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Apafi wrote with a trembling hand and read: "Whereas--"
The Pasha furiously tore away the parchment and roared at him.
"Plague take all your whereases and inasmuch-ases! Why all this beating about the bush? Write the usual formula--'We, Michael Apafi, Prince of Transylvania, command you, wretched slaves, by these presents, to appear incontinently before us at Kis-Selyk, under pain of death.'"
Apafi was brought almost to his wits' ends before he could make the Pasha comprehend that it was not usual to correspond in this style with free Hungarian n.o.blemen. At last the Pasha allowed him to write his letter in his own way, but took care that its purport should be emphatic and dictatorial. As soon as Apafi had written the letters, Ali Pasha put a Ciaus on horseback, and sent him off at full speed to all those to whom the writ was addressed.
"And now," said Apafi to himself, sighing deeply as he wiped his pen, "and now I should like to see the man who could tell me what will come of it all!"
"Till the Diet a.s.sembles," said the Pasha, "you will remain here as my guest."
"Cannot I go home then to my wife and child?" asked Apafi, with a beating heart.
"To give us the slip, eh? A likely tale. That is always the way with you Hungarian n.o.bles. Those we won't have at any price are always dangling about our necks, and begging and praying for the princely diadem; and those we would place on the throne take to their heels as if we were going to impale them." And with that the Pasha a.s.signed Apafi a tent and dismissed him, at the same time giving secret but strict orders to the guard of honour stationed at the door of the new Prince, not to lose sight of him for an instant.
"I'm nicely in for it now," sighed Apafi with the resignation of despair.
His solitary hope now was, that the deputies whom he had summoned would ignore his informal mandate by failing to appear.
A few days afterwards, as Apafi still lay on his camp bedstead in the early morning, Stephen Kun, John Daczo, and Stephen Nalaczi, with all the other n.o.ble Szeklers to whom the circular had been sent, suddenly walked into his tent.
"In Heaven's name!" cried Apafi, starting up, "why have you come hither?"
"Your Highness ordered us to come hither," replied Nalaczi.
"True; but you would have shown far greater wisdom if you had kept away.
What are you going to do?"
"Solemnly install your Highness, and, if need be, defend you also in the good old Szekler fas.h.i.+on," replied Stephen Kun.
"You are too few for that, my brothers," objected Apafi.
"Pray be so good as to cast a glance outside the tent!" replied Nalaczi, drawing aside the curtain and pointing to a band of Szeklers armed with sabres and lances, who had remained outside the tent. "We have marched out _c.u.m gentibus_, to prove to your Highness that if we have accepted you as our Prince, we have not done so simply by way of a jest."
Apafi shrugged his shoulders and began to draw on his boots; but he was so dazed all the while, that almost an hour elapsed before he was half dressed. He put on every article of clothing the wrong way, and had to take it off again. Thus, for example, he had slipped into his mantle before he even thought of his vest.
Several hundred gentlemen had met together in Selyk at his bidding, a thing he had never expected, still less desired.
When Ali Pasha came out of his tent, he went towards the deputies, took Apafi by the hand in the presence of them all, threw over his shoulders a broad, new green velvet mente,[11] put an ermine embroidered cap on his head, and explained to the a.s.sembled crowd that henceforth they were to regard him as their legitimate Prince; whereupon the Szeklers roared out deafening "Eljens," raised Apafi on their shoulders, and hoisted him on to a das covered with velvet which Ali Pasha had expressly provided for the occasion.
[Footnote 11: _Mente._ See Note 2, p. 21.]
"And now," said the Pasha, "go to church, administer the oaths to the Prince according to ancient custom, and yourselves take the oath of allegiance. I have ordered the bells to be rung myself, and you had better have a ma.s.s sung in the usual way."
"Your pardon, but I am a Calvinist," protested Apafi.
"So much the better. The ceremony will be over all the quicker, and will cost less trouble. There is the Rev. Francis Magyari, he will preach the sermon."
After that Apafi let them do whatever they liked with him, merely twirling his long moustaches. .h.i.ther and thither, and shrugging his shoulders whenever they asked him questions.
Nalaczi and the other Szeklers thought good to treat him in church with all the respect due to a sovereign prince, and the Rev. Francis Magyari improvised a powerful sermon, in which he prophesied, in a voice of thunder, that the G.o.d of Israel who had called David from the sheepfolds to a throne, and exalted him over all his adversaries, would now also graciously maintain the cause of His elect even though his enemies were as numerous as the gra.s.s of the field or the sand on the sea-sh.o.r.e.
This modest little house of prayer could never have thought that it would have been the scene of a Diet and a coronation; and as for Apafi, not even in his wildest dreams had it ever occurred to him that such things might befall him.
He had eyes and ears neither for the coronation nor for the sermon, but kept on thinking of his wife and child. What would become of them, poor creatures; where would they be able to hide their heads when John Kemeny had put him in prison, confiscated his estates, and driven them out of house and home? It next occurred to him that, somewhere in Szeklerland, he had a brother, Stephen Apafi, with whom he had always been on the most friendly terms, who would certainly take them under his roof if he saw them dest.i.tute. These thoughts made him so forgetful of everything around him, that when at the close of the sermon all present arose and intoned the _Te Deum_, he too got up, oblivious of the fact that all this ceremony was being held in his special honour.
Then some one behind him placed two hands on his shoulders, pressed him down into his seat again, and a well-known voice growled into his ear--
"Keep your seat."
Apafi looked in the direction of the voice, and fell back in his chair completely overcome. His brother Stephen was actually standing behind him.
"You here too?" said Apafi, deeply distressed.
"I was a little late," returned Stephen, "but quite early enough after all, and I'll venture to remain here till you tell me to go."
"So you have also resolved to plunge into destruction?"
"Brother," said Stephen, "we are in the hands of G.o.d; but something has been put into our own hands also which may have a say in the matter,"
and he touched the hilt of his sword. "Kemeny has lost the affection of the greater part of the country; why I need not now tell you. Your cause is righteous, nor do you lack the means of success."
"But if it should turn out otherwise, what would become of my wife? Have you not seen her?"
"I came straight from her--that is why I came so late."
"What! You have spoken to her? What did she say about my evil case? Was she not much troubled?"
"Not in the least. On the contrary, she was very glad of it, and said that Transylvania could not have got a better prince; that you deserved this honour far more than any of the magnates who practise nothing but tyranny and extortion, and that she much regretted her illness prevented her from a.s.sisting you with her sympathy and counsel."
"Well, I should have liked it better if the election had fallen upon her," said Apafi, half in jest and half in anger.
"Take heed to yourself," answered Stephen archly; "the lady is already so much used to ruling the roost, that we shall live to see her put the Prince's diadem on her own head, unless you plant it right firmly on your temples. Nay, brother, don't look so serious; I was but in jest!"
But does not the proverb say that there is many a true word spoken in jest?
CHAPTER IV.
A BANQUET WITH THE PRINCE OF TRANSYLVANIA.
Meanwhile, his Highness, Prince John Kemeny, was faring sumptuously at Hermannstadt. This gentleman's darling vice was gluttony--even if the whole machinery of state were to fall to pieces in consequence, he would not have risen from table, and amongst all his counsellors his cook always stood highest.
And now, too, we find him at dinner. He has converted the Town-hall to his own use, and it is thronged by his suite. In the courtyard we see spurred and iron-clad cuira.s.siers flirting with the Saxon serving-maids; German musketeers, professedly on guard, who have left their muskets standing against the doorposts, in order to cultivate friendly relations with the scullions removing the dishes. With br.i.m.m.i.n.g gla.s.ses raised on high, they jocosely warble Hungarian airs picked up on the spur of the moment, improvising at the same time an absurdly artless sort of dance, in which one leg performs aimless aerial gyrations. On the other hand, the heydukes of the Hungarian bodyguard, dressed in yellow dolmans with green facings, sit morosely in twos and threes against the wall, not even condescending to look at the b.u.mpers of wine thrust, from time to time, into their hands; but gravely tossing it down at a single gulp into its proper place, returning the empty pocal to the friendly butler, who has as much as he can do to keep his feet; keeps on offering the n.o.ble fluid to Tom, d.i.c.k, and Harry; and finding it easier to go backwards than forwards, is constantly backing against the head cook as he pa.s.ses to and fro, bearing now a sugared almond tart adorned with flowers on a silver salver, and representing the tower of Babel, now a large porcelain bowl exhaling the spicy fragrance of hot punch, or a peac.o.c.k on a large wooden platter, roasted whole, with his gorgeous head-dress and splendid tail still upon him.