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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ History of Friedrich II. Of Prussia, Volume X. by Thomas Carlyle
+ </title>
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol.
+X. (of XXI.), by Thomas Carlyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol. X. (of XXI.)
+ Frederick The Great--At Reinsberg--1736-1740
+
+Author: Thomas Carlyle
+
+Release Date: June 13, 2008 [EBook #2110]
+Last Updated: November 30, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by D.R. Thompson and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II OF PRUSSIA
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ FREDERICK THE GREAT <br /> <br /> By Thomas Carlyle
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Volume X.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <div class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <big><b>BOOK X. &mdash; AT REINSBERG. -
+ 1736-1740.</b></big> </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> <b>Chapter I.
+ &mdash; MANSION OF REINSBERG.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> OF MONSIEUR JORDAN AND THE LITERARY SET. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002"> <b>Chapter II. &mdash; OF VOLTAIRE AND THE
+ LITERARY CORRESPONDENCES.</b> </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> <b>Chapter
+ III. &mdash; CROWN-PRINCE MAKES A MORNING CALL.</b> </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0004"> <b>Chapter IV. &mdash; NEWS OF THE DAY.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> OF BERG AND JULICH AGAIN; AND OF LUISCIUS WITH
+ THE ONE RAZOR. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005"> <b>Chapter V. &mdash; VISIT AT LOO.</b>
+ </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> CROWN-PRINCE BECOMES A FREEMASON; AND IS
+ HARANGUED BY MONSIEUR DE BIELFELD. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0011">
+ SECKENDORF GETS LODGED IN GRATZ. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE
+ EAR OF JENKINS RE-EMERGES. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006"> <b>Chapter VI. &mdash; LAST YEAR OF
+ REINSBERG; JOURNEY TO PREUSSEN.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> PINE'S HORACE; AND THE ANTI-MACHIAVEL. </a><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> FRIEDRICH IN PREUSSEN AGAIN; AT THE STUD OF
+ TRAKEHNEN. A TRAGICALLY GREAT EVENT COMING ON. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> <b>Chapter VII. &mdash; LAST YEAR OF
+ REINSBERG: TRANSIT OF BALTIMORE AND OTHER PERSONS AND THINGS.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> BIELFELD, WHAT HE SAW AT REINSBERG AND AROUND.
+ </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> TURK WAR ENDS; SPANISH WAR BEGINS. A
+ WEDDING IN PETERSBURG. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> <b>Chapter VIII. &mdash; DEATH OF FRIEDRICH
+ WILHELM.</b> </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a><br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ BOOK X. &mdash; AT REINSBERG. - 1736-1740.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter I. &mdash; MANSION OF REINSBERG.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the Crown-Prince's Marriage, three years ago, when the AMT or
+ Government-District RUPPIN, with its incomings, was assigned to him for
+ revenue, we heard withal of a residence getting ready. Hint had fallen
+ from the Prince, that Reinsberg, an old Country-seat, standing with its
+ Domain round it in that little Territory of Ruppin, and probably
+ purchasable as was understood, might be pleasant, were it once his and
+ well put in repair. Which hint the kind paternal Majesty instantly
+ proceeded to act upon. He straightway gave orders for the purchase of
+ Reinsberg; concluded said purchase, on fair terms, after some months'
+ bargaining; [23d October, 1733, order given,&mdash;16th March, 1734,
+ purchase completed (Preuss, i. 75).]&mdash;and set his best Architect, one
+ Kemeter, to work, in concert with the Crown-Prince, to new-build and
+ enlarge the decayed Schloss of Reinsberg into such a Mansion as the young
+ Royal Highness and his Wife would like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kemeter has been busy, all this while; a solid, elegant, yet frugal
+ builder: and now the main body of the Mansion is complete, or nearly so,
+ the wings and adjuncts going steadily forward; Mansion so far ready that
+ the Royal Highnesses can take up their abode in it. Which they do, this
+ Autumn, 1736; and fairly commence Joint Housekeeping, in a permanent
+ manner. Hitherto it has been intermittent only: hitherto the
+ Crown-Princess has resided in their Berlin Mansion, or in her own
+ Country-house at Schonhausen; Husband not habitually with her, except when
+ on leave of absence from Ruppin, in Carnival time or for shorter periods.
+ At Ruppin his life has been rather that of a bachelor, or husband abroad
+ on business; up to this time. But now at Reinsberg they do kindle the
+ sacred hearth together; "6th August, 1736," the date of that important
+ event. They have got their Court about them, dames and cavaliers more than
+ we expected; they have arranged the furnitures of their existence here on
+ fit scale, and set up their Lares and Penates on a thrifty footing.
+ Majesty and Queen come out on a visit to them next month; [4th September,
+ 1736 (Ib.).]&mdash;raising the sacred hearth into its first considerable
+ blaze, and crowning the operation in a human manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so there has a new epoch arisen for the Crown-Prince and his Consort.
+ A new, and much-improved one. It lasted into the fourth year; rather
+ improving all the way: and only Kingship, which, if a higher sphere, was a
+ far less pleasant one, put an end to it. Friedrich's happiest time was
+ this at Reinsberg; the little Four Years of Hope, Composure, realizable
+ Idealism: an actual snatch of something like the Idyllic, appointed him in
+ a life-pilgrimage consisting otherwise of realisms oftenest contradictory
+ enough, and sometimes of very grim complexion. He is master of his work,
+ he is adjusted to the practical conditions set him; conditions once
+ complied with, daily work done, he lives to the Muses, to the spiritual
+ improvements, to the social enjoyments; and has, though not without flaws
+ of ill-weather,&mdash;from the Tobacco-Parliament perhaps rather less than
+ formerly, and from the Finance-quarter perhaps rather more,&mdash;a sunny
+ time. His innocent insipidity of a Wife, too, appears to have been happy.
+ She had the charm of youth, of good looks; a wholesome perfect loyalty of
+ character withal; and did not "take to pouting," as was once apprehended
+ of her, but pleasantly gave and received of what was going. This poor
+ Crown-Princess, afterwards Queen, has been heard, in her old age,
+ reverting, in a touching transient way, to the glad days she had at
+ Reinsberg. Complaint openly was never heard from her, in any kind of days;
+ but these doubtless were the best of her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reinsberg, we said, is in the AMT Ruppin; naturally under the
+ Crown-Prince's government at present: the little Town or Village of
+ Reinsberg stands about, ten miles north of the Town Ruppin;&mdash;not
+ quite a third-part as big as Ruppin is in our time, and much more
+ pleasantly situated. The country about is of comfortable, not
+ unpicturesque character; to be distinguished almost as beautiful, in that
+ region of sand and moor. Lakes abound in it; tilled fields; heights called
+ "hills;" and wood of fair growth,&mdash;one reads of "beech-avenues" of
+ "high linden-avenues:"&mdash;a country rather of the ornamented sort,
+ before the Prince with his improvements settled there. Many lakes and
+ lakelets in it, as usual hereabouts; the loitering waters straggle, all
+ over that region, into meshes of lakes. Reinsberg itself, Village and
+ Schloss, stands on the edge of a pleasant Lake, last of a mesh of such:
+ the SUMMARY, or outfall, of which, already here a good strong brook or
+ stream, is called the RHEIN, Rhyn or Rein; and gives name to the little
+ place. We heard of the Rein at Ruppin: it is there counted as a kind of
+ river; still more, twenty miles farther down, where it falls into the
+ Havel, on its way to the Elbe. The waters, I think, are drab-colored, not
+ peat-brown: and here, at the source, or outfall from that mesh of lakes,
+ where Reinsberg is, the country seems to be about the best;&mdash;sufficient,
+ in picturesqueness and otherwise, to satisfy a reasonable man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Town is very old; but, till the Crown-Prince settled there, had
+ no peculiar vitality in it. I think there are now some potteries,
+ glass-manufactories: Friedrich Wilhelm, just while the Crown-Prince was
+ removing thither, settled a first Glass-work there; which took good root,
+ and rose to eminence in the crystal, Bohemian-crystal, white-glass,
+ cut-glass, and other commoner lines, in the Crown-Prince's time. [<i>Bescheibung
+ des Lutschlosses &amp;c. zu Reinsberg</i> (Berlin, 1788); Author, a
+ "Lieutenant Hennert," thoroughly acquainted with his subject.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reinsberg stands on the east or southeast side of its pretty Lake: Lake is
+ called "the GRINERICK SEE" (as all those remote Lakes have their names);
+ Mansion is between the Town and Lake. A Mansion fronting, we may say, four
+ ways; for it is of quadrangular form, with a wet moat from the Lake
+ begirdling it, and has a spacious court for interior: but the principal
+ entrance is from the Town side; for the rest, the Building is ashlar on
+ all sides, front and rear. Stands there, handsomely abutting on the Lake
+ with two Towers, a Tower at each angle, which it has on that lakeward
+ side; and looks, over Reinsberg, and its steeple rising amid friendly
+ umbrage which hides the house-tops, towards the rising sun. Townward there
+ is room for a spacious esplanade; and then for the stables, outbuildings,
+ well masked; which still farther shut off the Town. To this day, Reinsberg
+ stands with the air of a solid respectable Edifice; still massive,
+ rain-tight, though long since deserted by the Princeships,&mdash;by
+ Friedrich nearly sixscore years ago, and nearly threescore by Prince
+ Henri, Brother of Friedrich's, who afterwards had it. Last accounts I got
+ were, of talk there had risen of planting an extensive NORMAL-SCHOOL
+ there; which promising plan had been laid aside again for the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old Schloss, residence of the Bredows and other feudal people for a
+ long while, had good solid masonry in it, and around it orchards, potherb
+ gardens; which Friedrich Wilhelm's Architects took good care to extend and
+ improve, not to throw away: the result of their art is what we see, a
+ beautiful Country-House, what might be called a Country-Palace with all
+ its adjuncts;&mdash;and at a rate of expense which would fill English
+ readers, of this time, with amazement. Much is admirable to us as we study
+ Reinsberg, what it had been, what it became, and how it was made; but
+ nothing more so than the small modicum of money it cost. To our wondering
+ thought, it seems as if the shilling, in those parts, were equal to the
+ guinea in these; and the reason, if we ask it, is by no means flattering
+ altogether. "Change in the value of money?" Alas, reader, no; that is not
+ above the fourth part of the phenomenon. Three-fourths of the phenomenon
+ are change in the methods of administering money,&mdash;difference between
+ managing it with wisdom and veracity on both sides, and managing it with
+ unwisdom and mendacity on both sides. Which is very great indeed; and
+ infinitely sadder than any one, in these times, will believe!&mdash;But we
+ cannot dwell on this consideration. Let the reader take it with him, as a
+ constant accompaniment in whatever work of Friedrich Wilhelm's or of
+ Friedrich his Son's, he now or at any other time may be contemplating.
+ Impious waste, which means disorder and dishonesty, and loss of much other
+ than money to all, parties,&mdash;disgusting aspect of human creatures,
+ master and servant, working together as if they were not human,&mdash;will
+ be spared him in those foreign departments; and in an English heart
+ thoughts will arise, perhaps, of a wholesome tendency, though very sad, as
+ times are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would but weary the reader to describe this Crown-Prince Mansion;
+ which, by desperate study of our abstruse materials, it is possible to do
+ with auctioneer minuteness. There are engraved VIEWS of Reinsberg and its
+ Environs; which used to lie conspicuous in the portfolios of collectors,&mdash;-which
+ I have not seen. [See Hennert, just cited, for the titles of them.] Of the
+ House itself, engraved Frontages (FACADES), Ground-plans, are more
+ accessible; and along with them, descriptions which are little
+ descriptive,&mdash;wearisomely detailed, and as it were dark by excess of
+ light (auctioneer light) thrown on them. The reader sees, in general, a
+ fine symmetrical Block of Buildings, standing in rectangular shape, in the
+ above locality;&mdash;about two hundred English feet, each, the two longer
+ sides measure, the Townward and the Lakeward, on their outer front: about
+ a hundred and thirty, each, the two shorter; or a hundred and fifty,
+ taking in their Towers just spoken of. The fourth or Lakeward side,
+ however, which is one of the longer pair, consists mainly of "Colonnade;"
+ spacious Colonnade "with vases and statues;" catching up the outskirts of
+ said Towers, and handsomely uniting everything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond doubt, a dignified, substantial pile of stone-work; all of good
+ proportions. Architecture everywhere of cheerfully serious, solidly
+ graceful character; all of sterling ashlar; the due RISALITES (projecting
+ spaces) with their attics and statues atop, the due architraves, cornices
+ and corbels,&mdash;in short the due opulence of ornament being introduced,
+ and only the due. Genuine sculptors, genuine painters, artists have been
+ busy; and in fact all the suitable fine arts, and all the necessary solid
+ ones, have worked together, with a noticeable fidelity, comfortable to the
+ very beholder to this day. General height is about forty feet; two stories
+ of ample proportions: the Towers overlooking them are sixty feet in
+ height. Extent of outer frontage, if you go all round, and omit the
+ Colonnade, will be five hundred feet and more: this, with the rearward
+ face, is a thousand feet of room frontage:&mdash;fancy the extent of
+ lodging space. For "all the kitchens and appurtenances are underground;"
+ the "left front" (which is a new part of the Edifice) rising comfortably
+ over these. Windows I did not count; but they must go high up into the
+ Hundreds. No end to lodging space. Way in a detached side-edifice
+ subsequently built, called Cavalier House, I read of there being, for one
+ item, "fifty lodging rooms," and for another "a theatre." And if an
+ English Duke of Trumps were to look at the bills for all that, his
+ astonishment would be extreme, and perhaps in a degree painful and
+ salutary to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one of these Towers the Crown-Prince has his Library: a beautiful
+ apartment; nothing wanting to it that the arts could furnish, "ceiling
+ done by Pesne" with allegorical geniuses and what not,&mdash;looks out on
+ mere sky, mere earth and water in an ornamental state: silent as in
+ Elysium. It is there we are to fancy the Correspondence written, the
+ Poetries and literary industries going on. There, or stepping down for a
+ turn in the open air, or sauntering meditatively under the Colonnade with
+ its statues and vases (where weather is no object), one commands the Lake,
+ with its little tufted Islands, "Remus Island" much famed among them, and
+ "high beech-woods" on the farther side. The Lake is very pretty, all say;
+ lying between you and the sunset;&mdash;with perhaps some other lakelet,
+ or solitary pool in the wilderness, many miles away, "revealing itself as
+ a cup of molten gold," at that interesting moment. What the
+ Book-Collection was, in the interior, I know not except by mere guess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Crown-Princess's Apartment, too, which remained unaltered at the last
+ accounts had of it, [From Hennert, namely, in 1778.] is very fine;&mdash;take
+ the anteroom for specimen: "This fine room," some twenty feet height of
+ ceiling, "has six windows; three of them, in the main front, looking
+ towards the Town, the other three, towards the Interior Court. The light
+ from these windows is heightened by mirrors covering all the piers
+ (SCHAFTE, interspaces of the walls), to an uncommonly splendid pitch; and
+ shows the painting of the ceiling, which again is by the famous Pesne, to
+ much perfection. The Artist himself, too, has managed to lay on his colors
+ there so softly, and with such delicate skill, that the light-beams seem
+ to prolong themselves in the painted clouds and air, as if it were the
+ real sky you had overhead." There in that cloud-region "Mars is being
+ disarmed by the Love-goddesses, and they are sporting with his weapons. He
+ stretches out his arm towards the Goddess, who looks upon him with fond
+ glances. Cupids are spreading out a draping." That is Pesne's luxurious
+ performance in the ceiling.&mdash;"Weapon-festoons, in basso-relievo,
+ gilt, adorn the walls of this room; and two Pictures, also by Pesne, which
+ represent, in life size, the late King and Queen [our good friends
+ Friedrich Wilhelm and his Sophie], are worthy of attention. Over each of
+ the doors, you find in low-relief the Profiles of Hannibal, Pompey,
+ Scipio, Caesar, introduced as Medallions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this is very fine; but all this is little to another ceiling, in some
+ big Saloon elsewhere, Music-saloon, I think: Black Night, making off, with
+ all her sickly dews, at one end of the ceiling; and at the other end, the
+ Steeds of Phoebus bursting forth, and the glittering shafts of Day,&mdash;with
+ Cupids, Love-goddesses, War-gods, not omitting Bacchus and his vines, all
+ getting beautifully awake in consequence. A very fine room indeed;&mdash;used
+ as a Music-saloon, or I know not what,&mdash;and the ceiling of it almost
+ an ideal, say the connoisseurs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Endless gardens, pavilions, grottos, hermitages, orangeries, artificial
+ ruins, parks and pleasances surround this favored spot and its Schloss;
+ nothing wanting in it that a Prince's establishment needs,&mdash;except
+ indeed it be hounds, for which this Prince never had the least demand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Except the old Ruppin duties, which imply continual journeyings thither,
+ distance only a morning's ride; except these, and occasional commissions
+ from Papa, Friedrich is left master of his time and pursuits in this new
+ Mansion. There are visits to Potsdam, periodical appearances at Berlin;
+ some Correspondence to keep the Tobacco-Parliament in tune. But
+ Friedrich's taste is for the Literatures, Philosophies: a&mdash;young
+ Prince bent seriously to cultivate his mind; to attain some clear
+ knowledge of this world, so all-important to him. And he does seriously
+ read, study and reflect a good deal; his main recreations, seemingly, are
+ Music, and the converse of well-informed, friendly men. In Music we find
+ him particularly rich. Daily, at a fixed hour of the afternoon, there is
+ concert held; the reader has seen in what kind of room: and if the Artists
+ entertained here for that function were enumerated (high names, not yet
+ forgotten in the Musical world), it would still more astonish readers. I
+ count them to the number of twenty or nineteen; and mention only that "the
+ two Brothers Graun" and "the two Brothers Benda" were of the lot;
+ suppressing four other Fiddlers of eminence, and "a Pianist who is known
+ to everybody." [Hennert, p. 21.] The Prince has a fine sensibility to
+ Music: does himself, with thrilling adagios on the flute, join in these
+ harmonious acts; and, no doubt, if rightly vigilant against the Nonsenses,
+ gets profit, now and henceforth, from this part of his resources.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He has visits, calls to make, on distinguished persons within reach; he
+ has much Correspondence, of a Literary or Social nature. For instance,
+ there is Suhm the Saxon Envoy translating <i>Wolf's Philosophy</i> into
+ French for him; sending it in fascicles; with endless Letters to and from,
+ upon it,&mdash;which were then highly interesting, but are now dead to
+ every reader. The Crown-Prince has got a Post-Office established at
+ Reinsberg; leathern functionary of some sort comes lumbering round,
+ southward, "from the Mecklenburg quarter twice a week, and goes by
+ Fehrbellin," for the benefit of his Correspondences. Of his calls in the
+ neighborhood, we mean to show the reader one sample, before long; and only
+ one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are Lists given us of the Prince's "Court" at Reinsberg; and one
+ reads, and again reads, the dreariest unmemorable accounts of them; but
+ cannot, with all one's industry, attain any definite understanding of what
+ they were employed in, day after day, at Reinsberg:&mdash;still more are
+ their salaries and maintenance a mystery to us, in that frugal
+ establishment. There is Wolden for Hofmarschall, our old Custrin friend;
+ there is Colonel Senning, old Marlborough Colonel with the wooden leg, who
+ taught Friedrich his drillings and artillery-practices in boyhood, a fine
+ sagacious old gentleman this latter. There is a M. Jordan, Ex-Preacher, an
+ ingenious Prussian-Frenchman, still young, who acts as "Reader and
+ Librarian;" of whom we shall hear a good deal more. "Intendant" is Captain
+ (Ex-Captain) Knobelsdorf; a very sensible accomplished man, whom we saw
+ once at Baireuth; who has been to Italy since, and is now returned with
+ beautiful talents for Architecture: it is he that now undertakes the
+ completing of Reinsberg, [Hennert, p. 29.] which he will skilfully
+ accomplish in the course of the next three years. Twenty Musicians on wind
+ or string; Painters, Antoine Pesne but one of them; Sculptors, Glume and
+ others of eminence; and Hof-Cavaliers, to we know not what extent:&mdash;how
+ was such a Court kept up, in harmonious free dignity, and no halt in its
+ finances, or mean pinch of any kind visible? The Prince did get in debt;
+ but not deep, and it was mainly for the tall recruits he had to purchase.
+ His money-accounts are by no means fully known to me: but I should
+ question if his expenditure (such is my guess) ever reached 3,000 pounds a
+ year; and am obliged to reflect more and more, as the ancient Cato did,
+ what an admirable revenue frugality is!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the Cavaliers, I find, for one thing, were of the Regiment Goltz;
+ that was one evident economy. "Rittmeister van Chasot," as the Books call
+ him: readers saw that Chasot flying to Prince Eugene, and know him since
+ the Siege of Philipsburg. He is not yet Rittmeister, or Captain of Horse,
+ as he became; but is of the Ruppin Garrison; Hof-Cavalier; "attended
+ Friedrich on his late Prussian journey;" and is much a favorite, when he
+ can be spared from Ruppin. Captain Wylich, afterwards a General of mark;
+ the Lieutenant Buddenbrock who did the parson-charivari at Ruppin, but is
+ now reformed from those practices: all these are of Goltz. Colonel
+ Keyserling, not of Goltz, nor in active military duty here, is a friend of
+ very old standing; was officially named as "Companion" to the Prince, a
+ long while back; and got into trouble on his account in the disastrous
+ Ante-Custrin or Flight Epoch: one of the Prince's first acts, when he got
+ pardoned after Custrin, was to beg for the pardon of this Keyserling; and
+ now he has him here, and is very fond of him. A Courlander, of good
+ family, this Keyserling; of good gifts too,&mdash;which, it was once
+ thought, would be practically sublime; for he carried off all manner of
+ college prizes, and was the Admirable-Crichton of Konigsberg University
+ and the Graduates there. But in the end they proved to be gifts of the
+ vocal sort rather: and have led only to what we see. A man, I should
+ guess, rather of buoyant vivacity than of depth or strength in intellect
+ or otherwise. Excessively buoyant, ingenious; full of wit, kindly
+ exuberance; a loyal-hearted, gay-tempered man, and much a favorite in
+ society as well as with the Prince. If we were to dwell on Reinsberg,
+ Keyserling would come prominently forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major van Stille, ultimately Major-General von Stille, I should also
+ mention: near twenty years older than the Prince; a wise thoughtful
+ soldier (went, by permission, to the Siege of Dantzig lately, to improve
+ himself); a man capable of rugged service, when the time comes. His
+ military writings were once in considerable esteem with professional men;
+ and still impress a lay reader with favorable notions towards Stille, as a
+ man of real worth and sense. [<i>Campagnes du Roi de Prusse;</i>&mdash;a
+ posthumous Book; ANTERIOR to the Seven-Years War.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ OF MONSIEUR JORDAN AND THE LITERARY SET.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is, of course, a Chaplain in the Establishment: a Reverend "M.
+ Deschamps;" who preaches to them all,&mdash;in French no doubt. Friedrich
+ never hears Deschamps: Friedrich is always over at Ruppin on Sundays; and
+ there "himself reads a sermon to the Garrison," as part of the day's
+ duties. Reads finely, in a melodious feeling manner, says Formey, who can
+ judge: "even in his old days, he would incidentally," when some Emeritus
+ Parson, like Formey, chanced to be with him, "roll out choice passages
+ from Bossuet, from Massillon," in a voice and with a look, which would
+ have been perfection in the pulpit, thinks Formey. [<i>Souvenirs d'un
+ Citoyen</i> (2de edition, Paris, 1797), i. 37.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Jordan, though he was called "LECTEUR (Reader)," did not read to him, I
+ can perceive; but took charge of the Books; busied himself honestly to be
+ useful in all manner of literary or quasi-literary ways. He was, as his
+ name indicates, from the French-refugee department; a recent acquisition,
+ much valued at Reinsberg. As he makes a figure afterwards, we had better
+ mark him a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jordan's parents were wealthy religious persons, in trade at Berlin; this
+ Jordan (Charles Etienne, age now thirty-six) was their eldest son. It
+ seems they had destined him from birth, consulting their own pious
+ feelings merely, to be a Preacher of the Gospel; the other sons, all of
+ them reckoned clever too, were brought up to secular employments. And
+ preach he, this poor Charles Etienne, accordingly did; what best Gospel he
+ had; in an honest manner, all say,&mdash;though never with other than a
+ kind of reluctance on the part of Nature, forced out of her course. He had
+ wedded, been clergyman in two successive country places; when his wife
+ died, leaving him one little daughter, and a heart much overset by that
+ event. Friends, wealthy Brothers probably, had pushed him out into the
+ free air, in these circumstances: "Take a Tour; Holland, England; feel the
+ winds blowing, see the sun shining, as in times past: it will do you
+ good!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jordan, in the course of his Tour, came to composure on several points. He
+ found that, by frugality, by wise management of some peculium already his,
+ his little Daughter and he might have quietness at Berlin, and the
+ necessary food and raiment;&mdash;and, on the whole, that he would
+ altogether cease preaching, and settle down there, among his Books, in a
+ frugal manner. Which he did;&mdash;and was living so, when the Prince,
+ searching for that kind of person, got tidings of him. And here he is at
+ Reinsberg; bustling about, in a brisk, modestly frank and cheerful manner:
+ well liked by everybody; by his Master very well and ever better, who grew
+ into real regard, esteem and even friendship for him, and has much
+ Correspondence, of a freer kind than is common to him, with little Jordan,
+ so long as they lived together. Jordan's death, ten years hence, was
+ probably the one considerable pain he had ever given his neighbors, in
+ this the ultimate section of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I find him described, at Reinsberg, as a small nimble figure, of
+ Southern-French aspect; black, uncommonly bright eyes; and a general
+ aspect of adroitness, modesty, sense, sincerity; good prognostics, which
+ on acquaintance with the man were pleasantly fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of these considerations, I fished out, from the Old-Book
+ Catalogues and sea of forgetfulness, some of the poor Books he wrote;
+ especially a <i>Voyage Litteraire,</i> [<i>Histoire d'un Voyage Litteraire
+ fait, en MDCCXXXIII., en France, en Angleterre et en Hollande</i> (2de
+ edition, a La Haye, 1736).] Journal of that first Sanitary Excursion or
+ Tour he took, to get the clouds blown from his mind. A LITERARY VOYAGE
+ which awakens a kind of tragic feeling; being itself dead, and treating of
+ matters which are all gone dead. So many immortal writers, Dutch chiefly,
+ whom Jordan is enabled to report as having effloresced, or being soon to
+ effloresce, in such and such forms, of Books important to be learned:
+ leafy, blossomy Forest of Literature, waving glorious in the then sunlight
+ to Jordan;&mdash;and it lies all now, to Jordan and us, not withered only,
+ but abolished; compressed into a film of indiscriminate PEAT. Consider
+ what that peat is made of, O celebrated or uncelebrated reader, and take a
+ moral from Jordan's Book! Other merit, except indeed clearness and
+ commendable brevity, the <i>Voyage Litteraire</i> or other little Books of
+ Jordan's have not now. A few of his Letters to Friedrich, which exist, are
+ the only writings with the least life left in them, and this an accidental
+ life, not momentous to him or us. Dryasdust informs me, "Abbe Jordan,
+ alone of the Crown-Prince's cavaliers, sleeps in the Town of Reinsberg,
+ not in the Schloss:" and if I ask, Why?&mdash;there is no answer. Probably
+ his poor little Daughterkin was beside him there?&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have to say of Friedrich's Associates, that generally they were of
+ intelligent type, each of them master of something or other, and capable
+ of rational discourse upon that at least. Integrity, loyalty of character,
+ was indispensable; good humor, wit if it could be had, were much in
+ request. There was no man of shining distinction there; but they were the
+ best that could be had, and that is saying all. Friedrich cannot be said,
+ either as Prince or as King, to have been superlatively successful in his
+ choice of associates. With one single exception, to be noticed shortly,
+ there is not one of them whom we should now remember except for
+ Friedrich's sake;&mdash;uniformly they are men whom it is now a weariness
+ to hear of, except in a cursory manner. One man of shining parts he had,
+ and one only; no man ever of really high and great mind. The latter sort
+ are not so easy to get; rarely producible on the soil of this Earth! Nor
+ is it certain how Friedrich might have managed with one of this sort, or
+ he with Friedrich;&mdash;though Friedrich unquestionably would have tried,
+ had the chance offered. For he loved intellect as few men on the throne,
+ or off it, ever did; and the little he could gather of it round him often
+ seems to me a fact tragical rather than otherwise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the outer Berlin social world, acting and reacting, Friedrich has his
+ connections, which obscurely emerge on us now and then. Literary
+ Eminences, who are generally of Theological vesture; any follower of
+ Philosophy, especially if he be of refined manners withal, or known in
+ fashionable life, is sure to attract him; and gains ample recognition at
+ Reinsberg or on Town-visits. But the Berlin Theological or Literary world
+ at that time, still more the Berlin Social, like a sunk extinct object,
+ continues very dim in those old records; and to say truth, what features
+ we have of it do not invite to miraculous efforts for farther
+ acquaintance. Venerable Beausobre, with his <i>History of the Manicheans,
+ [</i>Histoire critique de Manichee et du Manicheisme:<i> wrote also </i>Remarques
+ &amp;c. sur le Nouveau Testament,<i> which were once famous; </i>Histoire
+ de la Reformation;<i> &amp;c. &amp;c. He is Beausobre SENIOR; there were
+ two Sons (one of them born in second wedlock, after Papa was 70), who were
+ likewise given to writing.&mdash;See Formey, </i>Souvenirs d'un Citoyen
+ since, in Toland and the Republican Queen's time, as a light of the world.
+ He is now fourscore, grown white as snow; very serene, polite, with a
+ smack of French noblesse in him, perhaps a smack of affectation traceable
+ too. The Crown-Prince, on one of his Berlin visits, wished to see this
+ Beausobre; got a meeting appointed, in somebody's rooms "in the French
+ College," and waited for the venerable man. Venerable man entered, loftily
+ serene as a martyr Preacher of the Word, something of an ancient Seigneur
+ de Beausobre in him, too; for the rest, soft as sunset, and really with
+ fine radiances, in a somewhat twisted state, in that good old mind of his.
+ "What have you been reading lately, M. de Beausobre?" said the Prince, to
+ begin conversation. "Ah, Monseigneur, I have just risen from reading the
+ sublimest piece of writing that exists."&mdash;"And what?" "The exordium
+ of St. John's Gospel: <i>In the Beginning was the Word; and the Word was
+ with God, and the Word was&mdash;"</i> Which somewhat took the Prince by
+ surprise, as Formey reports; though he rallied straightway, and got good
+ conversation out of the old gentleman. To whom, we perceive, he writes
+ once or twice, [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> 121-126. Dates are all of
+ 1737; the last of Beausobre's years.]&mdash;a copy of his own verses to
+ correct, on one occasion,&mdash;and is very respectful and considerate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formey tells us of another French sage, personally known to the Prince
+ since Boyhood; for he used to be about the Palace, doing something. This
+ is one La Croze; Professor of, I think, "Philosophy" in the French
+ College: sublime Monster of Erudition, at that time; forgotten now, I
+ fear, by everybody. Swag-bellied, short of wind; liable to rages, to
+ utterances of a coarse nature; a decidedly ugly, monstrous and rather
+ stupid kind of man. Knew twenty languages, in a coarse inexact way.
+ Attempted deep kinds of discourse, in the lecture-room and elsewhere; but
+ usually broke off into endless welters of anecdote, not always of cleanly
+ nature; and after every two or three words, a desperate sigh, not for
+ sorrow, but on account of flabbiness and fat. Formey gives a portraiture
+ of him; not worth copying farther. The same Formey, standing one day
+ somewhere on the streets of Berlin, was himself, he cannot doubt, SEEN by
+ the Crown-Prince in passing; "who asked M. Jordan, who that was," and got
+ answer:&mdash;is not that a comfortable fact? Nothing farther came of it;&mdash;respectable
+ Ex-Parson Formey, though ever ready with his pen, being indeed of very
+ vapid nature, not wanted at Reinsberg, as we can guess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is M. Achard, too, another Preacher, supreme of his sort, in the
+ then Berlin circles; to whom or from whom a Letter or two exist. Letters
+ worthless, if it were not for one dim indication: That, on inquiry, the
+ Crown-Prince had been consulting this supreme Achard on the difficulties
+ of Orthodoxy; [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xvi. pp. 112-117: date,
+ March-June, 1736.] and had given him texts, or a text, to preach from.
+ Supreme Achard did not abolish the difficulties for his inquiring Prince,&mdash;who
+ complains respectfully that "his faith is weak," and leaves us dark as to
+ particulars. This Achard passage is almost the only hint we have of what
+ might have been an important chapter: Friedrich's Religious History at
+ Reinsberg. The expression "weak faith" I take to be meant not in mockery,
+ but in ingenuous regret and solicitude; much painful fermentation,
+ probably, on the religious question in those Reinsberg years! But the old
+ "GNADENWAHL" business, the Free-Grace controversy, had taught him to be
+ cautious as to what he uttered on those points. The fermentation,
+ therefore, had to go on under cover; what the result of it was, is
+ notorious enough; though the steps of the process are not in any point
+ known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Enough now of such details. Outwardly or inwardly, there is no History, or
+ almost none, to be had of this Reinsberg Period; the extensive records of
+ it consisting, as usual, mainly of chaotic nugatory matter, opaque to the
+ mind of readers. There is copious correspondence of the Crown-Prince, with
+ at least dates to it for most part: but this, which should be the main
+ resource, proves likewise a poor one; the Crown-Prince's Letters, now or
+ afterwards, being almost never of a deep or intimate quality; and seldom
+ turning on events or facts at all, and then not always on facts
+ interesting, on facts clearly apprehensible to us in that extinct element.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Thing, we know always, IS there; but vision of the Thing is only to be
+ had faintly, intermittently. Dim inane twilight, with here and there a
+ transient SPARK falling somewhither in it;&mdash;you do at last, by
+ desperate persistence, get to discern outlines, features:&mdash;"The Thing
+ cannot always have been No-thing," you reflect! Outlines, features:&mdash;and
+ perhaps, after all, those are mostly what the reader wants on this
+ occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter II. &mdash; OF VOLTAIRE AND THE LITERARY CORRESPONDENCES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One of Friedrich's grand purposes at Reinsberg, to himself privately the
+ grandest there, which he follows with constant loyalty and ardor, is that
+ of scaling the heights of the Muses' Hill withal; of attaining mastership,
+ discipleship, in Art and Philosophy;&mdash;or in candor let us call it,
+ what it truly was, that of enlightening and fortifying himself with clear
+ knowledge, clear belief, on all sides; and acquiring some spiritual
+ panoply in which to front the coming practicalities of life. This, he
+ feels well, will be a noble use of his seclusion in those still places;
+ and it must be owned, he struggles and endeavors towards this, with great
+ perseverance, by all the methods in his power, here, or wherever
+ afterwards he might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here at Reinsberg, one of his readiest methods, his pleasantest if not his
+ usefulest, is that of getting into correspondence with the chief spirits
+ of his time. Which accordingly he forthwith sets about, after getting into
+ Reinsberg, and continues, as we shall see, with much assiduity. Rollin,
+ Fontenelle, and other French lights of the then firmament,&mdash;his
+ Letters to them exist; and could be given in some quantity: but it is
+ better not. They are intrinsically the common Letters on such occasions:
+ "O sublime demi-god of literature, how small are princely distinctions to
+ such a glory as thine; thou who enterest within the veil of the temple,
+ and issuest with thy face shining!"&mdash;To which the response is: "Hm,
+ think you so, most happy, gracious, illustrious Prince, with every
+ convenience round you, and such prospects ahead? Well, thank you, at any
+ rate,&mdash;and, as the Irish say, more power to your Honor's Glory!" This
+ really is nearly all that said Sets of Letters contain; and except perhaps
+ the Voltaire Set, none of them give symptoms of much capacity to contain
+ more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly there was no want of Literary Men discernible from Reinsberg at
+ that time; and the young Prince corresponds with a good many of them;
+ temporal potentate saluting spiritual, from the distance,&mdash;in a way
+ highly interesting to the then parties, but now without interest, except
+ of the reflex kind, to any creature. A very cold and empty portion, this,
+ of the Friedrich Correspondence; standing there to testify what his
+ admiration was for literary talent, or the great reputation of such; but
+ in itself uninstructive utterly, and of freezing influence on the now
+ living mind. Most of those French lights of the then firmament are gone
+ out. Forgotten altogether; or recognized, like Rollin and others, for
+ polished dullards, university big-wigs, and long-winded commonplace
+ persons, deserving nothing but oblivion. To Montesquieu,&mdash;not yet
+ called "Baron de Montesquieu" with ESPRIT DES LOIS, but "M. de Secondat"
+ with (Anonymous) LETTRES PERSANES, and already known to the world for a
+ person of sharp audacious eyesight,&mdash;it does not appear that
+ Friedrich addressed any Letter, now or afterwards. No notice of
+ Montesquieu; nor of some others, the absence of whom is a little
+ unexpected. Probably it was want of knowledge mainly; for his appetite was
+ not fastidious at this time. And certainly he did hit the centre of the
+ mark, and get into the very kernel of French literature, when, in 1736,
+ hardly yet established in his new quarters, he addressed himself to the
+ shining figure known to us as "Arouet Junior" long since, and now called
+ M. DE VOLTAIRE; which latter is still a name notable in Friedrich's
+ History and that of Mankind. Friedrich's first Letter, challenging
+ Voltaire to correspondence, dates itself 8th August, 1736; and Voltaire's
+ Answer&mdash;the Reinsberg Household still only in its second month&mdash;was
+ probably the brightest event which had yet befallen there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On various accounts it will behoove us to look a good deal more strictly
+ into this Voltaire; and, as his relations to Friedrich and to the world
+ are so multiplex, endeavor to disengage the real likeness of the man from
+ the circumambient noise and confusion which in his instance continue very
+ great. "Voltaire was the spiritual complement of Friedrich," says
+ Sauerteig once: "what little of lasting their poor Century produced lies
+ mainly in these Two. A very somnambulating Century! But what little it
+ DID, we must call Friedrich; what little it THOUGHT, Voltaire. Other fruit
+ we have not from it to speak of, at this day. Voltaire, and what CAN be
+ faithfully done on the Voltaire Creed; 'Realized Voltairism;'&mdash;admit
+ it, reader, not in a too triumphant humor,&mdash;is not that pretty much
+ the net historical product of the Eighteenth Century? The rest of its
+ history either pure somnambulism; or a mere Controversy, to the effect,
+ 'Realized Voltairism? How soon shall it be realized, then? Not at once,
+ surely!' So that Friedrich and Voltaire are related, not by accident only.
+ They are, they for want of better, the two Original Men of their Century;
+ the chief and in a sense the sole products of their Century. They alone
+ remain to us as still living results from it,&mdash;such as they are. And
+ the rest, truly, OUGHT to depart and vanish (as they are now doing); being
+ mere ephemera; contemporary eaters, scramblers for provender, talkers of
+ acceptable hearsay; and related merely to the butteries and wiggeries of
+ their time, and not related to the Perennialities at all, as these Two
+ were."&mdash;With more of the like sort from Sauerteig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. de Voltaire, who used to be M. Francois-Marie Arouet, was at this time
+ about forty, [Born 20th February, 1694; the younger of two sons: Father,
+ "Francois Arouet, a Notary of the Chatelet, ultimately Treasurer of the
+ Chamber of Accounts;" Mother, "Marguerite d'Aumart, of a noble family of
+ Poitou."] and had gone through various fortunes; a man, now and
+ henceforth, in a high degree conspicuous, and questionable to his
+ fellow-creatures. Clear knowledge of him ought, at this stage, to be
+ common; but unexpectedly it is not. What endless writing and biographying
+ there has been about this man; in which one still reads, with a kind of
+ lazy satisfaction, due to the subject, and to the French genius in that
+ department! But the man himself, and his environment and practical
+ aspects, what the actual physiognomy of his life and of him can have been,
+ is dark from beginning to ending; and much is left in an ambiguous
+ undecipherable condition to us. A proper History of Voltaire, in which
+ should be discoverable, luminous to human creatures, what he was, what
+ element he lived in, what work he did: this is still a problem for the
+ genius of France!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Father's name is known to us; the name of his Father's profession,
+ too, but not clearly the nature of it; still less his Father's character,
+ economic circumstances, physiognomy spiritual or social: not the least
+ possibility granted you of forming an image, however faint, of that
+ notable man and household, which distinguished itself to all the earth by
+ producing little Francois into the light of this sun. Of Madame Arouet,
+ who, or what, or how she was, nothing whatever is known. A human reader,
+ pestered continually with the Madame-Denises, Abbe-Mignots and enigmatic
+ nieces and nephews, would have wished to know, at least, what children,
+ besides Francois, Madame Arouet had: once for all, How many children? Name
+ them, with year of birth, year of death, according to the
+ church-registers: they all, at any rate, had that degree of history! No;
+ even that has not been done. Beneficent correspondents of my own make
+ answer, after some research, No register of the Arouets anywhere to be
+ had. The very name VOLTAIRE, if you ask whence came it? there is no
+ answer, or worse than none.&mdash;The fit "History" of this man, which
+ might be one of the shining Epics of his Century, and the lucid summary
+ and soul of any HISTORY France then had, but which would require almost a
+ French demi-god to do it, is still a great way off, if on the road at all!
+ For present purposes, we select what follows from a well-known hand:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "YOUTH OF VOLTAIRE (1694-1725).&mdash;French Biographers have left the
+ Arouet Household very dark for us; meanwhile we can perceive, or guess,
+ that it was moderately well in economic respects; that Francois was the
+ second of the Two Sons; and that old Arouet, a steady, practical and
+ perhaps rather sharp-tempered old gentleman, of official legal habits and
+ position, 'Notary of the Chatelet' and something else, had destined him
+ for the Law Profession; as was natural enough to a son of M. Arouet, who
+ had himself succeeded well in Law, and could there, best of all, open
+ roads for a clever second son. Francois accordingly sat 'in chambers,' as
+ we call it; and his fellow-clerks much loved him,&mdash;the most amusing
+ fellow in the world. Sat in chambers, even became an advocate; but did not
+ in the least take to advocateship;&mdash;took to poetry, and other airy
+ dangerous courses, speculative, practical; causing family explosions and
+ rebukes, which were without effect on him. A young fool, bent on sportful
+ pursuits instead of serious; more and more shuddering at Law. To the
+ surprise and indignation of M. Arouet Senior. Law, with its wigs and
+ sheepskins, pointing towards high honors and deep flesh-pots, had no
+ charms for the young fool; he could not be made to like Law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whereupon arose explosions, as we hint; family explosions on the part of
+ M. Arouet Senior; such that friends had to interfere, and it was uncertain
+ what would come of it. One judicious friend, 'M. Caumartin,' took the
+ young fellow home to his house in the country for a time;&mdash;and there,
+ incidentally, brought him acquainted with old gentlemen deep in the
+ traditions of Henri Quatre and the cognate topics; which much inflamed the
+ young fellow, and produced big schemes in the head of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "M. Arouet Senior stood strong for Law; but it was becoming daily more
+ impossible. Madrigals, dramas (not without actresses), satirical wit, airy
+ verse, and all manner of adventurous speculation, were what this young man
+ went upon; and was getting more and more loved for; introduced, even, to
+ the superior circles, and recognized there as one of the brightest young
+ fellows ever seen. Which tended, of course, to confirm him in his folly,
+ and open other outlooks and harbors of refuge than the paternal one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such things, strange to M. Arouet Senior, were in vogue then; wicked
+ Regent d'Orleans having succeeded sublime Louis XIV., and set strange
+ fashions to the Quality. Not likely to profit this fool Francois, thought
+ M. Arouet Senior; and was much confirmed in his notion, when a rhymed
+ Lampoon against the Government having come out (LES J'AI VU, as they call
+ it ["I have seen (J'AI VU)" this ignominy occur, "I have seen" that other,&mdash;to
+ the amount of a dozen or two;&mdash;"and am not yet twenty." Copy of it,
+ and guess as to authorship, in <i>OEuvres de Voltaire</i>, i. 321.]), and
+ become the rage, as a clever thing of the kind will, it was imputed to the
+ brightest young fellow in France, M. Arouet's Son. Who, in fact, was not
+ the Author; but was not believed on his denial; and saw himself, in spite
+ of his high connections, ruthlessly lodged in the Bastille in consequence.
+ 'Let him sit,' thought M. Arouet Senior, 'and come to his senses there!'
+ He sat for eighteen months (age still little above twenty); but privately
+ employed his time, not in repentance, or in serious legal studies, but in
+ writing a Poem on his Henri Quatre. 'Epic Poem,' no less; LA LIGUE, as he
+ then called it; which it was his hope the whole world would one day fall
+ in love with;&mdash;as it did. Nay, in two years more, he had done a Play,
+ OEDIPE the renowned name of it; which ran for forty-eight nights' (18th
+ November, 1718, the first of them); and was enough to turn any head of
+ such age. Law may be considered hopeless, even by M. Arouet Senior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Try him in the Diplomatic line; break these bad habits and connections,
+ thought M. Arouet, at one time; and sent him to the French Ambassador in
+ Holland,&mdash;on good behavior, as it were, and by way of temporary
+ banishment. But neither did this answer. On the contrary, the young fellow
+ got into scrapes again; got into amatory intrigues,&mdash;young lady
+ visiting you in men's clothes, young lady's mother inveigling, and I know
+ not what;&mdash;so that the Ambassador was glad to send him home again
+ unmarried; marked, as it were, 'Glass, with care!' And the young lady's
+ mother printed his Letters, not the least worth reading:&mdash;and the old
+ M. Arouet seems now to have flung up his head; to have settled some small
+ allowance on him, with peremptory no hope of more, and said, 'Go your own
+ way, then, foolish junior: the elder shall be my son.' M. Arouet
+ disappears at this point, or nearly so, from the history of his son
+ Francois; and I think must have died in not many years. Poor old M. Arouet
+ closed his old eyes without the least conception what a prodigious
+ ever-memorable thing he had done unknowingly, in sending this Francois
+ into the world, to kindle such universal 'dry dung-heap of a rotten
+ world,' and set it blazing! Francois, his Father's synonym, came to be
+ representative of the family, after all; the elder Brother also having
+ died before long. Except certain confused niece-and-nephew personages,
+ progeny of the sisters, Francois has no more trouble or solacement from
+ the paternal household. Francois meanwhile is his Father's synonym, and
+ signs Arouet Junior, 'Francois Aroue l. j. (LE JEUNE).'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'All of us Princes, then, or Poets!' said he, one night at supper,
+ looking to right and left: the brightest fellow in the world, well fit to
+ be Phoebus Apollo of such circles; and great things now ahead of him.
+ Dissolute Regent d'Orleans, politest, most debauched of men, and very
+ witty, holds the helm; near him Dubois the Devil's Cardinal, and so many
+ bright spirits. All the Luciferous Spiritualism there is in France is
+ lifting anchor, under these auspices, joyfully towards new latitudes and
+ Isles of the Blest. What may not Francois hope to become? 'Hmph!' answers
+ M. Arouet Senior, steadily, so long as he lives. Here are one or two
+ subsequent phases, epochs or turning-points, of the young gentleman's
+ career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "PHASIS FIRST (1725-1728).&mdash;The accomplished Duc de Sulli (Year 1725,
+ day not recorded), is giving in his hotel a dinner, such as usual; and a
+ bright witty company is assembled;&mdash;the brightest young fellow in
+ France sure to be there; and with his electric coruscations illuminating
+ everything, and keeping the table in a roar. To the delight of most; not
+ to that of a certain splenetic ill-given Duc de Rohan; grandee of high
+ rank, great haughtiness, and very ill-behavior in the world; who feels
+ impatient at the notice taken of a mere civic individual, Arouet Junior.
+ <i> 'Quel est done ce jeune homme qui parle si haut,</i> Who is this young
+ man that talks so loud, then?' exclaims the proud splenetic Duke.
+ 'Monseigneur,' flashes the young man back upon him in an electric manner,
+ 'it is one who does not drag a big name about with him; but who secures
+ respect for the name he has!' Figure that, in the penetrating grandly
+ clangorous voice (VOIX SOMBRE ET MAJESTUEUSE), and the momentary flash of
+ eyes that attended it. Duc de Rohan rose, in a sulphurous frame of mind;
+ and went his ways. What date? You ask the idle French Biographer in vain;&mdash;see
+ only, after more and more inspection, that the incident is true; and with
+ labor date it, summer of the Year 1725. Treaty of Utrecht itself, though
+ all the Newspapers and Own Correspondents were so interested in it, was
+ perhaps but a foolish matter to date in comparison!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "About a week after, M. Arouet Junior was again dining with the Duc de
+ Sulli, and a fine company as before. A servant whispers him, That somebody
+ has called, and wants him below. 'Cannot come,' answers Arouet; 'how can
+ I, so engaged?' Servant returns after a minute or two: 'Pardon, Monsieur;
+ I am to say, it is to do an act of beneficence that you are wanted below!'
+ Arouet lays down his knife and fork; descends instantly to see what act it
+ is. A carriage is in the court, and hackney-coach near it: 'Would Monsieur
+ have the extreme goodness to come to the door of the carriage, in a case
+ of necessity?' At the door of the carriage, hands seize the collar of him,
+ hold him as in a vice; diabolic visage of Duc de Rohan is visible inside,
+ who utters, looking to the hackney-coach, some "VOILA, Now then!"
+ Whereupon the hackney-coach opens, gives out three porters, or hired
+ bullies, with the due implements: scandalous actuality of horsewhipping
+ descends on the back of poor Arouet, who shrieks and execrates to no
+ purpose, nobody being near. 'That will do,' says Rohan at last, and the
+ gallant ducal party drive off; young Arouet, with torn frills and deranged
+ hair, rushing up stairs again, in such a mood as is easy to fancy.
+ Everybody is sorry, inconsolable, everybody shocked; nobody volunteers to
+ help in avenging. 'Monseigneur de Sulli, is not such atrocity done to one
+ of your guests, an insult to yourself?' asks Arouet. 'Well, yes perhaps,
+ but'&mdash;Monseigneur de Sulli shrugs his shoulders, and proposes
+ nothing. Arouet withdrew, of course in a most blazing condition, to
+ consider what he could, on his own strength, do in this conjuncture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Biographer Duvernet says, he decided on doing two things: learning
+ English and the small-sword exercise. [<i>La Vie de Voltaire,</i> par M&mdash;(a
+ Geneve, 1786), pp. 55-57; or pp. 60-63, in his SECOND form of the Book.
+ The "M&mdash;" is an Abbe Duvernet; of no great mark otherwise. He got
+ into Revolution trouble afterwards, but escaped with his head; and
+ republished his Book, swollen out somewhat by new "Anecdotes" and
+ republican bluster, in this second instance; signing himself T. J. D. V&mdash;(Paris,
+ 1797). A vague but not dark or mendacious little Book; with traces of real
+ EYESIGHT in it,&mdash;by one who had personally known Voltaire, or at
+ least seen and heard him.] He retired to the country for six months, and
+ perfected himself in these two branches. Being perfect, he challenged Duc
+ de Rohan in the proper manner; applying ingenious compulsives withal, to
+ secure acceptance of the challenge. Rohan accepted, not without some
+ difficulty, and compulsion at the Theatre or otherwise:&mdash;accepted,
+ but withal confessed to his wife. The result was, no measuring of swords
+ took place; and Rohan only blighted by public opinion, or incapable of
+ farther blight that way, went at large; a convenient LETTRE DE CACHET
+ having put Arouet again in the Bastille. Where for six months Arouet
+ lodged a second time, the innocent not the guilty; making, we can well
+ suppose, innumerable reflections on the phenomena of human life.
+ Imprisonment once over, he hastily quitted for England; shaking the dust
+ of ungrateful France off his feet,&mdash;resolved to change his unhappy
+ name, for one thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Smelfungus, denouncing the torpid fatuity of Voltaire's Biographers, says
+ he never met with one Frenchman, even of the Literary classes, who could
+ tell him whence this name VOLTAIRE originated. 'A PETITE TERRE, small
+ family estate,' they said; and sent him hunting through Topographies, far
+ and wide, to no purpose. Others answered, 'Volterra in Italy, some
+ connection with Volterra,'&mdash;and seemed even to know that this was but
+ fatuity. 'In ever-talking, ever-printing Paris, is it as in Timbuctoo,
+ then, which neither prints nor has anything to print?' exclaims poor
+ Smelfungus! He tells us at last, the name VOLTAIRE is a mere Anagram of
+ AROUET L. J.&mdash;you try it; A.R.O.U.E.T.L.J.=V.O.L.T.A.I.R.E and
+ perceive at once, with obligations to Smelfungus, that he has settled this
+ small matter for you, and that you can be silent upon it forever
+ thenceforth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The anagram VOLTAIRE, gloomily settled in the Bastille in this manner,
+ can be reckoned a very famous wide-sounding outer result of the Rohan
+ impertinence and blackguardism; but it is not worth naming beside the
+ inner intrinsic result, of banishing Voltaire to England at this point of
+ his course. England was full of Constitutionality and Freethinking;
+ Tolands, Collinses, Wollastons, Bolingbrokes, still living; very free
+ indeed. England, one is astonished to see, has its royal-republican ways
+ of doing; something Roman in it, from Peerage down to Plebs; strange and
+ curious to the eye of M. de Voltaire. Sciences flourishing; Newton still
+ alive, white with fourscore years, the venerable hoary man; Locke's Gospel
+ of Common Sense in full vogue, or even done into verse, by incomparable
+ Mr. Pope, for the cultivated upper classes. In science, in religion, in
+ politics, what a surprising 'liberty' allowed or taken! Never was a freer
+ turn of thinking. And (what to M. de Voltaire is a pleasant feature) it is
+ Freethinking with ruffles to its shirt and rings on its fingers;&mdash;never
+ yet, the least, dreaming of the shirtless or SANSCULOTTIC state that lies
+ ahead for it! That is the palmy condition of English Liberty, when M. de
+ Voltaire arrives there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In a man just out of the Bastille on those terms, there is a mind driven
+ by hard suffering into seriousness, and provoked by indignant comparisons
+ and remembrances. As if you had elaborately ploughed and pulverized the
+ mind of this Voltaire to receive with its utmost avidity, and strength of
+ fertility, whatever seed England may have for it. That was a notable
+ conjuncture of a man with circumstances. The question, Is this man to grow
+ up a Court Poet; to do legitimate dramas, lampoons, witty verses, and wild
+ spiritual and practical magnificences, the like never seen; Princes and
+ Princesses recognizing him as plainly divine, and keeping him tied by
+ enchantments to that poor trade as his task in life? is answered in the
+ negative. No: and it is not quite to decorate and comfort your 'dry
+ dung-heap' of a world, or the fortunate cocks that scratch on it, that the
+ man Voltaire is here; but to shoot lightnings into it, and set it ablaze
+ one day! That was an important alternative; truly of world-importance to
+ the poor generations that now are; and it was settled, in good part, by
+ this voyage to England, as one may surmise. Such is sometimes the use of a
+ dissolute Rohan in this world; for the gods make implements of all manner
+ of things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "M. de Voltaire (for we now drop the Arouet altogether, and never hear of
+ it more) came to England&mdash;when? Quitted England&mdash;when? Sorrow on
+ all fatuous Biographers, who spend their time not in laying permanent
+ foundation-stones, but in fencing with the wind!&mdash;I at last find
+ indisputably, it was in 1726 that he came to England: [Got out of the
+ Bastille, with orders to leave France, "29th April" of that year (<i>OEuvres
+ de Voltaire,</i> i. 40 n.).] and he himself tells us that he 1728.' Spent,
+ therefore, some two years there in all,&mdash;last year of George I.'s
+ reign, and first of George II.'s. But mere inanity and darkness visible
+ reign, in all his Biographies, over this period of his life, which was
+ above all others worth investigating: seek not to know it; no man has
+ inquired into it, probably no competent man now ever will. By hints in
+ certain Letters of the period, we learn that he lodged, or at one time
+ lodged, in 'Maiden Lane, Covent Garden;' one of those old Houses that yet
+ stand in Maiden Lane: for which small fact let us be thankful. His own
+ Letters of the period are dated now and then from 'Wandsworth.' Allusions
+ there are to Bolingbroke; but the Wandsworth is not Bolingbroke's mansion,
+ which stood in Battersea; the Wandsworth was one Edward Fawkener's; a man
+ somewhat admirable to young Voltaire, but extinct now, or nearly so, in
+ human memory. He had been a Turkey Merchant, it would seem, and
+ nevertheless was admitted to speak his word in intellectual, even in
+ political circles; which was wonderful to young Voltaire. This Fawkener, I
+ think, became Sir Edward Fawkener, and some kind of 'Secretary to the Duke
+ of Cumberland:'&mdash;I judge it to be the same Fawkener; a man highly
+ unmemorable now, were it not for the young Frenchman he was hospitable to.
+ Fawkener's and Bolingbroke's are perhaps the only names that turn up in
+ Voltaire's LETTERS of this English Period: over which generally there
+ reigns, in the French Biographies, inane darkness, with an intimation,
+ half involuntary, that it SHOULD have been made luminous, and would if
+ perfectly easy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We know, from other sources, that he had acquaintance with many men in
+ England, with all manner of important men: Notes to Pope in
+ Voltaire-English, visit of Voltaire to Congreve, Notes even to such as
+ Lady Sundon in the interior of the Palace, are known of. The brightest
+ young fellow in the world did not want for introductions to the highest
+ quarters, in that time of political alliance, and extensive private
+ acquaintance, between his Country and ours. And all this he was the man to
+ improve, both in the trivial and the deep sense. His bow to the divine
+ Princess Caroline and suite, could it fail in graceful reverence or what
+ else was needed? Dexterous right words in the right places, winged with
+ ESPRIT so called: that was the man's supreme talent, in which he had no
+ match, to the last. A most brilliant, swift, far-glancing young man,
+ disposed to make himself generally agreeable. For the rest, his wonder, we
+ can see, was kept awake; wonder readily inclining, in his circumstances,
+ towards admiration. The stereotype figure of the Englishman, always the
+ same, which turns up in Voltaire's WORKS, is worth noting in this respect.
+ A rugged surly kind of fellow, much-enduring, not intrinsically bad;
+ splenetic without complaint, standing oddly inexpugnable in that natural
+ stoicism of his; taciturn, yet with strange flashes of speech in him now
+ and then, something which goes beyond laughter and articulate logic, and
+ is the taciturn elixir of these two, what they call 'humor' in their
+ dialect: this is pretty much the REVERSE of Voltaire's own self, and
+ therefore all the welcomer to him; delineated always with a kind of
+ mockery, but with evident love. What excellences are in England, thought
+ Voltaire; no Bastille in it, for one thing! Newton's Philosophy
+ annihilated the vortexes of Descartes for him; Locke's Toleration is very
+ grand (especially if all is uncertain, and YOU are in the minority); then
+ Collins, Wollaston and Company,&mdash;no vile Jesuits here, strong in
+ their mendacious mal-odorous stupidity, despicablest yet most dangerous of
+ creatures, to check freedom of thought! Illustrious Mr. Pope, of the <i>Essay
+ on Man,</i> surely he is admirable; as are Pericles Bolingbroke, and many
+ others. Even Bolingbroke's high-lacquered brass is gold to this young
+ French friend of his.&mdash;Through all which admirations and
+ exaggerations the progress of the young man, toward certain very serious
+ attainments and achievements, is conceivable enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One other man, who ought to be mentioned in the Biographies, I find
+ Voltaire to have made acquaintance with, in England: a German M. Fabrice,
+ one of several Brothers called Fabrice or Fabricius,&mdash;concerning
+ whom, how he had been at Bender, and how Voltaire picked CHARLES DOUSE
+ from the memory of him, there was already mention. The same Fabrice who
+ held poor George I. in his arms while they drove, galloping, to
+ Osnabriick, that night, IN EXTREMIS:&mdash;not needing mention again. The
+ following is more to the point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Voltaire, among his multifarious studies while in England, did not forget
+ that of economics: his Poem LA LIGUE,&mdash;surreptitiously printed, three
+ years since, under that title (one Desfontaines, a hungry Ex-Jesuit, the
+ perpetrator), [1723, VIE, par T. J. D. V. (that is, "M&mdash;" in the
+ second form), p. 59.]&mdash;he now took in hand for his own benefit;
+ washed it clean of its blots; christened it HENRIADE, under which name it
+ is still known over all the world;&mdash;and printed it; published it
+ here, by subscription, in 1726; one of the first things he undertook. Very
+ splendid subscription; headed by Princess Caroline, and much favored by
+ the opulent of quality. Which yielded an unknown but very considerable sum
+ of thousands sterling, and grounded not only the world-renown but the
+ domestic finance of M. de Voltaire. For the fame of the 'new epic,' as
+ this HENRIADE was called, soon spread into all lands. And such fame, and
+ other agencies on his behalf, having opened the way home for Voltaire, he
+ took this sum of Thousands Sterling along with him; laid it out
+ judiciously in some city lottery, or profitable scrip then going at Paris,
+ which at once doubled the amount: after which he invested it in
+ Corn-trade, Army Clothing, Barbary-trade, Commissariat Bacon-trade, all
+ manner of well-chosen trades,&mdash;being one of the shrewdest financiers
+ on record;&mdash;and never from that day wanted abundance of money, for
+ one thing. Which he judged to be extremely expedient for a literary man,
+ especially in times of Jesuit and other tribulation. 'You have only to
+ watch,' he would say, 'what scrips, public loans, investments in the field
+ of agio, are offered; if you exert any judgment, it is easy to gain there:
+ do not the stupidest of mortals gain there, by intensely attending to it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Voltaire got almost nothing by his Books, which he generally had to
+ disavow, and denounce as surreptitious supposititious scandals, when some
+ sharp-set Book-seller, in whose way he had laid the savory article as
+ bait, chose to risk his ears for the profit of snatching and publishing
+ it. Next to nothing by his Books; but by his fine finance-talent
+ otherwise, he had become possessed of ample moneys. Which were so
+ cunningly disposed, too, that he had resources in every Country; and no
+ conceivable combination of confiscating Jesuits and dark fanatic Official
+ Persons could throw him out of a livelihood, whithersoever he might be
+ forced to run. A man that looks facts in the face; which is creditable of
+ him. The vulgar call it avarice and the like, as their way is: but M. de
+ Voltaire is convinced that effects will follow causes; and that it well
+ beseems a lonely Ishmaelite, hunting his way through the howling
+ wildernesses and confused ravenous populations of this world, to have
+ money in his pocket. He died with a revenue of some 7,000 pounds a year,
+ probably as good as 20,000 pounds at present; the richest literary man
+ ever heard of hitherto, as well as the remarkablest in some other
+ respects. But we have to mark the second phasis of his life [in which
+ Friedrich now sees him], and how it grew out of this first one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "PHASIS SECOND (1728-1733).&mdash;Returning home as if quietly triumphant,
+ with such a talent in him, and such a sanction put upon it and him by a
+ neighboring Nation, and by all the world, Voltaire was warmly received, in
+ his old aristocratic circles, by cultivated France generally; and now in
+ 1728, in his thirty-second year, might begin to have definite outlooks of
+ a sufficiently royal kind, in Literature and otherwise. Nor is he slow,
+ far from it, to advance, to conquer and enjoy. He writes successful
+ literature, falls in love with women of quality; encourages the indigent
+ and humble; eclipses, and in case of need tramples down, the too proud. He
+ elegizes poor Adrienne Lecouvreur, the Actress,&mdash;our poor friend the
+ Comte de Saxe's female friend; who loyally emptied out her whole purse for
+ him, 30,000 pounds in one sum, that he might try for Courland, and whether
+ he could fall in love with her of the Swollen Cheek there; which proved
+ impossible. Elegizes Adrienne, slightly, and even buries her under cloud
+ of night: ready to protect unfortunate females of merit. Especially
+ theatrical females; having much to do in the theatre, which we perceive to
+ be the pulpit or real preaching-place of cultivated France in those years.
+ All manner of verse, all manner of prose, he dashes off with surprising
+ speed and grace: showers of light spray for the moment; and always some
+ current of graver enterprise, <i>Siecle de Louis Quatorze</i> or the like,
+ going on beneath it. For he is a most diligent, swift, unresting man; and
+ studies and learns amazingly in such a rackety existence. Victorious
+ enough in some senses; defeat, in Literature, never visited him. His
+ Plays, coming thick on the heels of one another, rapid brilliant pieces,
+ are brilliantly received by the unofficial world; and ought to dethrone
+ dull Crebillon, and the sleepy potentates of Poetry that now are. Which in
+ fact is their result with the public; but not yet in the highest courtly
+ places;&mdash;a defect much to be condemned and lamented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Numerous enemies arise, as is natural, of an envious venomous
+ description; this is another ever-widening shadow in the sunshine. In fact
+ we perceive he has, besides the inner obstacles and griefs, two classes of
+ outward ones: There are Lions on his path and also Dogs. Lions are the
+ Ex-Bishop of Mirepoix, and certain other dark Holy Fathers, or potent
+ orthodox Official Persons. These, though Voltaire does not yet declare his
+ heterodoxy (which, indeed, is but the orthodoxy of the cultivated private
+ circles), perceive well enough, even by the HENRIADE, and its talk of
+ 'tolerance,' horror of 'fanaticism' and the like, what this one's 'DOXY
+ is; and how dangerous he, not a mere mute man of quality, but a talking
+ spirit with winged words, may be;&mdash;and they much annoy and terrify
+ him, by their roaring in the distance. Which roaring cannot, of course,
+ convince; and since it is not permitted to kill, can only provoke a
+ talking spirit into still deeper strains of heterodoxy for his own private
+ behoof. These are the Lions on his path: beasts conscious to themselves of
+ good intentions; but manifesting from Voltaire's point of view, it must be
+ owned, a physiognomy unlovely to a degree. 'Light is superior to darkness,
+ I should think,' meditates Voltaire; 'power of thought to the want of
+ power! The ANE DE MIREPOIX (Ass of Mirepoix), [Poor joke of Voltaire's,
+ continually applied to this Bishop, or Ex-Bishop,&mdash;who was thought,
+ generally, a rather tenebrific man for appointment to the FEUILLE DES
+ BENEFICES (charge of nominating Bishops, keeping King's conscience, &amp;c.);
+ and who, in that capacity, signed himself ANC (by no means "ANE," but
+ "ANCIEN, Whilom") DE MIREPOIX,&mdash;to the enragement of Voltaire often
+ enough.] pretending to use me in this manner, is it other, in the court of
+ Rhadamanthus, than transcendent Stupidity, with transcendent Insolence
+ superadded?' Voltaire grows more and more heterodox; and is ripening
+ towards dangerous utterances, though he, strives to hold in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Dogs upon his path, again, are all the disloyal envious persons of
+ the Writing Class, whom his success has offended; and, more generally, all
+ the dishonest hungry persons who can gain a morsel by biting him: and
+ their name is legion. It must be owned, about as ugly a Doggery ('INFAME
+ CANAILLE' he might well reckon them) as has, before or since, infested the
+ path of a man. They are not hired and set on, as angry suspicion might
+ suggest; but they are covertly somewhat patronized by the Mirepoix, or
+ orthodox Official class. Scandalous Ex-Jesuit Desfontaines, Thersites
+ Freron,&mdash;these are but types of an endless Doggery; whose names and
+ works should be blotted out; whose one claim to memory is, that the riding
+ man so often angrily sprang down, and tried horsewhipping them into
+ silence. A vain attempt. The individual hound flies howling, abjectly
+ petitioning and promising; but the rest bark all with new comfort, and
+ even he starts again straightway. It is bad travelling in those woods,
+ with such Lions and such Dogs. And then the sparsely scattered HUMAN
+ Creatures (so we may call them in contrast, persons of Quality for most
+ part) are not always what they should be. The grand mansions you arrive
+ at, in this waste-howling solitude, prove sometimes essentially
+ Robber-towers;&mdash;and there may be Armida Palaces, and divine-looking
+ Armidas, where your ultimate fate is still worse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>'Que le monde est rempli d'enchanteurs, je ne dis rien
+ d'enchanteresses!'</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To think of it, the solitary Ishmaelite journeying, never so well mounted,
+ through such a wilderness: with lions, dogs, human robbers and Armidas all
+ about him; himself lonely, friendless under the stars:&mdash;one could
+ pity him withal, though that is not the feeling he solicits; nor gets
+ hitherto, even at this impartial distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of the beautiful creatures of Quality,&mdash;we hope, not an Armida,&mdash;who
+ came athwart Voltaire, in these times, was a Madame du Chatelet;
+ distinguished from all the others by a love of mathematics and the pure
+ sciences, were it nothing else. She was still young, under thirty; the
+ literary man still under forty. With her Husband, to whom she had brought
+ a child, or couple of children, there was no formal quarrel; but they were
+ living apart, neither much heeding the other, as was by no means a case
+ without example at that time; Monsieur soldiering, and philandering about,
+ in garrison or elsewhere; Madame, in a like humor, doing the best for
+ herself in the high circles of society, to which he and she belonged. Most
+ wearisome barren circles to a person of thought, as both she and M. de
+ Voltaire emphatically admitted to one another, on first making
+ acquaintance. But is there no help?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame had tried the pure sciences and philosophies, in Books: but how
+ much more charming, when they come to you as a Human Philosopher;
+ handsome, magnanimous, and the wittiest man in the world! Young Madame was
+ not regularly beautiful; but she was very piquant, radiant, adventurous;
+ understood other things than the pure sciences, and could be abundantly
+ coquettish and engaging. I have known her scuttle off, on an evening, with
+ a couple of adventurous young wives of Quality, to the remote lodging of
+ the witty M. de Voltaire, and make his dim evening radiant to him. [One of
+ Voltaire's Letters.] Then again, in public crowds, I have seen them;
+ obliged to dismount to the peril of Madame's diamonds, there being a jam
+ of carriages, and no getting forward for half the day. In short, they are
+ becoming more and more intimate, to the extremest degree; and, scorning
+ the world, thank Heaven that they are mutually indispensable. Cannot we
+ get away from this scurvy wasp's-nest of a Paris, thought they, and live
+ to ourselves and our books?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame was of high quality, one of the Breteuils; but was poor in
+ comparison, and her Husband the like. An old Chateau of theirs, named
+ Cirey, stands in a pleasant enough little valley in Champagne; but so
+ dilapidated, gaunt and vacant, nobody can live in it. Voltaire, who is by
+ this time a man of ample moneys, furnishes the requisite cash; Madame and
+ he, in sweet symphony, concert the plans: Cirey is repaired, at least
+ parts of it are, into a boudoir of the gods, regardless of expense;
+ nothing ever seen so tasteful, so magnificent; and the two withdraw
+ thither to study, in peace, what sciences, pure and other, they have a
+ mind to. They are recognized as lovers, by the Parisian public, with
+ little audible censure from anybody there,&mdash;with none at all from the
+ easy Husband; who occasionally even visits Cirey, if he be passing that
+ way; and is content to take matters as he finds them, without looking
+ below the surface. [See (whosoever is curious) Madame de Grafigny, <i>Vie
+ Privee de Voltaire et de Madame du Chatelet</i> (Paris, 1820). A six
+ months of actual Letters written by poor Grafigny, while sheltering at
+ Cirey, Winter and Spring, 1738-1739; straitened there in various respects,&mdash;extremely
+ ill off for fuel, among other things. Rugged practical Letters, shadowing
+ out to us, unconsciously oftenest, and like a very mirror, the splendid
+ and the sordid, the seamy side and the smooth, of Life at Cirey, in her
+ experience of it. Published, fourscore years after, under the above
+ title.] For the Ten Commandments are at a singular pass in cultivated
+ France at this epoch. Such illicit-idyllic form of life has been the form
+ of Voltaire's since 1733,"&mdash;for some three years now, when Friedrich
+ and we first make acquaintance with him. "It lasted above a dozen years
+ more: an illicit marriage after its sort, and subject only to the
+ liabilities of such. Perhaps we may look in upon the Cirey Household,
+ ourselves, at some future time; and"&mdash;This Editor hopes not!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madame admits that for the first ten years it was, on the whole, sublime;
+ a perfect Eden on Earth, though stormy now and then. [<i>Lettres Inedites
+ de Madame la Marquise du Chastelet; auxquelles on a joint une Dissertation</i>
+ (&amp;c. of hers): Paris, 1806.] After ten years, it began to grow
+ decidedly dimmer; and in the course of few years more, it became
+ undeniably evident that M. de Voltaire 'did not love me as formerly:'&mdash;in
+ fact, if Madame could have seen it, M. de Voltaire was growing old, losing
+ his teeth, and the like; and did not care for anything as formerly! Which
+ was a dreadful discovery, and gave rise to results by and by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In this retreat at Cirey, varied with flying visits to Paris, and kept
+ awake by multifarious Correspondences, the quantity of Literature done by
+ the two was great and miscellaneous. By Madame, chiefly in the region of
+ the pure sciences, in Newtonian Dissertations, competitions for Prizes,
+ and the like: really sound and ingenious Pieces, entirely forgotten long
+ since. By Voltaire, in serious Tragedies, Histories, in light Sketches and
+ deep Dissertations:&mdash;mockery getting ever wilder with him; the
+ satirical vein, in prose and verse, amazingly copious, and growing more
+ and more heterodox, as we can perceive. His troubles from the
+ ecclesiastical or Lion kind in the Literary forest, still more from the
+ rabid Doggery in it, are manifold, incessant. And it is pleasantly
+ notable,&mdash;during these first ten years,&mdash;with what desperate
+ intensity, vigilance and fierceness, Madame watches over all his interests
+ and liabilities and casualties great and small; leaping with her whole
+ force into M. de Voltaire's scale of the balance, careless of antecedences
+ and consequences alike; flying, with the spirit of an angry brood-hen, at
+ the face of mastiffs, in defence of any feather that is M. de Voltaire's.
+ To which Voltaire replies, as he well may, with eloquent gratitude; with
+ Verses to the divine Emilie, with Gifts to her, verses and gifts the
+ prettiest in the world;&mdash;and industriously celebrates the divine
+ Emilie to herself and all third parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An ardent, aerial, gracefully predominant, and in the end somewhat
+ termagant female figure, this divine Emilie. Her temper, radiant rather
+ than bland, was none of the patientest on occasion; nor was M. de Voltaire
+ the least of a Job, if you came athwart him the wrong way. I have heard,
+ their domestic symphony was liable to furious flaws,&mdash;let us hope at
+ great distances apart:&mdash;that 'plates' in presence of the lackeys,
+ actual crockery or metal, have been known to fly from end to end of the
+ dinner-table; nay they mention 'knives' (though only in the way of
+ oratorical action); and Voltaire has been heard to exclaim, the sombre and
+ majestic voice of him risen to a very high pitch: <i>'Ne me regardez tant
+ de ces yeux hagards et louches,</i> Don't fix those haggard sidelong eyes
+ on me in that way!'&mdash;mere shrillness of pale rage presiding over the
+ scene. But we hope it was only once in the quarter, or seldomer: after
+ which the element would be clearer for some time. A lonesome literary man,
+ who has got a Brood Phoenix to preside over him, and fly at the face of
+ gods and men for him in that manner, ought to be grateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps we shall one day glance, personally, as it were, into Cirey with
+ our readers;"&mdash;Not with this Editor or his!&mdash;"It will turn out
+ beyond the reader's expectation. Tolerable illicit resting-place, so far
+ as the illicit can be tolerable, for a lonesome Man of Letters, who goes
+ into the illicit. Helpfulness, affection, or the flattering image of such,
+ are by no means wanting: squalls of infirm temper are not more frequent
+ than in the most licit establishments of a similar sort. Madame, about
+ this time, has a swift Palfrey, 'ROSSIGNOL (Nightingale)' the name of him;
+ and gallops fairy-like through the winding valleys; being an ardent rider,
+ and well-looking on horseback. Voltaire's study is inlaid with&mdash;the
+ Grafigny knows all what:&mdash;mere china tiles, gilt sculptures, marble
+ slabs, and the supreme of taste and expense: study fit for the Phoebus
+ Apollo of France, so far as Madame could contrive it. Takes coffee with
+ Madame, in the Gallery, about noon. And his bedroom, I expressly discern,
+ [<i>Letters of Voltaire.</i>] looks out upon a running brook, the murmur
+ of which is pleasant to one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Enough, enough. We can perceive what kind of Voltaire it was to whom the
+ Crown-Prince now addressed himself; and how luminous an object, shining
+ afar out of the solitudes of Champagne upon the ardent young man, still so
+ capable of admiration. Model Epic, HENRIADE; model History, CHARLES DOUZE;
+ sublime Tragedies, CISAR, ALZIRE and others, which readers still know
+ though with less enthusiasm, are blooming fresh in Friedrich's memory and
+ heart; such Literature as man never saw before; and in the background
+ Friedrich has inarticulately a feeling as if, in this man, there were
+ something grander than all Literatures: a Reform of human Thought itself;
+ a new "Gospel," good-tidings or God's-Message, by this man;&mdash;which
+ Friedrich does not suspect, as the world with horror does, to be a new
+ BA'SPEL, or Devil's-Message of bad-tidings! A sublime enough Voltaire;
+ radiant enough, over at Cirey yonder. To all lands, a visible Phoebus
+ Apollo, climbing the eastern steeps; with arrows of celestial "new light"
+ in his quiver; capable of stretching many a big foul Python, belly
+ uppermost, in its native mud, and ridding the poor world of her Nightmares
+ and Mud-Serpents in some measure, we may hope!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so there begins, from this point, a lively Correspondence between
+ Friedrich and Voltaire; which, with some interruptions of a notable sort,
+ continued during their mutual Life; and is a conspicuous feature in the
+ Biographies of both. The world talked much of it, and still talks; and has
+ now at last got it all collected, and elucidated into a dimly legible form
+ for studious readers. [Preuss, <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> (xxi. xxii.
+ xxiii., Berlin, 1853); who supersedes the lazy French Editors in this
+ matter.] It is by no means the diabolically wicked Correspondence it was
+ thought to be; the reverse, indeed, on both sides;&mdash;but it has
+ unfortunately become a very dull one, to the actual generation of mankind.
+ Not without intrinsic merit; on the contrary (if you read intensely, and
+ bring the extinct alive again), it sparkles notably with epistolary grace
+ and vivacity; and, on any terms, it has still passages of biographical and
+ other interest: but the substance of it, then so new and shining, has
+ fallen absolutely commonplace, the property of all the world, since then;
+ and is now very wearisome to the reader. No doctrine or opinion in it that
+ you have not heard, with clear belief or clear disbelief, a hundred times,
+ and could wish rather not to hear again. The common fate of philosophical
+ originalities in this world. As a Biographical Document, it is worth a
+ very strict perusal, if you are interested that way in either Friedrich or
+ Voltaire: finely significant hints and traits, though often almost
+ evanescent, so slight are they, abound in this Correspondence; frankness,
+ veracity under graceful forms, being the rule of it, strange to say! As an
+ illustration of Two memorable Characters, and of their Century; showing on
+ what terms the sage Plato of the Eighteenth Century and his Tyrant
+ Dionysius correspond, and what their manners are to one another, it may
+ long have a kind of interest to mankind: otherwise it has not much left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Friedrich's History it was, no doubt, an important fact, that there
+ lived a Voltaire along with him, twenty years his senior. With another
+ Theory of the Universe than the Voltaire one, how much OTHER had Friedrich
+ too been! But the Theory called by Voltaire's name was not properly of
+ Voltaire's creating, but only of his uttering and publishing; it lay ready
+ for everybody's finding, and could not well have been altogether missed by
+ such a one as Friedrich. So that perhaps we exaggerate the effects of
+ Voltaire on him, though undoubtedly they were considerable. Considerable;
+ but not derived from this express correspondence, which seldom turns on
+ didactic points at all; derived rather from Voltaire's Printed WORKS,
+ where they lay derivable to all the world. Certain enough it is, Voltaire
+ was at this time, and continued all his days, Friedrich's chief Thinker in
+ the world; unofficially, the chief Preacher, Prophet and Priest of this
+ Working King;&mdash;no better off for a spiritual Trismegistus was poor
+ Friedrich in the world! On the practical side, Friedrich soon outgrew him,&mdash;perhaps
+ had already outgrown, having far more veracity of character, and an
+ intellect far better built in the silent parts of it, and trained too by
+ hard experiences to know shadow from substance;&mdash;outgrew him, and
+ gradually learned to look down upon him, occasionally with much contempt,
+ in regard to the practical. But in all changes of humor towards Voltaire,
+ Friedrich, we observe, considers him as plainly supreme in speculative
+ intellect; and has no doubt but, for thinking and speaking, Nature never
+ made such another. Which may be taken as a notable feature of Friedrich's
+ History; and gives rise to passages between Voltaire and him, which will
+ make much noise in time coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, meanwhile, faithfully presented though in condensed form, is the
+ starting of the Correspondence; First Letter of it, and first Response.
+ Two Pieces which were once bright as the summer sunrise on both sides, but
+ are now fallen very dim; and have much needed condensation, and abridgment
+ by omission of the unessential,&mdash;so lengthy are they, so extinct and
+ almost dreary to us! Sublime "Wolf" and his "Philosophy," how he was
+ hunted out of Halle with it, long since; and now shines from Marburg, his
+ "Philosophy" and he supreme among mankind: this, and other extinct points,
+ the reader's fancy will endeavor to rekindle in some slight measure:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TO M. DE VOLTAIRE, AT CIREY (from the Crown-Prince).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "BERLIN, 8th August, 1736.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MONSIEUR,&mdash;Although I have not the satisfaction of knowing you
+ personally, you are not the less known to me through your Works. They are
+ treasures of the mind, if I may so express myself; and they reveal to the
+ reader new beauties at every fresh perusal. I think I have recognized in
+ them the character of their ingenious Author, who does honor to our age
+ and to human nature. If ever the dispute on the comparative merits of the
+ Moderns and the Ancients should be revived, the modern great men will owe
+ it to you, and to you only, that the scale is turned in their favor. With
+ the excellent quality of Poet you join innumerable others more or less
+ related to it. Never did Poet before put Metaphysics into rhythmic
+ cadence: to you the honor was reserved of doing it first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This taste for Philosophy manifested in your writings, induces me to send
+ you a translated Copy of the <i>Accusation and defence of M. Wolf,</i> the
+ most celebrated Philosopher of our days; who, for having carried light
+ into the darkest places of Metaphysics, is cruelly accused of irreligion
+ and atheism. Such is the destiny of great men; their superior genius
+ exposes them to the poisoned arrows of calumny and envy. I am about
+ getting a Translation made of the <i>Treatise on God, the Soul, and the
+ World,"</i>&mdash;Translation done by an Excellency Suhm, as has been
+ hinted,&mdash;"from the pen of the same Author. I will send it you when it
+ is finished; and I am sure that the force of evidence in all his
+ propositions, and their close geometrical sequence, will strike you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The kindness and assistance you afford to all who devote themselves to
+ the Arts and Sciences, makes me hope that you will not exclude me from the
+ number of those whom you find worthy of your instructions:&mdash;it is so
+ I would call your intercourse by Correspondence of Letters; which cannot
+ be other than profitable to every thinking being....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ... "beauties without number in your works. Your HENRIADE delights me. The
+ tragedy of CESAR shows us sustained characters; the sentiments in it are
+ magnificent and grand, and one feels that Brutus is either a Roman, or
+ else an Englishman <i>(ou un Romain ou un Anglais).</i> Your ALZIRE, to
+ the graces of novelty adds...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur, there is nothing I wish so much as to possess all your
+ Writings," even those not printed hitherto. "Pray, Monsieur, do
+ communicate them to me without reserve. If there be amongst your
+ Manuscripts any that you wish to conceal from the eyes of the public, I
+ engage to keep them in the profoundest secrecy. I am unluckily aware, that
+ the faith of Princes is an object of little respect in our days;
+ nevertheless I hope you will make an exception from the general rule in my
+ favor. I should think myself richer in the possession of your Works than
+ in that of all the transient goods of Fortune. These the same chance
+ grants and takes away: your Works one can make one's own by means of
+ memory, so that they last us whilst it lasts. Knowing how weak my own
+ memory is, I am in the highest degree select in what I trust to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If Poetry were what it was before your appearance, a strumming of
+ wearisome idyls, insipid eclogues, tuneful nothings, I should renounce it
+ forever:" but in your hands it becomes ennobled; a melodious "course of
+ morals; worthy of the admiration and the study of cultivated minds (DES
+ HONNETES GENS). You"&mdash;in fine, "you inspire the ambition to follow in
+ your footsteps. But I, how often have I said to myself: 'MALHEUREUX, throw
+ down a burden which is above thy strength! One cannot imitate Voltaire,
+ without being Voltaire!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is in such moments that I have felt how small are those advantages of
+ birth, those vapors of grandeur, with which vanity would solace us! They
+ amount to little, properly to nothing (POUR MIEUX DIRE, RIEN). Nature,
+ when she pleases, forms a great soul, endowed with faculties that can
+ advance the Arts and Sciences; and it is the part of Princes to recompense
+ his noble toils. Ah, would Glory but make use of me to crown your
+ successes! My only fear would be, lest this Country, little fertile in
+ laurels, proved unable to furnish enough of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If my destiny refuse me the happiness of being able to possess you, may
+ I, at least, hope one day to see the man whom I have admired so long now
+ from afar; and to assure you, by word of mouth, that I am,&mdash;With all
+ the esteem and consideration due to those who, following the torch of
+ truth for guide, consecrate their labors to the Public,&mdash;Monsieur,
+ your affectionate friend,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "FREDERIC, P. R. of Prussia."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xxi. 6.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By what route or conveyance this Letter went, I cannot say. In general, it
+ is to be observed, these Friedrich-Voltaire Letters&mdash;liable perhaps
+ to be considered contraband at BOTH ends of their course&mdash;do not go
+ by the Post; but by French-Prussian Ministers, by Hamburg Merchants, and
+ other safe subterranean channels. Voltaire, with enthusiasm, and no doubt
+ promptly, answers within three weeks:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TO THE CROWN-PRINCE, AT REINSBERG (from Voltaire).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "CIREY, 26th August, 1736.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MONSEIGNEUR,&mdash;A man must be void of all feeling who were not
+ infinitely moved by the Letter which your Royal Highness has deigned to
+ honor me with. My self-love is only too much flattered by it: but my love
+ of Mankind, which I have always nourished in my heart, and which, I
+ venture to say, forms the basis of my character, has given me a very much
+ purer pleasure,&mdash;to see that there is, now in the world, a Prince who
+ thinks as a man; a PHILOSOPHER Prince, who will make men happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Permit me to say, there is not a man on the earth but owes thanks for the
+ care you take to cultivate by sound philosophy a soul that is born for
+ command. Good kings there never were except those that had begun by
+ seeking to instruct themselves; by knowing-good men from bad; by loving
+ what was true, by detesting persecution and superstition. No Prince,
+ persisting in such thoughts, but might bring back the golden age into his
+ Countries! And why do so few Princes seek this glory? You feel it,
+ Monseigneur, it is because they all think more of their Royalty than of
+ Mankind. Precisely the reverse is your case:&mdash;and, unless, one day,
+ the tumult of business and the wickedness of men alter so divine a
+ character, you will be worshipped by your People, and loved by the whole
+ world. Philosophers, worthy of the name, will flock to your States;
+ thinkers will crowd round that throne, as the skilfulest artisans do to
+ the city where their art is in request. The illustrious Queen Christina
+ quitted her kingdom to go in search of the Arts; reign you, Monseigneur,
+ and the Arts will come to seek you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May you only never be disgusted with the Sciences by the quarrels of
+ their Cultivators! A race of men no better than Courtiers; often enough as
+ greedy, intriguing, false and cruel as these," and still more ridiculous
+ in the mischief they do. "And how sad for mankind that the very
+ Interpreters of Heaven's commandments, the Theologians, I mean, are
+ sometimes the most dangerous of all! Professed messengers of the Divinity,
+ yet men sometimes of obscure ideas and pernicious behavior; their soul
+ blown out with mere darkness; full of gall and pride, in proportion as it
+ is empty of truths. Every thinking being who is not of their opinion is an
+ Atheist; and every King who does not favor them will be damned. Dangerous
+ to the very throne; and yet intrinsically insignificant:" best way is,
+ leave their big talk and them alone; speedy collapse will follow....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot sufficiently thank your Royal Highness for the gift of that
+ little Book about Monsieur Wolf. I respect Metaphysical ideas; rays of
+ lightning they are in the midst of deep night. More, I think, is not to be
+ hoped from Metaphysics. It does not seem likely that the First-principles
+ of things will ever be known. The mice that nestle in some little holes of
+ an immense Building, know not whether it is eternal, or who the Architect,
+ or why he built it. Such mice are we; and the Divine Architect who built
+ the Universe has never, that I know of, told his secret to one of us. If
+ anybody could pretend to guess correctly, it is M. Wolf." Beautiful in
+ your Royal Highness to protect such a man. And how beautiful it will be,
+ to send me his chief Book, as you have the kindness to promise! "The Heir
+ of a Monarchy, from his palace, attending to the wants of a recluse far
+ off! Condescend to afford me the pleasure of that Book, Monseigneur....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What your Royal Highness thinks of poetry is just: verses that do not
+ teach men new and touching truths, do not deserve to be read." As to my
+ own poor verses&mdash;But, after all, "that HENRIADE is the writing of an
+ Honest Man: fit, in that sense, that it find grace with a Philosopher
+ Prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will obey your commands as to sending those unpublished Pieces. You
+ shall be my public, Monseigneur; your criticisms will be my reward: it is
+ a price few Sovereigns can pay. I am sure of your secrecy: your virtue and
+ your intellect must be in proportion. I should indeed consider it a
+ precious happiness to come and pay my court to your Royal Highness! One
+ travels to Rome to see paintings and ruins: a Prince such as you is a much
+ more singular object; worthier of a long journey! But the friendship
+ [divine Emilie's] which keeps me in this retirement does not permit my
+ leaving it. No doubt you think with Julian, that great and much
+ calumniated man, who said, 'Friends should always be preferred to Kings.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In whatever corner of the world I may end my life, be assured,
+ Monseigneur, my wishes will continually be for you,&mdash;that is to say,
+ for a whole People's happiness. My heart will rank itself among your
+ subjects; your glory will ever be dear to me. I shall wish, May you always
+ be like yourself, and may other Kings be like you!&mdash;I am, with
+ profound respect, your Royal Highness's most humble
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "VOLTAIRE."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xxi. 10.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Correspondence, once kindled, went on apace; and soon burst forth,
+ finding nourishment all round, into a shining little household fire,
+ pleasant to the hands and hearts of both parties. Consent of opinions on
+ important matters is not wanting; nor is emphasis in declaring the same.
+ The mutual admiration, which is high,&mdash;high and intrinsic on
+ Friedrich's side; and on Voltaire's, high if in part extrinsic,&mdash;by
+ no means wants for emphasis of statement: superlatives, tempered by the
+ best art, pass and repass. Friedrich, reading Voltaire's immortal
+ Manuscripts, confesses with a blush, before long, that he himself is a
+ poor Apprentice that way. Voltaire, at sight of the Princely Productions,
+ is full of admiration, of encouragement; does a little in correcting,
+ solecisms of grammar chiefly; a little, by no means much. But it is a
+ growing branch of employment; now and henceforth almost the one reality of
+ function Voltaire can find for himself in this beautiful Correspondence.
+ For, "Oh what a Crown-Prince, ripening forward to be the delight of human
+ nature, and realize the dream of sages, Philosophy upon the Throne!" And
+ on the other side, "Oh what a Phoebus Apollo, mounting the eastern sky,
+ chasing the Nightmares,&mdash;sowing the Earth with Orient pearl, to begin
+ with!"&mdash;In which fine duet, it must be said, the Prince is
+ perceptibly the truer singer; singing within compass, and from the heart;
+ while the Phoebus shows himself acquainted with art, and warbles in
+ seductive quavers, now and then beyond the pitch of his voice. We must own
+ also, Friedrich proves little seducible; shows himself laudably
+ indifferent to such siren-singing;&mdash;perhaps more used to flattery,
+ and knowing by experience how little meal is to be made of chaff.
+ Voltaire, in an ungrateful France, naturally plumes himself a good deal on
+ such recognition by a Foreign Rising Sun; and, of the two, though so many
+ years the elder, is much more like losing head a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elegant gifts are despatched to Cirey; gold-amber trinkets for Madame,
+ perhaps an amber inkholder for Monsieur: priceless at Cirey as the gifts
+ of the very gods. By and by, a messenger goes express: the witty Colonel
+ Keyserling, witty but experienced, whom we once named at Reinsberg; he is
+ to go and see with his eyes, since his Master cannot. What a messenger
+ there; ambassador from star to star! Keyserling's report at Reinsberg is
+ not given; but we have Grafigny's, which is probably the more impartial.
+ Keyserling's embassy was in the end of next year; [3d November, 1737 (as
+ we gather from the Correspondence).] and there is plenty of airy writing
+ about it and him, in these Letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich has translated the name KEYSERLING (diminutive of KAISER) into
+ "Caesarion;"&mdash;and I should have said, he plays much upon names and
+ also upon things, at Reinsberg, in that style; and has a good deal of airy
+ symbolism, and cloud-work ingeniously painted round the solidities of his
+ life there. Especially a "Bayard Order," as he calls it: Twelve of his
+ selectest Friends made into a Chivalry Brotherhood, the names of whom are
+ all changed, "Caesarion" one of them; with dainty devices, and mimetic
+ procedures of the due sort. Which are not wholly mummery; but have a spice
+ of reality, to flavor them to a serious young heart. For the selection was
+ rigorous, superior merit and behavior a strict condition; and indeed
+ several of these Bayard Chevaliers proved notable practical Champions in
+ time coming;&mdash;for example Captain Fouquet, of whom we have heard
+ before, in the dark Custrin days. This is a mentionable feature of the
+ Reinsberg life, and of the young Prince's character there: pleasant to
+ know of, from this distance; but not now worth knowing more in detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Friedrich-Voltaire Correspondence contains much incense; due whiffs of
+ it, from Reinsberg side, to the "divine Emilie," Voltaire's quasi
+ better-half or worse-half; who responds always in her divinest manner to
+ Reinsberg, eager for more acquaintance there. The Du Chatelets had a
+ Lawsuit in Brabant; very inveterate, perhaps a hundred years old or more;
+ with the "House of Honsbrouck:" [<i>Lettres Inedites de Voltaire</i>
+ (Paris, 1826), p. 9.] this, not to speak of other causes, flights from
+ French peril and the like, often brought Voltaire and his Dame into those
+ parts; and gave rise to occasional hopes of meeting with Friedrich; which
+ could not take effect. In more practical style, Voltaire solicits of him:
+ "Could not your Royal Highness perhaps graciously speak to some of those
+ Judicial Big wigs in Brabant, and flap them up a little!" Which Friedrich,
+ I think, did, by some good means. Happily, by one means or other, Voltaire
+ got the Lawsuit ended,&mdash;1740, we might guess, but the time is not
+ specified;&mdash;and Friedrich had a new claim, had there been need of
+ new, to be regarded with worship by Madame. [Record of all this, left,
+ like innumerable other things there, in an intrinsically dark condition,
+ lies in Voltaire's LETTERS,&mdash;not much worth hunting up into clear
+ daylight, the process being so difficult to a stranger.] But the proposed
+ meeting with Madame could never take effect; not even when Friedrich's
+ hands were free. Nay I notice at last, Friedrich had privately determined
+ it never should&mdash;Madame evidently an inconvenient element to him. A
+ young man not wanting in private power of eyesight; and able to
+ distinguish chaff from meal! Voltaire and he will meet; meet, and also
+ part; and there will be passages between them:&mdash;and the reader will
+ again hear of this Correspondence of theirs, where it has a biographical
+ interest. We are to conceive it, at present, as a principal light of life
+ to the young heart at Reinsberg; a cheerful new fire, almost an
+ altar-fire, irradiating the common dusk for him there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of another Correspondence, beautifully irradiative for the young heart, we
+ must say almost nothing: the Correspondence with Suhm. Suhm the Saxon
+ Minister, whom we have occasionally heard of, is an old Friend of the
+ Crown-Prince's, dear and helpful to him: it is he who is now doing those
+ <i>Translations of Wolf,</i> of which Voltaire lately saw specimens;
+ translate at large, for the young man's behoof. The young man, restless to
+ know the best Philosophy going, had tried reading of Wolf's chief Book;
+ found it too abstruse, in Wolf's German: wherefore Suhm translates; sends
+ it to him in limpid French; fascicle by fascicle, with commentaries; young
+ man doing his best to understand and admire,&mdash;gratefully, not too
+ successfully, we can perceive. That is the staple of the famous SUHM
+ CORRESPONDENCE; staple which nobody could now bear to be concerned with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suhm is also helpful in finance difficulties, which are pretty frequent;
+ works out subventions, loans under a handsome form, from the Czarina's and
+ other Courts. Which is an operation of the utmost delicacy; perilous,
+ should it be heard of at Potsdam. Wherefore Suhm and the Prince have a
+ covert language for it: and affect still to be speaking of "Publishers"
+ and "new Volumes," when they mean Lenders and Bank-Draughts. All these
+ loans, I will hope, were accurately paid one day, as that from George II.
+ was, in "rouleaus of new gold." We need not doubt the wholesome charm and
+ blessing of so intimate a Correspondence to the Crown-Prince: and indeed
+ his real love of the amiable Suhm, as Suhm's of him, comes beautifully to
+ light in these Letters: but otherwise they are not now to be read without
+ weariness, even dreariness, and have become a biographical reminiscence
+ merely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concerning Graf von Manteufel, a third Literary Correspondent, and the
+ only other considerable one, here, from a German Commentator on this
+ matter, is a Clipping that will suffice:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Manteufel was Saxon by birth, long a Minister of August the Strong, but
+ quarrelled with August, owing to some frail female it is said, and had
+ withdrawn to Berlin a few years ago. He shines there among the fashionable
+ philosophical classes; underhand, perhaps does a little in the volunteer
+ political line withal; being a very busy pushing gentleman. Tall of
+ stature, 'perfectly handsome at the age of sixty;' [Formey, <i>Souvenirs
+ d'un Citoyen,</i> i. 39-45.] great partisan of Wolf and the Philosophies,
+ awake to the Orthodoxies too. Writes flowing elegant French, in a softly
+ trenchant, somewhat too all-knowing style. High manners traceable in him;
+ but nothing of the noble loyalty, natural politeness and pious lucency of
+ Suhm. One of his Letters to Friedrich has this slightly impertinent
+ passage;&mdash;Friedrich, just getting settled in Reinsberg, having
+ transiently mentioned 'the quantity of fair sex' that had come about him
+ there:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'BERLIN, 26th AUGUST, 1736 (to the Crown-Prince).... I am well persuaded
+ your Royal Highness will regulate all that to perfection, and so manage
+ that your fair sex will be charmed to find themselves with you at
+ Reinsberg, and you charmed to have them there. But permit me, your Royal
+ Highness, to repeat in this place, what I one day took the liberty of
+ saying here at Berlin: Nothing in the world would better suit the present
+ interests of your Royal Highness and of us all, than some Heir of your
+ Royal Highness's making! Perhaps the tranquil convenience with which your
+ Royal Highness at Reinsberg can now attend to that object, will be of
+ better effect than all those hasty and transitory visits at Berlin were.
+ At least I wish it with the best of my heart. I beg pardon, Monseigneur,
+ for intruding thus into everything which concerns your Royal Highness;'&mdash;In
+ truth, I am a rather impudent busybodyish fellow, with superabundant
+ dashing manner, speculation, utterance; and shall get myself ordered out
+ of the Country, by my present correspondent, by and by.&mdash;'Being
+ ever,' with the due enthusiasm, 'MANTEUFEL.' [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i>
+ xxv. 487;&mdash;Friedrich's Answer is, Reinsberg, 23d September (Ib.
+ 489).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To which Friedrich's Answer is of a kind to put a gag in the foul mouth
+ of certain extraordinary Pamphleteerings, that were once very copious in
+ the world; and, in particular, to set at rest the Herr Dr. Zimmermann, and
+ his poor puddle of calumnies and credulities, got together in that weak
+ pursuit of physiology under obscene circumstances;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which is the one good result I have gathered from the Manteufel
+ Correspondence," continues our German friend; whom I vote with!&mdash;Or
+ if the English reader never saw those Zimmermann or other dog-like
+ Pamphleteerings and surmisings, let this Excerpt be mysterious and
+ superfluous to the thankful English reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, we conceive to ourselves the abundant nature of Friedrich's
+ Correspondence, literary and other; and what kind of event the transit of
+ that Post functionary "from Fehrbellin northwards," with his leathern
+ bags, "twice a week," may have been at Reinsberg, in those years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter III. &mdash; CROWN-PRINCE MAKES A MORNING CALL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Thursday, 25th October, 1736, the Crown-Prince, with Lieutenant
+ Buddenbrock and an attendant or two, drove over into Mecklenburg, to a
+ Village and serene Schloss called Mirow, intending a small act of
+ neighborly civility there; on which perhaps an English reader of our time
+ will consent to accompany him. It is but some ten or twelve miles off, in
+ a northerly direction; Reinsberg being close on the frontier there. A
+ pleasant enough morning's-drive, with the October sun shining on the
+ silent heaths, on the many-colored woods and you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mirow is an Apanage for one of the Mecklenburg-Strelitz junior branches:
+ Mecklenburg-Strelitz being itself a junior compared to the
+ Mecklenburg-Schwerin of which, and its infatuated Duke, we have heard so
+ much in times past. Mirow and even Strelitz are not in&mdash;a very
+ shining state,&mdash;but indeed, we shall see them, as it were, with eyes.
+ And the English reader is to note especially those Mirow people, as
+ perhaps of some small interest to him, if he knew it. The Crown-Prince
+ reports to papa, in a satirical vein, not ungenially, and with much more
+ freedom than is usual in those Reinsberg letters of his:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "TO HIS PRUSSIAN MAJESTY (from the Crown-Prince).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "REINSBERG, 26th October, 1736.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ... "Yesterday I went across to Mirow. To give my Most All-gracious Father
+ an idea of the place, I cannot liken it to anything higher than
+ Gross-Kreutz [term of comparison lost upon us; say GARRAT, at a venture,
+ or the CLACHAN OF ABERFOYLE]: the one house in it, that can be called a
+ house, is not so good as the Parson's there. I made straight for the
+ Schloss; which is pretty much like the Garden-house in Bornim: only there
+ is a rampart round it; and an old Tower, considerably in ruins, serves as
+ a Gateway to the House.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Coming on the Drawbridge, I perceived an old stocking-knitter disguised
+ as Grenadier, with his cap, cartridge-box and musket laid to a side, that
+ they might not hinder him in his knitting-work. As I advanced, he asked,
+ 'Whence I came, and whitherward I was going?' I answered, that 'I came
+ from the Post-house, and was going over this Bridge:' whereupon the
+ Grenadier, quite in a passion, ran to the Tower; where he opened a door,
+ and called out the Corporal. The Corporal seemed to have hardly been out
+ of bed; and in his great haste, had not taken time to put on his shoes,
+ nor quite button his breeches; with much flurry he asked us, 'Where we
+ were for, and how we came to treat the Sentry in that manner?' Without
+ answering him at all, we went our way towards the Schloss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never in my life should I have taken this for a Schloss, had it not been
+ that there were two glass lamps fixed at the door-posts, and the figures
+ of two Cranes standing in front of them, by way of Guards. We made up to
+ the House; and after knocking almost half an hour to no purpose, there
+ peered out at last an exceedingly old woman, who looked as if she might
+ have nursed the Prince of Mirow's father. The poor woman, at sight of
+ strangers, was so terrified, she slammed the door to in our faces. We
+ knocked again; and seeing there could nothing be made of it, we went round
+ to the stables; where a fellow told us, 'The young Prince with his Consort
+ was gone to Neu-Strelitz, a couple of miles off [ten miles English]; and
+ the Duchess his Mother, who lives here, had given him, to make the better
+ figure, all her people along with him; keeping nobody but the old woman to
+ herself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was still early; so I thought I could not do better than profit by the
+ opportunity, and have a look at Neu-Strelitz. We took post-horses; and got
+ thither about noon. Neu-Strelitz is properly a Village; with only one
+ street in it, where Chamberlains, Office-Clerks, Domestics all lodge, and
+ where there is an Inn. I cannot better describe it to my Most All-gracious
+ Father than by that street in Gumbinnen where you go up to the Town-hall,&mdash;except
+ that no house here is whitewashed. The Schloss is fine, and lies on a
+ lake, with a big garden; pretty much like Reinsberg in situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first question I asked here was for the Prince of Mirow: but they
+ told me he had just driven off again to a place called Kanow; which is
+ only a couple of miles English from Mirow, where we had been. Buddenbrock,
+ who is acquainted with Neu-Strelitz, got me, from a chamberlain, something
+ to eat; and in the mean while, that Bohme came in, who was Adjutant in my
+ Most All-gracious Father's Regiment [not of Goltz, but King's presumably]:
+ Bohme did not know me till I hinted to him who I was. He told me, 'The
+ Duke of Strelitz was an excellent seamster;'" fit to be Tailor to your
+ Majesty in a manner, had not Fate been cruel, "'and that he made beautiful
+ dressing-gowns (CASSAQUINS) with his needle.' This made me curious to see
+ him: so we had ourselves presented as Foreigners; and it went off so well
+ that nobody recognized me. I cannot better describe the Duke than by
+ saying he is like old Stahl [famed old medical man at Berlin, dead last
+ year, physiognomy not known to actual readers], in a blond Abbe's-periwig.
+ He is extremely silly (BLODE); his Hofrath Altrock tells him, as it were,
+ everything he has to say." About fifty, this poor Duke; shrunk into
+ needlework, for a quiet life, amid such tumults from Schwerin and
+ elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having taken leave, we drove right off to Kanow; and got thither about
+ six. It is a mere Village; and the Prince's Pleasure-House (LUSTHAUS) here
+ is nothing better than an ordinary Hunting-Lodge, such as any
+ Forest-keeper has. I alighted at the Miller's; and had myself announced"
+ at the LUSTHAUS, "by his maid: upon which the Major-Domo (HAUS-HOFMEISTER)
+ came over to the Mill, and complimented me; with whom I proceeded to the
+ Residenz," that is, back again to Mirow, "where the whole Mirow Family
+ were assembled. The Mother is a Princess of Schwartzburg, and still the
+ cleverest of them all," still under sixty; good old Mother, intent that
+ her poor Son should appear to advantage, when visiting the more opulent
+ Serenities. "His Aunt also," mother's sister, "was there. The Lady Spouse
+ is small; a Niece to the Prince of Hildburghausen, who is in the Kaiser's
+ service: she was in the family-way; but (ABER) seemed otherwise to be a
+ very good Princess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first thing they entertained me with was, the sad misfortune come
+ upon their best Cook; who, with the cart that was bringing the provisions,
+ had overset, and broken his arm; so that the provisions had all gone to
+ nothing. Privately I have had inquiries made; there was not a word of
+ truth in the story. At last we went to table; and, sure enough, it looked
+ as if the Cook and his provisions had come to some mishap; for certainly
+ in the Three Crowns at Potsdam [worst inn, one may guess, in the satirical
+ vein], there is better eating than here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At table, there was talk of nothing but of all the German Princes who are
+ not right in their wits (NICHT RECHT KLUG)," as Mirow himself, your
+ Majesty knows, is reputed to be!" There was Weimar, [Wilhelmina's
+ acquaintance; wedded, not without difficulty, to a superfluous Baireuth
+ Sister-in-law by Wilhelmina (<i> Memoires de Wilhelmina,</i> ii. 185-194):
+ Grandfather of Goethe's Friend;&mdash;is nothing like fairly out of his
+ wits; only has a flea (as we may say) dancing occasionally in the ear of
+ him. Perhaps it is so with the rest of these Serenities, here fallen upon
+ evil tongues?] Gotha, Waldeck, Hoym, and the whole lot of them, brought
+ upon the carpet:&mdash;and after our good Host had got considerably drunk,
+ we rose,&mdash;and he lovingly promised me that 'he and his whole Family
+ would come and visit Reinsberg.' Come he certainly will; but how I shall
+ get rid of him, God knows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I most submissively beg pardon of my Most All-gracious Father for this
+ long Letter; and"&mdash;we will terminate here. [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i>
+ xxvii. part 3d, pp. 104-106.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dilapidated Mirow and its inmates, portrayed in this satirical way, except
+ as a view of Serene Highnesses fallen into Sleepy Hollow, excites little
+ notice in the indolent mind; and that little, rather pleasantly
+ contemptuous than really profitable. But one fact ought to kindle
+ momentary interest in English readers: the young foolish Herr, in this
+ dilapidated place, is no other than our "Old Queen Charlotte's" Father
+ that is to be,&mdash;a kind of Ancestor of ours, though we little guessed
+ it! English readers will scan him with new curiosity, when he pays that
+ return visit at Reinsberg. Which he does within the fortnight:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "TO HIS PRUSSIAN MAJESTY (from the Crown-Prince).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "REINSBERG, 6th November, 1736.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ... "that my Most All-gracious Father has had the graciousness to send us
+ some Swans. My Wife also has been exceedingly delighted at the fine
+ Present sent her.... General Praetorius," Danish Envoy, with whose Court
+ there is some tiff of quarrel, "came hither yesterday to take leave of us;
+ he seems very unwilling to quit Prussia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This morning about three o'clock, my people woke me, with word that there
+ was a Stafette come with Letters,"&mdash;from your Majesty or Heaven knows
+ whom! "I spring up in all haste; and opening the Letter,&mdash;find it is
+ from the Prince of Mirow; who informs me that 'he will be here to-day at
+ noon.' I have got all things in readiness to receive him, as if he were
+ the Kaiser in person; and I hope there will be material for some amusement
+ to my Most All-gracious Father, by next post."&mdash;Next post is half a
+ week hence:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "TO HIS PRUSSIAN MAJESTY (from the Crown-Prince).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "REINSBERG, 11th Novemher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ... "The Prince of Mirow's visit was so curious, I must give my Most
+ All-gracious Father a particular report of it. In my last, I mentioned how
+ General Praetorius had come to us: he was in the room, when I entered with
+ the Prince of Mirow; at sight of him Praetorius exclaimed, loud enough to
+ be heard by everybody, 'VOILA LE PRINCE CAJUCA!' [Nickname out of some
+ Romance, fallen extinct long since.] Not one of us could help laughing;
+ and I had my own trouble to turn it so that he did not get angry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Scarcely was the Prince got in, when they came to tell me, for his worse
+ luck, that Prince Heinrich," the Ill Margraf, "was come;&mdash;who
+ accordingly trotted him out, in such a way that we thought we should all
+ have died with laughing. Incessant praises were given him, especially for
+ his fine clothes, his fine air, and his uncommon agility in dancing. And
+ indeed I thought the dancing would never end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the afternoon, to spoil his fine coat,"&mdash;a contrivance of the Ill
+ Margraf's, I should think,&mdash;"we stept out to shoot at target in the
+ rain: he would not speak of it, but one could observe he was in much
+ anxiety about the coat. In the evening, he got a glass or two in his head,
+ and grew extremely merry; said at last, 'He was sorry that, for divers
+ state-reasons and businesses of moment, he must of necessity return home;'&mdash;which,
+ however, he put off till about two in the morning. I think, next day he
+ would not remember very much of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Prince Heinrich is gone to his Regiment again;" Praetorius too is off;&mdash;and
+ we end with the proper KOW-TOW. [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xvii. part
+ 3d, p. 109.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These Strelitzers, we said, are juniors to infatuated Schwerin; and poor
+ Mirow is again junior to Strelitz: plainly one of the least opulent of
+ Residences. At present, it is Dowager Apanage (WITTWEN-SITZ) to the Widow
+ of the late Strelitz of blessed memory: here, with her one Child, a boy
+ now grown to what manhood we see, has the Serene Dowager lived, these
+ twenty-eight years past; a Schwartzburg by birth, "the cleverest head
+ among them all." Twenty-eight years in dilapidated Mirow: so long has that
+ Tailoring Duke, her eldest STEP-SON (child of a prior wife) been Supreme
+ Head of Mecklenburg-Strelitz; employed with his needle, or we know not
+ how,&mdash;collapsed plainly into tailoring at this date. There was but
+ one other Son; this clever Lady's, twenty years junior,&mdash;"Prince of
+ Mirow" whom we now see. Karl Ludwig Friedrich is the name of this one; age
+ now twenty-eight gone. He, ever since the third month of him, when the
+ poor Serene Father died ("May, 1703"), has been at Mirow with Mamma;
+ getting what education there was,&mdash;not too successfully, as would
+ appear. Eight years ago, "in 1726," Mamma sent him off upon his travels;
+ to Geneva, Italy, France: he looked in upon Vienna, too; got a
+ Lieutenant-Colonelcy in the Kaiser's Service, but did not like it; soon
+ gave it up; and returned home to vegetate, perhaps to seek a wife,&mdash;having
+ prospects of succession in Strelitz. For the Serene Half-Brother proves to
+ have no children: were his tailoring once finished in the world, our
+ Prince of Mirow is Duke in Chief. On this basis the wedded last year; the
+ little Wife has already brought him one child, a Daughter; and has (as
+ Friedrich notices) another under way, if it prosper. No lack of Daughters,
+ nor of Sons by and by: eight years hence came the little Charlotte,&mdash;subsequently
+ Mother of England: much to her and our astonishment. [Born (at Mirow) 19th
+ May, 1744; married (London), 8th September, 1761; died, 18th November,
+ 1818 (Michaelis, ii. 445, 446; Hubner, t. 195; OErtel, pp. 43, 22).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor man did not live to be Duke of Strelitz; he died, 1752, in little
+ Charlotte's eighth year; Tailor Duke SURVIVING him a few months. Little
+ Charlotte's Brother did then succeed, and lasted till 1794; after whom a
+ second Brother, father of the now Serene Strelitzes;&mdash;who also is
+ genealogically notable. For from him there came another still more famous
+ Queen: Louisa of Prussia; beautiful to look upon, as "Aunt Charlotte" was
+ not, in a high degree; and who showed herself a Heroine in Napoleon's
+ time, as Aunt Charlotte never was called to do. Both Aunt and Niece were
+ women of sense, of probity, propriety; fairly beyond the average of
+ Queens. And as to their early poverty, ridiculous to this gold-nugget
+ generation, I rather guess it may have done them benefits which the
+ gold-nugget generation, in its Queens and otherwise, stands far more in
+ want of than it thinks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But enough of this Prince of Mirow, whom Friedrich has accidentally
+ unearthed for us. Indeed there is no farther history of him, for or
+ against. He evidently was not thought to have invented gunpowder, by the
+ public. And yet who knows but, in his very simplicity, there lay something
+ far beyond the Ill Margraf to whom he was so quizzable? Poor down-pressed
+ brother mortal; somnambulating so pacifically in Sleepy Hollow yonder, and
+ making no complaint!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He continued, though soon with less enthusiasm, and in the end very
+ rarely, a visitor of Friedrich's during this Reinsberg time. Patriotic
+ English readers may as well take the few remaining vestiges, too, before
+ quite dismissing him to Sleepy Hollow. Here they are, swept accurately
+ together, from that Correspondence of Friedrich with Papa:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "REINSBERG, 18th NOVEMBER, 1736.... report most submissively that the
+ Prince of Mirow has again been here, with his Mother, Wife, Aunt,
+ Hofdames, Cavaliers and entire Household; so that I thought it was the
+ Flight out of Egypt [Exodus of the Jews]. I begin to have a fear of those
+ good people, as they assured me they would have such pleasure in coming
+ often!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "REINSBERG, 1st FEBRUARY, 1737." Let us give it in the Original too, as a
+ specimen of German spelling:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>"Der Prints von Mihrau ist vohr einigen thagen hier gewessen und haben
+ wier einige Wasser schwermer in der See ihm zu Ehren gesmissen, seine frau
+ ist mit eber thoten Printzesin nieder geKomen.&mdash;Der General
+ schulenburg ist heute hier gekommen und wirdt morgen"</i>&mdash;That is to
+ say:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Prince of Mirow was here a few days ago; and we let off, in honor of
+ him, a few water-rockets over the Lake: his Wife has been brought to bed
+ of a dead Princess. General Schulenburg [with a small s] came hither
+ to-day; and to-morrow will"...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "REINSBERG, 28th MARCH, 1737.... Prince von Mirow was here yesterday; and
+ tried shooting at the popinjay with us; he cannot see rightly, and shoots
+ always with help of an opera-glass."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "RUPPIN, 20th OCTOBER, 1737. The Prince of Mirow was with us last Friday;
+ and babbled much in his high way; among other things, white-lied to us,
+ that the Kaiserinn gave him a certain porcelain snuff-box he was handling;
+ but on being questioned more tightly, he confessed to me he had bought it
+ in Vienna." [<i>Briefe an Vater,</i> p. 71 (CARET in <i>OEuvres</i> ); pp.
+ 85-114.&mdash;See Ib. 6th November, 1737, for faint trace of a visit; and
+ 25th September, 1739, for another still fainter, the last there is.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so let him somnambulate yonder, till the two Queens, like winged
+ Psyches, one after the other, manage to emerge from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's Letters to his Father are described by some Prussian Editors
+ as "very attractive, SEHR ANZIEHENDE BRIEFE;" which, to a Foreign reader,
+ seems a strange account of them. Letters very hard to understand
+ completely; and rather insignificant when understood. They turn on Gifts
+ sent to and sent from, "swans," "hams," with the unspeakable thanks for
+ them; on recruits of so many inches; on the visitors that have been; they
+ assure us that "there is no sickness in the regiment," or tell expressly
+ how much:&mdash;wholly small facts; nothing of speculation, and of
+ ceremonial pipe-clay a great deal. We know already under what nightmare
+ conditions Friedrich wrote to his Father! The attitude of the
+ Crown-Prince, sincerely reverent and filial, though obliged to appear
+ ineffably so, and on the whole struggling under such mountains of
+ encumbrance, yet loyally maintaining his equilibrium, does at last
+ acquire, in these Letters, silently a kind of beauty to the best class of
+ readers. But that is nearly their sole merit. By far the most human of
+ them, that on the first visit to Mirow, the reader has now seen; and may
+ thank us much that we show him no more of them. [<i>Friedrich des Grossen
+ Briefe an seinen Vater</i> (Berlin, 1838)]. Reduced in size, by suitable
+ omissions; and properly spelt; but with little other elucidation for a
+ stranger: in <i>OEuvres,</i> xxvii. part 3d, pp, 1-123 (Berlin, 1856).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IV. &mdash; NEWS OF THE DAY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While these Mirow visits are about their best, and much else at Reinsberg
+ is in comfortable progress, Friedrich's first year there just ending,
+ there come accounts from England of quarrels broken out between the
+ Britannic Majesty and his Prince of Wales. Discrepancies risen now to a
+ height; and getting into the very Newspapers;&mdash;the Rising Sun too
+ little under the control of the Setting, in that unquiet Country!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Fred of England did not get to the Rhine Campaign, as we saw: he
+ got some increase of Revenue, a Household of his own; and finally a Wife,
+ as he had requested: a Sachsen-Gotha Princess; who, peerless Wilhelmma
+ being unattainable, was welcome to Prince Fred. She is in the family-way,
+ this summer 1737, a very young lady still; result thought to be due&mdash;When?
+ Result being potential Heir to the British Nation, there ought to have
+ been good calculation of the time when! But apparently nobody had well
+ turned his attention that way. Or if Fred and Spouse had, as is
+ presumable, Fred had given no notice to the Paternal Majesty,&mdash;"Let
+ Paternal Majesty, always so cross to me, look out for himself in that
+ matter." Certain it is, Fred and Spouse, in the beginning of August, 1737,
+ are out at Hampton Court; potential Heir due before long, and no
+ preparation made for it. August 11th in the evening, out at solitary
+ Hampton Court; the poor young Mother's pains came on; no Chancellor there,
+ no Archbishop to see the birth,&mdash;in fact, hardly the least medical
+ help, and of political altogether none. Fred, in his flurry, or by
+ forethought,&mdash;instead of dashing off expresses, at a gallop as of
+ Epsom, to summon the necessary persons and appliances, yoked wheeled
+ vehicles and rolled off to the old unprovided Palace of St. James's,
+ London, with his poor Wife in person! Unwarned, unprovided; where
+ nevertheless she was safely delivered that same night,&mdash;safely, as if
+ by miracle. The crisis might have taken her on the very highway: never was
+ such an imprudence. Owing, I will believe, to Fred's sudden flurry in the
+ unprovided moment,&mdash;unprovided, by reason of prior desuetudes and
+ discouragements to speech, on Papa's side. A shade of malice there might
+ also be. Papa doubts not, it was malice aforethought all of it. "Had the
+ potential Heir of the British Nation gone to wreck, or been born on the
+ highway, from my quarrels with this bad Fred, what a scrape had I been
+ in!" thinks Papa, and is in a towering permanence of wrath ever since; the
+ very Newspapers and coffee-houses and populaces now all getting vocal with
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Papa, as it turned out, never more saw the face of Fred. Judicious Mamma,
+ Queen Caroline, could not help a visit, one visit to the poor young
+ Mother, so soon as proper: coming out from the visit, Prince Fred
+ obsequiously escorting her to her carriage, found a crowd of people and
+ populace, in front of St. James's; and there knelt down on the street, in
+ his fine silk breeches, careless of the mud, to "beg a Mother's blessing,"
+ and show what a son he was, he for his part, in this sad discrepancy that
+ had risen! Mamma threw a silent glance on him, containing volumes of mixed
+ tenor; drove off; and saw no more of Fred, she either. I fear, this
+ kneeling in the mud tells against Prince Fred; but in truth I do not know,
+ nor even much care. [Lord Hervey, <i>Memoirs of George the Second,</i> ii.
+ 362-370, 409.] What a noise in England about nothing at all!&mdash;What a
+ noisy Country, your Prussian Majesty! Foolish "rising sun" not
+ restrainable there by the setting or shining one; opposition parties
+ bowling him about among the constellations, like a very mad object!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in a month or two, there comes worse news out of England; falling
+ heavy on the heart of Prussian Majesty: news that Queen Caroline herself
+ is dead. ["Sunday evening, 1st December (20th Nov.), 1737." Ib. pp.
+ 510-539.] Died as she had lived, with much constancy of mind, with a
+ graceful modest courage and endurance; sinking quietly under the load of
+ private miseries long quietly kept hidden, but now become too heavy, and
+ for which the appointed rest was now here. Little George blubbered a good
+ deal; fidgeted and flustered a good deal: much put about, poor foolish
+ little soul. The dying Caroline recommended HIM to Walpole; advised his
+ Majesty to marry again. <i>"Non, j'aurai des maitresses</i> (No, I'll have
+ mistresses)!" sobbed his Majesty passionately. <i>"Ah, mon Dieu, cela
+ n'empeche pas</i>" (that does not an experience of the case). There is
+ something stoically tragic in the history of Caroline with her flighty
+ vaporing little King: seldom had foolish husband so wise a wife. "Dead!"
+ thought Friedrich Wilhelm, looking back through the whirlwinds of life,
+ into sunny young scenes far enough away: "Dead!"&mdash;Walpole continued
+ to manage the little King; but not for long; England itself rising in
+ objection. Jenkins's Ear, I understand, is lying in cotton; and there are
+ mad inflammable strata in that Nation, capable of exploding at a great
+ rate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Eastern regions our Newspapers are very full of events: War with
+ the Turk going on there; Russia and Austria both doing their best against
+ the Turk. The Russians had hardly finished their Polish-Election fighting,
+ when they decided to have a stroke at the Turk,&mdash;Turk always an
+ especial eye-sorrow to them, since that "Treaty of the Pruth," and Czar
+ Peter's sad rebuff there:&mdash;Munnich marched direct out of Poland
+ through the Ukraine, with his eye on the Crimea and furious business in
+ that quarter. This is his second Campaign there, this of 1737; and furious
+ business has not failed. Last year he stormed the Lines of Perecop, tore
+ open the Crimea; took Azoph, he or Lacy under him; took many things: this
+ year he had laid his plans for Oczakow;&mdash;takes Oczakow,&mdash;fiery
+ event, blazing in all the Newspapers, at Reinsberg and elsewhere.
+ Concerning which will the reader accept this condensed testimony by an
+ eye-witness?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "OCZAKOW, 13th JULY, 1737. Day before yesterday, Feldmarschall Munnich got
+ to Oczakow, as he had planned,"&mdash;strong Turkish Town in the nook
+ between the Black Sea and the estuary of the Dnieper;&mdash;"with
+ intention to besiege it. Siege-train, stores of every sort, which he had
+ set afloat upon the Dnieper in time enough, were to have been ready for
+ him at Oczakow. But the flotilla had been detained by shallows, by
+ waterfalls; not a boat was come, nor could anybody say when they were
+ coming. Meanwhile nothing is to be had here; the very face of the earth
+ the Turks have burnt: not a blade of grass for cavalry within eight miles,
+ nor a stick of wood for engineers; not a hole for covert, and the ground
+ so hard you cannot raise redoubts on it: Munnich perceives he must
+ attempt, nevertheless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On his right, by the sea-shore, Munnich finds some remains of gardens,
+ palisades; scrapes together some vestige of shelter there (five thousand,
+ or even ten thousand pioneers working desperately all that first night,
+ 11th July, with only half success); and on the morrow commences firing
+ with what artillery he has. Much outfired by the Turks inside;&mdash;his
+ enterprise as good as desperate, unless the Dnieper flotilla come soon.
+ July 12th, all day the firing continues, and all night; Turks extremely
+ furious: about an hour before daybreak, we notice burning in the interior,
+ 'Some wooden house kindled by us, town got on fire yonder,'&mdash;and,
+ praise to Heaven, they do not seem to succeed in quenching it again.
+ Munnich turns out, in various divisions; intent on trying something, had
+ he the least engineer furniture;&mdash;hopes desperately there may be
+ promise for him in that internal burning still visible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the centre of Munnich's line is one General Keith, a deliberate
+ stalwart Scotch gentleman, whom we shall know better; Munnich himself is
+ to the right: Could not one try it by scalade; keep the internal burning
+ free to spread, at any rate? 'Advance within musket-shot, General Keith!'
+ orders Munnich's Aide-de-Camp cantering up. 'I have been this good while
+ within it,' answers Keith, pointing to his dead men. Aide-de-Camp canters
+ up a second time: 'Advance within half musket-shot, General Keith, and
+ quit any covert you have!' Keith does so; sends, with his respects to
+ Feldmarschall Munnich, his remonstrance against such a waste of human
+ life. Aide-de-Camp canters up a third time: 'Feldmarschall Munnich is for
+ trying a scalade; hopes General Keith will do his best to co-operate!'
+ 'Forward, then!' answers Keith; advances close to the glacis; finds a wet
+ ditch twelve feet broad, and has not a stick of engineer furniture. Keith
+ waits there two hours; his men, under fire all the while, trying this and
+ that to get across; Munnich's scalade going off ineffectual in like
+ manner:&mdash;till at length Keith's men, and all men, tire of such a
+ business, and roll back in great confusion out of shot-range. Munnich
+ gives himself up for lost. And indeed, says Mannstein, had the Turks
+ sallied out in pursuit at that moment, they might have chased us back to
+ Russia. But the Turks did not sally. And the internal conflagration is not
+ quenched, far from it;&mdash;and about nine A.M. their Powder-Magazine,
+ conflagration reaching it, roared aloft into the air, and killed seven
+ thousand of them," [Mannstein, pp. 151-156.]&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that Oczakow was taken, sure enough; terms, life only: and every
+ remaining Turk packs off from it, some "twenty thousand inhabitants young
+ and old" for one sad item.&mdash;A very blazing semi-absurd event, to be
+ read of in Prussian military circles,&mdash;where General Keith will be
+ better known one day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russian War with the Turk: that means withal, by old Treaties, aid of
+ thirty thousand men from the Kaiser to Russia. Kaiser, so ruined lately,
+ how can he send thirty thousand, and keep them recruited, in such distant
+ expedition? Kaiser, much meditating, is advised it will be better to go
+ frankly into the Turk on his own score, and try for slices of profit from
+ him in this game. Kaiser declares war against the Turk; and what is still
+ more interesting to Friedrich Wilhelm and the Berlin Circles, Seckendorf
+ is named General of it. Feldzeugmeister now Feldmarschall Seckendorf, envy
+ may say what it will, he has marched this season into the Lower-Donau
+ Countries,&mdash;going to besiege Widdin, they say,&mdash;at the head of a
+ big Army (on paper, almost a hundred and fifty thousand, light troops and
+ heavy)&mdash;virtually Commander-in-Chief; though nominally our fine young
+ friend Franz of Lorraine bears the title of Commander, whom Seckendorf is
+ to dry-nurse in the way sometimes practised. Going to besiege Widdin, they
+ say. So has the poor Kaiser been advised. His wise old Eugene is now gone;
+ [Died 30th April, 1736.] I fear his advisers,&mdash;a youngish
+ Feldzeugmeister, Prince of Hildburghausen, the chief favorite among them,&mdash;are
+ none of the wisest. All Protestants, we observe, these favorite
+ Hildburghausens, Schmettaus, Seckendorfs of his; and Vienna is an orthodox
+ papal Court;&mdash;and there is a Hofkriegsrath (Supreme Council of War),
+ which has ruined many a General, poking too meddlesomely into his affairs!
+ On the whole, Seckendorf will have his difficulties. Here is a scene, on
+ the Lower Donau, different enough from that at Oczakow, not far from
+ contemporaneous with it. The Austrian Army is at Kolitz, a march or two
+ beyond Belgrade:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "KOLITZ, 2d JULY, 1737. This day, the Army not being on march, but allowed
+ to rest itself, Grand Duke Franz went into the woods to hunt. Hunting up
+ and down, he lost himself; did not return at evening; and, as the night
+ closed in and no Generalissimo visible, the Generalissimo AD LATUS (such
+ the title they had contrived for Seckendorf) was in much alarm.
+ Generalissimo AD LATUS ordered out his whole force of drummers,
+ trumpeters: To fling themselves, postwise, deeper and deeper into the
+ woods all round; to drum there, and blow, in ever-widening circle, in
+ prescribed notes, and with all energy, till the Grand Duke were found.
+ Grand Duke being found, Seckendorf remonstrated, rebuked; a thought too
+ earnestly, some say, his temper being flurried,"&mdash;voice snuffling
+ somewhat in alt, with lisp to help:&mdash;"so that the Grand Duke took
+ offence; flung off in a huff: and always looked askance on the
+ Feldmarschall from that time;" [See <i>Lebensgeschichte des Grafen van
+ Schmettau</i> (by his Son: Berlin, 1806), i. 27.]&mdash;quitting him
+ altogether before long; and marching with Khevenhuller, Wallis,
+ Hildburghausen, or any of the subordinate Generals rather. Probably Widdin
+ will not go the road of Oczakow, nor the Austrians prosper like the
+ Russians, this summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pollnitz, in Tobacco-Parliament, and in certain Berlin circles foolishly
+ agape about this new Feldmarschall, maintains always, Seckendorf will come
+ to nothing; which his Majesty zealously contradicts,&mdash;his Majesty,
+ and some short-sighted private individuals still favorable to Seckendorf.
+ [Pollnitz, <i>Memoiren,</i> ii. 497-502.] Exactly one week after that
+ singular drum-and-trumpet operation on Duke Franz, the Last of the Medici
+ dies at Florence; [9th July (<i>Fastes de Louis XV.</i>, p. 304).] and
+ Serene Franz, if he knew it, is Grand Duke of Tuscany, according to
+ bargain: a matter important to himself chiefly, and to France, who, for
+ Stanislaus and Lorraine's sake, has had to pay him some 200,000 pounds a
+ year during the brief intermediate state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ OF BERG AND JULICH AGAIN; AND OF LUISCIUS WITH THE ONE RAZOR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ These remote occurrences are of small interest to his Prussian Majesty, in
+ comparison with the Pfalz affair, the Cleve-Julich succession, which lies
+ so near home. His Majesty is uncommonly anxious to have this matter
+ settled, in peace, if possible. Kaiser and Reich, with the other Mediating
+ Powers, go on mediating; but when will they decide? This year the old
+ Bishop of Augsburg, one Brother of the older Kur-Pfalz Karl Philip, dies;
+ nothing now between us and the event itself, but Karl Philip alone, who is
+ verging towards eighty: the decision, to be peaceable, ought to be speedy!
+ Friedrich Wilhelm, in January last, sent the expert Degenfeld, once of
+ London, to old Karl Philip; and has him still there, with the most
+ conciliatory offers: "Will leave your Sulzbachs a part, then; will be
+ content with part, instead of the whole, which is mine if there be force
+ in sealed parchment; will do anything for peace!" To which the old
+ Kur-Pfalz, foolish old creature, is steadily deaf; answers vaguely,
+ negatively always, in a polite manner; pushing his Majesty upon
+ extremities painful to think of. "We hate war; but cannot quite do without
+ justice, your Serenity," thinks Friedrich Wilhelm: "must it be the eighty
+ thousand iron ramrods, then?" Obstinate Serenity continues deaf; and
+ Friedrich Wilhelm's negotiations, there at Mannheim, over in Holland, and
+ through Holland with England, not to speak of Kaiser and Reich close at
+ hand, become very intense; vehemently earnest, about this matter, for the
+ next two years. The details of which, inexpressibly uninteresting, shall
+ be spared the reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_SUMM" id="link2H_SUMM">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Summary is, these Mediating Powers will be of no help to his Majesty;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ not even the Dutch will, with whom he is specially in friendship: nay, in
+ the third year it becomes fatally manifest, the chief Mediating Powers,
+ Kaiser and France, listening rather to political convenience, than to the
+ claims of justice, go direct in Kur-Pfalz's favor;&mdash;by formal treaty
+ of their own, ["Versailles, 13th January, 1739" (Olrich, <i>Geschichte der
+ Schlesischen Kriege,</i> i. 13); Mauvillon, ii 405-446; &amp;c.] France
+ and the Kaiser settle, "That the Sulzbachers shall, as a preliminary, get
+ provisional possession, on the now Serenity's decease; and shall continue
+ undisturbed for two years, till Law decide between his Prussian Majesty
+ and them." Two years; Law decide;&mdash;and we know what are the
+ NINE-POINTS in a Law-case! This, at last, proved too much for his Majesty.
+ Majesty's abstruse dubitations, meditations on such treatment by a Kaiser
+ and others, did then, it appears, gloomily settle into fixed private
+ purpose of trying it by the iron ramrods, when old Kur-Pfalz should die,&mdash;of
+ marching with eighty thousand men into the Cleve Countries, and SO
+ welcoming any Sulzbach or other guests that might arrive. Happily old
+ Kur-Pfalz did not die in his Majesty's time; survived his Majesty several
+ years: so that the matter fell into other hands,&mdash;and was settled
+ very well, near a century after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of certain wranglings with the little Town of Herstal,&mdash;Prussian Town
+ (part of the Orange Heritage, once KING PEPIN'S Town, if that were any
+ matter now) in the Bishop of Liege's neighborhood, Town highly
+ insignificant otherwise,&mdash;we shall say nothing here, as they will
+ fall to be treated, and be settled, at an after stage. Friedrich Wilhelm
+ was much grieved by the contumacies of that paltry little Herstal; and by
+ the Bishop of Liege's high-flown procedures in countenancing them;&mdash;especially
+ in a recruiting ease that had fallen out there, and brought matters to a
+ head. ["December, 1738," is crisis of the recruiting case (<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii. 63); "17th February, 1739," Bishop's high-flown appearance in it (ib.
+ 67); Kaiser's in consequence, "10th April, 1739."] The Kaiser too was
+ afflictively high in countenancing the Bishop;&mdash;-for which both
+ Kaiser and Bishop got due payment in time. But his Prussian Majesty would
+ not kindle the world for such a paltriness; and so left it hanging in a
+ vexatious condition. Such things, it is remarked, weigh heavier on his now
+ infirm Majesty than they were wont. He is more subject to fits of
+ hypochondria, to talk of abdicating. "All gone wrong!" he would say, if
+ any little flaw rose, about recruiting or the like. "One might go and live
+ at Venice, were one rid of it!" [Forster (place LOST).] And his deep-stung
+ clangorous growl against the Kaiser's treatment of him bursts out, from
+ time to time; though he oftenest pities the Kaiser, too; seeing him at
+ such a pass with his Turk War and otherwise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this Pfalz business that Herr Luiscius, the Prussian Minister in
+ Holland, got into trouble; of whom there is a light dash of
+ outline-portraiture by Voltaire, which has made him memorable to readers.
+ This "fat King of Prussia," says Voltaire, was a dreadfully avaricious
+ fellow, unbeautiful to a high degree in his proceedings with mankind:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He had a Minister at the Hague called Luiscius; who certainly of all
+ Ministers of Crowned Heads was the worst paid. This poor man, to warm
+ himself, had made some trees be felled in the Garden of Honslardik, which
+ belonged at that time to the House of Prussia; he thereupon received
+ despatches from the King, intimating that a year of his salary was
+ forfeited. Luiscius, in despair, cut his throat with probably the one
+ razor he had (SEUL RASOIR QU'IL EUT); an old valet came to his assistance,
+ and unhappily saved his life. In after years, I found his Excellency at
+ the Hague; and have occasionally given him an alms at the door of the
+ VIEILLE COUR (Old Court), a Palace belonging to the King of Prussia, where
+ this poor Ambassador had lived a dozen years. It must be owned, Turkey is
+ a republic in comparison to the despotism exercised by Friedrich Wilhelm."
+ [<i>OEuvres de Voltaire (Vie Pricee,</i> or what they now call <i>Memoires</i>
+ ), ii. 15.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here truly is a witty sketch; consummately dashed off, as nobody but
+ Voltaire could; "round as Giotto's O," done at one stroke. Of which the
+ prose facts are only as follows. Luiscius, Prussian Resident, not
+ distinguished by salary or otherwise, had, at one stage of these
+ negotiations, been told, from head-quarters, He might, in casual
+ extra-official ways, if it seemed furthersome, give their High
+ Mightinesses the hope, or notion, that his Majesty did not intend actual
+ war about that Cleve-Julich Succession,&mdash;being a pacific Majesty, and
+ unwilling to involve his neighbors and mankind. Luiscius, instead of
+ casual hint delicately dropped in some good way, had proceeded by direct
+ declaration; frank assurance to the High Mightinesses, That there would be
+ no war. Which had never been quite his Majesty's meaning, and perhaps was
+ now becoming rather the reverse of it. Disavowal of Luiscius had to ensue
+ thereupon; who produced defensively his instruction from head-quarters;
+ but got only rebukes for such heavy-footed clumsy procedure, so unlike
+ Diplomacy with its shoes of felt;&mdash;and, in brief, was turned out of
+ the Diplomatic function, as unfit for it; and appointed to manage certain
+ Orange Properties, fragments of the Orange Heritage which his Majesty
+ still has in those Countries. This misadventure sank heavily on the
+ spirits of Luiscius, otherwise none of the strongest-minded of men. Nor
+ did he prosper in managing the Orange Properties: on the contrary, he
+ again fell into mistakes; got soundly rebuked for injudicious conduct
+ there,&mdash;"cutting trees," planting trees, or whatever it was;&mdash;and
+ this produced such an effect on Luiscius, that he made an attempt on his
+ own throat, distracted mortal; and was only stopped by somebody rushing
+ in. "It was not the first time he had tried that feat," says Pollnitz,
+ "and been prevented; nor was it long till he made a new attempt, which was
+ again frustrated: and always afterwards his relations kept him close in
+ view:" Majesty writing comfortable forgiveness to the perturbed creature,
+ and also "settling a pension on him;" adequate, we can hope, and not
+ excessive; "which Luiscius continued to receive, at the Hague, so long as
+ he lived." These are the prose facts; not definitely dated to us, but
+ perfectly clear otherwise. [Pollnitz, ii. 495, 496;&mdash;the "NEW
+ attempt" seems to have been "June, 1739" (<i> Gentleman's Magazine,</i> in
+ mense, p. 331).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Voltaire, in his Dutch excursions, did sometimes, in after years, lodge in
+ that old vacant Palace, called VIEILLE COUR, at the Hague; where he
+ gracefully celebrates the decayed forsaken state of matters; dusky vast
+ rooms with dim gilding; forgotten libraries "veiled under the biggest
+ spider-webs in Europe;" for the rest, an uncommonly quiet place,
+ convenient for a writing man, besides costing nothing. A son of this
+ Luiscius, a good young lad, it also appears, was occasionally Voltaire's
+ amanuensis there; him he did recommend zealously to the new King of
+ Prussia, who was not deaf on the occasion. This, in the fire of satirical
+ wit, is what we can transiently call "giving alms to a Prussian
+ Excellency;"&mdash;not now excellent, but pensioned and cracked; and the
+ reader perceives, Luiscius had probably more than one razor, had not one
+ been enough, when he did the rash act. Friedrich employed Luiscius Junior,
+ with no result that we hear of farther; and seems to have thought Luiscius
+ Senior an absurd fellow, not worth mentioning again: "ran away from the
+ Cleve Country [probably some mad-house there] above a year ago, I hear;
+ and what is the matter where such a crack-brain end?" [Voltaire, <i>OEuvres</i>
+ (Letter to Friedrich, 7th October, 1740), lxxii. 261; and Fredrich's
+ answer (wrong dated), ib. 265; Preuss, xxii. 33.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter V. &mdash; VISIT AT LOO.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Pfalz question being in such a predicament, and Luiscius diplomatizing
+ upon it in such heavy-footed manner, his Majesty thinks a journey to
+ Holland, to visit one's Kinsfolk there, and incidentally speak a word with
+ the High Mightinesses upon Pfalz, would not be amiss. Such journey is
+ decided on; Crown-Prince to accompany. Summer of 1738: a short visit,
+ quite without fuss; to last only three days;&mdash;mere sequel to the
+ Reviews held in those adjacent Cleve Countries; so that the Gazetteers may
+ take no notice. All which was done accordingly: Crown-Prince's first sight
+ of Holland; and one of the few reportable points of his Reinsberg life,
+ and not quite without memorability to him and us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 8th of July, 1738, the Review Party got upon the road for Wesel:
+ all through July, they did their reviewing in those Cleve Countries; and
+ then struck across for the Palace of Loo in Geldern, where a Prince of
+ Orange countable kinsman to his Prussian Majesty, and a Princess still
+ more nearly connected,&mdash;English George's Daughter, own niece to his
+ Prussian Majesty,&mdash;are in waiting for this distinguished honor. The
+ Prince of Orange we have already seen, for a moment once; at the siege of
+ Philipsburg four years ago, when the sale of Chasot's horses went off so
+ well. "Nothing like selling horses when your company have dined well,"
+ whispered he to Chasot, at that time; since which date we have heard
+ nothing of his Highness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is not a beautiful man; he has a crooked back, and features
+ conformable; but is of prompt vivacious nature, and does not want for
+ sense and good-humor. Paternal George, the gossips say, warned his
+ Princess, when this marriage was talked of, "You will find him very
+ ill-looking, though!" "And if I found him a baboon&mdash;!" answered she;
+ being so heartily tired of St. James's. And in fact, for anything I have
+ heard, they do well enough together. She is George II.'s eldest Princess;&mdash;next
+ elder to our poor Amelia, who was once so interesting to us! What the
+ Crown-Prince now thought of all that, I do not know; but the Books say,
+ poor Amelia wore the willow, and specially wore the Prince's miniature on
+ her breast all her days after, which were many. Grew corpulent, somewhat a
+ huddle in appearance and equipment, "eyelids like upper-LIPS," for one
+ item: but when life itself fled, the miniature was found in its old place,
+ resting on the old heart after some sixty years. O Time, O Sons and
+ Daughters of Time!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Majesty's reception at Loo was of the kind he liked,&mdash;cordial,
+ honorable, unceremonious; and these were three pleasant days he had.
+ Pleasant for the Crown-Prince too; as the whole Journey had rather been;
+ Papa, with covert satisfaction, finding him a wise creature, after all,
+ and "more serious" than formerly. "Hm, you don't know what things are in
+ that Fritz!" his Majesty murmured sometimes, in these later years, with a
+ fine light in his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loo itself is a beautiful Palace: "Loo, close by the Village Appeldoorn,
+ is a stately brick edifice, built with architectural regularity; has
+ finely decorated rooms, beautiful gardens, and round are superb alleys of
+ oak and linden." [Busching, <i>Erdbeschreibung,</i> viii. 69.] There
+ saunters pleasantly our Crown-Prince, for these three days;&mdash;and one
+ glad incident I do perceive to have befallen him there: the arrival of a
+ Letter from Voltaire. Letter much expected, which had followed him from
+ Wesel; and which he answers here, in this brick Palace, among the superb
+ avenues and gardens. [<i>OEuvres,</i> xxi. 203, the Letter, "Cirey, June,
+ 1738;" Ib. 222, the Answer to it, "Loo, 6th August, 1738."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt a glad incident, irradiating, as with a sudden sunburst in gray
+ weather, the commonplace of things. Here is news worth listening to; news
+ as from the empyrean! Free interchange of poetries and proses, of heroic
+ sentiments and opinions, between the Unique of Sages and the Paragon of
+ Crown-Princes; how charming to both! Literary business, we perceive, is
+ brisk on both hands; at Cirey the <i>Discours sur l'Homme</i> ("Sixth
+ DISCOURS" arrives in this packet at Loo, surely a deathless piece of
+ singing); nor is Reinsberg idle: Reinsberg is copiously doing verse, such
+ verse! and in prose, very earnestly, an "ANTI-MACHIAVEL;" which soon
+ afterwards filled all the then world, though it has now fallen so silent
+ again. And at Paris, as Voltaire announces with a flourish, "M. de
+ Maupertuis's excellent Book, <i>Figure de la T'erre,</i> is out;" [Paris,
+ 1738: Maupertuis's "measurement of a degree," in the utmost North,
+ 1736-1737 (to prove the Earth flattened there). Vivid Narrative; somewhat
+ gesticulative, but duly brief. The only Book of that great Maupertuis
+ which is now readable to human nature.] M. de Maupertuis, home from the
+ Polar regions and from measuring the Earth there; the sublimest miracle in
+ Paris society at present. Might build, new-build, an ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
+ at Berlin for your Royal Highness, one day? suggests Voltaire, on this
+ occasion: and Friedrich, as we shall see, takes the hint. One passage of
+ the Crown-Prince's Answer is in these terms;&mdash;fixing this Loo visit
+ to its date for us, at any rate:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "LOO IN HOLLAND, 6th AUGUST, 1739.... I write from a place where there
+ lived once a great man [William III. of England, our Dutch William]; which
+ is now the Prince of Orange's House. The demon of Ambition sheds its
+ unhappy poisons over his days. He might be the most fortunate of men; and
+ he is devoured by chagrins in his beautiful Palace here, in the middle of
+ his gardens and of a brilliant Court. It is pity in truth; for he is a
+ Prince with no end of wit (INFINIMENT D'ESPRIT), and has respectable
+ qualites." Not Stadtholder, unluckily; that is where the shoe pinches; the
+ Dutch are on the Republican tack, and will not have a Stadtholder at
+ present. No help for it in one's beautiful gardens and avenues of oak and
+ linden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have talked a great deal about Newton with the Princess,"&mdash;about
+ Newton; never hinted at Amelia; not permissible!&mdash;"from Newton we
+ passed to Leibnitz; and from Leibnitz to the Late Queen of England,"
+ Caroline lately gone, "who, the Prince told me, was of Clarke's sentiment"
+ on that important theological controversy now dead to mankind.&mdash;And
+ of Jenkins and his Ear did the Princess say nothing? That is now becoming
+ a high phenomenon in England! But readers must wait a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pity that we cannot give these two Letters in full; that no reader,
+ almost, could be made to understand them, or to care for them when
+ understood. Such the cruelty of Time upon this Voltaire-Friedrich
+ Correspondence, and some others; which were once so rosy, sunny, and are
+ now fallen drearily extinct,&mdash;studiable by Editors only! In itself
+ the Friedrich-Voltaire Correspondence, we can see, was charming; very
+ blossomy at present: businesses increasing; mutual admiration now risen to
+ a great height,&mdash;admiration sincere on both sides, most so on the
+ Prince's, and extravagantly expressed on both sides, most so on
+ Voltaire's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CROWN-PRINCE BECOMES A FREEMASON; AND IS HARANGUED BY MONSIEUR DE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BIELFELD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Majesty, we said, had three pleasant days at Loo; discoursing, as with
+ friends, on public matters, or even on more private matters, in a frank
+ unconstrained way. He is not to be called "Majesty" on this occasion; but
+ the fact, at Loo, and by the leading Mightinesses of the Republic, who
+ come copiously to compliment him there, is well remembered. Talk there
+ was, with such leading Mightinesses, about the Julich-and-Berg question,
+ aim of this Journey: earnest enough private talk with some of them: but it
+ availed nothing; and would not be worth reporting now to any creature, if
+ we even knew it. In fact, the Journey itself remains mentionable chiefly
+ by one very trifling circumstance; and then by another, not important
+ either, which followed out of that. The trifling circumstance is,&mdash;That
+ Friedrich, in the course of this Journey, became a Freemason: and the
+ unimportant sequel was, That he made acquaintance with one Bielfeld, on
+ the occasion; who afterwards wrote a Book about him, which was once much
+ read, though never much worth reading, and is still citable, with
+ precaution, now and then. [Monsieur le Baron de Bielfeld, <i>Lettres
+ Familieres et Autres,</i> 1763;&mdash;second edition, 2 vols. a Leide,
+ 1767, is the one we use here.] Trifling circumstance, of Freemasonry, as
+ we read in Bielfeld and in many Books after him, befell in manner
+ following.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the dinner-guests at Loo, one of those three days, was a Prince of
+ Lippe-Buckeburg,&mdash;Prince of small territory, but of great
+ speculation; whose territory lies on the Weser, leading to Dutch
+ connections; and whose speculations stretch over all the Universe, in a
+ high fantastic style:&mdash;he was a dinner-guest; and one of the topics
+ that came up was Freemasonry; a phantasmal kind of object, which had
+ kindled itself, or rekindled, in those years, in England first of all; and
+ was now hovering about, a good deal, in Germany and other countries;
+ pretending to be a new light of Heaven, and not a bog-meteor of
+ phosphorated hydrogen, conspicuous in the murk of things. Bog-meteor,
+ foolish putrescent will-o'-wisp, his Majesty promptly defined it to be:
+ Tom-foolery and KINDERSPIEL, what else? Whereupon ingenious Buckeburg, who
+ was himself a Mason, man of forty by this time, and had high things in him
+ of the Quixotic type, ventured on defence; and was so respectful,
+ eloquent, dexterous, ingenious, he quite captivated, if not his Majesty,
+ at least the Crown-Prince, who was more enthusiastic for high things.
+ Crown-Prince, after table, took his Durchlaucht of Buckeburg aside; talked
+ farther on the subject, expressed his admiration, his conviction,&mdash;his
+ wish to be admitted into such a Hero Fraternity. Nothing could be welcomer
+ to Durchlaucht. And so, in all privacy, it was made up betweeen them, That
+ Durchlaucht, summoning as many mystic Brothers out of Hamburg as were
+ needful, should be in waiting with them, on the Crown-Prince's road
+ homeward,&mdash;say at Brunswick, night before the Fair, where we are to
+ be,&mdash;and there make the Crown-Prince a Mason. [Bielfeld, i. 14-16;
+ Preuss, i. 111; Preuss, <i>Buch fur Jedermann,</i> i. 41.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is Bielfeld's account, repeated ever since; substantially correct,
+ except that the scene was not Loo at all: dinner and dialogue, it now
+ appears, took place in Durchlaucht's own neighborhood, during the Cleve
+ Review time; "probably at Minden, 17th July;" and all was settled into
+ fixed program before Loo came in sight. [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xvs.
+ 201: Friedrich's Letter to this Durchlaucht, "Comte de Schaumbourg-Lippe"
+ he calls him; date, "Moyland, 26th July, 1738: "Moyland, a certain
+ SCHLOSS, or habitable Mansion, of his Majesty's, few miles to north of
+ Mors in the Cleve Country; where his Majesty used often to pause;&mdash;and
+ where (what will be much more remarkable to readers) the Crown-Prince and
+ Voltaire had their first meeting, two years hence.] Bielfeld's report of
+ the subsequent procedure at Brunswick, as he saw it and was himself part
+ of it, is liable to no mistakes, at least of the involuntary kind; and
+ may, for anything we know, be correct in every particular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He says (veiling it under discreet asterisks, which are now decipherable
+ enough), The Durchlaucht of Lippe-Buckeburg had summoned six Brethren of
+ the Hamburg Lodge; of whom we mention only a Graf von Kielmannsegge, a
+ Baron von Oberg, both from Hanover, and Bielfeld himself, a Merchant's
+ Son, of Hamburg; these, with "Kielmannsegge's Valet to act as Tiler,"
+ Valet being also a Mason, and the rule equality of mankind,&mdash;were to
+ have the honor of initiating the Crown-Prince. They arrived at the Western
+ Gate of Brunswick on the 11th of August, as prearranged; Prussian Majesty
+ not yet come, but coming punctually on the morrow. It is Fair-time; all
+ manner of traders, pedlers, showmen rendezvousing; many neighboring
+ Nobility too, as was still the habit. "Such a bulk of light luggage?" said
+ the Custom-house people at the Gate;&mdash;but were pacified by slipping
+ them a ducat. Upon which we drove to "Korn's Hotel" (if anybody now knew
+ it); and there patiently waited. No great things of a Hotel, says
+ Bielfeld; but can be put up with;&mdash;worst feature is, we discover a
+ Hanover acquaintance lodging close by, nothing but a wooden partition
+ between us: How if he should overhear!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prussian Majesty and suite, under universal cannon-salvos, arrived, Sunday
+ the 12th; to stay till Wednesday (three days) with his august Son-in-law
+ and Daughter here. Durchlaucht Lippe presents himself at Court, the rest
+ of us not; privately settles with the Prince: "Tuesday night, eve of his
+ Majesty's departure; that shall be the night: at Korn's Hotel, late
+ enough!" And there, accordingly, on the appointed night, 14th-15th August,
+ 1738, the light-luggage trunks have yielded their stage-properties; Jachin
+ and Boaz are set up, and all things are ready; Tiler (Kielmannsegge's
+ Valet) watching with drawn sword against the profane. As to our Hanover
+ neighbor, on the other side the partition, says Bielfeld, we waited on
+ him, this day after dinner, successively paying our respects; successively
+ pledged him in so many bumpers, he is lying dead drunk hours ago, could
+ not overhear a cannon-battery, he. And soon after midnight, the
+ Crown-Prince glides in, a Captain Wartensleben accompanying, who is also a
+ candidate; and the mysterious rites are accomplished on both of them, on
+ the Crown-Prince first, without accident, and in the usual way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bielfeld could not enough admire the demeanor of this Prince, his
+ clearness, sense, quiet brilliancy; and how he was so "intrepid," and
+ "possessed himself so gracefully in the most critical instants." Extremely
+ genial air, and so young, looks younger even than his years: handsome to a
+ degree, though of short stature. Physiognomy, features, quite charming;
+ fine auburn hair (BEAU BRUN), a negligent plenty of it; "his large blue
+ eyes have something at once severe, sweet and gracious." Eligible Mason
+ indeed. Had better make despatch at present, lest Papa be getting on the
+ road before him!&mdash;Bielfeld delivered a small address, composed
+ beforehand; with which the Prince seemed to be content. And so, with
+ masonic grip, they made their adieus for the present; and the Crown-Prince
+ and Wartensleben were back at their posts, ready for the road along with
+ his Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Majesty came on Sunday; goes on Wednesday, home now at a stretch; and,
+ we hope, has had a good time of it here, these three days. Daughter
+ Charlotte and her Serene Husband, well with their subjects, well with one
+ another, are doing well; have already two little Children; a Boy the
+ elder, of whom we have heard: Boy's name is Karl, age now three;
+ sprightly, reckoned very clever, by the fond parents;&mdash;who has many
+ things to do in the world, by and by; to attack the French Revolution, and
+ be blown to pieces by it on the Field of Jena, for final thing! That is
+ the fate of little Karl, who frolics about here, so sunshiny and ingenuous
+ at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Karl's Grandmother, the Serene Dowager Duchess, Friedrich's own
+ Mother-in-law, his Majesty and Friedrich would also of course see here.
+ Fine Younger Sons of hers are coming forward; the reigning Duke
+ beautifully careful about the furtherance of these Cadets of the House.
+ Here is Prince Ferdinand, for instance; just getting ready for the Grand
+ Tour; goes in a month hence: [Mauvillon (FILS, son of him whom we cite
+ otherwise), <i>Geschichte Ferdinands Herzogs von Braunschweig-Luneburg</i>
+ (Leipzig, 1794), i. 17-25.] a fine eupeptic loyal young fellow; who, in a
+ twenty years more, will be Chatham's Generalissimo, and fight the French
+ to some purpose. A Brother of his, the next elder, is now fighting the
+ Turks for his Kaiser; does not like it at all, under such Seckendorfs and
+ War-Ministries as there are. Then, elder still, eldest of all the Cadets,
+ there is Anton Ulrich, over at Petersburg for some years past, with
+ outlooks high enough: To wed the Mecklenburg Princess there (Daughter of
+ the unutterable Duke), and be as good as Czar of all the Russias one day.
+ Little to his profit, poor soul!&mdash;These, historically ascertainable,
+ are the aspects of the Brunswick Court during those three days of Royal
+ Visit, in Fair-time; and may serve to date the Masonic Transaction for us,
+ which the Crown-Prince has just accomplished over at Korn's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the Transaction itself, there is intrinsically no harm in this
+ initiation, we will hope: but it behooves to be kept well hidden from
+ Papa. Papa's good opinion of the Prince has sensibly risen, in the course
+ of this Journey, "so rational, serious, not dangling about among the women
+ as formerly;"&mdash;and what a shock would this of Korn's Hotel be, should
+ Papa hear of it! Poor Papa, from officious tale-bearers he hears many
+ things: is in distress about Voltaire, about Heterodoxies;&mdash;and
+ summoned the Crown-Prince, by express, from Reinsberg, on one occasion
+ lately, over to Potsdam, "to take the Communion" there, by way of
+ case-hardening against Voltaire and Heterodoxies! Think of it, human
+ readers!&mdash;We will add the following stray particulars, more or less
+ illustrative of the Masonic Transaction; and so end that trifling affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain Wartensleben, fellow-recipient of the mysteries at Brunswick,
+ is youngest son, by a second marriage, of old Feldmarschall Wartensleben,
+ now deceased; and is consequently Uncle, Half-Uncle, of poor Lieutenant
+ Katte, though some years younger than Katte would now have been. Tender
+ memories hang by Wartensleben, in a silent way! He is Captain in the
+ Potsdam Giants; somewhat an intimate, and not undeservedly so, of the
+ Crown-Prince;&mdash;succeeds Wolden as Hofmarschall at Reinsberg, not many
+ months after this; Wolden having died of an apoplectic stroke. Of Bielfeld
+ comes a Book, slightly citable; from no other of the Brethren, or their
+ Feat at Kern's, comes (we may say) anything whatever. The Crown-Prince
+ prosecuted his Masonry, at Reinsberg or elsewhere, occasionally, for a
+ year or two; but was never ardent in it; and very soon after his
+ Accession, left off altogether: "Child's-play and IGNIS FATUUS mainly!" A
+ Royal Lodge was established at Berlin, of which the new King consented to
+ be patron; but he never once entered the place; and only his Portrait (a
+ welcomely good one, still to be found there) presided over the mysteries
+ in that Establishment. Harmless "fire," but too "fatuous;" mere
+ flame-circles cut in the air, for infants, we know how!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With Lippe-Buckeburg there ensued some Correspondence, high enough on his
+ Serenity's side; but it soon languished on the Prince's side; and in
+ private Poetry, within a two years of this Brunswick scene, we find Lippe
+ used proverbially for a type-specimen of Fools. ["Taciturne, Caton, avec
+ mes bons parents, Aussi fou que la Lippe met les jeunes gens." <i>OEuvres,</i>
+ xi. 80 (<i>Discours sur la Faussete,</i> written 1740).] A windy fantastic
+ individual;&mdash;overwhelmed in finance-difficulties too! Lippe continued
+ writing; but "only Secretaries now answered him" from Berlin. A son of
+ his, son and successor, something of a Quixote too, but notable in
+ Artillery-practice and otherwise, will turn up at a future stage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is Bielfeld with his Book a thing of much moment to Friedrich or to
+ us. Bielfeld too has a light airy vein of talk; loves Voltaire and the
+ Philosophies in a light way;&mdash;knows the arts of Society, especially
+ the art of flattering; and would fain make himself agreeable to the
+ Crown-Prince, being anxious to rise in the world. His Father is a Hamburg
+ Merchant, Hamburg "Sealing-wax Manufacturer," not ill off for money: Son
+ has been at schools, high schools, under tutors, posture-masters; swashes
+ about on those terms, with French ESPRIT in his mouth, and lace ruffles at
+ his wrists; still under thirty; showy enough, sharp enough; considerably a
+ coxcomb, as is still evident. He did transiently get about Friedrich, as
+ we shall see; and hoped to have sold his heart to good purpose there;&mdash;was,
+ by and by, employed in slight functions; not found fit for grave ones. In
+ the course of some years, he got a title of Baron; and sold his heart more
+ advantageously, to some rich Widow or Fraulein; with whom he retired to
+ Saxony, and there lived on an Estate he had purchased, a stranger to
+ Prussia thenceforth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Book (<i>Lettres Familieres et Autres,</i> all turning on Friedrich),
+ which came out in 1763, at the height of Friedrich's fame, and was much
+ read, is still freely cited by Historians as an Authority. But the reading
+ of a few pages sufficiently intimates that these "Letters" never can have
+ gone through a terrestrial Post-office; that they are an afterthought,
+ composed from vague memory and imagination, in that fine Saxon retreat;&mdash;a
+ sorrowful ghost-like "TRAVELS OF ANACHARSIS," instead of living words by
+ an eye-witness! Not to be cited "freely" at all, but sparingly and under
+ conditions. They abound in small errors, in misdates, mistakes; small
+ fictions even, and impossible pretensions:&mdash;foolish mortal, to write
+ down his bit of knowledge in that form! For the man, in spite of his lace
+ ruffles and gesticulations, has brisk eyesight of a superficial kind: he
+ COULD have done us this little service (apparently his one mission in the
+ world, for which Nature gave him bed and board here); and he, the lace
+ ruffles having gone into his soul, has been tempted into misdoing it!&mdash;Bielfeld
+ and Bielfeld's Book, such as they are, appear to be the one conquest
+ Friedrich got of Freemasonry; no other result now traceable to us of that
+ adventure in Korn's Hotel, crowning event of the Journey to Loo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SECKENDORF GETS LODGED IN GRATZ.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Feldmarschall Seckendorf, after unheard-of wrestlings with the Turk War,
+ and the Vienna War-Office (HOFKRIEGSRATH), is sitting, for the last three
+ weeks,&mdash;where thinks the reader?&mdash;in the Fortress of Gratz among
+ the Hills of Styria; a State-Prisoner, not likely to get out soon!
+ Seckendorf led forth, in 1737, "such an Army, for number, spirit and
+ equipment," say the Vienna people, "as never marched against the Turk
+ before;" and it must be owned, his ill success has been unparalleled. The
+ blame was not altogether his; not chiefly his, except for his rash
+ undertaking of the thing, on such terms as there were. But the truth is,
+ that first scene we saw of him,&mdash;an Army all gone out trumpeting and
+ drumming into the woods to FIND its Commander-in-Chief,&mdash;was an
+ emblem of the Campaign in general. Excellent Army; but commanded by nobody
+ in particular; commanded by a HOFKRIEGSRATH at Vienna, by a Franz Duke of
+ Tuscany, by Feldmarschall Seckendorf, and by subordinates who were
+ disobedient to him: which accordingly, almost without help of the Turk and
+ his disorderly ferocity, rubbed itself to pieces before long. Roamed
+ about, now hither now thither, with plans laid and then with plans
+ suddenly altered, Captain being Chaos mainly; in swampy countries, by
+ overflowing rivers, in hunger, hot weather, forced marches; till it was
+ marched gradually off its feet; and the clouds of chaotic Turks, who did
+ finally show face, had a cheap pennyworth of it. Never was such a campaign
+ seen as this of Seckendorf in 1737, said mankind. Except indeed that the
+ present one, Campaign of 1738, in those parts, under a different hand, is
+ still worse; and the Campaign of 1739, under still a different, will be
+ worst of all!&mdash;Kaiser Karl and his Austrians do not prosper in this
+ Turk War, as the Russians do,&mdash;who indeed have got a General equal to
+ his task: Munnich, a famed master in the art of handling Turks and
+ War-Ministries: real father of Russian Soldiering, say the Russians still.
+ [See MANNSTEIN for Munnich's plans with the Turk (methods and devices of
+ steady Discipline in small numbers VERSUS impetuous Ferocity in great);
+ and Berenhorst (<i>Betrachtungen uber die Kriegskunst,</i> Leipzig, 1796),
+ a first-rate Authority, for examples and eulogies of them.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Campaign 1737, with clouds of chaotic Turks now sabring on the skirts of
+ it, had not yet ended, when Seckendorf was called out of it; on polite
+ pretexts, home to Vienna; and the command given to another. At the gates
+ of Vienna, in the last days of October, 1737, an Official Person, waiting
+ for the Feldmarschall, was sorry to inform him, That he, Feldmarschall
+ Seckendorf, was under arrest; arrest in his own house, in the KOHLMARKT
+ (Cabbage-market so called), a captain and twelve musketeers to watch over
+ him with fixed bayonets there; strictly private, till the HOFKRIEGSRATH
+ had satisfied themselves in a point or two. "Hmph!" snuffled he; with brow
+ blushing slate-color, I should think, and gray eyes much alight. And ever
+ since, for ten months or so, Seckendorf, sealed up in the Cabbage-market,
+ has been fencing for life with the HOFKRIEGSRATH; who want satisfaction
+ upon "eighty-six" different "points;" and make no end of chicaning to
+ one's clear answers. And the Jesuits preach, too: "A Heretic, born enemy
+ of Christ and his Kaiser; what is the use of questioning!" And the Heathen
+ rage, and all men gnash their teeth, in this uncomfortable manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Answering done, there comes no verdict, much less any acquittal; the
+ captain and twelve musketeers, three of them with fixed bayonets in one's
+ very bedroom, continue. One evening, 21st July, 1738, glorious news from
+ the seat of War&mdash;not TILL evening, as the Imperial Majesty was out
+ hunting&mdash;enters Vienna; blowing trumpets; shaking flags: "Grand
+ Victory over the Turks!" so we call some poor skirmish there has been; and
+ Vienna bursting all into three-times-three, the populace get very high.
+ Populace rush to the Kohlmarkt: break the Seckendorf windows; intent to
+ massacre the Seckendorf; had not fresh military come, who were obliged to
+ fire and kill one or two. "The house captain and his twelve musketeers, of
+ themselves, did wonders; Seckendorf and all his domestics were in arms:"
+ "JARNI-BLEU" for the last time!&mdash;This is while the Crown-Prince is at
+ Wesel; sound asleep, most likely; Loo, and the Masonic adventure, perhaps
+ twinkling prophetically in his dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At two next morning, an Official Gentleman informs Seckendorf, That he,
+ for his part, must awaken, and go to Gratz. And in one hour more (3 A.M.),
+ the Official Gentleman rolls off with him; drives all day; and delivers
+ his Prisoner at Gratz:&mdash;"Not so much as a room ready there; Prisoner
+ had to wait an hour in the carriage," till some summary preparation were
+ made. Wall-neighbors of the poor Feldmarschall, in his Fortress here, were
+ "a GOLD-COOK (swindling Alchemist), who had gone crazy; and an Irish
+ Lieutenant, confined thirty-two years for some love-adventure, likewise
+ pretty crazy; their noises in the night-time much disturbed the
+ Feldmarschall." [<i>Seckendorfs Leben,</i> ii. 170-277 pp. 27-59.] One
+ human thing there still is in his lot, the Feldmarschall's old Grafinn.
+ True old Dame, she, both in the Kohlmarkt and at Gratz, stands by him,
+ "imprisoned along with him" if it must be so; ministering, comforting, as
+ only a true Wife can;&mdash;and hope has not quite taken wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rough old Feldmarschall; now turned of sixty: never made such a Campaign
+ before, as this of 1737 followed by 1738! There sits he; and will not
+ trouble us any more during the present Kaiser's lifetime. Friedrich
+ Wilhelm is amazed at these sudden cantings of Fortune's wheel, and grieves
+ honestly as for an old friend: even the Crown-Prince finds Seckendorf
+ punished unjustly; and is almost, sorry for him, after all that has come
+ and gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE EAR OF JENKINS RE-EMERGES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We must add the following, distilled from the English Newspapers, though
+ it is now almost four months after date:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "LONDON, 1st APRIL, 1738. In the English House of Commons, much more in
+ the English Public, there has been furious debating for a fortnight past:
+ Committee of the whole House, examining witnesses, hearing counsel;
+ subject, the Termagant of Spain, and her West-Indian procedures;&mdash;she,
+ by her procedures somewhere, is always cutting out work for mankind! How
+ English and other strangers, fallen-in with in those seas, are treated by
+ the Spaniards, readers have heard, nay have chanced to see; and it is a
+ fact painfully known to all nations. Fact which England, for one nation,
+ can no longer put up with. Walpole and the Official Persons would fain
+ smooth the matter; but the West-India Interest, the City, all Mercantile
+ and Navigation Interests are in dead earnest: Committee of the whole
+ House, 'Presided by Alderman Perry,' has not ears enough to hear the
+ immensities of evidence offered; slow Public is gradually kindling to some
+ sense of it. This had gone on for two weeks, when&mdash;what shall we say?&mdash;the
+ EAR OF JENKINS re-emerged for the second time; and produced important
+ effects!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where Jenkins had been all this while,&mdash;steadfastly navigating to
+ and fro, steadfastly eating tough junk with a wetting of rum; not thinking
+ too much of past labors, yet privately 'always keeping his lost Ear in
+ cotton' (with a kind of ursine piety, or other dumb feeling),&mdash;no
+ mortal now knows. But to all mortals it is evident he was home in London
+ at this time; no doubt a noted member of Wapping society, the
+ much-enduring Jenkins. And witnesses, probably not one but many, had
+ mentioned him to this Committee, as a case eminently in point. Committee,
+ as can still be read in its Rhadamanthine Journals, orders: 'DIE JOVIS,
+ 16* MARTII 1737-1738, That Captain Robert Jenkins do attend this House
+ immediately;' and then more specially, '17* MARTII' captious objections
+ having risen in Official quarters, as we guess,&mdash;'That Captain Robert
+ Jenkins do attend upon Tuesday morning next.' [<i>Commons Journals,</i>
+ xxiii. (in diebus).] Tuesday next is 21st March,&mdash;1st of April, 1738,
+ by our modern Calendar;&mdash;and on that day, not a doubt, Jenkins does
+ attend; narrates that tremendous passage we already heard of, seven years
+ ago, in the entrance of the Gulf of Florida; and produces his Ear wrapt in
+ cotton:&mdash;setting all on flame (except the Official persons) at sight
+ of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Official persons, as their wont is in the pressure of debate, endeavored
+ to deny, to insinuate in their vile Newspapers, That Jenkins lost his Ear
+ nearer home and not for nothing; as one still reads in the History Books.
+ [Tindal (xx. 372). Coxe, &amp;c.] Sheer calumnies, we now find. Jenkins's
+ account was doubtless abundantly emphatic; but there is no ground to
+ question the substantial truth of him and it. And so, after seven years of
+ unnoticeable burning upon the thick skin of the English Public, the case
+ of Jenkins accidentally burns through, and sets England bellowing; such a
+ smart is there of it,&mdash;not to be soothed by Official wet-cloths; but
+ getting worse and worse, for the nineteen months ensuing. And in short&mdash;But
+ we will not anticipate!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VI. &mdash; LAST YEAR OF REINSBERG; JOURNEY TO PREUSSEN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Idyllium of Reinsberg&mdash;of which, except in the way of sketchy
+ suggestion, there can no history be given&mdash;lasted less than four
+ years; and is now coming to an end, unexpectedly soon. A pleasant Arcadian
+ Summer in one's life;&mdash;though it has not wanted its occasional
+ discords, flaws of ill weather in the general sunshine. Papa, always in
+ uncertain health of late, is getting heavier of foot and of heart under
+ his heavy burdens; and sometimes falls abstruse enough, liable to
+ bewilderments from bad people and events: not much worth noticing here.
+ [See Pollnitz, ii. 509-515; Friedrich's Letter to Wilhelmina ("Berlin,
+ 20th January, 1739:" in <i>OEuvres,</i> xxvii. part 1st, pp. 60, 61);
+ &amp;c. &amp;c.] But the Crown-Prince has learned to deal with all this;
+ all this is of transient nature; and a bright long future seems to lie
+ ahead at Reinsberg;&mdash;brightened especially by the Literary Element;
+ which, in this year of 1739, is brisker than it had ever been.
+ Distinguished Visitors, of a literary turn, look in at Reinsberg; the
+ Voltaire Correspondence is very lively; on Friedrich's part there is
+ copious production, various enterprise, in the form of prose and verse;
+ thoughts even of going to press with some of it: in short, the Literary
+ Interest rises very prominent at Reinsberg in 1739. Biography is apt to
+ forget the Literature there (having her reasons); but must at last take
+ some notice of it, among the phenomena of the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the young Prince himself, "courting tranquillity," as his door-lintel
+ intimated, [<i>"Frederico tranquillitatem colenti"</i> (Infra, p. 123).]
+ and forbidden to be active except within limits, this of Literature was
+ all along the great light of existence at Reinsberg; the supplement to all
+ other employments or wants of employment there. To Friedrich himself, in
+ those old days, a great and supreme interest; while again, to the modern
+ Biographer of him, it has become dark and vacant; a thing to be shunned,
+ not sought. So that the fact as it stood with Friedrich differs far from
+ any description that can be given of the fact. Alas, we have said already,
+ and the constant truth is, Friedrich's literatures, his distinguished
+ literary visitors and enterprises, which were once brand-new and
+ brilliant, have grown old as a garment, and are a sorrow rather than
+ otherwise to existing mankind! Conscientious readers, who would represent
+ to themselves the vanished scene at Reinsberg, in this point more
+ especially, must make an effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As biographical documents, these Poetries and Proses of the young man give
+ a very pretty testimony of him; but are not of value otherwise. In fact,
+ they promise, if we look well into them, That here is probably a practical
+ faculty and intellect of the highest kind; which again, on the
+ speculative, especially on the poetical side, will never be considerable,
+ nor has even tried to be so. This young soul does not deal in meditation
+ at all, and his tendencies are the reverse of sentimental. Here is no
+ introspection, morbid or other, no pathos or complaint, no melodious
+ informing of the public what dreadful emotions you labor under: here, in
+ rapid prompt form, indicating that it is truth and not fable, are generous
+ aspirations for the world and yourself, generous pride, disdain of the
+ ignoble, of the dark, mendacious;&mdash;here, in short, is a swift-handed,
+ valiant, STEEL-bright kind of soul; very likely for a King's, if other
+ things answer, and not likely for a Poet's. No doubt he could have made
+ something of Literature too; could have written Books, and left some stamp
+ of a veracious, more or less victorious intellect, in that strange
+ province too. But then he must have applied himself to it, as he did to
+ reigning: done in the cursory style, we see what it has come to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is certain, Friedrich's reputation suffers, at this day, from his
+ writing. From his NOT having written nothing, he stands lower with the
+ world. Which seems hard measure;&mdash;though perhaps it is the law of the
+ case, after all. "Nobody in these days," says my poor Friend, "has the
+ least notion of the sinful waste there is in talk, whether by pen or
+ tongue. Better probably that King Friedrich had written no Verses; nay I
+ know not that David's Psalms did David's Kingship any good!" Which may be
+ truer than it seems. Fine aspirations, generous convictions, purposes,&mdash;they
+ are thought very fine: but it is good, on various accounts, to keep them
+ rather silent; strictly unvocal, except on call of real business; so
+ dangerous are they for becoming conscious of themselves! Most things do
+ not ripen at all except underground. And it is a sad but sure truth, that
+ every time you SPEAK of a fine purpose, especially if with eloquence and
+ to the admiration of by-standers, there is the LESS chance of your ever
+ making a fact of it in your poor life.&mdash;If Reinsberg, and its vacancy
+ of great employment, was the cause of Friedrich's verse-writing, we will
+ not praise Reinsberg on that head! But the truth is, Friedrich's verses
+ came from him with uncommon fluency; and were not a deep matter, but a
+ shallow one, in any sense. Not much more to him than speaking with a will;
+ than fantasying on the flute in an animated strain. Ever and anon through
+ his life, on small hint from without or on great, there was found a
+ certain leakage of verses, which he was prompt to utter;&mdash;and the
+ case at Reinsberg, or afterwards, is not so serious as we might imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PINE'S HORACE; AND THE ANTI-MACHIAVEL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In late months Friedrich had conceived one notable project; which demands
+ a word in this place. Did modern readers ever hear of "John Pine, the
+ celebrated English Engraver"? John Pine, a man of good scholarship, good
+ skill with his burin, did "Tapestries of the House of Lords," and other
+ things of a celebrated nature, famous at home and abroad: but his peculiar
+ feat, which had commended him at Reinsberg, was an Edition of HORACE:
+ exquisite old FLACCUS brought to perfection, as it were; all done with
+ vignettes, classical borderings, symbolic marginal ornaments, in fine
+ taste and accuracy, the Text itself engraved; all by the exquisite burin
+ of Pine. ["London, 1737" (<i>Biographie Universelle,</i> xxxiv. 465).]
+ This Edition had come out last year, famous over the world; and was by and
+ by, as rumor bore, to be followed by a VIRGIL done in the like exquisite
+ manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pine HORACE, part of the Pine VIRGIL too, still exist in the libraries
+ of the curious; and are doubtless known to the proper parties, though much
+ forgotten by others of us. To Friedrich, scanning the Pine phenomenon with
+ interest then brand-new, it seemed an admirable tribute to classical
+ genius; and the idea occurred to him, "Is not there, by Heaven's blessing,
+ a living genius, classical like those antique Romans, and worthy of a like
+ tribute?" Friedrich's idea was, That Voltaire being clearly the supreme of
+ Poets, the HENRIADE, his supreme of Poems, ought to be engraved like
+ FLACCUS; text and all, with vignettes, tail-pieces, classical borderings
+ beautifully symbolic and exact; by the exquisite burin of Pine. Which idea
+ the young hero-worshipper, in spite of his finance-difficulties, had
+ resolved to realize; and was even now busy with it, since his return from
+ Loo. "Such beautiful enthusiasm," say some readers; "and in behalf of that
+ particular demi-god!" Alas, yes; to Friedrich he was the best demi-god
+ then going; and Friedrich never had any doubt about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the rest, this heroic idea could not realize itself; and we are happy
+ to have nothing more to do with Pine or the HENRIADE. Correspondences were
+ entered into with Pine, and some pains taken: Pine's high prices were as
+ nothing; but Pine was busy with his VIRGIL; probably, in fact, had little
+ stomach for the HENRIADE; "could not for seven years to come enter upon
+ it:" so that the matter had to die away; and nothing came of it but a
+ small DISSERTATION, or Introductory Essay, which the Prince had got ready,&mdash;which
+ is still to be found printed in Voltaire's Works [<i>OEuvres, xiii.
+ 393-402.</i>] and in Friedrich's, if anybody now cared much to read it.
+ Preuss says it was finished, "the 10th August, 1739;" and that minute fact
+ in Chronology, with the above tale of Hero-worship hanging to it, will
+ suffice my readers and me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there is another literary project on hand, which did take effect;&mdash;much
+ worthy of mention, this year; the whole world having risen into such a
+ Chorus of TE DEUM at sight of it next year. In this year falls, what at
+ any rate was a great event to Friedrich, as literary man: the printing of
+ his first Book,&mdash;assiduous writing of it with an eye to print. The
+ Book is that "celebrated ANTI-MACHIAVEL," ever-praiseworthy Refutation of
+ Machiavel's PRINCE; concerning which there are such immensities of
+ Voltaire Correspondence, now become, like the Book itself, inane to all
+ readers. This was the chosen soul's employment of Friedrich, the flower of
+ life to him, at Reinsberg, through the yea? 1739. It did not actually get
+ to press till Spring 1740; nor actually come out till Autumn,&mdash;by
+ which time a great change had occurred in Friedrich's title and
+ circumstances: but we may as well say here what little is to be said of it
+ for modern readers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Crown-Prince, reading this bad Book of Machiavel's, years ago, had
+ been struck, as all honest souls, especially governors or apprentices to
+ governing, must be, if they thought of reading such a thing, with its
+ badness, its falsity, detestability; and came by degrees, obliquely
+ fishing out Voltaire's opinion as he went along, on the notion of refuting
+ Machiavel; and did refute him, the best he could. Set down, namely, his
+ own earnest contradiction to such ungrounded noxious doctrines;
+ elaborating the same more and more into clear logical utterance; till it
+ swelled into a little Volume; which, so excellent was it, so important to
+ mankind, Voltaire and friends were clear for publishing. Published
+ accordingly it was; goes through the press next Summer (1740), under
+ Voltaire's anxious superintendence: [Here, gathered from Friedrich's
+ Letters to Voltaire, is the Chronology of the little Enterprise:&mdash;1738,
+ MARCH 21, JUNE 17, "Machiavel a baneful man," thinks Friedrich. "Ought to
+ be refuted by somebody?" thinks he (date not known). 1739, MARCH 22,
+ Friedrich thinks of doing it himself. Has done it, DECEMBER 4;&mdash;"a
+ Book which ought to be printed," say Voltaire and the literary visitors.
+ 1740, APRIL 26, Book given up to Voltaire for finished; Book appears, "end
+ of SEPTEMBER," when a great change had occurred in Friedrich's title and
+ position.] for the Prince has at length consented; and Voltaire hands the
+ Manuscript, with mystery yet with hints, to a Dutch Bookseller, one Van
+ Duren at the Hague, who is eager enough to print such an article. Voltaire
+ himself&mdash;such his magnanimous friendship, especially if one have
+ Dutch Lawsuits, or business of one's own, in those parts&mdash;takes
+ charge of correcting; lodges himself in the 'Old Court' (Prussian Mansion,
+ called VIEILLE COUR, at the Hague, where 'Luiscius,' figuratively
+ speaking, may 'get an alms' from us); and therefrom corrects, alters;
+ corresponds with the Prince and Van Duren, at a great rate. Keeps
+ correcting, altering, till Van Duren thinks he is spoiling it for sale;&mdash;and
+ privately determines to preserve the original Manuscript, and have an
+ edition of that, with only such corrections as seem good to Van Duren. A
+ treasonous step on this mule of a Bookseller's part, thinks Voltaire; but
+ mulishly persisted in by the man. Endless correspondence, to right and
+ left, ensues; intolerably wearisome to every reader. And, in fine, there
+ came out, in Autumn next,"&mdash;the Crown-Prince no longer a Crown-Prince
+ by that time, but shining conspicuous under Higher Title,&mdash;"not one
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL only, but a couple or a trio of ANTI-MACHIAVELS; as printed
+ 'at the Hague;' as reprinted 'at London' or elsewhere; the confused
+ Bibliography of which has now fallen very insignificant. First there was
+ the Voltaire text, Authorized Edition, 'end of September, 1740;' then
+ came, in few weeks, the Van Duren one; then, probably, a third, combining
+ the two, the variations given as foot-notes:&mdash;in short, I know not
+ how many editions, translations, printings and reprintings; all the world
+ being much taken up with such a message from the upper regions, and eager
+ to read it in any form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to Friedrich himself, who of course says nothing of the ANTI-MACHIAVEL
+ in public, he privately, to Voltaire, disowns all these editions; and
+ intends to give a new one of his own, which shall be the right article;
+ but never did it, having far other work cut out for him in the months that
+ came. But how zealous the worlds humor was in that matter, no modern
+ reader can conceive to himself. In the frightful Compilation called
+ HELDEN-GESCHICHTE, which we sometimes cite, there are, excerpted from the
+ then 'Bibliotheques' (NOUVELLE BIBLIOTHEQUE and another; shining
+ Periodicals of the time, now gone quite dead), two 'reviews' of the
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL, which fill modern readers with amazement: such a DOMINE
+ DIMITTAS chanted over such an article!&mdash;These details, in any other
+ than the Biographical point of view, are now infinitely unimportant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truly, yes! The Crown-Prince's ANTI-MACHIAVEL, final correct edition (in
+ two forms, Voltaire's as corrected, and the Prince's own as written),
+ stands now in clear type; [Preuss, <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> viii.
+ 61-163.] and, after all that jumble of printing and counter-printing, we
+ can any of us read it in a few hours; but, alas, almost none of us with
+ the least interest, or, as it were, with any profit whatever. So different
+ is present tense from past, in all things, especially in things like
+ these! It is sixscore years since the ANTI-MACHIAVEL appeared. The
+ spectacle of one who was himself a King (for the mysterious fact was well
+ known to Van Duren and everybody) stepping forth to say with conviction,
+ That Kingship was not a thing of attorney mendacity, to be done under the
+ patronage of Beelzebub, but of human veracity, to be set about under quite
+ Other patronage; and that, in fact, a King was the "born servant of his
+ People" (DOMESTIQUE Friedrich once calls it), rather than otherwise: this,
+ naturally enough, rose upon the then populations, unused to such language,
+ like the dawn of a new day; and was welcomed with such applauses as are
+ now incredible, after all that has come and gone! Alas, in these sixscore
+ years, it has been found so easy to profess and speak, even with
+ sincerity! The actual Hero-Kings were long used to be silent; and the
+ Sham-Hero kind grow only the more desperate for us, the more they speak
+ and profess!&mdash;This ANTI-MACHIAVEL of Friedrich's is a clear distinct
+ Treatise; confutes, or at least heartily contradicts, paragraph by
+ paragraph, the incredible sophistries of Machiavel. Nay it leaves us, if
+ we sufficiently force our attention, with the comfortable sense that his
+ Royal Highness is speaking with conviction, and honestly from the heart,
+ in the affair: but that is all the conquest we get of it, in these days.
+ Treatise fallen more extinct to existing mankind it would not be easy to
+ name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps indeed mankind is getting weary of the question altogether.
+ Machiavel himself one now reads only by compulsion. "What is the use of
+ arguing with anybody that can believe in Machiavel?" asks mankind, or
+ might well ask; and, except for Editorial purposes, eschews any
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL; impatient to be rid of bane and antidote both. Truly the
+ world has had a pother with this little Nicolo Machiavelli and his
+ perverse little Book:&mdash;pity almost that a Friedrich Wilhelm, taking
+ his rounds at that point of time, had not had the "refuting" of him;
+ Friedrich Wilhelm's method would have been briefer than Friedrich's! But
+ let us hope the thing is now, practically, about completed. And as to the
+ other question, "Was the Signor Nicolo serious in this perverse little
+ Book; or did he only do it ironically, with a serious inverse purpose?" we
+ will leave that to be decided, any time convenient, by people who are much
+ at leisure in the world!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The printing of the ANTI-MACHIAVEL was not intrinsically momentous in
+ Friedrich's history; yet it might as well have been dispensed with. He had
+ here drawn a fine program, and needlessly placarded it for the street
+ populations: and afterwards there rose, as could not fail on their part,
+ comparison between program and performance; scornful cry, chiefly from men
+ of weak judgment, "Is this King an ANTI-Machiavel, then? Pfui!" Of which,&mdash;though
+ Voltaire's voice, too, was heard in it, in angry moments,&mdash;we shall
+ say nothing: the reader, looking for himself, will judge by and by. And
+ herewith enough of the ANTI-MACHIAVEL. Composition of ANTI-MACHIAVEL and
+ speculation of the Pine HENRIADE lasted, both of them, all through this
+ Year 1739, and farther: from these two items, not to mention any other,
+ readers can figure sufficiently how literary a year it was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH IN PREUSSEN AGAIN; AT THE STUD OF TRAKEHNEN. A TRAGICALLY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ GREAT EVENT COMING ON.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In July this year the Crown-Prince went with Papa on the Prussian
+ Review-journey. ["Set out, 7th July" (<i>OEuvres,</i> xxvii. part 1st, 67
+ n.).] Such attendance on Review-journeys, a mark of his being well with
+ Papa, is now becoming usual; they are agreeable excursions, and cannot but
+ be instructive as well. On this occasion, things went beautifully with
+ him. Out in those grassy Countries, in the bright Summer, once more he had
+ an unusually fine time;&mdash;and two very special pleasures befell him.
+ First was, a sight of the Emigrants, our Salzburgers and other, in their
+ flourishing condition, over in Lithuania yonder. Delightful to see how the
+ waste is blossoming up again; busy men, with their industries, their
+ steady pious husbandries, making all things green and fruitful:
+ horse-droves, cattle-herds, waving cornfields;&mdash;a very "SCHMALZGRUBE
+ (Butter-pit)" of those Northern parts, as it is since called. [Busching,
+ Erdbeschreibung, ii. 1049.] The Crown-Prince's own words on this matter we
+ will give; they are in a Letter of his to Voltaire, perhaps already known
+ to some readers;&mdash;and we can observe he writes rather copiously from
+ those localities at present, and in a cheerful humor with everybody.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "INSTERBURG, 27th JULY, 1739 (Crown-Prince to Voltaire).... Prussian
+ Lithuania is a Country a hundred and twenty miles long, by from sixty to
+ forty broad; ["Miles ENGLISH," we always mean, UNLESS &amp;c.] it was
+ ravaged by Pestilence at the beginning of this Century; and they say three
+ hundred thousand people died of disease and famine." Ravaged by Pestilence
+ and the neglect of King Friedrich I.; till my Father, once his hands were
+ free, made personal survey of it, and took it up, in earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since that time," say twenty years ago, "there is no expense that the
+ King has been afraid of, in order to succeed in his salutary views. He
+ made, in the first place, regulations full of wisdom; he rebuilt wherever
+ the Pestilence had desolated: thousands of families, from the ends of
+ Europe," seventeen thousand Salzburgers for the last item, "were conducted
+ hither; the Country repeopled itself; trade began to flourish again;&mdash;and
+ now, in these fertile regions, abundance reigns more than it ever did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are above half a million of inhabitants in Lithuania; there are
+ more towns than there ever were, more flocks than formerly, more wealth
+ and more productiveness than in any other part of Germany. And all this
+ that I tell you of is due to the King alone: who not only gave the orders,
+ but superintended the execution of them; it was he that devised the plans,
+ and himself got them carried to fulfilment; and spared neither care nor
+ pains, nor immense expenditures, nor promises nor recompenses, to secure
+ happiness and life to this half-million of thinking beings, who owe to him
+ alone that they have possessions and felicity in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope this detail does not weary you. I depend on your humanity
+ extending itself to your Lithuanian brethren, as well as to your French,
+ English, German, or other,&mdash;all the more as, to my great
+ astonishment, I passed through villages where you hear nothing spoken but
+ French.&mdash;I have found something so heroic, in the generous and
+ laborious way in which the King addressed himself to making this desert
+ flourish with inhabitants and happy industries and fruits, that it seemed
+ to me you would feel the same sentiments in learning the circumstances of
+ such a re-establishment. I daily expect news of you from Enghien" [in
+ those Dutch-Lawsuit Countries].... The divine Emilie;... the Duke
+ [D'Aremberg, Austrian Soldier, of convivial turn,&mdash;remote Welsh-Uncle
+ to a certain little Prince de Ligne, now spinning tops in those parts;
+ [Born 23d May, 1735, this latter little Prince; lasted till 13th December,
+ 1814 ("DANSE, MAIS IL NE MARCHE PAS").] not otherwise interesting], whom
+ Apollo contends for against Bacchues.... Adieu. NE M'OUBLIEZ PAS, MON CHER
+ AMI." [<i>OEuvres,</i> xxi. 304, 305.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is one pleasant scene, to the Crown-Prince and us, in those grassy
+ localities. And now we have to mention that, about a fortnight later, at
+ Konigsberg one day, in reference to a certain Royal Stud or Horse-breeding
+ Establishment in those same Lithuanian regions, there had a still livelier
+ satisfaction happened him; satisfaction of a personal and filial nature.
+ The name of this Royal Stud, inestimable on such ground, is Trakehnen,&mdash;lies
+ south of Tilsit, in an upper valley of the Pregel river;&mdash;very
+ extensive Horse-Establishment, "with seven farms under it," say the Books,
+ and all "in the most perfect order," they need hardly add, Friedrich
+ Wilhelm being master of it. Well, the Royal Party was at Konigsberg, so
+ far on the road homewards again from those outlying parts, when Friedrich
+ Wilhelm said one day to his Son, quite in a cursory manner, "I give thee
+ that Stud of Trakehnen; thou must go back and look to it;" which struck
+ Fritz quite dumb at the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For it is worth near upon 2,000 pounds a year (12,000 thalers); a welcome
+ new item in our impoverished budget; and it is an undeniable sign of
+ Papa's good-humor with us, which is more precious still. Fritz made his
+ acknowledgments, eloquent with looks, eloquent with voice, on coming to
+ himself; and is, in fact, very proud of his gift, and celebrates it to his
+ Wilhelmina, to Camas and others who have a right to know such a thing.
+ Grand useful gift; and handed over by Papa grandly, in three business
+ words, as if it had been a brace of game: "I give it thee, Fritz!" A thing
+ not to be forgotten. "At bottom, Friedrich Wilhelm was not avaricious"
+ (not a miser, only a man grandly abhorring waste, as the poor vulgar
+ cannot do), "not avaricious," says Pollnitz once; "he made munificent
+ gifts, and never thought of them more." This of Trakehnen,&mdash;perhaps
+ there might be a whiff of coming Fate concerned in it withal: "I shall
+ soon be dead, not able to give thee anything, poor Fritz!" To the Prince
+ and us it is very beautiful; a fine effulgence of the inner man of
+ Friedrich Wilhelm. The Prince returned to Trakehnen, on this glad errand;
+ settled the business details there; and, after a few days, went home by a
+ route of his own;&mdash;well satisfied with this Prussian-Review journey,
+ as we may imagine.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [SEE EARLIER&mdash;-Prussian Review-journey (placing of hyphen)]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ One sad thing there was, though Friedrich did not yet know how sad, in
+ this Review-journey: the new fit of illness that overtook his Majesty.
+ From Pollnitz, who was of the party, we have details on that head. In his
+ Majesty's last bad illness, five years ago, when all seemed hopeless, it
+ appears the surgeons had relieved him,&mdash;in fact recovered him,
+ bringing off the bad humors in quantity,&mdash;by an incision in the foot
+ or leg. In the course of the present fatigues, this old wound broke out
+ again; which of course stood much in the way of his Majesty; and could not
+ be neglected, as probably the causes of it were. A regimental surgeon,
+ Pollnitz says, was called in; who, in two days, healed the wound,&mdash;and
+ declared all to be right again; though in fact, as we may judge, it was
+ dangerously worse than before. "All well here," writes Friedrich; "the
+ King has been out of order, but is now entirely recovered (TOUT A FAIT
+ REMIS)." ["Konigsberg, 30th July, 1739," to his Wife (<i>OEuvres,</i>
+ xxvi. 6).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much reviewing and heavy business followed at Konigsberg;&mdash;gift of
+ Trakehnen, and departure of the Crown-Prince for Trakehnen, winding it up.
+ Directly on the heel of which, his Majesty turned homewards, the
+ Crown-Prince not to meet him till once at Berlin again. Majesty's first
+ stage was at Pillau, where we have been. At Pillau, or next day at
+ Dantzig, Pollnitz observed a change in his Majesty's humor, which had been
+ quite sunshiny all this journey hitherto. At Dantzig Pollnitz first
+ noticed it; but at every new stage it grew worse, evil accidents occurring
+ to worsen it; and at Berlin it was worst of all;&mdash;and, alas, his poor
+ Majesty never recovered his sunshine in this world again! Here is
+ Pollnitz's account of the journey homewards:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Till now," till Pillau and Dantzig, "his Majesty had been in especially
+ good humor; but in Dantzig his cheerfulness forsook him;&mdash;and it
+ never came back. He arrived about ten at night in that City [Wednesday,
+ 12th August, or thereby]; slept there; and was off again next morning at
+ five. He drove only thirty miles this day; stopped in Lupow [coast road
+ through Pommern], with Herr von Grumkow [the late Grumkow's Brother],
+ Kammer President in this Pommern Province. From Lupow he went to a poor
+ Village near Belgard, EIGHTY miles farther;"&mdash;last village on the
+ great road, Belgard lying to left a little, on a side road;&mdash;"and
+ stayed there overnight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At Belgard, next morning, he reviewed the Dragoon Regiment von Platen;
+ and was very ill content with it. And nobody, with the least understanding
+ of that business, but must own that never did Prussian Regiment manoeuvre
+ worse. Conscious themselves how bad it was, they lost head, and got into
+ open confusion. The King did all that was possible to help them into order
+ again. He withdrew thrice over, to give the Officers time to recover
+ themselves; but it was all in vain. The King, contrary to wont, restrained
+ himself amazingly, and would not show his displeasure in public. He got
+ into his carriage, and drove away with the Furst of Anhalt," Old Dessauer,
+ "and Von Winterfeld," Captain in the Giant Regiment, "who is now
+ Major-General von Winterfeld; [Major-General since 1743, of high fame;
+ fell in fight, 7th September, 1757.] not staying to dine with General von
+ Platen, as was always his custom with Commandants whom he had reviewed. He
+ bade Prince Wilhelm and the rest of us stay and dine; he himself drove
+ away,"&mdash;towards the great road again, and some uncertain lodging
+ there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We stayed accordingly; and did full justice to the good cheer,"&mdash;though
+ poor Platen would certainly look flustered, one may fancy. "But as the
+ Prince was anxious to come up with his Majesty again, and knew not where
+ he would meet him, we had to be very swift with the business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We found the King with Anhalt and Winterfeld, by and by; sitting in a
+ village, in front of a barn, and eating a cold pie there, which the Furst
+ of Anhalt had chanced to have with him; his Majesty, owing to what he had
+ seen on the parade-ground, was in the utmost ill-humor (HOCHST UBLER
+ LAUNE). Next day, Saturday, he went a hundred and fifty or two hundred
+ miles; and arrived in Berlin at ten at night. Not expected there till the
+ morrow; so that his rooms were locked,&mdash;her Majesty being over in
+ Monbijou, giving her children a Ball;" [Pollnitz, ii. 534-537.]&mdash;and
+ we can fancy what a frame of mind there was!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody, not at first even the Doctors, much heeded this new fit of
+ illness; which went and came: "changed temper," deeper or less deep gloom
+ of "bad humor," being the main phenomenon to by-standers. But the sad
+ truth was, his Majesty never did recover his sunshine; from Pillau onwards
+ he was slowly entering into the shadows of the total Last Eclipse; and his
+ journeyings and reviewings in this world were all done. Ten months hence,
+ Pollnitz and others knew better what it had been!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VII. &mdash; LAST YEAR OF REINSBERG: TRANSIT OF BALTIMORE AND
+ OTHER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ PERSONS AND THINGS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich had not been long home again from Trakehnen and Preussen, when
+ the routine of things at Reinsberg was illuminated by Visitors, of
+ brilliant and learned quality; some of whom, a certain Signor Algarotti
+ for one, require passing mention here. Algarotti, who became a permanent
+ friend or satellite, very luminous to the Prince, and was much about him
+ in coming years, first shone out upon the scene at this time,&mdash;coming
+ unexpectedly, and from the Eastward as it chanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his own score, Algarotti has become a wearisome literary man to modern
+ readers: one of those half-remembered men; whose books seem to claim a
+ reading, and do not repay it you when given. Treatises, of a serious
+ nature, ON THE OPERA; setting forth, in earnest, the potential "moral
+ uses" of the Opera, and dedicated to Chatham; <i>Neutonianismo per le
+ Donne</i> (Astronomy for Ladies): the mere Titles of such things are
+ fatally sufficient to us; and we cannot, without effort, nor with it,
+ recall the brilliancy of Algarotti and them to his contemporary world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Algarotti was a rich Venetian Merchant's Son, precisely about the
+ Crown-Prince's age; shone greatly in his studies at Bologna and elsewhere;
+ had written Poesies (RIME); written especially that <i>Newtonianism for
+ the Dames</i> (equal to Fontenelle, said Fame, and orthodox Newtonian
+ withal, not heterodox or Cartesian); and had shone, respected, at Paris,
+ on the strength of it, for three or four years past: friend of Voltaire in
+ consequence, of Voltaire and his divine Emilie, and a welcome guest at
+ Cirey; friend of the cultivated world generally, which was then laboring,
+ divine Emilie in the van of it, to understand Newton and be orthodox in
+ this department of things. Algarotti did fine Poesies, too, once and
+ again; did Classical Scholarships, and much else: everywhere a
+ clear-headed, methodically distinct, concise kind of man. A high style of
+ breeding about him, too; had powers of pleasing, and used them: a man
+ beautifully lucent in society, gentle yet impregnable there; keeping
+ himself unspotted from the world and its discrepancies,&mdash;really with
+ considerable prudence, first and last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is somewhat of the Bielfeld type; a Merchant's Son, we observe, like
+ Bielfeld; but a Venetian Merchant's, not a Hamburg's; and also of better
+ natural stuff than Bielfeld. Concentrated himself upon his task with more
+ seriousness, and made a higher thing of it than Bielfeld; though, after
+ all, it was the same task the two had. Alas, our "Swan of Padua" (so they
+ sometimes called him) only sailed, paddling grandly, no-whither,&mdash;as
+ the Swan-Goose of the Elbe did, in a less stately manner! One cannot well
+ bear to read his Books. There is no light upon Friedrich to tempt us;
+ better light than Bielfeld's there could have been, and much of it: but he
+ prudently, as well as proudly, forbore such topics. He approaches very
+ near fertility and geniality in his writings, but never reaches it.
+ Dilettantism become serious and strenuous, in those departments&mdash;Well,
+ it was beautiful to young Friedrich and the world at that time, though it
+ is not to us!&mdash;Young Algarotti, twenty-seven this year, has been
+ touring about as a celebrity these four years past, on the strength of his
+ fine manners and <i>Newtonianism for the Dames.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was under escort of Baltimore, "an English Milord," recommended from
+ Potsdam itself, that Algarotti came to Reinsberg; the Signor had much to
+ do with English people now and after. Where Baltimore first picked him up,
+ I know not: but they have been to Russia together; Baltimore by twelve
+ years the elder of the two: and now, getting home towards England again,
+ they call at Reinsberg in the fine Autumn weather;&mdash;and considerably
+ captivate the Crown-Prince, Baltimore playing chief, in that as in other
+ points. The visit lasted five days: [20th-25th September, 1739 (<i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> xiv. p. xiv).] there was copious speech on many things;&mdash;discussion
+ about Printing of the ANTI MACHIAVEL; Algarotti to get it printed in
+ England, Algarotti to get Pine and his Engraved HENRIADE put under way;
+ neither of which projects took effect;&mdash;readers can conceive what a
+ charming five days these were. Here, in the Crown-Prince's own words, are
+ some brief glimmerings which will suffice us:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REINSBERG, 25th SEPT. 1739 (Crown-Prince to Papa).... that "nothing new
+ has occurred in the Regiment, and we have few sick. Here has the English
+ Milord, who was at Potsdam, passing through [stayed five days, though we
+ call it passing, and suppress the Algarotti, Baltimore being indeed
+ chief]. He is gone towards Hamburg, to take ship for England there. As I
+ heard that my Most All-gracious Father wished I should show him courtesy,
+ I have done for him what I could. The Prince of Mirow has also been here,"&mdash;our
+ old Strelitz friend. Of Baltimore nothing more to Papa. But to another
+ Correspondent, to the good Suhm (who is now at Petersburg, and much in our
+ intimacy, ready to transact loans for us, translate Wolf, or do what is
+ wanted), there is this passage next day:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REINSBERG, 26th SEPTEMBER, 1739 (to Suhm). "We have had Milord Baltimore
+ here, and the young Algarotti; both of them men who, by their
+ accomplishments, cannot but conciliate the esteem and consideration of all
+ who see them. We talked much of you [Suhm], of Philosophy, of Science,
+ Art; in short, of all that can be included in the taste of cultivated
+ people (HONNETES GENS)." [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xvi. 378.] And again
+ to another, about two weeks hence:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ REINSBERG, 10th OCTOBER, 1739 (to Voltaire). "We have had Milord Baltimore
+ and Algarotti here, who are going back to England. This Milord is a very
+ sensible man (HOMME TRESSENSE); who possesses a great deal of knowledge,
+ and thinks, like us, that sciences can be no disparagement to nobility,
+ nor degrade an illustrious rank. I admired the genius of this ANGLAIS, as
+ one does a fine face through a crape veil. He speaks French very ill, yet
+ one likes to hear him speak it; and as for his English, he pronounces it
+ so quick, there is no possibility of following him. He calls a Russian 'a
+ mechanical animal.' He says 'Petersburg is the eye of Russia, with which
+ it keeps civilized countries in sight; if you took this eye from it,
+ Russia would fall again into barbarism, out of which it is just
+ struggling.' [Ib. xxi. 326, 327.]... Young Algarotti, whom you know,
+ pleased me beyond measure. He promised that he"&mdash;But Baltimore,
+ promise or not, is the chief figure at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently an original kind of figure to us, CET ANGLAIS. And indeed there
+ is already finished a rhymed EPISTLE to Baltimore; <i>Epitre sur la
+ Liberte</i> (copy goes in that same LETTER, for Voltaire's behoof), which
+ dates itself likewise October 10th; beginning,&mdash;<i>"L'esprit libre,
+ Milord, qui regne en Angleterre,"</i> which, though it is full of fine
+ sincere sentiments, about human dignity, papal superstition, Newton,
+ Locke, and aspirations for progress of culture in Prussia, no reader could
+ stand at this epoch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What Baltimore said in answer to the EPITRE, we do not know; probably not
+ much: it does not appear he ever saw or spoke to Friedrich a second time.
+ Three weeks after, Friedrich writing to Algarotti, has these words: "I
+ pray you make my friendships to Milord Baltimore, whose character and
+ manner of thinking I truly esteem. I hope he has, by this time, got my
+ EPITRE on the English Liberty of Thought." [29th October 1739, To
+ Algarotti in London (<i>OEuvres,</i> xviii. 5).] And so Baltimore passes
+ on, silent in History henceforth,&mdash;though Friedrich seems to have
+ remembered him to late times, as a kind of type-figure when England came
+ into his head. For the sake of this small transit over the sun's disk, I
+ have made some inquiry about Baltimore; but found very little;&mdash;perhaps
+ enough:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was Charles, Sixth Lord Baltimore, it appears; Sixth, and last but
+ one. First of the Baltimores, we know, was Secretary Calvert (1618-1624),
+ who colonized Maryland; last of them (1774) was the Son of this Charles;
+ something of a fool, to judge by the face of him in Portraits, and by some
+ of his doings in the world. He, that Seventh Baltimore, printed one or two
+ little Volumes "now of extreme rarity"&mdash;(cannot be too rare); and
+ winded up by standing an ugly Trial at Kingston Assizes (plaintiff an
+ unfortunate female). After which he retired to Naples, and there ended,
+ 1774, the last of these Milords. [Walpole (by Park), <i>Catalogue of Royal
+ and Noble Authors</i> (London, 1806), v. 278.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He of the Kingston Assizes, we say, was not this Charles; but his Son,
+ whom let the reader forget. Charles, age forty at this time, had travelled
+ about the Continent a good deal: once, long ago, we imagined we had got a
+ glimpse of him (but it was a guess merely) lounging about Luneville and
+ Lorraine, along with Lyttelton, in the Congress-of-Soissons time? Not long
+ after that, it is certain enough, he got appointed a Gentleman of the
+ Bedchamber to Prince Fred; who was a friend of speculative talkers and
+ cultivated people. In which situation Charles Sixth Baron Baltimore
+ continued all his days after; and might have risen by means of Fred, as he
+ was anxious enough to do, had both of them lived; but they both died;
+ Baltimore first, in 1751, a year before Fred. Bubb Doddington, diligent
+ laborer in the same Fred vineyard, was much infested by this Baltimore,&mdash;who,
+ drunk or sober (for he occasionally gets into liquor), is always putting
+ out Bubb, and stands too well with our Royal Master, one secretly fears!
+ Baltimore's finances, I can guess, were not in too good order; mostly an
+ Absentee; Irish Estates not managed in the first style, while one is busy
+ in the Fred vineyard! 'The best and honestest man in the world, with a
+ good deal of jumbled knowledge,' Walpole calls him once: 'but not capable
+ of conducting a party.'" [Walpole's <i>Letters to Mann</i> (London, 1843),
+ ii. 175; 27th January, 1747. See ib. i. 82.] Oh no;&mdash;and died, at any
+ rate, Spring 1751: [<i>Peerage of Ireland</i> (London, 1768), ii.
+ 172-174.] and we will not mention him farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BIELFELD, WHAT HE SAW AT REINSBERG AND AROUND.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Directly on the rear of these fine visitors, came, by invitation, a pair
+ of the Korn's-Hotel people; Masonic friends; one of whom was Bielfeld,
+ whose dainty Installation Speech and ways of procedure had been of promise
+ to the Prince on that occasion. "Baron von Oberg" was the other:&mdash;Hanoverian
+ Baron: the same who went into the Wars, and was a "General von Oberg"
+ twenty years hence? The same or another, it does not much concern us. Nor
+ does the visit much, or at all; except that Bielfeld, being of writing
+ nature, professes to give ocular account of it. Honest transcript of what
+ a human creature actually saw at Reinsberg, and in the Berlin environment
+ at that date, would have had a value to mankind: but Bielfeld has adopted
+ the fictitious form; and pretty much ruined for us any transcript there
+ is. Exaggeration, gesticulation, fantastic uncertainty afflict the reader;
+ and prevent comfortable belief, except where there is other evidence than
+ Bielfeld's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Berlin the beautiful straight streets, Linden Avenues (perhaps a better
+ sample than those of our day), were notable to Bielfeld; bridges, statues
+ very fine; grand esplanades, and such military drilling and parading as
+ was never seen. He had dinner-invitations, too, in quantity; likes this
+ one and that (all in prudent asterisks),&mdash;-likes Truchsess von
+ Waldburg very much, and his strange mode of bachelor housekeeping, and the
+ way he dines and talks among his fellow-creatures, or sits studious among
+ his Military Books and Paper-litters. But all is loose far-off sketching,
+ in the style of <i>Anacharsis the Younger;</i> and makes no solid
+ impression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Getting to Reinsberg, to the Town, to the Schloss, he crosses the
+ esplanade, the moat; sees what we know, beautiful square Mansion among its
+ woods and waters;&mdash;and almost nothing that we do not know, except the
+ way the moat-bridge is lighted: "Bridge furnished," he says, "with seven
+ Statues representing the seven Planets, each holding in her hand a glass
+ lamp in the form of a globe;"&mdash;which is a pretty object in the
+ night-time. The House is now finished; Knobelsdorf rejoicing in his
+ success; Pesne and others giving the last touch to some ceilings of a
+ sublime nature. On the lintel of the gate is inscribed FREDERICO
+ TRANQUILLITATEM COLENTI (To Friedrich courting Tranquillity). The gardens,
+ walks, hermitages, grottos, are very spacious, fine: not yet completed,&mdash;perhaps
+ will never be. A Temple of Bacchus is just now on hand, somewhere in those
+ labyrinthic woods: "twelve gigantic Satyrs as caryatides, crowned by an
+ inverted Punch-bowl for dome;" that is the ingenious Knobelsdorf's idea,
+ pleasant to the mind. Knobelsdorf is of austere aspect; austere, yet
+ benevolent and full of honest sagacity; the very picture of sound sense,
+ thinks Bielfeld. M. Jordan is handsome, though of small stature; agreeable
+ expression of face; eye extremely vivid; brown complexion, bushy eyebrows
+ as well as beard are black. [Bielfeld (abridged), i. 45.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Or did the reader ever hear of "M. Fredersdorf," Head Valet at this time?
+ Fredersdorf will become, as it were, Privy-Purse, House-Friend, and
+ domestic Factotum, and play a great part in coming years. "A tall handsome
+ man;" much "silent sense, civility, dexterity;" something "magnificently
+ clever in him," thinks Bielfeld (now, or else twenty years afterwards);
+ whom we can believe. [Ib. p. 49.] He was a gift from General Schwerin,
+ this Fredersdorf; once a Private in Schwerin's regiment, at
+ Frankfurt-on-Oder,&mdash;excellent on the flute, for one quality.
+ Schwerin, who had an eye for men, sent him to Friedrich, in the Custrin
+ time; hoping he might suit in fluting and otherwise. Which he
+ conspicuously did. Bielfeld's account, we must candidly say, appears to be
+ an afterthought; but readers can make their profit of it, all the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the Crown-Prince and Princess, words fail to express their gracious
+ perfections, their affabilities, polite ingenuities:&mdash;Bielfeld's
+ words do give us some pleasant shadowy conceivability of the
+ Crown-Princess:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tall, and perfect in shape; bust such as a sculptor might copy;
+ complexion of the finest; features ditto; nose, I confess, smallish and
+ pointed, but excellent of that kind; hair of the supremest flaxen,
+ 'shining' like a flood of sunbeams, when the powder is off it. A humane
+ ingenuous Princess; little negligences in toilet or the like, if such
+ occur, even these set her off, so ingenuous are they. Speaks little; but
+ always to the purpose, in a simple, cheerful and wise way. Dances
+ beautifully; heart (her soubrette assures me) is heavenly;&mdash;and
+ 'perhaps no Princess living has a finer set of diamonds.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the Crown-Princess there is some pleasant shadow traced as on cobweb,
+ to this effect. But of the Crown-Prince there is no forming the least
+ conception from what he says:&mdash;this is mere cobweb with Nothing
+ elaborately painted on it. Nor do the portraits of the others attract by
+ their verisimilitude. Here is Colonel Keyserling, for instance; the witty
+ Courlander, famous enough in the Friedrich circle; who went on embassy to
+ Cirey, and much else: he "whirls in with uproar (FRACAS) like Boreas in
+ the Ballet;" fowling-piece on shoulder, and in his "dressing-gown" withal,
+ which is still stranger; snatches off Bielfeld, unknown till that moment,
+ to sit by him while dressing; and there, with much capering, pirouetting,
+ and indeed almost ground-and-lofty tumbling, for accompaniment, "talks of
+ Horses, Mathematics, Painting, Architecture, Literature, and the Art of
+ War," while he dresses. This gentleman was once Colonel in Friedrich
+ Wilhelm's Army; is now fairly turned of forty, and has been in troubles:
+ we hope he is not LIKE in the Bielfeld Portrait;&mdash;otherwise, how
+ happy that we never had the honor of knowing him! Indeed, the
+ Crown-Prince's Household generally, as Bielfeld paints it in flourishes of
+ panegyric, is but unattractive; barren to the modern on-looker; partly the
+ Painter's blame, we doubt not. He gives details about their mode of
+ dining, taking coffee, doing concert;&mdash;and describes once an
+ incidental drinking-bout got up aforethought by the Prince; which is
+ probably in good part fiction, though not ill done. These fantastic
+ sketchings, rigorously winnowed into the credible and actual, leave no
+ great residue in that kind; but what little they do leave is of favorable
+ and pleasant nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bielfeld made a visit privately to Potsdam, too: saw the Giants drill;
+ made acquaintance with important Captains of theirs (all in ASTERISKS) at
+ Potsdam; with whom he dined, not in a too credible manner, and even
+ danced. Among the asterisks, we easily pick out Captain Wartensleben (of
+ the Korn's-Hotel operation), and Winterfeld, a still more important
+ Captain, whom we saw dining on cold pie with his Majesty, at a barn-door
+ in Pommern, not long since. Of the Giants, or their life at Potsdam,
+ Bielfeld's word is not worth hearing,&mdash;worth suppressing rather; his
+ knowledge being so small, and hung forth in so fantastic a way. This
+ transient sight he had of his Majesty in person; this, which is worth
+ something to us,&mdash;fact being evidently lodged in it, "After
+ church-parade," Autumn Sunday afternoon (day uncertain, Bielfeld's date
+ being fictitious, and even impossible), Majesty drove out to Wusterhausen,
+ "where the quantities of game surpass all belief;" and Bielfeld had one
+ glimpse of him:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I saw his Majesty only, as it were, in passing. If I may judge by his
+ Portraits, he must have been of a perfect beauty in his young time; but it
+ must be confessed there is nothing left of it now. His eyes truly are
+ fine; but the glance of them is terrible: his complexion is composed of
+ the strongest tints of red, blue, yellow, green,"&mdash;not a lovely
+ complexion at all; "big head; the thick neck sunk between the shoulders;
+ figure short and heavy (COURTE ET RAMASSEE)." [Bielfeld, p. 35.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Going out to Wusterhausen," then, that afternoon, "October, 1739." How
+ his Majesty is crushed down; quite bulged out of shape in that sad way, by
+ the weight of time and its pressures: his thoughts, too, most likely, of a
+ heavy-laden and abstruse nature! The old Pfalz Controversy has misgone
+ with him: Pfalz, and so much else in the world;&mdash;the world in whole,
+ probably enough, near ending to him; the final shadows, sombre, grand and
+ mournful, closing in upon him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ TURK WAR ENDS; SPANISH WAR BEGINS. A WEDDING IN PETERSBURG.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Last news come to Potsdam in these days is, The Kaiser has ended his
+ disastrous Turk War; been obliged to end it; sudden downbreak, and as it
+ were panic terror, having at last come upon his unfortunate Generals in
+ those parts. Duke Franz was passionate to be out of such a thing; Franz,
+ General Neipperg and others; and now, "2d September, 1739," like lodgers
+ leaping from a burning house, they are out of it. The Turk gets Belgrade
+ itself, not to mention wide territories farther east,&mdash;Belgrade
+ without shot fired;&mdash;nay the Turk was hardly to be kept from hanging
+ the Imperial Messenger (a General Neipperg, Duke Franz's old Tutor, and
+ chief Confidant, whom we shall hear more of elsewhere), whose passport was
+ not quite right on this occasion!&mdash;Never was a more disgraceful
+ Peace. But also never had been worse fighting; planless, changeful,
+ powerless, melting into futility at every step:&mdash;not to be mended by
+ imprisonments in Gratz, and still harsher treatment of individuals. "Has
+ all success forsaken me, then, since Eugene died?" said the Kaiser; and
+ snatched at this Turk Peace; glad to have it, by mediation of France, and
+ on any terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Has not this Kaiser lost his outlying properties at a fearful rate? Naples
+ is gone; Spanish Bourbon sits in our Naples; comparatively little left for
+ us in Italy. And now the very Turk has beaten us small; insolently fillips
+ the Imperial nose of us,&mdash;threatening to hang our Neipperg, and the
+ like. Were it not for Anne of Russia, whose big horse-whip falls heavy on
+ this Turk, he might almost get to Vienna again, for anything we could do!
+ A Kaiser worthy to be pitied;&mdash;whom Friedrich Wilhelm, we perceive,
+ does honestly pity. A Kaiser much beggared, much disgraced, in late years;
+ who has played a huge life-game so long, diplomatizing, warring; and,
+ except the Shadow of Pragmatic Sanction, has nothing to retire upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russians protested, with astonishment, against such Turk Peace on the
+ Kaiser's part. But there was no help for it. One ally is gone, the Kaiser
+ has let go this Western skirt of the Turk; and "Thamas Kouli Khan" (called
+ also Nadir Shah, famed Oriental slasher and slayer of that time) no longer
+ stands upon the Eastern skirt, but "has entered India," it appears: the
+ Russians&mdash;their cash, too, running low&mdash;do themselves make
+ peace, "about a month after;" restoring Azoph and nearly all their
+ conquests; putting off the ruin of the Turk till a better time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ War is over in the East, then; but another in the West, England against
+ Spain (Spain and France to help), is about beginning. Readers remember how
+ Jenkins's Ear re-emerged, Spring gone a year, in a blazing condition?
+ Here, through SYLVANUS URBAN himself, are two direct glimpses, a
+ twelve-month nearer hand, which show us how the matter has been proceeding
+ since:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "LONDON, 19th FEBRUARY, 1739. The City Authorities,"&mdash;laying or going
+ to lay "the foundation of the Mansion-House" (Edifice now very black in
+ our time), and doing other things of little moment to us, "had a
+ Masquerade at the Guildhall this night. There was a very splendid
+ appearance at the Masquerade; but among the many humorous and whimsical
+ characters, what seemed most to engage attention was a Spaniard, who
+ called himself 'Knight of the Ear;' as Badge of which Order he wore on his
+ breast the form of a Star, with its points tinged in blood; and on the
+ body of it an Ear painted, and in capital letters the word JENKINS
+ encircling it. Across his shoulder there hung, instead of ribbon, a large
+ Halter; which he held up to several persons dressed as English Sailors,
+ who seemed in great terror of him, and falling on their knees suffered him
+ to rummage their pockets; which done, he would insolently dismiss them
+ with strokes of his halter. Several of the Sailors had a bloody Ear
+ hanging down from their heads; and on their hats were these words, EAR FOR
+ EAR; on others, NO SEARCH OR NO TRADE; with the like sentences." [<i>Gentleman's
+ Magazine</i> for 1739, p. 103;&mdash;our DATES, as always, are N. 8.] The
+ conflagration evidently going on; not likely to be damped down again, by
+ ministerial art!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "LONDON, 19th MARCH, 1739." Grand Debate in Parliament, on the late
+ "Spanish Convention," pretended Bargain of redress lately got from Spain:
+ Approve the Convention, or Not approve? "A hundred Members were in the
+ House of Commons before seven, this morning; and four hundred had taken
+ their seat by ten; which is an unheard-of thing. Prince of Wales," Fred in
+ person, "was in the gallery till twelve at night, and had his dinner sent
+ to him. Sir Robert Walpole rose: 'Sir, the great pains that have been
+ taken to influence all ranks and degrees of men in this Nation&mdash;...
+ But give me leave to'"&mdash;apply a wet cloth to Honorable Gentlemen.
+ Which he does, really with skill and sense. France and the others are so
+ strong, he urges; England so unprepared; Kaiser at such a pass; 'War like
+ to be, about the Palatinate Dispute [our friend Friedrich Wilhelm's]:
+ Where is England to get, allies?'&mdash;and hours long of the like sort. A
+ judicious wet cloth; which proved unavailing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For "William Pitts" (so they spell the great Chatham that is to be) was
+ eloquent on the other side: "Despairing Merchants," "Voice of England,"
+ and so on. And the world was all in an inflamed state. And Mr. Pulteney
+ exclaimed: Palatinate? Allies? "We need no allies; the case of Mr. Jenkins
+ will raise us volunteers everywhere!" And in short,&mdash;after eight
+ months more of haggling, and applying wet cloths,&mdash;Walpole, in the
+ name of England, has to declare War against Spain; ["3d November (23d
+ October), 1739."] the public humor proving unquenchable on that matter.
+ War; and no Peace to be, "till our undoubted right," to roadway on the
+ oceans of this Planet, become permanently manifest to the Spanish Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such the effect of a small Ear, kept about one in cotton, from ursine
+ piety or other feelings. Has not Jenkins's Ear re-emerged, with a
+ vengeance? It has kindled a War: dangerous for kindling other Wars, and
+ setting the whole world on fire,&mdash;as will be too evident in the
+ sequel! The EAR OF JENKINS is a singular thing. Might have mounted to be a
+ constellation, like BERENICE'S HAIR, and other small facts become
+ mythical, had the English People been of poetic turn! Enough of IT, for
+ the time being.&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Summer, Anton Ulrich, at Petersburg, did wed his Serene Mecklenburg
+ Princess, Heiress of all the Russias: "July 14th, 1739,"&mdash;three
+ months before that Drive to Wusterhausen, which we saw lately. Little
+ Anton Ulrich, Cadet of Brunswick; our Friedrich's Brother-in-Law;&mdash;a
+ noticeably small man in comparison to such bulk of destiny, thinks
+ Friedrich, though the case is not without example! [A Letter of his to
+ Suhm; touching on Franz of Lorraine and this Anton Ulrich.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Anton Ulrich is now five-and-twenty," says one of my Notebooks; "a young
+ gentleman of small stature, shining courage in battle, but somewhat shy
+ and bashful; who has had his troubles in Petersburg society, till the
+ trial came,&mdash;and will have. Here are the stages of Anton Ulrich's
+ felicity:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "WINTER, 1732-1733. He was sent for to Petersburg (his Serene Aunt the
+ German Kaiserinn, and Kaiser Karl's diplomatists, suggesting it there),
+ with the view of his paying court to the young Mecklenburg Princess,
+ Heiress of all the Russias, of whom we have often heard. February, 1733,
+ he arrived on this errand;&mdash;not approved of at all by the Mecklenburg
+ Princess, by Czarina Anne or anybody there: what can be done with such an
+ uncomfortable little creature? They gave him the Colonelcy of Cuirassiers:
+ 'Drill there, and endure.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "SPRING, 1737. Much-enduring, diligently drilling, for four years past, he
+ went this year to the Turk War under Munnich;&mdash;much pleased Munnich,
+ at Oczakow and elsewhere; who reports in the War-Office high things of
+ him. And on the whole,&mdash;the serene Vienna people now again bestirring
+ themselves, with whom we are in copartnery in this Turk business,&mdash;little
+ Anton Ulrich is encouraged to proceed. Proceeds; formally demands his
+ Mecklenburg Princess; and,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "JULY 14th, 1739, weds her; the happiest little man in all the Russias,
+ and with the biggest destiny, if it prosper. Next year, too, there came a
+ son and heir; whom they called Iwan, in honor of his Russian
+ Great-grandfather. Shall we add the subsequent felicities of Anton Ulrich
+ here; or wait till another opportunity?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Better wait. This is all, and more than all, his Prussian Majesty, rolling
+ out of Wusterhausen that afternoon, ever knew of them, or needed to know!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VIII. &mdash; DEATH OF FRIEDRICH WILHELM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At Wusterhausen, this Autumn, there is game as usual, but little or no
+ hunting for the King. He has to sit drearily within doors, for most part;
+ listening to the rustle of falling leaves, to dim Winter coming with its
+ rains and winds. Field-sports are a rumor from without: for him now no
+ joyous sow-baiting, deer-chasing;&mdash;that, like other things, is past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the beginning of November, he came to Berlin; was worse there, and
+ again was better;&mdash;strove to do the Carnival, as had been customary;
+ but, in a languid, lamed manner. One night he looked in upon an
+ evening-party which General Schulenburg was giving: he returned home,
+ chilled, shivering, could not, all night, be brought to heat again. It was
+ the last evening-party Friedrich Wilhelm ever went to. [Pollnitz (ii.
+ 538); who gives no date.] Lieutenant-General Schulenburg: the same who
+ doomed young Friedrich to death, as President of the Court-Martial; and
+ then wrote the Three Letters about him which we once looked into:
+ illuminates himself in this manner in Berlin society,&mdash;Carnival
+ season, 1740, weather fiercely cold. Maypole Schulenburg the lean Aunt,
+ Ex-Mistress of George I., over in London,&mdash;I think she must now be
+ dead? Or if not dead, why not! Memory, for the tenth time, fails me, of
+ the humanly unmemorable, whom perhaps even flunkies should forget; and I
+ will try it no more. The stalwart Lieutenant-General will reappear on us
+ once, twice at the utmost, and never again. He gave the last evening-party
+ Friedrich Wilhelm ever went to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Friedrich Wilhelm is in truth very ill; tosses about all day, in and
+ out of bed,&mdash;bed and wheeled-chair drearily alternating; suffers
+ much;&mdash;and again, in Diplomatic circles, the rumors are rife and
+ sinister. Ever from this chill at Schulenburg's the medicines did him no
+ good, says Pollnitz: if he rallied, it was the effect of Nature, and only
+ temporary. He does daily, with punctuality, his Official business; perhaps
+ the best two hours he has of the four-and-twenty, for the time hangs heavy
+ on him. His old Generals sit round his bed, talking, smoking, as it was
+ five years ago; his Feekin and his Children much about him, out and in:
+ the heavy-laden, weary hours roll round as they can. In general there is a
+ kind of constant Tabaks-Collegium, old Flans, Camas, Hacke, Pollnitz,
+ Derschau, and the rest by turns always there; the royal Patient cannot be
+ left alone, without faces he likes: other Generals, estimable in their
+ way, have a physiognomy displeasing to the sick man; and will smart for it
+ if they enter,&mdash;"At sight of HIM every pain grows painfuler!"&mdash;the
+ poor King being of poetic temperament, as we often say. Friends are
+ encouraged to smoke, especially to keep up a stream of talk; if at any
+ time he fall into a doze and they cease talking, the silence will awaken
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is worst off in the night; sleep very bad: and among his sore bodily
+ pains, ennui falls very heavy to a mind so restless. He can paint, he can
+ whittle, chisel: at last they even mount him a table, in his bed, with
+ joiner's tools, mallets, glue-pots, where he makes small carpentry,&mdash;the
+ talk to go on the while;&mdash;often at night is the sound of his mallet
+ audible in the Palace Esplanade; and Berlin townsfolk pause to listen,
+ with many thoughts of a sympathetic or at least inarticulate character:
+ "HM, WEH, IHRO MAJESTAT: ACH GOTT, pale Death knocks with impartial foot
+ at the huts of poor men and the Palaces of Kings!" [Pollnitz, ii. 539.]
+ Reverend Herr Roloff, whom they call Provost (PROBST, Chief Clergyman)
+ Roloff, a pious honest man and preacher, he, I could guess, has already
+ been giving spiritual counsel now and then; later interviews with Roloff
+ are expressly on record: for it is the King's private thought, ever and
+ anon borne in upon him, that death itself is in this business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Queen and Children, mostly hoping hitherto, though fearing too, live in
+ much anxiety and agitation. The Crown-Prince is often over from Reinsberg;
+ must not come too often, nor even inquire too much: his affectionate
+ solicitude might be mistaken for solicitude of another kind! It is certain
+ he is in no haste to be King; to quit the haunts of the Muses, and embark
+ on Kingship. Certain, too, he loves his Father; shudders at the thought of
+ losing HIM. And yet again there will gleams intrude of a contrary thought;
+ which the filial heart disowns, with a kind of horror, "Down, thou impious
+ thought!"&mdash;We perceive he manages in general to push the crisis away
+ from him; to believe that real danger is still distant. His demeanor, so
+ far as we can gather from his Letters or other evidence, is amiable,
+ prudent, natural; altogether that of a human Son in those difficult
+ circumstances. Poor Papa is heavy-laden: let us help to bear his burdens;&mdash;let
+ us hope the crisis is still far off!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once, on a favorable evening, probably about the beginning of April, when
+ he felt as if improving, Friedrich Wilhelm resolved to dress, and hold
+ Tobacco-Parliament again in a formal manner, Let us look in there, through
+ the eyes of Pollnitz, who was of it, upon the last Tobacco-Parliament:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A numerous party; Schwerin, Hacke, Derschau, all the chiefs and
+ commandants of the Berlin Garrison are there; the old circle full; social
+ human speech once more, and pipes alight; pleasant to the King. He does
+ not himself smoke on this occasion; but he is unusually lively in talk;
+ much enjoys the returning glimpse of old days; and the Tobacco circle was
+ proceeding through its phases, successful beyond common. All at once the
+ Crown-Prince steps in; direct from Reinsberg: [12th April, 1740? (<i>OEuvres,</i>
+ xxvii. part lst, p. 29); Pollnitz is dateless] an unexpected pleasure. At
+ sight of whom the Tobacco circle, taken on the sudden, simultaneously
+ started up, and made him a bow. Rule is, in Tobacco-Parliament you do not
+ rise&mdash;for anybody; and they have risen. Which struck the sick heart
+ in a strange painful way. 'Hm, the Rising Sun?' thinks he; 'Rules broken
+ through, for the Rising Sun. But I am not dead yet, as you shall know!'
+ ringing for his servants in great wrath; and had himself rolled out,
+ regardless of protestations and excuses. 'Hither, you Hacke!' said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hacke followed; but it was only to return on the instant, with the King's
+ order, 'That you instantly quit the Palace, all of you, and don't come
+ back!' Solemn respectful message to his Majesty was of no effect, or of
+ less; they had to go, on those terms; and Pollnitz, making for his
+ Majesty's apartment next morning as usual, was twitched by a Gens-d'arme,
+ 'No admittance!' And it was days before the matter would come round again,
+ under earnest protestations from the one side, and truculent rebukes from
+ the other." [Pollnitz (abridged), ii. 50.] Figure the Crown-Prince, figure
+ the poor sick Majesty; and what a time in those localities!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the bright spring weather he seemed to revive; towards the end of
+ April he resolved for Potsdam, everybody thinking him much better, and the
+ outer Public reckoning the crisis of the illness over. He himself knew
+ other. It was on the 27th of the month that he went; he said, "Fare thee
+ well, then, Berlin; I am to die in Potsdam, then (ICH WERDE IN POTSDAM
+ STERBEN)!" The May-flowers came late; the weather was changeful, ungenial
+ for the sick man: this winter of 1740 had been the coldest on record; it
+ extended itself into the very summer; and brought great distress of every
+ kind;&mdash;of which some oral rumor still survives in all countries.
+ Friedrich Wilhelm heard complaints of scarcity among the people;
+ admonitions to open his Corn-granaries (such as he always has in store
+ against that kind of accident); but he still hesitated and refused; unable
+ to look into it himself, and fearing deceptions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the rest, he is struggling between death and life; in general
+ persuaded that the end is fast hastening on. He sends for Chief Preacher
+ Roloff out to Potsdam; has some notable dialogues with Roloff, and with
+ two other Potsdam Clergymen, of which there is record still left us. In
+ these, as in all his demeanor at this supreme time, we see the big rugged
+ block of manhood come out very vividly; strong in his simplicity, in his
+ veracity. Friedrich Wilhelm's wish is to know from Roloff what the chances
+ are for him in the other world,&mdash;which is not less certain than
+ Potsdam and the giant grenadiers to Friedrich Wilhelm; and where, he
+ perceives, never half so clearly before, he shall actually peel off his
+ Kinghood, and stand before God Almighty, no better than a naked beggar.
+ Roloff's prognostics are not so encouraging as the King had hoped. Surely
+ this King "never took or coveted what was not his; kept true to his
+ marriage-vow, in spite of horrible examples everywhere; believed the
+ Bible, honored the Preachers, went diligently to Church, and tried to do
+ what he understood God's commandments were?" To all which Roloff, a
+ courageous pious man, answers with discreet words and shakings of the
+ head, "Did I behave ill, then; did I ever do injustice?" Roloff mentions
+ Baron Schlubhut the defalcating Amtmann, hanged at Konigsberg without even
+ a trial. "He had no trial; but was there any doubt he had justice? A
+ public thief, confessing he had stolen the taxes he was set to gather;
+ insolently offering, as if that were all, to repay the money, and saying,
+ It was not MANIER (good manners) to hang a nobleman!" Roloff shakes his
+ head, Too violent, your Majesty, and savoring of the tyrannous. The poor
+ King must repent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well,&mdash;is there anything more? Out with it, then; better now than
+ too late!"&mdash;Much oppression, forcing men to build in Berlin.&mdash;"Oppression?
+ was it not their benefit, as well as Berlin's and the Country's? I had no
+ interest in it other. Derschau, you who managed it?" and his Majesty
+ turned to Derschau. For all the smoking generals and company are still
+ here; nor will his Majesty consent to dismiss them from the presence and
+ be alone with Roloff: "What is there to conceal? They are people of honor,
+ and my friends." Derschau, whose feats in the building way are not unknown
+ even to us, answers with a hard face, It was all right and orderly;
+ nothing out of square in his building operations. To which Roloff shakes
+ his head: "A thing of public notoriety, Herr General."&mdash;"I will prove
+ everything before a Court," answers the Herr General with still harder
+ face; Roloff still austerely shaking his head. Hm!&mdash;And then there is
+ forgiveness of enemies; your Majesty is bound to forgive all men, or how
+ can you ask to be forgiven? "Well, I will, I do; you Feekin, write to your
+ Brother (unforgivablest of beings), after I am dead, that I forgave him,
+ died in peace with him."&mdash;Better her Majesty should write at once,
+ suggests Roloff.&mdash;"No, after I am dead," persists the Son of Nature,&mdash;that
+ will be safer! [Wrote accordingly, "not able to finish without many
+ tears;" honest sensible Letter (though indifferently spelt), "Berlin, 1st
+ June, 1740;"&mdash;lies now in State-Paper Office: "ROYAL LETTERS, vol.
+ xciv., Prussia, 1689-1777."] An unwedgeable and gnarled big block of
+ manhood and simplicity and sincerity; such as we rarely get sight of among
+ the modern sons of Adam, among the crowned sons nearly never. At parting
+ he said to Roloff, "You (ER, He) do not spare me; it is right. You do your
+ duty like an honest Christian man." [<i>Notata ex ore Roloffi</i> ("found
+ among the Seckendorf Papers," no date but "May 1740"), in Forster, ii.
+ 154, 155; in a fragmentary state: completed in Pollnitz, ii. 545-549.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Roloff, I perceive, had several Dialogues with the King; and stayed in
+ Potsdam some days for that object. The above bit of jotting is from the
+ Seckendorf Papers (probably picked up by Seckendorf Junior), and is dated
+ only "May." Of the two Potsdam Preachers, one of whom is "Oesfeld,
+ Chaplain of the Giant Grenadiers," and the other is "Cochius, Calvinist
+ Hofprediger," each published on his own score some Notes of dialogue and
+ circumstance; [Cochius the HOFPREDIGER'S (Calvinist Court-Chaplain's)
+ ACCOUNT of his Interviews (first of them "Friday, 27th May, 1740, about 9
+ P.M."); followed by ditto from Oesfeld (Chaplain of the Giants), who
+ usually accompanied Cochius,&mdash;are in Seyfarth, <i>Geschichte
+ Friedrich des Grossen</i> (Leipzig, 1783-1788), i. (Beylage) 24-40.
+ Seyfarth was "Regiments-Auditor" in Halle: his Work, solid though stupid,
+ consists nearly altogether of multifarious BEYLAGEN (Appendices) and
+ NOTES; which are creditably accurate, and often curious; and, as usual,
+ have no Index for an unfortunate reader.] which are to the same effect, so
+ far as they concern us; and exhibit the same rugged Son of Nature, looking
+ with all his eyesight into the near Eternity, and sinking in a human and
+ not inhuman manner amid the floods of Time. "Wa, Wa, what great God is
+ this, that pulls down the strength of the strongest Kings!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor King's state is very restless, fluctuates from day to day; he is
+ impatient of bed; sleeps very ill; is up whenever possible; rolls about in
+ his wheeled-chair, and even gets into the air: at one time looking strong,
+ as if there were still months in him, and anon sunk in fainting weakness,
+ as if he had few minutes to live. Friedrich at Reinsberg corresponds very
+ secretly with Dr. Eller; has other friends at Potsdam whose secret news he
+ very anxiously reads. To the last he cannot bring himself to think it
+ "serious." [Letter to Eller, 25th May, 1740 (<i>OEuvres</i> ), xvi. 184.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Thursday, 26th of May, an express from Eller, or the Potsdam friends,
+ arrives at Reinsberg: He is to come quickly, if he would see his Father
+ again alive! The step may have danger, too; but Friedrich, a world of
+ feelings urging him, is on the road next morning before the sun. His
+ journey may be fancied; the like of it falls to all men. Arriving at last,
+ turning hastily a corner of the Potsdam Schloss, Friedrich sees some
+ gathering in the distance: it is his Father in his ROLLWAGEN
+ (wheeled-chair),&mdash;not dying; but out of doors, giving orders about
+ founding a House, or seeing it done. House for one Philips, a crabbed
+ Englishman he has; whose tongue is none of the best, not even to Majesty
+ itself, but whose merits as a Groom, of English and other Horses, are
+ without parallel in those parts. Without parallel, and deserve a House
+ before we die. Let us see it set agoing, this blessed Mayday! Of Philips,
+ who survived deep into Friedrich's time, and uttered rough sayings (in
+ mixed intelligible dialect) when put upon in his grooming, or otherwise
+ disturbed, I could obtain no farther account: the man did not care to be
+ put in History (a very small service to a man); cared to have a house with
+ trim fittings, and to do his grooming well, the fortunate Philips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At sight of his Son, Friedrich Wilhelm threw out his arms; the Son
+ kneeling sank upon his breast, and they embraced with tears. My Father, my
+ Father; My Son, my Son! It was a scene to make all by-standers and even
+ Philips weep.&mdash;Probably the emotion hurt the old King; he had to be
+ taken in again straightway, his show of strength suddenly gone, and bed
+ the only place for him. This same Friday he dictated to one of his
+ Ministers (Boden, who was in close attendance) the Instruction for his
+ Funeral; a rude characteristic Piece, which perhaps the English reader
+ knows. Too long and rude for reprinting here. [Copy of it, in Seyfarth
+ (ubi supra), i. 19-24. Translated in Mauvillon (ii. 432-437); in &amp;c.
+ &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is to be buried in his uniform, the Potsdam Grenadiers his escort; with
+ military decorum, three volleys fired (and take care they be well fired,
+ "NICHT PLACKEREN"), so many cannon-salvos;&mdash;and no fuss or flaunting
+ ceremony: simplicity and decency is what the tenant of that oak coffin
+ wants, as he always did when owner of wider dominions. The coffin, which
+ he has ready and beside him in the Palace this good while, is a stout
+ piece of carpentry, with leather straps and other improvements; he views
+ it from time to time; solaces his truculent imagination with the look of
+ it: "I shall sleep right well there," he would say. The image he has of
+ his Burial, we perceive, is of perfect visuality, equal to what a Defoe
+ could do in imagining. All is seen, settled to the last minuteness: the
+ coffin is to be borne out by so and so, at such and such a door; this
+ detachment is to fall-in here, that there, in the attitude of "cover arms"
+ (musket inverted under left arm); and the band is to play, with all its
+ blackamoors, <i>O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden</i> (O Head, all bleeding
+ wounded); a Dirge his Majesty had liked, who knew music, and had a love
+ for it, after his sort. Good Son of Nature: a dumb Poet, as I say always;
+ most dumb, but real; the value of him great, and unknown in these babbling
+ times. It was on this same Friday night that Cochius was first sent for;
+ Cochius, and Oesfeld with him, "about nine o'clock."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the next three days (Saturday to Monday) when his cough and many
+ sufferings would permit him, Friedrich Wilhelm had long private dialogues
+ with his Son; instructing him, as was evident, in the mysteries of State;
+ in what knowledge, as to persons and to things, he reckoned might be
+ usefulest to him. What the lessons were, we know not; the way of taking
+ them had given pleasure to the old man: he was heard to say, perhaps more
+ than once, when the Generals were called in, and the dialogue interrupted
+ for a while: "Am not I happy to have such a Son to leave behind me!" And
+ the grimly sympathetic Generals testified assent; endeavored to talk a
+ little, could at least smoke, and look friendly; till the King gathered
+ strength for continuing his instructions to his Successor. All else was as
+ if settled with him; this had still remained to do. This once done
+ (finished, Monday night), why not abdicate altogether; and die disengaged,
+ be it in a day or in a month, since that is now the one work left?
+ Friedrich Wilhelm does so purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His state, now as all along, was fluctuating, uncertain, restless. He was
+ heard murmuring prayers; he would say sometimes, "Pray for me; BETET
+ BETET." And more than once, in deep tone: "Lord, enter not into judgment
+ with Thy servant, for in Thy sight shall no man living be justified!" The
+ wild Son of Nature, looking into Life and Death, into Judgment and
+ Eternity, finds that these things are very great. This too is a
+ characteristic trait: In a certain German Hymn (<i>Why fret or murmur,
+ then?</i> the title of it), which they often sang to him, or along with
+ him, as he much loved it, are these words, "Naked I came into the world,
+ and naked shall I go,"&mdash;"No," said he "always with vivacity," at this
+ passage; "not quite nakid, I shall have my uniform on:" Let us be exact,
+ since we are at it! After which the singing proceeded again. "The late
+ Graf Alexander von Wartenberg"&mdash;Captain Wartenberg, whom we know, and
+ whose opportunities&mdash;"was wont to relate this." [Busching (in 1786),
+ <i>Beitrage,</i> iv. 100.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tuesday, 31st May, "about one in the morning," Cochius was again sent for.
+ He found the King in very pious mood, but in great distress, and afraid he
+ might yet have much pain to suffer. Cochius prayed with him; talked
+ piously. "I can remember nothing," said the King; "I cannot pray, I have
+ forgotten all my prayers."&mdash;"Prayer is not in words, but in the
+ thought of the heart," said Cochius; and soothed the heavy-laden man as he
+ could. "Fare you well," said Friedrich Wilhelm, at length; "most likely we
+ shall not meet again in this world." Whereat Cochius burst into tears, and
+ withdrew. About four, the King was again out of bed; wished to see his
+ youngest Boy, who had been ill of measles, but was doing well: "Poor
+ little Ferdinand, adieu, then, my little child!" This is the Father of
+ that fine Louis Ferdinand, who was killed at Jena; concerning whom Berlin,
+ in certain emancipated circles of it, still speaks with regret. He, the
+ Louis Ferdinand, had fine qualities; but went far a-roving, into
+ radicalism, into romantic love, into champagne; and was cut down on the
+ threshold of Jena, desperately fighting,&mdash;perhaps happily for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From little Ferdinand's room Friedrich Wilhelm has himself rolled into
+ Queen Sophie's. "Feekin, O my Feekin, thou must rise this day, and help me
+ what thou canst. This day I am going to die; thou wilt be with me this
+ day!" The good Wife rises: I know not that it was the first time she had
+ been so called; but it did prove the last. Friedrich Wilhelm has decided,
+ as the first thing he will do, to abdicate; and all the Official persons
+ and companions of the sick-room, Pollnitz among them, not long after
+ sunrise, are called to see it done. Pollnitz, huddling on his clothes,
+ arrived about five: in a corridor he sees the wheeled-chair and poor sick
+ King; steps aside to let him pass: "'It is over (DAS IST VOLLBRACHT),'
+ said the King, looking up to me as he passed: he had on his nightcap, and
+ a blue mantle thrown round him." He was wheeled into his anteroom; there
+ let the company assemble; many of them are already there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The royal stables are visible from this room: Friedrich Wilhelm orders the
+ horses to be ridden out: you old Furst of Anhalt-Dessau my oldest friend,
+ you Colonel Hacke faithfulest of Adjutant-Generals, take each of you a
+ horse, the best you can pick out: it is my last gift to you. Dessau, in
+ silence, with dumb-show of thanks, points to a horse, any horse: "You have
+ chosen the very worst," said Friedrich Wilhelm: "Take that other, I will
+ warrant him a good one!" The grim old Dessauer thanks in silence;
+ speechless grief is on that stern gunpowder face, and he seems even to be
+ struggling with tears. "Nay, nay, my friend," Friedrich Wilhelm said,
+ "this is a debt we have all to pay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Official people, Queen, Friedrich, Minister Boden, Minister Podewils,
+ and even Pollnitz, being now all present, Friedrich Wilhelm makes his
+ Declaration, at considerable length; old General Bredow repeating it
+ aloud, [Pollnitz, ii. 561.] sentence by sentence, the King's own voice
+ being too weak; so that all may hear: "That he abdicates, gives up wholly,
+ in favor of his good Son Friedrich; that foreign Ambassadors are to be
+ informed; that you are all to be true and loyal to my Son as you were to
+ me"&mdash;and what else is needful. To which the judicious Podewils makes
+ answer, "That there must first be a written Deed of his high Transaction
+ executed, which shall be straightway set about; the Deed once executed,
+ signed and sealed,&mdash;the high Royal will, in all points, takes
+ effect." Alas, before Podewils has done speaking, the King is like falling
+ into a faint; does faint, and is carried to bed: too unlikely any Deed of
+ Abdication will be needed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ups and downs there still were; sore fluctuating labor, as the poor King
+ struggles to his final rest, this morning. He was at the window again,
+ when the WACHT-PARADE (Grenadiers on Guard) turned out; he saw them make
+ their evolutions for the last time. [Pauli, viii. 280.] After which, new
+ relapse, new fluctuation. It was about eleven o'clock, when Cochius was
+ again sent for. The King lay speechless, seemingly still conscious, in
+ bed; Cochius prays with fervor, in a loud tone, that the dying King may
+ hear and join. "Not so loud!" says the King, rallying a little. He had
+ remembered that it was the season when his servants got their new
+ liveries; they had been ordered to appear this day in full new costume: "O
+ vanity! O vanity!" said Friedrich Wilhelm, at sight of the ornamented
+ plush. "Pray for me, pray for me; my trust is in the Saviour!" he often
+ said. His pains, his weakness are great; the cordage of a most tough heart
+ rending itself piece by piece. At one time, he called for a mirror: that
+ is certain:&mdash;rugged wild man, son of Nature to the last. The mirror
+ was brought; what he said at sight of his face is variously reported: "Not
+ so worn out as I thought," is Pollnitz's account, and the likeliest;&mdash;though
+ perhaps he said several things, "ugly face," "as good as dead already;"
+ and continued the inspection for some moments. [Pollnitz, ii. 564;
+ Wilhelmina, ii. 321.] A grim, strange thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Feel mv pulse, Pitsch," said he, noticing the Surgeon of his Giants:
+ "tell me how long this will last."&mdash;"Alas, not long," answered
+ Pitsch.&mdash;"Say not, alas; but how do you (He) know?"&mdash;"The pulse
+ is gone!"&mdash;"Impossible," said he, lifting his arm: "how could I move
+ my fingers so, if the pulse were gone?" Pitsch looked mournfully
+ steadfast. "Herr Jesu, to thee I live; Herr Jesu, to thee I die; in life
+ and in death thou art my gain (DU BIST MEIN GEWINN)." These were the last
+ words Friedrich Wilhelm spoke in this world. He again fell into a faint.
+ Eller gave a signal to the Crown-Prince to take the Queen away. Scarcely
+ were they out of the room, when the faint had deepened into death; and
+ Friedrich Wilhelm, at rest from all his labors, slept with the primeval
+ sons of Thor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No Baresark of them, nor Odin's self, I think, was a bit of truer human
+ stuff;&mdash;I confess his value to me, in these sad times, is rare and
+ great. Considering the usual Histrionic, Papin's-Digester,
+ Truculent-Charlatan and other species of "Kings," alone attainable for the
+ sunk flunky populations of an Era given up to Mammon and the worship of
+ its own belly, what would not such a population give for a Friedrich
+ Wilhelm, to guide it on the road BACK from Orcus a little? "Would give," I
+ have written; but alas, it ought to have been "SHOULD give." What THEY
+ "would" give is too mournfully plain to me, in spite of ballot-boxes: a
+ steady and tremendous truth from the days of Barabbas downwards and
+ upwards!&mdash;Tuesday, 31st May, 1740, between one and two o'clock in the
+ afternoon, Friedrich Wilhelm died; age fifty-two, coming 15th August next.
+ Same day, Friedrich his Son was proclaimed at Berlin; quilted heralds,
+ with sound of trumpet and the like, doing what is customary on such
+ occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Saturday, 4th June, the King's body is laid out in state; all Potsdam
+ at liberty to come and see. He lies there, in his regimentals, in his
+ oaken coffin, on a raised place in the middle of the room; decent mortuary
+ draperies, lamps, garlands, banderols furnishing the room and him: at his
+ feet, on a black-velvet TABOURET (stool), are the chivalry emblems,
+ helmet, gauntlets, spurs; and on similar stools, at the right hand and the
+ left, lie his military insignia, hat and sash, sword, guidon, and what
+ else is fit. Around, in silence, sit nine veteran military dignitaries;
+ Buddenbrock, Waldau, Derschau, Einsiedel, and five others whom we omit to
+ name. Silent they sit. A grim earnest sight in the shine of the lamplight,
+ as you pass out of the June sun. Many went, all day; looked once again on
+ the face that was to vanish. Precisely at ten at night, the coffin-lid is
+ screwed down: twelve Potsdam Captains take the coffin on their shoulders;
+ four-and-twenty Corporals with wax torches, four-and-twenty Sergeants with
+ inverted halberts lowered; certain Generals on order, and very many
+ following as volunteers; these perform the actual burial,&mdash;carry the
+ body to the Garrison Church, where are clergy waiting, which is but a
+ small step off; see it lodged, oak coffin and all, in a marble coffin in
+ the side vault there, which is known to Tourists. [Pauli, viii. 281.] It
+ is the end of the week, and the actual burial is done,&mdash;hastened
+ forward for reasons we can guess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Filial piety by no means intends to defraud a loved Father of the Spartan
+ ceremonial contemplated as obsequies by him: very far from it. Filial
+ piety will conform to that with rigor; only adding what musical and other
+ splendors are possible, to testify his love still more. And so, almost
+ three weeks hence, on the 23d of the month, with the aid of Dresden
+ Artists, of Latin Cantatas and other pomps (not inexcusable, though
+ somewhat out of keeping), the due Funeral is done, no Corpse but a Wax
+ Effigy present in it;&mdash;and in all points, that of the Potsdam
+ Grenadiers not forgotten, there was rigorous conformity to the Instruction
+ left. In all points, even to the extensive funeral dinner, and drinking of
+ the appointed cask of wine, "the best cask in my cellar." Adieu, O King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Potsdam Grenadiers fired their three volleys (not "PLACKERING," as I
+ have reason to believe, but well); got their allowance, dinner-liquor, and
+ appointed coin of money: it was the last service required of them in this
+ world. That same night they were dissolved, the whole Four Thousand of
+ them, at a stroke; and ceased to exist as Potsdam Grenadiers. Colonels,
+ Captains, all the Officers known to be of merit, were advanced, at least
+ transferred. Of the common men, a minority, of not inhuman height and of
+ worth otherwise, were formed into a new Regiment on the common terms: the
+ stupid splay-footed eight-feet mass were allowed to stalk off whither they
+ pleased, or vegetate on frugal pensions; Irish Kirkman, and a few others
+ neither knock-kneed nor without head, were appointed HEYDUCS, that is,
+ porters to the King's or other Palaces; and did that duty in what was
+ considered an ornamental manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are still two things capable of being fished up from the sea of
+ nugatory matter; and meditated on by readers, till the following Books
+ open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last breath of Friedrich Wilhelm having fled, Friedrich hurried to a
+ private room; sat there all in tears; looking back through the gulfs of
+ the Past, upon such a Father now rapt away forever. Sad all, and soft in
+ the moonlight of memory,&mdash;the lost Loved One all in the right as we
+ now see, we all in the wrong!&mdash;this, it appears, was the Son's fixed
+ opinion. Seven years hence, here is how Friedrich concludes the HISTORY of
+ his Father, written with a loyal admiration throughout: "We have left
+ under silence the domestic chagrins of this great Prince: readers must
+ have some indulgence for the faults of the Children, in consideration of
+ the virtues of such a Father." [<i>OEuvres,</i> i. 174 (<i>Memoires de
+ Brandebourg:</i> finished about 1747).] All in tears he sits at present,
+ meditating these sad things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a little while the Old Dessauer, about to leave for Dessau, ventures in
+ to the Crown-Prince, Crown-Prince no longer; "embraces his knees;" offers,
+ weeping, his condolence, his congratulation;&mdash;hopes withal that his
+ sons and he will be continued in their old posts, and that he, the Old
+ Dessauer, "will have the same authority as in the late reign." Friedrich's
+ eyes, at this last clause, flash out tearless, strangely Olympian. "In
+ your posts I have no thought of making change: in your posts, yes;&mdash;and
+ as to authority, I know of none there can be but what resides in the King
+ that is sovereign!" Which, as it were, struck the breath out of the Old
+ Dessauer; and sent him home with a painful miscellany of feelings,
+ astonishment not wanting among them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At an after hour, the same night, Friedrich went to Berlin; met by
+ acclamation enough. He slept there, not without tumult of dreams, one may
+ fancy; and on awakening next morning, the first sound he heard was that of
+ the Regiment Glasenap under his windows, swearing fealty to the new King.
+ He sprang out of bed in a tempest of emotion; bustled distractedly to and
+ fro, wildly weeping. Pollnitz, who came into the anteroom, found him in
+ this state, "half-dressed, with dishevelled hair, in tears, and as if
+ beside himself." "These huzzaings only tell me what I have lost!" said the
+ new King.&mdash;"HE was in great suffering," suggested Pollnitz; "he is
+ now at rest." "True, he suffered; but he was here with us: and now&mdash;!"
+ [Ranke (ii. 46, 47)], from certain Fragments, still, in manuscript, of
+ Pollnits's <i>Memoiren.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>