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A70642 The Russian imposter, or, The history of Muskovie, under the usurpation of Boris and the imposture of Demetrius, late emperors of Muskovy Manley, Roger, Sir, 1626?-1688. 1674 (1674) Wing M440A; ESTC R22560 101,264 264

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could not appease the tumult neither would they any more be Commanded by him but chusing one Tiskevicius for their General prepare to follow Demetrius their old Lord. For all this the Chief Officers and those most in favour with the Souldiery had by their diligence and Authority welnigh appeased these disorders which they had also probably effected if new Commotions had not interven'd upon new considerations to wit that it was not safe to remain longer in the Camp so distracted and divided without Order or Discipline and in sight of an Enemy vigilant and intent upon every occasion This hurried them into new Confusions and like so many Furies they all cry out they would immediately be gone and packing up their Baggage fired their Camp which for the variety and Magnificence of its Structures seemed another great City and being ready to march mutually engaged to keep together till they came to Volock where every body should be at liberty to dispose of himself as he thought most for his advantage Being come thither Sapiha and all his men resolving to follow the fortune of Demetrius went to Caluga to him Rosinski and Alexander Zbarowski with 4000 Horse and the Dunensian Cossacks went to their King at Smolensko And thus this power which had so long blocked up Musko and had trampled upon the Empire two years and would certainly have subjugated both was dispersed in the beginning of March 1610 by the ill Counsel and to the very great detriment of King Sigismund for the Enemy being well-nigh broke with the long Siege of their Metropolitan gathered new force and vigour upon the raising of it and the King who might have prosecuted the War at the expence and danger of others drew the whole burthen of it as it were voluntarily upon his own shoulders In the mean time the Zuiskian Muskovites not ignorant of the dissentions in the Camp began to hope well but leaving them to their discords lest by attempting them the sense of their common danger might unite them they turned their forces another way They turned the Poles out of Peraslaw and Alexandria which lay there drive Sapiha from the Siege of Troyeze and reduced all the places about the Volga into their power But when the City it self was delivered from their troublesome Neighbours then as if they had broken their Fetters been delivered out of a long Imprisonment they reassumed new courage and new vigour and having in a short time recovered most of the Provinces which revolted to them they sent the best part of their Army to follow Rosinski who had possessed himself of Volock and the strong Monastery of Osippow He was necessitated to stay there by reason of the indisposition his hurts had procured him He kept with him 1500 Poles and 400 Cossacks having sent the rest of the Army with Zbarowski to the King His health was much impaired through his daily toils and the smart of his old hurt to which also contributed the perturbation and grief of his mind which his ill Successes had created him in that he had quitted Musko with less Glory and Splendor than he had attempted it Nature and strength being decayed in him he was overcome by the violence of his Malady and unable to resist longer was forced to submit to the necessity of his Fate which deprived him of his life and hopes in a strange Country which he had entred in Pomp and Triumph Rosinski being dead Volviovius the Zuiskian General taking the occasion of the distraction his loss had bred amongst the Garrison besieged Volock and took it without much difficulty Ossipow defended it self better in so much that the Auxiliaries from Sweden being French and desirous to shew of what importance they were to their Party having opened a passage into the Fortress with a Petard were after a very bloody Assault baffled and beaten off But the place being more oppressed by wants from within than by any force from the Enemy from without were forced to yield to the necessity of their condition but scorning a tame surrender they resolved upon a Salley and to take the hazard of that as their safest and last refuge The obscurity of the night was judged fittest for the Exployt which being come they refreshed themselves with the whole Provisions of the place and after mutual embracings and encouragement of each other they set open their Gates and made towards Smolensko Their Sally was furious like that of men resolved to die and they performed it with a Courage hurried on by despair which made the Fight bloody and the carnage great amongst the Muskovites but they abounding in their numbers and not being surprized upon this occasion killed most of the Poles so that scarce 300 of them escaped in safety and they were 1200 who sallied out to Sigismund's Camp The Muskovites raised with this variety of Successes formed to themselves an Army of 30000 men to which were added 1000 French De la Garde's Germans and 6000 Suedes newly arrived under the Command of Count Edward Horn. Demetrius after his quitting the Camp lay with a few Sapihans at Caluga but they despising his small force marched to the relief of Smolensko King Sigismund having notice of these preparations and their approach Commanded Stanislaws Zolkievius his General with 8000 choice men to obstruct their passage The two Armies engaged at Clusinum where the Muskovites were again overcome by the Fatal Virtue of the Poles in a great and memorable Battle But it cost the Poles dear for though their Right Wing had routed the Enemies Left Commanded by Demetrius Zuiski the Great Dukes Brother yet the other Wing consisting of Germans and other Strangers stood their ground which they had chosen advantageously amongst shrubs and other rubbage in such a place where the Enemies Horse could not come up to charge them without much difficulty but being well seconded by their Reserves they at last made so violent an impression upon this Wing also that it was put to flight There remained yet the Main Body of Foot made up of Germans and Swedes which kept entire and the Polish being recalled from the pursuit prepared to make a Charge upon them but they seeing themselves abandoned by their Horse and left singly to the fortune of the day many of their men likewise stealing from them and running to the Enemy durst not stand out the shock but waved their Hats and hands about their Heads in signe of Parley which being granted and Hostages delivered they surrendered themselves for all what la Guarde who was newly returned from the flight whilest they were in Treaty could intreat or do to the contrary Those Wings that had been defeated having rallied themselves returned also to their Station upon a confidence their Foot had stood their ground but they came only time enough to be beaten over again the Poles having the pursuit of them till late in the night and thus the Field being cleared of the Enemy they had the entire
were engaged The Poles had indeed ordered their Reserves but by an over-confidence advanced upon the Enemy from without the protection of their Forts contrary to the Generals Orders which the Enemy observing the Tartars shewed themselves on the Right Wing and extending that way endeavoured to get between the Christians Camp and the Rear of their Army which obliged Zolkievius to oppose against them his Reserves The Fight was Bloody and doubtful for two hours together but the Main Battle of the Poles having no Seconds by reason of the diversion of their Reserves to defend the Rear oppressed by the often-repeated Charges of the Enemies fresh Troops however keeping within the protection of their Forts on the left Wing were no longer able to sustain the Impression of those multitudes that swarmed upon them they therefore faced about and breaking through those Squadrons of Tartars who had got between them and the Camp made their retreat in reasonable good order the Barbarians being checked in their Pursuit by the Forts before-mentioned which were still defended by the Poles That on the Right Wing was violently assaulted by the Enemy who killed three hundred of the Defendants and took four of their Field-Pieces neither had their Success rested there but that the Christians not wanting to themselves in that extremity advanced with their best Troops to their relief forcing the Infidels after a hot dispute to a confused Retreat The Fort or Castle on the other Wing was left unattempted and night drawing on the Enemy after a kind of drawn Battle wherein there fell 1000 of theirs and about six hundred of the Christians retreated to their Tents The rest of that night and the following day were past without any Attempt on either side The Poles in the mean time went to counsel what was to be done upon this pressing occasion which being of an extraordinary nature they were able to fall upon no probable Resolutions During this time of their Consultation there was a report spread about the Camp of a purpose in the Chief Officers to steal away from the Army which put the Souldiers into confusion till they were undeceived by the generous professions of their Leaders who vowed to live and die with them Zolkievius proposed in Council that they should the next day try the fortune of another Battle wherein they might easily correct the errors of the former day and being now informed of their own and the Enemies strength they could better lay hold of such advantages as should occur having failed more in Conduct than Courage and if the Success of the next day should not answer the Attempt they might then think of retiring towards the confines of their Countrey where they should be sure to meet with new Supplies for the further prosecution of the War The very mention of another Battle surprized many of the Great Persons especially Alexander Kalinowski Duke Corecki and Nicholas Struse three of the most eminent Lords in the Army who maligning the Command of Zolkievius were the more apt to oppose his Counsels especially in this juncture which must bring their lives to an apparent hazard They therefore absolutely declared against it and that there was no safety but in a sudden flight by which means they might avoid death or a Turkish Bondage which was yet more terrible and being resolved to put the Counsels they had given in execution that night they took the first opportunity after the Watch was set to quit the Camp proposing to themselves that by the favour of the darkness they might get over the River Prut which covered the Rear of the Camp before the Enemy could take the Alarm of their departure Gratian the Vayvod for whose preservation the War was undertaken went away with them and having by the number of their Train and Dependants made a considerable Party they concluded themselves of strength able by the advantage of the night to break through all opposition There was a second Rumour spread about in the Army that the General himself was likewise gone which bearing terrour with it the inferior Officers and Souldiers were upon preparation for their flight also whereof he having speedy notice mounted on Horsback and causing many lighted Torches to be carried before him shewed himself to his Souldiers surrounded the Quarters spoke to every one he met and animated all with his presence and chearfulness He added That he could not be guilty of so nefarious a Treason as to desert so many brave men his fellow-Souldiers they had served too long under his Command to conceive their General capable of so wretched an act as to sully all his Honour by so sordid a Retreat That for his part he had no other consideration for his life but in order to their preservation and since some he must confess eminent Persons had preferred that to all sence of Honour he was glad they were gone hoping they had carried away with them that infection of Cowardize which might have tainted the whole Army He also would wish them a good Journey provided they would tell the King and such of their Friends that should enquire after them that they had abandoned the Army and their General in the Plains of Cicora engaged against theirs and the Common Enemy of Christianity Zolkievius though he had harangued his Souldiers in these kind of Terms and with a serene Countenance yet had he much ado to compose those minds which were agitated with terror and fear who could not be perswaded to return to their Duty until a sence of the danger of their disobedience obliged them to it But they were wholly confirmed by the ill Success of those who had deserted them who by their degenerous flight had hastened not prevented their ruine For in passing the River which was rather rapid than deep many of them missing the Ford were overwhelmed in it Kalinowski himself perished in the stream and such as got over at least most of them were knocked in the head by the Tartars who had the Guard of that Post Gratian and his Moldavians being skill'd in the Passage and ways got clear off but being pursued by his ill Fate had the recompence of his infamous flight rewarded upon him by the perfidy of his own Servants who murthered their Lord to possess themselves of what Treasure he had brought away with him The rest of the Party after a vain Attempt to pass the River not daring to land on the other side wet weary and confounded with shame came back for refuge to the Camp which a while before they had forsaken as desperate reposing now all their safety in that of the Army The Poles by these losses and the escape of 900 Cossacks who by a more lucky fate than that of their Fellows had broke through a neglected Quarter of the Enemy without opposition being much weakned and far unequal in strength to the Enemy and not daring to attempt another fight without manifest hazard to loose all resolved upon a
deditione accepta Smolensko Reipublicae restituta Basilio Zuiskio Magno Duce Moscoviae Et Fratre ejus Demetrio Militiae Praefecto Captivis jure Belli receptis Et in Arce Gostienensi sub custodia habitis ibique vita functis Humanae sortis memor Ossa illorum huc deferre Et ne se regnante etiam hostes Injusteque Sceptra parantes Justis Sepulturaque carerent IN HOC A se ad publicam Posteritatem Memoriam Regnique sui Nomen Extructo Trophaeo DEPONI JUSSIT ANNO A PARTU Virginis MDCXX Regnor ' POLONIAE XXXIII SUECIAE XXVI And this was the end of Basilius Zuiski who having by many extraordinary Actions raised himself to the Throne enjoyed it no more than his Predecessor either long or quietly He had to do with an unstable People hurried from one extreme to another and being of a jealous nature had recourse to Witchcrafts and Incantations endeavouring by the help of Sathan to preserve what he had gained by improving the violent humour of the giddy multitude And his Wizards furnishing him with Discoveries of the unfaithfulness of some about him or he pretending such Discoveries to gratifie his fears put many eminent Persons to death proposing to settle that Dominion by Blood and Fraud the same Arts whereby he had obtained it And his nature by frequent practises being hardened in cruelty he caused three of his most faithful Servants and Friends to be made away only because their names were Michael for he had been told by his Soothsayers that one of that name should Succeed him in the Empire which proved true for all his barbarous precaution which hurried him upon doing those horrid things that hardly any Story can parallel He would tear up the Wombs of great-bellied women and rip open the breasts of the mettledst Horses for the immature fruit of the one and the hearts of the other wherewith he used to make his Diabolical Infusions as well to charm the Poles whom he could not overcome as his Rebel-Subjects whom he could not bring to their Duty But no Magick is of power against the Providence of God which after a short turbulent Reign removed him from the Throne to a Prison where he ended his days The Method of our Tragick History doth invite us back to Musko to observe the actions of that place but Zolkievius whose Army we left there having in the succeeding course of his life rendered himself famous upon the account of many Enterprizes especially his unparallel'd Retreat at Cicora from the Turks a short digression as to his Affairs may not be wholly impertinent wherein I shall observe my accustomed brevity to relate only matter of fact and so return to where we left Stanislaws Zolkiewski the Sirnames of most of the Polish Nobility do end in ski a Person of an eminent extraction dedicated himself to Arms so soon as he was well able to wield them making his first Apprentiship under that Great Chancellour and greatest Captain that Poland hath produced for many Ages John Zamoyski who at the famous Battle of Byczin which decided the contest between Sigismund and Maximilian concerning the Crown in favour of the former had the Honour to Command the Right Wing of Zamoyski's Army to the defeating of that Enemy that opposed him in which encounter he received a sore wound in the Knee His Conduct in that Adventure raised him in short time after to the Preferment of being Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom during which Command he was employed against the Rebellious Cossacks whom after many doubtful Fights he reduced to his own Terms of delivering up their General a Plebeian but of great Conduct with three other of their Principal Officers into his hands He defeated the Swedes at Revel And afterwards being made General he did beat the Russians at Clusinum entred Musko forced Demetrius to quit his Siege and led away the Emperour Zuiski and his two Brothers Captive with him into Poland as we have formerly mentioned and likewise that he left the Army in Musko upon discontent by reason Sigismund refused to ratifie the Articles which Zolkievius by his directions had in his name sworn to Being 70 years of Age he was created Great Chancellor of Poland He repressed the Tartars in their Invasion at Orimin and a while after marched with his Army into Moldavia in aid of Gratian the Vayvod against the Turks that oppressed him to so great an extremity that he came in to Zolkievius but with six hundred Horse but so fatally negligent that he could give no account of the Enemies number or force even in his own County so that the General had nothing certain of them till he saw them cover the Campania about him with their numerous hoast He himself had encamped upon the Plains of Cicora determining in that place to attend their motion This was in Sept. 1620. The Tartars who had joyned with the Turks upon this occasion having taken some Christian Prisoners gained from them an account of the Christian strength which did not exceed 10000 effective men whereupon they drew up within view of them with an Army of double their number led by their Commander Cantimir Mursa A few hours after they were followed by Skinder Bassa General of the Turks and of the War who pitcht his Tents near those of his Confederates within view of the Christians The Poles contained themselves within their Trenches till a Squadron of Cossacks who had the out-Guard encountred that of the Tartars whom after a smart dispute they forced to a Retreat but being relieved by their own men they turned upon the Christians pursuing them up to their very Trenches where they also being seasonably reinforced opposed the prevailing Enemy with so great Success that having killed a great number they chased them into their Main Body but giving no Quarter did consequently take no Prisoners and so made no discovery of the Enemies strength in so much that Zolkievius making his computation by what appeared in view and finding his Army chearful upon the Success of that days Action resolved to put all upon the fottune of a Battle That night there came to the Turkish Camp Sultan Galga the Great Chams Brother with a fresh Army of 30000 choice Souldiers whereof Zolkievius had no knowledge and therefore in order to the determinations of the day before he drew out his whole Army early the next morning being the 19th of Sept. 1620. and ranging them in Battalia strengthened both Wings with Forts made of his Waggons and Carriages closed together on all sides and filled with Foot and Cannon so that the Enemy could make no advantage of their numbers to infest their Flanks Skinder Bassa on the other side seeing the Order of the Christians drew his Army into a Line of Battle placing only the Turks revolted Wallachians and Transylvanians in view the Auxiliary Tartars being placed out of sight and commanded not to stir till a Signal was given them to move which should be when the Christians
and Power His Son Basilius equally happy ●dded the fair Provinces of Smolensko and Plescow to his Dominions with the Honor of Knez King and Emperor to his Titles John succeeded him who adding Industry and Discipline to the Arts of his Forefathers conquered the Kingdoms of Cazan and Astracan and extended his Empire to the Confines of Persia But he was no less cruel than brave which did much asperse the glory of so many Victories But this Prince being his Father whose Story we write we will refer the rest of him and the Reader to the subsequent Relation SECTION I. The Introduction Theodorus dies and Boris is chosen in his place He causeth Demetrius the Heir of the Empire to be slain to facilate his Election A new Demetrius appears his Education and Discovery He is acknowledged in Poland and enters Moscovy with an Army He is beaten He afterwards overthrows the Enemy in a memorable Battle Boris enraged with this loss and the Competition of a Rival transported with passion and fury dies suddenly His Elogie ALong and uninterrupted series of Succession had devolved the Dominion of the vast Empire of Muscovy upon the person of John Basilius who however preferrable for his Cruelty to the most monstrous of Tyrants did yet excel the Glory of all his Predecessors in the Lustre of his Actions and Greatness of his Atchievements For having added the severe Rules of Military Discipline to his Industry and Valour he extended the Bounds of his Dominions as far as Persia and Conquered the Kingdoms of Casan and Astracan in vain attempted by his Father before him This Great Prince having lived six and fifty Years and Reigned nine and thirty of them was forced to quit this World to search for that Repose in another which the violence of his mind had denied him in the midst of his Victories and Triumphs Anastasia his first Lady had born him two Sons John his Eldest whom he slew with his own hands upon no other provocation than that of his violent Temper and Theodorus Heir of his Empire not his Greatness though the Father labouring under the pangs of Death was not wanting to recommend with much passion to his surviving Nobles the Conduct of that Son in whom he proposed to himself the perpetuating of his Glories and Conquests He yet left behind him another Son of a second Bed the unhappy Demetrius born in the extremity of his Fathers Age and brought up by his Mother till his supposed Decease in the Castle of Vglecz The Great Dutchess a Lady of a Masculine Presence and Carriage was Sister to Boris Gedanow Master of the Horse who by the joynt Advantages of his Relation and Quality added to the dexterity of his Address and Contrivances to all which Conspired the Infirmness of Theodorus his Constitution and the easiness of his Nature had gained an entire possession of the Government This Glorious Favorite having by his Sisters Influence and his own Skill gathered into his Manage the greatest Concerns of the State had thereby the opportunity of obliging or removing the chief Officers of the Empire at pleasure And whether having tasted the sweetness of Dominion ordinarily quitted with much reluctancy or that he had from the Death of his old Master laid his designs of placing the Crown upon his own head is scarce questionable However it was the way seemed already smoothed by the indisposition of the Duke and the acquired favour of the Nobility who preferments passing through his hands gave them a necessary dependence upon him none being advanced to any place of Honor or Trust but as they were presented by this Prince-minister Add to this that Theodorus was Childless though Married in his Fathers life-time who by reason of his Wives Barrenness had oft commanded him to put her away a Practice consistent with the Power of those Princes but he consulting more his Affection than his Interest had all that time delayed it and now what the Dutchess by her Influence had before exercised for the raising of her Brother to the Great Dukes Favour is by his insinuations upon the Affections and Passions of the Prince returned to her with advantage who for his sake continued her as he had formerly for hers received him He had indeed attained to a very great perfection in the Art of Government which with the powerful Charms of Flattery and a well-dissembled passion for his Masters Interest as it rendered Boris absolute in his greatness so it rendered the Empire secure in the Fidelity and Watchfulness of so excellent a Minister that laying aside the present Care of his Dominions he was consequently as little thoughtful of a Successor but indulging himself in his private Pleasures and Retirements he became insensibly devested of the Majesty of one of the Greatest Princes of the Christian World The main obstacle to the growing Ambition of Boris was the Life of Demetrius Brother to the great Duke and Heir apparent to the Crown His destruction was therefore judged necessary to precede in whom the Blood-Royal determined there would want only the death of the Great Duke to make way for the Election of a new Emperor And the Constitution of that Government then considered Boris might reasonably propose to himself the suffrages of the Nobles and People who were actuated by his Counsels and imployed or discontinued in order to his Interests and Designs Bloody Tyrants never want Bloody Instruments witness that most horrid of Murthers perpetrated in our own Land upon the best of Princes neither is any Relation proof against the Charms of Ambition and Avarice in a degenerate mind Boris by the aid of vast Presents and promises of greater had gained four of Demetrius his Servants to murther their Lord. The horridness of so sad an Assassination made them for some time suspend its execution till hurried on by a consideration that they were too far advanced to retreat with safety by threats of the Tyrant and by the hopes of becoming suddenly Great they resolved upon the cruel performance of what they had so wretchedly undertaken All the difficulty now is how it should be compassed and several ways being proposed they at length conclude as followeth An obscure gloomy Night is made choyce of as most proper and sutable to so black a deed and the Town being set on fire in many places at once these miscreants fill all with Tumult and the terror of the Burning This done they fling themselves like men amazed into the Princes Bed-chamber and awaking him with a sudden Fright alarm his already-disturbed Spirits with the approaching danger Demetrius starts up at the noise and running to the window to see the Flames is set upon by those he trusted most and pierced in several places of his Body with long poysoned knives prepared for this inhumane Butchery While the unhappy Child lay wallowing in his Blood and strugling with his Fate these Villians by the advantage of the Night and the confusion they had raised and upon
that that Impostor might be forthwith delivered into the Great Duke his Masters hands whom he would unmask and render him to the World in his native Complexion a mean Creature set up by the Malice of a discontented Priest And then concluded that in case the King and Kingdom of Poland shall decline those equitable demands they would create to them an Enemy one of the greatest Princes of the World And thus having sprinkled his desires with a mixture of some Threats he added Rich Presents which were distributed amongst the Ministers of State and indeed most of those in Credit about the King with an open hand so that there were very few but tasted of Muskovitish Bounty But all this state and charge amounted to nothing the Interest of the Jesuites added to the Authority of the Pope had rendered the King and his Council deaf to the applications of the Embassador It was therefore resolved that Demetrius should be assisted with fresh supplies in order to his Restauration which was considered as the only Basis upon which to lay the Foundation of a perpetual League between both Crowns and the only means to root out that Schism in Religion which hitherto had fomented their Quarrels their affection being swayed by their faith These Resolutions were kept secret as the Arcana Imperii for they did not judge it fit to come to an open Rupture till they saw what was like to be the Success of Demetrius his Arms. Their Answer therefore was that the King and State of Poland knew nothing at least took no notice of what was done in Muskovy and that those Tumults raised by Demetrius a Muskovian born and Aided by Muskovians or any other Voluntiers engaged in his designes did not at all infringe or so much as trench upon the League which they should be always ready to observe towards that Crown and Empire The Embassador being dismissed with this general Answer without effecting what he came for In the mean time the Armies in Muskovy were drawn within sight of each other equal in hopes and desires though not in numbers Demetrius upon the Enemies advance raised his Siege and having chosen his ground with respect to the number of his men wherein he was inferiour to Boris he was not without some hopes that some part of the Enemies Army would upon the closing come over to him having held an intelligence with some of their Officers to that purpose But there appearing so formidable a power of the Muskovites and but a handful of men with Demetrius those who had made him a promise of coming over to his side judged it more adviseable to adhere to their own The Armies were now drawn so neer each other that it was impossible to part without Engaging Demetrius therefore and the Palatine judging their safety depended upon their Courage received the Enemies Charge as men resolved to conquer or lie by it not onely sustaining but resisting the fury of their Enemies The Success was a while disputed with doubtful hopes till at last the Victory began to declare it self for the more numerous Force which powring in fresh supplies the Polonian was forced to shrink under the impressions of the multitude after they had given testimonies of great resolutions having fought it out with so great a pertinacie that the Victory cost Boris the loss of many of his men His General received several wounds and it was with much difficulty that the Enemy quitted the ground at last they were disordered and broke saving themselves by flight Demetrius having rallied some few of his Troops retreated to Ribscum and the Palatine returned into Poland to raise new Forces having left 8000 of his men upon the place with all his Cannon and Baggage The tidings of this Victory was carried to Boris the Great Duke by Bosmanno the Governour of Novogrod whom Boris received as his better Angel and the General having rendered him with an advantagious character caused him to be presented with a great Bason of pure Gold filled with Ducats of the same Mettal and all the Officers of the Army with Medals and increase of Pay The Borisians shewed more Courage in gaining this Victory than Conduct in improving it to their advantage wasting their time at the Siege of Krom whilst the Enemy had room without interruption to gather together their scattered Troops who had they been chased while their fears had been upon them must necessarily have fallen into the hands of the Conquerours and then the Garrisons had followed their Fate But the Great Dukes Army being fate down b●●●re Krom the place was defended againse them with so great a Courage that they despaired of taking it whereupon the greater part of the Army being reinforced with fresh men marched towards Ribscum in order to the scattering of Demetrius his Forces and the interrupting of his Levies He upon this defeat found the experience of those friends which had been made with his Successes not himself Many who had run in upon the fame of his prosperous March ran now from him as from a falling house that would in its own ruine involve those within it Yet was not he wanting to himself having his Courage cherished by two Cistercian Monks and two Jesuites who attended him especially the latter in all his adventures These inflame him to a perseverance with promises that the Issue would be Crowned with Success to him and confusion to his Enemies In the mean time the Borisians advanced towards him upon intelligence whereof he sent out his Horse to face them while he was drawing up his Foot Who had seen the great disproportion between both Armies the one of a vast Body of Horse and Foot fleshed with Victory a great Train of Artillery Carriages the other not exceeding 5000 effective men those abounding with wants most of them Raw and Undisciplined and the rest the remnant of a defeated Army might reasonably have guessed at the Success But the power of Fortune or rather of Providence in this juncture appeared beyond humane expectation Demetrius was in a strange Country no Counsel about him unknowing in Discipline preposterous in his Orders and not so much as a temptation left him to hope his Horse being advanced were opposed by those of the Enemy of whom upon the Charge they killed about 1000 which discouraging the rest they shrink and being pressed on by the Demetrians had not time to rally but were in disorder forced upon their own Foot breaking their Ranks and doing for Demetrius what his Army could never have effected He pursuing his Success had the slaughter of that great Body which not being able to make Head were cut down without any resistance And thus what began but in a light Skirmish ended in an intire Victory The Demetrians laden with spoils the whole Camp and Train falling into their hands returned in Triumph to Puttiwol where the Fame of this signal Victory spreading it self to their advantage Five good Towns with their Forts rendered
him their Submissions whereby he was furnisht with Ammunition and all other provisions for War A while after two other places Jalka and Leptina rendered themselves and the great Province of Seneria made one entire present of all t is strengths at once Others also hasting in to be first or with the first acknowledge the Conquerour who received their Addresses with great moderation upon so unexpected a Success His great care was the relieving of Krom besieged by the rest of the Enemies Army but having by a Spy which came from out the Town understood the place was in no danger and that it might defend it self for some longer time against the Assailants He diverted his thoughts from relieving it till he had improved his late Victory by enlarging his Quarters He continued at Puttiwol to reinforce his strengths and to receive the Submissions of several places and persons which daily rendred themselves with recruits to his small Army While he was thus busied Boris was not less active in his Levies repairing the Breaches in his scattered Regiments and doing what ever else might be needful to oppose the impressions of a great Enemy He had likewise his Emissaries and Agitatours in the Army of Demetrius who endeavoured to debauch the Cossacks and such other of the Russians as had listed themselves in his service tempting them by excessive rewards and honours to seize upon the Impostor as they Stiled him and to present him to the Emperour as a Peace-offering for their Rebellion And to inforce this the better they had with them a thundering Mandate from the Patriarch as the Vicar of Christ and Head of the true Church These Arguments swayed little specially those grounded upon point of Conscience The people had shook hands with that before only they kept so much of the pretence of it as might serve to justifie their present swerving from the present Government Some of these Agents were seized upon and being exposed to the Rack confessed the whole designe upon the person of Demetrius who being to gain upon the affections of the people by his clemencie dismissed them despising out of a generous carelesness of his own particular to revenge his own injury upon so ignoble Instruments He writ also his Letters to the Patriarch to mind him of the duty of his Office that he should not fix the Seal of Religion to justifie an usurpation founded upon murther and perfidy but rather dispose the people to yield to the Son of John Basilius their undoubted Sovereign that Obedience and Submission which was due to him from them by the Laws of God and the Empire 'T is said he also sent a Message to Boris advising him from those ungenerous practises of Assassinations and Libels and that if he would give testimony of his repentance by renouncing the unjust possession of the Throne to which he had ascended by a continued Series of unworthy and wicked practices He should be permitted to retire into what part of the Empire he pleased with an entire indemnity for what was past and all reasonable caution and security for his future safety But the Great Duke refused these overtures with scorn and indignation and casting about how he might root out this growing evil he judged it advisable to frame a diversion upon his forein supplies wisely considering that if he could prevent those the Rebellion in his own Kingdom would in time extinguish for want of fuel to sustain it and that those of his Subjects who were deaf to his invitations during the prosperity of Demetrius whilst he was owned and asserted by forain Princes would when he were left to his own fortunes fall from him with no less fervor than they had run in to him In order to this he treats with the Danish and Swedish Embassadors then in his Court by what means King Sigismond might be best incommodated in his own Dominions Designes were accordingly laid to imbroy him at his own doors and to kindle a fire in Poland which might oblige him to call home his own Subjects for the quenchin● of it But amidst all his contrivance of State formed with prudence agreeable to the occasion he was seized with a violent tearing in his Bowels a deluge of Blood flowing out of his Mouth Ears and Nostrils with which after some moments his enraged Soul issued out leaving the Body a horrid Spectacle to all about him and a Monument of the instability of humane greatness Some say he died of an Apoplexie others the fancied Fate of most Princes that he was poysoned Demetrius having by a more delicate contrivance subdued him at his own Weapon However it was he expired in the Month of April 1605. having lived Emperour the space of seven years during which time his Government was adorned with all imaginable moderation and justice as if to compensate the people for the murther of his Prince and to make good the sufficiencie of their choyce in his ability for administration And if we believe him who writ his Panegyrick he is to be justly reckoned amongst the best of the Russian Dukes SECT II. Fedro succeedeth his Father in the Empire His Army revolts His Partisans and Palace are destroyed by the madness of the people He and his Mother and Sister being reserved for Demetrius his Triumph poyson themselves Demetrius is received and crowned Emperour of Muskovy He marries the Lady Marina and in the height of joy and grandeur is miserably massacred Zuiski the chief of the Conspirators and prime Actor in this Tragedy is elected Emperour of Russia THe Great Duke being thus violently snatcht away in the midst of all his designes and in the strength of his Age the Nobility and chief Officers of the Army were astonished with the surprise of it and many of them for it is a superstitious Nation reflecting upon this extraordinary adventure as a clear decision of Providence with relation to the right of Demetrius began to entertain inclinations in his favour and certainly had not the people interposed they would have manifested the same by declaring him the Son of John Basilius But the people being alarm'd with the Death of Boris came to Court in swarms and in a Tumultuary way as if prompted by some irresistible impulse they placed his Son Fedro upon the Throne of his Father declaring his Mother Regent in his minority and bearing all before them like a torrent they sorced all the Nobility to swear Fealty to them and to ratifie the election by an Act of State grounded upon a mixture of descent and the suffrage of the people The Army as if swayed by the same instinct did by their example salute him Emperour and by their Deputies thereto appointed sent him a Declaration wherein they promised to adhere to him with the exposing of their lives and fortunes and to stand by him not only in repelling the common Enemy but also in suppressing the Rebellion raised by his own Subjects The State of Affairs being thus established
at Court care was had for the interment of the deceased Duke whose Corps was without much solemnity laid in the Sepulchre of their Princes After this a Council was held for the more effectual prosecuting of the War Peter Bosmanno upon the accompt of his great service and known abilities was appointed General of the Army and dispatched to the Camp before Krom Mislikowski and Zwiski being recalled to assist the Regent and the young Emperour in the administration of the Government Krom had been assaulted by the Russians ten severa● times who were as often repulsed by the obstinate Valour of the Cossacks within it But Demetrius to cherish the Courage and Fidelity of the Garrison and setting much of his rest upon the conservation of the place dispatched Zaporius one of his chief Commanders with the greatest par● of his Army to the relief of it He having marched within a convenient distance of it and by his Scouts and other Spie● understood the posture of the Enemie Leaguer judged it very hard to attempt any thing upon it by force and therefore hath recourse to policie and framing a Letter to the Governour told him he was advanced so far as a Forlorn to the main Army and to keep the Leaguer from forraging the Country while the Polish and Cossack Auxiliaries were coming up to their relief under the conduct of Demetrius in person And then magnifying their fidelity and abounding in promises of rewards and honours to them he concluded with an assurance of speedy relief This Letter was put into the hands of a bold fellow who undertook the delivery of it but was by the crafty Commander directed such ways towards the Town as led him directly upon an Out-guard of the Enemies who having seized upon him brought him to the Head-quarters where being presented to the Rack he discovered his Letters and being examined confirmed the effects of them as a truth which he had heard discoursed of by the chief Officers of Zaporius his Army The Leaguer was as yet commanded by Hoduinus a near Kinsman of the late Great Duke's the principal Officers of the Army disdaining to submit to Bosmanno as a Son of Fortune Upon this intelligence there were 2000 Horse commanded to keep the avenues of the Town while the rest of the Army drew off to encounter the Enemy Zaporius that he might better countenance his contrivement drew out his whole Army in Battalia and having at a further distance behind him placed all his Boyes and Bedles of the Army with all the Carriages and some few Souldiers to make up a Front which he extended to a great distance He with his real Forces marched up to encounter the Enemy having given order to this mock-Army that was behind and which he had furnished with Trumpets Drums and Colours that upon the Engagement they should advance in view and fill the Air with shouts and noises that the Poles and Cossacks were at hand The Fight was fierce and doubtful in the beginning and Zaporius was so hard put to it by the greater numbers of the Enemy that notwithstanding all his skill he must have sunk under their weight had not Bosmanno disobliged by his own Party who had the command of some Reserves instead of charging the Enemy joyned his Troops to theirs and then in the head of his men declared that Demetrius was the true Emperour inviting all who had a zeal to the honour of their Country to follow his example in adhering to the rightful Prince This extraordinary adventure did equally surprize both Armies possessing the one with a consternation and the other with amazement in so much that the Fight held up as by joynt consent and both sides seemed to expect the determination of the Cause by some other Umpirage than that of their Swords Bosmanno taking advantage of this profound Silence shews himself again betwixt both Armies and crying out with a loud Voice invited all those who had any reverence for the Ashes of John Basilius or honour for his Son and affection to the publike peace that they should follow his example by rendring themselves to the obedience of their rightful Prince where they should be sure of Indemnity and Protection Bosmanno being of great reputation with the common Souldiers as one that had engaged with them in many Services had the fortune in this juncture to make so strange an impression upon their minds by his discourse that after some murmur amongst themselves they all cried out with a loud voice that they would live and dye with Bosmanno The Nobility observing the course of the stream and lest that they might be overwhelmed in resisting of it resolved to follow the Current and immediately declaring for Demetrius dispatched a Party of 500 to him to Puttiwol with tender of their Submissions supplicating his pardon for their former defections whereto they had been insnared by the Artifices of Boris They further offered him an entire Obedience of themselves and of the strength of the Empire beseeching him he would come over to them that they might march under his Conduct to the Possession of his Hereditary rights Hodwenus having thus lost his Army which deserted him as one man purposed to save himself by flight but being pursued by a Party thereto imployed was seized upon and presented to Demetrius in whose presence he disdaining to bow or pay those respects due to an Emperour was commanded to Prison and to be laden with Irons Demetrius transported with this happy news broke up with those Troops which he had about him marching directly to Krom where he caressed the Governor and Garrison with all kindness imaginable magnifying their Courage and Fidelity and heaping upon them promises of Mountains when he should be establisht in his Throne From thence he went to Arol where the revolted Lords and Army attended his coming and received him with all the Submissions and demonstrations of joy that could be expressed And being by this accession of Force rendred absolute Master of the Field he advanced by easie marches toward Musko the Seat of the Empire and being come as far as Tula he made some stay there as well to refresh his Army as to consider how to carry on the rest of his Affairs And having advised with his Council he writ his Letters to the Magistrates of Musko to acquaint them that God had in a wonderful manner owned him and his Cause by bringing over the Army that opposed him to their due obedience without bloodshed much to his satisfaction rather to have them reduced by the convictions of their Conscience than by the force of his Arms he therefore invited them according to that pious example of the Army to return to their obedience and as a manifestation of it to root out from the face of the earth that hated Progeny of Boris who had murthered his elder Brother and had laid Trains for his life but that he was rescued from them by deliverances not much short of miracle
account he lay now encamped before Musko But the Citizens perceiving that no Demetrius did yet appear took heart and making an unanimous conjunction with Zuiskis Troops made a furious Sally upon Polutnich who not able to sustain the assault of an hundred thousand men was forced to quit his ground and save himself by a disorderly retreat in Caluga Zuiski transported with the Success returned Triumphant into Musko and having modelled his Army for a march advanced towards Caluga and sat down before it but was forced by the Valour and Conduct of the Lord Keeper to raise his Siege However having recruited his Troops he marched again to find out the Enemy and both Armies being met were upon the point to encounter when Schacopski being terrified with the unexspected defection of 4000 of his men not daring to hazard the rest in so great a consternation was constrained to quit the Field retreating to Thula whither he was hotly pursued by Zuiski and the place closely besieged in such sort that not having had time to put in Provisions they were soon reduced to the eating of Horses Dogs Cats Rats and such other things as were abhorring to nature This quickly raised the Citizens into a mutinous posture against Schacopski and Polutnich as being betrayed by them upon an imaginary supposition to adhere to a fictitious person that had not a being else that Demetrius if he had been alive would not have failed in such a juncture of his Affairs to have asserted his Interest in Person Polutnich protested to them that he had seen and discoursed with a young man in Poland of about 28 years of Age who called himself Demetrius and was there acknowledged for such but whether he were really so or no he could not positively affirm having never seen him before But if the people would have a little patience and stand by him he would send out such a trusty Messenger as they should make choice of one that knew the Prince to inform them of the truth and to see what hopes of relief was to be expected from him This being resolved upon an Emissary was sent out by the favour of the night and the carelessness of the Besiegers the Citizens resolving with patience to expect his return In the mean time no Demetrius did appear that person whom Schacopski had designed to assume his Name and Fortunes being a Polish Gentleman who thought it more safe to depend upon a plentiful estate of his own than to change his private condition for the hopes and hazard of the Empire of Muskovy An Empire can never Escheat for want of an Heir a new Demetrius shews himself upon the Stage coming out of Poland the forge of all the contrivances and troubles of Muskovy He was conducted to Putiwol by Micharetski a great Polish Lord and acknowledged there and received with all imaginary honour as their Prince and Sovereign After a short stay there he marched with what force he could make to Staradub where he met the Messenger from Thula who being brought into his presence was startled at the sight of a person only very like Demetrius but in reality not he Demetrius observing his dissatisfaction judged it more advisable to carry the news of his relief in the head of his Army than put himself into the hands of one who might raise in the City a prejudice against his Person and Interests This precaution was not unreasonable though it proved fruitless the Garrison of Thula being reduced to those straights especially for want of water and supposing by the Messengers long stay that he was fallen into the Enemies hands they came to Terms for a Surrender which being honourable as to the condition of Souldiers Zuiski swore to observe but failed in the performance for he caused Peter Fedrowits an eminent person to be hanged and Polutnich to be cast into a loathsome prison where he was miserably famished to death Thula being reduced in this manner the Demetrian Cossacks quitted their own Party as desperate to follow that of the Conqueror and were with some other Troops sent by Zuiski to prosecute the Siege of Caluga the Enemies principal Receptable The Quarters were scarce marked out before the Town when there happened a desperate Mutiny amongst the Souldiers propagated by the Cossacks as was supposed upon the news of Demetrius his recovery and approach This gave so great a terror to the rest of the Army that being possessed with a pannick fear they ran out of the Camp in the night in so great disorder that they left their Baggage behind them and made towards Musko with all their might The Cossacks seeing themselves left to their own disposal called upon the Garrison to receive them into the Town assuring them of their friendship and the flight of the Russians The Garrison wondring their deliverance should be so near and so unexspected could not upon the sudden being agitated with the passions of hope and fear resolve what to do until being ascertained by their Spies and Parties they had sent out of the truth of it they opened their Gates and arms to receive their Deliverers and joyntly with them plundered the Camp bringing into the Town in Triumph all the Provisions and Cannon of the same The Cossacks themselves would not enter into the City but hastening to meet Demetrius joyned themselves to his Army with the mutual congratulations of both sides Demetrius being thus revived many Muskovites and very many Lithuan●… and Poles came flocking in to him 〈◊〉 out of Novelty others out of resp●… many for Pillage and most for Revenge and being now rendered considerable by the accession of the revolted Cossacks he marched in quest of the Enemy whom he encountered and defeated being 8000 men and took Mathew Misinowski their General Prisoner with which success having gain'd a strong reputation the Towns of Severia gladly returned to the obedience of their old Lord and furnished him abundantly with all necessaries for the War But the Supplies from Poland were the main appay of his Army Duke Roman Rosinski being engaged in the Quarrel sent great Forces under the Command of Walareski a Creature of his out of that Country and a while after Duke Adam Wisnioweski Tischievicz Charlinski Mielski men of Eminence and at length Rosinski in person came up with the rest of the Army and at the same time there arrived at the Rendezvouz a Recruit of 8000 Zoporensian and Dumensian Cossacks so that the Army being now great and united into one body Rosinski by the suffrage of all the Peers and great Officers was declared General Basilius Zuiski observing the great growth and progress of his Rival caused new Levies to be made with which having formed an Army of 170000 though most raw men he placed his Brother Demetrius Zuiski in the head of them with Orders to find out and fight the Enemy And now behold both Armies in sight of each other encamped near the Town of Bolchow The first day was spent in Skirmishes
Picqueering and other hostile Braveries The next Morning both Armies impatient of looking upon each other were drawn out in Battalia with all the advantages that the ground would admit or able Officers could contrive the Generals caressing exhorting and encouraging their Souldiers to do well with all their Rhetorick Zuiski fierce in the confidence of his numbers and conduct told his men that now was the time to chastise the hereditary Enemy of their Country the Pole whose malice had been at work to create them those mischiefs under which their Kingdoms had laboured for divers years That this was the second mock Demetrius framed and set up in Poland to be imposed upon them That it would be a reproach to the Glory of their Empire to receive Laws from Strangers who by all Arts conspired their ruine That this Demetrius whom they had now in the head of their Army was one Master John a School-Master of Pocala a Town in Russia Alba as the other was one Grisko notoriously known in Muskovy and his violent death suffered in the face of the whole world in Musko universally acknowledged till the wicked Pole maligning their Greatness had raised another Impostor under whose countenance they proposed to themselves the inslaving of their Country and the rooting out of their Religion That there was no deliverance from all these and thousands more of miseries impending over them but in their Courage That they must resolve to win or die and to lose the day at no other rate than the Ioss of their lives That they must never survive their own happiness and the Glory of their Country and that for his part he would in that days fight give them the Example of a true lover of it Demetrius on the other side especially Rosinski were not wanting to inflame the courage of their Souldiers by all the Arguments of Power to sway them as desire of Empire Revenge and Spoils That the Conquest of Russia depended upon the Points of their Swords and that they had but that days labour to go in and possess that vast Empire In short both Armies joyn with equal hopes and equal courage The Fight proved but short though obstinate and the success doubtful till the Demetrians having before-hand placed their Chariots and Carriages attended with their Servants with Drums Trumpets and Colours at a distance out of sight an usual Polish Stratageme caused them in the heat of the Battle to appear in view with cries and shoutings which was so dreadful an object to the Zuiskians that they began to shrink not daring to trust in their Courage against that fresh Reserve that advanced towards them which the Polish Horse observing seconded their fears with a violent Charge wherewith they put the whole Army to an entire Rout leaving behind them all their Cannon and Baggage upon the place 5000 of the Muskovites saved themselves in Bolchow who after being four days beleaguered rendered themselves and the Town to the mercy of the Conqueror and were for their encouragement disposed and listed amongst his Troops The fame of this Victory opened him a passage into all the Cities and Forts in that Quarter only Mosaise gave him the trouble of drawing before it and then surrendered And now Demetrius being absolute Master of the Field marched by great Journeys towards Musko the Imperial City confident upon the stock of his last signal Victory that the Citizens upon his approach would quit Zuiski and receive him into their Town and questionless the issue had justified his computation but for the new perfidy of those 5000 men who upon the rendition of Bolchow had listed themselves under his Command for these left him again and marched into Musko assuring the Townsmen that the Polish Army was neither so numerous nor so formidable as Fame had rendered them which comfortable Intelligence and Aid giving new life to the heartless Citizens they resolve to adhere to the Fortunes of Zuiski and taking advantage by the delays of Demetrius who instead of improving his Victory as he ought suffered his men to ramble up and down the Country they consented to new Levies for the recruit of their Army wherewith they blocked up the way between them and Severia for the Poles were moved Northward so that no further Supplies out of the adhering Provinces could well joyn with them and many who were ignorant of this obstacle were daily intercepted But the Poles at length grown sensible of their Error drew back their Army to the South-side of the Town and having forced those Troops which interrupted their Passage encamped at Tusin with their whole strength being environed and secured by the two Rivers Moska Tussin From whence by their frequent vigorous Excursions they obliged the Muskovites to keep within their Walls The Citizens seeing themselves thus shut up and that they could not drive away the Enemy by force betake themselves to other shifts they apply themselves to the Polish Embassadors and the Palatine of Sandomiria and propose a Treaty of Peace to them and in the mean time mention a Cessation of Arms as the only means to compass it Their Designe was not so much a Reconciliation as that the Poles otherwise naturally careless and licentious should waste their force and heat in a languishing Truce and that the designed Succours for their relief might be ready against the designed time But the Embassadors and the Palatine who had been detained Prisoners ever since the Massacre desirous of Peace and their liberty send Peter Zbarouski to the Camp to perswade their Countrymen to return into Poland and not disturb that Peace which they were then treating with further hostilities but in vain for the Poles refused all commerce or mention of Peace unless Demetrius from whom they expected the reward of their labours were first restored to his Throne and the Usurper delivered into their hands Rosinski was in the interim preparing for an attempt becoming the greatness of his Quality and Courage for Duke Basilius Masalski a Kinsman of Zuiski's having raised an Army in the adjacent Provinces of 70000 men for the relief of the Town had entrenched himself upon the Banks of the River Chodiunka three Miles from the City Rosinski being resolved to attempt his Quarters drew out his whole Army by favour of the night and marching directly to the Enemies Camp in a manner secure in the greatness of their numbers and nearness of the City broke into it without any very great resistance killed 14000 upon the place took the General prisoner and scattered the whole Army Neither was the Victory cheap or bloodless on the Demetrian side for while they were engaged upon the Pillage being dispersed over the Field to rake up the Spoils the touted Enemy faced about and rallying being further encouraged by a Party come out of the City returned to the Charge and renewing the Fight with much pertinacie made a slaughter amongst the Conquerors of multitudes of their men in so much that they
Kings Guards rendered himself famous for an Attempt wherein if he had been vigorously seconded the place had run the risk of falling into the Kings hands He fastened a Petard to St. Michaels Gate which laid the passage open into the Town but being ill seconded by his own men and multitudes of the Russians flocking to the danger he was forced to retreat without having effected any thing more than to render the Enemy more diligent who immediately blocked up their Gates with Mountains of earth making also great Trenches before them to prevent the like Attempt for the future And thus the Siege continued with various labours on both sides the King having lain about a year before it with more pertinacie than was judged conducible to the state of his Affairs which seemed to invite him to Musko the Imperial Seat as a place more probable to fall into his hands It was now the Year 1610 and the Zuiskians had laboured long against a prevailing Enemy at their Doors when the Aids came from Sweden The Poles in the Camp wanted not their inconveniencies They had a multitude of Chief Commanders which occasioned frequent Disputes to the disappointing of many probable Designes they had to this a licentiousness in their Discipline secure carelesness in the conduct of their Affairs the natural infirmity of that Nation and an instability and irresolution in their Councils all things seeming to portend their ruine Most of the great Cities and Provinces except Severia had revolted from their Obedience Their Taxations were become intolerable which the unseasonable Seditions of the Army had extorted from Demetrius for want of Pay the People now too late repenting themselves of the Contributions already paid them without which they must have left them to the enjoyment of that peace which by their own folly and fickle nature they had deprived themselves of They proceeded so far in many parts of the Empire as to seize upon imprison and kill the Tax-gatherers which caused the Poles to disperse strong Parties of their Army into several parts of the Land insomuch that their force in the Camp did not suffice to check the excursions of the Town by whom they were several times baffled Their Commander in Chief Rosinski upon one of those Sallies was shot into the side with an Arrow of which hurt he lay long sick and never perfectly recovered Upon an Encounter which happened in May the Poles had gained a notable advantage over them but delaying their Retreat gave the Enemy time to come on with fresh Troops against their wearied Souldiers whom they routed and snatching the Victory out of their hands took divers Prisoners and destroyed most of their Foot The time was thus wasted as well as the strength of each Party The Poles having received Intelligence of the advance of the Swedish Aids towards Musko under the Command of Pontus de la Garde sent Alexander Zbarowski with 2000 Horse to check their progress He beat one of their Regiments at Toccinum and killed 600 Germans upon the place The Muskovites concerned in the safety of these Auxiliaries drew out their whole strength and joyned with them The Poles also reinforced Zbarowski with their best Troops and being now in the Field again both Armies met at T wer 30 Leagues from Musko the Dispute was fierce the Demetrians rushing with contempt upon those they had so often beaten the Russians seemed more willing to die than be overcome which made the Fight bloody and doubtful until these were forced yet again to give place to the Ascendant Virtue of the Poles And certainly the business had there received an end had not the main body of the Army commanded by Zbarowski himself shrunk from the ground for both his Wings prevailed over those of the Enemy and dispersed those who had beaten his Battalia but their number being inferior to that of the Enemy they durst not follow the pursuit or attack the body of Foot which stood immoveable notwithstanding the defection of their Horse There were slain in this Fight 1000 German Horse and 6000 Muskovites with the loss of but 50 Poles The Main Body of Zbarowski's Army emulous of the Success of their Fellows and pressed with the shame of their own miscarriage resolved upon the very spot of ground to redeem their sullied Honour though contrary to the advice of some of their ablest Souldiers who counselled them to withdraw to a more advantageous Post The Army labouring thus under divided Counsels but united in a careless security some lying in the Field and others quartered in the Town The rallied Enemy about break of day fell upon them with a surprize so violent that they had no choice left them but to fly for their lives or lie by it Many save themselves in T wer which was Garrison'd with Cossacks others scarce looked till they got to the Camp at Musko The Poles did indeed what they could to have rallied but the Assault being universal it was impossible for them to do it which probably saved most of them but they lost all their Baggage and most of their Horses The Muskovites raised upon the stock of this Victory stormed the Castle of T wer thrice but were as oft beaten off with loss and now despairing of carrying the place they raised the Siege and marched towards the Volga where they met again with the Demetrian Forces and fought them at Kolasinum but parted upon equal terms Whilest Zuiski and Demetrius do thus with various Fortune strive for the Empire of Russia Sigismund continues obstinate at the Siege of Smolensko which if he had raised and transferred his Arms to Musko it is very probable he might have given Law to both those wearied and implacable Parties but he was absolutely resolved not to quit the place till he had taken it though it may be presumed he failed in his unseasonable distracting and weakning the Demetrian Poles which he ought rather to have assisted with fresh Supplies lest the Muskoviters prevailing Zuiski might be confirmed in the Government and attempt the relief of Smolensko with the united Forces of the Empire which also happened The King had not his Recruits so opportunely out of Poland as he desired but he could not well call his Countrymen from Demetrius without satisfying their Arrears and the rewards they had proposed from the Victory they seemed assured of and the exhausted Treasury of the Commonwealth could not suffice for such a sum but he positive in his resolves sent some eminent Emissaries to perswade them to abandon Demetrius and return to their Duty They on the other side sent their Embassadors to the King that they might not by an untimely desertion be defrauded of the fruit of their labours and after many altercations and disputes of Duty and Rewards the Souldiery resolved to persevere in their faith to Demetrius and which they were obliged to by the Sacred Ties of Vows and Oaths There were for all that some who promised Obedience provided
retreat They had lost many of their Horses and more died daily for want of Forrage they were harrassed with duty and had no hopes of relief from Poland being besieged by a barbarous Enemy ready every moment at least in their apprehension to storm their Camp their Provisions were short and no possibility of Supplies from without all the sides of their Camp being invested so that it was impossible for them to subsist for want of Food in expectation of succour from their own Country Neither had the King by reason of the interruption of the Passages received but one Letter from Zolkievius when it was too late wherein he gave him an account of his condition and how he had been unseasonably abandoned by some of the Army This was the state of Affairs in the Camp while the Enemy without lay close upon them and computing the distresses and disorders within by the desertion of those that had left them they were much raised in their hopes despising all proposals and overtures of quitting the place In so much that upon the 22th of September the whole Turkish Army was drawn up before the Camp threatning a general Assault unless they immediately surrendred at discretion On the 23th they did the like and on the 26th the Galga or Prince of Tartary approaching nearer the Trenches was met by Duke Corecki upon Parole who proposed to him an excessive ransom for himself and some few with him and descending to some particulars for a rendition of the Camp only that the Souldiers might march away with their Swords the Tartarian left him in scorn and anger and clapping his hand upon his Sable bid him expect no other conditions than what the sharpness of that would afford him Zolkievius having throughly computed the state of his Affairs resolved to quit the Camp and having ordered all things accordingly which took up three days time being assisted in the method of his Designe by Martin Kasanowski an old experienced Colonel and upon the 29th of September that part of the Wall through which the Camp was to pass being opened the Army about Sun-set began its march in the order following On both sides a row of Waggons as it were chained together five hundred paces in length drawn by their Horses closed the Wings The Front consisting likewise of linked Waggons took up three hundred paces and the Rear being fenced with the like Barricado was as also the other extremities of the Camp fortified with Cannon The wounded sick Baggage and all the best Horses of the Army were placed in the middest while the Officers and Souldiers marched on the out-side of the Camp with Colours flying and their Arms ready fixed to resist any impression The Tartars observing this order of the Poles did at first think they had drawn out to fight but when they discerned the whole Camp to move and that no man stirred out of his Rank they stood amazed at the Novelty and the night being so near they durst do no more but send out small Parties to observe their motion And so they marched two Moldavish Miles that night without any disorder save what they received at the passage of a Lake which was supplied well enough in respect they were not eagerly pressed upon by the Enemy On the 30th of September Skinder Bassa assaulted the Camp on all sides with his united Forces but being repelled with great loss they marched yet two Moldavish Miles more that night A Molvish Mile is more than a German On the first of October the Camp being lodged near a great Pool continued there that whole day and the night following The Infidels did extremely gall them from the other side of the Water with their shot and from the open side by their Excursions but were bravely repulsed with great slaughter of their men About Noon that day they prepared for a fresh Assault but instead thereof sent a Trumpet to the Camp to demand their Turkish Interpreter that they might speak with him which being granted they only detained him making no Attempt that day Octob. 2. The Turks having the day before observed the Camp stormed it with greater fury than ever and being repulsed returned fifteen times to the Assault The Courage of the Defendants growing by their being able to resist in so much that at last it did not only suffice them to make good their Station but that they followed the flying Enemy to a good distance from it in which Pursuit they took two Colours and a Piece of Ordnance having killed multitudes of their men Towards Sun-set they began their March with their shot about them which must needs retard their pace and yet they advanced three of their Miles before Morning being by computation fifteen English Octob. 3. Having gained the Advantage of a Rivulet and heights of Ground they easily repressed the Enemies fury and took a Tartar Colours they also eluded an Ambush of the Enemy and continued their Journey that night Octob. 4. They had strengthened their Camp by the Neighbourhood of a River But Skinder Bassa considering that by these Marches by night the Prey might slip out of his hands and sensible of the disgrace that would attend him to suffer it resolved to make an Attempt at the hazard of his whole Army and consequently gave order for a general Assault But being the Tartars were not so forward as he expected having been so many times baffled pretending the difficulty by reason of the posture of the Camp seated upon the advantage of the River by the help of which they would be able to bring more hands to the defence of those parts that were assaultable but the enraged Bassa impatient of Arguments turned hastily to his Janizaries And are you also affrighted with the greatness of the danger said he And will you suffer this handful of men to slip out of your hands for want of a vigorous Attempt upon them But they cried out He should not reproach but Command them for nothing was terrible to them but the anger of their General The rest of the Turks sway'd by this Example would be of the Party prompted by an Ambition to do the Service with their own hands without the aid of the Tartars And armed with these Resolutions they assaulted the Camp from all their Quarters and pressed on by a mixture of shame and fury broke in upon it in one place carrying their terror into the Bowels of their Enemy maugre all the resistance made against them All their former disputes and conflicts seemed but sport to this The Turks hurried on by their Principle of Predestination added to a zeal of gratifying their General made havock of their lives to preserve the footing they had gained in the Camp doing more than men in prosecution of the advantage The Christians armed with a native courage inflamed yet by their despair did more than they for despising their multitudes and resolving to conquer or die they made a charge upon those who had
entred with a fury sutable to the constitution of their Affairs and forcing them back and upon those that followed made them contribute to their own disorders in such sort that not being able to rally they were repell'd with a great slaughter And having clear'd themselves from this violent storm they continued their march that evening alongst the Banks of the River for three Miles the enemy coasting them on the other side with an equal pace Octob. 5. The Tartars having got before them the day before lay directly in their way but they carrying with them the resolution of surmounting every difficulty and grown skilful in this new kind of March broke through all the resistance made against them though not without some disorder in their Rear occasioned by the fears of the Waggon-men which rendred them less exact and faithful in their charge But by the valour and conduct of Zemberg who commanded in that part the Enemy was repulsed and the disorder being repaired they performed a March of two Miles that day Octob. 6. They still advanced and like a wedge of Iron divided their passage through the numerous Squadrons of the Enemy who clouded their very sight with their showers of Shot and Arrows but seeing they could make no impression upon them they burnt up and destroyed all their grass and forrage in their way whereby they were extremely incommodated and by reason whereof and their often Skirmishes they were that day able to march but one Moldavish Mile The Poles still followed the Banks of the River Tire with a designe to gain Mohilow a safe Retreat after their tedious March They were constrained to avoid the nearest way thither as mountainous boggy besides great Woods in it which would obstruct them in the manner of their motion chusing for the sake of a more even passage to go about by such a way as brought them within a Mile of their desired Harbour The Camp was in perfect order and the Enemy tired with a repetition of fruitless Attempts and labours had forborn to press upon them being content to wait on their motion by a few Scouts only The Poles about the evening of this seventh day of their March continued their Journey according to their former Method and meeting in their Passage with some Barns stored with great quantities of Hay and Corn many of them but without order ran to the Bait to supply themselves with Provisions for their well-nigh-starved Horses In the mean time the Van of the Camp began to march without calling in their Forragers or giving notice as they ought and used to the Rear of their motion The Rear for want of the accustomed Signe being thus separated from the Main Body was seized on by a sudden horror and pannick fear which having laid hold on some was like Wild-fire carried through all Their apprehensions were various but all upon the account of fear heightned by the darkness and imaginary noises concluding their Van was cut off and that the Sword was at their Throats The same plague being spread over the rest of the Army infected the whole in a moment with its contagion whereupon the Carters Waggon-men Pedees and Servants imploy'd about the Carriages unloosed the Horses to serve themselves by flight upon them so that the whole Fabrick and Machine of the Camp being dissolved they could move no further There was yet another cause at least contributary to these Evils Upon the departure of Gratian and other Fugitives from the Camp at Cicora the Raskality of the Army with a mixture of Souldiers robbed and plundered their Tents and Lodgings whereof the Officers in that juncture durst not be over-inquisitive but being got on the Banks of the River Tire they began to speak of it and Koninkspolski the Lieutenant-General had that very evening improvidently enough let fall some threatning expressions concerning it The number of the guilty being many they began to think of their proper safety and the avoiding that punishment which if they stood to it would fall upon them they therefore in great numbers fled away from their friends as well as their foes These wretches having begun a Tumult upon this occasion the same was seconded by the dividing of the Camp as is before declared The confusion was so great that Zolkievius and the chief Officers about him could not be heard the variety of noises with the apprehension of the danger and the darkness of the night rendring the Army deaf to all his Commands and Orders The Tartars being by their Scouts advertised of these Tumults failed not to hasten thither and working upon the advantage given them by the Poles prepared to it by their own fears fell in among them with shouts and terror Zolkievius had Commanded that for the better safety of the Quarters and encouraging of the Souldiers all men should quit their Horses and march on foot wherein himself was the first example which was the reason that so many of the Chief Commanders fell and were taken in that encounter for when the Rout was become so universal that all resistance was to no purpose they perished upon the place for want of Horses to carry them off except such as escaped by swimming and so got away Zolkievius his Son with his Nephew and Strusius the two former being weak of their Wounds and forsaken by their Coachmen were made Prisoners and presented to the Tartarian Galga Zolkievius had before taken an eternal Farewel of his Son and then having made a short Confession to his Ghostly Father was lost in the confusion but found dead next morning upon the skirts of the Camp some say he caused himself to be killed by one of his Followers a Cossack chusing rather to perish with his Army than fall into the Enemies hands or survive his own glory But the Wounds in his Sword-hand on his Face and Breast and a Tartarian laid dead along by him seem to declare that he was killed fighting However it was Skinder Bassa caused his Head to be cut off and fixed upon a Pike exposing it for that day to the view of his whole Army and afterwards to be sent to the Grand Seignior his Master as a Testimony of his Victory The Lieutenant-General Corecki the young Zolkievius with the other Prisoners of Quality were sent to Constantinople where after a three years imprisonment they were ransomed and returned to their own Country And thus like a Ship after a long voyage sunk in the harbour Zolkievius having through all the accidents of his Life proceeded regularly from the Quality of a private Souldier to the Supreme Command of an Army was raised by his own Virtue to those Honours which rendered him eminent in those parts of the World Neither was there any thing wanting to compleat his Glory besides the Success of this Retreat which was reduced to that point that there wanted but two hours space to render him eminent amongst the most illustrious Captains of Antiquity It is held of all hands
that the most difficult part of Military Service is in the right conduct of a Retreat and it may be judged hard measure to deny Zolkievius the Honour of having acquitted himself well in that particular since he had brought it within view of the Harbour but as the Honour of the Success would have been entirely his had he prospered so his Memory must be patient of this Cloud drawn over the lustre of it by the failing of some mean Officer in omitting to give the Signal of his March But here did he fall and was laid upon the Bed of Honour in the extremity of his Age refusing to live when he could not do it gloriously Skinder Bassa either grown uneasie by the accession of this Victory or that some Great Ones at Court were unworthily emulous of his Glory had contracted many Enemies near the Grand Seignior who upon all occasions did him ill offices but finding that Infection to work slowly they corrupted some of his nearest Servants who by the Infusion of Poyson in his Drinks destroyed him suddenly so that he did not long survive the unfortunate Zolkievius being in this more unfortunate that he died in the quality of a Criminal and that no certain account can be given of him but that he died in the year 1620. And having by this digression given the Reader a short survey of this great Action which wanted only one moment more of Success to render it the most glorious that any Age had produced we will return to the continuation of our History where we left which was the condition of the Polish Garrison in the Palace of Musko who being grown weary with their unprofitable strivings had taken a rise from their ill Pay to propose Terms for their dismission Their General Goziowski used all his Arts to quiet them and having the Treasure of the Empire in his possession he resolved to Sacrifice that to their Avarice There was amongst other things in the Treasury a Statue of our SAVIOVR of the bigness of a man weighing C C C lib. of massive Gold which the Souldiers mangled into parcels not making their dividend so exactly by Rule but that every one got what he could Basilius Zuiski in his short Reign had destroyed the Twelve Apostles being composed of the same Mettle and largeness And this part of the Polish Army despairing of relief were become careless of that Representation of Christ which by the practice of the Church of Rome they were used to worship Their General having by this and other dividends out of the Treasury appeased though not satisfied his Army for the present though what by an equal estimate migh● have sufficed all they bargained for but a● part of their Recompence he was industrious in all his other Contrivances for their satisfaction as well as safety H● caused counterfeit Letters to be brough● him from the King of Poland with Promises of a powerful relief in short time and that his Souldiers might not be disused to beat the Muskovites he made frequent advantageous Sallies upon them There was in that part of the City which had been wasted by the fire a house in which the Magazine of Salt had been laid up which having escaped the fury of that merciless Element was become a considerable Commodity to both Parties It lay more under the Command of the Poles than the City but Gariowski because he would have somewhat for his Army to do forbore to bring it in to his Garrison but as he had daily use for it this gave his men constant imployment for what between their own wants and those of the Enemy they had perpetual Skirmishes wherein for the most part they came off with the advantage but that the wasting of their men was an incurable evil for which they had no remedy Gariowski made use of all his Arts and had recourse to yet other Finesses he laid a train for the destruction of Lepanow the Russian General by causing Letters to be dispersed in his name into the several Provinces requiring them to Massacre all the Dunensian Cossacks in their Quarters as designing a Revolt and too passionately promoters of the interest of Demetrius to which they had always adhered One of these Packets being put into Sidorus his hand he was General of the Cossacks so terrified him that believing what he feared and too sensible of the danger he resolv'd to prevent it in order whereto having consulted the Principal Officers in so weighty an affair they all concluded to anticipate their own Fate by Lepanow's fall and immediately thereupon mutined their Souldiers transported with the apprehension of their imaginary peril whereupon Lepanow running to appease the Tumult being no way warned of his own danger was overpowred and slain upon the place The General being thus removed the Muskovites gave the Command of their Army to Trubecius who being more wary of the Artifices of Gaziowski which by this time had taken air caused some of his Emissaries who were found tampering afresh with the Cossacks to be seised upon and to render the cheat more publike had them put to death with exquisite Torments And after the Kings departure from Smolensko applied himself so vigorously in prosecution of the Siege pressing so hard upon the Poles that he shut them up close within their Fortifications And now they were out of all hope of any relief and so closely pent up that they began to want every thing necessary for their subsistance They endured these hardships seven full weeks after which time they were delivered by a Miracle on the 15th of August as one of their Priests had foretold Before they were reduced to this narrow compass they had sent all their Boys and Servants out to the number of betwixt three and four thousand upon a Party for forrage These by the time of their return found all the Avenues shut up At first they were upon thoughts of retiring and shifting for themselves until detained with the shame of abandoning their Masters without attempting their relief they took new courage and resolutions to endeavour to force the Passage Being thus animated having some Souldiers amongst them they drew up into as large a front as they could extending their Wings to a great distance and advancing up within sight of the Leaguer upon that side where the Moska runs put themselves into a posture to pass it which they did without opposition and were received into the Fortress with the acclamations of the Besieged and the congratulations of their Masters The Russians had been surprized with this unexpected relief as they termed it and having had no room left in their apprehensions for the exercise of their courage concluded that the whole force of Poland was at their backs which obliged them to quit their Trenches on that side of the Town and leave an open and uninterrupted Passage for the Boys to enter at The Besieged taking the opportunity of their Enemies fears made a seasonable Sally whereby they