LETTER FROM KING JOHN SOBIESKI OF POLAND TO HIS WIFE
(1683)
The immortal God, (to whom Honour and Glory be Ascribed for Ever) has Blest us with so
Signal a Victory, as scarce the Memory of Man can Equal: The Enemy was not only
content to Raise the Siege of Vienna, and Leave us Masters of the Field;
But also of all their Cannon, and Tents, with Inestimable Treasure, and clim'd over Mountains of Carcasses made by their own Body's
in the Flight. My Eyes were never Blest before with so delightful a Prospect as
to see my Soldiers follow here a great Drove of their Sheep and Oxen, and there
a much greater Herd of Turkish Captives; Nor my Ear's e're Charm'd with so pleasing Musick, as the Howlings and Dying
Groans of these Miserable Wretches: So great was their Hast, that the Prime Visier almost alone and forsaken of all, was forc't without the Ceremony of his Turbant,
to take his Flight; But yet he left me Heir to his Tent and Riches whith were shewn me by a Renegado of his own Retinue.
I have Presented the
Turkish Standard to His Holyness, who was
Instrumental no less by His Money, than His Prayers, to their Overthrow. The
Prime Vizor's Horse with all his Trappings, I reserv'd for my self; And tho he was so Fortunate in his Flight to Escape us, yet his
Caymecam, or Lieutenant-General, with some of the
most Considerable Bassa's [Pashas] fell by
our Swords; But the approaching Night put a Stop to our Pursuit, and their
Slaughter. Those Janizaries which were left behind in
the Mines and Trenches, we thought not worth the dulling of our Swords,
there-fore we made but one Funeral Pile for 'em all,
and Burnt 'em.
In that Action there were about Thirty
Thousand Turks kill'd; besides Tartars, and
One Hundred Thousand Tents taken. Our Souldiers, and
the Burghers of Vienna, were Two whole Nights,
and One Day, in Rifling their Tents and Body's, and I believe a Week would
scarce suffice to finish it.
The Rarities which were found in the Prime Vizor's Tent, were no less Numerous than Strange and
Surprising, as very curious Parrots, and some Birds of Paradise, with all his Banio's [baths], and Fountains, and some Ostriches, which
he Chose rather to Kill, than let 'em fall Alive into
our Hands; Nay his Dispair and Jealousy transported
him so far, as to Destroy his very Women for the same Reason.
The whole Army Attributes the Glory of this
Victory to God, and Us, and all the Princes of the Empire, with the Great
Officers, as the Dukes of Bavaria and Lorrain, Prince Waldek, etc. were so far transported with my Valour and Success, that their Thanks and Praises were more
Numerous, than was their Fears before; and Count Staremberg
the Governour, Saluted me with the Title of his
Mighty Deliverer. The Common People in my going to and from the Churches, pay'd their Veneration even to my very Garments, and made
their Cry's and Acclamations reach the Sky, of Long Live the King of Poland.
In the Battel we Lost some of our Friends, as Prince Halicki,
and the Treasurer of our Household. The Reverend Marinus
Daviano, heapt on me
his Pray'rs and Blessings, and told me he saw a White
Dove fluttering o're the Army, which he look'd upon as an happy Augure of
our Victory.
We are now on our March towards Hungary; taking
the Advantage of their Distraction, to Defeat the Remainder of their scatter'd Troops, and Surprize Gran
or Newheufell. I have all the
Princes of the Empire my Companions in this Enterprise, who tell me they are
ready to follow such a Leader not only into Hungary, but to the End of
the World.
The Prime Vizor
being unable to put a Stop to our Pursuit, told his Eldest Son Mahomet Han, That
he must now bid Adieu to all his Greatness, and never expect to be in Safety,
whilst their Lye's one Stone upon another in the Walls of Vienna, but
withal bid him hasten to the Grand Seignor and Demand
a Speedy Succour, to whom his Son Reply'd,
That he knew him too well for that, and there was nothing for 'em now to Rely on but their Flight.
I am just now going to take Horse, and all my
way for Two Hungarian Miles together, are so strew'd
with the Carcasses of Men, Horses, and Camels, that the Stench of 'em would be insupportable to any but a Soldier.
I have sent several Dispatches to Foreign
Princes to give Notice of this Action, but the King of France was
forgotten.
I Rejoyce to see
our Son Alexander of so Clear and Undanted a
Courage who always stuck to me in my most iminent
Dangers: and made the first onset on a Body of Turkish Spahn [cavalry], with that Courage
that he put 'em soon to flight, and Receiv'd the Applauses of the whole Army. He has Contracted
a very Intimate Friend-ship with the young Duke of Bavaria with whom he
equally devided the spoyl,
This Prince has been very Assiduous in his Services to me; therefore I have
presented him three of my Horses, the Bassa of Egypt's
Tent and Standard, and ten Pieces of Cannon. To his
Sister the Dauphiness, a Locket of Diamonds. Yet there Remains such heaps of their Colours
and Symeters in our possession as are not to be numbred.
All my Countrey men
March't with the same Bravery to the Relief of Vienna,
as the Souldiers of Godfrey of Bullein did to the Holy Land, and the miraculous
Cross that you presented me with (which was his Companion in that Expedition) pI Believe Contributed no less to our Victory.
Thanks be to
Heaven, now the Half-Moon Triumphs no longer o're the
Cross, And 'twas thrown down from St. Stephen's Steeple in Vienna (whom
it had o'retopt so long) immediately on the Defeat:
Neither have the Turks any occasion to upbraid us with their Blasphemous
Mahometan Proverb. Ye Christians where is Your
God?