Ratisbon's fast in the clutch of the foe.?Yet, the army lies here in Bohemia still,?And caring for naught, so their paunches they fill!?Bottles far rather than battles you'll get,?And your bills than your broad-swords more readily wet;?With the wenches, I ween, is your dearest concern,?And you'd rather roast oxen than Oxenstiern.?In sackcloth and ashes while Christendom's grieving,?No thought has the soldier his guzzle of leaving.?'Tis a time of misery, groans, and tears!?Portentous the face of the heavens appears!?And forth from the clouds behold blood-red,?The Lord's war-mantle is downward spread--?While the comet is thrust as a threatening rod,?From the window of heaven by the hand of God.?The world is but one vast house of woe,?The ark of the church stems a bloody flow,?The Holy Empire--God help the same!?Has wretchedly sunk to a hollow name.?The Rhine's gay stream has a gory gleam,?The cloister's nests are robbed by roysters;?The church-lands now are changed to lurch-lands;?Abbacies, and all other holy foundations?Now are but robber-sees--rogues' habitations.?And thus is each once-blest German state,?Deep sunk in the gloom of the desolate!?Whence comes all this? Oh, that will I tell--?It comes of your doings, of sin, and of hell;?Of the horrible, heathenish lives ye lead,?Soldiers and officers, all of a breed.?For sin is the magnet, on every hand,?That draws your steel throughout the land!?As the onion causes the tear to flow,?So vice must ever be followed by woe--?The W duly succeeds the V,?This is the order of A, B, C.?Ubi erit victoriae spes,?Si offenditur Deus? which says,?How, pray ye, shall victory e'er come to pass,?If thus you play truant from sermon and mass,?And do nothing but lazily loll o'er the glass??The woman, we're told in the Testament,?Found the penny in search whereof she went.?Saul met with his father's asses again,?And Joseph his precious fraternal train,?But he, who 'mong soldiers shall hope to see?God's fear, or shame, or discipline--he?From his toil, beyond doubt, will baffled return,?Though a hundred lamps in the search he burn.?To the wilderness preacher, th' Evangelist says,?The soldiers, too, thronged to repent of their ways,?And had themselves christened in former days.?Quid faciemus nos? they said:?Toward Abraham's bosom what path must we tread??Et ait illis, and, said he,?Neminem concutiatis;?From bother and wrongs leave your neighbors free.?Neque calumniam faciatis;?And deal nor in slander nor lies, d'ye see??Contenti estote--content ye, pray,?Stipendiis vestris--with your pay--?And curse forever each evil way.?There is a command--thou shalt not utter?The name of the Lord thy God in vain;?But, where is it men most blasphemies mutter??Why here, in Duke Friedland's headquarters, 'tie plain?If for every thunder, and every blast,?Which blazing ye from your tongue-points cast,?The bells were but rung, in the country round,?Not a bellman, I ween, would there soon be found;?And if for each and every unholy prayer?Which to vent from your jabbering jaws you dare,?From your noddles were plucked but the smallest hair,?Ev'ry crop would be smoothed ere the sun went down,?Though at morn 'twere as bushy as Absalom's crown.?Now, Joshua, methinks, was a soldier as well--?By the arm of King David the Philistine fell;?But where do we find it written, I pray,?That they ever blasphemed in this villanous way??One would think ye need stretch your jaws no more,?To cry, "God help us!" than "Zounds!" to roar.?But, by the liquor that's poured in the cask, we know?With what it will bubble and overflow.?Again, it is written--thou shalt not steal,?And this you follow, i'faith! to the letter,?For open-faced robbery suits ye better.?The gripe of your vulture claws you fix?On all--and your wiles and rascally tricks?Make the gold unhid in our coffers now,?And the calf unsafe while yet in the cow--?Ye take both the egg and the hen, I vow.?Contenti estote--the preacher said;?Which means--be content with your army bread.?But how should the slaves not from duty swerve??The mischief begins with the lord they serve,?Just like the members so is the head.?I should like to know who can tell me his creed.
FIRST YAGER.?Sir priest, 'gainst ourselves rail on as you will--?Of the general we warn you to breathe no ill.
CAPUCHIN.?Ne custodias gregem meam!?An Ahab is he, and a Jerobeam,?Who the people from faith's unerring way,?To the worship of idols would turn astray,
TRUMPETER and RECRUIT.?Let us not hear that again, we pray.
CAPUCHIN.?Such a Bramarbas, whose iron tooth?Would seize all the strongholds of earth forsooth!?Did he not boast, with ungodly tongue,?That Stralsund must needs to his grasp be wrung,?Though to heaven itself with a chain 'twere strung?
TRUMPETER.?Will none put a stop to his slanderous bawl?
CAPUCHIN.?A wizard he is!--and a sorcerer Saul!--?Holofernes!--a Jehu!--denying, we know,?Like St. Peter, his Master and Lord below;?And hence must he quail when the cock doth crow--
BOTH YAGERS.?Now, parson, prepare; for thy doom is nigh.
CAPUCHIN.?A fox more cunning than Herod, I trow--
TRUMPETER and both YAGERS (pressing against him).?Silence, again,--if thou wouldst not die!
CROATS (interfering.)?Stick to it, father; we'll shield you, ne'er fear;?The close of your
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