, were strenuous in their opposition to the king’s design; their principles had always been more exclusive than those of the Poles, but the danger which threatened their privileges united both in the common cause. From this time we may date their despotism over the serfs, who, not having allies in the commercial classes, were obliged to submit quietly.

The influence of the trading classes was checked by two causes. In the first place, every gentleman who had a house and a few acres of land could enjoy all the privileges of nobility; hence none but the lower order, or foreigners, would engage in mercantile pursuits; and, secondly, the towns were composed chiefly of German strangers, Jews, and even Armenians, who had been long considered almost out of the pale of the law, and could not be ad­mitted to the rights of naturalisation. From this time, therefore, we may date the origin of the exclusive influence of the nobles; they became resolute in maintaining arbitrary authority over their serfs; the commercial class were included in the proscription of rights, being interdicted by the diet in 1496 from becoming proprietors of land or possessors of church preferment.

But what Albert unintentionally pulled down from one part of the constitution, he rebuilt in another; and to make amends for having thus weakened the political power of the people, he fortified their juridical rights. In his time the law courts were submitted to more fixed regulations, and corruption and oppression of the people exposed and punished.

In the reign of his successor, Alexander, who came to the throne in 1501, the crown was still more debased. The king was prohibited from raising any money or using the revenue without the consent of the diet. This law, called Statutum Alexandrinum, is said to have been passed to check Alexander’s prodigality to musicians, to whose art he was passionately attached. All the Polish laws were revised and corrected at this period by the chancellor Laski, after whom the code is named.

THE REIGNS OF SIGISMUND I AND OF SIGISMUND AUGUSTUS

When Sigismund I came to the throne, in 1507, he found that it was not a bed of roses. Faction rose up against him as a many-headed monster, and it required a powerful and long arm to decapitate the ever-growing heads and perseverance with resolution to sear the wounds. But the Polish monarch was not to be soon intimidated; he defeated the Lithuanians, who had re­volted, and routed the Russian auxiliaries of the rebels. The latter success was in a great measure owing to the artillery, which was now introduced into the Polish army, or rather among their Bohemian allies and fellow subjects.

Albert, marquis of Brandenburg and nephew of Sigismund, had been elected master of the Teutonic order, in the hope that his connection with the Polish kings might be the means of advancing their interest. No sooner was he invested with this authority than he renounced all allegiance to Poland, and refused to submit to his liege lord Sigismund. He was, however, soon brought to obedience, and obliged to resign his authority as master. This resignation was the knell of the Teutonic knights; they were now deprived of all standing ground in Prussia, and were obliged to retire to Marienthal, in Franconia. The Poles were thus delivered from one enemy, but little did they imagine that the successors, whom they appointed to the vacated authority, would eventually be their destroyers. Sigismund formed eastern Prussia into a duchy in 1525, and intrusted it to Albert as a fief. Polish or western Prussia was hence called Regal Prussia, to distinguish it from the duchy.

But when the king had quelled all foreign troubles, he found others at home of a more insidious and less tractable nature. His wife, Bona, was the prime mover of these intrigues; she had obtained a complete ascendency over the mind of her husband, who was now no more than a puppet which played her own game. The nobility, being summoned by the king to assemble at Leopol or Lemberg in Galicia, obeyed his orders, but it was to make universal complaints against the queen and the administration. This confederation they styled Rokosz, in imitation of the Hungarians, who in cases of public emergency held their assemblies in the plain of Rokosz, near the city Pesth. The confederation was not formed of very stubborn materials, for they were all dispersed, we are told, by a shower of rain. This assembly and protest, however trifling in themselves, were of much importance as establishing a precedent which was but too often and obstinately imitated in following times.

No sooner had Sigismund Augustus, the son of the preceding monarch, ascended the throne, than factions were formed against him, because he had married without the consent and concurrence of the diet. The object of his choice was Barba Radziwill, widow of a Lithuanian noble of no great consequence. This marriage had been contracted secretly before his father’s death, but he publicly acknowledged it on coming to the crown. Firm in his affection, and faithful to his vows, he would not break his domestic tics, although his constancy might cost him a kingdom. The contest did not, however, come to this crisis, for the king dexterously turned the attention of the nobles to their own interests, and heard no more objections to his marriage. But Sigis­mund did not long enjoy the domestic happiness which he so well deserved, for in the course of six months death made him a widower.

Sigismund was not entirely freed from war, but he found time to cultivate the arts of peace very successfully. In this reign Livonia and Courland were annexed to the Polish crown. The order of the knights of Christ, having the same statutes as the Templars, was founded in 1202 by the bishop of Riga, who conferred on them the right to a third part of Livonia, which they were to conquer and convert to Christianity, and this grant was also confirmed by the pope. The first grand master was Winno, who denominated the order Ensiferi. In 123S they formed a solemn compact with the Teutonic knights and adopted their statutes. They reduced Livonia and Courland, and in 1521 purchased their independence of the grand master of the Teutonic order. The Reformation began now to spread in Livonia, and greatly weakened the power of the knights. At this time they had imprisoned the bishop of Riga, Sigismund’s cousin, and massacred the envoys whom he sent to demand the release of his kinsman.

Sigismund was arming to wreak vengeance on them, when, dreading the encounter, they submitted, and formed an alliance with Poland. The czar of Moscow, provoked at this step, invaded Livonia, and the knights, not able to defend themselves, sued for assistance from Sigismund, who repelled the Russians. Livonia was surrendered to Poland in 1561; and Kettler, the grand master, was invested with the duchy of Courland as a fief. He was bound to furnish the king as his vassal with two hundred horse or five hundred infantry, and was not allowed to maintain more than five hundred regular troops.

The war in which Sigismund was engaged with the Russians led to a con­solidation of the union between Poland and Lithuania. At the commencement of hostilities the czar was victorious, and even invaded Lithuania. The Polish nobles refused to march to the assistance of their fellow subjects but under the condition that the union should be consummated. This was readily granted, and in 1569 the desired arrangement was definitely concluded in a diet of both provinces at Lublin. Lithuania was united to Poland under the same laws, privileges, and government. It was agreed that the diets composed of representatives of both these countries should meet at Warsaw, which is a central town, and neither in Poland proper nor Lithuania, but in Masovia.

THE ADVANCED CIVILISATION OF POLAND UNDER THE JAGELLOS

The genius of Copernicus, the great precursor of Newton, had lately shone forth,

                              velut inter ignes Luna minores.

He was born in 1473 at Thorn, where his father, a citizen of Cracow, had settled after the accession of Polish Prussia to Poland. At the age of nineteen he was sent to the University of Cracow, where he pursued his mathematical studies under the noted Brudzewski. Adam Zaluzianski is the Polish Linnaeus, and in this same age published a work entitled Methodus Herbaria, in which he exhibits his sexual arrangement of plants. There were perhaps more printing presses at this time in Poland than there have ever been since, or than there were in any other country of Europe at the time. There were eighty-three towns where they printed books, and in Cracow alone there were fifty presses. The chief circumstance which supported so many printing houses in Poland at this time was the liberty of the press, which allowed the publication of writings of all the contending sects which were not permitted to be printed elsewhere.

Nor were the Poles less advanced in that most enlightened feeling of civili­sation, religious toleration. When almost all the rest of Europe was deluged with the blood of contending sectaries; while the Lutherans were perishing in Germany, while the blood of above a hundred thousand Protestants, the victims of the war of persecution and the horrid massacre of St. Bartholomew, was crying from the ground of France against the infamous Triumvirate and the hypocritical Catherine de’ Medici; while Mary made England a fiery ordeal of persecution, and even the heart of the Virgin Queen was not entirely cleansed of the foul stuff of bigotry, but dictated the burnings of the Arians, Poland opened an asylum for the persecuted of all religions, and allowed every man to worship God in his own way. “Mosques,” says Rulhiere, “were raised among churches and synagogues. Leopol has always been the seat of three bishops, Greek, Armenian, and Latin, and it was never inquired in which of their three cathedrals any man, who consented to submit to the regulations of government, went to receive the communion. Lastly, when the Reformation was rending so many states into inimical factions, Poland, without proscribing her ancient religion, received into her bosom the two new sects.” All parties were allowed a perfect liberty of the press; the Catholics printed their books at Cracow, Posen, Lublin, etc., while the followers of the Confession of Augsburg published theirs at Paniowica, Dabrowa, and Szamotuly; the reformers, at Pinczow, Brzesc, Knyszyn, Nieswiez; the Arians, at Rakow and Zaslaw, and the Greek sectarians in Lithuania, at Ostrowo and Vilna.

In 1540 it was ascertained that there were not in the whole of Poland more than five hundred Christian merchants and manufacturers, while there were three thousand two hundred Jewish, who employed nine thousand six hundred artisans in working gold, silver, etc.., or manufacturing cloths. In the reign of Sigismund Augustus the Jews were prohibited from dealing in horses or keeping inns. Such was the state, of his kingdom, when Sigismund died in 1572. With this monarch ended the line of kings of the house of Jagello.

Having thus arrived at another era in our historical narrative, let us cast a brief view on the tract we have travelled over. Under the dynasty of the Jagellos, which lasted 186 years, Poland had attained its perfect growth and dimensions, and its constitution had also arrived at equal maturity. Jewel after jewel has since been stolen from the crown, till it has become but a simple badge of official distinction. There being no third order whom the kings could raise up against the nobles, which would have rendered the monarchy limited, but shielded it from total subjection to the aristocracy, there was no alternative but to make the government a perfect despotism as in Russia, to preserve the regal authority. This was attempted, as we shall see, in after years, but the kings who undertook it had not sufficient genius or perseverance, and the aristocracy had attained too great an ascendency by the diet and confederation. Besides, the chief military forces of the kingdom were not composed of a distinct order, who might be won over to the regal side, but of the nobility and their retinues; nor had the king that powerful engine, wealth, in his power, all the revenue being at the disposal of the diet, which was composed of the aristocracy. Under these circumstances the king could only be “a judge,” as one of the future monarchs expressed himself, and the state that anomaly, a republic of aristocrats.

THE CROWN A PRIZE OF COMPETITION

Sigismund’s funeral bell was the tocsin of anarchy in Poland. Being without a male heir, this last of the Jagellos restored the crown to his subjects for their disposal, a trust which occasioned them much perplexity. The nobles, among whom had sprung up that spirit of equality and jealousy which had so intrenched on the regal authority, would not bend to a rival of their own order; and with the same feeling which has made them in late years rather submit to the domineering and treacherous interference of foreign powers than bear any stretch or even appearance of power in their peers, they preferred to look abroad for a king. The Polish crown thus became a prize of competition for foreign princes, and it still possessed sufficient temptations to have many candidates; for besides the opportunity that a monarch, backed with extraneous forces, might have of extending the authority, there remained still many important privileges like interstices between the enclosures of the laws. The neighbouring potentates now began a struggle for Poland, and at length the unhappy country became the prey of their conflicting interests in addition to the evils of civil dissension.

During the interregnum which succeeded the death of Sigismund, the archbishop of Gnesen, on whom the authority devolved at such times, convoked the diet to debate on the choice of a new king. In this meeting, which was held in 1573, the laws were passed which regulated the elections. The motion made by John Zamoyski, representative of Belz, in Galicia, that all the nobles should have a voice in the nomination, was carried, and it was agreed that they should meet in a plain near Warsaw. In this diet also the coronation oath, or pacta conventa, was revised. The principal articles were the same as have been ever since administered to the kings-elect, stripping the monarch of all active power, making the crown elective, and requiring regular convocations of the diet every two years. They bound him also to observe perfect toleration of religious principles, promising among themselves (inter nos dissidentes de religione), as well for themselves as their posterity, never to take up arms on account of diversity in religious tenets. The Roman Catholic, however, remained the state religion, and the kings were bound to be of that profession of faith.

The nobles accordingly assembled at Warsaw, armed, and with all their pomp of retinue. Several candidates were nominated, among whom were Ernest, son of the emperor Maximilian of Austria, and Henry, duke of Anjou, son of Catherine de’ Medici, and brother of Charles IX, the reigning king of France. The latter was the successful competitor, and an embassy was sent to Paris to announce the decision. We cannot refrain from inserting, at full length, the description given of this Polish deputation by an eyewitness then living at Paris:

“It is impossible to express the general astonishment when we saw these ambassadors in long robes, fur caps, sabres, arrows, and quivers; but our admiration was excessive when we saw the sumptuousness of their equipages, the scabbards of their swords adorned with jewels, their bridles, saddles, and horse-cloths decked in the same way, and the air of consequence and dignity by which they were distinguished. One of the most remarkable circumstances was their facility in expressing themselves in Latin, French, German, and Italian. These four languages were as familiar to them as their vernacular tongue. There were only two men of rank at court who could answer them in Latin, the baron of Millau and the marquis of Castelnau-Mauvissiere. They had been commissioned expressly to support the honour of the French nation, that had reason to blush at their ignorance in this point. They (the ambas­sadors) spoke our language with so much purity that one would have taken them rather for men educated on the banks of the Seine and the Loire than for inhabitants of the countries which are watered by the Vistula or the Dnieper, which put our courtiers to the blush, who knew nothing, but were open ene­mies of all science; so that when their guests questioned them, they answered only with signs or blushes.”

Thus was Henry called to the throne, and he who was engaged at the very moment of his election in fighting against the Protestants now took the oath of toleration to all dissenters and sectaries. He accepted the crown reluctantly; for, although all was ready for the king’s departure to Poland, this prince did not hurry to set out. However honourable the object of his voyage, he regarded it as an exile. But no sooner had he reached Poland than he was informed of the death of his brother and the vacancy of the French throne. Not choosing to forfeit his hereditary right and the substantial authority of the crown of France, and knowing that the Poles would not allow him to swerve from his oath, which bound him to reside in Poland, he took the singular resolution to abscond and leave the country by stealth. He was overtaken a few leagues from Cracow by one of the Polish nobles, but resolutely refused to return.

This singular and unexpected event renewed the factions, some of which called Maximilian of Austria to the throne, but were at last obliged to yield to the opposite party, who chose Anne, the sister of Sigismund, and Stephen Báthori, duke of Transylvania, for her husband, 1575 a.d

THE REIGN OF BATHORI (1575-1586 A.D.)

This prince was possessed of rare qualities and high talent, having raised himself by his valour, and without the least violence or collusion, to the dukedom of Transylvania; and he was now called spontaneously to the Polish throne. Nor did he degenerate after his exaltation, vanquishing the Russians in a series of battles. Peace was at length concluded by the interposition of Possevin, the Jesuit, and legate from the pope.

This was the circumstance which gave the Jesuits an introduction into Poland. Their order was then noted only for its learning, and Bathori, imagining he was acting for the improvement of his people, intrusted to them the care of the University of Vilna, which he had just founded. Succeeding years, however, showed them in a very different character in Poland from teachers and peacemakers.

But the most politic act of this king was the addition to the strength of the nation effected by establishing a standing army and introducing an improved  discipline. He now also brought the Cossacks under some military order. It was that Cossack tribe called Zaporog (Cosaci Zaporohenses) that was thus rendered serviceable to Poland. They inhabited, or rather frequented, the islands and swamps of the Dnieper, which formed a barrier against their warlike neighbours. In the reign of Sigismund I they were first armed against the Tatars, and a Polish officer, Daszkiewicz, was appointed their governor, but no further notice was taken of them till the time of Báthori.

The absurd and monstrous descriptions of this people and their manners, which were founded on rumour, have been fully credited by modern writers; and Voltaire, who is one of the greatest among fabulists, does not fail to magnify the wonders. We shall endeavour to throw a little clearer light on the manners of this tribe, from two old authors of credit. The Cossacks were the southern borderers of Poland, and, like all other people similarly situated, were continually carrying on an irregular and predatory war; hence their name, which implies plunderers. The Ukraine also means frontier country, and in course of time all its inhabitants were designated Cossacks. “They were,” says Chevalier, “only a military body, and not a nation, as some have imagined. We cannot compare them better than to the ‘Francarch­ers’ formerly established in France by Charles VII.” They made periodical naval expeditions every season against the Turks, and have even advanced within two leagues of Constantinople. Their rendezvous was in the islands of the Dnieper, and when winter approached they returned to their homes. They generally mustered five thousand or six thousand men; their boats were sixty feet long, with ten or twelve oars on each side, but this must be under­stood only of their war-boats.

The other author whom we shall quote was one who lived at that period, and frequently had the command of the Cossack troops, no less than the father of the famous Sobieski. Even then, it seems, they were the subject of curiosity and fable. “I will describe,” says he, “their origin, manners, and customs, which I am acquainted with by hearsay, and have myself witnessed. They are chiefly of Russian origin, though many criminal refugees from Poland, Germany, etc., are to be found among them. They profess the religion of the Greek church. They have fixed their residence in those natu­rally fortified places which are watered by the Dniester. Their business is war, and when they are shut up as it were in their nest, they consider it illegal to neglect athletic sports for any other pursuits. They live sparingly, by hunting and fishing. They support their wives and families with plunder. They are governed by a project (hetman), whose sceptre is a reed, and who is chosen by acclamation in a tumultuous manner. He has absolute power of life and death. He has four counsellors. The Poles have given them the town Trychtymirow, in Kiev.

“Long habit has fitted them for maritime warfare. They use boats on the sides of which they can occasionally fasten flat bundles of reeds, to buoy them up, and resist the violence of the waves and winds. With these boats they sail with great rapidity, and very often take the laden Turkish vessels. Not many of them use lances, but they are all furnished with arquebuses, and in this kind of warfare the kings of Poland can match the infantry of all the monarchs in the world. They fortify their camps with wagons ranged in several rows; this they call Tabor, and make them their last refuge from an overbearing enemy. The Poles were obliged to furnish them with arms, provisions, and forage for their horses.” Such were the men whom Bathory enlisted in the Polish service. In the year 1576 he divided them into six regiments, and appointed superior and subordinate officers over them. “They were then only infantry,” says Chevalier, “but Báthory joined to them two thousand horse, and in a short time they consisted chiefly of cavalry.” Their chief was called hetman, or ataman, and the king presented him with the fol­lowing articles as ensigns of authority: a flag, a horse-tail, a staff, and a mirror. Rozinski was their first hetman appointed by Báthory.

It is said that the king had formed a design of extending the regal au­thority, but death frustrated it, in 15S6. Few monarchs are more respected by the Poles than the one whom we have just described; and, compared with many of the Polish sovereigns, he certainly deserved the title conferred on him, “In republica plus quàm rex.”

sigismund’s wars with turkey, Russia, and Sweden

Violent factions, in consequence of this event, were formed at the diet of election, and both Maximilian of Austria and Sigismund, prince of Sweden, were next elected to the throne. Sigismund’s party prevailed, and took Maximilian prisoner, 1587 a.d. The successful competitor did not make an ungenerous use of his advantage, but liberated him, and rejected the offered ransom, saying: “I will not add insult to misfortune. I shall give Maximilian his liberty, and not oblige him to buy it.”

Sigismund’s family was related to the Jagellos on the female side, which reconciled the Poles to his accession. His reign commenced with war, for the Turks, continually harassed by the Cossacks, and not being able to revenge themselves on that vagrant people any more than if they were an annoying swami of locusts, called the Poles to account for the actions of their dependents. After considerable slaughter, which was interesting only to the victors and the victims, and of no service but to rid the Ukraine of a few thousand cutthroat robbers, peace was effected by the intervention of an English ambassador.

Sigismund’s father dying about this time, the Swedish crown was bequeathed to the Polish king; but the Swedes, who had adopted the reformed religion of Luther ever since the time of Gustavus, were apprehensive of the government of a Roman Catholic, as Sigismund was, and as he was obliged to declare himself before he could ascend the Polish throne. Nor were their fears groundless, for his very first acts were a bad omen for the Protestant religion He was accompanied by a popish legate, by whose advice he demanded that there should be a Roman Catholic chapel in every town, and expressed his determination to be crowned by the pope’s deputy. This was borne with impatience; but when the king attempted to enforce his will with Polish troops, the murmur of discontent was raised to the shout of rebellion, and all the attempts of the king to trample down the Swedes to obedience were of no avail.

Sigismund turned his attention at this time to Russia, where was being enacted the farcical romance of the false Dmitri. Incited by an ambition to conquer Russia, and encouraged therein by the Jesuits, he invaded the country, ostensibly as the avenger of his murdered subjects.

Zolkiewski, the maternal grandfather of Sobieski, who, as his son-in-law writes, was made both chancellor and grand general, commanded the troops, and entering Moscow took prisoner Vasili Shulsky, the new czar, and his brother. The king’s son, Wladislaw, was set on the throne, and thus Poland was once the disposer of the Russian crown. He was, however, soon deposed, and Sigismund did not attempt to reinstate him. Zolkiewski had the honour of entering Warsaw with a Russian czar in his train.

Sigismund had not abandoned his plan of regaining the crown of Sweden, and with this view he joined, with Ferdinand, the emperor of Germany, and assisted him against the voyevode of Transylvania, who opposed him. The Transylvanian was in alliance with the sultan, and urged him to make a diversion on the side of Moldavia, which at that time was under the power of the Turks. The palatine of Moldavia had invited the Poles to his assistance, and accordingly the famous Zolkiewski, the conqueror of Russia, marched into that country with eight thousand regular troops, and irregular forces of Cossacks and Moldavian refugees amounting to about twenty thousand. The Turkish army was chiefly composed of Tatars, and numbered nearly seventy thousand. Zolkiewski, notwithstanding the disparity of forces, obliged the Tatars to give way; but being almost abandoned by his auxiliaries, and his little band being reduced to little better than five thousand, he was obliged to retreat.

Like all experienced generals, Zolkiewski could play the losing as well as the winning game, and an eight days’ march in the face of a numerous army, used to irregular warfare, must have required some tactics and management. Historians compare this retrograde movement to “ the retreat of the ten thousand,” and no doubt the Polish grand general, if he had boasted a Greek tongue and a Greek sword, would have made as wonderful a narrative as Xenophon. But Zolkiewski was to suffer a different fate, for when the troops had reached the Dniester they were panic-struck at the sight of the enemy, and fled in disorder. “Zolkiewski,” says the Polish historian James Sobieski, “like Paulus Aemilius, disdained to survive his defeat, and, with the same valour which had marked his life, he fell fighting for his country, and covered with wounds, on the banks of the Dniester, near the town of Mohilev.” His son was taken prisoner, but both bodies were redeemed and buried in the same grave, with this inscription:

Ezoriare aliquis nostris ex ossibus ultor.

This voice from the tomb urged their descendant Sobieski to exact retribution from the Turks. This was only the signal for fresh war; the sultan now headed his troops in person, but was eventually obliged to make peace.

While the Poles were thus engaged in the south, the Swedes were making inroads in the north. Sigismund had not quietly given up the crown of Sweden, but although his exertions were fruitless, he still cherished the hope of recovering it. The Polish king found an opponent in Gustavus Adolphus, who was now on the throne, and who withstood not merely the Poles, but almost all continental Europe, at least the Catholic part. Livonia, the point of junction between the two kingdoms, was the seat of war. After some trifling struggles, Gustavus took the field in 1626, and laid siege to Riga. This town surrendered in six weeks, and the Swedish king drove out the Jesuits, who were its perpetual tormentors. But Sigismund was too stubborn to be taught the inutility of resisting the great Gustavus; he would not see in him anything but a young hot-headed competitor, and not the determined champion of the Thirty Years’ War. Battle lost after battle increased the demands of the Swedes, and lessened the power of the Poles. The Polish king was also the dupe of the courts of Vienna and Madrid, whose interest it was to make him divert Gustavus from the rest of Europe, and in consequence they promised to assist him with money and troops. These promises were never kept, and Sigismund continued obstinately to gnaw the file. The city of Dantzic, however, defended itself very vigorously; the Swedish admiral was killed, and Gustavus obliged to raise the siege. But the continued run of ill-fortune at length opened the eyes of the Poles to their own folly and the treachery of their pretended allies, and Sigismund was happy to make peace for six years, by which he resigned Livonia and part of Prussia, in 1629.

Sigismund terminated this reign of trouble in 1632. Ever the dupe of the Jesuits, who were in his perfect confidence, he lost one kingdom and weak­ened another which was so unfortunate as to continue under his power. Poland, the land of toleration, was now the scene of religious contest, and the Protestants were deprived of all places of trust and power. General dissatisfaction resulted, and the nobles had formed a confederation against their king in 1607, but not being very resolute, they failed in carrying their point. In 1609 these confederations were authorised by law. The spirit of contention, however, still continued to divide house against house, and the father against his son; intolerance added to the serf’s chains and put an embargo on commerce. Such were the effects for which Poland was indebted to Sigismund III. He not only committed actual injury, but sowed fresh seeds by intrusting great power to the Jesuits. “He had, in short,” says a French writer, “two faults, which generally occasion great misfortune: he was very silly and very obstinate.”

A PERIOD OF DECLINE

Some time after the accession of Wladislaw VII, son of Sigismund, to the throne, died Gustavus Adolphus, which event enabled the Poles to oblige the Swedes to resign their conquests and make a firmer peace in 1635 at Stumsdorf. Had all the acts of the new king been dictated by the same good policy, Poland would have been saved much loss of strength and influence.

The Polish nobles were jealous of the independence of the Cossacks, so different from the state of their own serfs; the Jesuits could not bear to tolerate them in their adherence to the doctrines of the Greek church, and longed to make them Catholics; the king perhaps was swayed by both reasons, so that the sovereign, nobles, and Jesuits all united to prune the almost lawless freedom of that wild but useful tribe, and from this time may be dated their alienation from the Polish interest. Wladislaw ordered forts to be erected in the Ukraine to awe them, and the Cossacks armed in defence of their right, but were defeated. In defiance of treaties, the Poles villainously butchered their hetman and many other prisoners. A compact made after this, bind­ing the victors to withdraw their troops and restore the Cossacks to their full liberty, was as soon broken; the diet ordered the number of forces in the Ukraine to be increased, and that they should be reduced to the same state of subjection as the serfs. The Polish nobles seemed to imagine that oaths and engagements were not binding with uncivilised people, for they committed all kinds of outrages on them, both personal and general; at length an act of intolerable injustice drove the Cossacks again to rebel, and they were obtaining many advantages when death carried off their tyrant, Wladislaw, in 1648.

But the former bigot was succeeded by another: John Casimir, younger brother of the late king, was called to occupy the throne just vacated. Casimir was a Jesuit by principle, education, and character, and the pope gave him a cardinal’s hat, to free him from his religious ties that he might assume the crown.

Under this king the Cossacks were as badly treated as under his prede­cessor. The Polish nobles continued to oppress them, and Casimir connived at the injustice; at length, however, a notorious act of villainy roused them to revolt. Chmielnicki, a man of some influence in the Ukraine, was deprived of a small tract of land by the Polish governor, and resenting the oppression, asserted his right and taunted that officer as a tyrannical upstart. The governor, incensed at his resistance, imitated the violence of the other Polish nobles, carried off Chimielncki’s wife, and set fire to his house, in which his infant child perished. Chmielnicki drew his sword to revenge his wife’s honour and his child’s death, and joined the rebel Cossacks, who made him their leader. It was about this time that Casimir came to the throne, and feeling that the Cossacks were the aggrieved party, he refused to prosecute the war, but endeavoured to conciliate them by writing to the hetman and confirming him in his office. The Cossack chief withdrew his forces, and negotiations were in progress; but the nobles, confederating at the instigation of the aristocrats, put an end to these pacific measures with the sword. The Cossacks taught the Poles that they could defend their own liberty as well as that of their former allies and present oppressors. The rebel forces left behind them a wake of blood and devastation. They advanced into Poland, and even invested the king in his camp at Zboro. The Cossacks were credulous, and, believing a people who had deceived them so often, consented to negotiate. It was then agreed, in 1649, that they should have the free use of their privileges and religion.

This treaty did not satisfy the nobles, who were both foiled in their under­taking and humiliated by their defeat; they therefore determined to pay no more attention to it than the preceding agreements. Before the end of the year the diet announced its intention of reducing the Cossacks to obedience. Casimir made the expedition quite a crusade, and received a sacred helmet and sword from Pope Innocent X. His preparations were on as great a scale as if he designed the subjugation of a powerful nation, instead of a few thousand rebels, as they denominated the Cossacks; besides an army of 100,000 nobles, he assembled a body of 50,000 of the foreign troops who had fought in the Thirty Years’ War. The hetman, not terrified at this gigantic armament, allied himself with the Khan of the Tatars, and encountered the Poles.

Victory declared in favour of the oppressors, and the Cossacks were dis­persed; but the hetman had yet sufficient resources to obtain a peace in 1651. Submission to despotism is a distasteful lot, and happily cannot under any circumstances be made a duty by the strictest treaties or vows, according to the well-known principle of moral philosophy, that improper promises are not binding; so thought the Cossacks without the aid of a system of ethics, and submitted to the Russians in 1654. Alexis was then czar; he gladly received his new subjects, and, assigning as a pretext for war an omission which the Poles had made in one of his titles, marched two armies into Poland, one towards Smolensk, and the other towards Kiev.

While the Russians were ravaging the east, another and no less formidable enemy was arming on the north. Casimir, who sunk beneath the burden of one crown, would not resign the family pretensions to another, that of Sweden; and when Christina, abdicating about this time, appointed her cousin, Charles Gustavus, her heir, he protested vehemently against the succession. Charles Gustavus armed in defence of his right; and perceiving that in one of the letters from Casimir only two et cameras were used after his titles, instead of three, made it a pretext for declaring war. Charles Gustavus marched into Poland with 60,000 troops; discontent and revolt increased their number with Poles, and the Swede entered Warsaw. The contemptible John Casimir fled to Silesia, and Charles Gustavus was master of Poland.

But the nobles were soon disgusted with their new tyrant, and in 1656 they confederated in Galicia, and Casimir joined the confederacy. Fortune smiled still more favourably: Alexis, jealous of the growing power of Sweden, withdrew his troops, and even the hetman, who had received an envoy from Casimir, was satiated with revenge, and retired to the Ukraine. Charles was obliged to retrace his steps, and Casimir reached Warsaw again.

The Treaty of Oliva (1660 a.d.)

It is pretended that Charles Gustavus now proposed a partition of Poland between Prussia and Austria, but, fortunately for the kingdom, the czar declared war against Sweden, and diverted the conqueror from his design. The elector of Brandenburg concluded a treaty of peace at Wehlau, on the 19th of September, 1657, satisfied with obtaining the independence of Ducal Prussia. Austria offered assistance, now the danger was over, and the Treaty of Oliva was concluded on the 3rd of May, 1660, between Poland, Prussia, and Sweden. Casimir resigned all pretensions to the Swedish crown, and ceded Livonia to Sweden. It must not be forgotten that the et cameras of the king of Sweden’s title were arranged to his satisfaction in one of the articles of this treaty.

Thus was Casimir freed from this terrible coalition, which had threatened to forestall the fate of his unfortunate kingdom. But even before the Treaty of Oliva was concluded, the Poles, instead of conciliating all parties, passed a decree in the diet against the Arians, most of whom had sided with Sweden, and persecuted them with confiscation, exile, and death. Another rupture also broke out with the Cossacks; the haughty nobles infringed on the treaty they had made with them in 1658, and the Ukraine again submitted to Russia. “Since then,” says Salvandy, “Warsaw has seen them keeping guard at the gates of her palace.”

The Poles kept the Russians at bay, and the famous John Sobieski dis­tinguished himself in these campaigns, but they were obliged to make peace in 1667. By the treaty, Severia and the Ukraine on the east of the Dnieper were ceded to Russia; the Cossacks (Zaporogians) were to be under the joint dominion of both states, ready to serve against the Turks when required, and were to have the free exercise of their religion.

This reign was as unfortunate in its internal policy as in its foreign relations; the king was entirely at the mercy of his queen, his mistresses, and the Jesuits. Many of the nobles during the Swedish invasion had urged the necessity of choosing a successor to the throne who might be able to fight their cause, and many went so far as to wish the monarchy to become hereditary. The emperor was proposed by many, but the queen, Louise Marie, exerted herself to insure the succession to the French prince, Condé; and in the diet of 1661 the king himself made the proposal. This unconstitutional proceeding produced great murmurs among the nobles; the diet was dissolved, and the seeds of serious revolt were thus sown which harassed Casimir during the rest of his reign. In this diet Casimir pronounced these remarkable words, which have been construed as a singular prophecy of the dismemberment of Poland: “I hope I may be a false prophet, in stating that you have to fear the dis­memberment of the republic. The Russians (Moscus et Russi) will attempt to seize the grand duchy of Lithuania as far as the rivers Bug and Narew, and almost to the Vistula. The elector of Brandenburg will have a design on Greater Poland and the neighbouring palatinates, and will contend for the aggrandisement of both Prussias. The house of Austria will turn its attention to Cracow and the adjacent palatinates. Rulhière pretends that Casimir had the mysterious treaty in his eye when he spoke these prophetic words, but a more natural solution of the question is found in the letters before mentioned, which show that the apprehensions Casimir expresses were not confined to him.

Casimir, worn out by trouble, took the resolution of resigning the sceptre which he could not wield and resuming his religious habit. He had been told in the diet that the calamities of Poland could not end but with his reign, and he addressed that diet in the following words:

People of Poland : If is now two hundred and eighty years that you have been governed by my family. The reign of my ancestors is past, and mine is going to expire. Fatigued by the labours of war, the cares of the cabinet, and the weight of age; oppressed with the burdens and solicitudes of a reign of more than twenty-one years, I, your kin" and father, return into your hands what the world esteems above all things, a crown; and choose for my throne six feet of earth, where I shall sleep in peace with my fathers.

After his abdication he retired to France, where he was made abbot of the monastery of St. Germain-des-Prés.

It was in this king’s reign that the liberum veto, or privilege of the deputies to stop all proceedings in the diet, by a simple dissent, first assumed the form of a legal custom. “The leaven of superstition and bigotry,” says Rulhière “began to ferment and blend itself with all the other vices of the constitution; they then became closely united, and their junction defied all remedy. It was then that in the bosom of the national assemblies sprung up this singular anarchy which, under the pretext of making the constitution more firm, has destroyed in Poland all sovereign power. The right of single opposition to general decrees, although always admitted, was for a long time not acted upon. There remained but one step to complete the destructive system, and that was taken in 1652 under the reign of John Casimir. A Polish noble, named Sizinski, whom his contemporaries have denounced to the indignation of pos­terity, having left the diet at the period allotted for its resolutions, and by his voluntary absence preventing the possibility of any unanimity, the diet considered that it had lost its power by the desertion of this one deputy.” A precedent so absurd but so easily imitated could not fail to have the most pernicious effects.

There can be only one opinion on this king’s reign; he deserves any char­acter rather than that of “The Polish Solomon,” nor can we agree with the whole of the assertion that

He made no wars, and did not gain

New realms to lose them back again,

And (save debates in Warsaw’s diet)

He reigned in most unseemly quiet.

His reign, unfortunately for Poland, was anything but an “unseemly quiet,” and has added another proof of the bad effects of engrafting the sceptre on the crosier.

The introduction of the Jesuits by Báthory had a great effect on the progress of learning in Poland. The curious, however, count up 711 Polish authors in the reign of Sigismund III. The Polish language became more generally diffused in Lithuania, Galicia, Volhinia, etc., where formerly the Russian was the prevalent dialect. The close intercourse which commenced with France during the unfortunate administration of John Casimir introduced many of the comforts of civilisation; travelling was improved in Poland, inns were built on the high roads, and carriages came into general use. But sadly did learning languish in this stormy reign. The incursions of the Swedes, Cossacks, and Tatars swept away the libraries, broke up all literary society, and commerce shared the same fate.

THE UNWILLING MICHAEL IS MADE KING (1668 A.D.)

A diet of convocation now assembled to elect a successor to Casimir. Its first act was to render abdication henceforth illegal in Poland.

The candidates to the throne were three: the prince of Conde, supported by the primate and the great barons; the prince of Neuburg, an ally, or rather a creature, of Louis XIV; and Charles of Lorraine, a prince in the interests of Austria. The first of these candidates, however illustrious his exploits, could not be acceptable to a nation which detested alike the tyranny and arro­gance of the French monarch, and which remembered but too well the dis­asters inflicted on the republic by one of that nation—Henry of Valois. Though the grand marshal of the crown, Sobieski, left the fields on which he had hitherto reaped his laurels to swell the partisans of Cond6, the cause was hopeless; vast bodies of armed nobles flocked round the kolo, and insisted that the Frenchman should be excluded. The contest, which now lay between the French and Austrian interests, promised to be ruinous, and to end in blood; the adherents of each were nearly equal in number, and perfectly so in obstinacy. One morning, however, before the great dignitaries had arrived, and while the electors were ranged round the plain, under the banners of their respective palatinates, the cry of a Piast proceeded from that of Russia, and an obscure prince, Michael Korybut, was proclaimed by those immediately at hand. The cry spread with electric rapidity; it was echoed by the electors of the other palatinates, who by this unexpected nomination saw an escape from the greatest of all evils—civil war. As the senators approached, they were surprised at the universal clashing of sabres, and the howls of approbation which accompanied the name of Michael. They were compelled to join in the vast chorus, and “Michael! Michael!” resounded with deafening acclamations. In less than two hours he was proclaimed king of Poland.

Prince Michael Korybut Wisniowieki was the son of the ruthless Jeremy, so infamous for his persecution of the dissidents. Infirm in body and weak in mind, without influence, because without courage and riches, he saw that if he was now made the scapegoat for the hostile factions, both would afterwards unite in his pursuit. With tears in his eyes he begged to decline the proffered dignity; and when his entreaties were received with howls of “Most serene king, you shall reign! ” he mounted his horse and precipitately fled from the plain. He was pursued, brought back, forced to accept the pacta conventa which had been prepared for the successful candidate, and to promise before the assembled multitude, whose outrageous demonstrations of homage he well knew were intended to insult his incapacity, that he would never seek to evade his new duties. To relieve his extreme poverty, some of the wealthier barons immediately filled his empty apartments with household furniture, and his still emptier kitchen with cheer, to which he had never before been accustomed. In these studied attentions there was more of contempt than of good nature. The mockery was complete, when in the diploma of his elevation it was expressed that he was the sun of the republic, the proudest boast of a mighty line of princes, one who left the greatest of the Piasts, the Jagellos, or the Vasas far behind him.

With the commencement of his reign Michael began to experience mortification within and danger from without. Though the public treasury was empty, though Poland had no army, even when the Cossacks and Tatars were preparing to invade her, two consecutive diets were dissolved, and their proceedings consequently nullified, by the veto. Then the quarrels of the deputies—quarrels which were not unfrequently decided by the sword—introduced a perfect contempt for the laws, as well as for all authority other than that of brute force. The poor monarch strove in vain to reconcile the hostile factions; his entreaties—he was too timid or too prudent to use threats—were disregarded, even by such as the distribution of crown benefices had at first allied with his interests. Without decision, without vigour, without money or troops, and consequently without the means of commanding respect from any one of his subjects, he was the scorn or jest of all. A resolution was soon taken to dethrone this phantom of royalty. The turbulent primate Prasmowski was the soul of the conspiracy, which was rendered still more formidable by the accession of the queen Eleanor, an Austrian princess. In the view of obtaining a divorce, and of procuring the elevation to the throne of one who had long been her lover—the prince of Lorraine—she scrupled not to plot against her husband and king. It was, in fact, but exchanging one lord for another, a beloved for a despised one; and whether the plot failed or succeeded, she was sure of a husband and a throne. Fortunately for Michael, there was another conspiracy, the object of which was to transfer the queen and the sceptre to a French prince. Thus one faction neutralised the other; but in the end one of them would doubtless have triumphed, notwithstanding the adhesion of the small nobles to the reigning king—an adhesion, however, not the result of attachment to the royal person, but solely of hostility to the great barons—had not the loud notes of warlike preparation drowned for a moment the noisy contentions of the rebels.

SOBIESKI AND THE TURKISH CAMPAIGN (1670-1673 A.D.)

During these melancholy transactions, the heroic Sobieski was gathering new laurels on the plains of Podolia and Volhinia. By several successes, though obtained with but a handful of troops, chiefly raised at his own expense, he preserved the frontier provinces from the ravages 'Of the Cossacks, the allies now of Muscovy, now of the Porte, as best suited their ideas of interest or of revenge. He was now opposed, however, to a new and apparently resistless enemy—the Turks, whom the perfidious policy or revenge of Louis XIV raised up against the republic. The advanced guard of that enemy, consisting of Cossacks and Tatars, whom the Porte had ordered to pass the Borysthenes, he utterly routed, retook the important frontier fortresses, and by everywhere opposing a movable rampart to the barbarians, he kept them in check, fixed the wavering fidelity of the Volhinians, who were ready to join the Muscovites, and re-established his communications with Moldavia. Europe termed these preliminary operations the miraculous campaign. But Muhamed IV now approached, accompanied by the veteran army which had reduced Candia, and which under its general, Cuprugli, had triumphed over the Venetians, the Hungarians, and the empire. About three hundred thousand Ottomans crossed the Dniester and advanced into Podolia. In the deplorable anarchy which reigned at the diet, no measures whatever had been taken to oppose the enemy. Sobieski had but 6,000 men; and notwithstanding his energetic remonstrances, he could obtain no reinforcements. He had the mortification to see the fall of Kamenets, the reduction of all Podolia, and the advance of the Turks into Red Russia, the capital of which, Leopol, was soon invested by Muhamed in person. What man could do—what no man but himself could have dared—he accomplished. He cut off an army of Tatars, leaving 15,000 dead on the field, and releasing 20,000 Polish captives, whom the robbers were carrying away. But however splendid this success, it could not arrest the arms of the Turks. As the panic-struck nobles removed as far as possible from the seat of war, Michael hastened to make peace with the Porte; as the price of which he ceded Kamenets and the Ukraine to the victors, acknowledged the superiority of the Porte over the Cossacks, and agreed to pay an annual tribute of 20,000 ducats.

Such was the humiliating state to which the republic was reduced by its own dissensions. In vain did Sobieski exclaim against the inglorious Peace of Buczacz; in no Polish breast could he awaken the fire of patriotism. It is impossible not to suspect that the money of France or of the Porte had corrupted the leaders of the various factions; a nation renowned beyond all others for its valour would surely not have thus coolly beheld its glory sullied, its very existence threatened, unless treachery had disarmed its natural defenders. At this time no less than five armed confederations were opposed to each other—of the great against the king; of the loyal in his defence; of the army in defence of their chief, whom Michael and his party had resolved to try, as implicated in the French party; of the Lithuanians against the Poles; and, finally, of the servants against their masters, of the peasants against their lords.

Though Sobieski despised Michael, he scorned to take revenge on so poor a creature; his country still remained, though humbled and degraded, and he swore to exalt her or to die. Through his efforts, and the mutual exhaustion of the contending parties, something like tranquillity was restored, and in a diet held at Warsaw the renewal of the war was decreed. As no tribute was sent, the grand vizier did not wait for the hostile declaration: followed by his imperial master, he crossed the Danube. At the head of near forty thousand men, Poles, Lithuanians, and German auxiliaries, Sobieski opened a campaign destined to be forever memorable in the annals of the world. His plan was to meet and annihilate Kaplan Pasha, who was advancing through Moldavia; to return and fall on Hussein, another Turkish general, who with eighty thousand men held the strong position of Kotin, on the Moldavian side of the Dniester, opposite to Kamenets: the destruction of these two leaders, he hoped, would lead to the fall of the latter fortress, and enable him to contend with the sultan in person, should the monarch persist in advancing.

The mutiny of his troops, however, especially of the Lithuanians, who exclaimed that he was leading them to utter destruction, and who refused to advance into an unknown country, compelled him to begin with Hussein. With difficulty he prevailed on them to pass the Dniester, and to march on Kotin; he found the Turkish general so strongly fortified, that Paz, the Lithuanian hetman, refused at first to join in the meditated assault; but he had done such wonders in preceding campaigns with a handful of troops, that with 40,000 he thought nothing impossible. Paz, his personal enemy, he persuaded to co-operate, and the bombardment commenced while the grand assault was preparing. Fortunately for the Christian arms, the night of the 10th of November, 1673, was one of unexampled severity; the snow fell profusely, and the piercing blasts were still more fatal to the besieged, most of them from warm Asiatic climes. On the morning of the 11th Sobieski led the attack; ere long his lance gleamed on the heights, and the struggle was renewed in the heart of the Turkish intrenchments. In vain did the janissaries endeavour to prolong it; they fell in heaps, while the less courageous or more enfeebled portion of the enemy sought safety in flight. The bridge, however, which connected the two banks of the river was in the possession of the Christians, and thousands perished while endeavouring to swim over. The carnage was now terrific; 40,000 of the Moslems now lay on the plain, or floated in the stream, and an immense booty fell to the victors. Poland was saved; the fortress of Kotin capitulated. Kaplan Pasha retreated beyond the Danube; Moldavia and Wallachia declared for the republic, and would perhaps have been incorporated with it, had not the grand hetman been recalled from his career of conquest by an important though not an unexpected event.

This was no other than the death of Michael, who expired at Lemberg (Leopol) the night before the great battle of Kotin, while on his way to join the army. His demise was very agreeable to the Poles, who longed for a prince capable of restoring their ancient glory. Let him not, however, be judged with undue severity; his feebleness was no more than his misfortune, while his intentions were good. Though without vigour of understanding, he was accomplished, and even learned; he was acquainted with several languages, and addicted to literary pursuits. Knowing his own incapacity to rule so fierce a nation, compulsion alone made him ascend the throne; and if his reign was disastrous, the reason has been sufficiently explained. On the whole, he should be pitied rather than condemned.

MICHAEL IS SUCCEEDED BY JOHN (III) SOBIESKI (1674 A.D.)

Though, on the death of Michael, the number of candidates was greater than it had been on any preceding occasion, from the state of parties in the republic, no one could doubt that the chief struggle would be between those of France and the empire. The dukes of Lorraine and Neuburg were again proposed : the former was zealously supported by a queen lover; the latter by the money and promises of Louis. (The electors had long been sufficiently alive to the value of their votes.) That a stormy election was apprehended was evident from the care with which the szopa, or wooden pavilion of the senators, was fortified. The appearance on the plains was exceedingly picturesque: everywhere were seen small bands of horsemen exercising their daring feats; some tilting; some running at the ring; others riding with battle-axes bran­dished to the entrance of the szopa, and with loud hurrahs inciting the senate to expedition; others were deciding private quarrels, which always ended in blood; some were listening with fierce impatience to the harangues of their leaders, and testifying by their howls or hurrahs their condemnation or approval of the subject. At a distance appeared the white tents of the nobles, which resembled an amphitheatre of snowy mountains, with the sparkling waters of the Vistula and the lofty towers of Warsaw.

The appearance of the Lithuanians was hostile; perhaps they had some reason to suspect the nomination of Sobieski, with whom their hetman, Paz, had long been at variance; certainly they seemed resolved to support the Austrian to the last extremity. Sobieski, who in the mean time had arrived from Kotin, proposed the prince of Condé, another candidate; whether in the hope that such a proposition would succeed, or with the view of distracting the different parties and making way for his own elevation, is not very clear. He soon found, however, that the prince was no favourite on the kolo; and his personal friend, Jablonowski, palatine of Russia, commenced a harangue in sup­port of his pretensions. The speaker, with great animation, and not without eloquence, showed that the republic could expect little benefit from any of the candidates proposed, and insisted that its choice ought to fall on a Piast; on one, above all, capable of repressing domestic anarchy, and of upholding the honour of its arms, which had been so lamentably sullied during the two preceding reigns. The cry of “ A Piast! a Piast!” and “God bless Poland!” speedily rose from the Russian palatinate, and was immediately echoed by thousands of voices. Seeing their minds thus favourably inclined, he proposed the conqueror of Slobodisza, of Podhaic, of Kalusz and Kotin; and the cry was met with “Sobieski forever!” All the palatinates of the crown joined in the acclamation; but the Lithuanians entered their protest against a Piast. Fortunately for the peace of the republic, the grand duchy was not, or did not long continue, unanimous; Prince Radziwill embraced the cause of the crown; Paz was at length persuaded to withdraw his unavailing opposition, and John III was proclaimed king of Poland.

Before the new king would consent to be crowned, he undertook an expedi­tion to rescue Kamenets, Podolia, and the Ukraine from the domination of the Moslems. To preserve these, and if possible to add to them, Muhamed IV had taken the field with a formidable army. Kotin was retaken, the Muscovites who contended with the Porte for the possession of the provinces on the Borysthenes were expelled from the Ukraine, and several Cossack fortresses carried; but here the sultan, thinking he had done enough for glory, returned to Constantinople. John now entered on the scene, and with great rapidity retook all the conquests that had been made, except Kotin, and reduced to obedience most of the Cossacks on the left bank of the Borysthenes. But this scene was doomed to be sufficiently diversified: the wicked desertion of Paz, who with his Lithuanians was averse to a winter campaign, prevented the king from completing the subjugation of the Ukraine, and even forced him to retreat before a new army of Turks and Tatars: twenty thousand of the Tatars, however, were signally defeated at Zloczow; and the little fortress of Trembowla made a defence worthy the best ages of Roman bravery. The Lithu­anian soldiers being compelled by their countrymen to rejoin the king, that monarch again entered on the career of victory. The Turks were defeated at Soczawa, and were pursued with great loss to the ramparts of Kamenets. With the exception of that fortress and of Podhaic, which they had stormed, Poland was free from the invaders.

Sobieski, having thus nobly earned the crown of a kingdom which he had so often saved, returned to Cracow, where his coronation was performed with the accustomed pomp, but with far more than the accustomed joy. At the diet assembled on this occasion, a standing army of 30,000, and an extraordinary one of three times that number, were decreed; but nothing more was done, and the republic remained defenceless as before. Other salutary pro­posals submitted by the king, whose talents were as conspicuous in govern­ment as in the field, had no better success. The fate of the republic, however it might be delayed by monarchs so enlightened and conquerors so great as he, was not to be averted.

From these harassing cares John was summoned by a new invasion of the Turks and Tatars, amounting in number to almost 210,000, and commanded by Ibraham Pasha of Damascus, whose surname of Shaitan, or the devil, was significant enough of his talents and character. The Polish king, with his handful of 10,000, was compelled to intrench himself at Zurawno, where he was well defended by sixty-three pieces of cannon. His fate was considered—perhaps even by himself—as decided; all Poland, instead of flocking to his aid, hastened to the churches to pray for his deliverance. For twenty days the cannonading continued its destructive havoc, occasionally diversified by still more destructive sorties from the camp. The advantage rested with the Poles, but they were so thinned by their very successes that their situation became desperate. The Tatar khan, however, who knew that the Muscovites were laying waste that part of the Ukraine subject to Doroszensko, the feudatory of the Porte, and were menacing his own territories, clamoured for peace. It was proposed by the pasha, but on the same humiliating terms as those of Buczacz. The enraged Sobieski threatened to hang the messenger who should in future bring him so insulting a proposal.

Hostilities recommenced; though the Poles were without provisions or ammunition, he scorned to capitulate. He rode among his dismayed ranks, reminded them that he had extricated them from situations even worse than the present one, and gaily asked whether his head was likely to have suffered by the weight of a crown. When the Lithuanians threatened to desert, he only replied, “Desert who will—alive or dead I remain!” But to remain in his camp was no longer safe: one morning he issued from it, and drew up his handful of men, now scarcely seven thousand, in battle array as tranquilly as if he had legions to marshal. Utterly confounded at this display of rashness or of confidence, the Turks cried out, “There is magic in it!”—a cry in which Shaitan, devil as he was, joined. Filled with admiration at a bravery which exceeded his imagination, the pasha sued for peace on less dishonourable conditions. By the treaty two-thirds of the Ukraine was restored to Poland, the remaining third being in the power of the Porte; the question as to Podolia was to be discussed at Constantinople; all prisoners, hostages, etc., were also restored. The conditions, indeed, were below the dignity of the republic, but that such favourable ones could be procured at such a crisis is the best comment on the valour of the king. This was the sentiment of all Europe, which resounded more than ever with his praises.

This peace was followed by the prolongation of the truce with Muscovy. Neither were the conditions of the latter so advantageous as could have been desired. Three insignificant fortresses were restored; but Severia, Smolensk, Kiev, and other possessions remained in the iron grasp of the autocrat. In vain would the king have endeavoured to wrest them from it: without money or troops, with anarchy also before his eyes, it was no slight blessing that he was able to preserve from day to day the independence, nay, the existence, of the republic.

During the four following years the king was unable to undertake any expedition for the reconquest of the lost possessions. Though he convoked diet after diet in the hope of obtaining the necessary supplies for that purpose, diet after diet was dissolved by the fatal veto; for the same reason he could not procure the adoption of the many salutary courses he recommended, to banish anarchy, to put the kingdom on a permanent footing of defence, and to amend the laws. His failure, indeed, must be partly attributed to himself; since, great as he was, he appeared as much alive to the aggrandisement of his own family as to the good of the republic. There can be little doubt—and he ought to be praised for it—that he had long meditated the means of rendering the crown hereditary in his offspring; but the little caution with which he proceeded in this great design, and the criminal intrigues of his queen, a French woman of little principle, whose influence over him was unbounded, roused the jealousy of the nobles, especially of the Lithuanians, and compelled him to suspend it. Had he shown more prudence, as well as more firmness, in his ad­ministration, and within his palace, his object might have been attained, and Poland preserved from ruin, under the sway of his family.

John Sobieski had always belonged to the faction or party in the interests of France, and, consequently, averse to that of Austria; but there was one thing in which he would not gratify the perfidious Louis XIV. As a Christian knight and a noble Pole, he had vowed inextinguishable hostility against the Moslems—a feeling, in his case, deepened by the memory of his maternal grandfather, his father, and his brother, who had all perished under the sword of the misbelievers—and he could not consequently band with the Porte against the empire. While the Turks were arming for the invasion of Germany, his alliance was eagerly sought by Louis and Leopold: he entered into a treaty offensive and defensive with the latter. To this turn in his policy he was said, perhaps injuriously, to have been not a little disposed by the promise of an archduchess for his eldest son, and by the resentment of some insults shown by the grand monarque to his queen.

THE RELIEF OF VIENNA (1683 A.D.)

But the money of Louis and the venality of the Polish barons opposed great obstacles to the ratification of this treaty by the diet. A conspiracy was soon set on foot, the object of which was, either to turn the king from the Austrian cause or to dethrone him. Fortunately the correspondence of the French ambassador with the unprincipled court of Paris fell into his hands, and he was enabled to frustrate the criminal design. To escape detection, the very conspirators voted for a war with the infidels, and preparations were made for a great campaign. It was tune. Vienna was invested by 300,000 Turks and Tatars, under Kara Mustapha, the vizir; the dastardly Leopold had retreated to Linz, and despatched messenger after messenger to hasten the departure of Sobieski. Germany looked to him as its saviour, and Europe as the bulwark of Christendom. Having beheld at his feet the ambassadors of the empire and the nuncio of the pope, he left Cracow, August 15th, with a small body of Polish troops, and without waiting for the Lithuanians; the chief part of his army, amounting in all to about thirty thousand men, he had previously ordered to rendezvous under the walls of Vienna.

The king found the affairs of the imperialists in a worse situation than he had conceived. The Turkish artillery had made a practicable breach, and the terrified inhabitants of the capital were in momentary expectation of an assault. One evening, however, their despair was changed to joy, as they perceived from their telescopes the appearance of the Polish hussars on the heights of Kahleuberg. Sobieski was enthusiastically invested with the chief command of the Christian army, consisting of Poles, Saxons, Bavarians, and Austrians, amounting to 70,000 men. One who had been his rival as a candidate, the duke of Lorraine, gave a noble example of magnanimity by this submission, and by zealously co-operating in all his plans. On the morning of September 12th commenced the mighty struggle between the Crescent and the Cross. Throughout the day the advantage rested with the Christians, but the vast masses of the Turks remained unbroken. Towards nightfall the Polish king had fought his way to the intrenched camp of the vizir, whom he perceived seated in a magnificent apartment tranquilly drinking coffee with his two sons.

Provoked at the sight, he rushed forward, followed by an intrepid band. With the loud war-cry of “God for Poland! ” and his pious repetition of the well-known verse of Israel’s prophet king, “Non nobis, non nobis, Domine exercituum, sect nomini tuo da gloriam!” was united that of “Sobieski!” Shouts of “ Sobieski! Sobieski!” caught the ears of the Moslems, who for the first time now certainly knew that this dreaded hero was with the Christians. “Allah!” exclaimed the Tatar khan, “ the king is with them sure enough!” The consternation among the infidels was extreme; but, true to the bravery of their character, they made a vigorous stand. In vain; their ranks strewed the ground; six pashas fell with them; the vizir fled, and with him the remnant of his once formidable host. The Turkish camp, with its immense riches, became the prey of the victors; not only Germany, but Europe, was saved. The hero of Christendom hastened to the cathedral of St. Stephen to join in a solemn Te Deum for the success of this memorable day.

It is painful to dwell on the subsequent conduct of Leopold. Instead of clasping the knees of his saviour with joy, and of blushing at his own cowardice, he met the king with coolness, nay, even with insult. His empire was saved, and as he had no need of further aid, he took care to exhibit no further gratitude. His behaviour astonished no less than incensed the Poles, many of whom, without their king’s permission, returned to their homes; but Sobieski, with the rest, proceeded into Hungary in pursuit of the fugitive Moslems. By two subsequent victories won at Parkan and Strigonia, he freed most of that kingdom from the foot of the invaders, and would have extended his successes far beyond the Danube, had not the Lithuanians delayed to join him and his Polish troops insisted on returning to their country.

On his arrival he had the additional gratification of finding that one of his generals had obtained some signal successes in the Ukraine over a combined army of Turks and Tatars; had dethroned one hospodar of Wallachia, and elevated another better disposed to the views of the republic.

But whilst pursuing the splendid successes of this Christian hero, posterity must blush at the weakness of his policy, at the blindness with which he pursued the aggrandisement of his family; implicitly followed the counsels of his despicable queen; and trusted to the protestations of Leopold, who, when his aid was required, never hesitated at promises, and, when that aid was furnished, never thought of performing them. Though the archduchess promised to his son was resigned to the elector of Bavaria, the imperial lure of assisting him to subdue Wallachia, which was to become a permanent sovereignty in his family, again armed him against the Turks. To be freed from all apprehensions on the side of Muscovy, he forever confirmed to that power the possession of Smolensk, Siewierz, Tchernigov, and the greater portion of Kiovia, with Kiev, the capital. These possessions, indeed, he could not hope to recover; but voluntarily to have resigned them, and forever, justly excited the indignation of many, especially when they found that the czarina Sophia refused to perform conditions to which she had agreed—to join the general crusade against the Porte, and to pay the republic 200,000 rubles in return for these con­cessions.

Having raised about forty thousand men, the king entered into Wallachia, to conquer it for one of his sons. But the expedition had no effect, owing partly to the exceeding dryness of the season, and to the consequent sufferings of his army, and partly to the non-appearance of the contingents promised by Leopold and the hospodar. He returned, but not without loss, both from the reason already assigned, and from the activity of the Turks in his rear, who, however, dared not attack him. A second expedition was but partly successful; in fact, the infirmities of age had overtaken him, and had impaired his mental no less than his bodily vigour. His failure, however, in both expeditions was owing to circumstances over which he had no control; in neither did it dim the lustre of his martial fame.

No two men could be more unlike than Sobieski in the field and Sobieski at his palace of government in the former he was the greatest, in the latter the meanest, of men. He was justly despised for his tame submission to his worthless queen. To her he abandoned all but the load of administration; her creatures filled most offices in the state; all, too, were become venal—all conferred on the highest bidder. The bishop Zaluski, on this subject, relates an anecdote sufficiently characteristic of the court where such a shameless transaction could take place. The rich see of Cracow being vacant, the queen one day said to the bishop of Kuhn, “J wager with your sincerity that you alone will have the bishopric of Cracow.” Of course the prelate accepted the challenge, and, on being invested with the see, paid the amount. Zaluski himself opened a way to the royal favour by means equally reprehensible. He presented the queen with a medicine-chest, together with a book of direc­tions for employing them, valued at a few hundred ducats: she received it with contempt. The offer of a silver altar, estimated at 10,000 crowns, of a val­uable ring, and two diamond crosses gratified her avarice, and made the fortune of the giver. Her temper was about equal to her disinterestedness. On one occasion the king had promised the great seal to Zaluski; the queen to Denhov: of course the latter triumphed.

“You are not ignorant,” said the king to the disappointed claimant, his intimate friend, “ of the rights claimed by wives—with what importunity the queen demands everything that she likes; you only have the power to make me live tranquilly or wretchedly with my wife. She has given her word to another, and if I refuse her the disposal of the chancellorship she will not remain with me. I know you wish me too well to expose me to public laughter, and I am convinced that you will let me do what she wishes, but what I do with extreme regret.” Can this be the victor of Slobodisz, Podhaic, Kotin, and Vienna ?

It cannot be matter of much surprise that such a prince should have little influence in the diets, or that his measures should form the subject of severe scrutiny by many of his nobles. French money raised him up enemies on every side; so also did that of his queen, whenever he ventured on such as were unpalatable either to her or to her creatures. The man who could not pre­serve peace in his own family, who could not prevent his wife and eldest son, nor mother-in-law and daughter-in-law, from bringing disgrace on his palace by their unnatural quarrels, could not be expected to have much influence anywhere. In full senate he was often treated with marked disrespect; the words “tyrant! traitor!” were lavished on him; and he was once or twice invited to descend from a dignity which he dishonoured. That he seriously entertained the design of abdication, notwithstanding the decree against it during the interregnum of Michael Korybut, is certain; but if he had many enemies, he had more friends, and he was persuaded to relinquish it.

The last days of John Sobieski were passed in literary or in philosophical contemplation. Sometimes, too, he migrated from scene to scene, pitching his tent, like the Sarmatians of old, wherever a fine natural prospect attracted his attention. His last hours were wrapped in mystery. He spoke to Zaluski of a dose of mercury which he had taken, and which had occasioned him intense suffering in mind and body. “Is there no one,” he abruptly exclaimed, whilst heavy sobs agitated his whole frame, “to avenge my death!” This might be the raving of a sickly, nervous, distempered mind; but a dreadful suspicion fixed on the queen. Her subsequent conduct confirmed it. Scarcely was the breath out of his body when she seized on his treasures, and renewed her quarrels with her eldest son, Prince James, with a bitterness that showed she felt no regret for his loss.

Sobieski was the last independent king of Poland. His enemies could not but allow that he was one of the greatest characters in royal biography, the greatest beyond comparison in the regal annals of his country. He died in 1696.

 

CHAPTER III

THE EXTINCTION OF A KINGDOM

[1696-1796 A.D.]