<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>Let him who will not proffer'd peace receive,</p>
<p>Be sated with the plagues which war can give;</p>
<p>And well thy hatred of the peace is known,</p>
<p>If now thy soul reject the friendship shown.</p>
<p class="i16"><span class="smcap">Hoole's</span> <i>Tasso</i>.</p>
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</div>
<p>The confidence betwixt the Landamman and the
English merchant appeared to increase during the
course of a few busy days, which occurred before
that appointed for the commencement of their
journey to the court of Charles of Burgundy. The
state of Europe, and of the Helvetian Confederacy,
has been already alluded to; but, for the distinct
explanation of our story, may be here briefly
recapitulated.</p>
<p>In the interval of a week, whilst the English
travellers remained at Geierstein, meetings or
diets were held, as well of the City Cantons of the
Confederacy as of those of the Forest. The former,
aggrieved by the taxes imposed on their commerce
by the Duke of Burgundy, rendered yet more intolerable
by the violence of the agents whom he
employed in such oppression, were eager for war,
in which they had hitherto uniformly found victory
and wealth. Many of them were also privately
instigated to arms by the largesses of Louis
XI., who spared neither intrigues nor gold to effect
a breach betwixt these dauntless confederates and
his formidable enemy, Charles the Bold.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</SPAN></span></p>
<p>On the other hand, there were many reasons
which appeared to render it impolitic for the
Switzers to engage in war with one of the most
wealthy, most obstinate, and most powerful princes
in Europe—for such unquestionably was Charles
of Burgundy—without the existence of some
strong reason affecting their own honour and independence.
Every day brought fresh intelligence
from the interior that Edward the Fourth of England
had entered into a strict and intimate alliance,
offensive and defensive, with the Duke of
Burgundy, and that it was the purpose of the English
King, renowned for his numerous victories
over the rival House of Lancaster, by which, after
various reverses, he had obtained undisputed possession
of the throne, to reassert his claims to
those provinces of France so long held by his
ancestors. It seemed as if this alone were wanting
to his fame, and that, having subdued his
internal enemies, he now turned his eyes to the
regaining of those rich and valuable foreign possessions
which had been lost during the administration
of the feeble Henry VI. and the civil
discords so dreadfully prosecuted in the wars of
the White and Red Roses. It was universally
known, that throughout England generally the
loss of the French provinces was felt as a national
degradation; and that not only the nobility, who
had in consequence been deprived of the large fiefs
which they had held in Normandy, Gascony,
Maine, and Anjou, but the warlike gentry, accustomed
to gain both fame and wealth at the expense
of France, and the fiery yeomanry, whose bows
had decided so many fatal battles, were as eager to
renew the conflict, as their ancestors of Cressy,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</SPAN></span>
Poitiers, and Agincourt had been to follow their
sovereign to the fields of victory, on which their
deeds had conferred deathless renown.</p>
<p>The latest and most authentic intelligence bore,
that the King of England was on the point of
passing to France in person (an invasion rendered
easy by his possession of Calais), with an army
superior in numbers and discipline to any with
which an English monarch had ever before entered
that kingdom; that all the hostile preparations
were completed, and that the arrival of Edward
might instantly be expected; whilst the powerful
co-operation of the Duke of Burgundy, and the
assistance of numerous disaffected French noblemen
in the provinces which had been so long
under the English dominion, threatened a fearful
issue of the war to Louis XI., sagacious, wise, and
powerful as that prince unquestionably was.</p>
<p>It would no doubt have been the wisest policy of
Charles of Burgundy, when thus engaging in an
alliance against his most formidable neighbour,
and hereditary as well as personal enemy, to have
avoided all cause of quarrel with the Helvetian
Confederacy, a poor but most warlike people, who
already had been taught by repeated successes to
feel that their hardy infantry could, if necessary,
engage on terms of equality, or even of advantage,
the flower of that chivalry which had hitherto
been considered as forming the strength of European
battle. But the measures of Charles, whom
fortune had opposed to the most astucious and
politic monarch of his time, were always dictated
by passionate feeling and impulse, rather than by
a judicious consideration of the circumstances in
which he stood. Haughty, proud, and uncompromising,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</SPAN></span>
though neither destitute of honour nor
generosity, he despised and hated what he termed
the paltry associations of herdsmen and shepherds,
united with a few towns which subsisted chiefly
by commerce; and instead of courting the Helvetian
Cantons, like his crafty enemy, or at least
affording them no ostensible pretence of quarrel,
he omitted no opportunity of showing the disregard
and contempt in which he held their upstart consequence,
and of evincing the secret longing which
he entertained to take vengeance upon them for
the quantity of noble blood which they had shed,
and to compensate the repeated successes they had
gained over the feudal lords, of whom he imagined
himself the destined avenger.</p>
<p>The Duke of Burgundy's possessions in the
Alsatian territory [<SPAN href="#ednote_f" name="enanchor_f" id="enanchor_f" ><i>f</i></SPAN>] afforded him many opportunities
for wreaking his displeasure upon the Swiss
League. The little castle and town of Ferette,
lying within ten or eleven miles of Bâle, served as
a thoroughfare to the traffic of Berne and Soleure,
the two principal towns of the confederation. In
this place the Duke posted a governor, or seneschal,
who was also an administrator of the revenue,
and seemed born on purpose to be the plague
and scourge of his republican neighbours.</p>
<p>Archibald von Hagenbach was a German noble,
whose possessions lay in Suabia, and was universally
esteemed one of the fiercest and most lawless
of that frontier nobility known by the name of
Robber-knights and Robber-counts. These dignitaries,
because they held their fiefs of the Holy
Roman Empire, claimed as complete sovereignty
within their territories of a mile square as any
reigning prince of Germany in his more extended
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</SPAN></span>
dominions. They levied tolls and taxes on
strangers, and imprisoned, tried, and executed
those who, as they alleged, had committed offences
within their petty domains. But especially, and
in further exercise of their seignorial privileges,
they made war on each other, and on the Free
Cities of the Empire, attacking and plundering
without mercy the caravans, or large trains of
wagons, by which the internal commerce of Germany
was carried on.</p>
<p>A succession of injuries done and received by
Archibald of Hagenbach, who had been one of the
fiercest sticklers for this privilege of <i>faustrecht</i>, or
club-law, as it may be termed, had ended in his
being obliged, though somewhat advanced in life,
to leave a country where his tenure of existence
was become extremely precarious, and to engage
in the service of the Duke of Burgundy, who
willingly employed him, as he was a man of high
descent and proved valour, and not the less, perhaps,
that he was sure to find in a man of Hagenbach's
fierce, rapacious, and haughty disposition,
the unscrupulous executioner of whatsoever severities
it might be his master's pleasure to enjoin.</p>
<p>The traders of Berne and Soleure, accordingly,
made loud and violent complaints of Hagenbach's
exactions. The impositions laid on commodities
which passed through his district of La Ferette,
to whatever place they might be ultimately bound,
were arbitrarily increased, and the merchants and
traders who hesitated to make instant payment of
what was demanded were exposed to imprisonment
and personal punishment. The commercial towns
of Germany appealed to the Duke against this
iniquitous conduct on the part of the Governor of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</SPAN></span>
La Ferette, and requested of his Grace's goodness
that he would withdraw Von Hagenbach from
their neighbourhood; but the Duke treated their
complaints with contempt. The Swiss League
carried their remonstrances higher, and required
that justice should be done on the Governor of La
Ferette, as having offended against the law of
nations; but they were equally unable to attract
attention or obtain redress.</p>
<p>At length the Diet of the Confederation determined
to send the solemn deputation which has
been repeatedly mentioned. One or two of these
envoys joined with the calm and prudent Arnold
Biederman, in the hope that so solemn a measure
might open the eyes of the Duke to the wicked
injustice of his representative; others among the
deputies, having no such peaceful views, were
determined, by this resolute remonstrance, to pave
the way for hostilities.</p>
<p>Arnold Biederman was an especial advocate for
peace, while its preservation was compatible with
national independence, and the honour of the
Confederacy; but the younger Philipson soon discovered
that the Landamman alone, of all his
family, cherished these moderate views. The
opinion of his sons had been swayed and seduced
by the impetuous eloquence and overbearing influence
of Rudolph of Donnerhugel, who, by some
feats of peculiar gallantry, and the consideration
due to the merit of his ancestors, had acquired an
influence in the councils of his native canton, and
with the youth of the League in general, beyond
what was usually yielded by these wise republicans
to men of his early age. Arthur, who was
now an acceptable and welcome companion of all
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</SPAN></span>
their hunting parties and other sports, heard nothing
among the young men but anticipations of
war, rendered delightful by the hopes of booty and
of distinction, which were to be obtained by the
Switzers. The feats of their ancestors against
the Germans had been so wonderful as to realise
the fabulous victories of romance; and while the
present race possessed the same hardy limbs, and
the same inflexible courage, they eagerly anticipated
the same distinguished success. When the Governor
of La Ferette was mentioned in the conversation,
he was usually spoken of as the bandog of
Burgundy, or the Alsatian mastiff; and intimations
were openly given, that if his course were
not instantly checked by his master, and he himself
withdrawn from the frontiers of Switzerland,
Archibald of Hagenbach would find his fortress no
protection from the awakened indignation of the
wronged inhabitants of Soleure, and particularly
of those of Berne.</p>
<p>This general disposition to war among the young
Switzers was reported to the elder Philipson by
his son, and led him at one time to hesitate
whether he ought not rather to resume all the
inconveniences and dangers of a journey, accompanied
only by Arthur, than run the risk of the
quarrels in which he might be involved by the
unruly conduct of these fierce mountain youths,
after they should have left their own frontiers.
Such an event would have had, in a peculiar
degree, the effect of destroying every purpose of
his journey; but respected as Arnold Biederman
was by his family and countrymen, the English
merchant concluded, upon the whole, that his
influence would be able to restrain his companions
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</SPAN></span>
until the great question of peace or war should
be determined, and especially until they should
have discharged their commission by obtaining an
audience of the Duke of Burgundy; and after this
he should be separated from their society, and not
liable to be engaged in any responsibility for their
ulterior measures.</p>
<p>After a delay of about ten days, the deputation
commissioned to remonstrate with the Duke on
the aggressions and exactions of Archibald of
Hagenbach at length assembled at Geierstein,
whence the members were to journey forth together.
They were three in number, besides the
young Bernese, and the Landamman of Unterwalden.
One was, like Arnold, a proprietor from
the Forest Cantons, wearing a dress scarcely handsomer
than that of a common herdsman, but distinguished
by the beauty and size of his long
silvery beard. His name was Nicholas Bonstetten.
Melchior Sturmthal, banner-bearer of Berne, a
man of middle age, and a soldier of distinguished
courage, with Adam Zimmerman, a burgess of
Soleure, who was considerably older, completed
the number of the envoys.</p>
<p>Each was dressed after his best fashion; but
notwithstanding that the severe eye of Arnold
Biederman censured one or two silver belt-buckles,
as well as a chain of the same metal, which decorated
the portly person of the burgess of Soleure,
it seemed that a powerful and victorious people,
for such the Swiss were now to be esteemed, were
never represented by an embassy of such patriarchal
simplicity. The deputies travelled on foot,
with their piked staves in their hands, like pilgrims
bound for some place of devotion. Two
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</SPAN></span>
mules, which bore their little stock of baggage,
were led by young lads, sons or cousins of members
of the embassy, who had obtained permission in
this manner to get such a glance of the world
beyond the mountains as this journey promised
to afford.</p>
<p>But although their retinue was small, so far as
respected either state or personal attendance and
accommodation, the dangerous circumstances of
the times, and the very unsettled state of the
country beyond their own territories, did not permit
men charged with affairs of such importance to
travel without a guard. Even the danger arising
from the wolves, which, when pinched by the
approach of winter, have been known to descend
from their mountain fastnesses into open villages,
such as those the travellers might choose to quarter
in, rendered the presence of some escort necessary;
and the bands of deserters from various services,
who formed parties of banditti on the frontiers of
Alsatia and Germany, combined to recommend
such a precaution.</p>
<p>Accordingly, about twenty of the selected youth
from the various Swiss cantons, including Rudiger,
Ernest, and Sigismund, Arnold's three eldest sons,
attended upon the deputation. They did not, however,
observe any military order, or march close
or near to the patriarchal train. On the contrary,
they formed hunting parties of five or six together,
who explored the rocks, woods, and passes of the
mountains, through which the envoys journeyed.
Their slower pace allowed the active young men,
who were accompanied by their large shaggy dogs,
full time to destroy wolves and bears, or occasionally
to surprise a chamois among the cliffs; while
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</SPAN></span>
the hunters, even while in pursuit of their sport,
were careful to examine such places as might
afford opportunity for ambush, and thus ascertained
the safety of the party whom they escorted, more
securely than if they had attended close on their
train. A peculiar note on the huge Swiss bugle,
before described, formed of the horn of the mountain
bull, was the signal agreed upon for collecting
in a body should danger occur. Rudolph
Donnerhugel, so much younger than his brethren
in the same important commission, took the command
of this mountain body-guard, whom he
usually accompanied in their sportive excursions.
In point of arms, they were well provided; bearing
two-handed swords, long partisans and spears,
as well as both cross and long bows, short cutlasses,
and huntsmen's knives. The heavier
weapons, as impeding their activity, were carried
with the baggage, but were ready to be assumed
on the slightest alarm.</p>
<p>Arthur Philipson, like his late antagonist, naturally
preferred the company and sports of the
younger men to the grave conversation and slow
pace of the fathers of the mountain commonwealth.
There was, however, one temptation to loiter with
the baggage, which, had other circumstances permitted,
might have reconciled the young Englishman
to forego the opportunities of sport which the
Swiss youth so eagerly sought after, and endure
the slow pace and grave conversation of the elders
of the party. In a word, Anne of Geierstein,
accompanied by a Swiss girl her attendant, travelled
in the rear of the deputation.</p>
<p>The two females were mounted upon asses,
whose slow step hardly kept pace with the baggage
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</SPAN></span>
mules; and it may be fairly suspected that Arthur
Philipson, in requital of the important services
which he had received from that beautiful and
interesting young woman, would have deemed it
no extreme hardship to have afforded her occasionally
his assistance on the journey, and the advantage
of his conversation to relieve the tediousness
of the way. But he dared not presume to offer
attentions which the customs of the country did
not seem to permit, since they were not attempted
by any of the maiden's cousins, or even by
Rudolph Donnerhugel, who certainly had hitherto
appeared to neglect no opportunity to recommend
himself to his fair cousin. Besides, Arthur had
reflection enough to be convinced, that in yielding
to the feelings which impelled him to cultivate
the acquaintance of this amiable young person, he
would certainly incur the serious displeasure of
his father, and probably also that of her uncle, by
whose hospitality they had profited, and whose
safe-conduct they were in the act of enjoying.</p>
<p>The young Englishman, therefore, pursued the
same amusements which interested the other young
men of the party, managing only, as frequently as
their halts permitted, to venture upon offering to
the maiden such marks of courtesy as could afford
no room for remark or censure. And his character
as a sportsman being now well established, he
sometimes permitted himself, even when the game
was afoot, to loiter in the vicinity of the path on
which he could at least mark the flutter of the
grey wimple of Anne of Geierstein, and the outline
of the form which it shrouded. This indolence,
as it seemed, was not unfavourably construed by
his companions, being only accounted an indifference
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</SPAN></span>
to the less noble or less dangerous game; for
when the object was a bear, wolf, or other animal
of prey, no spear, cutlass, or bow of the party,
not even those of Rudolph Donnerhugel, were so
prompt in the chase as those of the young
Englishman.</p>
<p>Meantime, the elder Philipson had other and
more serious subjects of consideration. He was a
man, as the reader must have already seen, of much
acquaintance with the world, in which he had
acted parts different from that which he now sustained.
Former feelings were recalled and awakened,
by the view of sports familiar to his early
years. The clamour of the hounds, echoing from
the wild hills and dark forests through which they
travelled; the sight of the gallant young huntsmen,
appearing, as they brought the object of
their chase to bay, amid airy cliffs and profound
precipices, which seemed impervious to the human
foot; the sounds of halloo and horn reverberating
from hill to hill, had more than once well-nigh
impelled him to take a share in the hazardous but
animating amusement, which, next to war, was
then in most parts of Europe the most serious
occupation of life. But the feeling was transient,
and he became yet more deeply interested in studying
the manners and opinions of the persons with
whom he was travelling.</p>
<p>They seemed to be all coloured with the same
downright and blunt simplicity which characterised
Arnold Biederman, although it was in
none of them elevated by the same dignity of
thought or profound sagacity. In speaking of the
political state of their country, they affected no
secrecy; and although, with the exception of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</SPAN></span>
Rudolph, their own young men were not admitted
into their councils, the exclusion seemed only
adopted with a view to the necessary subordination
of youth to age, and not for the purpose of
observing any mystery. In the presence of the
elder Philipson, they freely discussed the pretensions
of the Duke of Burgundy, the means which
their country possessed of maintaining her independence,
and the firm resolution of the Helvetian
League to bid defiance to the utmost force the
world could bring against it, rather than submit
to the slightest insult. In other respects, their
views appeared wise and moderate, although both
the Banneret of Berne and the consequential Burgher
of Soleure seemed to hold the consequences
of war more lightly than they were viewed by
the cautious Landamman of Unterwalden, and his
venerable companion, Nicholas Bonstetten, who
subscribed to all his opinions.</p>
<p>It frequently happened that, quitting these subjects,
the conversation turned on such as were less
attractive to their fellow-traveller. The signs of
the weather, the comparative fertility of recent
seasons, the most advantageous mode of managing
their orchards and rearing their crops, though
interesting to the mountaineers themselves, gave
Philipson slender amusement; and notwithstanding
that the excellent Meinherr Zimmerman of
Soleure would fain have joined with him in conversation
respecting trade and merchandise, yet
the Englishman, who dealt in articles of small
bulk and considerable value, and traversed sea and
land to carry on his traffic, could find few mutual
topics to discuss with the Swiss trader, whose
commerce only extended into the neighbouring
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</SPAN></span>
districts of Burgundy and Germany, and whose
goods consisted of coarse woollen cloths, fustian,
hides, peltry, and such ordinary articles.</p>
<p>But ever and anon, while the Switzers were
discussing some paltry interests of trade, or describing
some process of rude cultivation, or speaking
of blights in grain, and the murrain amongst
cattle, with all the dull minuteness of petty
farmers and traders met at a country fair, a well-known
spot would recall the name and story of a
battle in which some of them had served (for there
were none of the party who had not been repeatedly
in arms), and the military details, which
in other countries were only the theme of knights
and squires who had acted their part in them, or
of learned clerks who laboured to record them,
were, in this singular region, the familiar and
intimate subjects of discussion with men whose
peaceful occupations seemed to place them at an
immeasurable distance from the profession of a
soldier. This led the Englishman to think of the
ancient inhabitants of Rome, where the plough
was so readily exchanged for the sword, and the
cultivation of a rude farm for the management of
public affairs. He hinted this resemblance to the
Landamman, who was naturally gratified with the
compliment to his country, but presently replied—"May
Heaven continue among us the homebred
virtues of the Romans, and preserve us from their
lust of conquest and love of foreign luxuries!"</p>
<p>The slow pace of the travellers, with various
causes of delay which it is unnecessary to dwell
upon, occasioned the deputation spending two
nights on the road before they reached Bâle. The
small towns or villages in which they quartered,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</SPAN></span>
received them with such marks of respectful hospitality
as they had the means to bestow, and their
arrival was a signal for a little feast, with which
the heads of the community uniformly regaled
them.</p>
<p>On such occasions, while the elders of the village
entertained the deputies of the Confederation,
the young men of the escort were provided for by
those of their own age, several of whom, usually
aware of their approach, were accustomed to join
in the chase of the day, and made the strangers
acquainted with the spots where game was most
plenty.</p>
<p>These feasts were never prolonged to excess, and
the most special dainties which composed them
were kids, lambs, and game, the produce of the
mountains. Yet it seemed, both to Arthur Philipson
and his father, that the advantages of good
cheer were more prized by the Banneret of Berne
and the Burgess of Soleure than by their host the
Landamman and the Deputy of Schwitz. There
was no excess committed, as we have already said;
but the deputies first mentioned obviously understood
the art of selecting the choicest morsels, and
were connoisseurs in the good wine, chiefly of
foreign growth, with which they freely washed it
down. Arnold was too wise to censure what he
had no means of amending: he contented himself
by observing in his own person a rigorous diet,
living indeed almost entirely upon vegetables and
fair water, in which he was closely imitated by
the old grey-bearded Nicholas Bonstetten, who
seemed to make it his principal object to follow
the Landamman's example in everything.</p>
<p>It was, as we have already said, the third day
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</SPAN></span>
after the commencement of their journey, before
the Swiss deputation reached the vicinity of Bâle,
in which city, then one of the largest in the
south-western extremity of Germany, they proposed
taking up their abode for the evening, nothing
doubting a friendly reception. The town, it is
true, was not then, nor till about thirty years afterwards,
a part of the Swiss Confederation, to which
it was only joined in 1501; but it was a Free
Imperial City, connected with Berne, Soleure,
Lucerne, and other towns of Switzerland by
mutual interests and constant intercourse. It was
the object of the deputation to negotiate, if possible,
a peace, which could not be more useful to
themselves than to the city of Bâle, considering
the interruptions of commerce which must be occasioned
by a rupture between the Duke of Burgundy
and the Cantons, and the great advantage which
that city would derive by preserving a neutrality,
situated as it was betwixt these two hostile
powers.</p>
<p>They anticipated, therefore, as welcome a reception
from the authorities of Bâle as they had
received while in the bounds of their own Confederation,
since the interests of that city were so
deeply concerned in the objects of their mission.
The next chapter will show how far these expectations
were realised.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</SPAN></span></p>
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