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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ History of Friedrich II. Of Prussia, Volume XI. by Thomas Carlyle
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol.
+XI. (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. XI. (of XXI.)
+ Frederick The Great--Friedrich Takes the Reins in
+ Hand--June-December, 1740
+
+Author: Thomas Carlyle
+
+Release Date: June 13, 2008 [EBook #2111]
+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 XI.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <div class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <big><b>BOOK XI. &mdash; FRIEDRICH TAKES THE
+ REINS IN HAND. &mdash; June-December, 1740.</b></big> </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0001"> <b>Chapter I. &mdash; PHENOMENA OF FRIEDRICH'S
+ ACCESSION.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> FRIEDRICH WILL MAKE MEN HAPPY: CORN-MAGAZINES.
+ </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> ABOLITION OF LEGAL TORTURE. </a><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> WILL HAVE PHILOSOPHERS ABOUT HIM, AND A REAL
+ ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> AND EVERY ONE
+ SHALL GET TO HEAVEN IN HIS OWN WAY. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0007">
+ FREE PRESS, AND NEWSPAPERS THE BEST INSTRUCTORS. </a><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0008"> INTENDS TO BE PRACTICAL WITHAL, AND EVERY INCH A
+ KING. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> BEHAVIOR TO HIS MOTHER; TO HIS
+ WIFE. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> NO CHANGE IN HIS FATHER'S
+ METHODS OR MINISTRIES. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002"> <b>Chapter II. &mdash; THE HOMAGINGS.</b>
+ </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> FRIEDRICH ACCEPTS THE HOMAGES, PERSONALLY, IN
+ THREE PLACES. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> <b>Chapter III. &mdash; FRIEDRICH MAKES AN
+ EXCURSION, NOT OF DIRECT SORT INTO THE CLEVE COUNTRIES.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> FRIEDRICH STRIKES OFF TO THE LEFT, AND HAS A
+ VIEW OF STRASBURG FOR TWO DAYS. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0016">
+ FRIEDRICH FINDS M. DE MAUPERTUIS; NOT YET M. DE VOLTAIRE. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> <b>Chapter IV. &mdash; VOLTAIRE'S FIRST
+ INTERVIEW WITH FRIEDRICH.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> PARTICULARS OF FIRST INTERVIEW, ON SEVERE
+ SCRUTINY. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF
+ THE INTERVIEW TWENTY YEARS AFTERWARDS. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0020">
+ WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF THE INTERVIEW AT THE TIME. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005"> <b>Chapter V. &mdash; AFFAIR OF HERSTAL.</b>
+ </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> HOW THE HERSTALLERS HAD BEHAVED TO FRIEDRICH
+ WILHELM. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> FRIEDRICH TAKES THE ROD OUT
+ OF PICKLE. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF
+ HERSTAL. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006"> <b>Chapter VI. &mdash; RETURNS BY HANOVER;
+ DOES NOT CALL ON HIS ROYAL UNCLE THERE.</b> </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0007"> <b>Chapter VII. &mdash; WITHDRAWS TO REINSBERG,
+ HOPING A PEACEABLE WINTER.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> WILHELMINA'S RETURN-VISIT. </a><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0028"> UNEXPECTED NEWS AT REINSBERG. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> <b>Chapter VIII. &mdash; THE KAISER'S
+ DEATH.</b> </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0009"> <b>Chapter IX. &mdash;
+ RESOLUTION FORMED AT REINSBERG IN CONSEQUENCE.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> MYSTERY IN BERLIN, FOR SEVEN WEEKS, WHILE THE
+ PREPARATIONS GO ON; VOLTAIRE VISITS FRIEDRICH TO DECIPHER IT, BUT
+ CANNOT. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> VIEW OF FRIEDRICH BEHIND THE
+ VEIL. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> EXCELLENCY BOTTA HAS AUDIENCE;
+ THEN EXCELLENCY DICKENS, AND OTHERS: DECEMBER 6th, THE MYSTERY IS OUT.
+ </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> MASKED BALL, AT BERLIN, 12th-13th
+ DECEMBER. </a><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ BOOK XI. &mdash; FRIEDRICH TAKES THE REINS IN HAND. &mdash; June-December,
+ 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; PHENOMENA OF FRIEDRICH'S ACCESSION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In Berlin, from Tuesday, 31st May, 1740, day of the late King's death,
+ till the Thursday following, the post was stopped and the gates closed; no
+ estafette can be despatched, though Dickens and all the Ambassadors are
+ busy writing. On the Thursday, Regiments, Officers, principal Officials
+ having sworn, and the new King being fairly in the saddle, estafettes and
+ post-boys shoot forth at the top of their speed; and Rumor, towards every
+ point of the compass, apprises mankind what immense news there is.
+ [Dickens (in State-Paper Office), 4th June, 1740.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A King's Accession is always a hopeful phenomenon to the public; more
+ especially a young King's, who has been talked of for his talents and
+ aspirings,&mdash;for his sufferings, were it nothing more,&mdash;and whose
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL is understood to be in the press. Vaguely everywhere there
+ has a notion gone abroad that this young King will prove considerable.
+ Here at last has a Lover of Philosophy got upon the throne, and great
+ philanthropies and magnanimities are to be expected, think rash editors
+ and idle mankind. Rash editors in England and elsewhere, we observe, are
+ ready to believe that Friedrich has not only disbanded the Potsdam Giants;
+ but means to "reduce the Prussian Army one half" or so, for ease
+ (temporary ease which we hope will be lasting) of parties concerned; and
+ to go much upon emancipation, political rose-water, and friendship to
+ humanity, as we now call it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At his first meeting of Council, they say, he put this question, "Could
+ not the Prussian Army be reduced to 45,000?" The excellent young man. To
+ which the Council had answered, "Hardly, your Majesty! The Julich-and-Berg
+ affair is so ominous hitherto!" These may be secrets, and dubious to
+ people out of doors, thinks a wise editor; but one thing patent to the day
+ was this, surely symbolical enough: On one of his Majesty's first drives
+ to Potsdam or from it, a thousand children,&mdash;in round numbers a
+ thousand of them, all with the RED STRING round their necks, and liable to
+ be taken for soldiers, if needed in the regiment of their Canton,&mdash;a
+ thousand children met this young King at a turn of his road; and with
+ shrill unison of wail, sang out: "Oh, deliver us from slavery,"&mdash;from
+ the red threads, your Majesty. Why should poor we be liable to suffer
+ hardship for our Country or otherwise, your Majesty! Can no one else be
+ got to do it? sang out the thousand children. And his Majesty assented on
+ the spot, thinks the rash editor. [<i>Gentleman's Magazine</i> (London,
+ 1740), x. 318; Newspapers, &amp;c.] "Goose, Madam?" exclaimed a
+ philanthropist projector once, whose scheme of sweeping chimneys by
+ pulling a live goose down through them was objected to: "Goose, Madam? You
+ can take two ducks, then, if you are so sorry for the goose!"&mdash;Rash
+ editors think there is to be a reign of Astraea Redux in Prussia, by means
+ of this young King; and forget to ask themselves, as the young King must
+ by no means do, How far Astraea may be possible, for Prussia and him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At home, too, there is prophesying enough, vague hope enough, which for
+ most part goes wide of the mark. This young King, we know, did prove
+ considerable; but not in the way shaped out for him by the public;&mdash;it
+ was in far other ways! For no public in the least knows, in such cases:
+ nor does the man himself know, except gradually and if he strive to learn.
+ As to the public,&mdash;"Doubtless," says a friend of mine, "doubtless it
+ was the Atlantic Ocean that carried Columbus to America; lucky for the
+ Atlantic, and for Columbus and us: but the Atlantic did not quite vote
+ that way from the first; nay ITS votes, I believe, were very various at
+ different stages of the matter!" This is a truth which kings and men, not
+ intending to be drift-logs or waste brine obedient to the Moon, are much
+ called to have in mind withal, from perhaps an early stage of their
+ voyage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's actual demeanor in these his first weeks, which is still
+ decipherable if one study well, has in truth a good deal of the brilliant,
+ of the popular-magnanimous; but manifests strong solid quality withal, and
+ a head steadier than might have been expected. For the Berlin world is all
+ in a rather Auroral condition; and Friedrich too is,&mdash;the chains
+ suddenly cut loose, and such hopes opened for the young man. He has great
+ things ahead; feels in himself great things, and doubtless exults in the
+ thought of realizing them. Magnanimous enough, popular, hopeful enough,
+ with Voltaire and the highest of the world looking on:&mdash;but yet he is
+ wise, too; creditably aware that there are limits, that this is a bargain,
+ and the terms of it inexorable. We discern with pleasure the old veracity
+ of character shining through this giddy new element; that all these fine
+ procedures are at least unaffected, to a singular degree true, and the
+ product of nature, on his part; and that, in short, the complete respect
+ for Fact, which used to be a quality of his, and which is among the
+ highest and also rarest in man, has on no side deserted him at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A trace of airy exuberance, of natural exultancy, not quite repressible,
+ on the sudden change to freedom and supreme power from what had gone
+ before: perhaps that also might be legible, if in those opaque bead-rolls
+ which are called Histories of Friedrich anything human could with
+ certainty be read! He flies much about from place to place; now at
+ Potsdam, now at Berlin, at Charlottenburg, Reinsberg; nothing loath to run
+ whither business calls him, and appear in public: the gazetteer world, as
+ we noticed, which has been hitherto a most mute world, breaks out here and
+ there into a kind of husky jubilation over the great things he is daily
+ doing, and rejoices in the prospect of having a Philosopher King; which
+ function the young man, only twenty-eight gone, cannot but wish to fulfil
+ for the gazetteers and the world. He is a busy man; and walks boldly into
+ his grand enterprise of "making men happy," to the admiration of Voltaire
+ and an enlightened public far and near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bielfeld speaks of immense concourses of people crowding about
+ Charlottenburg, to congratulate, to solicit, to &amp;c.; tells us how he
+ himself had to lodge almost in outhouses, in that royal village of hope,
+ His emotions at Reinsberg, and everybody's, while Friedrich Wilhelm lay
+ dying, and all stood like greyhounds on the slip; and with what
+ arrow-swiftness they shot away when the great news came: all this he has
+ already described at wearisome length, in his fantastic semi-fabulous way.
+ [Bielfeld, i. 68-77; ib. 81.]' Friedrich himself seemed moderately glad to
+ see Bielfeld; received his high-flown congratulations with a benevolent
+ yet somewhat composed air; and gave him afterwards, in the course of
+ weeks, an unexpectedly small appointment: To go to Hanover, under
+ Truchsess von Waldburg, and announce our Accession. Which is but a simple,
+ mostly formal service; yet perhaps what Bielfeld is best equal to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Britannic Majesty, or at least his Hanover people have been beforehand
+ with this civility; Baron Munchhausen, no doubt by orders given for such
+ contingency, had appeared at Berlin with the due compliment and condolence
+ almost on the first day of the New Reign; first messenger of all on that
+ errand; Britannic Majesty evidently in a conciliatory humor,&mdash;having
+ his dangerous Spanish War on hand. Britannic Majesty in person, shortly
+ after, gets across to Hanover; and Friedrich despatches Truchsess, with
+ Bielfeld adjoined, to return the courtesy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich does not neglect these points of good manners; along with which
+ something of substantial may be privately conjoined. For example, if he
+ had in secret his eye on Julich and Berg, could anything be fitter than to
+ ascertain what the French will think of such an enterprise? What the
+ French; and next to them what the English, that is to say, Hanoverians,
+ who meddle much in affairs of the Reich. For these reasons and others he
+ likewise, probably with more study than in the Bielfeld case, despatches
+ Colonel Camas to make his compliment at the French Court, and in an expert
+ way take soundings there. Camas, a fat sedate military gentleman, of
+ advanced years, full of observation, experience and sound sense,&mdash;"with
+ one arm, which he makes do the work of two, and nobody can notice that the
+ other arm resting in his coat-breast is of cork, so expert is he,"&mdash;will
+ do in this matter what is feasible; probably not much for the present. He
+ is to call on Voltaire, as he passes, who is in Holland again, at the
+ Hague for some months back; and deliver him "a little cask of Hungary
+ Wine," which probably his Majesty had thought exquisite. Of which, and the
+ other insignificant passages between them, we hear more than enough in the
+ writings and correspondences of Voltaire about this time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In such way Friedrich disposes of his Bielfelds; who are rather numerous
+ about him now and henceforth. Adventurers from all quarters, especially of
+ the literary type, in hopes of being employed, much hovered round
+ Friedrich through his whole reign. But they met a rather strict judge on
+ arriving; it cannot be said they found it such a Goshen as they expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Favor, friendly intimacy, it is visible from the first, avails nothing
+ with this young King; beyond and before all things he will have his work
+ done, and looks out exclusively for the man ablest to do it. Hence
+ Bielfeld goes to Hanover, to grin out euphuisms, and make graceful
+ courtbows to our sublime little Uncle there. On the other hand, Friedrich
+ institutes a new Knighthood, ORDER OF MERIT so called; which indeed is but
+ a small feat, testifying mere hope and exuberance as yet; and may even be
+ made worse than nothing, according to the Knights he shall manage to have.
+ Happily it proved a successful new Order in this last all-essential
+ particular; and, to the end of Friedrich's life, continued to be a great
+ and coveted distinction among the Prussians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond doubt this is a radiant enough young Majesty; entitled to hope, and
+ to be the cause of hope. Handsome, to begin with; decidedly well-looking,
+ all say, and of graceful presence, though hardly five feet seven, and
+ perhaps stouter of limb than the strict Belvedere standard. [Height, it
+ appears, was five feet five inches (Rhenish), which in English measure is
+ five feet seven or a hair's-breadth less. Preuss, twice over, by a mistake
+ unusual with him, gives "five feet two inches three lines" as the correct
+ cipher (which it is of NAPOLEON'S measure in FRENCH feet); then settles on
+ the above dimensions from unexceptionable authority (Preuss, <i>Buch fur
+ Jedermann,</i> i. 18; Preuss, <i>Fredrich der Grosse,</i> i. 39 and 419).]
+ Has a fine free expressive face; nothing of austerity in it; not a proud
+ face, or not too proud, yet rapidly flashing on you all manner of high
+ meanings. [Wille's Engraving after Pesne (excellent, both Picture and
+ Engraving) is reckoned the best Likeness in that form.] Such a man, in the
+ bloom of his years; with such a possibility ahead, and Voltaire and
+ mankind waiting applausive!&mdash;Let us try to select, and extricate into
+ coherence and visibility out of those Historical dust-heaps, a few of the
+ symptomatic phenomena, or physiognomic procedures of Friedrich in his
+ first weeks of Kingship, by way of contribution to some Portraiture of his
+ then inner-man.
+ </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>
+ FRIEDRICH WILL MAKE MEN HAPPY: CORN-MAGAZINES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the day after his Accession, Officers and chief Ministers taking the
+ Oath, Friedrich, to his Officers, "on whom he counts for the same zeal now
+ which he had witnessed as their comrade," recommends mildness of demeanor
+ from the higher to the lower, and that the common soldier be not treated
+ with harshness when not deserved: and to his Ministers he is still more
+ emphatic, in the like or a higher strain. Officially announcing to them,
+ by Letter, that a new Reign has commenced, he uses these words, legible
+ soon after to a glad Berlin public: "Our grand care will be, To further
+ the Country's well-being, and to make every one of our subjects (EINEN
+ JEDEN UNSERER UNTERTHANEN) contented and happy. Our will is, not that you
+ strive to enrich Us by vexation of Our subjects; but rather that you aim
+ steadily as well towards the advantage of the Country as Our particular
+ interest, forasmuch as We make no difference between these two objects,"
+ but consider them one and the same. This is written, and gets into print
+ within the month; and his Majesty, that same day (Wednesday, 2d June),
+ when it came to personal reception, and actual taking of the Oath, was
+ pleased to add in words, which also were printed shortly, this comfortable
+ corollary: "My will henceforth is, If it ever chance that my particular
+ interest and the general good of my Countries should seem to go against
+ each other,&mdash;in that case, my will is, That the latter always be
+ preferred." [Dickens, Despatch, 4th June, 1740: Preuss, <i>Friedrichs
+ Jugend und Thronbesteigung</i> (Berlin, 1840), p. 325;&mdash;quoting from
+ the Berlin Newspapers of 28th June and 2d July, 1740.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a fine dialect for incipient Royalty; and it is brand-new at that
+ time. It excites an admiration in the then populations, which to us, so
+ long used to it and to what commonly comes of it, is not conceivable at
+ once. There can be no doubt the young King does faithfully intend to
+ develop himself in the way of making men happy; but here, as elsewhere,
+ are limits which he will recognize ahead, some of them perhaps nearer than
+ was expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile his first acts, in this direction, correspond to these fine
+ words. The year 1740, still grim with cold into the heart of summer, bids
+ fair to have a late poor harvest, and famine threatens to add itself to
+ other hardships there have been. Recognizing the actualities of the case,
+ what his poor Father could not, he opens the Public Granaries,&mdash;a
+ wise resource they have in Prussian countries against the year of
+ scarcity;&mdash;orders grain to be sold out, at reasonable rates, to the
+ suffering poor; and takes the due pains, considerable in some cases, that
+ this be rendered feasible everywhere in his dominions. "Berlin, 2d June,"
+ is the first date of this important order; fine program to his Ministers,
+ which, we read, is no sooner uttered, than some performance follows. An
+ evident piece of wisdom and humanity; for which doubtless blessings of a
+ very sincere kind rise to him from several millions of his fellow-mortals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nay furthermore, as can be dimly gathered, this scarcity continuing, some
+ continuous mode of management was set on foot for the Poor; and there is
+ nominated, with salary, with outline of plan and other requisites, as
+ "Inspector of the Poor," to his own and our surprise, M. Jordan, late
+ Reader to the Crown-Prince, and still much the intimate of his royal
+ Friend. Inspector who seems to do his work very well. And in the November
+ coming this is what we see: "One thousand poor old women, the destitute of
+ Berlin, set to spin," at his Majesty's charges; vacant houses, hired for
+ them in certain streets and suburbs, have been new-planked, partitioned,
+ warmed; and spinning is there for any diligent female soul. There a
+ thousand of them sit, under proper officers, proper wages, treatment;&mdash;and
+ the hum of their poor spindles, and of their poor inarticulate old hearts,
+ is a comfort, if one chance to think of it.&mdash;Of "distressed
+ needlewomen" who cannot sew, nor be taught to do it; who, in private
+ truth, are mutinous maid-servants come at last to the net upshot of their
+ anarchies; of these, or of the like incurable phenomena, I hear nothing in
+ Berlin; and can believe that, under this King, Indigence itself may still
+ have something of a human aspect, not a brutal or diabolic as is commoner
+ in some places.&mdash;This is one of Friedrich's first acts, this opening
+ of the Corn-magazines, and arrangements for the Destitute; [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ i. 367. Rodenbeck, <i>Tagebuch aus Friedrichs des Grossen Regentenleben</i>
+ (Berlin, 1840), i. 2, 26 (2d June, October, 1740): a meritorious,
+ laborious, though essentially chaotic Book, unexpectedly futile of result
+ to the reader; settles for each Day of Friedrich's Reign, so far as
+ possible, where Friedrich was and what doing; fatally wants all index
+ &amp;c., as usual.] and of this there can be no criticism. The sound of
+ hungry pots set boiling, on judicious principles; the hum of those old
+ women's spindles in the warm rooms: gods and men are well pleased to hear
+ such sounds; and accept the same as part, real though infinitesimally
+ small, of the sphere-harmonies of this Universe!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ABOLITION OF LEGAL TORTURE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich makes haste, next, to strike into Law-improvements. It is but
+ the morrow after this of the Corn-magazines, by KABINETS-ORDRE (Act of
+ Parliament such as they can have in that Country, where the Three Estates
+ sit all under one Three-cornered Hat, and the debates are kept silent, and
+ only the upshot of them, more or less faithfully, is made public),&mdash;by
+ Cabinet Order, 3d June, 1740, he abolishes the use of Torture in Criminal
+ Trials. [Preuss, <i>Friedrichs Jugend und Thronbesteigung</i> (Berlin,
+ 1840,&mdash;a minor Book of Preuss's), p. 340. Rodenbeck, i. 14 ("3d
+ June").] Legal Torture, "Question" as they mildly call it, is at an end
+ from this date. Not in any Prussian Court shall a "question" try for
+ answer again by that savage method. The use of Torture had, I believe,
+ fallen rather obsolete in Prussia; but now the very threat of it shall
+ vanish,&mdash;the threat of it, as we may remember, had reached Friedrich
+ himself, at one time. Three or four years ago, it is farther said, a dark
+ murder happened in Berlin: Man killed one night in the open streets;
+ murderer discoverable by no method,&mdash;unless he were a certain
+ CANDIDATUS of Divinity to whom some trace of evidence pointed, but who
+ sorrowfully persisted in absolute and total denial. This poor Candidatus
+ had been threatened with the rack; and would most likely have at length
+ got it, had not the real murderer been discovered,&mdash;much to the
+ discredit of the rack in Berlin. This Candidatus was only threatened; nor
+ do I know when the last actual instance in Prussia was; but in enlightened
+ France, and most other countries, there was as yet no scruple upon it.
+ Barbier, the Diarist at Paris, some time after this, tells us of a gang of
+ thieves there, who were regularly put to the torture; and "they blabbed
+ too, ILS ONT JASE," says Barbier with official jocosity. [Barbier, <i>Journal
+ Historique du Regne de Louis XV.</i> (Paris, 1849), ii. 338 (date "Dec.
+ 1742").]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's Cabinet Order, we need not say, was greeted everywhere, at
+ home and abroad, by three rounds of applause;&mdash;in which surely all of
+ us still join; though the PER CONTRA also is becoming visible to some of
+ us, and our enthusiasm grows less complete than formerly. This was
+ Friedrich's first step in Law-Reform, done on his fourth day of Kingship.
+ A long career in that kind lies ahead of him; in reform of Law, civil as
+ well as criminal, his efforts ended with life only. For his love of
+ Justice was really great; and the mendacities and wiggeries, attached to
+ such a necessary of life as Law, found no favor from him at any time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WILL HAVE PHILOSOPHERS ABOUT HIM, AND A REAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To neglect the Philosophies, Fine Arts, interests of Human Culture, he is
+ least of all likely. The idea of building up the Academy of Sciences to
+ its pristine height, or far higher, is evidently one of those that have
+ long lain in the Crown-Prince's mind, eager to realize themselves.
+ Immortal Wolf, exiled but safe at Marburg, and refusing to return in
+ Friedrich Wilhelm's time, had lately dedicated a Book to the Crown-Prince;
+ indicating that perhaps, under a new Reign, he might be more persuadable.
+ Friedrich makes haste to persuade; instructs the proper person, Reverend
+ Herr Reinbeck, Head of the Consistorium at Berlin, to write and negotiate.
+ "All reasonable conditions shall be granted" the immortal Wolf,&mdash;and
+ Friedrich adds with his own hand as Postscript: "I request you (IHN) to
+ use all diligence about Wolf. A man that seeks truth, and loves it, must
+ be reckoned precious in any human society; and I think you will make a
+ conquest in the realm of truth if you persuade Wolf hither again." [In <i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic</i> (xxvii. ii. 185), the Letter given.] This is of date June
+ 6th; not yet a week since Friedrich came to be King. The Reinbeck-Wolf
+ negotiation which ensued can be read in Busching by the curious.
+ [Busching's <i>Beitrage</i> (? Freiherr von Wolf), i. 63-137.] It
+ represents to us a croaky, thrifty, long-headed old Herr Professor, in no
+ haste to quit Marburg except for something better: "obliged to wear
+ woollen shoes and leggings;" "bad at mounting stairs;" and otherwise
+ needing soft treatment. Willing, though with caution, to work at an
+ Academy of Sciences;&mdash;but dubious if the French are so admirable as
+ they seem to themselves in such operations. Veteran Wolf, one dimly begins
+ to learn, could himself build a German Academy of Sciences, to some
+ purpose, if encouraged! This latter was probably the stone of stumbling in
+ that direction. Veteran Wolf did not get to be President in the New
+ Academy of Sciences; but was brought back, "streets all in triumph," to
+ his old place at Halle; and there, with little other work that was heard
+ of, but we hope in warm shoes and without much mounting of stairs, lived
+ peaceably victorious the rest of his days. Friedrich's thoughts are not of
+ a German home-built Academy, but of a French one: and for this he already
+ knows a builder; has silently had him in his eye, these two years past,&mdash;Voltaire
+ giving hint, in the LETTER we once heard of at Loo. Builder shall be that
+ sublime Maupertuis; scientific lion of Paris, ever since his feat in the
+ Polar regions, and the charming Narrative he gave of it. "What a feat,
+ what a book!" exclaimed the Parisian cultivated circles, male and female,
+ on that occasion; and Maupertuis, with plenty of bluster in him carefully
+ suppressed, assents in a grandly modest way. His Portraits are in the
+ Printshops ever since; one very singular Portrait, just coming out (at
+ which there is some laughing): a coarse-featured, blusterous, rather
+ triumphant-looking man, blusterous, though finely complacent for the
+ nonce; in copious dressing-gown and fur cap; comfortably SQUEEZING the
+ Earth and her meridians flat (as if HE had done it), with his left hand;
+ and with the other, and its outstretched finger, asking mankind, "Are not
+ you aware, then?"&mdash;"Are not we!" answers Voltaire by and by, with
+ endless waggeries upon him, though at present so reverent. Friedrich, in
+ these same days, writes this Autograph; which who of men or lions could
+ resist?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TO MONSIEUR DE MAUPERTUIS, at Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (No date;&mdash;datable, June, 1740.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My heart and my inclination excited in me, from the moment I mounted the
+ throne, the desire of having you here, that you might put our Berlin
+ Academy into the shape you alone are capable of giving it. Come, then,
+ come and insert into this wild crab-tree the graft of the Sciences, that
+ it may bear fruit. You have shown the Figure of the Earth to mankind; show
+ also to a King how sweet it is to possess such a man as you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur de Maupertuis,&mdash;votre tres-affectionne
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "FEDERIC" (SIC). [<i>OEuvres,</i> xvii. i. 334. The fantastic "Federic,"
+ instead of "Frederic," is, by this time, the common signature to French
+ Letters.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Letter&mdash;how could Maupertuis prevent some accident in such a
+ case?&mdash;got into the Newspapers; glorious for Friedrich, glorious for
+ Maupertuis; and raised matters to a still higher pitch. Maupertuis is on
+ the road, and we shall see him before long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AND EVERY ONE SHALL GET TO HEAVEN IN HIS OWN WAY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Here is another little fact which had immense renown at home and abroad,
+ in those summer months and long afterwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ June 22d, 1740, the GEISTLICHE DEPARTEMENT (Board of Religion, we may term
+ it) reports that the Roman-Catholic Schools, which have been in use these
+ eight years past, for children of soldiers belonging to that persuasion,
+ "are, especially in Berlin, perverted, directly in the teeth of Royal
+ Ordinance, 1732, to seducing Protestants into Catholicism;" annexed, or
+ ready for annexing, "is the specific Report of Fiscal-General to this
+ effect:"&mdash;upon which, what would it please his Majesty to direct us
+ to do?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Majesty writes on the margin these words, rough and ready, which we
+ give with all their grammatical blotches on them; indicating a mind made
+ up on one subject, which was much more dubious then, to most other minds,
+ than it now is:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Die Religionen Musen (MUSSEN) alle Tollerirt (TOLERIRT) werden, und Mus
+ (MUSS) der Fiscal nuhr (NUR) das Auge darauf haben, das (DASS) keine der
+ andern abrug Tuhe (ABBRUCH THUE), den (DENN) hier mus (MUSS) ein jeder
+ nach seiner Fasson Selich (FACON SELIG) werden." [Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i>
+ p. 333; Rodenbeck, IN DIE.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which in English might run as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All Religions must be tolerated (TOLLERATED), and the Fiscal must have an
+ eye that none of them make unjust encroachment on the other; for in this
+ Country every man must get to Heaven in his own way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wonderful words; precious to the then leading spirits, and which (the
+ spelling and grammar being mended) flew abroad over all the world: the
+ enlightened Public everywhere answering his Majesty, once more, with its
+ loudest "Bravissimo!" on this occasion. With what enthusiasm of admiring
+ wonder, it is now difficult to fancy, after the lapse of sixscore years!
+ And indeed, in regard to all these worthy acts of Human Improvement which
+ we are now concerned with, account should be held (were it possible) on
+ Friedrich's behalf how extremely original, and bright with the splendor of
+ new gold, they then were: and how extremely they are fallen dim, by
+ general circulation, since that. Account should be held; and yet it is not
+ possible, no human imagination is adequate to it, in the times we are now
+ got into.
+ </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>
+ FREE PRESS, AND NEWSPAPERS THE BEST INSTRUCTORS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Toleration, in Friedrich's spiritual circumstances, was perhaps no great
+ feat to Friedrich: but what the reader hardly expected of him was Freedom
+ of the Press, or an attempt that way! From England, from Holland,
+ Friedrich had heard of Free Press, of Newspapers the best Instructors: it
+ is a fact that he hastens to plant a seed of that kind at Berlin; sets
+ about it "on the second day of his reign," so eager is he. Berlin had
+ already some meagre INTELLIGENZ-BLATT (Weekly or Thrice-Weekly
+ Advertiser), perhaps two; but it is a real Newspaper, frondent with genial
+ leafy speculation, and food for the mind, that Friedrich is intent upon: a
+ "Literary-Political Newspaper," or were it even two Newspapers, one
+ French, one German; and he rapidly makes the arrangements for it;
+ despatches Jordan, on the second day, to seek some fit Frenchman.
+ Arrangements are soon made: a Bookselling Printer, Haude, Bookseller once
+ to the Prince-Royal,&mdash;whom we saw once in a domestic
+ flash-of-lightning long ago, [Antea, Book vi. c. 7.]&mdash;is encouraged
+ to proceed with the improved German article, MERCURY or whatever they
+ called it; vapid Formey, a facile pen, but not a forcible, is the Editor
+ sought out by Jordan for the French one. And, in short, No. 1 of Formey
+ shows itself in print within a month; ["2d July, 1740:" Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i>
+ p. 330; and Formey, <i>Souvenirs,</i> i. 107, rectified by the exact Herr
+ Preuss.] and Haude and he, Haude picking up some grand Editor in Hamburg,
+ do their best for the instruction of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In not many months, Formey, a facile and learned but rather vapid
+ gentleman, demitted or was dismissed; and the Journals coalesced into one,
+ or split into two again; and went I know not what road, or roads, in time
+ coming,&mdash;none that led to results worth naming. Freedom of the Press,
+ in the case of these Journals, was never violated, nor was any need for
+ violating it. General Freedom of the Press Friedrich did not grant, in any
+ quite Official or steady way; but in practice, under him, it always had a
+ kind of real existence, though a fluctuating, ambiguous one. And we have
+ to note, through Friedrich's whole reign, a marked disinclination to
+ concern himself with Censorship, or the shackling of men's poor tongues
+ and pens; nothing but some officious report that there was offence to
+ Foreign Courts, or the chance of offence, in a poor man's pamphlet, could
+ induce Friedrich to interfere with him or it,&mdash;and indeed his
+ interference was generally against his Ministers for having wrong informed
+ him, and in favor of the poor Pamphleteer appealing at the fountain-head.
+ [Anonymous (Laveaux), <i>Vie de Frederic II., Roi de Prusse</i>
+ (Strasbourg, 1787), iv. 82. A worthless, now nearly forgotten Book; but
+ competent on this point, if on any; Laveaux (a handy fellow, fugitive
+ Ex-Monk, with fugitive Ex-Nun attached) having lived much at Berlin,
+ always in the pamphleteering line.] To the end of his life, disgusting
+ Satires against him, <i>Vie Privee</i> by Voltaire, <i>Matinees du Roi de
+ Prusse,</i> and still worse Lies and Nonsenses, were freely sold at
+ Berlin, and even bore to be printed there, Friedrich saying nothing,
+ caring nothing. He has been known to burn Pamphlets publicly,&mdash;one
+ Pamphlet we shall ourselves see on fire yet;&mdash;but it was without the
+ least hatred to them, and for official reasons merely. To the last, he
+ would answer his reporting Ministers, "LE PRESSE EST LIBRE (Free press,
+ you must consider)!"&mdash;grandly reluctant to meddle with the press, or
+ go down upon the dogs barking at his door. Those ill effects of Free Press
+ (first stage of the ill effects) he endured in this manner; but the good
+ effects seem to have fallen below his expectation. Friedrich's enthusiam
+ for freedom of the press, prompt enough, as we see, never rose to the
+ extreme pitch, and it rather sank than increased as he continued his
+ experiences of men and things. This of Formey and the two Newspapers was
+ the only express attempt he made in that direction; and it proved a rather
+ disappointing one. The two Newspapers went their way thenceforth,
+ Friedrich sometimes making use of them for small purposes, once or twice
+ writing an article himself, of wildly quizzical nature, perhaps to be
+ noticed by us when the time comes; but are otherwise, except for
+ chronological purposes, of the last degree of insignificance to gods or
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Freedom of the Press," says my melancholic Friend, "is a noble thing; and
+ in certain Nations, at certain epochs, produces glorious effects,&mdash;chiefly
+ in the revolutionary line, where that has grown indispensable. Freedom of
+ the Press is possible, where everybody disapproves the least abuse of it;
+ where the 'Censorship' is, as it were, exercised by all the world. When
+ the world (as, even in the freest countries, it almost irresistibly tends
+ to become) is no longer in a case to exercise that salutary function, and
+ cannot keep down loud unwise speaking, loud unwise persuasion, and rebuke
+ it into silence whenever printed, Freedom of the Press will not answer
+ very long, among sane human creatures: and indeed, in Nations not in an
+ exceptional case, it becomes impossible amazingly soon!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these are phenomena of Friedrich's first week. Let these suffice as
+ sample, in that first kind. Splendid indications surely; and shot forth in
+ swift enough succession, flash following flash, upon an attentive world.
+ Betokening, shall we say, what internal sea of splendor, struggling to
+ disclose itself, probably lies in this young King; and how high his hopes
+ go for mankind and himself? Yes, surely;&mdash;and introducing, we remark
+ withal, the "New Era," of Philanthropy, Enlightenment and so much else;
+ with French Revolution, and a "world well suicided" hanging in the rear!
+ Clearly enough, to this young ardent Friedrich, foremost man of his Time,
+ and capable of DOING its inarticulate or dumb aspirings, belongs that
+ questionable honor; and a very singular one it would have seemed to
+ Friedrich, had he lived to see what it meant!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's rapidity and activity, in the first months of his reign, were
+ wonderful to mankind; as indeed through life he continued to be a most
+ rapid and active King. He flies about; mustering Troops, Ministerial
+ Boards, passing Edicts, inspecting, accepting Homages of Provinces;&mdash;decides
+ and does, every day that passes, an amazing number of things. Writes many
+ Letters, too; finds moments even for some verses; and occasionally draws a
+ snatch of melody from his flute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Letters are copiously preserved; but, as usual, they are in swift
+ official tone, and tell us almost nothing. To his Sisters he writes
+ assurances; to his friends, his Suhms, Duhans, Voltaires, eager
+ invitations, general or particular, to come to him. "My state has
+ changed," is his phrase to Voltaire and other dear intimates; a tone of
+ pensiveness, at first even of sorrow and pathos traceable in it; "Come to
+ me,"&mdash;and the tone, in an old dialect, different from Friedrich's,
+ might have meant, "Pray for me." An immense new scene is opened, full of
+ possibilities of good and bad. His hopes being great, his anxieties, the
+ shadow of them, are proportionate. Duhan (his good old Tutor) does arrive,
+ Algarotti arrives, warmly welcomed, both: with Voltaire there are
+ difficulties; but surely he too will, before long, manage to arrive. The
+ good Suhm, who had been Saxon Minister at Petersburg to his sorrow this
+ long while back, got in motion soon enough; but, alas, his lungs were
+ ruined by the Russian climate, and he did not arrive. Something pathetic
+ still in those final LETTERS of Suhm. Passionately speeding on, like a
+ spent steed struggling homeward; he has to pause at Warsaw, and in a few
+ days dies there,&mdash;in a way mournful to Friedrich and us! To Duhan,
+ and Duhan's children afterwards, he was punctually, not too lavishly,
+ attentive; in like manner to Suhm's Nephews, whom the dying man had
+ recommended to him.&mdash;We will now glance shortly at a second and
+ contemporaneous phasis of Friedrich's affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTENDS TO BE PRACTICAL WITHAL, AND EVERY INCH A KING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich is far indeed from thinking to reduce his Army, as the Foreign
+ Editor imagines. On the contrary, he is, with all industry, increasing it.
+ He changed the Potsdam Giants into four regiments of the usual stature; he
+ is busy bargaining with his Brother-in-law of Brunswick, and with other
+ neighbors, for still new regiments;&mdash;makes up, within the next few
+ months, Eight Regiments, an increase of, say, 16,000 men. It would appear
+ he means to keep an eye on the practicalities withal; means to have a
+ Fighting-Apparatus of the utmost potentiality, for one thing! Here are
+ other indications.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We saw the Old Dessauer, in a sad hour lately, speaking beside the mark;
+ and with what Olympian glance, suddenly tearless, the new King flashed out
+ upon him, knowing nothing of "authority" that could reside in any
+ Dessauer. Nor was that a solitary experience; the like befell wherever
+ needed. Heinrich of Schwedt, the Ill Margraf, advancing with jocose
+ countenance in the way of old comradeship, in those first days, met
+ unexpected rebuff, and was reduced to gravity on the sudden: "JETZT BIN
+ ICH KONIG,&mdash;My Cousin, I am now King!" a fact which the Ill Margraf
+ could never get forgotten again. Lieutenant-General Schulenburg, too, the
+ didactic Schulenburg, presuming, on old familiarity, and willing to wipe
+ out the misfortune of having once condemned us to death, which nobody is
+ now upbraiding him with, rushes up from Landsberg, unbidden, to pay his
+ congratulations and condolences, driven by irresistible exuberance of
+ loyalty: to his astonishment, he is reminded (thing certain, manner of the
+ thing not known), That an Officer cannot quit his post without order; that
+ he, at this moment, ought to be in Landsberg! [Stenzel, iv. 41; Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung;</i>
+ &amp;c.] Schulenburg has a hard old military face; but here is a young
+ face too, which has grown unexpectedly rigorous. Fancy the blank look of
+ little Schulenburg; the light of him snuffed out in this manner on a
+ sudden. It is said he had thoughts of resigning, so indignant was he: no
+ doubt he went home to Landsberg gloomily reflective, with the pipe-clay of
+ his mind in such a ruinous condition. But there was no serious anger, on
+ Friedrich's part; and he consoled his little Schulenburg soon after, by
+ expediting some promotion he had intended him. "Terribly proud young
+ Majesty this," exclaim the sweet voices. And indeed, if they are to have a
+ Saturnian Kingdom, by appearance it will be on conditions only!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anticipations there had been, that old unkindnesses against the
+ Crown-Prince, some of which were cruel enough, might be remembered now:
+ and certain people had their just fears, considering what account stood
+ against them; others, VICE VERSA, their hopes. But neither the fears nor
+ the hopes realized themselves; especially the fears proved altogether
+ groundless. Derschau, who had voted Death in that Copenick Court-Martial,
+ upon the Crown-Prince, is continued in his functions, in the light of his
+ King's countenance, as if nothing such had been. Derschau, and all others
+ so concerned; not the least question was made of them, nor of what they
+ had thought or had done or said, on an occasion once so tragically vital
+ to a certain man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is reward much regulated by past services to the Crown-Prince, or even
+ by sufferings endured for him. "Shocking ingratitude!" exclaim the sweet
+ voices here too,&mdash;being of weak judgment, many of them! Poor Katte's
+ Father, a faithful old Soldier, not capable of being more, he does, rather
+ conspicuously, make Feldmarschall, make Reichsgraf; happy, could these
+ honors be a consolation to the old man. The Munchows of Custrin,&mdash;readers
+ remember their kindness in that sad time; how the young boy went into
+ petticoats again, and came to the Crown-Prince's cell with all manner of
+ furnishings,&mdash;the Munchows, father and sons, this young gentleman of
+ the petticoats among them, he took immediate pains to reward by promotion:
+ eldest son was advanced into the General Directorium; two younger sons, to
+ Majorship, to Captaincy, in their respective Regiments; him of the
+ petticoats "he had already taken altogether to himself," [Preuss, i. 66.]
+ and of him we shall see a glimpse at Wilhelmina's shortly, as a "milkbeard
+ (JEUNE MORVEUX)" in personal attendance on his Majesty. This was a notable
+ exception. And in effect there came good public service, eminent some of
+ it, from these Munchows in their various departments. And it was at length
+ perceived to have been, in the main, because they were of visible faculty
+ for doing work that they had got work to do; and the exceptional case of
+ the Munchows became confirmatory of the rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lieutenant Keith, again, whom we once saw galloping from Wesel to save his
+ life in that bad affair of the Crown-Prince's and his, was nothing like so
+ fortunate. Lieutenant Keith, by speed on that Wesel occasion, and help of
+ Chesterfield's Secretary, got across to England; got into the Portuguese
+ service; and has there been soldiering, very silently, these ten years
+ past,&mdash;skin and body safe, though his effigy was cut in four quarters
+ and nailed to the gallows at Wesel;&mdash;waiting a time that would come.
+ Time being come, Lieutenant Keith hastened home; appealed to his effigy on
+ the gallows;&mdash;and was made a Lieutenant-Colonel merely, with some
+ slight appendages, as that of STALLMEISTER (Curator of the Stables) and
+ something else; income still straitened, though enough to live upon.
+ [Preuss, <i>Friedrich mit Verwandten und Freunden,</i> p. 281.] Small
+ promotion, in comparison with hope, thought the poor Lieutenant; but had
+ to rest satisfied with it; and struggle to understand that perhaps he was
+ fit for nothing bigger, and that he must exert himself to do this small
+ thing well. Hardness of heart in high places! Friedrich, one is glad to
+ see, had not forgotten the poor fellow, could he have done better with
+ him. Some ten years hence, quite incidentally, there came to Keith, one
+ morning, a fine purse of money from his Majesty, one pretty gift in
+ Keith's experience;&mdash;much the topic in Berlin, while a certain solemn
+ English gentleman happened to be passing that way (whom we mean to detain
+ a little by and by), who reports it for us with all the circumstances.
+ [Sir Jonas Hanway, <i>Travels,</i> &amp;c. (London, 1753), ii. 202. Date
+ of the Gift is 1750.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lieutenant Spaen too had got into trouble for the Crown-Prince's sake,
+ though we have forgotten him again; had "admitted Katte to interviews," or
+ we forget what;&mdash;had sat his "year in Spandau" in consequence; been
+ dismissed the Prussian service, and had taken service with the Dutch.
+ Lieutenant Spaen either did not return at all, or disliked the aspects
+ when he did, and immediately withdrew to Holland again. Which probably was
+ wise of him. At a late period, King Friedrich, then a great King, on one
+ of his Cleve Journeys, fell in with Spaen; who had become a Dutch General
+ of rank, and was of good manners and style of conversation: King Friedrich
+ was charmed to see him; became his guest for the night; conversed
+ delightfully with him, about old Prussian matters and about new; and in
+ the colloquy never once alluded to that interesting passage in his young
+ life and Spaen's. [Nicolai, <i>Anekdoten,</i> vi. 178.] Hard as polished
+ steel! thinks Spaen perhaps; but, if candid, must ask himself withal, Are
+ facts any softer, or the Laws of Kingship to a man that holds it?&mdash;Keith
+ silently did his Lieutenant-Colonelcy with the appendages, while life
+ lasted: of the Page Keith, his Brother, who indeed had blabbed upon the
+ Prince, as we remember, and was not entitled to be clamorous, I never
+ heard that there was any notice taken; and figure him to myself as walking
+ with shouldered firelock, a private Fusileer, all his life afterwards,
+ with many reflections on things bygone. [These and the other Prussian
+ Keiths are all of Scotch extraction; the Prussians, in natural German
+ fashion, pronounce their name KAH-IT (English "KITE" with nothing of the Y
+ in it), as may be worth remembering in a more important instance.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old friendship, it would seem, is without weight in public appointments
+ here: old friends are somewhat astonished to find this friend of theirs a
+ King every inch! To old comrades, if they were useless, much more if they
+ were worse than useless, how disappointing! "One wretched Herr [name
+ suppressed, but known at the time, and talked of, and whispered of], who
+ had, like several others, hoping to rise that way, been industrious in
+ encouraging the Crown-Prince's vices as to women, was so shocked at the
+ return he now met, that in despair he hanged himself in LobeJun."
+ (Lobegun, Magdeburg Country): here is a case for the humane! [Kuster, <i>Characterzuge
+ des &amp;c. von Saldern</i> (Berlin, 1793), p. 63.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friend Keyserling himself, "Caesarion" that used to be, can get nothing,
+ though we love him much; being an idle topsy-turvy fellow with revenues of
+ his own. Jordan, with his fine-drawn wit, French logics, LITERARY TRAVELS,
+ thin exactitude; what can be done for Jordan? Him also his new Majesty
+ loves much; and knows that, without some official living, poor Jordan has
+ no resource. Jordan, after some waiting and survey, is made "Inspector of
+ the Poor;"&mdash;busy this Autumn looking out for vacant houses, and
+ arrangements for the thousand spinning women;&mdash;continues to be
+ employed in mixed literary services (hunting up of Formey, for Editor, was
+ one instance), and to be in much real intimacy. That also was perhaps
+ about the real amount of amiable Jordan. To get Jordan a living by
+ planting him in some office which he could not do; to warm Jordan by
+ burning our royal bed for him: that had not entered into the mind of
+ Jordan's royal friend. The Munchows he did promote; the Finks, sons of his
+ Tutor Finkenstein: to these and other old comrades, in whom he had
+ discovered fitness, it is no doubt abundantly grateful to him to recognize
+ and employ it. As he notably does, in these and in other instances. But
+ before all things he has decided to remember that he is King; that he must
+ accept the severe laws of that trust, and do IT, or not have done
+ anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An inverse sign, pointing in the same way, is the passionate search he is
+ making in Foreign Countries for such men as will suit him. In these same
+ months, for example, he bethinks him of two Counts Schmettau, in the
+ Austrian Service, with whom he had made acquaintance in the Rhine
+ Campaign; of a Count von Rothenburg, whom he saw in the French Camp there;
+ and is negotiating to have them if possible. The Schmettaus are Prussian
+ by birth, though in Austrian Service; them he obtains under form of an
+ Order home, with good conditions under it; they came, and proved useful
+ men to him. Rothenburg, a shining kind of figure in Diplomacy as well as
+ Soldiership, was Alsatian German, foreign to Prussia; but him too
+ Friedrich obtained, and made much of, as will be notable by and by. And in
+ fact the soul of all these noble tendencies in Friedrich, which surely are
+ considerable, is even this, That he loves men of merit, and does not love
+ men of none; that he has an endless appetite for men of merit, and feels,
+ consciously and otherwise, that they are the one thing beautiful, the one
+ thing needful to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, which is the product of all fine tendencies, is likewise their
+ centre or focus out of which they start again, with some chance of
+ fulfilment;&mdash;and we may judge in how many directions Friedrich was
+ willing to expand himself, by the multifarious kinds he was inviting, and
+ negotiating for. Academicians,&mdash;and not Maupertuis only, but all
+ manner of mathematical geniuses (Euler whom he got, at Gravesande,
+ Muschenbroek whom he failed of); and Literary geniuses innumerable, first
+ and last. Academicians, Musicians, Players, Dancers even; much more
+ Soldiers and Civil-Service men: no man that carries any honest "CAN DO"
+ about with him but may expect some welcome here. Which continued through
+ Friedrich's reign; and involved him in much petty trouble, not always
+ successful in the lower kinds of it. For his Court was the cynosure of
+ ambitious creatures on the wing, or inclined for taking wing: like a
+ lantern kindled in the darkness of the world;&mdash;and many owls impinged
+ upon him; whom he had to dismiss with brevity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps it had been better to stand by mere Prussian or German merit,
+ native to the ground? Or rather, undoubtedly it had! In some departments,
+ as in the military, the administrative, diplomatic, Friedrich was himself
+ among the best of judges: but in various others he had mainly (mainly, by
+ no means blindly or solely) to accept noise of reputation as evidence of
+ merit; and in these, if we compute with rigor, his success was
+ intrinsically not considerable. The more honor to him that he never
+ wearied of trying. "A man that does not care for merit," says the adage,
+ "cannot himself have any." But a King that does not care for merit, what
+ shall we say of such a King!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BEHAVIOR TO HIS MOTHER; TO HIS WIFE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One other fine feature, significant of many, let us notice: his affection
+ for his Mother. When his Mother addressed him as "Your Majesty," he
+ answered, as the Books are careful to tell us: "Call me Son; that is the
+ Title of all others most agreeable to me!" Words which, there can be no
+ doubt, came from the heart. Fain would he shoot forth to greatness in
+ filial piety, as otherwise; fain solace himself in doing something kind to
+ his Mother. Generously, lovingly; though again with clear view of the
+ limits. He decrees for her a Title higher than had been customary, as well
+ as more accordant with his feelings; not "Queen Dowager," but "Her Majesty
+ the Queen Mother." He decides to build her a new Palace; "under the
+ Lindens" it is to be, and of due magnificence: in a month or two, he had
+ even got bits of the foundation dug, and the Houses to be pulled down
+ bought or bargained for; [Rodenbeck, p. 15 (30th June-23d Aug. 1740); and
+ correct Stenzel (iv. 44).]&mdash;which enterprise, however, was renounced,
+ no doubt with consent, as the public aspects darkened. Nothing in the way
+ of honor, in the way of real affection heartily felt and demonstrated, was
+ wanting to Queen Sophie in her widowhood. But, on the other hand, of
+ public influence no vestige was allowed, if any was ever claimed; and the
+ good kind Mother lived in her Monbijou, the centre and summit of Berlin
+ society; and restricted herself wisely to private matters. She has her
+ domesticities, family affections, readings, speculations; gives evening
+ parties at Monbijou. One glimpse of her in 1742 we get, that of a
+ perfectly private royal Lady; which though it has little meaning, yet as
+ it is authentic, coming from Busching's hand, may serve as one little
+ twinkle in that total darkness, and shall be left to the reader and his
+ fancy:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Count Henkel, a Thuringian gentleman, of high speculation, high
+ pietistic ways, extremely devout, and given even to writing of religion,
+ came to Berlin about some Silesian properties,&mdash;a man I should think
+ of lofty melancholic aspect; and, in severe type, somewhat of a lion, on
+ account of his Book called "DEATH-BED SCENES, in four Volumes." Came to
+ Berlin; and on the 15th August, 1742, towards evening (as the
+ ever-punctual Busching looking into Henkel's Papers gives it), "was
+ presented to the Queen Mother; who retained him to supper; supper not
+ beginning till about ten o'clock. The Queen Mother was extremely gracious
+ to Henkel; but investigated him a good deal, and put a great many
+ questions," not quite easy to answer in that circle, "as, Why he did not
+ play? What he thought of comedies and operas? What Preachers he was
+ acquainted with in Berlin? Whether he too was a Writer of Books? [covertly
+ alluding to the DEATH-BED SCENES, notes Busching]. And abundance of other
+ questioning. She also recounted many fantastic anecdotes (VIEL
+ ABENTEUERLICHES) about Count von Zinzendorf [Founder of HERNNHUTH,
+ far-shining spiritual Paladin of that day, whom her Majesty thinks rather
+ a spiritual Quixote]; and declared that they were strictly true."
+ [Busching's <i>Beitrage,</i> iv. 27.]' Upon which, EXIT Henkel, borne by
+ Busching, and our light is snuffed out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is one momentary glance I have met with of Queen Sophie in her
+ Dowager state. The rest, though there were seventeen years of it in all,
+ is silent to mankind and me; and only her death, and her Son's great grief
+ about it, so great as to be surprising, is mentioned in the Books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Actual painful sorrow about his Father, much more any new outburst of
+ weeping and lamenting, is not on record, after that first morning. Time
+ does its work; and in such a whirl of occupations, sooner than elsewhere:
+ and the loved Dead lie silent in their mausoleum in our hearts,&mdash;serenely
+ sad as Eternity, not in loud sorrow as of Time. Friedrich was pious as a
+ Son, however he might be on other heads. To the last years of his life, as
+ from the first days of his reign, it was evident in what honor he held
+ Friedrich Wilhelm's memory; and the words "my Father," when they turned up
+ in discourse, had in that fine voice of his a tone which the observers
+ noted. "To his Mother he failed no day, when in Berlin, however busy, to
+ make his visit; and he never spoke to her, except hat in hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With his own Queen, Friedrich still consorts a good deal, in these first
+ times; is with her at Charlottenburg, Berlin, Potsdam, Reinsberg, for a
+ day or two, as occasion gives; sometimes at Reinsberg for weeks running,
+ in the intervals of war and business: glad to be at rest amid his old
+ pursuits, by the side of a kind innocent being familiar to him. So it
+ lasts for a length of time. But these happy intervals, we can remark, grow
+ rarer: whether the Lady's humor, as they became rarer, might not sink
+ withal, and produce an acceleration in the rate of decline? She was
+ thought to be capable of "pouting (FAIRE LA FACHEE)," at one period! We
+ are left to our guesses; there is not anywhere the smallest whisper to
+ guide us. Deep silence reigns in all Prussian Books.&mdash;To feel or to
+ suspect yourself neglected, and to become MORE amiable thereupon (in which
+ course alone lies hope), is difficult for any Queen! Enough, we can
+ observe these meetings, within two or three years, have become much rarer;
+ and perhaps about the end of the third or fourth year, they altogether
+ cease; and pass merely into the formal character. In which state they
+ continued fixed, liable to no uncertainty; and were transacted, to the end
+ of Friedrich's life, with inflexible regularity as the annual reviews
+ were. This is a curious section of his life; which there will be other
+ opportunities of noticing. But there is yet no thought of it anywhere, nor
+ for years to come; though fables to the contrary were once current in
+ Books. [Laveaux, &amp;c.]
+ </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>
+ NO CHANGE IN HIS FATHER'S METHODS OR MINISTRIES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the old mode of Administration, in the Ministries, Government Boards,
+ he made no change. These administrative methods of his wise Father's are
+ admirable to Friedrich, who knows them well; and they continue to be so.
+ These men of his Father's, them also Friedrich knows, and that they were
+ well chosen. In methods or in men, he is inclined to make the minimum of
+ alteration at present. One Finance Hofrath of a projecting turn, named
+ Eckart, who had abused the last weak years of Friedrich Wilhelm, and much
+ afflicted mankind by the favor he was in: this Eckart Friedrich appointed
+ a commission to inquire into; found the public right in regard to Eckart,
+ and dismissed him with ignominy, not with much other punishment. Minister
+ Boden, on the contrary, high in the Finance Department, who had also been
+ much grumbled at, Friedrich found to be a good man: and Friedrich not only
+ retained Boden, but advanced him; and continued to make more and more use
+ of him in time coming. His love of perfection in work done, his care of
+ thrift, seemed almost greater than his late Father's had been,&mdash;to
+ the disappointment of many. In the other Departments, Podewils, Thulmeyer
+ and the rest went on as heretofore;&mdash;only in general with less to do,
+ the young King doing more himself than had been usual. Valori, "MON GROS
+ VALORI (my fat Valori)," French Minister here, whom we shall know better,
+ writes home of the new King of Prussia: "He begins his government, as by
+ all appearance he will carry it on, in a highly satisfactory way:
+ everywhere traits of benevolence, sympathy for his subjects, respect shown
+ to the memory of the Deceased," [<i>Memoires des Negociations du Marquis
+ de Valori</i> (a Paris, 1820), i. 20 ("June 13th, 1740"). A valuable Book,
+ which we shall often have to quote: edited in a lamentably ignorant
+ manner.]&mdash;no change made, where it evidently is not for the better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's "Three principal Secretaries of State," as we should designate
+ them, are very remarkable. Three Clerks he found, or had known of,
+ somewhere in the Public Offices; and now took, under some advanced title,
+ to be specially his own Private Clerks: three vigorous long-headed young
+ fellows, "Eichel, Schuhmacher, Lautensack" the obscure names of them;
+ [Rodenbeck, 15th June, 1740.] out of whom, now and all along henceforth,
+ he got immensities of work in that kind. They lasted all his life; and, of
+ course, grew ever more expert at their function. Close, silent; exact as
+ machinery: ever ready, from the smallest clear hint, marginal pencil-mark,
+ almost from a glance of the eye, to clothe the Royal Will in official
+ form, with the due rugged clearness and thrift of words. "Came punctually
+ at four in the morning in summer, five in winter;" did daily the day's
+ work; and kept their mouths well shut. A very notable Trio of men; serving
+ his Majesty and the Prussian Nation as Principal Secretaries of State, on
+ those cheap terms;&mdash;nay almost as Houses of Parliament with Standing
+ Committees and appendages, so many Acts of Parliament admittedly rather
+ wise, being passed daily by his Majesty's help and theirs!&mdash;Friedrich
+ paid them rather well; they saw no society; lived wholly to their work,
+ and to their own families. Eichel alone of the three was mentioned at all
+ by mankind, and that obscurely; an "abstruse, reserved, long-headed kind
+ of man;" and "made a great deal of money in the end," insinuates Busching,
+ [<i>Beitrage,</i> v. 238, &amp;c.] no friend of Friedrich's or his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In superficial respects, again, Friedrich finds that the Prussian King
+ ought to have a King's Establishment, and maintain a decent splendor among
+ his neighbors,&mdash;as is not quite the case at present. In this respect
+ he does make changes. A certain quantity of new Pages, new Goldsticks;
+ some considerable, not too considerable, new furbishing of the Royal
+ Household,&mdash;as it were, a fair coat of new paint, with gilding not
+ profuse,&mdash;brought it to the right pitch for this King, About "a
+ hundred and fifty" new figures of the Page and Goldstick kind, is the
+ reckoning given. [<i>Helden Geschichte,</i> i. 353.] So many of these; and
+ there is an increase of 16,000 to one's Army going on: that is the
+ proportion noticeable. In the facts as his Father left them Friedrich
+ persisted all his life; in the semblances or outer vestures he changed, to
+ this extent for the present.&mdash;These are the Phenomena of Friedrich's
+ Accession, noted by us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Readers see there is radiance enough, perhaps slightly in excess, but of
+ intrinsically good quality, in the Aurora of this new Reign. A brilliant
+ valiant young King; much splendor of what we could call a golden or soft
+ nature (visible in those "New-Era" doings of his, in those strong
+ affections to his Friends); and also, what we like almost better in him,
+ something of a STEEL-BRIGHT or stellar splendor (meaning, clearness of
+ eyesight, intrepidity, severe loyalty to fact),&mdash;which is a fine
+ addition to the softer element, and will keep IT and its philanthropies
+ and magnanimities well under rule. Such a man is rare in this world; how
+ extremely rare such a man born King! He is swift and he is persistent;
+ sharply discerning, fearless to resolve and perform; carries his great
+ endowments lightly, as if they were not heavy to him. He has known hard
+ misery, been taught by stripes; a light stoicism sits gracefully on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What he will grow to?" Probably to something considerable. Very certainly
+ to something far short of his aspirations; far different from his own
+ hopes; and the world's concerning him. It is not we, it is Father Time
+ that does the controlling and fulfilling of our hopes; and strange work he
+ makes of them and us. For example, has not Friedrich's grand "New Era,"
+ inaugurated by him in a week, with the leading spirits all adoring, issued
+ since in French Revolution and a "world well suicided,"&mdash;the leading
+ spirits much thrown out in consequence! New Era has gone to great lengths
+ since Friedrich's time; and the leading spirits do not now adore it, but
+ yawn over it, or worse! Which changes to us the then aspect of Friedrich,
+ and his epoch and his aspirations, a good deal.&mdash;On the whole,
+ Friedrich will go his way, Time and the leading spirits going theirs; and,
+ like the rest of us, will grow to what he can. His actual size is not
+ great among the Kingdoms: his outward resources are rather to be called
+ small. The Prussian Dominion at that date is, in extent, about four-fifths
+ of an England Proper, and perhaps not one-fifth so fertile: subject
+ Population is well under Two Millions and a Half; Revenue not much above
+ One Million Sterling,' [The exact statistic cipher is, at Friedrich's
+ Accession: PRUSSIAN TERRITORIES, 2,275 square miles German (56,875
+ English); POPULATION, 2,240,000; ANNUAL REVENUE, 7,371,707 thalers 7
+ groschen (1,105,756 pounds without the pence). See Prenss, <i>Buch fur
+ Jedermann,</i> i. 49; Stenzel, iii. 692; &amp;c.]&mdash;very small, were
+ not thrift such a VECTIGAL.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This young King is magnanimous; not much to be called ambitious, or not in
+ the vulgar sense almost at all,&mdash;strange as it may sound to readers.
+ His hopes at this time are many;&mdash;and among them, I perceive, there
+ is not wanting secretly, in spite of his experiences, some hope that he
+ himself may be a good deal "happier" than formerly. Nor is there any
+ ascetic humor, on his part, to forbid trial. He is much determined to try.
+ Probably enough, as we guess and gather, his agreeablest anticipations, at
+ this time, were of Reinsberg: How, in the intervals of work well done, he
+ would live there wholly to the Muses; have his chosen spirits round him,
+ his colloquies, his suppers of the gods. Why not? There might be a King of
+ Intellects conceivable withal; protecting, cherishing, practically guiding
+ the chosen Illuminative Souls of this world. A new Charlemagne, the
+ smallest new Charlemagne of Spiritual type, with HIS Paladins round him;
+ how glorious, how salutary in the dim generations now going!&mdash;These
+ too were hopes which proved signally futile. Rigorous Time could not grant
+ these at all;&mdash;granted, in his own hard way, other things instead.
+ But, all along, the Life-element, the Epoch, though Friedrich took it
+ kindly and never complained, was ungenial to such a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Somewhat of a rotten Epoch, this into which Friedrich has been born, to
+ shape himself and his activities royal and other!"&mdash;exclaims
+ Smelfungus once: "In an older earnest Time, when the eternally awful
+ meanings of this Universe had not yet sunk into dubieties to any one, much
+ less into levities or into mendacities, into huge hypocrisies carefully
+ regulated,&mdash;so luminous, vivid and ingenuous a young creature had not
+ wanted divine manna in his Pilgrimage through Life. Nor, in that case, had
+ he come out of it in so lean a condition. But the highest man of us is
+ born brother to his Contemporaries; struggle as he may, there is no
+ escaping the family likeness. By spasmodic indignant contradiction of
+ them, by stupid compliance with them,&mdash;you will inversely resemble,
+ if you do not directly; like the starling, you can't get out!&mdash;Most
+ surely, if there do fall manna from Heaven, in the given Generation, and
+ nourish in us reverence and genial nobleness day by day, it is blessed and
+ well. Failing that, in regard to our poor spiritual interests, there is
+ sure to be one of two results: mockery, contempt, disbelief, what we may
+ call SHORT-DIET to the length of very famine (which was Friedrich's case);
+ or else slow-poison, carefully elaborated and provided by way of daily
+ nourishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Unhappy souls, these same! The slow-poison has gone deep into them.
+ Instead of manna, this long while back, they have been living on mouldy
+ corrupt meats sweetened by sugar-of-lead; or perhaps, like Voltaire, a few
+ individuals prefer hunger, as the cleaner alternative; and in
+ contemptuous, barren, mocking humor, not yet got the length of geniality
+ or indignation, snuff the east-wind by way of spiritual diet. Pilgriming
+ along on such nourishment, the best human soul fails to become very ruddy!&mdash;Tidings
+ about Heaven are fallen so uncertain, but the Earth and her joys are still
+ Interesting: 'Take to the Earth and her joys;&mdash;let your soul go out,
+ since it must; let your five senses and their appetites be well alive.'
+ That is a dreadful 'Sham-Christian Dispensation' to be born under! You
+ wonder at the want of heroism in the Eighteenth Century. Wonder rather at
+ the degree of heroism it had; wonder how many souls there still are to be
+ met with in it of some effective capability, though dieting in that way,&mdash;nothing
+ else to be had in the shops about. Carterets, Belleisles, Friedrichs,
+ Voltaires; Chathams, Franklins, Choiseuls: there is an effective stroke of
+ work, a fine fire of heroic pride, in this man and the other; not yet
+ extinguished by spiritual famine or slow-poison; so robust is Nature the
+ mighty Mother!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But in general, that sad Gospel, 'Souls extinct, Stomachs well alive!' is
+ the credible one, not articulately preached, but practically believed by
+ the abject generations, and acted on as it never was before. What immense
+ sensualities there were, is known; and also (as some small offset, though
+ that has not yet begun in 1740) what immense quantities of Physical Labor
+ and contrivance were got out of mankind, in that Epoch and down to this
+ day. As if, having lost its Heaven, it had struck desperately down into
+ the Earth; as if it were a BEAVER-kind, and not a mankind any more. We had
+ once a Barbaossa; and a world all grandly true. But from that to Karl VI.,
+ and HIS Holy Romish Reich in such a state of 'Holiness'&mdash;!" I here
+ cut short my abstruse Friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Readers are impatient to have done with these miscellaneous preludings,
+ and to be once definitely under way, such a Journey lying ahead. Yes,
+ readers; a Journey indeed! And, at this point, permit me to warn you that,
+ where the ground, where Dryasdust and the Destinies, yield anything
+ humanly illustrative of Friedrich and his Work, one will have to linger,
+ and carefully gather it, even as here. Large tracts occur, bestrewn with
+ mere pedantisms, diplomatic cobwebberies, learned marine-stores, and
+ inhuman matter, over which we shall have to skip empty-handed: this also
+ was among the sad conditions of our Enterprise, that it has to go now too
+ slow and again too fast; not in proportion to natural importance of
+ objects, but to several inferior considerations withal. So busy has
+ perverse Destiny been on it; perverse Destiny, edacious Chance;&mdash;and
+ the Dryasdusts, too, and Nightmares, in Prussia as elsewhere, we know how
+ strong they are!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's character in old age has doubtless its curious affinities, its
+ disguised identities, with these prognostic features and indications of
+ his youth: and to our readers,&mdash;if we do ever get them to the goal,
+ of seeing Friedrich a little with their own eyes and judgments,&mdash;there
+ may be pleasant contrasts and comparisons of that kind in store, one day.
+ But the far commoner experience (which also has been my own),&mdash;here
+ is Smelfungus's stern account of that:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My friend, you will be luckier than I, if, after ten years, not to say,
+ in a sense, twenty years, thirty years, of reading and rummaging in those
+ sad Prussian Books, ancient and new (which often are laudably authentic,
+ too, and exact as to details), you can gather any character whatever of
+ Friedrich, in any period of his life, or conceive him as a Human Entity at
+ all! It is strange, after such thousand-fold writing, but it is true, his
+ History is considerably unintelligible to mankind at this hour; left
+ chaotic, enigmatic, in a good many points,&mdash;the military part of it
+ alone being brought to clearness, and rendered fairly conceivable and
+ credible to those who will study. And as to the Man himself, or what his
+ real Physiognomy can have been&mdash;! Well, it must be owned few men were
+ of such RAPIDITY of face and aspect; so difficult to seize the features
+ of. In his action, too, there was such rapidity, such secrecy, suddenness:
+ a man that could not be read, even by the candid, except as in flashes of
+ lightning. And then the anger of by-standers, uncandid, who got hurt by
+ him; the hasty malevolences, the stupidities, the opacities: enough, in
+ modern times, what is saying much, perhaps no man's motives, intentions,
+ and procedure have been more belied, misunderstood, misrepresented, during
+ his life. Nor, I think, since that, have many men fared worse, by the
+ Limner or Biographic class, the favorable to him and the unfavorable; or
+ been so smeared of and blotched of, and reduced to a mere blur and
+ dazzlement of cross-lights, incoherences, incredibilities, in which
+ nothing, not so much as a human nose, is clearly discernible by way of
+ feature!"&mdash;Courage, reader, nevertheless; on the above terms let us
+ march according to promise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter II. &mdash; THE HOMAGINGS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Young Friedrich, as his Father had done, considers it unnecessary to be
+ crowned. Old Friedrich, first of the name, and of the King series, we did
+ see crowned, with a pinch of snuff tempering the solemnities. That
+ Coronation once well done suffices all his descendants hitherto. Such an
+ expense of money,&mdash;of diluted mendacity too! Such haranguing,
+ gesturing, symbolic fugling, all grown half false:&mdash;avoid lying, even
+ with your eyes, or knees, or the coat upon your back, so far as you easily
+ can!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing of Coronation: but it is thought needful to have the HULDIGUNGEN
+ (Homagings) done, the Fealties sworn; and the young Majesty in due course
+ goes about, or gives directions, now here now there, in his various
+ Provinces, getting that accomplished. But even in that, Friedrich is by no
+ means strait-laced or punctilious; does it commonly by Deputy: only in
+ three places, Konigsberg, Berlin, Cleve, does he appear in person. Mainly
+ by deputy; and always with the minimum of fuss, and no haranguing that
+ could be avoided. Nowhere are the old STANDE (Provincial Parliaments)
+ assembled, now or afterwards: sufficient for this and for every occasion
+ are the "Permanent Committees of the STANDE;" nor is much speaking,
+ unessential for despatch of business, used to these.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "STANDE&mdash;of Ritterschaft mainly, of Gentry small and great&mdash;existed
+ once in all those Countries, as elsewhere," says one Historian; "and some
+ of them, in Preussen, for example, used to be rather loud, and inclined to
+ turbulence, till the curb, from a judicious bridle-hand, would admonish
+ them. But, for a long while past,&mdash;especially since the Great
+ Elector's time, who got an 'Excise Law' passed, or the foundations of a
+ good Excise Law laid; [Preuss, iv. 432; and <i>Thronbesteigung,</i> pp.
+ 379-383.] and, what with Excise, what with Domain-Farms, had a fixed
+ Annual Budget, which he reckoned fair to both parties,&mdash;they have
+ been dying out for want of work; and, under Friedrich Wilhelm, may be said
+ to have gone quite dead. What work was left for them? Prussian Budget is
+ fixed, many things are fixed: why talk of them farther? The Prussian King,
+ nothing of a fool like certain others,"&mdash;which indeed is the cardinal
+ point, though my Author does not say so,&mdash;"is respectfully aware of
+ the facts round him; and can listen to the rumors too, so far as he finds
+ good. The King sees himself terribly interested to get into the right
+ course in all things, and avoid the wrong one! Probably he does, in his
+ way, seek 'wise Advice concerning the arduous matters of the Kingdom;' nay
+ I believe he is diligent to have it of the wisest:&mdash;who knows if
+ STANDE would always give it wiser; especially STANDE in the haranguing
+ condition?"&mdash;Enough, they are not applied to. There is no Freedom in
+ that Country. "No Freedom to speak of," continues he: "but I do a little
+ envy them their Fixed Budget, and some other things. What pleasure there
+ can be in having your household arrangements tumbled into disorder every
+ new Year, by a new-contrived scale of expenses for you, I never could
+ ascertain!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich is not the man to awaken Parliamentary sleeping-dogs well
+ settled by his Ancestors. Once or twice, out of Preussen, in Friedrich
+ Wilhelm's time, there was heard some whimper, which sounded like the
+ beginning of a bark. But Friedrich Wilhelm was on the alert for it: Are
+ you coming in with your NIE POZWALAM (your LIBERUM VETO), then? None of
+ your Polish vagaries here. "TOUT LE PAYS SERA RUINE (the whole Country
+ will be ruined)," say you? (Such had been the poor Marshal or Provincial
+ SPEAKER'S Remonstrance on one occasion): "I don't believe a word of that.
+ But I do believe the Government by JUNKERS [Country Squires] and NIE
+ POZWALAM will be ruined,"&mdash;as it is fully meant to be! "I am
+ establishing the King's Sovereignty like a rock of bronze (ICH STABILIRE
+ DIE SOUVERAINETAT WIE EINEN ROCHER VON BRONZE)," some extremely strong
+ kind of rock! [Forster, b. iii. (<i>Urkundenbuch,</i> i. 50); Preuss, iv.
+ 420 n. "NIE POZWALAM" (the formula of LIBERUM VETO) signifies "I Don't
+ Permit!"] This was one of Friedrich Wilhelm's marginalia in response to
+ such a thing; and the mutinous whimper died out again. Parliamentary
+ Assemblages are sometimes Collective Wisdoms, but by no means always so.
+ In Magdeburg we remember what trouble Friedrich Wilhelm had with his
+ unreasonable Ritters. Ritters there, in their assembled capacity, had the
+ Reich behind them, and could not be dealt with like Preussen: but
+ Friedrich Wilhelm, by wise slow methods, managed Magdeburg too, and
+ reduced it to silence, or to words necessary for despatch of business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In each Province, a Permanent Committee&mdash;chosen, I suppose, by King
+ and Knights assenting; chosen I know not how, but admitted to be wisely
+ chosen&mdash;represents the once Parliament or STANDE; and has its potency
+ for doing good service in regard to all Provincial matters, from roads and
+ bridges upwards, and is impotent to do the least harm. Roads and bridges,
+ Church matters, repartition of the Land-dues, Army matters,&mdash;in fact
+ they are an effective non-haranguing Parliament, to the King's Deputy in
+ every such Province; well calculated to illuminate and forward his
+ subaltern AMTmen and him. Nay, we observe it is oftenest in the way of
+ gifts and solacements that the King articulately communicates with these
+ Committees or their Ritterschafts. Projects for Draining of Bogs, for
+ improved Highways, for better Husbandry; loans granted them, Loan-Banks
+ established for the Province's behoof:&mdash;no need of parliamentary
+ eloquence on such occasions, but of something far different.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is from this quiescent, or busy but noiseless kind of STANDE and
+ Populations that Friedrich has his HULDIGUNG to take;&mdash;and the
+ operation, whether done personally or by deputy, must be an abundantly
+ simple one. He, for his part, is fortunate enough to find everywhere the
+ Sovereignty ESTABLISHED; "rock of bronze" not the least shaken in his
+ time. He will graciously undertake, by Written Act, which is read before
+ the STANDE, King or King's Deputy witnessing there, "To maintain the
+ privileges" of his STANDE and Populations; the STANDE answer, on oath,
+ with lifted hand, and express invocation of Heaven, That they will obey
+ him as true subjects; And so&mdash;doubtless with something of dining
+ superadded, but no whisper of it put on record&mdash;the HULDIGUNG will
+ everywhere very quietly transact itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The HULDIGUNG itself is nothing to us, even with Friedrich there,&mdash;as
+ at Konigsberg, Berlin, Cleve, the three exceptional places. To which,
+ nevertheless, let us briefly attend him, for the sake of here and there
+ some direct glimpse we may get of the then Friedrich's actual physiognomy
+ and ways. Other direct view, or the chance of such, is not conceded us out
+ of those sad Prussian Books; which are very full on this of the HULDIGUNG,
+ if silent on so many other points. [Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i> p.
+ 382.]
+ </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>
+ FRIEDRICH ACCEPTS THE HOMAGES, PERSONALLY, IN THREE PLACES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To Konigsberg is his first excursion on this errand. Preussen has perhaps,
+ or may be suspected of having, some remnants of sour humors left in it,
+ and remembrances of STANDE with haranguings and even mutinies: there if
+ anywhere the King in person may do good on such an occasion, He left
+ Berlin, July 7th, bound thitherward; here is Note of that first Royal
+ Tour,&mdash;specimen of several hundreds such, which he had to do in the
+ course of the next forty-five years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friend Algarotti, charming talker, attended him; who else, official and
+ non-official, ask not. The Journey is to be circuitous; to combine various
+ businesses, and also to have its amusements. They went by Custrin;
+ glancing at old known Country, which is at its greenest in this season. By
+ Custrin, across the Neumark, into Pommern; after that by an intricate
+ winding route; reviewing regiments, inspecting garrisons, now here now
+ there; doing all manner of inspections; talking I know not what; oftenest
+ lodging with favored Generals, if it suited. Distance to Konigsberg, by
+ the direct road, is about 500 miles; by this winding one, it must have
+ been 800: Journey thither took nine days in all. Obliquely through
+ Pommern, almost to the coast of the Baltic; their ultimatum there a place
+ called Coslin, where they reviewed with strictness,&mdash;omitting
+ Colberg, a small Sea-Fortress not far rearward, time being short. Thence
+ into West-Preussen, into Polish Territory, and swiftly across that;
+ keeping Dantzig and its noises wide enough to the left: one night in
+ Poland; and the next they are in Ost-Preussen, place called Liebstadt,&mdash;again
+ on home-ground, and diligently reviewing there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The review at Liebstadt is remarkable in this, That the regiments, one
+ regiment especially, not being what was fit, a certain Grenadier-Captain
+ got cashiered on the spot; and the old Commandant himself was soon after
+ pensioned, and more gently sent his ways. So strict is his Majesty.
+ Contrariwise, he found Lieutenant-General von Katte's Garrison, at
+ Angerburg, next day, in a very high perfection; and Colonel Posadowsky's
+ regiment specially so; with which latter gentleman he lodged that night,
+ and made him farther happy by the ORDER OF MERIT: Colonel Posadowsky,
+ Garrison of Angerburg, far off in East-Preussen, Chevalier of the Order of
+ Merit henceforth, if we ever meet him again. To the good old
+ Lieutenant-General von Katte, who no doubt dined with them, his Majesty
+ handed, on the same occasion, a Patent of Feldmarschall;&mdash;intends
+ soon to make him Graf; and did it, as readers know. Both Colonel and
+ General attended him thenceforth, still by a circuitous route, to
+ Konigsberg, to assist in the solemnities there. By Gumbinnen, by
+ Trakehnen,&mdash;the Stud of Trakehnen: that also his Majesty saw, and
+ made review of; not without emotion, we can fancy, as the sleek colts were
+ trotted out on those new terms! At Trakehnen, Katte and the Colonel would
+ be his Majesty's guests, for the night they stayed. This is their extreme
+ point eastward; Konigsberg now lies a good way west of them. But at
+ Trakehnen they turn; and, Saturday, 16th July, 1740, after another hundred
+ miles or so, along the pleasant valley of the Pregel, get to Konigsberg:
+ ready to begin business on Monday morning,&mdash;on Sunday if necessary."
+ [From Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i> pp. 382, 385; Rodenbeck, p. 16;
+ &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Sunday there did a kind of memorability occur: The HULDIGUNGS-PREDIGT
+ (Homage Sermon)&mdash;by a reverend Herr Quandt, chief Preacher there.
+ Which would not be worth mentioning, except for this circumstance, that
+ his Majesty exceedingly admired Quandt, and thought him a most Demosthenic
+ genius, and the best of all the Germans. Quandt's text was in these words:
+ <i>"Thine are we, David, and on thy side, thou Son of Jesse; Peace, peace
+ be unto thee, and peace be to thine helpers; for thy God helpeth thee."
+ </i>[<i>First Chronicles,</i> xii. 18.] Quandt began, in a sonorous voice,
+ raising his face with respectful enthusiasm to the King, "Thine are we, O
+ Friedrich, and on thy side, thou Son of Friedrich Wilhelm;" and so went
+ on: sermon brief, sonorous, compact, and sticking close to its text.
+ Friedrich stood immovable, gazing on the eloquent Demosthenic Quandt, with
+ admiration heightened by surprise;&mdash;wrote of Quandt to Voltaire; and,
+ with sustained enthusiasm, to the Public long afterwards; and to the end
+ of his days was wont to make Quandt an exception, if perhaps almost the
+ only one, from German barbarism, and disharmony of mind and tongue. So
+ that poor Quandt cannot ever since get entirely forgotten, but needs
+ always to be raked up again, for this reason when others have ceased: an
+ almost melancholy adventure for poor Quandt and Another!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The HULDIGUNG was rather grand; Harangue and Counter-harangue permitted to
+ the due length, and proper festivities following: but the STANDE could not
+ manage to get into vocal covenanting or deliberating at all; Friedrich
+ before leaving Berlin had answered their hint or request that way, in
+ these words: "We are likewise graciously inclined to give to the said
+ STANDE, before their Homaging, the same assurance which they got from our
+ Herr Father's Majesty, who is now with God,"&mdash;general assurance that
+ their, and everybody's, "Rights shall be maintained [as we see they are],&mdash;with
+ which, it is hoped (HOFFENTLICH), they will be content, and get to peace
+ upon this matter (SICH DABEI BERUHIGEN WERDEN)." [Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i>
+ p. 380.] It will be best for them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich gave away much corn here; that is, opened his Corn-Granaries, on
+ charitable terms, and took all manner of measures, here as in other
+ places, for relief of the scarcity there was. Of the illuminations, never
+ so grand, the reader shall hear nothing. A "Torch-Procession of the
+ Students" turned out a pretty thing:&mdash;Students marching with torches,
+ with fine wind-music, regulated enthusiasm, fine succinct address to his
+ Majesty; and all the world escorting, with its "Live Forever!" Friedrich
+ gave the Students "a TRINK-GELAG (Banquet of Liquors)," how arranged I do
+ not know: and to the Speaker of the Address, a likely young gentleman with
+ VON to his name, he offered an Ensigncy of Foot ("in Camas's Fusileer
+ Regiment,"&mdash;Camas now gone to Paris, embassying), which was joyfully
+ accepted. Joyfully accepted;&mdash;and it turned out well for all parties;
+ the young gentleman having risen, where merit was the rule of rising, and
+ become Graf and Lieutenant-General, in the course of the next fifty years.
+ [Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i> p. 387.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Huldigung and Torch-Procession over, the Royal Party dashed rapidly off,
+ next morning (21st July), homewards by the shortest route; and, in three
+ days more, by Frankfurt-on-Oder (where a glimpse of General Schwerin, a
+ favorite General, was to be had), were safe in Berlin; received with
+ acclamation, nay with "blessings and even tears" some say, after this
+ pleasant Fortnight's Tour. General Schwerin, it is rumored, will be made
+ Feldmarschall straightway, the Munchows are getting so promoted as we
+ said; edicts are coming out, much business speeding forward, and the
+ tongues of men keep wagging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Berlin HULDIGUNG&mdash;and indeed, by Deputy, that of nearly all the other
+ Towns&mdash;was on Tuesday, August 2d. At Berlin his Majesty was present
+ in the matter: but, except the gazing multitudes, and hussar regiments,
+ ranked in the Schloss-Platz and streets adjoining, there was little of
+ notable in it; the upholstery arrangements thrifty in the extreme. His
+ Majesty is prone to thrift in this of the Huldigung, as would appear;
+ perhaps regarding the affair as scenic merely. Here, besides this of
+ Berlin, is another instance just occurring. It appears, the Quedlinburg
+ people, shut out from the light of the actual Royal Countenance, cannot do
+ their Homaging by Deputy, without at least a Portrait of the King and of
+ the Queen: How manage? asks the Official Person. "Have a Couple of Daubs
+ done in Berlin, three guineas apiece; send them these," answers the King!
+ [<i>"On doit faire barbouiller de mauvaises copies a Berlin, la piece a 20
+ ecus.</i>&mdash;FR." Preuss, ii. (<i>Urkundenbuch,</i> s. 222).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here in the Berlin Schloss, scene the Large Hall within doors, there is a
+ "platform raised three steps; and on this, by way of a kind of throne, an
+ arm-chair covered with old black velvet;" the whole surmounted by a canopy
+ also of old black velvet: not a sublime piece of upholstery; but reckoned
+ adequate. Friedrich mounted the three steps; stood before the old chair,
+ his Princes standing promiscuously behind it; his Ritters in quantity, in
+ front and to right and left, on the floor. Some Minister of the Interior
+ explains suitably, not at too great length, what they are met for; some
+ junior Official, junior but of quality, responded briefly, for himself and
+ his order, to the effect, "Yea, truly:" the HULDIGUNGENS-URKUNDE (Deed of
+ Homage) was then read by the proper Clerk, and the Ritters all swore;
+ audibly, with lifted hands. This is the Ritter Huldigung.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Majesty then steps out to the Balcony, for Oath and Homage of the
+ general Population. General population gave its oath, and "three great
+ shouts over and above." "ES LEBE DER KONIG!" thrice, with all their
+ throats. Upon which a shower of Medals, "Homage-Medals," gold and silver
+ (quantity not mentioned) rained down upon them, in due succession; and
+ were scrambled for, in the usual way. "His Majesty," they write, and this
+ is perhaps the one point worth notice, "his Majesty, contrary to custom
+ and to etiquette, remained on the Balcony, some time after the ceremony,
+ perhaps a full half-hour;"&mdash;silent there, "with his look fixed
+ attentively on the immeasurable multitude before the Schloss; and seemed
+ sunk in deep reflection (BETRACHTUNG):"&mdash;an almost awfully eloquent
+ though inarticulate phenomenon to his Majesty, that of those multitudes
+ scrambling and huzzaing there! [Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i> p. 389.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These, with the Cleve one, are all the Hornagings Friedrich was personally
+ present at; the others he did by Deputy, all in one day (2d August); and
+ without fuss. Scenic matters these; in which, except where he can, as in
+ the Konigsberg case, combine inspections and grave businesses with them,
+ he takes no interest. However, he is now, for the sake chiefly of
+ inspections and other real objects, bent on a Journey to Cleve;&mdash;the
+ fellow of that to Konigsberg: Konigsberg, Preussen, the easternmost
+ outlying wing of his long straggling Dominions; and then Cleve-Julich, its
+ counterpart on the southwestern side,&mdash;there also, with such
+ contingencies hanging over Cleve-Julich, it were proper to make some
+ mustering of the Frontier garrisons and affairs. [In regard to the Day of
+ HULDIGUNG at Cleve, which happily is not of the least moment to us, Preuss
+ (<i>Thronbesteigung,</i> p, 390) and <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> (i. 423)
+ seem to be in flat contradiction.] His Majesty so purposes: and we purpose
+ again to accompany,&mdash;not for inspection and mustering, but for an
+ unexpected reason. The grave Journey to Cleve has an appendage, or comic
+ side-piece, hanging to it; more than one appendage; which the reader must
+ not miss!&mdash;Before setting out, read these two Fractions, snatched
+ from the Diplomatist Wastebag; looking well, we gain there some momentary
+ view of Friedrich on the business side. Of Friedrich, and also of Another:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sunday, 14th August, 1740, Dickens, who has been reporting hitherto in a
+ favorable, though in a languid exoteric manner, not being in any height of
+ favor, England or he,&mdash;had express Audience of his Majesty; being
+ summoned out to Potsdam for that end: "Sunday evening, about 7 P.M."&mdash;Majesty
+ intending to be off on the Cleve Journey to-morrow. Let us accompany
+ Dickens. Readers may remember, George II. has been at Hanover for some
+ weeks past; Bielfeld diligently grinning euphemisms and courtly
+ graciosities to him; Truchsess hinting, on opportunity, that there are
+ perhaps weighty businesses in the rear; which, however, on the Britannic
+ side, seem loath to start. Britannic Majesty is much at a loss about his
+ Spanish War, so dangerous for kindling France and the whole world upon
+ him. In regard to which Prussia might be so important, for or against.&mdash;This,
+ in compressed form, is what Dickens witnesses at Potsdam that Sunday
+ evening from 7 P.M.:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Audience lasted above an hour: King turned directly upon business; wishes
+ to have 'Categorical Answers' as to Three Points already submitted to his
+ Britannic Majesty's consideration. Clear footing indispensable between us.
+ What you want of me? say it, and be plain. What I want of you is, These
+ three things:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "1. Guarantee for Julich and Berg. All the world knows WHOSE these Duchies
+ are. Will his Britannic Majesty guarantee me there? And if so, How, and to
+ what lengths, will he proceed about it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "2. Settlement about Ost-Friesland. Expectancy of Ost-Friesland soon to
+ fall heirless, which was granted me long since, though Hanover makes
+ hagglings, counter-claimings: I must have some Settlement about that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "3. The like about those perplexities in Mecklenburg. No difficulty there
+ if we try heartily, nor is there such pressing haste about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These are my three claims on England; and I will try to serve England as
+ far in return, if it will tell me how. 'Ah, beware of throwing yourself
+ into the arms of France!' modestly suggests Dickens.&mdash;'Well, if
+ France will guarantee me those Duchies, and you will not do anything?'
+ answers his Majesty with a fine laugh: 'England I consider my most natural
+ friend and ally; but I must know what there is to depend on there. Princes
+ are ruled by their interest; cannot follow their feelings. Let me have an
+ explicit answer; say, at Wesel, where I am to be on the 24th,'" ten days
+ hence. Britannic Majesty is at Hanover, and can answer within that time.
+ "This he twice told me, 'Wesel, 24th,' in the course of our interview.
+ Permit me to recommend the matter to your Lordship,"&mdash;my Lord
+ Harrington, now attending the Britannic Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During the whole audience," adds Dickens, "the King was in extreme good
+ humor; and not only heard with attention all the considerations I offered,
+ but was not the least offended at any objections I made to what he said.
+ It is undoubtedly the best way to behave with frankness to him." These
+ last are Dickens's own words; let them modestly be a memorandum to your
+ Lordship. This King goes himself direct to the point; and
+ straightforwardness, as a primary condition, will profit your Lordship
+ with him. [Dickens (in State-Paper Office, 17th August, 1740).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most true advice, this;&mdash;and would perhaps be followed, were it quite
+ easy! But things are very complicated. And the Britannic Majesty, much
+ plagued with Spanish War and Parliamentary noises in that unquiet Island,
+ is doubtless glad to get away to Hanover for a little; and would fain be
+ on holiday in these fine rural months. Which is not well possible either.
+ Jenkins's Ear, rising at last like a fiery portent, has kindled the London
+ Fog over yonder, in a strange way, and the murky stagnancy is all getting
+ on fire; the English intent, as seldom any Nation was, to give the
+ Spaniards an effectual beating. Which they hope they can,&mdash;though
+ unexpected difficulties will occur. And, in the mean while, what a riddle
+ of potentialities for his poor Majesty to read, and pick his way from!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bielfeld, in spite of all this, would fain be full of admiration for the
+ Britannic Majesty. Confesses he is below the middle size, in fact a tiny
+ little creature, but then his shape is perfect; leg much to be commended,&mdash;which
+ his Majesty knows, standing always with one leg slightly advanced, and the
+ Order of the Garter on it, that mankind may take notice. Here is
+ Bielfeld's description faithfully abridged:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Big blue eyes, perhaps rather of parboiled character, though proud
+ enough; eyes flush with his face or more, rather IN RELIEF than on a level
+ with it,"&mdash;A FLEUR DE TETE, after the manner of a fish, if one might
+ say so, and betokening such an intellect behind them! "Attitude
+ constrained, leg advanced in that way; his courtiers call it majestic.
+ Biggish mouth, strictly shut in the crescent or horse-shoe form (FERMEE EN
+ CROISSANT); curly wig (A NOEUDS, reminding you of lamb's-wool, color not
+ known); eyebrows, however, you can see are ashy-blond; general tint is
+ fundamentally livid; but when in good case, the royal skin will take
+ tolerably bright colors (PREND D'ASSEZ BELLES COULEURS). As to the royal
+ mind and understanding, what shall Bielfeld say? That his Majesty
+ sometimes makes ingenious and just remarks, and is laudably serious at all
+ times, and can majestically hold his tongue, and stand with advanced leg,
+ and eyes rather more than flush. Sense of his dignity is high, as it ought
+ to be; on great occasions you see pride and a kind of joy mantling in the
+ royal countenance. Has been known to make explosions, and to be very
+ furious to Prince Fred and others, when pricked into:&mdash;but, my
+ friend, what mortal is exempt from failings? Majesty reads the English
+ Newspapers every morning in bed, which are often biting. Majesty has his
+ Walmoden, a Hanoverian Improper Female, Countess of Yarmouth so called;
+ quiet, autumnal, fair complexioned, stupid; who is much a comfort to him.
+ She keeps out of mischief, political or other; and gives Bielfeld a
+ gracious nod now and then." [Bielfeld, i. 158.] Harrington is here too;&mdash;and
+ Britannic Majesty and he are busy governing the English Nation on these
+ terms.&mdash;We return now to the Prussian Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About six weeks after that of Dickens,&mdash;Cleve Journey and much else
+ now ended,&mdash;Praetorius the Danish Envoy, whom we slightly knew at
+ Reinsberg once, gives this testimony; writing home to an Excellency at
+ Copenhagen, whose name we need not inquire into:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To give your Excellency a just idea of the new Government here, I must
+ observe that hitherto the King of Prussia does as it were everything
+ himself; and that, excepting the Finance Minister von Boden, who preaches
+ frugality, and finds for that doctrine uncommon acceptance, almost greater
+ even than in the former reign, his Majesty allows no counselling from any
+ Minister; so that Herr von Podewils, who is now the working hand in the
+ department of Foreign Affairs, has nothing given him to do but to expedite
+ the orders he receives from the Cabinet, his advice not being asked upon
+ any matter; and so it is with the other Ministers. People thought the loss
+ of Herr von Thulmeyer," veteran Foreign Minister whom we have transiently
+ heard of in the Double-Marriage time, and perhaps have even seen at London
+ or elsewhere, [Died 4th August (Rodenbeck, p. 20).] "would be irreparable;
+ so expert was he, and a living archive in that business: however, his post
+ seems to have vanished with himself. His salary is divided between Herr
+ von Podewils," whom the reader will sometimes hear of again, "Kriegsrath
+ (Councillor of War) von Ilgen," son of the old gentleman we used to know,
+ "and Hofrath Sellentin who is RENDANT OF THE LEGATIONS-KASSE"
+ (Ambassadors' Paymaster, we could guess, Ambassador Body having specialty
+ of cash assigned it, comparable with the specialty of value received from
+ it, in this strict frugal Country),&mdash;neither of which two latter
+ names shall the reader be troubled with farther. "A good many resolutions,
+ and responses by the King, I have seen: they combine laconic expression
+ with an admirable business eye (GESCHAFTSBLICK). Unhappily,"&mdash;at
+ least for us in the Diplomatic line, for your Excellency and me unhappily,&mdash;"there
+ is nobody about the King who possesses his complete confidence, or whom we
+ can make use of in regard to the necessary introductions and preliminary
+ movements. Hereby it comes that,&mdash;as certain things can only be
+ handled with cautious foresight and circumlocution, and in the way of
+ beginning wide,&mdash;an Ambassador here is more thrown out of his course
+ than in any other Court; and knows not, though his object were steadily in
+ sight, what road to strike into for getting towards it." [Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i>
+ p. 377 (2d October, 1740).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter III. &mdash; FRIEDRICH MAKES AN EXCURSION, NOT OF DIRECT SORT INTO
+ THE CLEVE COUNTRIES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ King Friedrich did not quite keep his day at Wesel; indeed this 24th was
+ not the first day, but the last of several, he had appointed to himself
+ for finis to that Journey in the Cleve Countries; Journey rather complex
+ to arrange. He has several businesses ahead in those parts; and, as usual,
+ will group them with good judgment, and thrift of time. Not inspections
+ merely, but amusements, meetings with friends, especially French friends:
+ the question is, how to group them with skill, so that the necessary
+ elements may converge at the right moment, and one shot kill three or four
+ birds. This is Friedrich's fine way, perceptible in all these Journeys.
+ The French friends, flying each on his own track, with his own load of
+ impediments, Voltaire with his Madame for instance, are a difficult
+ element in such problem; and there has been, and is, much scheming and
+ corresponding about it, within the last month especially.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Voltaire is now at Brussels, with his Du Chatelet, prosecuting that
+ endless "lawsuit with the House of Honsbruck,"&mdash;which he, and we, are
+ both desirous to have done with. He is at the Hague, too, now and then;
+ printing, about to print, the ANTI-MACHIAVEL; corresponding, to right and
+ left, quarrelling with Van Duren the Printer; lives, while there, in the
+ VIEILLE COUR, in the vast dusky rooms with faded gilding, and grand old
+ Bookshelves "with the biggest spider-webs in Europe." Brussels is his
+ place for Law-Consultations, general family residence; the Hague and that
+ old spider-web Palace for correcting Proof-sheets; doing one's own private
+ studies, which we never quite neglect. Fain would Friedrich see him, fain
+ he Friedrich; but there is a divine Emilie, there is a Maupertuis, there
+ are&mdash;In short, never were such difficulties, in the cooking of an egg
+ with water boiling; and much vain correspondence has already been on that
+ subject, as on others equally extinct. Correspondence which is not
+ pleasant reading at this time; the rather as no reader can, without
+ endless searching, even understand it. Correspondence left to us, not in
+ the cosmic, elucidated or legible state; left mainly as the Editorial
+ rubbish-wagons chose to shoot it; like a tumbled quarry, like the ruins of
+ a sacked city;&mdash;avoidable by readers who are not forced into it!
+ [Herr Preuss's edition (<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> vols. xxi. xxii.
+ xxiii.) has come out since the above was written: it is agreeably
+ exceptional; being, for the first time, correctly printed, and the editor
+ himself having mostly understood it,&mdash;though the reader still cannot,
+ on the terms there allowed.] Take the following select bricks as sample,
+ which are of some use; the general Heading is,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KING FRIEDERIC TO M. DE VOLTAIRE (at the Hague, or at Brussels).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "CHARLOTTENBURG, 12th JUNE, 1740.&mdash;... My dear Voltaire, resist no
+ longer the eagerness I have to see you. Do in my favor whatever your
+ humanity allows. In the end of August, I go to Wesel, and perhaps farther.
+ Promise that you will come and join me; for I could not live happy, nor
+ die tranquil, without having embraced you! Thousand compliments to the
+ Marquise," divine Emilie. "I am busy with both hands [Corn-Magazines, Free
+ Press, Abolition of Torture, and much else]; working at the Army with the
+ one hand, at the People and the Fine Arts with the other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "BERLIN, 5th AUGUST, 1740.&mdash;... I will write to Madame du Chatelet,
+ in compliance with your wish:" mark it, reader. "To speak to you frankly
+ concerning her journey, it is Voltaire, it is you, it is my Friend that I
+ desire to see; and the divine Emilie with all her divinity is only the
+ Accessory of the Apollo Newtonized.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot yet say whether I shall travel [incognito into foreign parts a
+ little] or not travel;" there have been rumors, perhaps private wishes;
+ but&mdash;... "Adieu, dear friend; sublime spirit, first-born of thinking
+ beings. Love me always sincerely, and be persuaded that none can love and
+ esteem you more than I. VALE. FEDERIC."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "BERLIN, 6th AUGUST [which is next day].&mdash;You will have received a
+ Letter from me dated yesterday; this is the second I write to you from
+ Berlin; I refer you to what was in the other. If it must be (FAUT) that
+ Emilie accompany Apollo, I consent; but if I could see you alone, that is
+ what I would prefer. I should be too much dazzled; I could not stand so
+ much splendor all at once; it would overpower me. I should need the veil
+ of Moses to temper the united radiance of your two divinities."... In
+ short, don't bring her, if you please.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "REMUSBERG [poetic for REINSBERG], 8th AUGUST, 1740.&mdash;... My dear
+ Voltaire, I do believe Van Duren costs you more trouble and pains than you
+ had with HENRI QUATRE. In versifying the Life of a Hero, you wrote the
+ history of your own thoughts; but in coercing a scoundrel you fence with
+ an enemy who is not worthy of you." To punish him, and cut short his
+ profits, "PRINT, then, as you wish [your own edition of the
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL, to go along with his, and trip the feet from it]. FAITES
+ ROULER LA PRESSE; erase, change, correct; do as you see best; your
+ judgment about it shall be mine."&mdash;"In eight days I leave for [where
+ thinks the reader? "DANTZIG" deliberately print all the Editors, careful
+ Preuss among them; overturning the terrestrial azimuths for us, and making
+ day night!]&mdash;for Leipzig, and reckon on being at Frankfurt on the
+ 22d. In case you could be there, I expect, on my passage, to give you
+ lodging! At Cleve or in Holland, I depend for certain on embracing you."
+ [Preuss, <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xx. pp. 5, 19-21; Voltaire, <i>OEuvres,</i>
+ lxxii. 226, &amp;c. (not worth citing, in comparison).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intrinsically the Friedrich correspondence at this time, with Voltaire
+ especially, among many friends now on the wing towards Berlin and sending
+ letters, has,&mdash;if you are forced into struggling for some
+ understanding of it, and do get to read parts of it with the eyes of
+ Friedrich and Voltaire,&mdash;has a certain amiability; and is nothing
+ like so waste and dreary as it looks in the chaotic or sacked-city
+ condition. Friedrich writes with brevity, oftenest on practicalities (the
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL, the coming Interview, and the like), evidently no time to
+ spare; writes always with considerable sincerity; with friendliness, much
+ admiration, and an ingenuous vivacity, to M. de Voltaire. Voltaire, at his
+ leisure in Brussels or the Old Palace and its spider-webs, writes much
+ more expansively; not with insincerity, he either;&mdash;with endless airy
+ graciosities, and ingenious twirls, and touches of flattering unction,
+ which latter, he is aware, must not be laid on too thick. As thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the ANTI-MACHIAVEL,&mdash;Sire, deign to give me your
+ permissions as to the scoundrel of a Van Duren; well worth while, Sire,&mdash;"IT
+ is a monument for the latest posterity; the only Book worthy of a King for
+ these fifteen hundred years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a strongish trowelful, thrown on direct, with adroitness; and even
+ this has a kind of sincerity. Safer, however, to do it in the oblique or
+ reflex way,&mdash;by Ambassador Cumas, for example:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will tell you boldly, Sir [you M. de Camas], I put more value on this
+ Book (ANTI-MACHIAVEL) than on the Emperor Julian's CAESAR, or on the
+ MAXIMS of Marcus Aurelius,"&mdash;I do indeed, having a kind of property
+ in it withal! [Voltaire, <i>OEuvres,</i> lxxii. 280 (to Camas, 18th
+ October, 1740).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, Voltaire too is beautiful, in this part of the Correspondence;
+ but much in a twitter,&mdash;the Queen of Sheba, not the sedate Solomon,
+ in prospect of what is coming. He plumes himself a little, we perceive, to
+ his d'Argentals and French Correspondents, on this sublime intercourse he
+ has got into with a Crowned Head, the cynosure of mankind:&mdash;-Perhaps
+ even you, my best friend, did not quite know me, and what merits I had!
+ Plumes himself a little; but studies to be modest withal; has not much of
+ the peacock, and of the turkey has nothing, to his old friends. All which
+ is very naive and transparent; natural and even pretty, on the part of M.
+ de Voltaire as the weaker vessel.&mdash;For the rest, it is certain
+ Maupertuis is getting under way at Paris towards the Cleve rendezvous.
+ Brussels, too, is so near these Cleve Countries; within two days' good
+ driving:&mdash;if only the times and routes would rightly intersect?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's intention is by no means for a straight journey towards Cleve:
+ he intends for Baireuth first, then back from Baireuth to Cleve,&mdash;making
+ a huge southward elbow on the map, with Baireuth for apex or
+ turning-point:&mdash;in this manner he will make the times suit, and have
+ a convergence at Cleve. To Baireuth;&mdash;who knows if not farther? All
+ summer there has gone fitfully a rumor, that he wished to see France;
+ perhaps Paris itself incognito? The rumor, which was heard even at
+ Petersburg, [Raumer's <i>Beitrage</i> (English Translation, London, 1837),
+ p. 15 (Finch's Despatch, 24th June, 1740).] is now sunk dead again; but
+ privately, there is no doubt, a glimpse of the sublime French Nation would
+ be welcome to Friedrich. He could never get to Travelling in his young
+ time; missed his Grand Tour altogether, much as he wished it; and he is
+ capable of pranks!&mdash;Enough, on Monday morning, 15th August, 1740,
+ [Rodenbeck, p. 15, slightly in error: see Dickens's Interview, supra, p.
+ 187.] Friedrich and Suite leave Potsdam; early enough; go, by Leipzig, by
+ the route already known to readers, through Coburg and the Voigtland
+ regions; Wilhelmina has got warning, sits eagerly expecting her Brother in
+ the Hermitage at Baireuth, gladdest of shrill sisters; and full of
+ anxieties how her Brother would now be. The travelling party consisted,
+ besides the King, of seven persons: Prince August Wilhelm, King's next
+ Brother, Heir-apparent if there come no children, now a brisk youth of
+ eighteen; Leopold Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, Old Dessauer's eldest, what we
+ may call the "Young Dessauer;" Colonel von Borck, whom we shall hear of
+ again; Colonel von Stille, already heard of (grave men of fifty, these
+ two); milk-beard Munchow, an Adjutant, youngest of the promoted Munchows;
+ Algarotti, indispensable for talk; and Fredersdorf, the House-Steward and
+ domestic Factotum, once Private in Schwerin's Regiment, whom Bielfeld so
+ admired at Reinsberg, foreseeing what he would come to. One of Friedrich's
+ late acts was to give Factotum Fredersdorf an Estate of Land (small
+ enough, I fancy, but with country-house on it) for solace to the leisure
+ of so useful a man,&mdash;studious of chemistry too, as I have heard.
+ Seven in all, besides the King. [Rodenbeck, p. 19 (and for Chamberlain
+ Fredersdorf's estate, p. 15).] Direct towards Baireuth, incognito, and at
+ the top of their speed. Wednesday, 17th, they actually arrive. Poor
+ Wilhelmina, she finds her Brother changed; become a King in fact, and
+ sternly solitary; alone in soul, even as a King must be! [Wilhelmina, ii.
+ 322, 323.]&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Algarotti, one of the first BEAUX-ESPRITS of this age," as Wilhelmina
+ defines him,&mdash;Friend Algarotti, the young Venetian gentleman of
+ elegance, in dusky skin, in very white linen and frills, with his fervid
+ black eyes, "does the expenses of the conversation." He is full of elegant
+ logic, has speculations on the great world and the little, on Nature, Art,
+ Papistry, Anti-Papistry, and takes up the Opera in an earnest manner, as
+ capable of being a school of virtue and the moral sublime. His respectable
+ Books on the Opera and other topics are now all forgotten, and crave not
+ to be mentioned. To me he is not supremely beautiful, though much the
+ gentleman in manners as in ruffles, and ingeniously logical:&mdash;rather
+ yellow to me, in mind as in skin, and with a taint of obsolete Venetian
+ Macassar. But to Friedrich he is thrice-dear; who loves the Sharp faceted
+ cut of the man, and does not object to his yellow or Extinct-Macassar
+ qualities of mind. Thanks to that wandering Baltimore for picking up such
+ a jewel and carrying him Northward! Algarotti himself likes the North:
+ here in our hardy climates,&mdash;especially at Berlin, and were his loved
+ Friedrich NOT a King,&mdash;Algarotti could be very happy in the liberty
+ allowed. At London, where there is no King, or none to speak of, and
+ plenty of free Intelligences, Carterets, Lytteltons, young Pitts and the
+ like, he is also well, were it not for the horrid smoke upon one's linen,
+ and the little or no French of those proud Islanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilhelmina seems to like him here; is glad, at any rate, that he does the
+ costs of conversation, better or worse. In the rest is no hope. Stille,
+ Borck are accomplished military gentlemen; but of tacit nature,
+ reflective, practical, rather than discursive, and do not waste themselves
+ by incontinence of tongue. Stille, by his military Commentaries, which are
+ still known to soldiers that read, maintains some lasting remembrance of
+ himself: Borck we shall see engaged in a small bit of business before
+ long. As to Munchow, the JEUNE MORVEUX of an Adjutant, he, though his
+ manners are well enough, and he wears military plumes in his hat, is still
+ an unfledged young creature, "bill still yellow," so to speak;&mdash;and
+ marks himself chiefly by a visible hankering after that troublesome
+ creature Marwitz, who is always coquetting. Friedrich's conversation,
+ especially to me Wilhelmina, seems "GUINDE, set on stilts," likewise there
+ are frequent cuts of banter in him; and it is painfully evident he
+ distinguishes my Sister of Anspach and her foolish Husband, whom he has
+ invited over hither in a most eager manner, beyond what a poor Wilhelmina
+ with her old love can pretend to. Patience, my shrill Princess, Beauty of
+ Baireuth and the world; let us hope all will come right again! My shrill
+ Princess&mdash;who has a melodious strength like that of war-fifes, too&mdash;knows
+ how to be patient; and veils many things, though of a highly
+ unhypocritical nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were Three great Days at Baireuth; Wilhelmina is to come soon, and
+ return the visit at Berlin. To wait upon the King, known though incognito,
+ "the Bishop of Bamberg" came driving over: [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> i.
+ 419.] Schonborn, Austrian Kanzler, or who? His old City we once saw (and
+ plenty of hanged malefactors swinging round it, during that JOURNEY TO THE
+ REICH);&mdash;but the Bishop himself never to our knowledge, Bishop being
+ absent then, I hope it is the same Bishop of Bamberg, whom a Friend of
+ Busching's, touring there about that same time, saw dining in a very
+ extraordinary manner, with medieval trumpeters, "with waiters in spurs and
+ buff-belts;" [Busching's <i>Beitrage;</i>&mdash;Schlosser (<i>History of
+ the Eighteenth Century</i>) also quotes the scene.] if it is not, I have
+ not the slightest shadow of acquaintance with him,&mdash;there have been
+ so many Bishops of Bamberg with whom one wishes to have none! On the third
+ day Friedrich and his company went away, towards Wurzburg; and Wilhelmina
+ was left alone with her reflections. "I had had so much to say to him; I
+ had got nothing said at all:" alas, it is ever so. "The King was so
+ changed, grown so much bigger (GRANDI), you could not have known him
+ again;" stands finely erect and at full breadth, every inch a King; his
+ very stature, you would say, increased.&mdash;Adieu, my Princess, pearl of
+ Princesses; all readers will expect your return-visit at Berlin, which is
+ to be soon.
+ </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>
+ FRIEDRICH STRIKES OFF TO THE LEFT, AND HAS A VIEW OF STRASBURG FOR TWO
+ DAYS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Through Wurzburg, Frankfurt-on-Mayn, speeds Friedrich;&mdash;Wilhelmina
+ and mankind understand that it is homewards and to Cleve; but at
+ Frankfurt, in deepest privacy, there occurs a sudden whirl southward,&mdash;up
+ the Rhine-Valley; direct towards Strasburg, for a sight of France in that
+ quarter! So has Friedrich decided,&mdash;not quite suddenly, on new
+ Letters here, or new computations about Cleve; but by forethought taken at
+ Baireuth, as rather appears. From Frankfurt to Strasburg, say 150 miles;
+ from Strasburg home, is not much farther than from Frankfurt home: it can
+ be done, then; husht!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The incognito is to be rigorous: Friedrich becomes COMTE DUFOUR, a
+ Prussian-French gentleman; Prince August Wilhelm is Graf von Schaffgotsch,
+ Algarotti is Graf von Pfuhl, Germans these two; what Leopold, the Young
+ Dessauer, called himself,&mdash;still less what the others, or whether the
+ others were there at all, and not shoved on, direct towards Wesel, out of
+ the way as is likelier,&mdash;can remain uncertain to readers and me. From
+ Frankfurt, then, on Monday morning, 22d August, 1740, as I compute,
+ through old known Philipsburg Campaign country, and the lines of Ettlingen
+ and Stollhofen; there the Royal Party speeds eagerly (weather very bad, as
+ appears): and it is certain they are at Kehl on Tuesday evening; looking
+ across the long Rhine Bridge, Strasburg and its steeples now close at
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This looks to be a romantic fine passage in the History of the young King;&mdash;though
+ in truth it is not, and proves but a feeble story either to him or us.
+ Concerning which, however, the reader, especially if he should hear that
+ there exists precise Account of it, Two Accounts indeed, one from the
+ King's own hand, will not fail of a certain craving to become acquainted
+ with details. This craving, foolish rather than wise, we consider it
+ thriftiest to satisfy at once; and shall give the King's NARRATIVE entire,
+ though it is a jingling lean scraggy Piece, partly rhyme, "in the manner
+ of Bachaumont and La Chapelle;" written at the gallop, a few days hence,
+ and despatched to Voltaire:&mdash;"You," dear Voltaire, "wish to know what
+ I have been about, since leaving Berlin; annexed you will find a
+ description of it," writes Friedrich. [<i>OEuvres,</i> xxii. 25 (Wesel, 2d
+ Septemher, 1740).] Out of Voltaire's and other people's waste-baskets, it
+ has at length been fished up, patch by patch, and pasted together by
+ victorious modern Editors; and here it is again entire. The other
+ Narrative, which got into the Newspapers soon after, is likewise of
+ authentic nature,&mdash;Fassmann, our poor old friend, confirming it, if
+ that were needful,&mdash;and is happily in prose. [Given in <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ i. 420-423;&mdash;see likewise Fassmann's <i>Merkwurdigster
+ Regierungs-Antritt</i> (poor old Book on FRIEDRICH'S ACCESSION); Preuss (<i>Thronbesteigung,</i>
+ pp. 395-400); &amp;c. &amp;c.] Holding these two Pieces well together, and
+ giving the King's faithfully translated, in a complete state, it will be
+ possible to satisfy foolish cravings, and make this Strasburg Adventure
+ luminous enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KING FRIEDRICH TO VOLTAIRE (from Wesel, 2d September, 1740), CHIEFLY IN
+ DOGGEREL, CONCERNING THE RUN TO STRASBURG.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Part of it, incorrect, in Voltaire, <i>OEuvres</i> (scandalous Piece now
+ called <i>Memoires,</i> once <i>Vie Privee du Roi de Prusse</i>), ii.
+ 24-26; finally, in Preuss, <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xiv. 156-161, the
+ real and complete affair, as fished up by victorious Preuss and others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have just finished a Journey, intermingled with singular adventures,
+ sometimes pleasant, sometimes the reverse. You know I had set out for
+ Baireuth,"&mdash;BRUXELLES the beautiful French Editor wrote, which makes
+ Egyptian darkness of the Piece!&mdash;"to see a Sister whom I love no less
+ than esteem. On the road [thither or thence; or likeliest, THERE],
+ Algarotti and I consulted the map, to settle our route for returning by
+ Wesel. Frankfurt-on-Mayn comes always as a principal stage;&mdash;Strasburg
+ was no great roundabout: we chose that route in preference. The INCOGNITO
+ was decided, names pitched upon [Comte Dufour, and the others]; story we
+ were to tell: in fine, all was arranged and concerted to a nicety as well
+ as possible. We fancied we should get to Strasburg in three days [from
+ Baireuth].
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But Heaven, which disposes of all things,
+ Differently regulated this thing.
+ With lank-sided coursers,
+ Lineal descendants from Rosinante,
+ With ploughmen in the dress of postilions,
+ Blockheads of impertinent nature;
+ Our carriages sticking fast a hundred times in the road,
+ We went along with gravity at a leisurely pace,
+ Knocking against the crags.
+ The atmosphere in uproar with loud thunder,
+ The rain-torrents streaming over the Earth
+ Threatened mankind with the Day of Judgment [VERY BAD WEATHER],
+ And in spite of our impatience,
+ Four good days are, in penance,
+ Lost forever in these jumblings.
+
+ Mais le ciel, qui de tout dispose,
+ Regla differemment la chose.
+ Avec de coursiers efflanques,
+ En ligne droites issus de Rosinante,
+ Et des paysans en postillons masques,
+ Dutors de race impertinente,
+ Notre carrosse en cent lieux accroche,
+ Nous allions gravement, d'une allure indolente,
+ Gravitant contre les rochers.
+ Les airs emus par le bruyant tonnerre,
+ Les torrents d'eau repandus sur la terre,
+ Du dernier jour menacaient les humains;
+ Et malgre notre impatience,
+ Quatre bons jours en penitence
+ Sont pour jamais perdus dans les charrains.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Had all our fatalities been limited to stoppages of speed on the journey,
+ we should have taken patience; but, after frightful roads, we found
+ lodgings still frightfuler.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ For greedy landlords
+ Seeing us pressed by hunger
+ Did, in a more than frugal manner,
+ In their infernal hovels,
+ Poisoning instead of feeding,
+ Steal from us our crowns.
+ O age different [in good cheer] from that of Lucullus!
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Car des hotes interesses,
+ De la faim nous voyant presses,
+ D'une facon plus que frugale,
+ Dans une chaumiere infernale,
+ En nous empoisonnant,
+ Nous volaient nos ecus.
+ O siecle different des temps de Lucullus!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Frightful roads; short of victual, short of drink: nor was that all. We
+ had to undergo a variety of accidents; and certainly our equipage must
+ have had a singular air, for in every new place we came to, they took us
+ for something different.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Some took us for Kings,
+ Some for pickpockets well disguised;
+ Others for old acquaintances.
+ At times the people crowded out,
+ Looked us in the eyes,
+ Like clowns impertinently curious.
+ Our lively Italian [Algarotti] swore;
+ For myself I took patience;
+ The young Count [my gay younger Brother, eighteen at present]
+ quizzed and frolicked;
+ The big Count [Heir-apparent of Dessau] silently swung his head,
+ Wishing this fine Journey to France,
+ In the bottom of his heart, most christianly at the Devil.
+
+ Les uns nous prenaient pour des rois,
+ D'autres pour des filous courtois,
+ D'autrespour gens de connaissance;
+ Parfois le peuple s'attroupait,
+ Entre les yeux nous regardait
+ En badauds curieux, remplis d'impertinence.
+ Notre vif Italien jurait,
+ Pour moi je prenais patience,
+ Le jeune Comte folatrait,
+ Le grand Comte se dandinait,
+ Et ce beau vogage de France
+ Dans le fond de son coeur chretiennement damnait.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "We failed not, however, to struggle gradually along; at last we arrived
+ in that Stronghold, where [as preface to the War of 1734, known to some of
+ us]&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Where the garrison, too supple,
+ Surrendered so piteously
+ After the first blurt of explosion
+ From the cannon of the French.
+
+ Ou a garrison, troupe flasque,
+ Se rendit si piteusement
+ Apres la premiere bourasque
+ Du canon francais foudroyant.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ You recognize Kehl in this description. It was in that fine Fortress,&mdash;where,
+ by the way, the breaches are still lying unrepaired [Reich being a slow
+ corpus in regard to such things],&mdash;that the Postmaster, a man of more
+ foresight than we, asked If we had got passports?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ No, said I to him; of passports
+ We never had the whim.
+ Strong ones I believe it would need
+ To recall, to our side of the limit,
+ Subjects of Pluto King of the Dead:
+ But, from the Germanic Empire
+ Into the gallant and cynical abode
+ Of Messieurs your pretty Frenchmen,&mdash;A jolly and beaming air,
+ Rubicund faces, not ignorant of wine,
+ These are the passports which, legible if you look on us,
+ Our troop produces to you for that end.
+
+ Non, lui dis-je, des passe-ports
+ Nous n'eumes jamais la folie.
+ Il en faudrait, je crois, de forts
+ Pour ressusciter a la vie
+ De chez Pluton le roi des morts;
+ Mais de l'empire germanique
+ Au sejour galant et cynique
+ De Messieurs vos jolis Francais,
+ Un air rebondissant et frais,
+ Une face rouge et bachique,
+ Sont les passe-ports qu'en nos traits
+ Vous produit ici notre clique.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "No, Messieurs, said the provident Master of Passports; no salvation
+ without passport. Seeing then that Necessity had got us in the dilemma of
+ either manufacturing passports ourselves or not entering Strasburg, we
+ took the former branch of the alternative and manufactured one;&mdash;in
+ which feat, the Prussian arms, which I had on my seal, were marvellously
+ furthersome."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a fact, as the old Newspapers and confirmatory Fassmann more
+ directly apprise us. "The Landlord [or Postmaster] at Kehl, having
+ signified that there was no crossing without Passport," Friedrich, at
+ first, somewhat taken aback, bethought him of his watch-seal with the
+ Royal Arms on it; and soon manufactured the necessary Passport, signeted
+ in due form;&mdash;which, however, gave a suspicion to the Innkeeper as to
+ the quality of his Guest. After which, Tuesday evening, 23d August, "they
+ at once got across to Strasburg," says my Newspaper Friend, "and put up at
+ the SIGN OF THE RAVEN, there." Or in Friedrich's own jingle:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We arrived at Strasburg; and the Custom-house corsair, with his
+ inspectors, seemed content with our evidences.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ These scoundrels spied us,
+ With one eye reading our passport,
+ With the other ogling our purse.
+ Gold, which was always a resource,
+ Which brought, Jove to the enjoyment
+ Of Danae whom he caressed;
+ Gold, by which Caesar governed
+ The world happy under his sway;
+ Gold, more a divinity than Mars or Love;
+ Wonder-working Gold introduced us
+ That evening, within the walls of Strasburg."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ [Given thus far, with several slight errors, in Voltaire, ii. 24-26;&mdash;the
+ remainder, long unknown, had to be fished up, patch by patch (Preuss, <i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> xiv. 159-161).]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ces scelerats nous epiaient,
+ D'un oeil le passe-port lisaient,
+ De l'autre lorgnaient notre bourse.
+ L'or, qui toujours fut de ressource,
+ Par lequel Jupin jouissait
+ De Danae, qu'il caressait;
+ L'or, par qui Cesar gouvernait
+ Le monde heureux sous son empire;
+ L'or, plus dieu que Mars et l'Amour,
+ Le soir, dans les murs de Strasbourg.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sad doggerel; permissible perhaps as a sample of the Friedrich
+ manufacture, surely not otherwise! There remains yet more than half of it;
+ readers see what their foolish craving has brought upon them! Doggerel out
+ of which no clear story, such story as there is, can be had; though,
+ except the exaggeration and contortion, there is nothing of fiction in it.
+ We fly to the Newspaper, happily at least a prose composition, which
+ begins at this point; and shall use the Doggerel henceforth as
+ illustration only or as repetition in the Friedrich-mirror, of a thing
+ OTHERWISE made clear to us:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having got into Strasburg and the RAVEN HOTEL; Friedrich now on French
+ ground at last, or at least on Half-French, German-French, is intent to
+ make the most of circumstances. The Landlord, with one of Friedrich's
+ servants, is straightway despatched into the proper coffee-houses to raise
+ a supper-party of Officers; politely asks any likely Officer, "If he will
+ not do a foreign Gentleman [seemingly of some distinction, signifies
+ Boniface] the honor to sup with him at the Raven?"&mdash;"No, by Jupiter!"
+ answer the most, in their various dialects: "who is he that we should sup
+ with him?" Three, struck by the singularity of the thing, undertake; and
+ with these we must be content. Friedrich&mdash;or call him M. le Comte
+ Dufour, with Pfuhl, Schaffgotsch and such escort as we see&mdash;politely
+ apologizes on the entrance of these officers: "Many pardons, gentlemen,
+ and many thanks. Knowing nobody; desirous of acquaintance:&mdash;since you
+ are so good, how happy, by a little informality, to have brought brave
+ Officers to keep me company, whom I value beyond other kinds of men!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Officers found their host a most engaging gentleman: his supper was
+ superb, plenty of wine, "and one red kind they had never tasted before,
+ and liked extremely;"&mdash;of which he sent some bottles to their lodging
+ next day. The conversation turned on military matters, and was enlivened
+ with the due sallies. This foreign Count speaks French wonderfully; a
+ brilliant man, whom the others rather fear: perhaps something more than a
+ Count? The Officers, loath to go, remembered that their two battalions had
+ to parade next morning, that it was time to be in bed: "I will go to your
+ review," said the Stranger Count: the delighted Officers undertake to come
+ and fetch him, they settle with him time and method; how happy!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morrow, accordingly, they call and fetch him; he looks at the
+ review; review done, they ask him to supper for this evening: "With
+ pleasure!" and "walks with them about the Esplanade, to see the guard
+ march by." Before parting, he takes their names, writes them in his
+ tablets; says, with a smile, "He is too much obliged ever to forget them."
+ This is Wednesday, the 24th of August, 1740; Field-Marshal Broglio is
+ Commandant in Strasburg, and these obliging Officers are "of the regiment
+ Piedmont,"&mdash;their names on the King's tablets I never heard mentioned
+ by anybody (or never till the King's Doggerel was fished up again).
+ Field-Marshal Broglio my readers have transiently seen, afar off;&mdash;"galloping
+ with only one boot," some say "almost in his shirt," at the Ford of
+ Secchia, in those Italian campaigns, five years ago, the Austrians having
+ stolen across upon him:&mdash;he had a furious gallop, with no end of
+ ridicule, on that occasion; is now Commandant here; and we shall have a
+ great deal more to do with him within the next year or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This same day, 24th, while I [the Newspaper volunteer Reporter or Own
+ Correspondent, seemingly a person of some standing, whose words carry
+ credibility in the tone of them] was with Field-Marshal Broglio our
+ Governor here, there came two gentlemen to be presented to him; 'German
+ Cavaliers' they were called; who, I now find, must have been the Prince of
+ Prussia and Algarotti. The Field-Marshal,"&mdash;a rather high-stalking
+ white-headed old military gentleman, bordering on seventy, of Piedmontese
+ air and breed, apt to be sudden and make flounderings, but the soul of
+ honor, "was very polite to the two Cavaliers, and kept them to dinner.
+ After dinner there came a so-styled 'Silesian Nobleman,' who likewise was
+ presented to the Field-Marshal, and affected not to know the other two:
+ him I now find to have been the Prince of Anhalt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of his Majesty's supper with the Officers that Wednesday, we are left to
+ think how brilliant it was: his Majesty, we hear farther, went to the
+ Opera that night,&mdash;the Polichinello or whatever the "Italian COMODIE"
+ was;&mdash;"and a little girl came to his box with two lottery-tickets
+ fifteen pence each, begging the foreign Gentleman for the love of Heaven
+ to buy them of her; which he did, tearing them up at once, and giving the
+ poor creature four ducats," equivalent to two guineas, or say in effect
+ even five pounds of the present British currency. The fame of this foreign
+ Count and his party at The Raven is becoming very loud over Strasburg,
+ especially in military circles. Our volunteer Own Correspondent proceeds
+ (whom we mean to contrast with the Royal Doggerel by and by):&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Next morning," Thursday, 25th August, "as the Marshal with above two
+ hundred Officers was out walking on the Esplanade, there came a soldier of
+ the Regiment Luxemburg, who, after some stiff fugling motions, of the
+ nature of salutation partly, and partly demand for privacy, intimated to
+ the Marshal surprising news: That the Stranger in The Raven was the King
+ of Prussia in person; he, the soldier, at present of the Regiment
+ Luxemburg, had in other days, before he deserted, been of the Prussian
+ Crown-Prince's regiment; had consequently seen him in Berlin, Potsdam and
+ elsewhere a thousand times and more, and even stood sentry where he was:
+ the fact is beyond dispute, your Excellency! said this soldier."&mdash;Whew!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon a certain Colonel, Marquis de Loigle, with or without a hint
+ from Broglio, makes off for The Raven; introduces himself, as was easy;
+ contrives to get invited to stay dinner, which also was easy. During
+ dinner the foreign Gentleman expressed some wish to see their fortress.
+ Colonel Loigle sends word to Broglio; Broglio despatches straightway an
+ Officer and fine carriage: "Will the foreign Gentleman do me the honor?"
+ The foreign Gentleman, still struggling for incognito, declines the
+ uppermost seat of honor in the carriage; the two Officers, Loigle and this
+ new one, insist on taking the inferior place. Alas, the incognito is
+ pretty much out. Calling at some coffee-house or the like on the road, a
+ certain female, "Madame de Fienne," named the foreign Gentleman "Sire,"&mdash;which
+ so startled him that, though he utterly declined such title, the two
+ Officers saw well how it was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After survey of the works, the two attendant Officers had returned to the
+ Field-Marshal; and about 4 P.M. the high Stranger made appearance there.
+ But the thing had now got wind, 'King of Prussia here incognito!' The
+ place was full of Officers, who came crowding about him: he escaped deftly
+ into the Marechal's own Cabinet; sat there, an hour, talking to the
+ Marechal [little admiring the Marechal's talk, as we shall find], still
+ insisting on the incognito,"&mdash;to which Broglio, put out in his high
+ paces by this sudden thing, and apt to flounder, as I have heard, was not
+ polite enough to conform altogether. "What shall I do, in this sudden
+ case?" poor Broglio is thinking to himself: "must write to Court; perhaps
+ try to detain&mdash;?" Friedrioh's chief thought naturally is, One cannot
+ be away out of this too soon. "Sha'n't we go to the Play, then, Monsieur
+ le Marechal? Play-hour is come!"&mdash;Own Correspondent of the Newspaper
+ proceeds:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Marechal then went to the Play, and all his Officers with him;
+ thinking their royal prize was close at their heels. Marechal and Officers
+ fairly ahead, coast once clear, their royal prize hastened back to The
+ Raven, paid his bill; hastily summoning Schaffgotsch and the others within
+ hearing; shot off like lightning; and was seen in Strasburg no more.
+ Algarotti, who was in the box with Broglio, heard the news in the house;
+ regretful rumor among the Officers, 'He is gone!' In about a quarter of an
+ hour Algarotti too slipped out; and vanished by extra post"&mdash;straight
+ towards Wesel; but could not overtake the King (whose road, in the latter
+ part of it, went zigzag, on business as is likely), nor see him again till
+ they met in that Town. [From <i>Helden-Geschichte</i> (i. 420-424), &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the Prose Truth of those fifty or eight-and-forty hours in
+ Strasburg, which were so mythic and romantic at that time. Shall we now
+ apply to the Royal Doggerel again, where we left off, and see the other
+ side of the picture? Once settled in The Raven, within Strasburg's walls,
+ the Doggerel continues:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You fancy well that there was now something to exercise my curiosity; and
+ what desire I had to know the French Nation in France itself.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ There I saw at length those French,
+ Of whom you have sung the glories;
+ A people despised by the English,
+ Whom their sad rationality fills with black bile;
+ Those French, whom our Germans
+ Reckon all to be destitute of sense;
+ Those French, whose History consists of Love-stories,
+ I mean the wandering kind of Love, not the constant;
+ Foolish this People, headlong, high-going,
+ Which sings beyond endurance;
+ Lofty in its good fortune, crawling in its bad;
+ Of an unpitying extent of babble,
+ To hide the vacancy of its ignorant mind.
+ Of the Trifling it is a tender lover;
+ The Trifling alone takes possession of its brain.
+ People flighty, indiscreet, imprudent,
+ Turning like the weathercock to every wind.
+ Of the ages of the Caesars those of the Louises are the shadow;
+ Paris is the ghost, of Rome, take it how you will.
+ No, of those vile French you are not one:
+ You think; they do not think at all.
+
+ La je vis enfin ces Francais
+ Dont vous avez chante la gloire;
+ Peuple meprise' des Anglais,
+ Que leur triste raison remplit de bile noire;
+ Ces Francais, que nos Allemands
+ Pensent tous prives de bon sens;
+ Ces Francais, do nt l'amour pourrait dicter l'histoire,
+ Je dis l'amour volage, et non l'amour constant;
+ Ce peuple fou, brusque et galant,
+ Chansonnier insupportable,
+ Superbe en sa fortune, en son malheur rampant,
+ D'un bavardage impitoyable,
+ Pour cacher le creux d'un esprit ignorant,
+ Tendre amant de la bagatelle,
+ Elle entre seule en sa cervelle;
+ Leger, indiscret, imprudent,
+ Comme ume girouette il revire a tout vent.
+ Des siecles des Cesars ceux des Louis sont l'ombre;
+ Rome efface Paris en tout sens, en tout point.
+ Non, des vils Francais vous n'etes pas du nombre;
+ Vous pensez, ils ne pensent point.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon, dear Voltaire, this definition of the French; at worst, it is
+ only of those in Strasburg I speak. To scrape acquaintance, I had to
+ invite some Officers on our arrival, whom of course I did not know.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Three of them came at once,
+ Gayer, more content than Kings;
+ Singing with rusty voice.
+ In verse, their amorous exploits,
+ Set to a hornpipe.
+
+ Trois d'eux s'en vinrent a la fois,
+ Plus gais, plus contents que des rois,
+ Chantant d'une voix enrouee,
+ En vers, leurs amoureux exploits,
+ Ajustes sur une bourree.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "M. de la Crochardiere and M. Malosa [two names from the tablets, third
+ wanting] had just come from a dinner where the wine had not been spared.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Of their hot friendship I saw the flame grow,
+ The Universe would have taken us for perfect friends:
+ But the instant of good-night blew out the business;
+ Friendship disappeared without regrets,
+ With the games, the wine, the table and the viands.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ De leur chaude amitie je vis croitre le flamme,
+ L'univers nous eut pris pour des amis parfaits;
+ Mais l'instant des adieux en detruisit la trame,
+ L'amitie disparut, ssns causer des regrets,
+ Avec le jeu, le vin, et la table, et les mets.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Next day, Monsieur the Gouverneur of the Town and Province, Marechal of
+ France, Chevalier of the Orders of the King, &amp;c. &amp;c.,&mdash;Marechal
+ Duc de Broglio, in fact," who was surprised at Secchia in the late War,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ This General always surprised.
+ Whom with regret, young Louis [your King]
+ Saw without breeches in Italy
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ["With only one boot," was the milder rumor; which we adopted (supra, vol.
+ vi. p. 472), but this sadder one, too, was current; and "Broglio's
+ breeches," or the vain aspiration after them, like a vanished ghost of
+ breeches, often enough turn up in the old Pamphlets.]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Galloping to hide away his life
+ From the Germans, unpolite fighters;&mdash;
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ce general toujours surpris,
+ Qu'a regret le jeune Louis
+ Vit sans culottes en Italie,
+ Courir pour derober sa vie
+ Aux Germains, guerriers impolis.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ this General wished to investigate your Comte Dufour,&mdash;foreign Count,
+ who the instant he arrives sets about inviting people to supper that are
+ perfect strangers. He took the poor Count for a sharper; and prudently
+ advised M. de la Crochardiere not to be duped by him. It was unluckily the
+ good Marechal that proved to be duped.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He was born for surprise.
+ His white hair, his gray beard,
+ Formed a reverend exterior.
+ Outsides are often deceptive:
+ He that, by the binding, judges
+ Of a Book and its Author
+ May, after a page of reading,
+ Chance to recognize his mistake.
+
+ Il etait ne pour la surprise.
+ Ses cheveux blancs, sa barbe grise,
+ Formaient un sage exterieur.
+ Le dehors est souvent trompeur;
+ Qui juge par la reliure
+ D'un ouvrage et de son auteur
+ Dans une page de lecture
+ Peut reconnaitre son erreur.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "That was my own experience; for of wisdom I could find nothing except in
+ his gray hair and decrepit appearance. His first opening betrayed him; no
+ great well of wit this Marechal,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Who, drunk with his own grandeur,
+ Informs you of his name and his titles,
+ And authority as good as unlimited.
+ He cited to me all the records
+ Where his name is registered,
+ Babbled about his immense power,
+ About his valor, his talents
+ So salutary to France;&mdash;He forgot that, three years ago
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ [Six to a nearness,&mdash;"15th September, 1734," if your Majesty will be
+ exact.]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Men did not praise his prudence.
+
+ Qui, de sa grandeur enivre;
+ Decline son nom et ses titres,
+ Et son pouvoir a rien borne.
+ Il me cita tous les registres
+ Ou son nom est enregistre;
+ Bavard de son pouvoir immense,
+ De sa valeur, de ces talents
+ Si salutaires a la France:
+ Il oubliait, passe trois ans,
+ Qu'on ne louait pas sa prudence.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Not satisfied with seeing the Marechal, I saw the guard mounted
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ By these Frenchmen, burning with glory,
+ Who, on four sous a day,
+ Will make of Kings and of Heroes the memory flourish:
+ Slaves crowned by the hands of Victory,
+ Unlucky herds whom the Court
+ Tinkles hither and thither by the sound of fife and drum.
+
+ A ces Francais brulants de gloire,
+ Dotes de quatre sous par jour,
+ Qui des rois, des heros font fleurir la memoire,
+ Esclaves couronnes des mains de la victoire,
+ Troupeaux malheureux que la cour
+ Dirige au seul bruit du tambour.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "That was my fated term. A deserter from our troops got eye on me,
+ recognised me and denounced me.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ This wretched gallows-bird got eye on me;
+ Such is the lot of all earthly things;
+ And so of our fine mystery
+ The whole secret came to light."
+
+ Ce malheureux pendard me vit,
+ C'est le sort de toutes les choses;
+ Ainsi de motre pot aux roses
+ Tout le secret se decouvrit.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Well; we must take this glimpse, such as it is, into the interior of the
+ young man,&mdash;fine buoyant, pungent German spirit, roadways for it very
+ bad, and universal rain-torrents falling, yet with coruscations from a
+ higher quarter;&mdash;and you can forget, if need be, the "Literature" of
+ this young Majesty, as you would a staccato on the flute by him! In after
+ months, on new occasion rising, "there was no end to his gibings and
+ bitter pleasantries on the ridiculous reception Broglio had given him at
+ Strasburg," says Valori, [<i>Memoires,</i> i. 88.]&mdash;of which this
+ Doggerel itself offers specimen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Probably the weakest Piece I ever translated?" exclaims one, who has
+ translated several such. Nevertheless there is a straggle of pungent sense
+ in it,&mdash;like the outskirts of lightning, seen in that dismally wet
+ weather, which the Royal Party had. Its wit is very copious, but slashy,
+ bantery, and proceeds mainly by exaggeration and turning topsy-turvy; a
+ rather barren species of wit. Of humor, in the fine poetic sense, no
+ vestige. But there is surprising veracity,&mdash;truthfulness
+ unimpeachable, if you will read well. What promptitude, too;&mdash;what
+ funds for conversation, when needed! This scraggy Piece, which is better
+ than the things people often talk to one another, was evidently written as
+ fast as the pen could go.&mdash;"It is done, if such a Hand could have
+ DONE it, in the manner of Bachaumont and La Chapelle," says Voltaire
+ scornfully, in that scandalous VIE PRIVEE;&mdash;of which phrase this is
+ the commentary, if readers need one:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some seventy or eighty years before that date, a M. Bachaumont and a M.
+ la Chapelle, his intimate, published, in Prose skipping off into dancings
+ of Verse every now and then, 'a charming RELATION of a certain VOYAGE or
+ Home Tour' (whence or whither, or correctly when, this Editor forgets),
+ ["First printed in 1665," say the Bibliographies; "but known to La
+ Fontaine some time before." Good!&mdash;Bachaumont, practically an
+ important and distinguished person, not literary by trade, or indeed
+ otherwise than by ennui, was he that had given (some fifteen years before)
+ the Nickname FRONDE (Bickering of Schoolboys) to the wretched Historical
+ Object which is still so designated in French annals.] which they had made
+ in partnership. 'RELATION' capable still of being read, if one were
+ tolerably idle;&mdash;it was found then to be charming, by all the world;
+ and gave rise to a new fashion in writing; which Voltaire often adopts,
+ and is supremely good at; and in which Friedrich, who is also fond of it,
+ by no means succeeds so well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Enough, Friedrich got to Wesel, back to his business, in a day or two; and
+ had done, as we forever have, with the Strasburg Escapade and its
+ Doggerel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH FINDS M. DE MAUPERTUIS; NOT YET M. DE VOLTAIRE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich got to Wesel on the 29th; found Maupertuis waiting there,
+ according to appointment: an elaborately polite, somewhat sublime
+ scientific gentleman; ready to "engraft on the Berlin crab-tree," and
+ produce real apples and Academics there, so soon as the King, the
+ proprietor, may have leisure for such a thing. Algarotti has already the
+ honor of some acquaintance with Maupertuis. Maupertuis has been at
+ Brussels, on the road hither; saw Voltaire and even Madame,&mdash;which
+ latter was rather a ticklish operation, owing to grudges and tiffs of
+ quarrel that had risen, but it proved successful under the delicate
+ guidance of Voltaire. Voltaire is up to oiling the wheels: "There you are,
+ Monsieur, like the [don't name What, though profane Voltaire does, writing
+ to Maupertuis a month ago]&mdash;Three Kings running after you!" A new
+ Pension to you from France; Russia outbidding France to have you; and then
+ that LETTER of Friedrich's, which is in all the Newspapers: "Three Kings,"&mdash;you
+ plainly great man, Trismegistus of the Sciences called Pure! Madame honors
+ you, has always done: one word of apology to the high female mind, it will
+ work wonders;&mdash;come now! [Voltaire, <i>OEuvres,</i> lxxii. 217, 216,
+ 230 (Hague, 21st July, 1740, and Brussels, 9th Aug. &amp;c).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No reader guesses in our time what a shining celestial body the
+ Maupertuis, who is now fallen so dim again, then was to mankind. In
+ cultivated French society there is no such lion as M. Maupertuis since he
+ returned from flattening the Earth in the Arctic regions. "The Exact
+ Sciences, what else is there to depend on?" thinks French cultivated
+ society: "and has not Monsieur done a feat in that line?" Monsieur, with
+ fine ex-military manners, has a certain austere gravity, reticent
+ loftiness and polite dogmatism, which confirms that opinion. A studious
+ ex-military man,&mdash;was Captain of Dragoons once, but too fond of
+ study,&mdash;who is conscious to himself, or who would fain be conscious,
+ that he is, in all points, mathematical, moral and other, the man. A
+ difficult man to live with in society. Comes really near the limit of what
+ we call genius, of originality, poetic greatness in thinking;&mdash;but
+ never once can get fairly over said limit, though always struggling
+ dreadfully to do so. Think of it! A fatal kind of man; especially if you
+ have made a lion of him at any time. Of his envies, deep-hidden splenetic
+ discontents and rages, with Voltaire's return for them, there will be
+ enough to say in the ulterior stages. He wears&mdash;at least ten years
+ hence he openly wears, though I hope it is not yet so flagrant&mdash;"a
+ red wig with yellow bottom (CRINIERE JAUNE);" and as Flattener of the
+ Earth, is, with his own flattish red countenance and impregnable stony
+ eyes, a man formidable to look upon, though intent to be amiable if you do
+ the proper homage. As to the quarrel with Madame take this Note; which may
+ prove illustrative of some things by and by:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maupertuis is well known at Cirey; such a lion could not fail there. All
+ manner of Bernouillis, Clairauts, high mathematical people, are frequent
+ guests at Cirey: reverenced by Madame,&mdash;who indeed has had her own
+ private Professor of Mathematics; one Konig from Switzerland (recommended
+ by those Bernouillis), diligently teaching her the Pure Sciences this good
+ while back, not without effect; and has only just parted with him, when
+ she left on this Brussels expedition. A BON GARCON, Voltaire says; though
+ otherwise, I think, a little noisy on occasion. There has been no end of
+ Madame's kindness to him, nay to his Brother and him,&mdash;sons of a
+ Theological Professorial Syriac-Hebrew kind of man at Berne, who has too
+ many sons;&mdash;and I grieve to report that this heedless Konig has
+ produced an explosion in Madame's feelings, such as little beseemed him.
+ On the road to Paris, namely, as we drove hitherward to the Honsbruck
+ Lawsuit by way of Paris, in Autumn last, there had fallen out some
+ dispute, about the monads, the VIS VIVA, the infinitely little, between
+ Madame and Konig; dispute which rose CRESCENDO in disharmonious duet, and
+ "ended," testifies M. de Voltaire, "in a scene TRESDESAGREABLE." Madame,
+ with an effort, forgave the thoughtless fellow, who is still rather young,
+ and is without malice. But thoughtless Konig, strong in his opinion about
+ the infinitely little, appealed to Maupertuis: "Am not I right, Monsieur?"
+ "HE is right beyond question!" wrote Maupertuis to Madame; "somewhat
+ dryly," thinks Voltaire: and the result is, there is considerable rage in
+ one celestial mind ever since against another male one in red wig and
+ yellow bottom; and they are not on speaking terms, for a good many months
+ past. Voltaire has his heart sore ("J'EN AI LE COEUR PERCE") about it,
+ needs to double-dose Maupertuis with flattery; and in fact has used the
+ utmost diplomacy to effect some varnish of a reconcilement as Maupertuis
+ passed on this occasion. As for Konig, who had studied in some Dutch
+ university, he went by and by to be Librarian to the Prince of Orange; and
+ we shall not fail to hear of him again,&mdash;once more upon the
+ infinitely little. [From <i>OEuvres de Voltaire,</i> ii. 126, lxxii. (20,
+ 216, 230), lxiii. (229-239), &amp;c. &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Voltaire too, in his way, is fond of these mathematical people; eager
+ enough to fish for knowledge, here as in all elements, when he has the
+ chance offered: this is much an interest of his at present. And he does
+ attain sound ideas, outlines of ideas, in this province,&mdash;though
+ privately defective in the due transcendency of admiration for it;&mdash;was
+ wont to discuss cheerily with Konig, about VIS VIVA, monads, gravitation
+ and the infinitely little; above all, bows to the ground before the
+ red-wigged Bashaw, Flattener of the Earth, whom for Madame's sake and his
+ own he is anxious to be well with. "Fall on your face nine times, ye
+ esoteric of only Impure Science!"&mdash;intimates Maupertuis to mankind.
+ "By all means!" answers M. de Voltaire, doing it with alacrity; with a
+ kind of loyalty, one can perceive, and also with a hypocrisy grounded on
+ love of peace. If that is the nature of the Bashaw, and one's sole mode of
+ fishing knowledge from him, why not? thinks M. de Voltaire. His patience
+ with M. de Maupertuis, first and last, was very great. But we shall find
+ it explode at length, a dozen years hence, in a conspicuous manner!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maupertuis had come to us to Cirey, with Jean Bernouilli," says Voltaire;
+ "and thenceforth Maupertuis, who was born the most jealous of men, took me
+ for the object of this passion, which has always been very dear to him."
+ [VIE PRIVEE.] Husht, Monsieur!&mdash;Here is a poor rheumatic kind of
+ Letter, which illustrates the interim condition, after that varnish of
+ reconcilement at Brussels:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO M. DE MAUPERTUIS (at Wesel, waiting for the King, or with him
+ rather).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "BRUSSELS, 29th August (1740), <i>3d year since the world flattened.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How the Devil, great Philosopher, would you have had me write to you at
+ Wesel? I fancied you gone from Wesel, to seek the King of Sages on his
+ Journey somewhere. I had understood, too, they were so delighted to have
+ you in that fortified lodge (BOUGE FORTIFIE) that you must be taking
+ pleasure there, for he that gives pleasure gets it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have already seen the jolly Ambassador of the amiablest Monarch in
+ the world,"&mdash;Camas, a fattish man, on his road to Versailles (who
+ called at Brussels here, with fine compliments, and a keg of Hungary Wine,
+ as YOU may have heard whispered). "No doubt M. de Camas is with you. For
+ my own share, I think it is after you that he is running at present. But
+ in truth, at the hour while I say this, you are with the King;"&mdash;a
+ lucky guess; King did return to Wesel this very day. "The Philosopher and
+ the Prince perceive already that they are made for each other. You and M.
+ Algarotti will say, FACIAMUS HIC TRIA TABERNACULA: as to me, I can only
+ make DUO TABERNACULA,"&mdash;profane Voltaire!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Without doubt I would be with you if I were not at Brussels; but my heart
+ is with you all the same; and is the subject, all the same, of a King who
+ is, formed to reign over every thinking and feeling being. I do not
+ despair that Madame du Chatelet will find herself somewhere on your route:
+ it will be a scene in a fairy tale;&mdash;she will arrive with a
+ SUFFICIENT REASON [as your Leibnitz says] and with MONADS. She does not
+ love you the less though she now believes the universe a PLENUM, and has
+ renounced the notion of VOID. Over her you have an ascendant which you
+ will never lose. In fine, my dear Monsieur, I wish as ardently as she to
+ embrace you the soonest possible. I recommend myself to your friendship in
+ the Court, worthy of you, where you now are."&mdash;TOUT A VOUS, somewhat
+ rheumatic! [Voltaire, lxxii. p. 243.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Always an anxious almost tremulous desire to conciliate this big glaring
+ geometrical bully in red wig. Through the sensitive transparent being of
+ M. de Voltaire, you may see that feeling almost painfully busy in every
+ Letter he writes to the Flattener of the Earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IV. &mdash; VOLTAIRE'S FIRST INTERVIEW WITH FRIEDRICH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At Wesel, in the rear of all this travelling and excitement, Friedrich
+ falls unwell; breaks down there into an aguish feverish distemper, which,
+ for several months after, impeded his movements, would he have yielded to
+ it. He has much business on hand, too,&mdash;some of it of prickly nature
+ just now;&mdash;but is intent as ever on seeing Voltaire, among the first
+ things. Diligently reading in the Voltaire-Friedrich Correspondence (which
+ is a sad jumble of misdates and opacities, in the common editions),
+ [Preuss (the recent latest Editor, and the only well-informed one, as we
+ said) prints with accuracy; but cannot be read at all (in the sense of
+ UNDERSTOOD) without other light.] this of the aguish condition frequently
+ turns up; "Quartan ague," it seems; occasionally very bad; but Friedrich
+ struggles with it; will not be cheated of any of his purposes by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had a busy fortnight here; busier than we yet imagine. Much employment
+ there naturally is of the usual Inspection sort; which fails in no quarter
+ of his Dominions, but which may be particularly important here, in these
+ disputed Berg-Julich Countries, when the time of decision falls. How he
+ does his Inspections we know;&mdash;and there are still weightier matters
+ afoot here, in a silent way, of which we shall have to speak before long,
+ and all the world will speak. Business enough, parts of it grave and
+ silent, going on, and the much that is public, miscellaneous, small: done,
+ all of it, in a rapid-punctual precise manner;&mdash;and always, after the
+ crowded day, some passages of Supper with the Sages, to wind up with on
+ melodious terms. A most alert and miscellaneously busy young King, in
+ spite of the ague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in these Cleve Countries, and now as probably as afterwards, that
+ the light scene recorded in Laveaux's poor HISTORY, and in all the
+ Anecdote-Books, transacted itself one day. Substance of the story is true;
+ though the details of it go all at random,&mdash;somewhat to this effect:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Inspecting his Finance Affairs, and questioning the parties interested,
+ Friedrich notices a certain Convent in Cleve, which appears to have,
+ payable from the Forest-dues, considerable revenues bequeathed by the old
+ Dukes, 'for masses to be said on their behalf.' He goes to look at the
+ place; questions the Monks on this point, who are all drawn out in two
+ rows, and have broken into TE-DEUM at sight of him: 'Husht! You still say
+ those Masses, then?' 'Certainly, your Majesty!'&mdash;'And what good does
+ anybody get of them?' 'Your Majesty, those old Sovereigns are to obtain
+ Heavenly mercy by them, to be delivered out of Purgatory by them.'&mdash;'Purgatory?
+ It is a sore thing for the Forests, all this while! And they are not yet
+ out, those poor souls, after so many hundred years of praying?' Monks have
+ a fatal apprehension, No. 'When will they be out, and the thing complete?'
+ Monks cannot say. 'Send me a courier whenever it is complete!' sneers the
+ King, and leaves them to their TE-DEUM." [C. Hildebrandt's Modern Edition
+ of the (mostly dubious) <i>Anekdoten und Charakterzuge aus dem Leben
+ Friedrichs des Grossen</i> (and a very ignorant and careless Edition it
+ is; 6 vols. 12mo, Halberstadt, 1829), ii. 160; Laveaus (whom we already
+ cited), <i>Vie de Frederic;</i> &amp;c. &amp;c. Nicolai's <i>Anekdoten</i>
+ alone, which are not included in this Hildebrandt Collection, are of sure
+ authenticity; the rest, occasionally true, and often with a kind of MYTHIC
+ truth in them worth attending to, are otherwise of all degrees of dubiety,
+ down to the palpably false and absurd.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mournful state of the Catholic Religion so called! How long must these
+ wretched Monks go on doing their lazy thrice-deleterious torpid blasphemy;
+ and a King, not histrionic but real, merely signify that he laughs at them
+ and it? Meseems a heavier whip than that of satire might be in place here,
+ your Majesty? The lighter whip is easier;&mdash;Ah yes, undoubtedly! cry
+ many men. But horrible accounts are running up, enough to sink the world
+ at last, while the heavier whip is lazily withheld, and lazy blasphemy,
+ fallen torpid, chronic, and quite unconscious of being blasphemous,
+ insinuates itself into the very heart's-blood of mankind! Patience,
+ however; the heavy whip too is coming,&mdash;unless universal death be
+ coming. King Friedrich is not the man to wield such whip. Quite other work
+ is in store for King Friedrich; and Nature will not, by any suggestion of
+ that terrible task, put him out in the one he has. He is nothing of a
+ Luther, of a Cromwell; can look upon fakirs praying by their rotatory
+ calabash, as a ludicrous platitude; and grin delicately as above, with the
+ approval of his wiser contemporaries. Speed to him on his own course!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What answer Friedrich found to his English proposals,&mdash;answer due
+ here on the 24th from Captain Dickens,&mdash;I do not pointedly learn; but
+ can judge of it by Harrington's reply to that Despatch of Dickens's, which
+ entreated candor and open dealing towards his Prussian Majesty. Harrington
+ is at Herrenhausen, still with the Britannic Majesty there; both of them
+ much at a loss about their Spanish War, and the French and other aspects
+ upon it: "Suppose his Prussian Majesty were to give himself to France
+ against us!" We will hope, not. Harrington's reply is to the effect, "Hum,
+ drum:&mdash;Berg and Julich, say you? Impossible to answer; minds not made
+ up here:&mdash;What will his Prussian Majesty do for US?" Not much, I
+ should guess, till something more categorical come from you! His Prussian
+ Majesty is careful not to spoil anything by over-haste; but will wait and
+ try farther to the utmost, Whether England or France is the likelier
+ bargain for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Better still, the Prussian Majesty is intent to do something for himself
+ in that Berg-Julich matter: we find him silently examining these Wesel
+ localities for a proper "entrenched Camp," Camp say of 40,000, against a
+ certain contingency that may be looked for. Camp which will much occupy
+ the Gazetteers when they get eye on it. This is one of the concerns he
+ silently attends to, on occasion, while riding about in the Cleve
+ Countries. Then there is another small item of business, important to do
+ well, which is now in silence diligently getting under way at Wesel; which
+ also is of remarkable nature, and will astonish the Gazetteer and
+ Diplomatic circles. This is the affair with the Bishop of Liege, called
+ also the Affair of Herstal, which his Majesty has had privately laid up in
+ the corner of his mind, as a thing to be done during this Excursion. Of
+ which the reader shall hear anon, to great lengths,&mdash;were a certain
+ small preliminary matter, Voltaire's Arrival in these parts, once off our
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's First Meeting with Voltaire! These other high things were once
+ loud in the Gazetteer and Diplomatic circles, and had no doubt they were
+ the World's History; and now they are sunk wholly to the Nightmares, and
+ all mortals have forgotten them,&mdash;and it is such a task as seldom was
+ to resuscitate the least memory of them, on just cause of a Friedrich or
+ the like, so impatient are men of what is putrid and extinct:&mdash;and a
+ quite unnoticed thing, Voltaire's First Interview, all readers are on the
+ alert for it, and ready to demand of me impossibilities about it!
+ Patience, readers. You shall see it, without and within, in such light as
+ there was, and form some actual notion of it, if you will co-operate. From
+ the circumambient inanity of Old Newspapers, Historical shot-rubbish, and
+ unintelligible Correspondences, we sift out the following particulars, of
+ this First Meeting, or actual Osculation of the Stars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Newspapers, though their eyes were not yet of the Argus quality now
+ familiar to us, have been intent on Friedrich during this Baireuth-Cleve
+ Journey, especially since that sudden eclipse of him at Strasburg lately;
+ forming now one scheme of route for him, now another; Newspapers, and even
+ private friends, being a good deal uncertain about his movements. Rumor
+ now ran, since his reappearance in the Cleve Countries, that Friedrich
+ meant to have a look at Holland before going home, And that had, in fact,
+ been a notion or intention of Friedrich's. "Holland? We could pass through
+ Brussels on the way, and see Voltaire!" thought he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Brussels this was, of course, the rumor of rumors. As Voltaire's
+ Letters, visibly in a twitter, still testify to us. King of Prussia
+ coming! Madame du Chatelet, the "Princess Tour" (that is, Tour-and-Taxis),
+ all manner of high Dames are on the tiptoe. Princess Tour hopes she shall
+ lodge this unparalleled Prince in her Palace: "You, Madame?" answers the
+ Du Chatelet, privately, with a toss of her head: "His Majesty, I hope,
+ belongs more to M. de Voltaire and me: he shall lodge here, please
+ Heaven!" Voltaire, I can observe, has sublime hostelry arrangements
+ chalked out for his Majesty, in case he go to Paris; which he does n't, as
+ we know. Voltaire is all on the alert, awake to the great contingencies
+ far and near; the Chatelet-Voltaire breakfast-table,&mdash;fancy it on
+ those interesting mornings, while the post comes round! [Voltaire, xxii.
+ 238-256 (Letters 22d August-22d September, 1740).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas, in the first days of September,&mdash;Friedrich's Letter is dated
+ "Wesel, 2d" (and has the STRASBURD DOGGEREL enclosed in it),&mdash;the
+ Brussels Postman delivers far other intelligence at one's door; very
+ mortifying to Madame: "That his Majesty is fallen ill at Wesel; has an
+ aguish fever hanging on him, and only hopes to come:" VOILA, Madame!&mdash;Next
+ Letter, Wesel, Monday, 5th September, is to the effect: "Do still much
+ hope to come; to-morrow is my trembling day; if that prove to be off!"&mdash;Out
+ upon it, that proves not to be off; that is on: next Letter, Tuesday,
+ September 6th, which comes by express (Courier dashing up with it, say on
+ the Thursday following) is,&mdash;alas, Madame!&mdash;here it is:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KING FRIEDRICH TO M. DE VOLTAIRE AT BRUSSELS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "WESEL, 6th September, 1740. "MY DEAR VOLTAIRE,&mdash;In spite of myself,
+ I have to yield to the Quartan Fever, which is more tenacious than a
+ Jansenist; and whatever desire I had of going to Antwerp and Brussels, I
+ find myself not in a condition to undertake such a journey without risk. I
+ would ask of you, then, if the road from Brussels to Cleve would not to
+ you seem too long for a meeting; it is the one means of seeing you which
+ remains to me. Confess that I am unlucky; for now when I could dispose of
+ my person, and nothing hinders me from seeing you, the fever gets its hand
+ into the business, and seems to intend disputing me that satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let us deceive the fever, my dear Voltaire; and let me at least have the
+ pleasure of embracing you. Make my best excuses [polite, rather than
+ sincere] to Madame the MARQUISE, that I cannot have the satisfaction of
+ seeing her at Brussels. All that are about me know the intention I was in;
+ which certainly nothing but the fever could have made me change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sunday next I shall be at a little Place near Cleve,"&mdash;Schloss of
+ Moyland, which, and the route to which, this Courier can tell you of;&mdash;"where
+ I shall be able to possess you at my ease. If the sight of you don't cure
+ me, I will send for a Confessor at once. Adieu; you know my sentiments and
+ my heart. [Preuss, <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xxii. 27.] FREDERIC."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After which the Correspondence suddenly extinguishes itself; ceases for
+ about a fortnight,&mdash;in the bad misdated Editions even does worse;&mdash;and
+ we are left to thick darkness, to our own poor shifts; Dryasdust being
+ grandly silent on this small interest of ours. What is to be done?
+ </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>
+ PARTICULARS OF FIRST INTERVIEW, ON SEVERE SCRUTINY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Here, from a painful Predecessor whose Papers I inherit, are some old
+ documents and Studies on the subject,&mdash;sorrowful collection, in fact,
+ of what poor sparks of certainty were to be found hovering in that dark
+ element;&mdash;which do at last (so luminous are certainties always, or
+ "sparks" that will shine steady) coalesce into some feeble general
+ twilight, feeble but indubitable; and even show the sympathetic reader how
+ they were searched out and brought together. We number and label these
+ poor Patches of Evidence on so small a matter; and leave them to the
+ curious:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No. 1. DATE OF THE FIRST INTERVIEW. It is certain Voltaire did arrive at
+ the little Schloss of Moyland, September 11th, Sunday night,&mdash;which
+ is the "Sunday" just specified in Friedrich's Letter. Voltaire had at once
+ decided on complying,&mdash;what else?&mdash;and lost no time in packing
+ himself: King's Courier on Thursday late; Voltaire on the road on Saturday
+ early, or the night before. With Madame's shrill blessing (not the most
+ musical in this vexing case), and plenty of fuss. "Was wont to travel in
+ considerable style," I am told; "the innkeepers calling him 'Your
+ Lordship' (M. LE COMTE)." Arrives, sure enough, Sunday night; old Schloss
+ of Moyland, six miles from Cleve; "moonlight," I find,&mdash;the Harvest
+ Moon. Visit lasted three days. [Rodenbeck, p. 21; Preuss, &amp;c. &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No. 2. VOLTAIRE'S DRIVE THITHER. Schloss Moyland: How far from Brussels,
+ and by what route? By Louvain, Tillemont, Tongres to Maestricht; then from
+ Maestricht up the Maas (left bank) to Venlo, where cross; through Geldern
+ and Goch to Cleve: between the Maas and Rhine this last portion. Flat damp
+ country; tolerably under tillage; original constituents bog and sand.
+ Distances I guess to be: To Tongres 60 miles and odd; to Maestricht 12 or
+ 15, from Maestricht 75; in all 150 miles English. Two days' driving? There
+ is equinoctial moon, and still above twelve hours of sunlight for "M. le
+ Comte."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No. 3. OF THE PLACE WHERE. Voltaire, who should have known, calls it
+ "PETIT CHATEAU DE MEUSE;" which is a Castle existing nowhere but in
+ Dreams. Other French Biographers are still more imaginary. The little
+ Schloss of Moyland&mdash;by no means "Meuse," nor even MORS, which
+ Voltaire probably means in saying CHATEAU DE MEUSE&mdash;was, as the least
+ inquiry settles beyond question, the place where Voltaire and Friedrich
+ first met. Friedrich Wilhelm used often to lodge there in his Cleve
+ journeys: he made thither for shelter, in the sickness that overtook him
+ in friend Ginkel's house, coming home from the Rhine Campaign in 1734; lay
+ there for several weeks after quitting Ginkel's. Any other light I can get
+ upon it, is darkness visible. Busching pointedly informs me, [<i>Erdbeschreibung</i>,
+ v. 659, 677.] "It is a Parish [or patch of country under one priest], and
+ Till AND it are a Jurisdiction" (pair of patches under one court of
+ justice):&mdash;which does not much illuminate the inquiring mind. Small
+ patch, this of Moyland, size not given; "was bought," says he, "in 1695,
+ by Friedrich afterwards First King, from the Family of Spaen,"&mdash;we
+ once knew a Lieutenant Spaen, of those Dutch regions,&mdash;"and was named
+ a Royal Mansion ever thereafter." Who lived in it; what kind of thing was
+ it, is it? ALTUM SILENTIUM, from Busching and mankind. Belonged to the
+ Spaens, fifty years ago;&mdash;some shadow of our poor banished friend the
+ Lieutenant resting on it? Dim enough old Mansion, with "court" to it, with
+ modicum of equipment; lying there in the moonlight;&mdash;did not look
+ sublime to Voltaire on stepping out. So that all our knowledge reduces
+ itself to this one point: of finding Moyland in the Map, with DATE, with
+ REMINISCENCE to us, hanging by it henceforth! Good. [Stieler's <i>Deutschland</i>
+ (excellent Map in 25 Pieces), Piece 12.&mdash;Till is a mile or two
+ northeast from Moyland; Moyland about 5 or 6 southeast from Cleve.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mors&mdash;which is near the Town of Ruhrort, about midway between Wesel
+ and Dusseldorf&mdash;must be some forty miles from Moyland, forty-five
+ from Cleve; southward of both. So that the place, "A DEUX LIEUES DE
+ CLEVES," is, even by Voltaire's showing, this Moyland; were there
+ otherwise any doubt upon it. "CHATEAU DE MEUSE"&mdash;hanging out a
+ prospect of MORS to us&mdash;is bad usage to readers. Of an intelligent
+ man, not to say a Trismegistus of men, one expects he will know in what
+ town he is, after three days' experience, as here. But he does not always;
+ he hangs out a mere "shadow of Mars by moonlight," till we learn better.
+ Duvernet, his Biographer, even calls it "SLEUS-MEUSE;" some wonderful idea
+ of Sluices and a River attached to it, in Duvernet's head! [Duvernet (2d
+ FORM of him,&mdash;that is, <i>Vie de Voltaire</i> par T. J. D. V.), p.
+ 117.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF THE INTERVIEW TWENTY YEARS AFTERWARDS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Of the Interview itself, with general bird's-eye view of the Visit
+ combined (in a very incorrect state), there is direct testimony by
+ Voltaire himself. Voltaire himself, twenty years after, in far other
+ humor, all jarred into angry sarcasm, for causes we shall see by and by,&mdash;Voltaire,
+ at the request of friends, writes down, as his Friedrich Reminiscences,
+ that scandalous VIE PRIVEE above spoken of, a most sad Document; and this
+ is the passage referring to "the little Place in the neighborhood of
+ Cleve," where Friedrich now waited for him: errors corrected by our
+ laborious Friend. After quoting something of that Strasburg Doggerel, the
+ whole of which is now too well known to us, Voltaire proceeds:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From Strasburg he," King Friedrich, "went to see his Lower German
+ Provinces; he said he would come and see me incognito at Brussels. We
+ prepared a fine house for him,"&mdash;were ready to prepare such hired
+ house as we had for him, with many apologies for its slight degree of
+ perfection (ERROR FIRST),&mdash;"but having fallen ill in the little
+ Mansion-Royal of Meuse (CHATEAU DE MEUSE), a couple of leagues from
+ Cleve,"&mdash;fell ill at Wesel; and there is no Chateau de MEUSE in the
+ world (ERRORS 2d AND 3d),&mdash;"he wrote to me that he expected I would
+ make the advances. I went, accordingly, to present my profound homages.
+ Maupertuis, who already had his views, and was possessed with the rage of
+ being President to an Academy, had of his own accord,"&mdash;no, being
+ invited, and at my suggestion (ERROR 4th),&mdash;"presented himself there;
+ and was lodged with Algarotti and Keyserling [which latter, I suppose, had
+ come from Berlin, not being of the Strasburg party, he] in a garret of
+ this Palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the door of the court, I found, by way of guard, one soldier.
+ Privy-Councillor Rambonet, Minister of State&mdash;[very subaltern man;
+ never heard of him except in the Herstal Business, and here] was walking
+ in the court; blowing in his fingers to keep them warm." Sunday night,
+ 11th September, 1740; world all bathed in moonshine; and mortals mostly
+ shrunk into their huts, out of the raw air. "He" Rambonet "wore big linen
+ ruffles at his wrists, very dirty [visibly so in the moonlight? ERROR 5th
+ extends AD LIBITUM over all the following details]; a holed hat; an old
+ official periwig,"&mdash;ruined into a totally unsymmetric state, as would
+ seem,&mdash;"one side of which hung down into one of his pockets, and the
+ other scarcely crossed his shoulder. I was told, this man was now
+ intrusted with an affair of importance here; and that proved true,"&mdash;the
+ Herstal Affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was led into his Majesty's apartment. Nothing but four bare walls
+ there. By the light of a candle, I perceived, in a closet, a little
+ truckle-bed two feet and a half broad, on which lay a man muffled up in a
+ dressing-gown of coarse blue duffel: this was the King, sweating and
+ shivering under a wretched blanket there, in a violent fit of fever. I
+ made my reverence, and began the acquaintance by feeling his pulse, as if
+ I had been his chief physician. The fit over, he dressed himself, and took
+ his place at table. Algarotti, Keyserling, Maupertuis, and the King's
+ Envoy to the States-General"&mdash;one Rasfeld (skilled in HERSTAL
+ matters, I could guess),&mdash;"we were of this supper, and discussed,
+ naturally in a profound manner, the Immortality of the Soul, Liberty,
+ Fate, the Androgynes of Plato [the ANDROGYNOI, or Men-Women, in Plato's
+ CONVIVIUM; by no means the finest symbolic fancy of the divine Plato],&mdash;and
+ other small topics of that nature." [Voltaire, <i>OEuvres,</i> (Piece once
+ called VIE PRIVEE), ii. 26, 27.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is Voltaire's account of the Visit,&mdash;which included three
+ "Suppers," all huddled into one by him here;&mdash;and he says nothing
+ more of it; launching off now into new errors, about HERSTAL, the
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL, and so forth: new and uglier errors, with much more of
+ mendacity and serious malice in them, than in this harmless half-dozen now
+ put on the score against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this Supper-Party, I know by face four of the guests: Maupertuis,
+ Voltaire, Algarotti, Keyserling;&mdash;Rasfeld, Rambonet can sit as
+ simulacra or mute accompaniment. Voltaire arrived on Sunday evening;
+ stayed till Wednesday. Wednesday morning, 14th of the month, the Party
+ broke up: Voltaire rolling off to left hand, towards Brussels, or the
+ Hague; King to right, on inspection business, and circuitously homewards.
+ Three Suppers there had been, two busy Days intervening; discussions about
+ Fate and the Androgynoi of Plato by no means the one thing done by
+ Voltaire and the rest, on this occasion. We shall find elsewhere, "he
+ declaimed his MAHOMET" (sublime new Tragedy, not yet come out), in the
+ course of these three evenings, to the "speechless admiration" of his
+ Royal Host, for one; and, in the daytime, that he even drew his pen about
+ the Herstal Business, which is now getting to its crisis, and wrote one of
+ the Manifestoes, still discoverable. And we need not doubt, in spite of
+ his now sneering tone, that things ran high and grand here, in this paltry
+ little Schloss of Moyland; and that those three were actually Suppers of
+ the Gods, for the time being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Councillor Rambonet," with the holed hat and unsymmetric wig, continues
+ Voltaire in the satirical vein, "had meanwhile mounted a hired hack
+ (CHEVAL DE LOUAGE;" mischievous Voltaire, I have no doubt he went on
+ wheels, probably of his own): "he rode all night; and next morning arrived
+ at the gates of Liege; where he took Act in the name of the King his
+ Master, whilst 2,000 men of the Wesel Troops laid Liege under
+ contribution. The pretext of this fine Marching of Troops,"&mdash;not a
+ pretext at all, but the assertion, correct in all points, of just claims
+ long trodden down, and now made good with more spirit than had been
+ expected,&mdash;"was certain rights which the King pretended to, over a
+ suburb of Liege. He even charged me to work at a Manifesto; and I made
+ one, good or bad; not doubting but a King with whom I supped, and who
+ called me his friend, must be in the right. The affair soon settled itself
+ by means of a million of ducats,"&mdash;nothing like the sum, as we shall
+ see,&mdash;"which he exacted by weight, to clear the costs of the Tour to
+ Strasburg, which, according to his complaint in that Poetic Letter
+ [Doggerel above given], were so heavy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is Voltaire's view; grown very corrosive after Twenty Years. He
+ admits, with all the satire: "I naturally felt myself attached to him; for
+ he had wit, graces; and moreover he was a King, which always forms a
+ potent seduction, so weak is human nature. Usually it is we of the writing
+ sort that flatter Kings: but this King praised me from head to foot, while
+ the Abbe Desfontaines and other scoundrels (GREDINS) were busy defaming me
+ in Paris at least once a week."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF THE INTERVIEW AT THE TIME.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ But let us take the contemporary account, which also we have at first
+ hand; which is almost pathetic to read; such a contrast between ruddy
+ morning and the storms of the afternoon! Here are two Letters from
+ Voltaire; fine transparent human Letters, as his generally are: the first
+ of them written directly on getting back to the Hague, and to the feeling
+ of his eclipsed condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO M. DE MAUPERTUIS (with the King). "THE HAGUE, 18th September,
+ 1740.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I serve you, Monsieur, sooner than I promised; and that is the way you
+ ought to be served. I send you the answer of M. Smith,"&mdash;probably
+ some German or Dutch SCHMIDT, spelt here in English, connected with the
+ Sciences, say with water-carriage, the typographies, or one need not know
+ what; "you will see where the question stands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we both left Cleve,"&mdash;14th of the month, Wednesday last; 18th
+ is Sunday, in this old cobwebby Palace, where I am correcting
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL,&mdash;"and you took to the right,"&mdash;King, homewards,
+ got to HAM that evening,&mdash;"I could have thought I was at the Last
+ Judgment, where the Bon Dieu separates the elect from the damned. DIVUS
+ FREDERICUS said to you, 'Sit down at my right hand in the Paradise of
+ Berlin;' and to me, 'Depart, thou accursed, into Holland.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here I am accordingly in this phlegmatic place of punishment, far from
+ the divine fire which animates the Friedrichs, the Maupertuis, the
+ Algarottis. For God's love, do me the charity of some sparks in these
+ stagnant waters where I am,"&mdash;stiffening, cooling,&mdash;"stupefying
+ to death. Instruct me of your pleasures, of your designs. You will
+ doubtless see M. de Valori,"&mdash;readers know de Valori; his Book has
+ been published; edited, as too usual, by a Human Nightmare, ignorant of
+ his subject and indeed of almost all other things, and liable to mistakes
+ in every page; yet partly readable, if you carry lanterns, and love "MON
+ GROS VALORI:"&mdash;"offer him, I pray you, my respects. If I do not write
+ to him, the reason is, I have no news to send: I should be as exact as I
+ am devoted, if my correspondence could be useful or agreeable to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Won't you have me send you some Books? If I be still in Holland when your
+ orders come, I will obey in a moment. I pray you do not forget me to M. de
+ Keyserling,"&mdash;Caesarion whom we once had at Cirey; a headlong dusky
+ little man of wit (library turned topsy-turvy, as Wilhelmina called him),
+ whom we have seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell me, I beg, if the enormous monad of Volfius&mdash;[Wolf, would the
+ reader like to hear about him? If so, he has only to speak!] is arguing at
+ Marburg, at Berlin, or at Hall [HALLE, which is a very different place].
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Adieu, Monsieur: you can address your orders to me 'At the Hague:' they
+ will be forwarded wherever I am; and I shall be, anywhere on earth,&mdash;Yours
+ forever (A VOUS POUR JAMAIS)." [Voltaire, lxxii. 252.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letter Second, of which a fragment may be given, is to one Cideville, a
+ month later; all the more genuine as there was no chance of the King's
+ hearing about this one. Cideville, some kind of literary Advocate at Rouen
+ (who is wearisomely known to the reader of Voltaire's Letters), had done,
+ what is rather an endemical disorder at this time, some Verses for the
+ King of Prussia, which he wished to be presented to his Majesty. The
+ presentation, owing to accidents, did not take place; hear how Voltaire,
+ from his cobweb Palace at the Hague, busy with ANTI-MACHIAVEL, Van Duren
+ and many other things,&mdash;18th October, 1740, on which day we find him
+ writing many Letters,&mdash;explains the sad accident:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE TO M. DE CIDEVILLE (at Rouen).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "AT THE HAGUE, KING OF PRUSSIA'S PALACE, 18th October, 1740.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "... This is my case, dear Cideville. When you sent me, enclosed in your
+ Letter, those Verses (among which there are some of charming and
+ inimitable turn) for our Marcus Aurelius of the North, I did well design
+ to pay my court to him with them. He was at that time to have come to
+ Brussels incognito: we expected him there; but the Quartan Fever, which
+ unhappily he still has, deranged all his projects. He sent me a courier to
+ Brussels,"&mdash;mark that point, my Cideville;&mdash;"and so I set out to
+ find him in the neighborhood of Cleve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was there I saw one of the amiablest men in the world, who forms the
+ charm of society, who would be everywhere sought after if he were not
+ King; a philosopher without austerity; full of sweetness, complaisance and
+ obliging ways (AGREMENS); not remembering that he is King when he meets
+ his friends; indeed so completely forgetting it that he made me too almost
+ forget it, and I needed an effort of memory to recollect that I here saw
+ sitting at the foot of my bed a Sovereign who had an Army of 100,000 men.
+ That was the moment to have read your amiable Verses to him:"&mdash;yes;
+ but then?&mdash;"Madame du Chatelet, who was to have sent them to me, did
+ not, NE L'A PA FAIT." Alas, no, they are still at Brussels, those charming
+ Verses; and I, for a month past, am here in my cobweb Palace! But I swear
+ to you, the instant I return to Brussels, I, &amp;c. &amp;c. [Voltaire,
+ lxii. 282.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, here is what Friedrich thought of it, ten days after parting with
+ Voltaire. We will read this also (though otherwise ahead of us as yet); to
+ be certified on all sides, and sated for the rest of our lives, concerning
+ the Friedrich-Voltaire First Interview.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KING FRIEDRICH TO M. JORDAN (at Berlin).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ POTSDAM, 24th September, 1740.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most respectable Inspector of the poor, the invalids, orphans, crazy
+ people and Bedlams,&mdash;I have read with mature meditation the very
+ profound Jordanic Letter which was waiting here;"&mdash;and do accept your
+ learned proposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have seen that Voltaire whom I was so curious to know; but I saw him
+ with the Quartan hanging on me, and my mind as unstrung as my body. With
+ men of his kind one ought not to be sick; one ought even to be specially
+ well, and in better health than common, if one could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has the eloquence of Cicero, the mildness of Pliny, the wisdom of
+ Agrippa; he combines, in short, what is to be collected of virtues and
+ talents from the three greatest men of Antiquity. His intellect is at work
+ incessantly; every drop of ink is a trait of wit from his pen. He
+ declaimed his MAHOMET to us, an admirable Tragedy which he has done,"&mdash;which
+ the Official people smelling heresies in it ("toleration," "horrors of
+ fanaticism," and the like) will not let him act, as readers too well know:&mdash;"he
+ transported us out of ourselves; I could only admire and hold my tongue.
+ The Du Chatelet is lucky to have him: for of the good things he flings out
+ at random, a person who had no faculty but memory might make a brilliant
+ Book. That Minerva has just published her Work on PHYSICS: not wholly bad.
+ It was Konig"&mdash;whom we know, and whose late tempest in a certain
+ teapot&mdash;"that dictated the theme to her: she has adjusted, ornamented
+ here and there with some touch picked from Voltaire at her Suppers. The
+ Chapter on Space is pitiable; the"&mdash;in short, she is still raw in the
+ Pure Sciences, and should have waited....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Adieu, most learned, most scientific, most profound Jordan,&mdash;or
+ rather most gallant, most amiable, most jovial Jordan;&mdash;I salute
+ thee, with assurance of all those old feelings which thou hast the art of
+ inspiring in every one that knows thee. VALE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I write the moment of my arrival: be obliged to me, friend; for I have
+ been working, I am going to work still, like a Turk, or like a Jordan." [<i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> xvii. 71.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is hastily thrown off for Friend Jordan, the instant after his
+ Majesty's circuitous return home. Readers cannot yet attend his Majesty
+ there, till they have brought the Affair of Herstal, and other remainders
+ of the Cleve Journey, along with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter V. &mdash; AFFAIR OF HERSTAL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This Rambonet, whom Voltaire found walking in the court of the old Castle
+ of Moyland, is an official gentleman, otherwise unknown to History, who
+ has lately been engaged in a Public Affair; and is now off again about it,
+ "on a hired hack" or otherwise,&mdash;with very good instructions in his
+ head. Affair which, though in itself but small, is now beginning to make
+ great noise in the world, as Friedrich wends homewards out of his Cleve
+ Journey. He has set it fairly alight, Voltaire and he, before quitting
+ Moyland; and now it will go of itself. The Affair of Herstal, or of the
+ Bishop of Liege; Friedrich's first appearance on the stage of politics.
+ Concerning which some very brief notice, if intelligible, will suffice
+ readers of the present day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heristal, now called Herstal, was once a Castle known to all mankind; King
+ Pipin's Castle, who styled himself "Pipin of Heristal," before he became
+ King of the Franks and begot Charlemagne. It lies on the Maas, in that
+ fruitful Spa Country; left bank of the Maas, a little to the north of
+ Liege; and probably began existence as a grander place than Liege
+ (LUTTICH), which was, at first, some Monastery dependent on secular
+ Herstal and its grandeurs:&mdash;think only how the race has gone between
+ these two entities; spiritual Liege now a big City, black with the smoke
+ of forges and steam-mills; Herstal an insignificant Village, accidentally
+ talked of for a few weeks in 1740, and no chance ever to be mentioned
+ again by men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herstal, in the confused vicissitudes of a thousand years, had passed
+ through various fortunes, and undergone change of owners often enough.
+ Fifty years ago it was in the hands of the Nassau-Orange House; Dutch
+ William, our English Protestant King, who probably scarce knew of his
+ possessing it, was Lord of Herstal till his death. Dutch William had no
+ children to inherit Herstal: he was of kinship to the Prussian House, as
+ readers are aware; and from that circumstance, not without a great deal of
+ discussion, and difficult "Division of the Orange Heritage," this Herstal
+ had, at the long last, fallen to Friedrich Wilhelm's share; it and
+ Neuchatel, and the Cobweb Palace, and some other places and pertinents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Dutch William was of kin, we say; Friedrich I. of Prussia, by his
+ Mother the noble Wife of the Great Elector, was full cousin to Dutch
+ William: and the Marriage Contracts were express,&mdash;though the High
+ Mightinesses made difficulties, and the collateral Orange branches were
+ abundantly reluctant, when it came to the fulfilling point. For indeed the
+ matter was intricate. Orange itself, for example, what was to be done with
+ the Principality of Orange? Clearly Prussia's; but it lies imbedded deep
+ in the belly of France, that will be a Caesarean-Operation for you! Had
+ not Neuchatel happened just then to fall home to France (or in some
+ measure to France) and be heirless, Prussia's Heritage of Orange would
+ have done little for Prussia! Principality of Orange was, by this chance,
+ long since, mainly in the First King's time, got settled: [Neuchatel, 3d
+ November, 1707, to Friedrich I., natives preferring him to "Fifteen other
+ Claimants;" Louis XIV. loudly protesting: not till Treaty of Utrecht (14th
+ March 1713, first month of Friedrich Wilhelm's reign) would Louis XIV., on
+ cession of Orange, consent and sanction.] but there needed many years more
+ of good waiting, and of good pushing, on Friedrich Wilhelm's part; and it
+ was not till 1732 that Friedrich Wilhelm got the Dutch Heritages finally
+ brought to the square: Neuchatel and Valengin, as aforesaid, in lieu of
+ Orange; and now furthermore, the Old Palace at Loo (that VIEILLE COUR and
+ biggest cobwebs), with pertinents, with Garden of Honslardik; and a string
+ of items, bigger and less, not worth enumerating. Of the items, this
+ Herstal was one;&mdash;and truly, so far as this went, Friedrich Wilhelm
+ often thought he had better never have seen it, so much trouble did it
+ bring him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ HOW THE HERSTALLERS HAD BEHAVED TO FRIEDRICH WILHELM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Herstal people, knowing the Prussian recruiting system and other
+ rigors, were extremely unwilling to come under Friedrich Wilhelm's sway,
+ could they have helped it. They refused fealty, swore they never would
+ swear: nor did they, till the appearance, or indubitable foreshine, of
+ Friedrich Wilhelm's bayonets advancing on them from the East, brought
+ compliance. And always after, spite of such quasi-fealty, they showed a
+ pig-like obstinacy of humor; a certain insignificant, and as it were
+ impertinent, deep-rooted desire to thwart, irritate and contradict the
+ said Friedrich Wilhelm. Especially in any recruiting matter that might
+ arise, knowing that to be the weak side of his Prussian Majesty. All this
+ would have amounted to nothing, had it not been that their neighbor, the
+ Prince Bishop of Liege, who imagined himself to have some obscure claims
+ of sovereignty over Herstal, and thought the present a good opportunity
+ for asserting these, was diligent to aid and abet the Herstal people in
+ such their mutinous acts. Obscure claims; of which this is the summary,
+ should the reader not prefer to skip it:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Bishop of Liege's claims on Herstal (which lie wrapt from mankind in
+ the extensive jungle of his law-pleadings, like a Bedlam happily fallen
+ extinct) seem to me to have grown mainly from two facts more or less
+ radical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "FACT FIRST. In Kaiser Barbarossa's time, year 1171, Herstal had been
+ given in pawn to the Church of Liege, for a loan, by the then proprietor,
+ Duke of Lorraine and Brabant. Loan was repaid, I do not learn when, and
+ the Pawn given back; to the satisfaction of said Duke, or Duke's Heirs;
+ never quite to the satisfaction of the Church, which had been in
+ possession, and was loath to quit, after hoping to continue. 'Give us back
+ Herstal; it ought to be ours!' Unappeasable sigh or grumble to this effect
+ is heard thenceforth, at intervals, in the Chapter of Liege, and has not
+ ceased in Friedrich's time. But as the world, in its loud thoroughfares,
+ seldom or never heard, or could hear, such sighing in the Chapter, nothing
+ had come of it,&mdash;till&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "FACT SECOND. In Kaiser Karl V.'s time, the Prince Bishop of Liege
+ happened to be a Natural Son of old Kaiser Max's;&mdash;and had friends at
+ headquarters, of a very choice nature. Had, namely, in this sort, Kaiser
+ Karl for Nephew or Half-Nephew; and what perhaps was still better, as
+ nearer hand, had Karl's Aunt, Maria Queen of Hungary, then Governess of
+ the Netherlands, for Half-Sister. Liege, in these choice circumstances,
+ and by other good chances that turned up, again got temporary clutch or
+ half-clutch of Herstal, for a couple of years (date 1546-1548, the Prince
+ of Orange, real proprietor, whose Ancestor had bought it for money down,
+ being then a minor); once, and perhaps a second time in like circumstance;
+ but had always to renounce it again, when the Prince of Orange came to
+ maturity. And ever since, the Chapter of Liege sighs as before, 'Herstal
+ is perhaps in a sense ours. We had once some kind of right to it!'&mdash;sigh
+ inaudible in the loud public thoroughfares. That is the Bishop's claim.
+ The name of him, if anybody care for it, is 'Georg Ludwig, titular COUNT
+ OF BERG,' now a very old man: Bishop of Liege, he, and has been snatching
+ at Herstal again, very eagerly by any skirt or tagrag that might happen to
+ fly loose, these eight years past, in a rash and provoking manner; [<i>Delices
+ du Pais de Liege</i> (Liege, 1738); <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 57-62.]&mdash;age
+ eighty-two at present; poor old fool, he had better have sat quiet. There
+ lies a rod in pickle for him, during these late months; and will be
+ surprisingly laid on, were the time come!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have Law Authority over Herstal, and power of judging there in the last
+ appeal," said this Bishop:&mdash;"You!" thought Friedrich Wilhelm, who was
+ far off, and had little time to waste.&mdash;"Any Prussian recruiter that
+ behaves ill, bring him to me!" said the Bishop, who was on the spot. And
+ accordingly it had been done; one notable instance two years ago: a
+ Prussian Lieutenant locked in the Liege jail, on complaint of riotous
+ Herstal; thereupon a Prussian Officer of rank (Colonel Kreutzen, worthy
+ old Malplaquet gentleman) coming as Royal Messenger, not admitted to
+ audience, nay laid hold of by the Liege bailiff instead; and other
+ unheard-of procedures. [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 63-73.] So that
+ Friedrich Wilhelm had nothing but trouble with this petty Herstal, and
+ must have thought his neighbor Bishop a very contentious high-flying
+ gentleman, who took great liberties with the Lion's whiskers, when he had
+ the big animal at an advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The episcopal procedures, eight years ago, about the First Homaging of
+ Herstal, had been of similar complexion; nor had other such failed in the
+ interim, though this last outrage exceeded them all. This last began in
+ the end of 1738; and span itself out through 1739, when Friedrich Wilhelm
+ lay in his final sickness, less able to deal with it than formerly. Being
+ a peaceable man, unwilling to awaken conflagrations for a small matter,
+ Friedrich Wilhelm had offered, through Kreutzen on this occasion, to part
+ with Herstal altogether; to sell it, for 100,000 thalers, say 16,000
+ pounds, to the high-flying Bishop, and honestly wash his hands of it. But
+ the high-flying Bishop did not consent, gave no definite answer; and so
+ the matter lay,&mdash;like an unsettled extremely irritating paltry little
+ matter,&mdash;at the time Friedrich Wilhelm died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Gazetteers and public knew little about these particulars, or had
+ forgotten them again; but at the Prussian Court they were in lively
+ remembrance. What the young Friedrich's opinion about them had been we
+ gather from this succinct notice of the thing, written seven or eight
+ years afterwards, exact in all points, and still carrying a breath of the
+ old humor in it. "A miserable Bishop of Liege thought it a proud thing to
+ insult the late King. Some subjects of Herstal, which belongs to Prussia,
+ had revolted; the Bishop gave them his protection. Colonel Kreutzen was
+ sent to Liege, to compose the thing by treaty; credentials with him, full
+ power, and all in order. Imagine it, the Bishop would not receive him!
+ Three days, day after day, he saw this Envoy apply at his Palace, and
+ always denied him entrance. These things had grown past endurance."
+ [Preuss, <i>OEuvres (Memoires de Brandebourg)</i>, end ii. 53.] And
+ Friedrich had taken note of Herstal along with him, on this Cleve Journey;
+ privately intending to put Herstal and the high-flying Bishop on a
+ suitabler footing, before his return from those countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For indeed, on Friedrich's Accession, matters had grown worse, not better.
+ Of course there was Fealty to be sworn; but the Herstal people, abetted by
+ the high-flying Bishop, have declined swearing it. Apology for the past,
+ prospect of amendment for the future, there is less than ever. What is the
+ young King to do with this paltry little Hamlet of Herstal? He could, in
+ theory, go into some Reichs-Hofrath, some Reichs-Kammergericht (kind of
+ treble and tenfold English Court-of-Chancery, which has lawsuits 250 years
+ old),&mdash;if he were a theoretic German King. He can plead in the Diets,
+ and the Wetzlar Reichs-Kammergericht without end: "All German Sovereigns
+ have power to send their Ambassador thither, who is like a mastiff chained
+ in the back-yard [observes Friedrich elsewhere] with privilege of barking
+ at the Moon,"&mdash;unrestricted privilege of barking at the Moon, if that
+ will avail a practical man, or King's Ambassador. Or perhaps the Bishop of
+ Liege will bethink him, at last, what considerable liberty he is taking
+ with some people's whiskers? Four months are gone; Bishop of Liege has not
+ in the least bethought him: we are in the neighborhood in person, with
+ note of the thing in our memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH TAKES THE ROD OUT OF PICKLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly the Rath Rambonet, whom Voltaire found at Moyland that Sunday
+ night, had been over at Liege; went exactly a week before; with this
+ message of very peremptory tenor from his Majesty:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TO THE PRINCE BISHOP OF LIEGE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "WESEL, 4th September, 1740.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MY COUSIN,&mdash;Knowing all the assaults (ATTEINTES) made by you upon my
+ indisputable rights over my free Barony of Herstal; and how the seditious
+ ringleaders there, for several years past, have been countenanced
+ (BESTARKET) by you in their detestable acts of disobedience against me,&mdash;I
+ have commanded my Privy Councillor Rambonet to repair to your presence,
+ and in my name to require from you, within two days, a distinct and
+ categorical answer to this question: Whether you are still minded to
+ assert your pretended sovereignty over Herstal; and whether you will
+ protect the rebels at Herstal, in their disorders and abominable
+ disobedience?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In case you refuse, or delay beyond the term, the Answer which I hereby
+ of right demand, you will render yourself alone responsible, before the
+ world, for the consequences which infallibly will follow. I am, with much
+ consideration,&mdash;My Cousin,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your very affectionate Cousin,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "FRIEDRICH." [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 75, 111.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rambonet had started straightway for Liege, with this missive; and had
+ duly presented it there, I guess on the 7th,&mdash;with notice that he
+ would wait forty-eight hours, and then return with what answer or
+ no-answer there might be. Getting no written answer, or distinct verbal
+ one; getting only some vague mumblement as good as none, Rambonet had
+ disappeared from Liege on the 9th; and was home at Moyland when Voltaire
+ arrived that Sunday evening,&mdash;just walking about to come to heat
+ again, after reporting progress to the above effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rambonet, I judge, enjoyed only one of those divine Suppers at Moyland;
+ and dashed off again, "on hired hack" or otherwise, the very next morning;
+ that contingency of No-answer having been the anticipated one, and all
+ things put in perfect readiness for it. Rambonet's new errand was to "take
+ act," as Voltaire calls it, "at the Gates of Liege,"&mdash;to deliver at
+ Liege a succinct Manifesto, Pair of Manifestoes, both in Print (ready
+ beforehand), and bearing date that same Sunday, "Wesel, 11th September;"
+ much calculated to amaze his Reverence at Liege. Succinct good
+ Manifestoes, said to be of Friedrich's own writing; the essential of the
+ two is this:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Exposition of the Reasons which have induced his Majesty the King of
+ Prussia to make just Reprisals on the Prince Bishop of Liege.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty the King of Prussia, being driven beyond bounds by the rude
+ proceedings of the Prince Bishop of Liege, has with regret seen himself
+ forced to recur to the Method of Arms, in order to repress the violence
+ and affront which the Bishop has attempted to put upon him. This
+ resolution has cost his Majesty much pain; the rather as he is, by
+ principle and disposition, far remote from whatever could have the least
+ relation to rigor and severity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But seeing himself compelled by the Bishop of Liege to take new methods,
+ he had no other course but to maintain the justice of his rights (LA
+ JUSTICE DE SES DROITS), and demand reparation for the indignity done upon
+ his Minister Von Kreuzen, as well as for the contempt with which the
+ Bishop of Liege has neglected even to answer the Letter of the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As too much rigor borders upon cruelty, so too much patience resembles
+ weakness. Thus, although the King would willingly have sacrificed his
+ interests to the public peace and tranquillity, it was not possible to do
+ so in reference to his honor; and that is the chief motive which has
+ determined him to this resolution, so contrary to his intentions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In vain has it been attempted, by methods of mildness, to come to a
+ friendly agreement: it has been found, on the contrary, that the King's
+ moderation only increased the Prince's arrogance; that mildness of conduct
+ on one side only furnished resources to pride on the other; and that, in
+ fine, instead of gaining by soft procedure, one was insensibly becoming an
+ object of vexation and disdain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There being no means to have justice but in doing it for oneself, and the
+ King being Sovereign enough for such a duty,&mdash;he intends to make the
+ Prince of Liege feel how far he was in the wrong to abuse such moderation
+ so unworthily. But in spite of so much unhandsome behavior on the part of
+ this Prince, the King will not be inflexible; satisfied with having shown
+ the said Prince that he can punish him, and too just to overwhelm him.
+ FREDERIC. "WESEL, September 11th, 1740." [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii.
+ 77. Said to be by Friedrich himself (Stenzel, iv. 59).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether Rambonet insinuated his Paper-Packet into the Palace of Seraing,
+ left it at the Gate of Liege (fixed by nail, if he saw good), or in what
+ manner he "took act," I never knew; and indeed Rambonet vanishes from
+ human History at this point: it is certain only that he did his Formality,
+ say two days hence;&mdash;and that the Fact foreshadowed by it is likewise
+ in the same hours, hour after hour, getting steadily done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the Manifestoes printed beforehand, dated Wesel, 11th September, were
+ not the only thing ready at Wesel; waiting, as on the slip, for the
+ contingency of No-answer. Major-General Borck, with the due Battalions,
+ squadrons and equipments, was also ready. Major-General Borck, the same
+ who was with us at Baireuth lately, had just returned from that journey,
+ when he got orders to collect 2,000 men, horse and foot, with the due
+ proportion of artillery, from the Prussian Garrisons in these parts; and
+ to be ready for marching with them, the instant the contingency of
+ No-answer arrives,&mdash;Sunday, 11th, as can be foreseen. Borck knows his
+ route: To Maaseyk, a respectable Town of the Bishop's, the handiest for
+ Wesel; to occupy Maaseyk and the adjoining "Counties of Lotz and Horn;"
+ and lie there at the Bishop's charge till his Reverence's mind alter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Borck is ready, to the last pontoon, the last munition-loaf; and no sooner
+ is signal given of the No-answer come, than Borck, that same "Sunday,
+ 11th," gets under way; marches, steady as clock-work, towards Maaseyk
+ (fifty miles southwest of him, distance now lessening every hour); crosses
+ the Maas, by help of his pontoons; is now in the Bishop's Territory, and
+ enters Maaseyk, evening of "Wednesday, 14th,"&mdash;that very day Voltaire
+ and his Majesty had parted, going different ways from Moyland; and
+ probably about the same hour while Rambonet was "taking act at the Gate of
+ Liege," by nail-hammer or otherwise. All goes punctual, swift, cog hitting
+ pinion far and near, in this small Herstal Business; and there is no
+ mistake made, and a minimum of time spent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Borck's management was throughout good: punctual, quietly exact, polite,
+ mildly inflexible. Fain would the Maaseyk Town-Baths have shut their gates
+ on him; desperately conjuring him, "Respite for a few hours, till we send
+ to Liege for instructions!" But it was to no purpose. "Unbolt, IHR HERREN;
+ swift, or the petard will have to do it!" Borck publishes his
+ Proclamation, a mild-spoken rigorous Piece; signifies to the Maaseyk
+ Authorities, That he has to exact a Contribution of 20,000 thalers (3,000
+ pounds) here, Contribution payable in three days; that he furthermore,
+ while he continues in these parts, will need such and such rations,
+ accommodations, allowances,&mdash;"fifty LOUIS (say guineas) daily for his
+ own private expenses," one item;&mdash;and, in mild rhadamanthine
+ language, waves aside all remonstrance, refusal or delay, as superfluous
+ considerations: Unless said Contribution and required supplies come in, it
+ will be his painful duty to bring them in. [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> i.
+ 427; ii. 113.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The high-flying Bishop, much astonished, does now eagerly answer his
+ Prussian Majesty, "Was from home, was ill, thought he had answered; is the
+ most ill-used of Bishops;" and other things of a hysteric character. [Ib.
+ ii. 85, 86 (date, 16th September).] And there came forth, as natural to
+ the situation, multitudinous complainings, manifestoings, applications to
+ the Kaiser, to the French, to the Dutch, of a very shrieky character on
+ the Bishop of Liege's part; sparingly, if at all noticed on Friedrich's:
+ the whole of which we shall consider ourselves free to leave undisturbed
+ in the rubbish-abysses, as henceforth conceivable to the reader. "SED SPEM
+ STUPENDE FEFELLIT EVENTUS," shrieks the poor old Bishop, making moan to
+ the Kaiser: "ECCE ENIM, PRAEMISSA DUNTAXAT UNA LITERA, one Letter," and
+ little more, "the said King of Borussia has, with about 2,000 horse and
+ foot, and warlike engines, in this month of September, entered the
+ Territory of Liege;" [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 88.] which is an
+ undeniable truth, but an unavailing. Borck is there, and "2,000 good
+ arguments with him," as Voltaire defines the phenomenon. Friedrich, except
+ to explain pertinently what my readers already know, does not write or
+ speak farther on the subject; and readers and he may consider the Herstal
+ Affair, thus set agoing under Borck's auspices, as in effect finished; and
+ that his Majesty has left it on a satisfactory footing, and may safely
+ turn his back on it, to wait the sure issue at Berlin before long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF HERSTAL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Voltaire told us he himself "did one Manifesto, good or bad," on this
+ Herstal business:&mdash;where is that Piece, then, what has become of it?
+ Dig well in the realms of Chaos, rectifying stupidities more or less
+ enormous, the Piece itself is still discoverable; and, were pieces by
+ Voltaire much a rarity instead of the reverse, might be resuscitated by a
+ good Editor, and printed in his WORKS. Lies buried in the lonesome
+ rubbish-mountains of that <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>&mdash;let a SISTE
+ VIATOR, scratched on the surface, mark where. [Ib. ii. 98-98.] Apparently
+ that is the Piece by Voltaire? Yes, on reading that, it has every internal
+ evidence; distinguishes itself from the surrounding pieces, like a slab of
+ compact polished stone, in a floor rammed together out of ruinous old
+ bricks, broken bottles and mortar-dust;&mdash;agrees, too, if you examine
+ by the microscope, with the external indications, which are sure and at
+ last clear, though infinitesimally small; and is beyond doubt Voltaire's,
+ if it were now good for much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not properly a Manifesto, but an anonymous memoir published in the
+ Newspapers, explaining to impartial mankind, in a legible brief manner,
+ what the old and recent History of Herstal, and the Troubles of Herstal,
+ have been, and how chimerical and "null to the extreme of nullity (NULLES
+ DE TOUT NULLITE)" this poor Bishop's pretensions upon it are. Voltaire
+ expressly piques himself on this Piece; [Letter to Friedrich: dateless,
+ datable "soon after 17th September;" which the rash dark Editors have by
+ guess misdated "August; "or, what was safer for them, omitted it
+ altogether. <i>OEuvres de Voltaire</i> (Paris, 1818, 40 vols.) gives the
+ Letter, xxxix. 442 (see also ibid. 453, 463); later Editors, and even
+ Preuss, take the safer course.] brags also how he settled "M. de Fenelon
+ [French Ambassador at the Hague], who came to me the day before
+ yesterday," much out of square upon the Herstal Business, till I pulled
+ him straight. And it is evident (beautifully so, your Majesty) how
+ Voltaire busied himself in the Gazettes and Diplomatic circles, setting
+ Friedrich's case right; Voltaire very loyal to Friedrich and his Liege
+ Cause at that time;&mdash;and the contrast between what his contemporary
+ Letters say on the subject, and what his ulterior Pasquil called VIE
+ PRIVEE says, is again great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dull stagnant world, shaken awake by this Liege adventure, gives voice
+ variously; and in the Gazetteer and Diplomatic circles it is much
+ criticised, by no means everywhere in the favorable tone at this first
+ blush of the business. "He had written an ANTI-Machiavel," says the Abbe
+ St. Pierre, and even says Voltaire (in the PASQUIL, not the contemporary
+ LETTERS), "and he acts thus!" Truly he does, Monsieur de Voltaire; and all
+ men, with light upon the subject, or even with the reverse upon it, must
+ make their criticisms. For the rest, Borck's "2,000 arguments" are there;
+ which Borck handles well, with polite calm rigor: by degrees the dust will
+ fall, and facts everywhere be seen for what they are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the high-flying Bishop, finding that hysterics are but wasted on
+ Friedrich and Borck, and produce no effect with their 2,000 validities, he
+ flies next to the Kaiser, to the Imperial Diet, in shrill-sounding Latin
+ obtestations, of which we already gave a flying snatch: "Your HUMILISSIMUS
+ and FIDELISSIMUS VASSALLUS, and most obsequient Servant, Georgius
+ Ludovicus; meek, modest, and unspeakably in the right: Was ever Member of
+ the Holy Roman Empire so snubbed, and grasped by the windpipe, before? Oh,
+ help him, great Kaiser, bid the iron gripe loosen itself!" [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii, 86-116.] The Kaiser does so, in heavy Latin rescripts, in German
+ DEHORTATORIUMS more than one, of a sulky, imperative, and indeed very
+ lofty tenor; "Let Georgius Ludovicus go, foolish rash young Dilection
+ (LIEBDEN, not MAJESTY, we ourselves being the only Majesty), and I will
+ judge between you; otherwise&mdash;!" said the Kaiser, ponderously shaking
+ his Olympian wig, and lifting his gilt cane, or sceptre of mankind, in an
+ Olympian manner. Here are some touches of his second sublimest
+ DEHORTATORIUM addressed to Friedrich, in a very compressed state: [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii. 127; a FIRST and milder (ibid. 73).]&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We Karl the Sixth, Kaiser of (TITLES ENOUGH),... "Considering these, in
+ the Holy Roman Reich, almost unheard-of violent Doings (THATLICHKEITEN),
+ which We, in Our Supreme-Judge Office, cannot altogether justify, nor will
+ endure... We have the trust that you yourself will magnanimously see How
+ evil counsellors have misled your Dilection to commence your Reign, not by
+ showing example of Obedience to the Laws appointed for all members of the
+ Reich, for the weak and for the strong alike, but by such Doings
+ (THATHANDLUNGEN) as in all quarters must cause a great surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We give your Dilection to know, therefore, That you must straightway
+ withdraw those troops which have broken into the Liege Territory; make
+ speedy restitution of all that has been extorted;&mdash;especially General
+ von Borck to give back at once those 50 louis d'or daily drawn by him, to
+ renounce his demand of the 20,000 thalers, to make good all damage done,
+ and retire with his whole military force (MILITZ) over the Liege
+ boundaries;&mdash;and in brief, that you will, by law or arbitration,
+ manage to agree with the Prince Bishop of Liege, who wishes it very much.
+ These things We expect from your Dilection, as Kurfurst of Brandenburg,
+ within the space of Two Months from the Issuing of this; and remain,"&mdash;Yours
+ as you shall demean yourself,&mdash;KARL.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Given at Wien, 4th of October, 1740."&mdash;The last Dehortatorium ever
+ signed by Karl VI. In two weeks after he ate too many mushrooms,&mdash;and
+ immense results followed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dehortatoriums had their interest, at Berlin and elsewhere, for the
+ Diplomatic circles; but did not produce the least effect on Borck or
+ Friedrich; though Friedrich noted the Kaiser's manner in these things, and
+ thought privately to himself, as was evident to the discerning, "What an
+ amount of wig on that old gentleman!" A notable Kaiser's Ambassador, Herr
+ Botta, who had come with some Accession compliments, in these weeks, was
+ treated slightingly by Friedrich; hardly admitted to Audience; and
+ Friedrich's public reply to the last Dehortatorium had almost something of
+ sarcasm in it: Evil counsellors yourself, Most Dread Kaiser! It is you
+ that are "misled by counsellors, who might chance to set Germany on fire,
+ were others as unwise as they!" Which latter phrase was remarkable to
+ mankind.&mdash;There is a long account already run up between that old
+ gentleman, with his Seckendorfs, Grumkows, with his dull insolencies,
+ wiggeries, and this young gentleman, who has nearly had his heart broken
+ and his Father's house driven mad by them! Borck remains at his post;
+ rations duly delivered, and fifty louis a day for his own private
+ expenses; and there is no answer to the Kaiser, or in sharp brief terms
+ (about "chances of setting Germany on fire"), rather worse than none.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Readers see, as well as Friedrich did, what the upshot of this affair must
+ be;&mdash;we will now finish it off, and wash our hands of it, before
+ following his Majesty to Berlin. The poor Bishop had applied, shrieking,
+ to the French for help;&mdash;and there came some colloquial passages
+ between Voltaire and Fenelon, if that were a result. He had shrieked in
+ like manner to the Dutch, but without result of any kind traceable in that
+ quarter: nowhere, except from the Kaiser, is so much as a DEHORTATORIUM to
+ be got. Whereupon the once high-flying, now vainly shrieking Bishop
+ discerns clearly that there is but one course left,&mdash;the course which
+ has lain wide open for some years past, had not his flight gone too high
+ for seeing it. Before three weeks are over, seeing how Dehortatoriums go,
+ he sends his Ambassadors to Berlin, his apologies, proposals: [Ambassadors
+ arrived 28th September; last Dehortatorium not yet out. Business was
+ completed 20th October (Rodenbeck, IN DIEBUS).] "Would not your Majesty
+ perhaps consent to sell this Herstal, as your Father of glorious memory
+ was pleased to be willing once?"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich answers straightway to the effect: "Certainly! Pay me the price
+ it was once already offered for: 100,000 thalers, PLUS the expenses since
+ incurred. That will be 180,000 thalers, besides what you have spent
+ already on General Borck's days' wages. To which we will add that wretched
+ little fraction of Old Debt, clear as noon, but never paid nor any part of
+ it; 60,000 thalers, due by the See of Liege ever since the Treaty of
+ Utrecht; 60,000, for which we will charge no interest: that will make
+ 240,000 thalers,&mdash;36,000 pounds, instead of the old sum you might
+ have had it at. Produce that cash; and take Herstal, and all the dust that
+ has risen out of it, well home with you." [Stenzel, iv. 60, who counts in
+ gulden, and is not distinct.] The Bishop thankfully complies in all
+ points; negotiation speedily done ("20th Oct." the final date): Bishop has
+ not, I think, quite so much cash on hand; but will pay all he has, and 4
+ per centum interest till the whole be liquidated. His Ambassadors "get
+ gold snuffboxes;" and return mildly glad!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, in some six weeks after Borck's arrival in those parts, Borck's
+ function is well done. The noise of Gazettes and Diplomatic circles lays
+ itself again; and Herstal, famous once for King Pipin, and famous again
+ for King Friedrich, lapses at length into obscurity, which we hope will
+ never end. Hope;&mdash;though who can say? ROUCOUX, quite close upon it,
+ becomes a Battle-ground in some few years; and memorabilities go much at
+ random in this world!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VI. &mdash; RETURNS BY HANOVER; DOES NOT CALL ON HIS ROYAL UNCLE
+ THERE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich spent ten days on his circuitous journey home; considerable
+ inspection to be done, in Minden, Magdeburg, not to speak of other
+ businesses he had. The old Newspapers are still more intent upon him, now
+ that the Herstal Affair has broken into flame: especially the English
+ Newspapers; who guess that there are passages of courtship going on
+ between great George their King and him. Here is one fact, correct in
+ every point, for the old London Public: "Letters from Hanover say, that
+ the King of Prussia passed within a small distance of that City the 16th
+ inst. N.S., on his return to Berlin, but did not stop at Herrenhausen;"&mdash;about
+ which there has been such hoping and speculating among us lately. [<i>Daily
+ Post,</i> 22d September, 1740; other London Newspapers from July 31st
+ downwards.] A fact which the extinct Editor seems to meditate for a day or
+ two; after which he says (partly in ITALICS), opening his lips the second
+ time, like a Friar Bacon's Head significant to the Public: "Letters from
+ Hanover tell us that the Interview, which it was said his Majesty was to
+ have with the King of Prussia, did not take place, for certain PRIVATE
+ REASONS, which our Correspondent leaves us to guess at!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is well known Friedrich did not love his little Uncle, then or
+ thenceforth; still less his little Uncle him: "What is this Prussia,
+ rising alongside of us, higher and higher, as if it would reach our own
+ sublime level!" thinks the little Uncle to himself. At present there is no
+ quarrel between them; on the contrary, as we have seen, there is a mutual
+ capability of helping one another, which both recognize; but will an
+ interview tend to forward that useful result? Friedrich, in the intervals
+ of an ague, with Herstal just broken out, may have wisely decided, No.
+ "Our sublime little Uncle, of the waxy complexion, with the proudly
+ staring fish-eyes,&mdash;no wit in him, not much sense, and a great deal
+ of pride,&mdash;stands dreadfully erect, 'plumb and more,' with the
+ Garter-leg advanced, when one goes to see him; and his remarks are not of
+ an entertaining nature. Leave him standing there: to him let Truchsess and
+ Bielfeld suffice, in these hurries, in this ague that is still upon us."
+ Upon which the dull old Newspapers, Owls of Minerva that then were,
+ endeavor to draw inferences. The noticeable fact is, Friedrich did, on
+ this occasion, pass within a mile or two of his royal Uncle, without
+ seeing him; and had not, through life, another opportunity; never saw the
+ sublime little man at all, nor was again so near him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe Friedrich little knows the thick-coming difficulties of his
+ Britannic Majesty at this juncture; and is too impatient of these laggard
+ procedures on the part of a man with eyes A FLEUR-DE-TETE. Modern readers
+ too have forgotten Jenkins's Ear; it is not till after long study and
+ survey that one begins to perceive the anomalous profundities of that
+ phenomenon to the poor English Nation and its poor George II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English sent off, last year, a scanty Expedition, "six ships of the
+ line," only six, under Vernon, a fiery Admiral, a little given to be fiery
+ in Parliamentary talk withal; and these did proceed to Porto-Bello on the
+ Spanish Main of South America; did hurl out on Porto-Bello such a fiery
+ destructive deluge, of gunnery and bayonet-work, as quickly reduced the
+ poor place to the verge of ruin, and forced it to surrender with whatever
+ navy, garrison, goods and resources were in it, to the discretion of fiery
+ Vernon,&mdash;who does not prove implacable, he or his, to a petitioning
+ enemy. Yes, humble the insolent, but then be merciful to them, say the
+ admiring Gazetteers. "The actual monster," how cheering to think, "who
+ tore off Mr. Jenkins's Ear, was got hold of [actual monster, or even three
+ or four different monsters who each did it, the "hold got" being mythical,
+ as readers see], and naturally thought he would be slit to ribbons; but
+ our people magnanimously pardoned him, magnanimously flung him aside out
+ of sight;" [<i>Gentleman's Magazine,</i> x. 124, 145 (date of the Event is
+ 3d December N.S., 1739).] impossible to shoot a dog in cold blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon Vernon returned home triumphant; and there burst forth such a
+ jubilation, over the day of small things, as is now astonishing to think
+ of. Had the Termagant's own Thalamus and Treasury been bombarded suddenly
+ one night by red-hot balls, Madrid City laid in ashes, or Baby Carlos's
+ Apanage extinguished from Creation, there could hardly have been greater
+ English joy (witness the "Porto-Bellos" they still have, new Towns so
+ named); so flamy is the murky element growing on that head. And indeed had
+ the cipher of tar-barrels burnt, and of ale-barrels drunk, and the general
+ account of wick and tallow spent in illuminations and in aldermanic
+ exertions on the matter, been accurately taken, one doubts if Porto-Bello
+ sold, without shot fired, to the highest bidder, at its floweriest, would
+ have covered such a sum. For they are a singular Nation, if stirred up
+ from their stagnancy; and are much in earnest about this Spanish War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said there is now another far grander Expedition on the stocks:
+ military this time as well as naval, intended for the Spanish Main;&mdash;but
+ of that, for the present, we will defer speaking. Enough, the Spanish War
+ is a most serious and most furious business to those old English; and, to
+ us, after forced study of it, shines out like far-off conflagration, with
+ a certain lurid significance in the then night of things. Night otherwise
+ fallen dark and somniferous to modern mankind. As Britannic Majesty and
+ his Walpoles have, from the first, been dead against this Spanish War, the
+ problem is all the more ominous, and the dreadful corollaries that may
+ hang by it the more distressing to the royal mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For example, there is known, or as good as known, to be virtually some
+ Family Compact, or covenanted Brotherhood of Bourbonism, French and
+ Spanish: political people quake to ask themselves, "How will the French
+ keep out of this War, if it continue any length of time? And in that case,
+ how will Austria, Europe at large? Jenkins's Ear will have kindled the
+ Universe, not the Spanish Main only, and we shall be at a fine pass!" The
+ Britannic Majesty reflects that if France take to fighting him, the first
+ stab given will probably be in the accessiblest quarter and the intensely
+ most sensitive,&mdash;our own Electoral Dominions where no Parliament
+ plagues us, our dear native country, Hanover. Extremely interesting to
+ know what Friedrich of Prussia will do in such contingency?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, truly it might have been King George's best bargain to close with
+ Friedrich; to guarantee Julich and Berg, and get Fredrich to stand between
+ the French and Hanover; while George, with an England behind him, in such
+ humor, went wholly into that Spanish Business, the one thing needful to
+ them at present. Truly; but then again, there are considerations: "What is
+ this Friedrich, just come out upon the world? What real fighting power has
+ he, after all that ridiculous drilling and recruiting Friedrich Wilhelm
+ made? Will he be faithful in bargain; is not, perhaps, from of old, his
+ bias always toward France rather? And the Kaiser, what will the Kaiser say
+ to it?" These are questions for a Britannic Majesty! Seldom was seen such
+ an insoluble imbroglio of potentialities; dangerous to touch, dangerous to
+ leave lying;&mdash;and his Britannic Majesty's procedures upon it are of a
+ very slow intricate sort; and will grow still more so, year after year, in
+ the new intricacies that are coming, and be a weariness to my readers and
+ me. For observe the simultaneous fact. All this while, Robinson at Vienna
+ is dunning the Imperial Majesty to remember old Marlborough days and the
+ Laws of Nature; and declare for us against France, in case of the worst.
+ What an attempt! Imperial Majesty has no money; Imperial Majesty remembers
+ recent days rather, and his own last quarrel with France (on the
+ Polish-Election score), in which you Sea-Powers cruelly stood neuter! One
+ comfort, and pretty much one only, is left to a nearly bankrupt Imperial
+ heart; that France does at any rate ratify Pragmatic Sanction, and instead
+ of enemy to that inestimable Document has become friend,&mdash;if only she
+ be well let alone. "Let well alone," says the sad Kaiser, bankrupt of
+ heart as well as purse: "I have saved the Pragmatic, got Fleury to
+ guarantee it; I will hunt wild swine and not shadows any more: ask me
+ not!" And now this Herstal business; the Imperial Dehortatoriums, perhaps
+ of a high nature, that are like to come? More hopeless proposition the
+ Britannic Majesty never made than this to the Kaiser. But he persists in
+ it, orders Robinson to persist; knocks at the Austrian door with one hand,
+ at the Prussian or Anti-Austrian with the other; and gazes, with those
+ proud fish-eyes, into perils and potentialities and a sea of troubles.
+ Wearisome to think of, were not one bound to it! Here, from a singular
+ CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND, not yet got into print, are two
+ Excerpts; which I will request the reader to try if he can take along with
+ him, in view of much that is Coming:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. A JUST WAR.&mdash;"This War, which posterity scoffs at as the WAR OF
+ JENKINS'S EAR, was, if we examine it, a quite indispensable one; the dim
+ much-bewildered English, driven into it by their deepest instincts, were,
+ in a chaotic inarticulate way, right and not wrong in taking it as the
+ Commandment of Heaven. For such, in a sense, it was; as shall by and by
+ appear. Not perhaps since the grand Reformation Controversy, under Oliver
+ Cromwell and Elizabeth, had there, to this poor English People (who are
+ essentially dumb, inarticulate, from the weight of meaning they have,
+ notwithstanding the palaver one hears from them in certain epochs), been a
+ more authentic cause of War. And, what was the fatal and yet foolish
+ circumstance, their Constitutional Captains, especially their King, would
+ never and could never regard it as such; but had to be forced into it by
+ the public rage, there being no other method left in the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I say, a most necessary War, though of a most stupid appearance; such the
+ fatality of it:&mdash;begun, carried on, ended, as if by a People in a
+ state of somnambulism! More confused operation never was. A solid placid
+ People, heavily asleep (and snoring much, shall we say, and inarticulately
+ grunting and struggling under indigestions, Constitutional and other? Do
+ but listen to the hum of those extinct Pamphlets and Parliamentary
+ Oratories of theirs!),&mdash;yet an honestly intending People; and keenly
+ alive to any commandment from Heaven, that could pierce through the thick
+ skin of them into their big obstinate heart. Such a commandment, then and
+ there, was that monition about Jenkins's Ear. Upon which, so pungent was
+ it to them, they started violently out of bed, into painful sleep-walking;
+ and went, for twenty years and more, clambering and sprawling about, far
+ and wide, on the giddy edge of precipices, over house-tops and frightful
+ cornices and parapets; in a dim fulfilment of the said Heaven's command. I
+ reckon that this War, though there were intervals, Treaties of Peace more
+ than one, and the War had various names,&mdash;did not end till 1763. And
+ then, by degrees, the poor English Nation found that (at, say, a thousand
+ times the necessary expense, and with imminent peril to its poor head, and
+ all the bones of its body) it had actually succeeded,&mdash;by dreadful
+ exertions in its sleep! This will be more apparent by and by; and may be a
+ kind of comfort to the sad English reader, drearily surveying such
+ somnambulisms on the part of his poor ancestors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. TWO DIFFICULTIES.&mdash;"There are Two grand Difficulties in this
+ Farce-Tragedy of a war; of which only one, and that not the worst of the
+ Pair, is in the least surmised by the English hitherto. Difficulty First,
+ which is even worse than the other, and will surprisingly attend the
+ English in all their Wars now coming, is: That their fighting-apparatus,
+ though made of excellent material, cannot fight,&mdash;being in disorganic
+ condition; one branch of it, especially the 'Military' one as they are
+ pleased to call it, being as good as totally chaotic, and this in a quiet
+ habitual manner, this long while back. With the Naval branch it is
+ otherwise; which also is habitual there. The English almost as if by
+ nature can sail, and fight, in ships; cannot well help doing it. Sailors
+ innumerable are bred to them; they are planted in the Ocean, opulent
+ stormy Neptune clipping them in all his moods forever: and then by nature,
+ being a dumb, much-enduring, much-reflecting, stout, veracious and valiant
+ kind of People, they shine in that way of life, which specially requires
+ such. Without much forethought, they have sailors innumerable, and of the
+ best quality. The English have among them also, strange as it may seem to
+ the cursory observer, a great gift of organizing; witness their Arkwrights
+ and others: and this gift they may often, in matters Naval more than
+ elsewhere, get the chance of exercising. For a Ship's Crew, or even a
+ Fleet, unlike a land Army, is of itself a unity, its fortunes disjoined,
+ dependent on its own management; and it falls, moreover, as no land army
+ can, to the undivided guidance of one man,&mdash;who (by hypothesis, being
+ English) has now and then, from of old, chanced to be an organizing man;
+ and who is always much interested to know and practise what has been well
+ organized. For you are in contact with verities, to an unexampled degree,
+ when you get upon the Ocean, with intent to sail on it, much more to fight
+ on it;&mdash;bottomless destruction raging beneath you and on all hands of
+ you, if you neglect, for any reason, the methods of keeping it down, and
+ making it float you to your aim!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The English Navy is in tolerable order at that period. But as to the
+ English Army,&mdash;we may say it is, in a wrong sense, the wonder of the
+ world, and continues so throughout the whole of this History and farther!
+ Never before, among the rational sons of Adam, were Armies sent out on
+ such terms,&mdash;namely without a General, or with no General
+ understanding the least of his business. The English have a notion that
+ Generalship is not wanted; that War is not an Art, as playing Chess is, as
+ finding the Longitude, and doing the Differential Calculus are (and a much
+ deeper Art than any of these); that War is taught by Nature, as eating is;
+ that courageous soldiers, led on by a courageous Wooden Pole with
+ Cocked-hat on it, will do very well. In the world I have not found opacity
+ of platitude go deeper among any People. This is Difficulty First, not yet
+ suspected by an English People, capable of great opacity on some subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Difficulty Second is, That their Ministry, whom they had to force into
+ this War, perhaps do not go zealously upon it. And perhaps even, in the
+ above circumstances, they totally want knowledge how to go upon it, were
+ they never so zealous; Difficulty Second might be much helped, were it not
+ for Difficulty First. But the administering of War is a thing also that
+ does not come to a man like eating.&mdash;This Second Difficulty,
+ suspicion that Walpole and perhaps still higher heads want zeal, gives his
+ Britannic Majesty infinite trouble; and"&mdash;&mdash;And so, in short, he
+ stands there, with the Garter-leg advanced, looking loftily into a
+ considerable sea of troubles,&mdash;that day when Friedrich drove past
+ him, Friday, 16th September, 1740, and never came so near him again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next business for Friedrich was a Visit at Brunswick, to the
+ Affinities and Kindred, in passing; where also was an important little act
+ to be done: Betrothal of the young Prince, August Wilhelm,
+ Heir-Presumptive whom we saw in Strasburg, to a Princess of that House,
+ Louisa Amelia, younger Sister of Friedrich's own Queen. A modest promising
+ arrangement; which turned out well enough,&mdash;though the young Prince,
+ Father to the Kings that since are, was not supremely fortunate otherwise.
+ [Betrothal was 20th September, 1740; Marriage, 5th January, 1742
+ (Buchholz, i. 207).] After which, the review at Magdeburg; and home on the
+ 24th, there to "be busy as a Turk or as a M. Jordan,"&mdash;according to
+ what we read long since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VII. &mdash; WITHDRAWS TO REINSBERG, HOPING A PEACEABLE WINTER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By this Herstal token, which is now blazing abroad, now and for a month to
+ come, it can be judged that the young King of Prussia intends to stand on
+ his own footing, quite peremptorily if need be; and will by no means have
+ himself led about in Imperial harness, as his late Father was. So that a
+ dull Public (Herrenhausen very specially), and Gazetteer Owls of Minerva
+ everywhere, may expect events. All the more indubitably, when that
+ spade-work comes to light in the Wesel Country. It is privately certain
+ (the Gazetteers not yet sure about it, till they see the actual spades
+ going), this new King does fully intend to assert his rights on
+ Berg-Julich; and will appear there with his iron ramrods, the instant old
+ Kur-Pfalz shall decease, let France and the Kaiser say No to it or say
+ Yes. There are, in fact, at a fit place, "Buderich in the neighborhood of
+ Wesel," certain rampart-works, beginnings as of an Entrenched Camp, going
+ on;&mdash;"for Review purposes merely," say the Gazetteers, IN ITALICS.
+ Here, it privately is Friedrich's resolution, shall a Prussian Army, of
+ the due strength (could be well-nigh 100,000 strong if needful), make its
+ appearance, directly on old Kur-Pfalz's decease, if one live to see such
+ event. [Stenzel, iv. 61.] France and the Kaiser will probably take good
+ survey of that Buderich phenomenon before meddling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To do his work like a King, and shun no peril and no toil in the course of
+ what his work may be, is Friedrich's rule and intention. Nevertheless it
+ is clear he expects to approve himself magnanimous rather in the Peaceable
+ operations than in the Warlike; and his outlooks are, of all places and
+ pursuits, towards Reinsberg and the Fine Arts, for the time being. His
+ Public activity meanwhile they describe as "prodigious," though the ague
+ still clings to him; such building, instituting, managing: Opera-House,
+ French Theatre, Palace for his Mother;&mdash;day by day, many things to be
+ recorded by Editor Formey, though the rule about them here is silence
+ except on cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt the ague is itself privately a point of moment. Such a vexatious
+ paltry little thing, in this bright whirl of Activities, Public and other,
+ which he continues managing in spite of it; impatient to be rid of it. But
+ it will not go: there IT reappears always, punctual to its "fourth day,"&mdash;like
+ a snarling street-dog, in the high Ball-room and Work-room. "He is
+ drinking Pyrmont water;" has himself proposed Quinquina, a remedy just
+ come up, but the Doctors shook their heads; has tried snatches of
+ Reinsberg, too short; he intends soon to be out there for a right spell of
+ country, there to be "happy," and get quit of his ague. The ague went,&mdash;and
+ by a remedy which surprised the whole world, as will be seen!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WILHELMINA'S RETURN-VISIT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Monday, 17th October, came the Baireuth Visitors; Wilhelmina all in a
+ flutter, and tremor of joy and sorrow, to see her Brother again, her old
+ kindred and the altered scene of things. Poor Lady, she is perceptibly
+ more tremulous than usual; and her Narrative, not in dates only, but in
+ more memorable points, dances about at a sad rate; interior agitations and
+ tremulous shrill feelings shivering her this way and that, and throwing
+ things topsy-turvy in one's recollection. Like the magnetic needle, shaky
+ but steadfast (AGITEE MAI CONSTANTE). Truer nothing can be, points forever
+ to the Pole; but also what obliquities it makes; will shiver aside in mad
+ escapades, if you hold the paltriest bit of old iron near it,&mdash;paltriest
+ clack of gossip about this loved Brother of mine! Brother, we will hope,
+ silently continues to be Pole, so that the needle always comes back again;
+ otherwise all would go to wreck. Here, in abridged and partly rectified
+ form, are the phenomena witnessed:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We arrived at Berlin the end of October [Monday, 17th, as above said]. My
+ younger Brothers, followed by the Princes of the Blood and by all the
+ Court, received us at the bottom of the stairs. I was led to my apartment,
+ where I found the Reigning Queen, my Sisters [Ulrique, Amelia], and the
+ Princesses [of the Blood, as above, Schwedt and the rest]. I learned with
+ much chagrin that the King was ill of tertian ague [quartan; but that is
+ no matter]. He sent me word that, being in his fit, he could not see me;
+ but that he depended on having that pleasure to-morrow. The Queen Mother,
+ to whom I went without delay, was in a dark condition; rooms all hung with
+ their lugubrious drapery; everything yet in the depth of mourning for my
+ Father. What a scene for me! Nature has her rights; I can say with truth,
+ I have almost never in my life been so moved as on this occasion."
+ Interview with Mamma&mdash;we can fancy it&mdash;"was of the most
+ touching." Wilhelmina had been absent eight years. She scarcely knows the
+ young ones again, all so grown;&mdash;finds change on change: and that
+ Time, as he always is, has been busy. That night the Supper-Party was
+ exclusively a Family one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Brother's welcome to her on the morrow, though ardent enough, she
+ found deficient in sincerity, deficient in several points; as indeed a
+ Brother up to the neck in business, and just come out of an ague-fit, does
+ not appear to the best advantage. Wilhelmina noticed how ill he looked, so
+ lean and broken-down (MAIGRE ET DEFAIT) within the last two months; but
+ seems to have taken no account of it farther, in striking her balances
+ with Friedrich. And indeed in her Narrative of this Visit, not, we will
+ hope, in the Visit itself, she must have been in a high state of magnetic
+ deflection,&mdash;pretty nearly her maximum of such, discoverable in those
+ famous MEMOIRS,&mdash;such a tumult is there in her statements, all gone
+ to ground-and-lofty tumbling in this place; so discrepant are the still
+ ascertainable facts from this topsy-turvy picture of them, sketched by her
+ four years hence (in 1744). The truest of magnetic needles; but so
+ sensitive, if you bring foreign iron near it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilhelmina was loaded with honors by an impartial Berlin Public that is
+ Court Public; "but, all being in mourning, the Court was not brilliant.
+ The Queen Mother saw little company, and was sunk in sorrow;&mdash;had not
+ the least influence in affairs, so jealous was the new King of his
+ Authority,&mdash;to the Queen Mother's surprise," says Wilhelmina. For the
+ rest, here is a King "becoming truly unpopular [or, we fancy so, in our
+ deflected state, and judging by the rumor of cliques]; a general
+ discontent reigning in the Country, love of his subjects pretty much gone;
+ people speaking of him in no measured terms [in certain cliques]. Cares
+ nothing about those who helped him as Prince Royal, say some; others
+ complain of his avarice [meaning steady vigilance in outlay] as surpassing
+ the late King's; this one complained of his violences of temper
+ (EMPORTEMENS); that one of his suspicions, of his distrust, his
+ haughtinesses, his dissimulation" (meaning polite impenetrability when he
+ saw good). Several circumstances, known to Wilhelmina's own experience,
+ compel Wilhelmina's assent on those points. "I would have spoken to him
+ about them, if my Brother of Prussia [young August Wilhelm, betrothed the
+ other day] and the Queen Regnant had not dissuaded me. Farther on I will
+ give the explanation of all this,"&mdash;never did it anywhere. "I beg
+ those who may one day read these MEMOIRS, to suspend their judgment on the
+ character of this great Prince till I have developed it." [Wilhelmina, ii.
+ 326.] O my Princess, you are true and bright, but you are shrill; and I
+ admire the effect of atmospheric electricity, not to say, of any
+ neighboring marine-store shop, or miserable bit of broken pan, on one of
+ the finest magnetic needles ever made and set trembling!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilhelmina is incapable of deliberate falsehood; and this her impression
+ or reminiscence, with all its exaggeration, is entitled to be heard in
+ evidence so far. From this, and from other sources, readers will assure
+ themselves that discontents were not wanting; that King Friedrich was not
+ amiable to everybody at this time,&mdash;which indeed he never grew to be
+ at any other time. He had to be a King; that was the trade he followed,
+ not the quite different one of being amiable all round. Amiability is
+ good, my Princess; but the question rises, "To whom?&mdash;for example, to
+ the young gentleman who shot himself in Lobegun?" There are young
+ gentlemen and old sometimes in considerable quantities, to whom, if you
+ were in your duty, as a King of men (or even as a "King of one man and his
+ affairs," if that is all your kingdom), you should have been hateful
+ instead of amiable! That is a stern truth; too much forgotten by
+ Wilhelmina and others. Again, what a deadening and killing circumstance is
+ it in the career of amiability, that you are bound not to be communicative
+ of your inner man, but perpetually and strictly the reverse! It may be
+ doubted if a good King can be amiable; certainly he cannot in any but the
+ noblest ages, and then only to a select few. I should guess Friedrich was
+ at no time fairly loved, not by those nearest to him. He was rapid,
+ decisive; of wiry compact nature; had nothing of his Father's amplitudes,
+ simplicities; nothing to sport with and fondle, far from it. Tremulous
+ sensibilities, ardent affections; these we clearly discover in him, in
+ extraordinary vivacity; but he wears them under his polished panoply, and
+ is outwardly a radiant but metallic object to mankind. Let us carry this
+ along with us in studying him; and thank Wilhelmina for giving us hint of
+ it in her oblique way.&mdash;Wilhelmima's love for her Brother rose to
+ quite heroic pitch in coming years, and was at its highest when she died.
+ That continuation of her MEMOIRS in which she is to develop her Brother's
+ character, was never written: it has been sought for in modern times; and
+ a few insignificant pages, with evidence that there is not, and was not,
+ any more, are all that has turned up. [Pertz, <i>Ueber die
+ Denkwurdigkeiten der Markgrafin van Bayreuth</i> (Paper read in the <i>Akademie
+ der Wissenschaften,</i> Berlin, 25th April, 1850)].
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Incapable of falsity prepense, we say; but the known facts, which stand
+ abundantly on record if you care to search them out, are merely as
+ follows: Friedrich, with such sincerity as there might be, did welcome
+ Wilhelmina on the morrow of her arrival; spoke of Reinsberg, and of air
+ and rest, and how pleasant it would be; rolled off next morning, having at
+ last gathered up his businesses, and got them well in hand, to Reinsberg
+ accordingly; whither Wilhelmina, with the Queen Regnant and others of
+ agreeable quality, followed in two days; intending a long and pleasant
+ spell of country out there. Which hope was tolerably fulfilled, even for
+ Wilhelmina, though there did come unexpected interruptions, not of
+ Friedrich's bringing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ UNEXPECTED NEWS AT REINSBERG.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's pursuits and intended conquests, for the present, are of
+ peaceable and even gay nature. French Theatre, Italian Opera-House, these
+ are among the immediate outlooks. Voltaire, skilled in French acting, if
+ anybody ever were, is multifariously negotiating for a Company of that
+ kind,&mdash;let him be swift, be successful. [Letters of Voltaire (PASSIM,
+ in these months).] An Italian Opera there shall be; the House is still to
+ be built: Captain Knobelsdorf, who built Reinsberg, whom we have known, is
+ to do it. Knobelsdorf has gone to Italy on that errand; "went by Dresden,
+ carefully examining the Opera-House there, and all the famed Opera-Houses
+ on his road." Graun, one of the best judges living, is likewise off to
+ Italy, gathering singers. Our Opera too shall be a successful thing, and
+ we hope, a speedy. Such are Friedrich's outlooks at this time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A miscellaneous pleasant company is here; Truchsess and Bielfeld, home
+ from Hanover, among them; Wilhelmina is here;&mdash;Voltaire himself
+ perhaps coming again. Friedrich drinks his Pyrmont waters; works at his
+ public businesses all day, which are now well in hand, and manageable by
+ couriers; at evening he appears in company, and is the astonishment of
+ everybody; brilliant, like a new-risen sun, as if he knew of no illness,
+ knew of no business, but lived for amusement only. "He intends Private
+ Theatricals withal, and is getting ready Voltaire's MORT DE CESAR."
+ [Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung,</i> p. 415.] These were pretty days at
+ Reinsberg. This kind of life lasted seven or eight weeks,&mdash;in spite
+ of interruptions of subterranean volcanic nature, some of which were
+ surely considerable. Here, in the very first week, coming almost
+ volcanically, is one, which indeed is the sum of them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tuesday forenoon, 25th October, 1740, Express arrives at Reinsberg; direct
+ from Vienna five days ago; finds Friedrich under eclipse, hidden in the
+ interior, laboring under his ague-fit: question rises, Shall the Express
+ be introduced, or be held back? The news he brings is huge, unexpected,
+ transcendent, and may agitate the sick King. Six or seven heads go wagging
+ on this point,&mdash;who by accident are namable, if readers care: "Prince
+ August Wilhelm," lately betrothed; "Graf Truchsess," home from Hanover;
+ "Colonel Graf von Finkenstein," old Tutor's Son, a familiar from boyhood
+ upwards; "Baron Pollnitz" kind of chief Goldstick now, or Master of the
+ Ceremonies, not too witty, but the cause of wit; "Jordan, Bielfeld," known
+ to us; and lastly, "Fredersdorf," Major-domo and Factotum, who is grown
+ from Valet to be Purse-Keeper, confidential Manager, and almost friend,&mdash;a
+ notable personage in Friedrich's History. They decide, "Better wait!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They wait accordingly; and then, after about an hour, the trembling-fit
+ being over, and Fredersdorf having cautiously preluded a little, and
+ prepared the way, the Despatch is delivered, and the King left with his
+ immense piece of news. News that his Imperial Majesty Karl VI. died, after
+ short illness, on Thursday, the 20th last. Kaiser dead: House of Hapsburg,
+ and its Five Centuries of tough wrestling, and uneasy Dominancy in this
+ world, ended, gone to the distaff:&mdash;the counter-wrestling Ambitions
+ and Cupidities not dead; and nothing but Pragmatic Sanction left between
+ the fallen House and them! Friedrich kept silence; showed no sign how
+ transfixed he was to hear such tidings; which, he foresaw, would have
+ immeasurable consequences in the world.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+One of the first was, that it cured Friedrich of his ague. It braced
+him (it, and perhaps "a little quinquina which he now insisted on") into
+such a tensity of spirit as drove out his ague like a mere hiccough;
+quite gone in the course of next week; and we hear no more of that
+importunate annoyance. He summoned Secretary Eichel, "Be ready in
+so many minutes hence;" rose from his bed, dressed himself; [Preuss,
+<i>Thronbesteigung,</i> p. 416.]&mdash;and then, by Eichel's help, sent off e
+ for Schwerin his chief General, and Podewils his chief Minister. A
+resolution, which is rising or has risen in the Royal mind, will be
+ready for communicating to these Two by the time they arrive, on the
+second day hence. This done, Friedrich, I believe, joined his company in
+the evening; and was as light and brilliant as if nothing had happened.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VIII. &mdash; THE KAISER'S DEATH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Kaiser's death came upon the Public unexpectedly; though not quite so
+ upon observant persons closer at hand. He was not yet fifty-six out; a
+ firm-built man; had been of sound constitution, of active, not intemperate
+ habits: but in the last six years, there had come such torrents of ill
+ luck rolling down on him, he had suffered immensely, far beyond what the
+ world knew of; and to those near him, and anxious for him, his strength
+ seemed much undermined. Five years ago, in summer 1735, Robinson reported,
+ from a sure hand: "Nothing can equal the Emperor's agitation under these
+ disasters [brought upon him by Fleury and the Spaniards, as after-clap to
+ his Polish-Election feat]. His good Empress is terrified, many times, he
+ will die in the course of the night, when singly with her he gives a loose
+ to his affliction, confusion and despair." Sea-Powers will not help;
+ Fleury and mere ruin will engulf! "What augments this agitation is his
+ distrust in every one of his own Ministers, except perhaps Bartenstein,"
+ [Robinson to Lord Warrington, 5th July, 1735 (in State-Paper Office).]&mdash;who
+ is not much of a support either, though a gnarled weighty old stick in his
+ way ("Professor at Strasburg once"): not interesting to us here. The rest
+ his Imperial Majesty considers to be of sublimated blockhead type, it
+ appears. Prince Eugene had died lately, and with Eugene all good fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, close following, the miseries of that Turk War, crashing down
+ upon a man! They say, Duke Franz, Maria Theresa's Husband, nominal
+ Commander in those Campaigns, with the Seckendorfs and Wallises under him
+ going such a road, was privately eager to have done with the Business, on
+ any terms, lest the Kaiser should die first, and leave it weltering. No
+ wonder the poor Kaiser felt broken, disgusted with the long Shadow-Hunt of
+ Life; and took to practical field-sports rather. An Army that cannot
+ fight, War-Generals good only to be locked in Fortresses, an Exchequer
+ that has no money; after such wagging of the wigs, and such
+ Privy-Councilling and such War-Councilling:&mdash;let us hunt wild swine,
+ and not think of it! That, thank Heaven, we still have; that, and
+ Pragmatic Sanction well engrossed, and generally sworn to by mankind,
+ after much effort!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outer Public of that time, and Voltaire among them more deliberately
+ afterwards, spoke of "mushrooms," an "indigestion of mushrooms;" and it is
+ probable there was something of mushrooms concerned in the event, Another
+ subsequent Frenchman, still more irreverent, adds to this of the "excess
+ of mushrooms," that the Kaiser made light of it. "When the Doctors told
+ him he had few hours to live, he would not believe it; and bantered his
+ Physicians on the sad news. 'Look me in the eyes,' said he; 'have I the
+ air of one dying? When you see my sight growing dim, then let the
+ sacraments be administered, whether I order or not.'" Doctors insisting,
+ the Kaiser replied: "'Since you are foolish fellows, who know neither the
+ cause nor the state of my disorder, I command that, once I am dead, you
+ open my body, to know what the matter was; you can then come and let me
+ know!"' [<i>Anecdotes Germaniques</i> (Paris, 1769), p. 692.]&mdash;in
+ which also there is perhaps a glimmering of distorted truth, though, as
+ Monsieur mistakes even the day ("18th October," says he, not 20th), one
+ can only accept it as rumor from the outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, by an extremely sombre domestic Gentleman of great punctuality and
+ great dulness, are the authentic particulars, such as it was good to
+ mention in Vienna circles. [(Anonymous) <i>Des &amp;c. Romischen Kaisers
+ Carl VI. Leben und Thaten</i> (Frankfurt und Leipzig, 1741), pp. 220-227.]
+ An extremely dull Gentleman, but to appearance an authentic; and so little
+ defective in reverence that he delicately expresses some astonishment at
+ Death's audacity this year, in killing so many Crowned Heads. "This year
+ 1740," says he, "though the weather throughout Europe had been
+ extraordinarily fine," or fine for a cold year, "had already witnessed
+ several Deaths of Sovereigns: Pope Clement XII., Friedrich Wilhelm of
+ Prussia, the Queen Dowager of Spain [Termagant's old stepmother, not
+ Termagant's self by a great way]. But that was not enough: unfathomable
+ Destiny ventured now on Imperial Heads (WAGTE SICH AUCH AN KAISER-KRONEN):
+ Karl VI., namely, and Russia's great, Monarchess;"&mdash;an audacity to be
+ remarked. Of Russia's great Monarchess (Czarina Anne, with the big cheek)
+ we will say nothing at present; but of Karl VI. only,&mdash;abridging
+ much, and studying arrangement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thursday, October 13th, returning from Halbthurn, a Hunting Seat of his,"
+ over in Hungary some fifty miles, "to the Palace Favorita at Vienna, his
+ Imperial Majesty felt slightly indisposed,"&mdash;indigestion of mushrooms
+ or whatever it was: had begun AT Halbthurn the night before, we rather
+ understand, and was the occasion of his leaving. "The Doctors called it
+ cold on the stomach, and thought it of no consequence. In the night of
+ Saturday, it became alarming;" inflammation, thought the Doctors,
+ inflammation of the liver, and used their potent appliances, which only
+ made the danger come and go; "and on the Tuesday, all day, the Doctors did
+ not doubt his Imperial Majesty was dying. ["Look me in the eyes; pack of
+ fools; you will have to dissect me, you will then know:" Any truth in all
+ that? No matter.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At noon of that Tuesday he took the Sacrament, the Pope's Nuncio
+ administering. His Majesty showed uncommonly great composure of soul, and
+ resignation to the Divine Will;" being indeed "certain,"&mdash;so he
+ expressed it to "a principal Official Person sunk in grief" (Bartenstein,
+ shall we guess?), who stood by him&mdash;"certain of his cause," not
+ afraid in contemplating that dread Judgment now near: "Look at me! A man
+ that is certain of his cause can enter on such a Journey with good courage
+ and a composed mind (MIT GUTEM UND DELASSENEM MUTH)." To the Doctors,
+ dubitating what the disease was, he said, "If Gazelli" my late worthy
+ Doctor, "were still here, you would soon know; but as it is, you will
+ learn it when you dissect me;"&mdash;and once asked to be shown the Cup
+ where his heart would lie after that operation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sacrament being over," Tuesday afternoon, "he sent for his Family, to
+ bless them each separately. He had a long conversation with Grand Duke
+ Franz," titular of Lorraine, actual of Tuscany, "who had assiduously
+ attended him, and continued to do so, during the whole illness." The Grand
+ Duke's Spouse,&mdash;Maria Theresa, the noble-hearted and the overwhelmed;
+ who is now in an interesting state again withal; a little Kaiserkin
+ (Joseph II.) coming in five months; first child, a little girl, is now two
+ years old;&mdash;"had been obliged to take to bed three days ago; laid up
+ of grief and terror (VOR SCHMERZEN UND SCHRECKEN), ever since Sunday the
+ 16th. Nor would his Imperial Majesty permit her to enter this death-room,
+ on account of her condition, so important to the world; but his Majesty,
+ turning towards that side where her apartment was, raised his right hand,
+ and commanded her Husband, and the Archduchess her younger Sister, to tell
+ his Theresa, That he blessed her herewith, notwithstanding her absence."
+ Poor Kaiser, poor Theresa! "Most distressing of all was the scene with the
+ Kaiserin. The night before, on getting knowledge of the sad certainty, she
+ had fainted utterly away (STARKE OHNMACHT), and had to be carried into the
+ Grand Duchess's [Maria Theresa's] room. Being summoned now with her
+ Children, for the last blessing, she cried as in despair, 'Do not leave
+ me, Your Dilection, do not (ACH EUER LIEBDEN VERLASSEN MICH DOCH NICHT)!'"
+ Poor good souls! "Her Imperial Majesty would not quit the room again, but
+ remained to the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wednesday, 19th, all day, anxiety, mournful suspense;" poor weeping
+ Kaiserin and all the world waiting; the Inevitable visibly struggling on.
+ "And in the night of that day [night of 19th-20th Oct., 1740], between one
+ and two in the morning, Death snatched away this most invaluable Monarch
+ (DEN PREISWURDIGSTEN MONARCHEN) in the 66th year of his life;" and Kaiser
+ Karl VI., and the House of Hapsburg and its Five tough Centuries of good
+ and evil in this world had ended. The poor Kaiserin "closed the eyes" that
+ could now no more behold her; "kissed his hands, and was carried out more
+ dead than alive." [Anonymous, UT SUPRA, pp. 220-227.&mdash;Adelung, <i>Pragmatische
+ Staatsgeschichte</i> (Gotha, 1762-1767), ii. 120. JOHANN CHRISTOPH
+ Adelung; the same who did the DICTIONARY and many other deserving Books;
+ here is the precise Title: <i>"Pragmatische Staatsgeschichte Europens,"</i>
+ that is, "Documentary History of Europe, from Kaiser Karl's Death, 1740,
+ till Peace of Paris, 1763." A solid, laborious and meritorious Work, of
+ its kind; extremely extensive (9 vols. 4to, some of which are double and
+ even treble), mostly in the undigested, sometimes in the quite uncooked or
+ raw condition; perhaps about a fifth part of it consists of "Documents"
+ proper, which are shippable. It cannot help being dull, waste, dreary, but
+ is everywhere intelligible (excellent Indexes too),&mdash;and offers an
+ unhappy reader by far the best resource attainable for survey of that sad
+ Period.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A good affectionate Kaiserin, I do believe; honorable, truthful, though
+ unwitty of speech, and converted by Grandpapa in a peculiar manner, For
+ her Kaiser too, after all, I have a kind of love. Of brilliant articulate
+ intellect there is nothing; nor of inarticulate (as in Friedrich Wilhelm's
+ case) anything considerable: in fact his Shadow-Hunting, and Duelling with
+ the Termagant, seemed the reverse of wise. But there was something of a
+ high proud heart in it, too, if we examine; and even the Pragmatic
+ Sanction, though in practice not worth one regiment of iron ramrods,
+ indicates a profoundly fixed determination, partly of loyal nature, such
+ as the gods more or less reward. "He had been a great builder," say the
+ Histories; "was a great musician, fit to lead orchestras, and had composed
+ an Opera,"&mdash;poor Kaiser. There came out large traits of him, in Maria
+ Theresa again, under an improved form, which were much admired by the
+ world. He looks, in his Portraits, intensely serious; a handsome man,
+ stoically grave; much the gentleman, much the Kaiser or Supreme Gentleman.
+ As, in life and fact, he was; "something solemn in him, even when he
+ laughs," the people used to say. A man honestly doing his very best with
+ his poor Kaisership, and dying of chagrin by it. "On opening the body, the
+ liver-region proved to be entirely deranged; in the place where the
+ gall-bladder should have been, a stone of the size of a pigeon's egg was
+ found grown into the liver, and no gall-bladder now there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That same morning, with earliest daylight, "Thursday, 20th, six A.M.,"
+ Maria Theresa is proclaimed by her Heralds over Vienna: "According to
+ Pragmatic Sanction, Inheritress of all the," &amp;c. &amp;c.;&mdash;Sovereign
+ Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia, for chief items. "At
+ seven her Majesty took the Oath from the Generals and Presidents of
+ Tribunals,&mdash;said, through her tears, 'All was to stand on the old
+ footing, each in his post,'"&mdash;and the other needful words. Couriers
+ shoot forth towards all Countries;&mdash;one express courier to
+ Regensburg, and the enchanted Wiggeries there, to say That a new Kaiser
+ will be needed; REICHS-Vicar or Vicars (Kur-Sachsen and whoever more, for
+ they are sometimes disagreed about it) will have to administer in the
+ interim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second courier we saw arrive at Reinsberg; he likewise may be important.
+ The Bavarian Minister, Karl Albert Kur-Baiern's man, shot off his express,
+ like the others; answer is, by return of courier, or even earlier (for a
+ messenger was already on the road), Make protest! "We Kur-Baiern solemnly
+ protest against Pragmatic Sanction, and the assumption of such Titles by
+ the Daughter of the late Kaiser. King of Bohemia, and in good part even of
+ Austria, it is not you, Madam, but of right WE; as, by Heaven's help, it
+ is our fixed resolution to make good!" Protest was presented, accordingly,
+ with all the solemnities, without loss of a moment. To which Bartenstein
+ and the Authorities answered "Pooh-pooh," as if it were nothing. It is the
+ first ripple of an immeasurable tide or deluge in that kind, threatening
+ to submerge the new Majesty of Hungary;&mdash;as had been foreseen at
+ Reinsberg; though Bartenstein and the Authorities made light of it,
+ answering "Pooh-pooh," or almost "Ha-ha," for the present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Hungarian Majesty's chief Generals, Seckendorf, Wallis, Neipperg, sit
+ in their respective prison-wards at this time (from which she soon
+ liberates them): Kur-Baiern has lodged protest; at Reinsberg there will be
+ an important resolution ready:&mdash;and in the Austrian Treasury (which
+ employs 40,000 persons, big and little) there is of cash or available,
+ resource, 100,000 florins, that is to say, 10,000 pounds net. [Mailath, <i>Geschichte
+ des Oestreichischen Kaiserstaats</i> (Hamburg, 1850), v. 8.] And unless
+ Pragmatic sheepskin hold tighter than some persons expect, the affairs of
+ Austria and of this young Archduchess are in a threatening way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Britannic Majesty was on the road home, about Helvoetsluys or on the
+ sea for Harwich, that night the Kaiser died; of whose illness he had heard
+ nothing. At London, ten days after, the sudden news struck dismally upon
+ his Majesty and the Political Circles there: "No help, then, from that
+ quarter, in our Spanish War; perhaps far other than help!"&mdash;Nay,
+ certain Gazetteers were afraid the grand new Anti-Spanish Expedition
+ itself, which was now, at the long last, after such confusions and delays,
+ lying ready, in great strength, Naval and Military, would be
+ countermanded,&mdash;on Pragmatic-Sanction considerations, and the crisis
+ probably imminent. [London Newspapers (31st Oct.-6th Nov., 1740)]. But it
+ was not countermanded; it sailed all the same, "November 6th" (seventh day
+ after the bad news); and made towards&mdash;Shall we tell the reader, what
+ is Officially a dead secret, though by this time well guessed at by the
+ Public, English and also Spanish?&mdash;towards Carthagena, to reinforce
+ fiery Vernon, in the tropical latitudes; and overset Spanish America,
+ beginning with that important Town!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Commodore Anson, he also, after long fatal delays, is off, several weeks
+ ago; [29th (18th) September, 1740.] round Cape Horn; hoping (or perhaps
+ already not hoping) to co-operate from the Other Ocean, and be
+ simultaneous with Vernon,&mdash;on these loose principles of keeping time!
+ Commodore Anson does, in effect, make a Voyage which is beautiful, and to
+ mankind memorable; but as to keeping tryst with Vernon, the very gods
+ could not do it on those terms!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IX. &mdash; RESOLUTION FORMED AT REINSBERG IN CONSEQUENCE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Thursday, 27th October, two days after the Expresses went for them,
+ Schwerin and Podewils punctually arrived at Reinsberg. They were carried
+ into the interior privacies, "to long conferences with his Majesty that
+ day, and for the next four days; Majesty and they even dining privately
+ together;" grave business of state, none guesses how grave, evidently
+ going on. The resolution Friedrich laid before them, fruit of these two
+ days since the news from Vienna, was probably the most important ever
+ formed in Prussia, or in Europe during that Century: Resolution to make
+ good our Rights on Silesia, by this great opportunity, the best that will
+ ever offer. Resolution which had sprung, I find, and got to sudden fixity
+ in the head of the young King himself; and which met with little save
+ opposition from all the other sons of Adam, at the first blush and for
+ long afterwards. And, indeed, the making of it good (of it, and of the
+ immense results that hung by it) was the main business of this young
+ King's Life henceforth; and cost him Labors like those of Hercules, and
+ was in the highest degree momentous to existing and not yet existing
+ millions of mankind,&mdash;to the readers of this History especially.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is almost touching to reflect how unexpectedly, like a bolt out of the
+ blue, all this had come upon Friedrich; and how it overset his fine
+ program for the winter at Reinsberg, and for his Life generally. Not the
+ Peaceable magnanimities, but the Warlike, are the thing appointed
+ Friedrich this winter, and mainly henceforth. Those "GOLDEN or soft
+ radiances" which we saw in him, admirable to Voltaire and to Friedrich,
+ and to an esurient philanthropic world,&mdash;it is not those, it is "the
+ STEEL-BRIGHT or stellar kind," that are to become predominant in
+ Friedrich's existence: grim hail-storms, thunders and tornado for an
+ existence to him, instead of the opulent genialities and halcyon weather,
+ anticipated by himself and others! Indisputably enough to us, if not yet
+ to Friedrich, "Reinsberg and Life to the Muses" are done. On a sudden,
+ from the opposite side of the horizon, see, miraculous Opportunity,
+ rushing hitherward,&mdash;swift, terrible, clothed with lightning like a
+ courser of the gods: dare you clutch HIM by the thundermane, and fling
+ yourself upon him, and make for the Empyrean by that course rather? Be
+ immediate about it, then; the time is now, or else never!&mdash;No fair
+ judge can blame the young man that he laid hold of the flaming Opportunity
+ in this manner, and obeyed the new omen. To seize such an opportunity, and
+ perilously mount upon it, was the part of a young magnanimous King, less
+ sensible to the perils, and more to the other considerations, than one
+ older would have been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Schwerin and Podewils were, no doubt, astonished to learn what the Royal
+ purpose was; and could not want for commonplace objections many and
+ strong, had this been the scene for dwelling on them, or dressing them out
+ at eloquent length. But they knew well this was not the scene for doing
+ more than, with eloquent modesty, hint them; that the Resolution, being
+ already taken, would not alter for commonplace; and that the question now
+ lying for honorable members was, How to execute it? It is on this, as I
+ collect, that Schwerin and Podewils in the King's company did, with
+ extreme intensity, consult during those four days; and were, most
+ probably, of considerable use to the King, though some of their
+ modifications adopted by him turned out, not as they had predicted, but as
+ he. On all the Military details and outlines, and on all the Diplomacies
+ of this business, here are two Oracles extremely worth consulting by the
+ young King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To seize Silesia is easy: a Country open on all but the south side; open
+ especially on our side, where a battalion of foot might force it; the
+ three or four fortresses, of which only two, Glogau and Neisse, can be
+ reckoned strong, are provided with nothing as they ought to be; not above
+ 3,000 fighting men in the whole Province, and these little expecting
+ fight. Silesia can be seized: but the maintaining of it?&mdash;We must try
+ to maintain it, thinks Friedrich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Reinsberg it is not yet known that Kur-Baiern has protested; but it is
+ well guessed he means to do so, and that France is at his back in some
+ sort. Kur-Baiern, probably Kur-Sachsen, and plenty more, France being
+ secretly at their back. What low condition Austria stands in, all its
+ ready resources run to the lees, is known; and that France, getting lively
+ at present with its Belleisles and adventurous spirits not restrainable by
+ Fleury, is always on the watch to bring Austria lower; capable, in spite
+ of Pragmatic Sanction, to snatch the golden moment, and spring hunter-like
+ on a moribund Austria, were the hunting-dogs once out and in cry. To
+ Friedrich it seems unlikely the Pragmatic Sanction will be a Law of Nature
+ to mankind, in these circumstances. His opinion is, "the old political
+ system has expired with the Kaiser." Here is Europe, burning in one corner
+ of it by Jenkins's Ear, and such a smoulder of combustible material
+ awakening nearer hand: will not Europe, probably, blaze into general War;
+ Pragmatic Sanction going to waste sheepskin, and universal scramble
+ ensuing? In which he who has 100,000 good soldiers, and can handle them,
+ may be an important figure in urging claims, and keeping what he has got
+ hold of!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's mind, as to the fact, is fixed: seize Silesia we will: but as
+ to the manner of doing it, Schwerin and Podewils modify him. Their counsel
+ is: "Do not step out in hostile attitude at the very first, saying, 'These
+ Duchies, Liegnitz, Brieg, Wohlau, Jagerndorf, are mine, and I will fight
+ for them;' say only, 'Having, as is well known, interests of various kinds
+ in this Silesia, I venture to take charge of it in the perilous times now
+ come, and will keep it safe for the real owner.' Silesia seized in this
+ fashion," continue they, "negotiate with the Queen of Hungary; offer her
+ help, large help in men and money, against her other enemies; perhaps she
+ will consent to do us right?"&mdash;"She never will consent," is
+ Friedrich's opinion. "But it is worth trying?" urge the Ministers.&mdash;"Well,"
+ answers Friedrich, "be it in that form; that is the soft-spoken cautious
+ form: any form will do, if the fact be there." That is understood to have
+ been the figure of the deliberation in this conclave at Reinsberg, during
+ the four days. [Stenzel (from what sources he does not clearly say, no
+ doubt from sources of some authenticity) gives this as summary of it, iv.
+ 61-65.] And now it remains only to fix the Military details, to be ready
+ in a minimum of time; and to keep our preparations and intentions in
+ impenetrable darkness from all men, in the interim. Adieu, Messieurs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, on the 1st of November, fifth morning since they came, Schwerin
+ and Podewils, a world of new business silently ahead of them, return to
+ Berlin, intent to begin the same. All the Kings will have to take their
+ resolution on this matter; wisely, or else unwisely. King Friedrich's, let
+ it prove the wisest or not, is notably the rapidest,&mdash;complete, and
+ fairly entering upon action, on November 1st. At London the news of the
+ Kaiser's death had arrived the day before; Britannic Majesty and Ministry,
+ thrown much into the dumps by it, much into the vague, are nothing like so
+ prompt with their resolution on it. Somewhat sorrowfully in the vague. In
+ fact, they will go jumbling hither and thither for about three years to
+ come, before making up their minds to a resolution: so intricate is the
+ affair to the English Nation and them! Intricate indeed; and even
+ imaginary,&mdash;definable mainly as a bottomless abyss of nightmare
+ dreams to the English Nation and them! Productive of strong somnambulisms,
+ as my friend has it!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MYSTERY IN BERLIN, FOR SEVEN WEEKS, WHILE THE PREPARATIONS GO ON; VOLTAIRE
+ VISITS FRIEDRICH TO DECIPHER IT, BUT CANNOT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Podewils and Schwerin gone, King Friedrich, though still very busy in
+ working-hours, returns to his society and its gayeties and brilliancies;
+ apparently with increased appetite after these four days of abstinence.
+ Still busy in his working-hours, as a King must be; couriers coming and
+ going, hundreds of businesses despatched each day; and in the evening what
+ a relish for society,&mdash;Praetorius is quite astonished at it. Music,
+ dancing, play-acting, suppers of the gods, "not done till four in the
+ morning sometimes," these are the accounts Praetorius hears at Berlin.
+ "From all persons who return from Reinsberg," writes he, "the unanimous
+ report is, That the King works, the whole day through, with an assiduity
+ that is unique; and then, in the evening, gives himself to the pleasures
+ of society, with a vivacity of mirth and sprightly humor which makes those
+ Evening-Parties charming." [Excerpt, in Preuss, <i>Thronbesteigung, </i>
+ p. 418.] So it had to last, with frequent short journeys on Friedrich's
+ part, and at last with change to Berlin as head-quarters, for about seven
+ weeks to come,&mdash;till the beginning of December, and the day of
+ action, namely. A notable little Interim in Friedrich's History and that
+ of Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's secret, till almost the very end, remained impenetrable;
+ though, by degrees, his movements excited much guessing in the Gazetteer
+ and Diplomatic world everywhere. Military matters do seem to be getting
+ brisk in Prussia; arsenals much astir; troops are seen mustering,
+ marching, plainly to a singular degree. Marching towards the Austrian
+ side, towards Silesia, some note. Yes; but also towards Cleve, certain
+ detachments of troops are marching,&mdash;do not men see? And the
+ Intrenchment at Buderich in those parts, that is getting forward withal,&mdash;though
+ privately there is not the least prospect of using it, in these altered
+ circumstances. Friedrich already guesses that if he could get Silesia, so
+ invaluable on the one skirt of him, he mill probably have to give up his
+ Berg-Julich claims on the other; I fancy he is getting ready to do so,
+ should the time come for such alternative. But he labors at Buderich, all
+ the same, and "improves the roads in that quarter,"&mdash;which at least
+ may help to keep an inquisitive public at bay. These are seven busy weeks
+ on Friedrich's part, and on the world's: constant realities of
+ preparation, on the one part, industriously veiled; on the other part,
+ such shadows, guessings, spyings, spectral movements above ground and
+ below; Diplomatic shadows fencing, Gazetteer shadows rumoring;&mdash;dreams
+ of a world as if near awakening to something great! "All Officers on
+ furlough have been ordered to their posts," writes Bielfeld, on those
+ vague terms of his: "On arriving at Berlin, you notice a great agitation
+ in all departments of the State. The regiments are ordered to prepare
+ their equipages, and to hold themselves in readiness for marching. There
+ are magazines being formed at Frankfurt-on-Oder and at Crossen,"&mdash;handy
+ for Silesia, you would say? "There are considerable trains of Artillery
+ getting ready, and the King has frequent conferences with his Generals."
+ [Bielfeld, i. 165 (Berlin, 30th November, is the date he puts to it).] The
+ authentic fact is: "By the middle of November, Troops, to the extent of
+ 30,000 and more, had got orders to be ready for marching in three weeks
+ hence; their public motions very visible ever since, their actual purpose
+ a mystery to all mortals except three."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of November, it becomes the prevailing guess that the
+ business is immediate, not prospective; that Silesia may be in the wind,
+ not Julich and Berg. Which infinitely quickens the shadowy rumorings and
+ Diplomatic fencings of mankind. The French have their special Ambassador
+ here; a Marquis de Beauvau, observant military gentleman, who came with
+ the Accession Compliment some time ago, and keeps his eyes well open, but
+ cannot see through mill-stones. Fleury is intensely desirous to know
+ Friedrich's secret; but would fain keep his own (if he yet have one), and
+ is himself quite tacit and reserved. To Fleury's Marquis de Beauvau
+ Friedrich is very gracious; but in regard to secrets, is for a reciprocal
+ procedure. Could not Voltaire go and try? It is thought Fleury had let
+ fall some hint to that effect, carried by a bird of the air. Sure enough
+ Voltaire does go; is actually on visit to his royal Friend; "six days with
+ him at Reinsberg;" perhaps near a fortnight in all (20 November-2 December
+ or so), hanging about those Berlin regions, on the survey. Here is an
+ unexpected pleasure to the parties;&mdash;but in regard to penetrating of
+ secrets, an unproductive one!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Voltaire's ostensible errand was, To report progress about the
+ ANTI-MACHIAVEL, the Van Duren nonsense; and, at any rate, to settle the
+ Money-accounts on these and other scores; and to discourse Philosophies,
+ for a day or two, with the First of Men. The real errand, it is pretty
+ clear, was as above. Voltaire has always a wistful eye towards political
+ employment, and would fain make himself useful in high quarters. Fleury
+ and he have their touches of direct Correspondence now and then; and
+ obliquely there are always intermediates and channels. Small hint, the
+ slightest twinkle of Fleury's eyelashes, would be duly speeded to
+ Voltaire, and set him going. We shall see him expressly missioned hither,
+ on similar errand, by and by; though with as bad success as at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this his First Visit to Berlin, his Second to Friedrich, Voltaire in
+ the VIE PRIVEE says nothing. But in his SIECLE DE LOUIS XV. he drops, with
+ proud modesty, a little foot-note upon it: "The Author was with the King
+ of Prussia at that time; and can affirm that Cardinal de Fleury was
+ totally astray in regard to the Prince he had now to do with." To which a
+ DATE slightly wrong is added; the rest being perfectly correct. [<i>OEuvres</i>
+ (Siecle de Louis XV., c. 6), xxviii. 74.] No other details are to be got
+ anywhere, if they were of importance; the very dates of it in the best
+ Prussian Books are all slightly awry. Here, by accident, are two poor
+ flint-sparks caught from the dust whirlwind, which yield a certain
+ sufficing twilight, when put in their place; and show us both sides of the
+ matter, the smooth side and the seamy:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. FRIEDRICH TO ALGAROTTI, AT BERLIN. From "Reinsberg, 21st Nov.," showing
+ the smooth side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MY DEAR SWAN OF PADUA,&mdash;Voltaire has arrived; all sparkling with new
+ beauties, and far more sociable than at Cleve. He is in very good humor;
+ and makes less complaining about his ailments than usual. Nothing can be
+ more frivolous than our occupations here:" mere verse-making, dancing,
+ philosophizing, then card-playing, dining, flirting; merry as birds on the
+ bough (and Silesia invisible, except to oneself and two others). [<i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> xviii. 25.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. FRIEDRICH TO JORDAN, AT BERLIN. "RUPPIN, 28th November."... Thy Miser
+ [Voltaire, now gone to Berlin, of whom Jordan is to send news, as of all
+ things else], thy Miser shall drink to the lees of his insatiable desire
+ (SIC) to enrich himself: he shall have the 3,000 thalers (450 pounds). He
+ was with me six days: that will be at the rate of 500 thalers (75 pounds)
+ a day. That is paying dear for one's merry-andrew (C'EST BIEN PAYER UN
+ FOU); never had court-fool such wages before." [Ib. xvii. 72. Particulars
+ of the money-payment (travelling expenses chiefly, rather exorbitant, and
+ THIS journey added to the list; and no whisper of the considerable
+ Van-Duren moneys, and copyright of ANTI-MACHIAVEL, in abatement) are in
+ Rodenbeck, i. 27. Exact sum paid is 3,300 thalers; 2,000 a good while ago,
+ 1,300 at this time, which settles the greedy bill.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which latter, also at first hand, shows us the seamy side. And here,
+ finally, with date happily appended, is a poetic snatch, in Voltaire's
+ exquisite style, which with the response gives us the medium view:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ VOLTAIRE'S ADIEU (<i>"Billet de Conge,</i> 2 December, 1740").
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Non, malgre vos vertus, non, malgre vos appas,
+ Mon ame n'est point satisfaite;
+ Non, vous n'etes qu'une coquette,
+ Qui subjuguez les coeurs, et ne rous donnez pas."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ FRIEDRICH'S RESPONSE.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Mon ame sent le prix de vos divins appas;
+ Mais ne presumez point qu'elle soit satisfaite.
+ Traitre, vous me quittez pour suivre une coquette;
+ Moi je ne vous quitterais pas."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ [<i>OEuvres de Frederic</i> (xiv. 167); <i>OEuvres de Voltaire;</i> &amp;c.
+ &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;Meaning, perhaps, in brief English: V. "Ah, you are but a beautiful
+ coquette; you charm away our hearts, and do not give your own [won't tell
+ me your secret at all]!" F. "Treacherous Lothario, it is you that quit me
+ for a coquette [your divine Emilie; and won't stay here, and be of my
+ Academy]; but however&mdash;!" Friedrich looked hopingly on the French,
+ but could not give his secret except by degrees and with reciprocity. Some
+ days hence he said to Marquis de Beauvau, in the Audience of leave, a word
+ which was remembered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIEW OF FRIEDRICH BEHIND THE VEIL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As to Friedrich himself, since about the middle of November his plans seem
+ to have been definitely shaped out in all points; Troops so many, when to
+ be on march, and how; no important detail uncertain since then. November
+ 17th, he jots down a little Note, which is to go to Vienna, were the due
+ hour come, by a special Ambassador, one Count Gotter, acquainted with the
+ ground there; and explain to her Hungarian Majesty, what his exact demands
+ are, and what the exact services he will render. Of which important little
+ Paper readers shall hear again. Gotter's demands are at first to be high:
+ Our Four Duchies, due by law so long; these and even more, considering the
+ important services we propose; this is to be his first word;&mdash;but, it
+ appears, he is privately prepared to put up with Two Duchies, if he can
+ have them peaceably: Duchies of Sagan and Glogau, which are not of the
+ Four at all, but which lie nearest us, and are far below the value of the
+ Four, to Austria especially. This intricate point Friedrich has already
+ settled in his mind. And indeed it is notably the habit of this young King
+ to settle matters with himself in good time: and in regard to all manner
+ of points, he will be found, on the day of bargaining about them, to have
+ his own resolution formed and definitely fixed;&mdash;much to his
+ advantage over conflicting parties, who have theirs still flying loose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another thing of much concernment is, To secure himself from danger of
+ Russian interference. To this end he despatches Major Winterfeld to
+ Russia, a man well known to him;&mdash;day of Winterfeld's departure is
+ not given; day of his arrival in Petersburg is "19th December" just
+ coming. Russia, at present, is rather in a staggering condition; hopeful
+ for Winterfeld's object. On the 28th of October last, only eight days
+ after the Kaiser, Czarina Anne of Russia, she with the big cheek, once of
+ Courland, had died; "audacious Death," as our poor friend had it,
+ "venturing upon another Crowned Head" there. Bieren her dear Courlander,
+ once little better than a Horse-groom, now Duke of Courland, Quasi-Husband
+ to the late Big Cheek, and thereby sovereign of Russia, this long while
+ past, is left Official Head in Russia. Poor little Anton Ulrich and his
+ august Spouse, well enough known to us, have indeed produced a Czar Iwan,
+ some months ago, to the joy of mankind: but Czar Iwan is in his cradle:
+ Father and Mother's function is little other than to rock the cradle of
+ Iwan; Bieren to be Regent and Autocrat over him and them in the interim.
+ To their chagrin, to that of Feldmarschall Munnich and many others: the
+ upshot of which will be visible before long. Czarina Anne's death had
+ seemed to Friedrich the opportune removal of a dangerous neighbor, known
+ to be in the pay of Austria: here now are new mutually hostile parties
+ springing up; chance, surely, of a bargain with some of them? He
+ despatches Winterfeld on this errand;&mdash;probably the fittest man in
+ Prussia for it. How soon and perfectly Winterfeld succeeded, and what
+ Winterfeld was, and something of what a Russia he found it, we propose to
+ mention by and by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These, and all points of importance, Friedrich has settled with himself
+ some time ago. What his own private thoughts on the Silesian Adventure
+ are, readers will wish to know, since they can at first hand. Hear
+ Friedrich himself, whose veracity is unquestionable to such as know
+ anything of him:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This Silesian Project fulfilled all his (the King's) political views,"&mdash;summed
+ them all well up into one head. "It was a means of acquiriug reputation;
+ of increasing the power of the State; and of terminating what concerned
+ that long-litigated question of the Berg-Julich Succession;"&mdash;can be
+ sure of getting that, at lowest; intends to give that up, if necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meanwhile, before entirely determining, the King weighed the risks there
+ were in undertaking such a War, and the advantages that were to be hoped
+ from it. On one side, presented itself the potent House of Austria, not
+ likely to want resources with so many vast Provinces under it; an
+ Emperor's Daughter attacked, who would naturally find allies in the King
+ of England, in the Dutch Republic, and so many Princes of the Empire who
+ had signed the Pragmatic Sanction." Russia was&mdash;or had been, and
+ might again be&mdash;in the pay of Vienna. Saxony might have some
+ clippings from Bohemia thrown to it, and so be gained over. Scanty
+ Harvest, 1740, threatened difficulties as to provisioning of troops. "The
+ risks were great. One had to apprehend the vicissitudes of war. A single
+ battle lost might be decisive. The King had no allies; and his troops,
+ hitherto without experience, would have to front old Austrian soldiers,
+ grown gray in harness, and trained to war by so many campaigns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the other side were hopeful considerations,"&mdash;four in number:
+ FIRST, Weak condition of the Austrian Court, Treasury empty, War-Apparatus
+ broken in pieces; inexperienced young Princess to defend a disputed
+ succession, on those terms. SECOND, There WILL be allies; France and
+ England always in rivalry, both meddling in these matters, King is sure to
+ get either the one or the other.&mdash;THIRD, Silesian War lies handy to
+ us, and is the only kind of Offensive War that does; Country bordering on
+ our frontier, and with the Oder running through it as a sure high-road for
+ everything. FOURTH, "What suddenly turned the balance," or at least what
+ kept it steady in that posture,&mdash;"news of the Czarina's death
+ arrives:" Russia has ceased to count against us; and become a manageable
+ quantity. On, therefore!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Add to these reasons," says the King, with a candor which has not been
+ well treated in the History Books, "Add to these reasons, an Army ready
+ for acting; Funds, Supplies all found [lying barrelled in the Schloss at
+ Berlin];&mdash;and perhaps the desire of making oneself a name," from
+ which few of mortals able to achieve it are exempt in their young time:
+ "all this was cause of the War which the King now entered upon." [<i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic</i> (Histoire de mon Temps), i. 128.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Desire to make himself a name; how shocking!" exclaim several Historians.
+ "Candor of confession that he may have had some such desire; how honest!"
+ is what they do not exclaim. As to the justice of his Silesian Claims, or
+ even to his own belief about their justice, Friedrich affords not the
+ least light which can be new to readers here. He speaks, when business
+ requires it, of "those known rights" of his, and with the air of a man who
+ expects to be believed on his word; but it is cursorily, and in the
+ business way only; and there is not here or elsewhere the least pleading:&mdash;a
+ man, you would say, considerably indifferent to our belief on that head;
+ his eyes set on the practical merely. "Just Rights? What are rights, never
+ so just, which you cannot make valid? The world is full of such. If you
+ have rights and can assert them into facts, do it; that is worth doing!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must add two Notes, two small absinthine drops, bitter but wholesome,
+ administered by him to the Old Dessauer, whose gloomy wonder over all this
+ military whirl of Prussian things, and discontent that he, lately the head
+ authority, has never once been spoken to on it, have been great. Guessing,
+ at last, that it was meant for Austria, a Power rather dear to Leopold, he
+ can suppress himself no longer; but breaks out into Cassandra
+ prophesyings, which have piqued the young King, and provoke this return:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. "REINSBERG, 24th November, 1740.&mdash;I have received your Letter, and
+ seen with what inquietude you view the approaching march of my Troops. I
+ hope you will set your mind at ease on that score; and wait with patience
+ what I intend with them and you. I have made all my dispositions; and Your
+ Serenity will learn, time enough, what my orders are, without disquieting
+ yourself about them, as nothing has been forgotten or delayed."&mdash;FRIEDRICH.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Dessauer, cut to the bone, perceives he will have to quit that method
+ and never resume it; writes next how painful it is to an old General to
+ see himself neglected, as if good for nothing, while his scholars are
+ allowed to gather laurels. Friedrich's answer is of soothing character:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. "BERLIN, 2d DECEMBER, 1740.&mdash;You may be assured I honor your
+ merits and capacity as a young Officer ought to honor an old one, who has
+ given the world so many proofs of his talent (DEXTERITAT); nor will I
+ neglect Your Serenity on any occasion when you can help me by your good
+ Counsel and co-operation." But it is a mere "bagatelle" this that I am now
+ upon; though, next year, it may become serious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the rest, Saxony being a neighbor whose intentions one does not know,
+ I have privately purposed Your Serenity should keep an outlook that way,
+ in my absence. Plenty of employment coming for Your Serenity. "But as to
+ this present Expedition, I reserve it for myself alone; that the world may
+ not think the King of Prussia marches with a Tutor to the Field."&mdash;FRIEDRICH.
+ [Orlich, <i>Geschichte der Schlesischen Kriege</i> (Berlin, 1841), i. 38,
+ 39.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And therewith Leopold, eagerly complying, has to rest satisfied; and
+ beware of too much freedom with this young King again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Berlin, December 2d," is the date of that last Note to the Dessauer; date
+ also of Voltaire's ADIEU with the RESPONSE;&mdash;on which same day,
+ "Friday, December 2d," as I find from the Old Books, his Majesty, quitting
+ the Reinsberg sojourn, "had arrived in Berlin about 2 P.M.; accompanied by
+ Prince August Wilhelm [betrothed at Brunswick lately]; such a crowd on the
+ streets as if they had never seen him before." He continued at Berlin or
+ in the neighborhood thenceforth. Busy days these; and Berlin a much
+ whispering City, as Regiment after Regiment marches away. King soon to
+ follow, as is thought,&mdash;"who himself sometimes deigns to take the
+ Regiments into highest own eyeshine, HOCHST-EIGENEN AUGENSCHEIN" (that is,
+ to review them), say the reverential Editors. December 6th&mdash;But let
+ us follow the strict sequence of Phenomena at Berlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ EXCELLENCY BOTTA HAS AUDIENCE; THEN EXCELLENCY DICKENS, AND OTHERS:
+ DECEMBER 6th, THE MYSTERY IS OUT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Of course her Hungarian Majesty, and her Bartensteins and Ministries,
+ heard enough of those Prussian rumors, interior Military activities, and
+ enigmatic movements; but they seem strangely supine on the matter; indeed,
+ they seem strangely supine on such matters; and lean at ease upon the
+ Sea-Powers, upon Pragmatic Sanction and other Laws of Nature. But at
+ length even they become painfully interested as to Friedrich's intentions;
+ and despatch an Envoy to sift him a little: an expert Marchese di Botta,
+ Genoese by birth, skilful in the Russian and other intricacies; who was
+ here at Berlin lately, doing the Accession Compliment (rather ill received
+ at that time), and is fit for the job. Perhaps Botta will penetrate him?
+ That is becoming desirable, in spite of the gay Private Theatricals at
+ Reinsberg, and the Berlin Carnival Balls he is so occupied with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ England is not less interested, and the diligent Sir Guy is doing his
+ best; but can make out nothing satisfactory;&mdash;much the reverse
+ indeed; and falls into angry black anticipations. "Nobody here, great or
+ small," says his Excellency, "dares make any representation to this young
+ Prince against the measures he is pursuing; though all are sensible of the
+ confusion which must follow. A Prince who had the least regard to honor,
+ truth and justice, could not act the part he is going to do." Alas, no,
+ Excellency Dickens! "But it is plain his only view was, to deceive us all,
+ and conceal for a while his ambitious and mischievous designs." [Despatch,
+ 29th November-3d December, 1740: Raumer, p. 58.] "Never was such
+ dissimulation!" exclaims the Diplomatic world everywhere, being angered at
+ it, as if it were a vice on the part of a King about to invade Silesia.
+ Dissimulation, if that mean mendacity, is not the name of the thing; it is
+ the art of wearing a polite cloak of darkness, and the King is little
+ disturbed what name they call it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Botta did not get to Berlin till December 1st, had no Audience till the
+ 5th;&mdash;by which time it is becoming evident to Excellency Dickens, and
+ to everybody, that Silesia is the thing meant. Botta hints as much in that
+ first Audience, December 5th: "Terrible roads, those Silesian ones, your
+ Majesty!" says Botta, as if historically merely, but with a glance of the
+ eye. "Hm," answers his Majesty in the same tone, "the worst that comes of
+ them is a little mud!"&mdash;Next day, Dickens had express Audience,
+ "Berlin, Tuesday 6th:" a smartish, somewhat flurried Colloquy with the
+ King; which, well abridged, may stand as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DICKENS.... "Indivisibility of the Austrian Monarchy, Sire!"&mdash;KING.
+ "Indivisibility? What do you mean?"&mdash;DICKENS. "The maintenance of the
+ Pragmatic Sanction."&mdash;KING. "Do you intend to support it? I hope not;
+ for such is not my intention." (There is for you!)...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DICKENS. "England and Holland will much wonder at the measures your
+ Majesty was taking, at the moment when your Majesty proposed to join with
+ them, and were making friendly proposals!" (Has been a deceitful man, Sir
+ Guy, at least an impenetrable;&mdash;but this latter is rather strong on
+ your part!) "What shall I write to England?" ("When I mentioned this,"
+ says Dickens, "the King grew red in the face," eyes considerably flashing,
+ I should think.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KING. "You can have no instructions to ask that question! And if you had,
+ I have an answer ready for you. England has no right to inquire into my
+ designs. Your great Sea-Armaments, did I ask you any questions about them?
+ No; I was and am silent on that head; only wishing you good luck, and that
+ you may not get beaten by the Spaniards." (Dickens hastily draws in his
+ rash horns again; after a pass or two, King's natural color returns.)...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KING. "Austria as a Power is necessary against the Turks. But in Germany,
+ what need of Austria being so superlative? Why should not, say, Three
+ Electors united be able to oppose her?... Monsieur, I find it is your
+ notion in England, as well as theirs in France, to bring other Sovereigns
+ under your tutorage, and lead them about. Understand that I will not be
+ led by either.... Tush, YOU are like the Athenians, who, when Philip of
+ Macedon was ready to invade them, spent their time in haranguing!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DICKENS.... "Berg and Julich, if we were to guarantee them?"&mdash;KING.
+ "Hm. Don't so much mind that Rhine Country: difficulties there,&mdash;Dutch
+ always jealous of one. But, on the other Frontier, neither England nor
+ Holland could take umbrage,"&mdash;points clearly to Silesia, then, your
+ Excellency Dickens? [Raumer, (from State-Paper Office), pp. 63, 64.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas, yes! Troops and military equipments are, for days past, evidently
+ wending towards Frankfurt, towards Crossen, and even the Newspapers now
+ hint that something is on hand in that quarter. Nay, this same day,
+ TUESDAY, 6th DECEMBER, there has come out brief Official Announcement, to
+ all the Foreign Ministers at Berlin, Excellency Dickens among them, "That
+ his Royal Majesty, our most all-gracious Herr, has taken the resolution to
+ advance a Body of Troops into Schlesien,"&mdash;rather out of friendly
+ views towards Austria (much business lying between us about Schlesien),
+ not out of hostile views by any means, as all Excellencies shall assure
+ their respective Courts. [Copy of the Paper in <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ i. 447.] Announcement which had thrown the Excellency Dickens into such a
+ frame of mind, before he got his Audience to-day!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SATURDAY following, which was December 10th, Marquis de Beauvau had his
+ Audience of leave; intending for Paris shortly: Audience very gracious;
+ covertly hinting, on both sides, more than it said; ending in these words,
+ on the King's side, which have become famous: "Adieu, then, M. le Marquis.
+ I believe I am going to play your game; if the aces fall to me, we will
+ share (<i>Je vais, je crois, jouer votre jeu: si les as me viennent, nous
+ partagerons)!</i>" [Voltaire, <i>OEuvres</i> (Siecle de Louis XV., c. 6),
+ xxviii. 74.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Botta, all this while, Friedrich strove to be specially civil; took him
+ out to Charlottenburg, that same Saturday, with the Queen and other
+ guests; but Botta, and all the world, being now certain about Silesia, and
+ that no amount of mud, or other terror on the roads, would be regarded,
+ Botta's thoughts in this evening party are not of cheerful nature. Next
+ day, Sunday, December 11th, he too gets his Audience of leave; and cannot
+ help bursting out, when the King plainly tells him what is now afoot, and
+ that the Prussian Ambassador has got instructions what to offer upon it at
+ Vienna. "Sire, you are going to ruin the House of Austria," cried Botta,
+ "and to plunge yourself into destruction (VOUS ABIMER) at the same time!"&mdash;"Depends
+ on the Queen," said Friedrich, "to accept the Offers I have made her."
+ Botta sank silent, seemed to reflect, but gathering himself again, added
+ with an ironical air and tone of voice, "They are fine Troops, those of
+ yours, Sire. Ours have not the same splendor of appearance; but they have
+ looked the wolf in the face. Think, I conjure you, what you are getting
+ into!" Friedrich answered with vivacity, a little nettled at the ironical
+ tone of Botta, and his mixed sympathy and menace: "You find my troops are
+ beautiful; perhaps I shall convince you they are good too." Yes,
+ Excellency Botta, goodish troops; and very capable "to look the wolf in
+ the face,"&mdash;or perhaps in the tail too, before all end! "Botta urged
+ and entreated that at least there should be some delay in executing this
+ project. But the King gave him to understand that it was now too late, and
+ that the Rubicon was passed." [Friedrich's own Account (<i>OEuvres,</i>
+ ii. 57).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secret is now out, therefore; Invasion of Silesia certain and close at
+ hand. "A day or two before marching," may have been this very day when
+ Botta got his audience, the King assembled his Chief Generals, all things
+ ready out in the Frankfurt-Crossen region yonder; and spoke to them as
+ follows; briefly and to the point:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gentlemen, I am undertaking a War, in which I have no allies but your
+ valor and your good-will. My cause is just; my resources are what we
+ ourselves can do; and the issue lies in Fortune. Remember continually the
+ glory which your Ancestors acquired in the plains of Warsaw, at
+ Fehrbellin, and in the Expedition to Preussen [across the Frische Haf on
+ ice, that time]. Your lot is in your own hands: distinctions and rewards
+ wait upon your fine actions which shall merit them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what need have I to excite you to glory? It is the one thing you keep
+ before your eyes; the sole object worthy of your labors. We are going to
+ front troops who, under Prince Eugene, had the highest reputation. Though
+ Prince Eugene is gone, we shall have to measure our strength against brave
+ soldiers: the greater will be the honor if we can conquer. Adieu, go
+ forth. I will follow you straightway to the rendezvous of glory which
+ awaits us." [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> ii.58.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MASKED BALL, AT BERLIN, 12th-13th DECEMBER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the evening of Monday, 12th, there was, as usual, Masked (or
+ Half-Masked) Ball, at the Palace. As usual; but this time it has become
+ mentionable in World-History. Bielfeld, personally interested, gives us a
+ vivid glance into it;&mdash;which, though pretending to be real and
+ contemporaneous, is unfortunately MYTHICAL only, and done at a great
+ interval of years (dates, and even slight circumstances of fact, refusing
+ to conform);&mdash;which, however, for the truth there is in it, we will
+ give, as better than nothing. Bielfeld's pretended date is, "Berlin, 15th
+ December;" should have been 14th,&mdash;wrong by a day, after one's best
+ effort!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "BERLIN, 15th DECEMBER, 1740. As for me, dear Sister, I am like a
+ shuttlecock whom the Kings of Prussia and of England hit with their
+ rackets, and knock to and fro. The night before last, I was at the Palace
+ Evening Party (ASSEMBLEE); which is a sort of Ball, where you go in
+ domino, but without mask on the face. The Queen was there, and all the
+ Court. About eight o'clock the King also made his appearance. His Majesty,
+ noticing M. de G&mdash;-[that is DE GUIDIKEN, or Guy Dickens], English
+ Minister, addressed him; led him into the embrasure of a window, and
+ talked alone with him for more than an hour [uncertain, probably
+ apocryphal this]. I threw, from time to time, a stolen glance at this
+ dialogue, which appeared to me to be very lively. A moment after, being
+ just dancing with Madame the Countess de&mdash;THREE ASTERISKS,&mdash;I
+ felt myself twitched by the domino; and turning, was much surprised to see
+ that it was the King; who took me aside, and said, 'Are your boots oiled
+ (VOS BOTTES SONT-ELLES GRAISSIES, Are you ready for a journey)?' I
+ replied, 'Sire, they will always be so for your Majesty's service.'&mdash;'Well,
+ then, Truchsess and you are for England; the day after to-morrow you go.
+ Speak to M. de Podewils!'&mdash;This was said like a flash of lightning.
+ His Majesty passed into another apartment; and I, I went to finish my
+ minuet with the Lady; who had been not less astonished to see me disappear
+ from her eyes, in the middle of the dance, than I was at what the King
+ said to me." [Bielfeld, i. 167, 168.] Next morning, I&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact is, next morning, Truchsess and I began preparation for the Court
+ of London,&mdash;and we did there, for many months afterwards, strive our
+ best to keep the Britannic Majesty in some kind of tune, amid the
+ prevailing discord of events;&mdash;fact interesting to some. And the
+ other fact, interesting to everybody, though Bielfeld has not mentioned
+ it, is, That King Friedrich, the same next morning, punctually "at the
+ stroke of 9," rolled away Frankfurt-ward,&mdash;into the First Silesian
+ War! Tuesday, "13th December, this morning, the King, privately quitting
+ the Ball, has gone [after some little snatch of sleep, we will hope] for
+ Frankfurt, to put himself at the head of his Troops." [Dickens (in
+ State-Paper Office), 13th December, 1740; see also <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ i. 452; &amp;c. &amp;c.] Bellona his companion for long years henceforth,
+ instead of Minerva and the Muses, as he had been anticipating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereby is like to be fulfilled (except that Friedrich himself is perhaps
+ this "little stone") what Friedrich prophesied to his Voltaire, the day
+ after hearing of the Kaiser's death: "I believe there will, by June next,
+ be more talk of cannon, soldiers, trenches, than of actresses, and dancers
+ for the ballet. This small Event changes the entire system of Europe. It
+ is the little stone which Nebuchadnezzar saw, in his dream, loosening
+ itself, and rolling down on the Image made of Four Metals, which it
+ shivers to ruin." [Friedrich to Voltaire, busy gathering actors at that
+ time, 26th October, 1740 (<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xxii. 49).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol.
+XI. (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. XI. (of XXI.)
+ Frederick The Great--Friedrich Takes the Reins in
+ Hand--June-December, 1740
+
+Author: Thomas Carlyle
+
+Posting Date: June 13, 2008 [EBook #2111]
+Release Date: March 2000
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by D.R. Thompson
+
+
+
+
+
+HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II. OF PRUSSIA
+
+FREDERICK THE GREAT
+
+By Thomas Carlyle
+
+Volume XI.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK XI. -- FRIEDRICH TAKES THE REINS IN HAND. -- June-December, 1740.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I. -- PHENOMENA OF FRIEDRICH'S ACCESSION.
+
+In Berlin, from Tuesday, 31st May, 1740, day of the late King's death,
+till the Thursday following, the post was stopped and the gates closed;
+no estafette can be despatched, though Dickens and all the Ambassadors
+are busy writing. On the Thursday, Regiments, Officers, principal
+Officials having sworn, and the new King being fairly in the saddle,
+estafettes and post-boys shoot forth at the top of their speed; and
+Rumor, towards every point of the compass, apprises mankind what immense
+news there is. [Dickens (in State-Paper Office), 4th June, 1740.]
+
+A King's Accession is always a hopeful phenomenon to the public; more
+especially a young King's, who has been talked of for his talents
+and aspirings,--for his sufferings, were it nothing more,--and whose
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL is understood to be in the press. Vaguely everywhere
+there has a notion gone abroad that this young King will prove
+considerable. Here at last has a Lover of Philosophy got upon the
+throne, and great philanthropies and magnanimities are to be expected,
+think rash editors and idle mankind. Rash editors in England and
+elsewhere, we observe, are ready to believe that Friedrich has not only
+disbanded the Potsdam Giants; but means to "reduce the Prussian Army one
+half" or so, for ease (temporary ease which we hope will be lasting)
+of parties concerned; and to go much upon emancipation, political
+rose-water, and friendship to humanity, as we now call it.
+
+At his first meeting of Council, they say, he put this question, "Could
+not the Prussian Army be reduced to 45,000?" The excellent young man.
+To which the Council had answered, "Hardly, your Majesty! The
+Julich-and-Berg affair is so ominous hitherto!" These may be secrets,
+and dubious to people out of doors, thinks a wise editor; but one thing
+patent to the day was this, surely symbolical enough: On one of his
+Majesty's first drives to Potsdam or from it, a thousand children,--in
+round numbers a thousand of them, all with the RED STRING round their
+necks, and liable to be taken for soldiers, if needed in the regiment of
+their Canton,--a thousand children met this young King at a turn of
+his road; and with shrill unison of wail, sang out: "Oh, deliver us from
+slavery,"--from the red threads, your Majesty. Why should poor we be
+liable to suffer hardship for our Country or otherwise, your Majesty!
+Can no one else be got to do it? sang out the thousand children. And
+his Majesty assented on the spot, thinks the rash editor. [_Gentleman's
+Magazine_ (London, 1740), x. 318; Newspapers, &c.] "Goose, Madam?"
+exclaimed a philanthropist projector once, whose scheme of sweeping
+chimneys by pulling a live goose down through them was objected to:
+"Goose, Madam? You can take two ducks, then, if you are so sorry for the
+goose!"--Rash editors think there is to be a reign of Astraea Redux in
+Prussia, by means of this young King; and forget to ask themselves, as
+the young King must by no means do, How far Astraea may be possible, for
+Prussia and him?
+
+At home, too, there is prophesying enough, vague hope enough, which for
+most part goes wide of the mark. This young King, we know, did prove
+considerable; but not in the way shaped out for him by the public;--it
+was in far other ways! For no public in the least knows, in such cases:
+nor does the man himself know, except gradually and if he strive to
+learn. As to the public,--"Doubtless," says a friend of mine, "doubtless
+it was the Atlantic Ocean that carried Columbus to America; lucky for
+the Atlantic, and for Columbus and us: but the Atlantic did not quite
+vote that way from the first; nay ITS votes, I believe, were very
+various at different stages of the matter!" This is a truth which kings
+and men, not intending to be drift-logs or waste brine obedient to the
+Moon, are much called to have in mind withal, from perhaps an early
+stage of their voyage.
+
+Friedrich's actual demeanor in these his first weeks, which is still
+decipherable if one study well, has in truth a good deal of the
+brilliant, of the popular-magnanimous; but manifests strong solid
+quality withal, and a head steadier than might have been expected. For
+the Berlin world is all in a rather Auroral condition; and Friedrich too
+is,--the chains suddenly cut loose, and such hopes opened for the young
+man. He has great things ahead; feels in himself great things, and
+doubtless exults in the thought of realizing them. Magnanimous enough,
+popular, hopeful enough, with Voltaire and the highest of the world
+looking on:--but yet he is wise, too; creditably aware that there are
+limits, that this is a bargain, and the terms of it inexorable. We
+discern with pleasure the old veracity of character shining through
+this giddy new element; that all these fine procedures are at least
+unaffected, to a singular degree true, and the product of nature, on his
+part; and that, in short, the complete respect for Fact, which used to
+be a quality of his, and which is among the highest and also rarest in
+man, has on no side deserted him at present.
+
+A trace of airy exuberance, of natural exultancy, not quite repressible,
+on the sudden change to freedom and supreme power from what had
+gone before: perhaps that also might be legible, if in those opaque
+bead-rolls which are called Histories of Friedrich anything human could
+with certainty be read! He flies much about from place to place; now at
+Potsdam, now at Berlin, at Charlottenburg, Reinsberg; nothing loath
+to run whither business calls him, and appear in public: the gazetteer
+world, as we noticed, which has been hitherto a most mute world, breaks
+out here and there into a kind of husky jubilation over the great things
+he is daily doing, and rejoices in the prospect of having a Philosopher
+King; which function the young man, only twenty-eight gone, cannot but
+wish to fulfil for the gazetteers and the world. He is a busy man; and
+walks boldly into his grand enterprise of "making men happy," to the
+admiration of Voltaire and an enlightened public far and near.
+
+Bielfeld speaks of immense concourses of people crowding about
+Charlottenburg, to congratulate, to solicit, to &c.; tells us how he
+himself had to lodge almost in outhouses, in that royal village of hope,
+His emotions at Reinsberg, and everybody's, while Friedrich Wilhelm
+lay dying, and all stood like greyhounds on the slip; and with what
+arrow-swiftness they shot away when the great news came: all this he has
+already described at wearisome length, in his fantastic semi-fabulous
+way. [Bielfeld, i. 68-77; ib. 81.]' Friedrich himself seemed moderately
+glad to see Bielfeld; received his high-flown congratulations with a
+benevolent yet somewhat composed air; and gave him afterwards, in the
+course of weeks, an unexpectedly small appointment: To go to Hanover,
+under Truchsess von Waldburg, and announce our Accession. Which is but
+a simple, mostly formal service; yet perhaps what Bielfeld is best equal
+to.
+
+The Britannic Majesty, or at least his Hanover people have been
+beforehand with this civility; Baron Munchhausen, no doubt by orders
+given for such contingency, had appeared at Berlin with the due
+compliment and condolence almost on the first day of the New Reign;
+first messenger of all on that errand; Britannic Majesty evidently in a
+conciliatory humor,--having his dangerous Spanish War on hand. Britannic
+Majesty in person, shortly after, gets across to Hanover; and Friedrich
+despatches Truchsess, with Bielfeld adjoined, to return the courtesy.
+
+Friedrich does not neglect these points of good manners; along with
+which something of substantial may be privately conjoined. For example,
+if he had in secret his eye on Julich and Berg, could anything be fitter
+than to ascertain what the French will think of such an enterprise?
+What the French; and next to them what the English, that is to say,
+Hanoverians, who meddle much in affairs of the Reich. For these reasons
+and others he likewise, probably with more study than in the Bielfeld
+case, despatches Colonel Camas to make his compliment at the French
+Court, and in an expert way take soundings there. Camas, a fat sedate
+military gentleman, of advanced years, full of observation, experience
+and sound sense,--"with one arm, which he makes do the work of two, and
+nobody can notice that the other arm resting in his coat-breast is
+of cork, so expert is he,"--will do in this matter what is feasible;
+probably not much for the present. He is to call on Voltaire, as he
+passes, who is in Holland again, at the Hague for some months back; and
+deliver him "a little cask of Hungary Wine," which probably his Majesty
+had thought exquisite. Of which, and the other insignificant
+passages between them, we hear more than enough in the writings and
+correspondences of Voltaire about this time.
+
+In such way Friedrich disposes of his Bielfelds; who are rather numerous
+about him now and henceforth. Adventurers from all quarters, especially
+of the literary type, in hopes of being employed, much hovered round
+Friedrich through his whole reign. But they met a rather strict judge
+on arriving; it cannot be said they found it such a Goshen as they
+expected.
+
+Favor, friendly intimacy, it is visible from the first, avails nothing
+with this young King; beyond and before all things he will have his
+work done, and looks out exclusively for the man ablest to do it. Hence
+Bielfeld goes to Hanover, to grin out euphuisms, and make graceful
+courtbows to our sublime little Uncle there. On the other hand,
+Friedrich institutes a new Knighthood, ORDER OF MERIT so called; which
+indeed is but a small feat, testifying mere hope and exuberance as yet;
+and may even be made worse than nothing, according to the Knights he
+shall manage to have. Happily it proved a successful new Order in this
+last all-essential particular; and, to the end of Friedrich's life,
+continued to be a great and coveted distinction among the Prussians.
+
+Beyond doubt this is a radiant enough young Majesty; entitled to
+hope, and to be the cause of hope. Handsome, to begin with; decidedly
+well-looking, all say, and of graceful presence, though hardly five feet
+seven, and perhaps stouter of limb than the strict Belvedere standard.
+[Height, it appears, was five feet five inches (Rhenish), which in
+English measure is five feet seven or a hair's-breadth less. Preuss,
+twice over, by a mistake unusual with him, gives "five feet two inches
+three lines" as the correct cipher (which it is of NAPOLEON'S measure in
+FRENCH feet); then settles on the above dimensions from unexceptionable
+authority (Preuss, _Buch fur Jedermann,_ i. 18; Preuss, _Fredrich der
+Grosse,_ i. 39 and 419).] Has a fine free expressive face; nothing
+of austerity in it; not a proud face, or not too proud, yet rapidly
+flashing on you all manner of high meanings. [Wille's Engraving after
+Pesne (excellent, both Picture and Engraving) is reckoned the best
+Likeness in that form.] Such a man, in the bloom of his years; with such
+a possibility ahead, and Voltaire and mankind waiting applausive!--Let
+us try to select, and extricate into coherence and visibility out of
+those Historical dust-heaps, a few of the symptomatic phenomena, or
+physiognomic procedures of Friedrich in his first weeks of Kingship, by
+way of contribution to some Portraiture of his then inner-man.
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH WILL MAKE MEN HAPPY: CORN-MAGAZINES.
+
+On the day after his Accession, Officers and chief Ministers taking the
+Oath, Friedrich, to his Officers, "on whom he counts for the same zeal
+now which he had witnessed as their comrade," recommends mildness of
+demeanor from the higher to the lower, and that the common soldier be
+not treated with harshness when not deserved: and to his Ministers he
+is still more emphatic, in the like or a higher strain. Officially
+announcing to them, by Letter, that a new Reign has commenced, he uses
+these words, legible soon after to a glad Berlin public: "Our grand care
+will be, To further the Country's well-being, and to make every one of
+our subjects (EINEN JEDEN UNSERER UNTERTHANEN) contented and happy. Our
+will is, not that you strive to enrich Us by vexation of Our subjects;
+but rather that you aim steadily as well towards the advantage of the
+Country as Our particular interest, forasmuch as We make no difference
+between these two objects," but consider them one and the same. This
+is written, and gets into print within the month; and his Majesty, that
+same day (Wednesday, 2d June), when it came to personal reception, and
+actual taking of the Oath, was pleased to add in words, which also were
+printed shortly, this comfortable corollary: "My will henceforth is, If
+it ever chance that my particular interest and the general good of my
+Countries should seem to go against each other,--in that case, my will
+is, That the latter always be preferred." [Dickens, Despatch, 4th June,
+1740: Preuss, _Friedrichs Jugend und Thronbesteigung_ (Berlin, 1840), p.
+325;--quoting from the Berlin Newspapers of 28th June and 2d July,
+1740.]
+
+This is a fine dialect for incipient Royalty; and it is brand-new at
+that time. It excites an admiration in the then populations, which
+to us, so long used to it and to what commonly comes of it, is
+not conceivable at once. There can be no doubt the young King does
+faithfully intend to develop himself in the way of making men happy; but
+here, as elsewhere, are limits which he will recognize ahead, some of
+them perhaps nearer than was expected.
+
+Meanwhile his first acts, in this direction, correspond to these fine
+words. The year 1740, still grim with cold into the heart of summer,
+bids fair to have a late poor harvest, and famine threatens to add
+itself to other hardships there have been. Recognizing the actualities
+of the case, what his poor Father could not, he opens the Public
+Granaries,--a wise resource they have in Prussian countries against the
+year of scarcity;--orders grain to be sold out, at reasonable rates, to
+the suffering poor; and takes the due pains, considerable in some cases,
+that this be rendered feasible everywhere in his dominions. "Berlin, 2d
+June," is the first date of this important order; fine program to his
+Ministers, which, we read, is no sooner uttered, than some performance
+follows. An evident piece of wisdom and humanity; for which doubtless
+blessings of a very sincere kind rise to him from several millions of
+his fellow-mortals.
+
+Nay furthermore, as can be dimly gathered, this scarcity continuing,
+some continuous mode of management was set on foot for the Poor;
+and there is nominated, with salary, with outline of plan and other
+requisites, as "Inspector of the Poor," to his own and our surprise, M.
+Jordan, late Reader to the Crown-Prince, and still much the intimate of
+his royal Friend. Inspector who seems to do his work very well. And in
+the November coming this is what we see: "One thousand poor old women,
+the destitute of Berlin, set to spin," at his Majesty's charges;
+vacant houses, hired for them in certain streets and suburbs, have been
+new-planked, partitioned, warmed; and spinning is there for any diligent
+female soul. There a thousand of them sit, under proper officers, proper
+wages, treatment;--and the hum of their poor spindles, and of their poor
+inarticulate old hearts, is a comfort, if one chance to think of it.--Of
+"distressed needlewomen" who cannot sew, nor be taught to do it; who, in
+private truth, are mutinous maid-servants come at last to the net upshot
+of their anarchies; of these, or of the like incurable phenomena, I
+hear nothing in Berlin; and can believe that, under this King, Indigence
+itself may still have something of a human aspect, not a brutal or
+diabolic as is commoner in some places.--This is one of Friedrich's
+first acts, this opening of the Corn-magazines, and arrangements for
+the Destitute; [_Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 367. Rodenbeck, _Tagebuch aus
+Friedrichs des Grossen Regentenleben_ (Berlin, 1840), i. 2, 26 (2d June,
+October, 1740): a meritorious, laborious, though essentially chaotic
+Book, unexpectedly futile of result to the reader; settles for each Day
+of Friedrich's Reign, so far as possible, where Friedrich was and what
+doing; fatally wants all index &c., as usual.] and of this there can
+be no criticism. The sound of hungry pots set boiling, on judicious
+principles; the hum of those old women's spindles in the warm rooms:
+gods and men are well pleased to hear such sounds; and accept the same
+as part, real though infinitesimally small, of the sphere-harmonies of
+this Universe!
+
+
+
+
+ABOLITION OF LEGAL TORTURE.
+
+Friedrich makes haste, next, to strike into Law-improvements. It is but
+the morrow after this of the Corn-magazines, by KABINETS-ORDRE (Act
+of Parliament such as they can have in that Country, where the Three
+Estates sit all under one Three-cornered Hat, and the debates are kept
+silent, and only the upshot of them, more or less faithfully, is made
+public),--by Cabinet Order, 3d June, 1740, he abolishes the use
+of Torture in Criminal Trials. [Preuss, _Friedrichs Jugend und
+Thronbesteigung_ (Berlin, 1840,--a minor Book of Preuss's), p. 340.
+Rodenbeck, i. 14 ("3d June").] Legal Torture, "Question" as they mildly
+call it, is at an end from this date. Not in any Prussian Court shall
+a "question" try for answer again by that savage method. The use of
+Torture had, I believe, fallen rather obsolete in Prussia; but now the
+very threat of it shall vanish,--the threat of it, as we may remember,
+had reached Friedrich himself, at one time. Three or four years ago, it
+is farther said, a dark murder happened in Berlin: Man killed one night
+in the open streets; murderer discoverable by no method,--unless he were
+a certain CANDIDATUS of Divinity to whom some trace of evidence pointed,
+but who sorrowfully persisted in absolute and total denial. This poor
+Candidatus had been threatened with the rack; and would most likely have
+at length got it, had not the real murderer been discovered,--much
+to the discredit of the rack in Berlin. This Candidatus was only
+threatened; nor do I know when the last actual instance in Prussia was;
+but in enlightened France, and most other countries, there was as yet
+no scruple upon it. Barbier, the Diarist at Paris, some time after
+this, tells us of a gang of thieves there, who were regularly put to
+the torture; and "they blabbed too, ILS ONT JASE," says Barbier with
+official jocosity. [Barbier, _Journal Historique du Regne de Louis XV._
+(Paris, 1849), ii. 338 (date "Dec. 1742").]
+
+Friedrich's Cabinet Order, we need not say, was greeted everywhere, at
+home and abroad, by three rounds of applause;--in which surely all of
+us still join; though the PER CONTRA also is becoming visible to some
+of us, and our enthusiasm grows less complete than formerly. This
+was Friedrich's first step in Law-Reform, done on his fourth day of
+Kingship. A long career in that kind lies ahead of him; in reform of
+Law, civil as well as criminal, his efforts ended with life only. For
+his love of Justice was really great; and the mendacities and wiggeries,
+attached to such a necessary of life as Law, found no favor from him at
+any time.
+
+
+
+
+WILL HAVE PHILOSOPHERS ABOUT HIM, AND A REAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
+
+To neglect the Philosophies, Fine Arts, interests of Human Culture, he
+is least of all likely. The idea of building up the Academy of Sciences
+to its pristine height, or far higher, is evidently one of those that
+have long lain in the Crown-Prince's mind, eager to realize themselves.
+Immortal Wolf, exiled but safe at Marburg, and refusing to return
+in Friedrich Wilhelm's time, had lately dedicated a Book to the
+Crown-Prince; indicating that perhaps, under a new Reign, he might
+be more persuadable. Friedrich makes haste to persuade; instructs the
+proper person, Reverend Herr Reinbeck, Head of the Consistorium at
+Berlin, to write and negotiate. "All reasonable conditions shall be
+granted" the immortal Wolf,--and Friedrich adds with his own hand as
+Postscript: "I request you (IHN) to use all diligence about Wolf. A man
+that seeks truth, and loves it, must be reckoned precious in any human
+society; and I think you will make a conquest in the realm of truth if
+you persuade Wolf hither again." [In _OEuvres de Frederic_ (xxvii. ii.
+185), the Letter given.] This is of date June 6th; not yet a week since
+Friedrich came to be King. The Reinbeck-Wolf negotiation which ensued
+can be read in Busching by the curious. [Busching's _Beitrage_ (?
+Freiherr von Wolf), i. 63-137.] It represents to us a croaky, thrifty,
+long-headed old Herr Professor, in no haste to quit Marburg except for
+something better: "obliged to wear woollen shoes and leggings;" "bad at
+mounting stairs;" and otherwise needing soft treatment. Willing, though
+with caution, to work at an Academy of Sciences;--but dubious if the
+French are so admirable as they seem to themselves in such operations.
+Veteran Wolf, one dimly begins to learn, could himself build a German
+Academy of Sciences, to some purpose, if encouraged! This latter was
+probably the stone of stumbling in that direction. Veteran Wolf did
+not get to be President in the New Academy of Sciences; but was brought
+back, "streets all in triumph," to his old place at Halle; and there,
+with little other work that was heard of, but we hope in warm shoes and
+without much mounting of stairs, lived peaceably victorious the rest of
+his days. Friedrich's thoughts are not of a German home-built Academy,
+but of a French one: and for this he already knows a builder; has
+silently had him in his eye, these two years past,--Voltaire giving
+hint, in the LETTER we once heard of at Loo. Builder shall be that
+sublime Maupertuis; scientific lion of Paris, ever since his feat in the
+Polar regions, and the charming Narrative he gave of it. "What a feat,
+what a book!" exclaimed the Parisian cultivated circles, male and
+female, on that occasion; and Maupertuis, with plenty of bluster in him
+carefully suppressed, assents in a grandly modest way. His Portraits are
+in the Printshops ever since; one very singular Portrait, just coming
+out (at which there is some laughing): a coarse-featured, blusterous,
+rather triumphant-looking man, blusterous, though finely complacent for
+the nonce; in copious dressing-gown and fur cap; comfortably SQUEEZING
+the Earth and her meridians flat (as if HE had done it), with his left
+hand; and with the other, and its outstretched finger, asking mankind,
+"Are not you aware, then?"--"Are not we!" answers Voltaire by and
+by, with endless waggeries upon him, though at present so reverent.
+Friedrich, in these same days, writes this Autograph; which who of men
+or lions could resist?
+
+
+TO MONSIEUR DE MAUPERTUIS, at Paris.
+
+(No date;--datable, June, 1740.)
+
+"My heart and my inclination excited in me, from the moment I mounted
+the throne, the desire of having you here, that you might put our Berlin
+Academy into the shape you alone are capable of giving it. Come, then,
+come and insert into this wild crab-tree the graft of the Sciences, that
+it may bear fruit. You have shown the Figure of the Earth to mankind;
+show also to a King how sweet it is to possess such a man as you.
+
+"Monsieur de Maupertuis,--votre tres-affectionne
+
+"FEDERIC" (SIC). [_OEuvres,_ xvii. i. 334. The fantastic "Federic,"
+instead of "Frederic," is, by this time, the common signature to French
+Letters.]
+
+This Letter--how could Maupertuis prevent some accident in such a
+case?--got into the Newspapers; glorious for Friedrich, glorious for
+Maupertuis; and raised matters to a still higher pitch. Maupertuis is on
+the road, and we shall see him before long.
+
+
+
+
+AND EVERY ONE SHALL GET TO HEAVEN IN HIS OWN WAY.
+
+Here is another little fact which had immense renown at home and abroad,
+in those summer months and long afterwards.
+
+June 22d, 1740, the GEISTLICHE DEPARTEMENT (Board of Religion, we may
+term it) reports that the Roman-Catholic Schools, which have been in
+use these eight years past, for children of soldiers belonging to that
+persuasion, "are, especially in Berlin, perverted, directly in the teeth
+of Royal Ordinance, 1732, to seducing Protestants into Catholicism;"
+annexed, or ready for annexing, "is the specific Report of
+Fiscal-General to this effect:"--upon which, what would it please his
+Majesty to direct us to do?
+
+His Majesty writes on the margin these words, rough and ready, which we
+give with all their grammatical blotches on them; indicating a mind
+made up on one subject, which was much more dubious then, to most other
+minds, than it now is:--
+
+"Die Religionen Musen (MUSSEN) alle Tollerirt (TOLERIRT) werden, und Mus
+(MUSS) der Fiscal nuhr (NUR) das Auge darauf haben, das (DASS) keine der
+andern abrug Tuhe (ABBRUCH THUE), den (DENN) hier mus (MUSS) ein
+jeder nach seiner Fasson Selich (FACON SELIG) werden." [Preuss,
+_Thronbesteigung,_ p. 333; Rodenbeck, IN DIE.]
+
+Which in English might run as follows:--
+
+"All Religions must be tolerated (TOLLERATED), and the Fiscal must have
+an eye that none of them make unjust encroachment on the other; for in
+this Country every man must get to Heaven in his own way."
+
+Wonderful words; precious to the then leading spirits, and which (the
+spelling and grammar being mended) flew abroad over all the world: the
+enlightened Public everywhere answering his Majesty, once more, with its
+loudest "Bravissimo!" on this occasion. With what enthusiasm of admiring
+wonder, it is now difficult to fancy, after the lapse of sixscore years!
+And indeed, in regard to all these worthy acts of Human Improvement
+which we are now concerned with, account should be held (were it
+possible) on Friedrich's behalf how extremely original, and bright with
+the splendor of new gold, they then were: and how extremely they are
+fallen dim, by general circulation, since that. Account should be held;
+and yet it is not possible, no human imagination is adequate to it, in
+the times we are now got into.
+
+
+
+
+FREE PRESS, AND NEWSPAPERS THE BEST INSTRUCTORS.
+
+Toleration, in Friedrich's spiritual circumstances, was perhaps no
+great feat to Friedrich: but what the reader hardly expected of him
+was Freedom of the Press, or an attempt that way! From England, from
+Holland, Friedrich had heard of Free Press, of Newspapers the best
+Instructors: it is a fact that he hastens to plant a seed of that kind
+at Berlin; sets about it "on the second day of his reign," so eager
+is he. Berlin had already some meagre INTELLIGENZ-BLATT (Weekly or
+Thrice-Weekly Advertiser), perhaps two; but it is a real Newspaper,
+frondent with genial leafy speculation, and food for the mind, that
+Friedrich is intent upon: a "Literary-Political Newspaper," or were it
+even two Newspapers, one French, one German; and he rapidly makes the
+arrangements for it; despatches Jordan, on the second day, to seek some
+fit Frenchman. Arrangements are soon made: a Bookselling Printer, Haude,
+Bookseller once to the Prince-Royal,--whom we saw once in a domestic
+flash-of-lightning long ago, [Antea, Book vi. c. 7.]--is encouraged
+to proceed with the improved German article, MERCURY or whatever they
+called it; vapid Formey, a facile pen, but not a forcible, is the Editor
+sought out by Jordan for the French one. And, in short, No. 1 of
+Formey shows itself in print within a month; ["2d July, 1740:" Preuss,
+_Thronbesteigung,_ p. 330; and Formey, _Souvenirs,_ i. 107, rectified by
+the exact Herr Preuss.] and Haude and he, Haude picking up some grand
+Editor in Hamburg, do their best for the instruction of mankind.
+
+In not many months, Formey, a facile and learned but rather vapid
+gentleman, demitted or was dismissed; and the Journals coalesced into
+one, or split into two again; and went I know not what road, or roads,
+in time coming,--none that led to results worth naming. Freedom of the
+Press, in the case of these Journals, was never violated, nor was any
+need for violating it. General Freedom of the Press Friedrich did not
+grant, in any quite Official or steady way; but in practice, under him,
+it always had a kind of real existence, though a fluctuating, ambiguous
+one. And we have to note, through Friedrich's whole reign, a marked
+disinclination to concern himself with Censorship, or the shackling
+of men's poor tongues and pens; nothing but some officious report that
+there was offence to Foreign Courts, or the chance of offence, in a poor
+man's pamphlet, could induce Friedrich to interfere with him or it,--and
+indeed his interference was generally against his Ministers for having
+wrong informed him, and in favor of the poor Pamphleteer appealing at
+the fountain-head. [Anonymous (Laveaux), _Vie de Frederic II., Roi de
+Prusse_ (Strasbourg, 1787), iv. 82. A worthless, now nearly forgotten
+Book; but competent on this point, if on any; Laveaux (a handy fellow,
+fugitive Ex-Monk, with fugitive Ex-Nun attached) having lived much at
+Berlin, always in the pamphleteering line.] To the end of his life,
+disgusting Satires against him, _Vie Privee_ by Voltaire, _Matinees du
+Roi de Prusse,_ and still worse Lies and Nonsenses, were freely sold
+at Berlin, and even bore to be printed there, Friedrich saying nothing,
+caring nothing. He has been known to burn Pamphlets publicly,--one
+Pamphlet we shall ourselves see on fire yet;--but it was without the
+least hatred to them, and for official reasons merely. To the last, he
+would answer his reporting Ministers, "LE PRESSE EST LIBRE (Free press,
+you must consider)!"--grandly reluctant to meddle with the press, or go
+down upon the dogs barking at his door. Those ill effects of Free Press
+(first stage of the ill effects) he endured in this manner; but the good
+effects seem to have fallen below his expectation. Friedrich's enthusiam
+for freedom of the press, prompt enough, as we see, never rose to the
+extreme pitch, and it rather sank than increased as he continued his
+experiences of men and things. This of Formey and the two Newspapers
+was the only express attempt he made in that direction; and it proved a
+rather disappointing one. The two Newspapers went their way thenceforth,
+Friedrich sometimes making use of them for small purposes, once or twice
+writing an article himself, of wildly quizzical nature, perhaps to
+be noticed by us when the time comes; but are otherwise, except for
+chronological purposes, of the last degree of insignificance to gods or
+men.
+
+"Freedom of the Press," says my melancholic Friend, "is a noble
+thing; and in certain Nations, at certain epochs, produces glorious
+effects,--chiefly in the revolutionary line, where that has grown
+indispensable. Freedom of the Press is possible, where everybody
+disapproves the least abuse of it; where the 'Censorship' is, as it
+were, exercised by all the world. When the world (as, even in the freest
+countries, it almost irresistibly tends to become) is no longer in
+a case to exercise that salutary function, and cannot keep down loud
+unwise speaking, loud unwise persuasion, and rebuke it into silence
+whenever printed, Freedom of the Press will not answer very long, among
+sane human creatures: and indeed, in Nations not in an exceptional case,
+it becomes impossible amazingly soon!"--
+
+All these are phenomena of Friedrich's first week. Let these suffice as
+sample, in that first kind. Splendid indications surely; and shot forth
+in swift enough succession, flash following flash, upon an attentive
+world. Betokening, shall we say, what internal sea of splendor,
+struggling to disclose itself, probably lies in this young King; and
+how high his hopes go for mankind and himself? Yes, surely;--and
+introducing, we remark withal, the "New Era," of Philanthropy,
+Enlightenment and so much else; with French Revolution, and a "world
+well suicided" hanging in the rear! Clearly enough, to this young
+ardent Friedrich, foremost man of his Time, and capable of DOING its
+inarticulate or dumb aspirings, belongs that questionable honor; and a
+very singular one it would have seemed to Friedrich, had he lived to see
+what it meant!
+
+Friedrich's rapidity and activity, in the first months of his reign,
+were wonderful to mankind; as indeed through life he continued to be
+a most rapid and active King. He flies about; mustering Troops,
+Ministerial Boards, passing Edicts, inspecting, accepting Homages of
+Provinces;--decides and does, every day that passes, an amazing number
+of things. Writes many Letters, too; finds moments even for some verses;
+and occasionally draws a snatch of melody from his flute.
+
+His Letters are copiously preserved; but, as usual, they are in swift
+official tone, and tell us almost nothing. To his Sisters he writes
+assurances; to his friends, his Suhms, Duhans, Voltaires, eager
+invitations, general or particular, to come to him. "My state has
+changed," is his phrase to Voltaire and other dear intimates; a tone of
+pensiveness, at first even of sorrow and pathos traceable in it; "Come
+to me,"--and the tone, in an old dialect, different from Friedrich's,
+might have meant, "Pray for me." An immense new scene is opened, full of
+possibilities of good and bad. His hopes being great, his anxieties,
+the shadow of them, are proportionate. Duhan (his good old Tutor) does
+arrive, Algarotti arrives, warmly welcomed, both: with Voltaire there
+are difficulties; but surely he too will, before long, manage to arrive.
+The good Suhm, who had been Saxon Minister at Petersburg to his sorrow
+this long while back, got in motion soon enough; but, alas, his lungs
+were ruined by the Russian climate, and he did not arrive. Something
+pathetic still in those final LETTERS of Suhm. Passionately speeding on,
+like a spent steed struggling homeward; he has to pause at Warsaw, and
+in a few days dies there,--in a way mournful to Friedrich and us! To
+Duhan, and Duhan's children afterwards, he was punctually, not too
+lavishly, attentive; in like manner to Suhm's Nephews, whom the dying
+man had recommended to him.--We will now glance shortly at a second and
+contemporaneous phasis of Friedrich's affairs.
+
+
+
+
+INTENDS TO BE PRACTICAL WITHAL, AND EVERY INCH A KING.
+
+Friedrich is far indeed from thinking to reduce his Army, as the Foreign
+Editor imagines. On the contrary, he is, with all industry, increasing
+it. He changed the Potsdam Giants into four regiments of the usual
+stature; he is busy bargaining with his Brother-in-law of Brunswick,
+and with other neighbors, for still new regiments;--makes up, within the
+next few months, Eight Regiments, an increase of, say, 16,000 men. It
+would appear he means to keep an eye on the practicalities withal; means
+to have a Fighting-Apparatus of the utmost potentiality, for one thing!
+Here are other indications.
+
+We saw the Old Dessauer, in a sad hour lately, speaking beside the mark;
+and with what Olympian glance, suddenly tearless, the new King flashed
+out upon him, knowing nothing of "authority" that could reside in any
+Dessauer. Nor was that a solitary experience; the like befell wherever
+needed. Heinrich of Schwedt, the Ill Margraf, advancing with jocose
+countenance in the way of old comradeship, in those first days, met
+unexpected rebuff, and was reduced to gravity on the sudden: "JETZT
+BIN ICH KONIG,--My Cousin, I am now King!" a fact which the Ill Margraf
+could never get forgotten again. Lieutenant-General Schulenburg, too,
+the didactic Schulenburg, presuming, on old familiarity, and willing
+to wipe out the misfortune of having once condemned us to death, which
+nobody is now upbraiding him with, rushes up from Landsberg, unbidden,
+to pay his congratulations and condolences, driven by irresistible
+exuberance of loyalty: to his astonishment, he is reminded (thing
+certain, manner of the thing not known), That an Officer cannot quit his
+post without order; that he, at this moment, ought to be in Landsberg!
+[Stenzel, iv. 41; Preuss, _Thronbesteigung;_ &c.] Schulenburg has a
+hard old military face; but here is a young face too, which has grown
+unexpectedly rigorous. Fancy the blank look of little Schulenburg; the
+light of him snuffed out in this manner on a sudden. It is said he had
+thoughts of resigning, so indignant was he: no doubt he went home to
+Landsberg gloomily reflective, with the pipe-clay of his mind in such a
+ruinous condition. But there was no serious anger, on Friedrich's part;
+and he consoled his little Schulenburg soon after, by expediting some
+promotion he had intended him. "Terribly proud young Majesty this,"
+exclaim the sweet voices. And indeed, if they are to have a Saturnian
+Kingdom, by appearance it will be on conditions only!
+
+Anticipations there had been, that old unkindnesses against the
+Crown-Prince, some of which were cruel enough, might be remembered now:
+and certain people had their just fears, considering what account stood
+against them; others, VICE VERSA, their hopes. But neither the fears nor
+the hopes realized themselves; especially the fears proved
+altogether groundless. Derschau, who had voted Death in that Copenick
+Court-Martial, upon the Crown-Prince, is continued in his functions,
+in the light of his King's countenance, as if nothing such had been.
+Derschau, and all others so concerned; not the least question was
+made of them, nor of what they had thought or had done or said, on an
+occasion once so tragically vital to a certain man.
+
+Nor is reward much regulated by past services to the Crown-Prince, or
+even by sufferings endured for him. "Shocking ingratitude!" exclaim
+the sweet voices here too,--being of weak judgment, many of them! Poor
+Katte's Father, a faithful old Soldier, not capable of being more, he
+does, rather conspicuously, make Feldmarschall, make Reichsgraf; happy,
+could these honors be a consolation to the old man. The Munchows of
+Custrin,--readers remember their kindness in that sad time; how the
+young boy went into petticoats again, and came to the Crown-Prince's
+cell with all manner of furnishings,--the Munchows, father and sons,
+this young gentleman of the petticoats among them, he took immediate
+pains to reward by promotion: eldest son was advanced into the General
+Directorium; two younger sons, to Majorship, to Captaincy, in their
+respective Regiments; him of the petticoats "he had already taken
+altogether to himself," [Preuss, i. 66.] and of him we shall see a
+glimpse at Wilhelmina's shortly, as a "milkbeard (JEUNE MORVEUX)" in
+personal attendance on his Majesty. This was a notable exception. And
+in effect there came good public service, eminent some of it, from these
+Munchows in their various departments. And it was at length perceived to
+have been, in the main, because they were of visible faculty for doing
+work that they had got work to do; and the exceptional case of the
+Munchows became confirmatory of the rule.
+
+Lieutenant Keith, again, whom we once saw galloping from Wesel to save
+his life in that bad affair of the Crown-Prince's and his, was nothing
+like so fortunate. Lieutenant Keith, by speed on that Wesel occasion,
+and help of Chesterfield's Secretary, got across to England; got into
+the Portuguese service; and has there been soldiering, very silently,
+these ten years past,--skin and body safe, though his effigy was cut in
+four quarters and nailed to the gallows at Wesel;--waiting a time that
+would come. Time being come, Lieutenant Keith hastened home; appealed
+to his effigy on the gallows;--and was made a Lieutenant-Colonel merely,
+with some slight appendages, as that of STALLMEISTER (Curator of the
+Stables) and something else; income still straitened, though enough to
+live upon. [Preuss, _Friedrich mit Verwandten und Freunden,_ p. 281.]
+Small promotion, in comparison with hope, thought the poor Lieutenant;
+but had to rest satisfied with it; and struggle to understand that
+perhaps he was fit for nothing bigger, and that he must exert himself to
+do this small thing well. Hardness of heart in high places! Friedrich,
+one is glad to see, had not forgotten the poor fellow, could he have
+done better with him. Some ten years hence, quite incidentally, there
+came to Keith, one morning, a fine purse of money from his Majesty, one
+pretty gift in Keith's experience;--much the topic in Berlin, while a
+certain solemn English gentleman happened to be passing that way (whom
+we mean to detain a little by and by), who reports it for us with all
+the circumstances. [Sir Jonas Hanway, _Travels,_ &c. (London, 1753), ii.
+202. Date of the Gift is 1750.]
+
+Lieutenant Spaen too had got into trouble for the Crown-Prince's sake,
+though we have forgotten him again; had "admitted Katte to interviews,"
+or we forget what;--had sat his "year in Spandau" in consequence; been
+dismissed the Prussian service, and had taken service with the Dutch.
+Lieutenant Spaen either did not return at all, or disliked the aspects
+when he did, and immediately withdrew to Holland again. Which probably
+was wise of him. At a late period, King Friedrich, then a great King,
+on one of his Cleve Journeys, fell in with Spaen; who had become a Dutch
+General of rank, and was of good manners and style of conversation:
+King Friedrich was charmed to see him; became his guest for the night;
+conversed delightfully with him, about old Prussian matters and about
+new; and in the colloquy never once alluded to that interesting passage
+in his young life and Spaen's. [Nicolai, _Anekdoten,_ vi. 178.] Hard as
+polished steel! thinks Spaen perhaps; but, if candid, must ask himself
+withal, Are facts any softer, or the Laws of Kingship to a man that
+holds it?--Keith silently did his Lieutenant-Colonelcy with the
+appendages, while life lasted: of the Page Keith, his Brother, who
+indeed had blabbed upon the Prince, as we remember, and was not entitled
+to be clamorous, I never heard that there was any notice taken; and
+figure him to myself as walking with shouldered firelock, a private
+Fusileer, all his life afterwards, with many reflections on things
+bygone. [These and the other Prussian Keiths are all of Scotch
+extraction; the Prussians, in natural German fashion, pronounce their
+name KAH-IT (English "KITE" with nothing of the Y in it), as may be
+worth remembering in a more important instance.]
+
+Old friendship, it would seem, is without weight in public appointments
+here: old friends are somewhat astonished to find this friend of theirs
+a King every inch! To old comrades, if they were useless, much more if
+they were worse than useless, how disappointing! "One wretched Herr [name
+suppressed, but known at the time, and talked of, and whispered of], who
+had, like several others, hoping to rise that way, been industrious in
+encouraging the Crown-Prince's vices as to women, was so shocked at
+the return he now met, that in despair he hanged himself in LobeJun."
+(Lobegun, Magdeburg Country): here is a case for the humane! [Kuster,
+_Characterzuge des &c. von Saldern_ (Berlin, 1793), p. 63.]
+
+Friend Keyserling himself, "Caesarion" that used to be, can get nothing,
+though we love him much; being an idle topsy-turvy fellow with revenues
+of his own. Jordan, with his fine-drawn wit, French logics, LITERARY
+TRAVELS, thin exactitude; what can be done for Jordan? Him also his new
+Majesty loves much; and knows that, without some official living, poor
+Jordan has no resource. Jordan, after some waiting and survey, is
+made "Inspector of the Poor;"--busy this Autumn looking out for vacant
+houses, and arrangements for the thousand spinning women;--continues
+to be employed in mixed literary services (hunting up of Formey, for
+Editor, was one instance), and to be in much real intimacy. That also
+was perhaps about the real amount of amiable Jordan. To get Jordan a
+living by planting him in some office which he could not do; to warm
+Jordan by burning our royal bed for him: that had not entered into the
+mind of Jordan's royal friend. The Munchows he did promote; the Finks,
+sons of his Tutor Finkenstein: to these and other old comrades, in whom
+he had discovered fitness, it is no doubt abundantly grateful to him
+to recognize and employ it. As he notably does, in these and in other
+instances. But before all things he has decided to remember that he is
+King; that he must accept the severe laws of that trust, and do IT, or
+not have done anything.
+
+An inverse sign, pointing in the same way, is the passionate search he
+is making in Foreign Countries for such men as will suit him. In these
+same months, for example, he bethinks him of two Counts Schmettau, in
+the Austrian Service, with whom he had made acquaintance in the Rhine
+Campaign; of a Count von Rothenburg, whom he saw in the French Camp
+there; and is negotiating to have them if possible. The Schmettaus are
+Prussian by birth, though in Austrian Service; them he obtains under
+form of an Order home, with good conditions under it; they came, and
+proved useful men to him. Rothenburg, a shining kind of figure in
+Diplomacy as well as Soldiership, was Alsatian German, foreign to
+Prussia; but him too Friedrich obtained, and made much of, as will be
+notable by and by. And in fact the soul of all these noble tendencies
+in Friedrich, which surely are considerable, is even this, That he loves
+men of merit, and does not love men of none; that he has an endless
+appetite for men of merit, and feels, consciously and otherwise, that
+they are the one thing beautiful, the one thing needful to him.
+
+This, which is the product of all fine tendencies, is likewise their
+centre or focus out of which they start again, with some chance of
+fulfilment;--and we may judge in how many directions Friedrich was
+willing to expand himself, by the multifarious kinds he was inviting,
+and negotiating for. Academicians,--and not Maupertuis only, but all
+manner of mathematical geniuses (Euler whom he got, at Gravesande,
+Muschenbroek whom he failed of); and Literary geniuses innumerable,
+first and last. Academicians, Musicians, Players, Dancers even; much
+more Soldiers and Civil-Service men: no man that carries any honest "CAN
+DO" about with him but may expect some welcome here. Which continued
+through Friedrich's reign; and involved him in much petty trouble,
+not always successful in the lower kinds of it. For his Court was the
+cynosure of ambitious creatures on the wing, or inclined for taking
+wing: like a lantern kindled in the darkness of the world;--and many
+owls impinged upon him; whom he had to dismiss with brevity.
+
+Perhaps it had been better to stand by mere Prussian or German
+merit, native to the ground? Or rather, undoubtedly it had! In some
+departments, as in the military, the administrative, diplomatic,
+Friedrich was himself among the best of judges: but in various others
+he had mainly (mainly, by no means blindly or solely) to accept noise of
+reputation as evidence of merit; and in these, if we compute with rigor,
+his success was intrinsically not considerable. The more honor to him
+that he never wearied of trying. "A man that does not care for merit,"
+says the adage, "cannot himself have any." But a King that does not care
+for merit, what shall we say of such a King!--
+
+
+
+
+BEHAVIOR TO HIS MOTHER; TO HIS WIFE.
+
+One other fine feature, significant of many, let us notice: his
+affection for his Mother. When his Mother addressed him as "Your
+Majesty," he answered, as the Books are careful to tell us: "Call me
+Son; that is the Title of all others most agreeable to me!" Words which,
+there can be no doubt, came from the heart. Fain would he shoot forth
+to greatness in filial piety, as otherwise; fain solace himself in doing
+something kind to his Mother. Generously, lovingly; though again with
+clear view of the limits. He decrees for her a Title higher than had
+been customary, as well as more accordant with his feelings; not "Queen
+Dowager," but "Her Majesty the Queen Mother." He decides to build her a
+new Palace; "under the Lindens" it is to be, and of due magnificence:
+in a month or two, he had even got bits of the foundation dug, and the
+Houses to be pulled down bought or bargained for; [Rodenbeck, p.
+15 (30th June-23d Aug. 1740); and correct Stenzel (iv. 44).]--which
+enterprise, however, was renounced, no doubt with consent, as the
+public aspects darkened. Nothing in the way of honor, in the way of real
+affection heartily felt and demonstrated, was wanting to Queen Sophie
+in her widowhood. But, on the other hand, of public influence no vestige
+was allowed, if any was ever claimed; and the good kind Mother lived in
+her Monbijou, the centre and summit of Berlin society; and restricted
+herself wisely to private matters. She has her domesticities, family
+affections, readings, speculations; gives evening parties at Monbijou.
+One glimpse of her in 1742 we get, that of a perfectly private royal
+Lady; which though it has little meaning, yet as it is authentic, coming
+from Busching's hand, may serve as one little twinkle in that total
+darkness, and shall be left to the reader and his fancy:--
+
+A Count Henkel, a Thuringian gentleman, of high speculation, high
+pietistic ways, extremely devout, and given even to writing of religion,
+came to Berlin about some Silesian properties,--a man I should think of
+lofty melancholic aspect; and, in severe type, somewhat of a lion, on
+account of his Book called "DEATH-BED SCENES, in four Volumes." Came
+to Berlin; and on the 15th August, 1742, towards evening (as the
+ever-punctual Busching looking into Henkel's Papers gives it), "was
+presented to the Queen Mother; who retained him to supper; supper
+not beginning till about ten o'clock. The Queen Mother was extremely
+gracious to Henkel; but investigated him a good deal, and put a great
+many questions," not quite easy to answer in that circle, "as, Why he
+did not play? What he thought of comedies and operas? What Preachers
+he was acquainted with in Berlin? Whether he too was a Writer of
+Books? [covertly alluding to the DEATH-BED SCENES, notes Busching].
+And abundance of other questioning. She also recounted many fantastic
+anecdotes (VIEL ABENTEUERLICHES) about Count von Zinzendorf [Founder of
+HERNNHUTH, far-shining spiritual Paladin of that day, whom her Majesty
+thinks rather a spiritual Quixote]; and declared that they were strictly
+true." [Busching's _Beitrage,_ iv. 27.]' Upon which, EXIT Henkel, borne
+by Busching, and our light is snuffed out.
+
+This is one momentary glance I have met with of Queen Sophie in her
+Dowager state. The rest, though there were seventeen years of it in all,
+is silent to mankind and me; and only her death, and her Son's great
+grief about it, so great as to be surprising, is mentioned in the Books.
+
+Actual painful sorrow about his Father, much more any new outburst of
+weeping and lamenting, is not on record, after that first morning.
+Time does its work; and in such a whirl of occupations, sooner than
+elsewhere: and the loved Dead lie silent in their mausoleum in our
+hearts,--serenely sad as Eternity, not in loud sorrow as of Time.
+Friedrich was pious as a Son, however he might be on other heads. To
+the last years of his life, as from the first days of his reign, it was
+evident in what honor he held Friedrich Wilhelm's memory; and the words
+"my Father," when they turned up in discourse, had in that fine voice of
+his a tone which the observers noted. "To his Mother he failed no day,
+when in Berlin, however busy, to make his visit; and he never spoke to
+her, except hat in hand."
+
+With his own Queen, Friedrich still consorts a good deal, in these first
+times; is with her at Charlottenburg, Berlin, Potsdam, Reinsberg, for a
+day or two, as occasion gives; sometimes at Reinsberg for weeks running,
+in the intervals of war and business: glad to be at rest amid his old
+pursuits, by the side of a kind innocent being familiar to him. So it
+lasts for a length of time. But these happy intervals, we can remark,
+grow rarer: whether the Lady's humor, as they became rarer, might not
+sink withal, and produce an acceleration in the rate of decline? She was
+thought to be capable of "pouting (FAIRE LA FACHEE)," at one period! We
+are left to our guesses; there is not anywhere the smallest whisper
+to guide us. Deep silence reigns in all Prussian Books.--To feel or to
+suspect yourself neglected, and to become MORE amiable thereupon (in
+which course alone lies hope), is difficult for any Queen! Enough, we
+can observe these meetings, within two or three years, have become
+much rarer; and perhaps about the end of the third or fourth year, they
+altogether cease; and pass merely into the formal character. In
+which state they continued fixed, liable to no uncertainty; and were
+transacted, to the end of Friedrich's life, with inflexible regularity
+as the annual reviews were. This is a curious section of his life;
+which there will be other opportunities of noticing. But there is yet
+no thought of it anywhere, nor for years to come; though fables to the
+contrary were once current in Books. [Laveaux, &c.]
+
+
+
+
+NO CHANGE IN HIS FATHER'S METHODS OR MINISTRIES.
+
+In the old mode of Administration, in the Ministries, Government Boards,
+he made no change. These administrative methods of his wise Father's are
+admirable to Friedrich, who knows them well; and they continue to be so.
+These men of his Father's, them also Friedrich knows, and that they were
+well chosen. In methods or in men, he is inclined to make the minimum of
+alteration at present. One Finance Hofrath of a projecting turn, named
+Eckart, who had abused the last weak years of Friedrich Wilhelm, and
+much afflicted mankind by the favor he was in: this Eckart Friedrich
+appointed a commission to inquire into; found the public right in
+regard to Eckart, and dismissed him with ignominy, not with much
+other punishment. Minister Boden, on the contrary, high in the Finance
+Department, who had also been much grumbled at, Friedrich found to be a
+good man: and Friedrich not only retained Boden, but advanced him; and
+continued to make more and more use of him in time coming. His love of
+perfection in work done, his care of thrift, seemed almost greater than
+his late Father's had been,--to the disappointment of many. In the
+other Departments, Podewils, Thulmeyer and the rest went on as
+heretofore;--only in general with less to do, the young King doing more
+himself than had been usual. Valori, "MON GROS VALORI (my fat Valori),"
+French Minister here, whom we shall know better, writes home of the new
+King of Prussia: "He begins his government, as by all appearance he
+will carry it on, in a highly satisfactory way: everywhere traits of
+benevolence, sympathy for his subjects, respect shown to the memory
+of the Deceased," [_Memoires des Negociations du Marquis de Valori_ (a
+Paris, 1820), i. 20 ("June 13th, 1740"). A valuable Book, which we shall
+often have to quote: edited in a lamentably ignorant manner.]--no change
+made, where it evidently is not for the better.
+
+Friedrich's "Three principal Secretaries of State," as we should
+designate them, are very remarkable. Three Clerks he found, or had known
+of, somewhere in the Public Offices; and now took, under some
+advanced title, to be specially his own Private Clerks: three vigorous
+long-headed young fellows, "Eichel, Schuhmacher, Lautensack" the obscure
+names of them; [Rodenbeck, 15th June, 1740.] out of whom, now and all
+along henceforth, he got immensities of work in that kind. They lasted
+all his life; and, of course, grew ever more expert at their function.
+Close, silent; exact as machinery: ever ready, from the smallest clear
+hint, marginal pencil-mark, almost from a glance of the eye, to clothe
+the Royal Will in official form, with the due rugged clearness and
+thrift of words. "Came punctually at four in the morning in summer, five
+in winter;" did daily the day's work; and kept their mouths well shut. A
+very notable Trio of men; serving his Majesty and the Prussian Nation
+as Principal Secretaries of State, on those cheap terms;--nay almost as
+Houses of Parliament with Standing Committees and appendages, so many
+Acts of Parliament admittedly rather wise, being passed daily by his
+Majesty's help and theirs!--Friedrich paid them rather well; they saw no
+society; lived wholly to their work, and to their own families. Eichel
+alone of the three was mentioned at all by mankind, and that obscurely;
+an "abstruse, reserved, long-headed kind of man;" and "made a great deal
+of money in the end," insinuates Busching, [_Beitrage,_ v. 238, &c.] no
+friend of Friedrich's or his.
+
+In superficial respects, again, Friedrich finds that the Prussian King
+ought to have a King's Establishment, and maintain a decent splendor
+among his neighbors,--as is not quite the case at present. In this
+respect he does make changes. A certain quantity of new Pages, new
+Goldsticks; some considerable, not too considerable, new furbishing of
+the Royal Household,--as it were, a fair coat of new paint, with gilding
+not profuse,--brought it to the right pitch for this King, About "a
+hundred and fifty" new figures of the Page and Goldstick kind, is the
+reckoning given. [_Helden Geschichte,_ i. 353.] So many of these; and
+there is an increase of 16,000 to one's Army going on: that is the
+proportion noticeable. In the facts as his Father left them Friedrich
+persisted all his life; in the semblances or outer vestures he changed,
+to this extent for the present.--These are the Phenomena of Friedrich's
+Accession, noted by us.
+
+Readers see there is radiance enough, perhaps slightly in excess, but of
+intrinsically good quality, in the Aurora of this new Reign. A brilliant
+valiant young King; much splendor of what we could call a golden or
+soft nature (visible in those "New-Era" doings of his, in those strong
+affections to his Friends); and also, what we like almost better in him,
+something of a STEEL-BRIGHT or stellar splendor (meaning, clearness
+of eyesight, intrepidity, severe loyalty to fact),--which is a fine
+addition to the softer element, and will keep IT and its philanthropies
+and magnanimities well under rule. Such a man is rare in this world; how
+extremely rare such a man born King! He is swift and he is persistent;
+sharply discerning, fearless to resolve and perform; carries his great
+endowments lightly, as if they were not heavy to him. He has known hard
+misery, been taught by stripes; a light stoicism sits gracefully on him.
+
+"What he will grow to?" Probably to something considerable. Very
+certainly to something far short of his aspirations; far different
+from his own hopes; and the world's concerning him. It is not we, it is
+Father Time that does the controlling and fulfilling of our hopes; and
+strange work he makes of them and us. For example, has not Friedrich's
+grand "New Era," inaugurated by him in a week, with the leading spirits
+all adoring, issued since in French Revolution and a "world well
+suicided,"--the leading spirits much thrown out in consequence! New
+Era has gone to great lengths since Friedrich's time; and the leading
+spirits do not now adore it, but yawn over it, or worse! Which changes
+to us the then aspect of Friedrich, and his epoch and his aspirations,
+a good deal.--On the whole, Friedrich will go his way, Time and the
+leading spirits going theirs; and, like the rest of us, will grow
+to what he can. His actual size is not great among the Kingdoms: his
+outward resources are rather to be called small. The Prussian Dominion
+at that date is, in extent, about four-fifths of an England Proper, and
+perhaps not one-fifth so fertile: subject Population is well under Two
+Millions and a Half; Revenue not much above One Million Sterling,'
+[The exact statistic cipher is, at Friedrich's Accession: PRUSSIAN
+TERRITORIES, 2,275 square miles German (56,875 English); POPULATION,
+2,240,000; ANNUAL REVENUE, 7,371,707 thalers 7 groschen (1,105,756
+pounds without the pence). See Prenss, _Buch fur Jedermann,_ i. 49;
+Stenzel, iii. 692; &c.]--very small, were not thrift such a VECTIGAL.
+
+This young King is magnanimous; not much to be called ambitious, or not
+in the vulgar sense almost at all,--strange as it may sound to readers.
+His hopes at this time are many;--and among them, I perceive, there is
+not wanting secretly, in spite of his experiences, some hope that he
+himself may be a good deal "happier" than formerly. Nor is there any
+ascetic humor, on his part, to forbid trial. He is much determined
+to try. Probably enough, as we guess and gather, his agreeablest
+anticipations, at this time, were of Reinsberg: How, in the intervals of
+work well done, he would live there wholly to the Muses; have his chosen
+spirits round him, his colloquies, his suppers of the gods. Why not?
+There might be a King of Intellects conceivable withal; protecting,
+cherishing, practically guiding the chosen Illuminative Souls of this
+world. A new Charlemagne, the smallest new Charlemagne of Spiritual
+type, with HIS Paladins round him; how glorious, how salutary in the
+dim generations now going!--These too were hopes which proved signally
+futile. Rigorous Time could not grant these at all;--granted, in his own
+hard way, other things instead. But, all along, the Life-element,
+the Epoch, though Friedrich took it kindly and never complained, was
+ungenial to such a man.
+
+"Somewhat of a rotten Epoch, this into which Friedrich has been born, to
+shape himself and his activities royal and other!"--exclaims Smelfungus
+once: "In an older earnest Time, when the eternally awful meanings of
+this Universe had not yet sunk into dubieties to any one, much less
+into levities or into mendacities, into huge hypocrisies carefully
+regulated,--so luminous, vivid and ingenuous a young creature had not
+wanted divine manna in his Pilgrimage through Life. Nor, in that case,
+had he come out of it in so lean a condition. But the highest man of us
+is born brother to his Contemporaries; struggle as he may, there is no
+escaping the family likeness. By spasmodic indignant contradiction of
+them, by stupid compliance with them,--you will inversely resemble, if
+you do not directly; like the starling, you can't get out!--Most surely,
+if there do fall manna from Heaven, in the given Generation, and nourish
+in us reverence and genial nobleness day by day, it is blessed and well.
+Failing that, in regard to our poor spiritual interests, there is sure
+to be one of two results: mockery, contempt, disbelief, what we may call
+SHORT-DIET to the length of very famine (which was Friedrich's case);
+or else slow-poison, carefully elaborated and provided by way of daily
+nourishment.
+
+"Unhappy souls, these same! The slow-poison has gone deep into them.
+Instead of manna, this long while back, they have been living on mouldy
+corrupt meats sweetened by sugar-of-lead; or perhaps, like Voltaire,
+a few individuals prefer hunger, as the cleaner alternative; and in
+contemptuous, barren, mocking humor, not yet got the length of geniality
+or indignation, snuff the east-wind by way of spiritual diet. Pilgriming
+along on such nourishment, the best human soul fails to become very
+ruddy!--Tidings about Heaven are fallen so uncertain, but the Earth and
+her joys are still Interesting: 'Take to the Earth and her joys;--let
+your soul go out, since it must; let your five senses and their
+appetites be well alive.' That is a dreadful 'Sham-Christian
+Dispensation' to be born under! You wonder at the want of heroism in
+the Eighteenth Century. Wonder rather at the degree of heroism it had;
+wonder how many souls there still are to be met with in it of some
+effective capability, though dieting in that way,--nothing else to be
+had in the shops about. Carterets, Belleisles, Friedrichs, Voltaires;
+Chathams, Franklins, Choiseuls: there is an effective stroke of work,
+a fine fire of heroic pride, in this man and the other; not yet
+extinguished by spiritual famine or slow-poison; so robust is Nature the
+mighty Mother!--
+
+"But in general, that sad Gospel, 'Souls extinct, Stomachs well alive!'
+is the credible one, not articulately preached, but practically believed
+by the abject generations, and acted on as it never was before. What
+immense sensualities there were, is known; and also (as some small
+offset, though that has not yet begun in 1740) what immense quantities
+of Physical Labor and contrivance were got out of mankind, in that
+Epoch and down to this day. As if, having lost its Heaven, it had struck
+desperately down into the Earth; as if it were a BEAVER-kind, and not a
+mankind any more. We had once a Barbaossa; and a world all grandly true.
+But from that to Karl VI., and HIS Holy Romish Reich in such a state of
+'Holiness'--!" I here cut short my abstruse Friend.
+
+Readers are impatient to have done with these miscellaneous preludings,
+and to be once definitely under way, such a Journey lying ahead. Yes,
+readers; a Journey indeed! And, at this point, permit me to warn
+you that, where the ground, where Dryasdust and the Destinies, yield
+anything humanly illustrative of Friedrich and his Work, one will have
+to linger, and carefully gather it, even as here. Large tracts occur,
+bestrewn with mere pedantisms, diplomatic cobwebberies, learned
+marine-stores, and inhuman matter, over which we shall have to skip
+empty-handed: this also was among the sad conditions of our Enterprise,
+that it has to go now too slow and again too fast; not in proportion to
+natural importance of objects, but to several inferior considerations
+withal. So busy has perverse Destiny been on it; perverse Destiny,
+edacious Chance;--and the Dryasdusts, too, and Nightmares, in Prussia as
+elsewhere, we know how strong they are!
+
+Friedrich's character in old age has doubtless its curious affinities,
+its disguised identities, with these prognostic features and indications
+of his youth: and to our readers,--if we do ever get them to the goal,
+of seeing Friedrich a little with their own eyes and judgments,--there
+may be pleasant contrasts and comparisons of that kind in store, one
+day. But the far commoner experience (which also has been my own),--here
+is Smelfungus's stern account of that:--
+
+"My friend, you will be luckier than I, if, after ten years, not to
+say, in a sense, twenty years, thirty years, of reading and rummaging
+in those sad Prussian Books, ancient and new (which often are laudably
+authentic, too, and exact as to details), you can gather any character
+whatever of Friedrich, in any period of his life, or conceive him as a
+Human Entity at all! It is strange, after such thousand-fold writing,
+but it is true, his History is considerably unintelligible to mankind at
+this hour; left chaotic, enigmatic, in a good many points,--the military
+part of it alone being brought to clearness, and rendered fairly
+conceivable and credible to those who will study. And as to the Man
+himself, or what his real Physiognomy can have been--! Well, it must be
+owned few men were of such RAPIDITY of face and aspect; so difficult to
+seize the features of. In his action, too, there was such rapidity, such
+secrecy, suddenness: a man that could not be read, even by the candid,
+except as in flashes of lightning. And then the anger of by-standers,
+uncandid, who got hurt by him; the hasty malevolences, the stupidities,
+the opacities: enough, in modern times, what is saying much, perhaps
+no man's motives, intentions, and procedure have been more belied,
+misunderstood, misrepresented, during his life. Nor, I think, since
+that, have many men fared worse, by the Limner or Biographic class, the
+favorable to him and the unfavorable; or been so smeared of and
+blotched of, and reduced to a mere blur and dazzlement of cross-lights,
+incoherences, incredibilities, in which nothing, not so much as a human
+nose, is clearly discernible by way of feature!"--Courage, reader,
+nevertheless; on the above terms let us march according to promise.
+
+
+
+Chapter II. -- THE HOMAGINGS.
+
+Young Friedrich, as his Father had done, considers it unnecessary to be
+crowned. Old Friedrich, first of the name, and of the King series, we
+did see crowned, with a pinch of snuff tempering the solemnities. That
+Coronation once well done suffices all his descendants hitherto. Such an
+expense of money,--of diluted mendacity too! Such haranguing, gesturing,
+symbolic fugling, all grown half false:--avoid lying, even with your
+eyes, or knees, or the coat upon your back, so far as you easily can!
+
+Nothing of Coronation: but it is thought needful to have the HULDIGUNGEN
+(Homagings) done, the Fealties sworn; and the young Majesty in due
+course goes about, or gives directions, now here now there, in his
+various Provinces, getting that accomplished. But even in that,
+Friedrich is by no means strait-laced or punctilious; does it commonly
+by Deputy: only in three places, Konigsberg, Berlin, Cleve, does he
+appear in person. Mainly by deputy; and always with the minimum of fuss,
+and no haranguing that could be avoided. Nowhere are the old STANDE
+(Provincial Parliaments) assembled, now or afterwards: sufficient
+for this and for every occasion are the "Permanent Committees of the
+STANDE;" nor is much speaking, unessential for despatch of business,
+used to these.
+
+"STANDE--of Ritterschaft mainly, of Gentry small and great--existed once
+in all those Countries, as elsewhere," says one Historian; "and some of
+them, in Preussen, for example, used to be rather loud, and inclined to
+turbulence, till the curb, from a judicious bridle-hand, would admonish
+them. But, for a long while past,--especially since the Great Elector's
+time, who got an 'Excise Law' passed, or the foundations of a good
+Excise Law laid; [Preuss, iv. 432; and _Thronbesteigung,_ pp. 379-383.]
+and, what with Excise, what with Domain-Farms, had a fixed Annual
+Budget, which he reckoned fair to both parties,--they have been dying
+out for want of work; and, under Friedrich Wilhelm, may be said to have
+gone quite dead. What work was left for them? Prussian Budget is fixed,
+many things are fixed: why talk of them farther? The Prussian King,
+nothing of a fool like certain others,"--which indeed is the cardinal
+point, though my Author does not say so,--"is respectfully aware of the
+facts round him; and can listen to the rumors too, so far as he finds
+good. The King sees himself terribly interested to get into the right
+course in all things, and avoid the wrong one! Probably he does, in his
+way, seek 'wise Advice concerning the arduous matters of the Kingdom;'
+nay I believe he is diligent to have it of the wisest:--who knows if
+STANDE would always give it wiser; especially STANDE in the haranguing
+condition?"--Enough, they are not applied to. There is no Freedom in
+that Country. "No Freedom to speak of," continues he: "but I do a little
+envy them their Fixed Budget, and some other things. What pleasure there
+can be in having your household arrangements tumbled into disorder every
+new Year, by a new-contrived scale of expenses for you, I never could
+ascertain!"--
+
+Friedrich is not the man to awaken Parliamentary sleeping-dogs well
+settled by his Ancestors. Once or twice, out of Preussen, in Friedrich
+Wilhelm's time, there was heard some whimper, which sounded like the
+beginning of a bark. But Friedrich Wilhelm was on the alert for it: Are
+you coming in with your NIE POZWALAM (your LIBERUM VETO), then? None of
+your Polish vagaries here. "TOUT LE PAYS SERA RUINE (the whole Country
+will be ruined)," say you? (Such had been the poor Marshal or Provincial
+SPEAKER'S Remonstrance on one occasion): "I don't believe a word of
+that. But I do believe the Government by JUNKERS [Country Squires]
+and NIE POZWALAM will be ruined,"--as it is fully meant to be! "I am
+establishing the King's Sovereignty like a rock of bronze (ICH STABILIRE
+DIE SOUVERAINETAT WIE EINEN ROCHER VON BRONZE)," some extremely strong
+kind of rock! [Forster, b. iii. (_Urkundenbuch,_ i. 50); Preuss, iv.
+420 n. "NIE POZWALAM" (the formula of LIBERUM VETO) signifies "I Don't
+Permit!"] This was one of Friedrich Wilhelm's marginalia in response
+to such a thing; and the mutinous whimper died out again. Parliamentary
+Assemblages are sometimes Collective Wisdoms, but by no means always
+so. In Magdeburg we remember what trouble Friedrich Wilhelm had with his
+unreasonable Ritters. Ritters there, in their assembled capacity, had
+the Reich behind them, and could not be dealt with like Preussen: but
+Friedrich Wilhelm, by wise slow methods, managed Magdeburg too, and
+reduced it to silence, or to words necessary for despatch of business.
+
+In each Province, a Permanent Committee--chosen, I suppose, by King
+and Knights assenting; chosen I know not how, but admitted to be wisely
+chosen--represents the once Parliament or STANDE; and has its potency
+for doing good service in regard to all Provincial matters, from roads
+and bridges upwards, and is impotent to do the least harm. Roads and
+bridges, Church matters, repartition of the Land-dues, Army matters,--in
+fact they are an effective non-haranguing Parliament, to the King's
+Deputy in every such Province; well calculated to illuminate and forward
+his subaltern AMTmen and him. Nay, we observe it is oftenest in the way
+of gifts and solacements that the King articulately communicates with
+these Committees or their Ritterschafts. Projects for Draining of
+Bogs, for improved Highways, for better Husbandry; loans granted
+them, Loan-Banks established for the Province's behoof:--no need
+of parliamentary eloquence on such occasions, but of something far
+different.
+
+It is from this quiescent, or busy but noiseless kind of STANDE
+and Populations that Friedrich has his HULDIGUNG to take;--and the
+operation, whether done personally or by deputy, must be an abundantly
+simple one. He, for his part, is fortunate enough to find everywhere the
+Sovereignty ESTABLISHED; "rock of bronze" not the least shaken in his
+time. He will graciously undertake, by Written Act, which is read before
+the STANDE, King or King's Deputy witnessing there, "To maintain the
+privileges" of his STANDE and Populations; the STANDE answer, on oath,
+with lifted hand, and express invocation of Heaven, That they will
+obey him as true subjects; And so--doubtless with something of dining
+superadded, but no whisper of it put on record--the HULDIGUNG will
+everywhere very quietly transact itself.
+
+The HULDIGUNG itself is nothing to us, even with Friedrich there,--as
+at Konigsberg, Berlin, Cleve, the three exceptional places. To which,
+nevertheless, let us briefly attend him, for the sake of here and
+there some direct glimpse we may get of the then Friedrich's actual
+physiognomy and ways. Other direct view, or the chance of such, is not
+conceded us out of those sad Prussian Books; which are very full on
+this of the HULDIGUNG, if silent on so many other points. [Preuss,
+_Thronbesteigung,_ p. 382.]
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH ACCEPTS THE HOMAGES, PERSONALLY, IN THREE PLACES.
+
+To Konigsberg is his first excursion on this errand. Preussen has
+perhaps, or may be suspected of having, some remnants of sour humors
+left in it, and remembrances of STANDE with haranguings and even
+mutinies: there if anywhere the King in person may do good on such an
+occasion, He left Berlin, July 7th, bound thitherward; here is Note of
+that first Royal Tour,--specimen of several hundreds such, which he had
+to do in the course of the next forty-five years.
+
+"Friend Algarotti, charming talker, attended him; who else, official
+and non-official, ask not. The Journey is to be circuitous; to combine
+various businesses, and also to have its amusements. They went by
+Custrin; glancing at old known Country, which is at its greenest in this
+season. By Custrin, across the Neumark, into Pommern; after that by an
+intricate winding route; reviewing regiments, inspecting garrisons,
+now here now there; doing all manner of inspections; talking I know not
+what; oftenest lodging with favored Generals, if it suited. Distance to
+Konigsberg, by the direct road, is about 500 miles; by this winding one,
+it must have been 800: Journey thither took nine days in all. Obliquely
+through Pommern, almost to the coast of the Baltic; their
+ultimatum there a place called Coslin, where they reviewed with
+strictness,--omitting Colberg, a small Sea-Fortress not far rearward,
+time being short. Thence into West-Preussen, into Polish Territory, and
+swiftly across that; keeping Dantzig and its noises wide enough to the
+left: one night in Poland; and the next they are in Ost-Preussen, place
+called Liebstadt,--again on home-ground, and diligently reviewing there.
+
+"The review at Liebstadt is remarkable in this, That the regiments, one
+regiment especially, not being what was fit, a certain Grenadier-Captain
+got cashiered on the spot; and the old Commandant himself was soon after
+pensioned, and more gently sent his ways. So strict is his Majesty.
+Contrariwise, he found Lieutenant-General von Katte's Garrison, at
+Angerburg, next day, in a very high perfection; and Colonel Posadowsky's
+regiment specially so; with which latter gentleman he lodged that night,
+and made him farther happy by the ORDER OF MERIT: Colonel Posadowsky,
+Garrison of Angerburg, far off in East-Preussen, Chevalier of the
+Order of Merit henceforth, if we ever meet him again. To the good old
+Lieutenant-General von Katte, who no doubt dined with them, his Majesty
+handed, on the same occasion, a Patent of Feldmarschall;--intends soon
+to make him Graf; and did it, as readers know. Both Colonel and General
+attended him thenceforth, still by a circuitous route, to Konigsberg, to
+assist in the solemnities there. By Gumbinnen, by Trakehnen,--the Stud
+of Trakehnen: that also his Majesty saw, and made review of; not without
+emotion, we can fancy, as the sleek colts were trotted out on those
+new terms! At Trakehnen, Katte and the Colonel would be his Majesty's
+guests, for the night they stayed. This is their extreme point eastward;
+Konigsberg now lies a good way west of them. But at Trakehnen they turn;
+and, Saturday, 16th July, 1740, after another hundred miles or so, along
+the pleasant valley of the Pregel, get to Konigsberg: ready to begin
+business on Monday morning,--on Sunday if necessary." [From Preuss,
+_Thronbesteigung,_ pp. 382, 385; Rodenbeck, p. 16; &c.]
+
+On Sunday there did a kind of memorability occur: The HULDIGUNGS-PREDIGT
+(Homage Sermon)--by a reverend Herr Quandt, chief Preacher there. Which
+would not be worth mentioning, except for this circumstance, that his
+Majesty exceedingly admired Quandt, and thought him a most Demosthenic
+genius, and the best of all the Germans. Quandt's text was in these
+words: _"Thine are we, David, and on thy side, thou Son of Jesse; Peace,
+peace be unto thee, and peace be to thine helpers; for thy God helpeth
+thee." _[_First Chronicles,_ xii. 18.] Quandt began, in a sonorous
+voice, raising his face with respectful enthusiasm to the King, "Thine
+are we, O Friedrich, and on thy side, thou Son of Friedrich Wilhelm;"
+and so went on: sermon brief, sonorous, compact, and sticking close to
+its text. Friedrich stood immovable, gazing on the eloquent Demosthenic
+Quandt, with admiration heightened by surprise;--wrote of Quandt to
+Voltaire; and, with sustained enthusiasm, to the Public long afterwards;
+and to the end of his days was wont to make Quandt an exception, if
+perhaps almost the only one, from German barbarism, and disharmony of
+mind and tongue. So that poor Quandt cannot ever since get entirely
+forgotten, but needs always to be raked up again, for this reason when
+others have ceased: an almost melancholy adventure for poor Quandt and
+Another!--
+
+The HULDIGUNG was rather grand; Harangue and Counter-harangue permitted
+to the due length, and proper festivities following: but the STANDE
+could not manage to get into vocal covenanting or deliberating at all;
+Friedrich before leaving Berlin had answered their hint or request that
+way, in these words: "We are likewise graciously inclined to give to the
+said STANDE, before their Homaging, the same assurance which they got
+from our Herr Father's Majesty, who is now with God,"--general assurance
+that their, and everybody's, "Rights shall be maintained [as we see they
+are],--with which, it is hoped (HOFFENTLICH), they will be content, and
+get to peace upon this matter (SICH DABEI BERUHIGEN WERDEN)." [Preuss,
+_Thronbesteigung,_ p. 380.] It will be best for them!
+
+Friedrich gave away much corn here; that is, opened his Corn-Granaries,
+on charitable terms, and took all manner of measures, here as in other
+places, for relief of the scarcity there was. Of the illuminations,
+never so grand, the reader shall hear nothing. A "Torch-Procession
+of the Students" turned out a pretty thing:--Students marching with
+torches, with fine wind-music, regulated enthusiasm, fine succinct
+address to his Majesty; and all the world escorting, with its "Live
+Forever!" Friedrich gave the Students "a TRINK-GELAG (Banquet of
+Liquors)," how arranged I do not know: and to the Speaker of the
+Address, a likely young gentleman with VON to his name, he offered an
+Ensigncy of Foot ("in Camas's Fusileer Regiment,"--Camas now gone to
+Paris, embassying), which was joyfully accepted. Joyfully accepted;--and
+it turned out well for all parties; the young gentleman having
+risen, where merit was the rule of rising, and become Graf and
+Lieutenant-General, in the course of the next fifty years. [Preuss,
+_Thronbesteigung,_ p. 387.]
+
+Huldigung and Torch-Procession over, the Royal Party dashed rapidly off,
+next morning (21st July), homewards by the shortest route; and, in three
+days more, by Frankfurt-on-Oder (where a glimpse of General Schwerin,
+a favorite General, was to be had), were safe in Berlin; received with
+acclamation, nay with "blessings and even tears" some say, after this
+pleasant Fortnight's Tour. General Schwerin, it is rumored, will be made
+Feldmarschall straightway, the Munchows are getting so promoted as we
+said; edicts are coming out, much business speeding forward, and the
+tongues of men keep wagging.
+
+Berlin HULDIGUNG--and indeed, by Deputy, that of nearly all the other
+Towns--was on Tuesday, August 2d. At Berlin his Majesty was present in
+the matter: but, except the gazing multitudes, and hussar regiments,
+ranked in the Schloss-Platz and streets adjoining, there was little of
+notable in it; the upholstery arrangements thrifty in the extreme. His
+Majesty is prone to thrift in this of the Huldigung, as would appear;
+perhaps regarding the affair as scenic merely. Here, besides this of
+Berlin, is another instance just occurring. It appears, the Quedlinburg
+people, shut out from the light of the actual Royal Countenance, cannot
+do their Homaging by Deputy, without at least a Portrait of the King and
+of the Queen: How manage? asks the Official Person. "Have a Couple of
+Daubs done in Berlin, three guineas apiece; send them these," answers
+the King! [_"On doit faire barbouiller de mauvaises copies a Berlin, la
+piece a 20 ecus._--FR." Preuss, ii. (_Urkundenbuch,_ s. 222).]
+
+Here in the Berlin Schloss, scene the Large Hall within doors, there is
+a "platform raised three steps; and on this, by way of a kind of throne,
+an arm-chair covered with old black velvet;" the whole surmounted by a
+canopy also of old black velvet: not a sublime piece of upholstery; but
+reckoned adequate. Friedrich mounted the three steps; stood before the
+old chair, his Princes standing promiscuously behind it; his Ritters in
+quantity, in front and to right and left, on the floor. Some Minister of
+the Interior explains suitably, not at too great length, what they are
+met for; some junior Official, junior but of quality, responded
+briefly, for himself and his order, to the effect, "Yea, truly:" the
+HULDIGUNGENS-URKUNDE (Deed of Homage) was then read by the proper Clerk,
+and the Ritters all swore; audibly, with lifted hands. This is the
+Ritter Huldigung.
+
+His Majesty then steps out to the Balcony, for Oath and Homage of the
+general Population. General population gave its oath, and "three great
+shouts over and above." "ES LEBE DER KONIG!" thrice, with all their
+throats. Upon which a shower of Medals, "Homage-Medals," gold and silver
+(quantity not mentioned) rained down upon them, in due succession; and
+were scrambled for, in the usual way. "His Majesty," they write, and
+this is perhaps the one point worth notice, "his Majesty, contrary to
+custom and to etiquette, remained on the Balcony, some time after the
+ceremony, perhaps a full half-hour;"--silent there, "with his look fixed
+attentively on the immeasurable multitude before the Schloss; and seemed
+sunk in deep reflection (BETRACHTUNG):"--an almost awfully eloquent
+though inarticulate phenomenon to his Majesty, that of those multitudes
+scrambling and huzzaing there! [Preuss, _Thronbesteigung,_ p. 389.]
+
+These, with the Cleve one, are all the Hornagings Friedrich was
+personally present at; the others he did by Deputy, all in one day (2d
+August); and without fuss. Scenic matters these; in which, except
+where he can, as in the Konigsberg case, combine inspections and grave
+businesses with them, he takes no interest. However, he is now, for the
+sake chiefly of inspections and other real objects, bent on a Journey
+to Cleve;--the fellow of that to Konigsberg: Konigsberg, Preussen, the
+easternmost outlying wing of his long straggling Dominions; and then
+Cleve-Julich, its counterpart on the southwestern side,--there also,
+with such contingencies hanging over Cleve-Julich, it were proper to
+make some mustering of the Frontier garrisons and affairs. [In regard to
+the Day of HULDIGUNG at Cleve, which happily is not of the least moment
+to us, Preuss (_Thronbesteigung,_ p, 390) and _Helden-Geschichte,_ (i.
+423) seem to be in flat contradiction.] His Majesty so purposes: and we
+purpose again to accompany,--not for inspection and mustering, but for
+an unexpected reason. The grave Journey to Cleve has an appendage, or
+comic side-piece, hanging to it; more than one appendage; which the
+reader must not miss!--Before setting out, read these two Fractions,
+snatched from the Diplomatist Wastebag; looking well, we gain there some
+momentary view of Friedrich on the business side. Of Friedrich, and also
+of Another:--
+
+Sunday, 14th August, 1740, Dickens, who has been reporting hitherto in a
+favorable, though in a languid exoteric manner, not being in any height
+of favor, England or he,--had express Audience of his Majesty;
+being summoned out to Potsdam for that end: "Sunday evening, about 7
+P.M."--Majesty intending to be off on the Cleve Journey to-morrow.
+Let us accompany Dickens. Readers may remember, George II. has been at
+Hanover for some weeks past; Bielfeld diligently grinning euphemisms
+and courtly graciosities to him; Truchsess hinting, on opportunity, that
+there are perhaps weighty businesses in the rear; which, however, on the
+Britannic side, seem loath to start. Britannic Majesty is much at a loss
+about his Spanish War, so dangerous for kindling France and the whole
+world upon him. In regard to which Prussia might be so important, for or
+against.--This, in compressed form, is what Dickens witnesses at Potsdam
+that Sunday evening from 7 P.M.:--
+
+"Audience lasted above an hour: King turned directly upon business;
+wishes to have 'Categorical Answers' as to Three Points already
+submitted to his Britannic Majesty's consideration. Clear footing
+indispensable between us. What you want of me? say it, and be plain.
+What I want of you is, These three things:--
+
+"1. Guarantee for Julich and Berg. All the world knows WHOSE these
+Duchies are. Will his Britannic Majesty guarantee me there? And if so,
+How, and to what lengths, will he proceed about it?
+
+"2. Settlement about Ost-Friesland. Expectancy of Ost-Friesland soon
+to fall heirless, which was granted me long since, though Hanover makes
+hagglings, counter-claimings: I must have some Settlement about that.
+
+"3. The like about those perplexities in Mecklenburg. No difficulty
+there if we try heartily, nor is there such pressing haste about it.
+
+"These are my three claims on England; and I will try to serve England
+as far in return, if it will tell me how. 'Ah, beware of throwing
+yourself into the arms of France!' modestly suggests Dickens.--'Well, if
+France will guarantee me those Duchies, and you will not do anything?'
+answers his Majesty with a fine laugh: 'England I consider my most
+natural friend and ally; but I must know what there is to depend
+on there. Princes are ruled by their interest; cannot follow their
+feelings. Let me have an explicit answer; say, at Wesel, where I am to
+be on the 24th,'" ten days hence. Britannic Majesty is at Hanover, and
+can answer within that time. "This he twice told me, 'Wesel, 24th,' in
+the course of our interview. Permit me to recommend the matter to your
+Lordship,"--my Lord Harrington, now attending the Britannic Majesty.
+
+"During the whole audience," adds Dickens, "the King was in extreme
+good humor; and not only heard with attention all the considerations I
+offered, but was not the least offended at any objections I made to
+what he said. It is undoubtedly the best way to behave with frankness
+to him." These last are Dickens's own words; let them modestly be a
+memorandum to your Lordship. This King goes himself direct to the
+point; and straightforwardness, as a primary condition, will profit your
+Lordship with him. [Dickens (in State-Paper Office, 17th August, 1740).]
+
+Most true advice, this;--and would perhaps be followed, were it quite
+easy! But things are very complicated. And the Britannic Majesty,
+much plagued with Spanish War and Parliamentary noises in that unquiet
+Island, is doubtless glad to get away to Hanover for a little; and
+would fain be on holiday in these fine rural months. Which is not well
+possible either. Jenkins's Ear, rising at last like a fiery portent,
+has kindled the London Fog over yonder, in a strange way, and the murky
+stagnancy is all getting on fire; the English intent, as seldom any
+Nation was, to give the Spaniards an effectual beating. Which they hope
+they can,--though unexpected difficulties will occur. And, in the mean
+while, what a riddle of potentialities for his poor Majesty to read, and
+pick his way from!--
+
+Bielfeld, in spite of all this, would fain be full of admiration for the
+Britannic Majesty. Confesses he is below the middle size, in fact a
+tiny little creature, but then his shape is perfect; leg much to be
+commended,--which his Majesty knows, standing always with one leg
+slightly advanced, and the Order of the Garter on it, that mankind may
+take notice. Here is Bielfeld's description faithfully abridged:--
+
+"Big blue eyes, perhaps rather of parboiled character, though proud
+enough; eyes flush with his face or more, rather IN RELIEF than on a
+level with it,"--A FLEUR DE TETE, after the manner of a fish, if one
+might say so, and betokening such an intellect behind them! "Attitude
+constrained, leg advanced in that way; his courtiers call it majestic.
+Biggish mouth, strictly shut in the crescent or horse-shoe form (FERMEE
+EN CROISSANT); curly wig (A NOEUDS, reminding you of lamb's-wool, color
+not known); eyebrows, however, you can see are ashy-blond; general tint
+is fundamentally livid; but when in good case, the royal skin will take
+tolerably bright colors (PREND D'ASSEZ BELLES COULEURS). As to the
+royal mind and understanding, what shall Bielfeld say? That his Majesty
+sometimes makes ingenious and just remarks, and is laudably serious at
+all times, and can majestically hold his tongue, and stand with advanced
+leg, and eyes rather more than flush. Sense of his dignity is high,
+as it ought to be; on great occasions you see pride and a kind of joy
+mantling in the royal countenance. Has been known to make explosions,
+and to be very furious to Prince Fred and others, when pricked
+into:--but, my friend, what mortal is exempt from failings? Majesty
+reads the English Newspapers every morning in bed, which are often
+biting. Majesty has his Walmoden, a Hanoverian Improper Female, Countess
+of Yarmouth so called; quiet, autumnal, fair complexioned, stupid; who
+is much a comfort to him. She keeps out of mischief, political or other;
+and gives Bielfeld a gracious nod now and then." [Bielfeld, i. 158.]
+Harrington is here too;--and Britannic Majesty and he are busy governing
+the English Nation on these terms.--We return now to the Prussian
+Majesty.
+
+About six weeks after that of Dickens,--Cleve Journey and much else now
+ended,--Praetorius the Danish Envoy, whom we slightly knew at Reinsberg
+once, gives this testimony; writing home to an Excellency at Copenhagen,
+whose name we need not inquire into:--
+
+"To give your Excellency a just idea of the new Government here, I must
+observe that hitherto the King of Prussia does as it were everything
+himself; and that, excepting the Finance Minister von Boden, who
+preaches frugality, and finds for that doctrine uncommon acceptance,
+almost greater even than in the former reign, his Majesty allows no
+counselling from any Minister; so that Herr von Podewils, who is now the
+working hand in the department of Foreign Affairs, has nothing given
+him to do but to expedite the orders he receives from the Cabinet, his
+advice not being asked upon any matter; and so it is with the other
+Ministers. People thought the loss of Herr von Thulmeyer,"
+veteran Foreign Minister whom we have transiently heard of in the
+Double-Marriage time, and perhaps have even seen at London or elsewhere,
+[Died 4th August (Rodenbeck, p. 20).] "would be irreparable; so expert
+was he, and a living archive in that business: however, his post seems
+to have vanished with himself. His salary is divided between Herr von
+Podewils," whom the reader will sometimes hear of again, "Kriegsrath
+(Councillor of War) von Ilgen," son of the old gentleman we used to
+know, "and Hofrath Sellentin who is RENDANT OF THE LEGATIONS-KASSE"
+(Ambassadors' Paymaster, we could guess, Ambassador Body having
+specialty of cash assigned it, comparable with the specialty of value
+received from it, in this strict frugal Country),--neither of which two
+latter names shall the reader be troubled with farther. "A good many
+resolutions, and responses by the King, I have seen: they combine
+laconic expression with an admirable business eye (GESCHAFTSBLICK).
+Unhappily,"--at least for us in the Diplomatic line, for your Excellency
+and me unhappily,--"there is nobody about the King who possesses
+his complete confidence, or whom we can make use of in regard to the
+necessary introductions and preliminary movements. Hereby it comes
+that,--as certain things can only be handled with cautious foresight and
+circumlocution, and in the way of beginning wide,--an Ambassador here
+is more thrown out of his course than in any other Court; and knows not,
+though his object were steadily in sight, what road to strike into for
+getting towards it." [Preuss, _Thronbesteigung,_ p. 377 (2d October,
+1740).]
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III. -- FRIEDRICH MAKES AN EXCURSION, NOT OF DIRECT SORT INTO THE
+CLEVE COUNTRIES.
+
+King Friedrich did not quite keep his day at Wesel; indeed this 24th was
+not the first day, but the last of several, he had appointed to himself
+for finis to that Journey in the Cleve Countries; Journey rather complex
+to arrange. He has several businesses ahead in those parts; and, as
+usual, will group them with good judgment, and thrift of time. Not
+inspections merely, but amusements, meetings with friends, especially
+French friends: the question is, how to group them with skill, so that
+the necessary elements may converge at the right moment, and one shot
+kill three or four birds. This is Friedrich's fine way, perceptible in
+all these Journeys. The French friends, flying each on his own track,
+with his own load of impediments, Voltaire with his Madame for instance,
+are a difficult element in such problem; and there has been, and
+is, much scheming and corresponding about it, within the last month
+especially.
+
+Voltaire is now at Brussels, with his Du Chatelet, prosecuting that
+endless "lawsuit with the House of Honsbruck,"--which he, and we, are
+both desirous to have done with. He is at the Hague, too, now and then;
+printing, about to print, the ANTI-MACHIAVEL; corresponding, to right
+and left, quarrelling with Van Duren the Printer; lives, while there, in
+the VIEILLE COUR, in the vast dusky rooms with faded gilding, and grand
+old Bookshelves "with the biggest spider-webs in Europe." Brussels is
+his place for Law-Consultations, general family residence; the Hague and
+that old spider-web Palace for correcting Proof-sheets; doing one's own
+private studies, which we never quite neglect. Fain would Friedrich
+see him, fain he Friedrich; but there is a divine Emilie, there is a
+Maupertuis, there are--In short, never were such difficulties, in the
+cooking of an egg with water boiling; and much vain correspondence
+has already been on that subject, as on others equally extinct.
+Correspondence which is not pleasant reading at this time; the rather
+as no reader can, without endless searching, even understand it.
+Correspondence left to us, not in the cosmic, elucidated or legible
+state; left mainly as the Editorial rubbish-wagons chose to shoot it;
+like a tumbled quarry, like the ruins of a sacked city;--avoidable by
+readers who are not forced into it! [Herr Preuss's edition (_OEuvres
+de Frederic,_ vols. xxi. xxii. xxiii.) has come out since the above
+was written: it is agreeably exceptional; being, for the first time,
+correctly printed, and the editor himself having mostly understood
+it,--though the reader still cannot, on the terms there allowed.]
+Take the following select bricks as sample, which are of some use; the
+general Heading is,
+
+KING FRIEDERIC TO M. DE VOLTAIRE (at the Hague, or at Brussels).
+
+"CHARLOTTENBURG, 12th JUNE, 1740.--... My dear Voltaire, resist no
+longer the eagerness I have to see you. Do in my favor whatever your
+humanity allows. In the end of August, I go to Wesel, and perhaps
+farther. Promise that you will come and join me; for I could not
+live happy, nor die tranquil, without having embraced you! Thousand
+compliments to the Marquise," divine Emilie. "I am busy with both hands
+[Corn-Magazines, Free Press, Abolition of Torture, and much else];
+working at the Army with the one hand, at the People and the Fine Arts
+with the other."
+
+"BERLIN, 5th AUGUST, 1740.--... I will write to Madame du Chatelet, in
+compliance with your wish:" mark it, reader. "To speak to you frankly
+concerning her journey, it is Voltaire, it is you, it is my Friend that
+I desire to see; and the divine Emilie with all her divinity is only the
+Accessory of the Apollo Newtonized.
+
+"I cannot yet say whether I shall travel [incognito into foreign parts a
+little] or not travel;" there have been rumors, perhaps private wishes;
+but--... "Adieu, dear friend; sublime spirit, first-born of thinking
+beings. Love me always sincerely, and be persuaded that none can love
+and esteem you more than I. VALE. FEDERIC."
+
+"BERLIN, 6th AUGUST [which is next day].--You will have received a
+Letter from me dated yesterday; this is the second I write to you from
+Berlin; I refer you to what was in the other. If it must be (FAUT) that
+Emilie accompany Apollo, I consent; but if I could see you alone, that
+is what I would prefer. I should be too much dazzled; I could not stand
+so much splendor all at once; it would overpower me. I should need the
+veil of Moses to temper the united radiance of your two divinities."...
+In short, don't bring her, if you please.
+
+"REMUSBERG [poetic for REINSBERG], 8th AUGUST, 1740.--... My dear
+Voltaire, I do believe Van Duren costs you more trouble and pains than
+you had with HENRI QUATRE. In versifying the Life of a Hero, you wrote
+the history of your own thoughts; but in coercing a scoundrel you fence
+with an enemy who is not worthy of you." To punish him, and cut
+short his profits, "PRINT, then, as you wish [your own edition of the
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL, to go along with his, and trip the feet from it]. FAITES
+ROULER LA PRESSE; erase, change, correct; do as you see best; your
+judgment about it shall be mine."--"In eight days I leave for [where
+thinks the reader? "DANTZIG" deliberately print all the Editors, careful
+Preuss among them; overturning the terrestrial azimuths for us, and
+making day night!]--for Leipzig, and reckon on being at Frankfurt on the
+22d. In case you could be there, I expect, on my passage, to give you
+lodging! At Cleve or in Holland, I depend for certain on embracing you."
+[Preuss, _OEuvres de Frederic,_ xx. pp. 5, 19-21; Voltaire, _OEuvres,_
+lxxii. 226, &c. (not worth citing, in comparison).]
+
+Intrinsically the Friedrich correspondence at this time, with Voltaire
+especially, among many friends now on the wing towards Berlin and
+sending letters, has,--if you are forced into struggling for some
+understanding of it, and do get to read parts of it with the eyes of
+Friedrich and Voltaire,--has a certain amiability; and is nothing like
+so waste and dreary as it looks in the chaotic or sacked-city condition.
+Friedrich writes with brevity, oftenest on practicalities (the
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL, the coming Interview, and the like), evidently no time
+to spare; writes always with considerable sincerity; with friendliness,
+much admiration, and an ingenuous vivacity, to M. de Voltaire. Voltaire,
+at his leisure in Brussels or the Old Palace and its spider-webs, writes
+much more expansively; not with insincerity, he either;--with endless
+airy graciosities, and ingenious twirls, and touches of flattering
+unction, which latter, he is aware, must not be laid on too thick. As
+thus:--
+
+In regard to the ANTI-MACHIAVEL,--Sire, deign to give me your
+permissions as to the scoundrel of a Van Duren; well worth while,
+Sire,--"IT is a monument for the latest posterity; the only Book worthy
+of a King for these fifteen hundred years."
+
+This is a strongish trowelful, thrown on direct, with adroitness; and
+even this has a kind of sincerity. Safer, however, to do it in the
+oblique or reflex way,--by Ambassador Cumas, for example:--
+
+"I will tell you boldly, Sir [you M. de Camas], I put more value on this
+Book (ANTI-MACHIAVEL) than on the Emperor Julian's CAESAR, or on the
+MAXIMS of Marcus Aurelius,"--I do indeed, having a kind of property in
+it withal! [Voltaire, _OEuvres,_ lxxii. 280 (to Camas, 18th October,
+1740).]
+
+In fact, Voltaire too is beautiful, in this part of the Correspondence;
+but much in a twitter,--the Queen of Sheba, not the sedate Solomon, in
+prospect of what is coming. He plumes himself a little, we perceive, to
+his d'Argentals and French Correspondents, on this sublime intercourse
+he has got into with a Crowned Head, the cynosure of mankind:---Perhaps
+even you, my best friend, did not quite know me, and what merits I had!
+Plumes himself a little; but studies to be modest withal; has not much
+of the peacock, and of the turkey has nothing, to his old friends. All
+which is very naive and transparent; natural and even pretty, on the
+part of M. de Voltaire as the weaker vessel.--For the rest, it is
+certain Maupertuis is getting under way at Paris towards the Cleve
+rendezvous. Brussels, too, is so near these Cleve Countries; within
+two days' good driving:--if only the times and routes would rightly
+intersect?
+
+Friedrich's intention is by no means for a straight journey towards
+Cleve: he intends for Baireuth first, then back from Baireuth to
+Cleve,--making a huge southward elbow on the map, with Baireuth for apex
+or turning-point:--in this manner he will make the times suit, and have
+a convergence at Cleve. To Baireuth;--who knows if not farther? All
+summer there has gone fitfully a rumor, that he wished to see France;
+perhaps Paris itself incognito? The rumor, which was heard even at
+Petersburg, [Raumer's _Beitrage_ (English Translation, London, 1837),
+p. 15 (Finch's Despatch, 24th June, 1740).] is now sunk dead again; but
+privately, there is no doubt, a glimpse of the sublime French Nation
+would be welcome to Friedrich. He could never get to Travelling in his
+young time; missed his Grand Tour altogether, much as he wished it; and
+he is capable of pranks!--Enough, on Monday morning, 15th August, 1740,
+[Rodenbeck, p. 15, slightly in error: see Dickens's Interview, supra, p.
+187.] Friedrich and Suite leave Potsdam; early enough; go, by Leipzig,
+by the route already known to readers, through Coburg and the Voigtland
+regions; Wilhelmina has got warning, sits eagerly expecting her Brother
+in the Hermitage at Baireuth, gladdest of shrill sisters; and full of
+anxieties how her Brother would now be. The travelling party consisted,
+besides the King, of seven persons: Prince August Wilhelm, King's next
+Brother, Heir-apparent if there come no children, now a brisk youth of
+eighteen; Leopold Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, Old Dessauer's eldest, what
+we may call the "Young Dessauer;" Colonel von Borck, whom we shall hear
+of again; Colonel von Stille, already heard of (grave men of fifty,
+these two); milk-beard Munchow, an Adjutant, youngest of the promoted
+Munchows; Algarotti, indispensable for talk; and Fredersdorf, the
+House-Steward and domestic Factotum, once Private in Schwerin's
+Regiment, whom Bielfeld so admired at Reinsberg, foreseeing what
+he would come to. One of Friedrich's late acts was to give Factotum
+Fredersdorf an Estate of Land (small enough, I fancy, but with
+country-house on it) for solace to the leisure of so useful a
+man,--studious of chemistry too, as I have heard. Seven in all, besides
+the King. [Rodenbeck, p. 19 (and for Chamberlain Fredersdorf's estate,
+p. 15).] Direct towards Baireuth, incognito, and at the top of their
+speed. Wednesday, 17th, they actually arrive. Poor Wilhelmina, she finds
+her Brother changed; become a King in fact, and sternly solitary; alone
+in soul, even as a King must be! [Wilhelmina, ii. 322, 323.]--
+
+"Algarotti, one of the first BEAUX-ESPRITS of this age," as Wilhelmina
+defines him,--Friend Algarotti, the young Venetian gentleman of
+elegance, in dusky skin, in very white linen and frills, with his fervid
+black eyes, "does the expenses of the conversation." He is full of
+elegant logic, has speculations on the great world and the little,
+on Nature, Art, Papistry, Anti-Papistry, and takes up the Opera in an
+earnest manner, as capable of being a school of virtue and the moral
+sublime. His respectable Books on the Opera and other topics are now
+all forgotten, and crave not to be mentioned. To me he is not supremely
+beautiful, though much the gentleman in manners as in ruffles, and
+ingeniously logical:--rather yellow to me, in mind as in skin, and
+with a taint of obsolete Venetian Macassar. But to Friedrich he is
+thrice-dear; who loves the Sharp faceted cut of the man, and does not
+object to his yellow or Extinct-Macassar qualities of mind. Thanks to
+that wandering Baltimore for picking up such a jewel and carrying
+him Northward! Algarotti himself likes the North: here in our hardy
+climates,--especially at Berlin, and were his loved Friedrich NOT a
+King,--Algarotti could be very happy in the liberty allowed. At
+London, where there is no King, or none to speak of, and plenty of free
+Intelligences, Carterets, Lytteltons, young Pitts and the like, he is
+also well, were it not for the horrid smoke upon one's linen, and the
+little or no French of those proud Islanders.
+
+Wilhelmina seems to like him here; is glad, at any rate, that he does
+the costs of conversation, better or worse. In the rest is no hope.
+Stille, Borck are accomplished military gentlemen; but of tacit
+nature, reflective, practical, rather than discursive, and do not
+waste themselves by incontinence of tongue. Stille, by his military
+Commentaries, which are still known to soldiers that read, maintains
+some lasting remembrance of himself: Borck we shall see engaged in a
+small bit of business before long. As to Munchow, the JEUNE MORVEUX
+of an Adjutant, he, though his manners are well enough, and he wears
+military plumes in his hat, is still an unfledged young creature, "bill
+still yellow," so to speak;--and marks himself chiefly by a visible
+hankering after that troublesome creature Marwitz, who is always
+coquetting. Friedrich's conversation, especially to me Wilhelmina, seems
+"GUINDE, set on stilts," likewise there are frequent cuts of banter in
+him; and it is painfully evident he distinguishes my Sister of Anspach
+and her foolish Husband, whom he has invited over hither in a most eager
+manner, beyond what a poor Wilhelmina with her old love can pretend to.
+Patience, my shrill Princess, Beauty of Baireuth and the world; let us
+hope all will come right again! My shrill Princess--who has a melodious
+strength like that of war-fifes, too--knows how to be patient; and veils
+many things, though of a highly unhypocritical nature.
+
+These were Three great Days at Baireuth; Wilhelmina is to come soon,
+and return the visit at Berlin. To wait upon the King, known
+though incognito, "the Bishop of Bamberg" came driving over:
+[_Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 419.] Schonborn, Austrian Kanzler, or who? His
+old City we once saw (and plenty of hanged malefactors swinging round
+it, during that JOURNEY TO THE REICH);--but the Bishop himself never to
+our knowledge, Bishop being absent then, I hope it is the same Bishop
+of Bamberg, whom a Friend of Busching's, touring there about that
+same time, saw dining in a very extraordinary manner, with medieval
+trumpeters, "with waiters in spurs and buff-belts;" [Busching's
+_Beitrage;_--Schlosser (_History of the Eighteenth Century_) also
+quotes the scene.] if it is not, I have not the slightest shadow of
+acquaintance with him,--there have been so many Bishops of Bamberg with
+whom one wishes to have none! On the third day Friedrich and his company
+went away, towards Wurzburg; and Wilhelmina was left alone with her
+reflections. "I had had so much to say to him; I had got nothing said
+at all:" alas, it is ever so. "The King was so changed, grown so much
+bigger (GRANDI), you could not have known him again;" stands finely
+erect and at full breadth, every inch a King; his very stature, you
+would say, increased.--Adieu, my Princess, pearl of Princesses; all
+readers will expect your return-visit at Berlin, which is to be soon.
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH STRIKES OFF TO THE LEFT, AND HAS A VIEW OF STRASBURG FOR TWO
+DAYS.
+
+Through Wurzburg, Frankfurt-on-Mayn, speeds Friedrich;--Wilhelmina and
+mankind understand that it is homewards and to Cleve; but at Frankfurt,
+in deepest privacy, there occurs a sudden whirl southward,--up the
+Rhine-Valley; direct towards Strasburg, for a sight of France in that
+quarter! So has Friedrich decided,--not quite suddenly, on new Letters
+here, or new computations about Cleve; but by forethought taken at
+Baireuth, as rather appears. From Frankfurt to Strasburg, say 150 miles;
+from Strasburg home, is not much farther than from Frankfurt home: it
+can be done, then; husht!
+
+The incognito is to be rigorous: Friedrich becomes COMTE DUFOUR,
+a Prussian-French gentleman; Prince August Wilhelm is Graf von
+Schaffgotsch, Algarotti is Graf von Pfuhl, Germans these two; what
+Leopold, the Young Dessauer, called himself,--still less what the
+others, or whether the others were there at all, and not shoved on,
+direct towards Wesel, out of the way as is likelier,--can remain
+uncertain to readers and me. From Frankfurt, then, on Monday morning,
+22d August, 1740, as I compute, through old known Philipsburg Campaign
+country, and the lines of Ettlingen and Stollhofen; there the Royal
+Party speeds eagerly (weather very bad, as appears): and it is certain
+they are at Kehl on Tuesday evening; looking across the long Rhine
+Bridge, Strasburg and its steeples now close at hand.
+
+This looks to be a romantic fine passage in the History of the young
+King;--though in truth it is not, and proves but a feeble story either
+to him or us. Concerning which, however, the reader, especially if
+he should hear that there exists precise Account of it, Two Accounts
+indeed, one from the King's own hand, will not fail of a certain craving
+to become acquainted with details. This craving, foolish rather than
+wise, we consider it thriftiest to satisfy at once; and shall give the
+King's NARRATIVE entire, though it is a jingling lean scraggy Piece,
+partly rhyme, "in the manner of Bachaumont and La Chapelle;" written at
+the gallop, a few days hence, and despatched to Voltaire:--"You," dear
+Voltaire, "wish to know what I have been about, since leaving
+Berlin; annexed you will find a description of it," writes Friedrich.
+[_OEuvres,_ xxii. 25 (Wesel, 2d Septemher, 1740).] Out of Voltaire's and
+other people's waste-baskets, it has at length been fished up, patch by
+patch, and pasted together by victorious modern Editors; and here it is
+again entire. The other Narrative, which got into the Newspapers soon
+after, is likewise of authentic nature,--Fassmann, our poor old friend,
+confirming it, if that were needful,--and is happily in prose. [Given
+in _Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 420-423;--see likewise Fassmann's
+_Merkwurdigster Regierungs-Antritt_ (poor old Book on FRIEDRICH'S
+ACCESSION); Preuss (_Thronbesteigung,_ pp. 395-400); &c. &c.] Holding
+these two Pieces well together, and giving the King's faithfully
+translated, in a complete state, it will be possible to satisfy foolish
+cravings, and make this Strasburg Adventure luminous enough.
+
+
+KING FRIEDRICH TO VOLTAIRE (from Wesel, 2d September, 1740), CHIEFLY IN
+DOGGEREL, CONCERNING THE RUN TO STRASBURG.
+
+Part of it, incorrect, in Voltaire, _OEuvres_ (scandalous Piece now
+called _Memoires,_ once _Vie Privee du Roi de Prusse_), ii. 24-26;
+finally, in Preuss, _OEuvres de Frederic,_ xiv. 156-161, the real and
+complete affair, as fished up by victorious Preuss and others.
+
+"I have just finished a Journey, intermingled with singular adventures,
+sometimes pleasant, sometimes the reverse. You know I had set out for
+Baireuth,"--BRUXELLES the beautiful French Editor wrote, which makes
+Egyptian darkness of the Piece!--"to see a Sister whom I love no less
+than esteem. On the road [thither or thence; or likeliest, THERE],
+Algarotti and I consulted the map, to settle our route for returning by
+Wesel. Frankfurt-on-Mayn comes always as a principal stage;--Strasburg
+was no great roundabout: we chose that route in preference. The
+INCOGNITO was decided, names pitched upon [Comte Dufour, and the
+others]; story we were to tell: in fine, all was arranged and concerted
+to a nicety as well as possible. We fancied we should get to Strasburg
+in three days [from Baireuth].
+
+ But Heaven, which disposes of all things,
+ Differently regulated this thing.
+ With lank-sided coursers,
+ Lineal descendants from Rosinante,
+ With ploughmen in the dress of postilions,
+ Blockheads of impertinent nature;
+ Our carriages sticking fast a hundred times in the road,
+ We went along with gravity at a leisurely pace,
+ Knocking against the crags.
+ The atmosphere in uproar with loud thunder,
+ The rain-torrents streaming over the Earth
+ Threatened mankind with the Day of Judgment [VERY BAD WEATHER],
+ And in spite of our impatience,
+ Four good days are, in penance,
+ Lost forever in these jumblings.
+
+ Mais le ciel, qui de tout dispose,
+ Regla differemment la chose.
+ Avec de coursiers efflanques,
+ En ligne droites issus de Rosinante,
+ Et des paysans en postillons masques,
+ Dutors de race impertinente,
+ Notre carrosse en cent lieux accroche,
+ Nous allions gravement, d'une allure indolente,
+ Gravitant contre les rochers.
+ Les airs emus par le bruyant tonnerre,
+ Les torrents d'eau repandus sur la terre,
+ Du dernier jour menacaient les humains;
+ Et malgre notre impatience,
+ Quatre bons jours en penitence
+ Sont pour jamais perdus dans les charrains.
+
+"Had all our fatalities been limited to stoppages of speed on the
+journey, we should have taken patience; but, after frightful roads, we
+found lodgings still frightfuler.
+
+ For greedy landlords
+ Seeing us pressed by hunger
+ Did, in a more than frugal manner,
+ In their infernal hovels,
+ Poisoning instead of feeding,
+ Steal from us our crowns.
+ O age different [in good cheer] from that of Lucullus!
+
+
+ Car des hotes interesses,
+ De la faim nous voyant presses,
+ D'une facon plus que frugale,
+ Dans une chaumiere infernale,
+ En nous empoisonnant,
+ Nous volaient nos ecus.
+ O siecle different des temps de Lucullus!
+
+
+"Frightful roads; short of victual, short of drink: nor was that all. We
+had to undergo a variety of accidents; and certainly our equipage must
+have had a singular air, for in every new place we came to, they took us
+for something different.
+
+ Some took us for Kings,
+ Some for pickpockets well disguised;
+ Others for old acquaintances.
+ At times the people crowded out,
+ Looked us in the eyes,
+ Like clowns impertinently curious.
+ Our lively Italian [Algarotti] swore;
+ For myself I took patience;
+ The young Count [my gay younger Brother, eighteen at present]
+ quizzed and frolicked;
+ The big Count [Heir-apparent of Dessau] silently swung his head,
+ Wishing this fine Journey to France,
+ In the bottom of his heart, most christianly at the Devil.
+
+ Les uns nous prenaient pour des rois,
+ D'autres pour des filous courtois,
+ D'autrespour gens de connaissance;
+ Parfois le peuple s'attroupait,
+ Entre les yeux nous regardait
+ En badauds curieux, remplis d'impertinence.
+ Notre vif Italien jurait,
+ Pour moi je prenais patience,
+ Le jeune Comte folatrait,
+ Le grand Comte se dandinait,
+ Et ce beau vogage de France
+ Dans le fond de son coeur chretiennement damnait.
+
+"We failed not, however, to struggle gradually along; at last we arrived
+in that Stronghold, where [as preface to the War of 1734, known to some
+of us]--
+
+ Where the garrison, too supple,
+ Surrendered so piteously
+ After the first blurt of explosion
+ From the cannon of the French.
+
+ Ou a garrison, troupe flasque,
+ Se rendit si piteusement
+ Apres la premiere bourasque
+ Du canon francais foudroyant.
+
+You recognize Kehl in this description. It was in that fine
+Fortress,--where, by the way, the breaches are still lying unrepaired
+[Reich being a slow corpus in regard to such things],--that the
+Postmaster, a man of more foresight than we, asked If we had got
+passports?
+
+ No, said I to him; of passports
+ We never had the whim.
+ Strong ones I believe it would need
+ To recall, to our side of the limit,
+ Subjects of Pluto King of the Dead:
+ But, from the Germanic Empire
+ Into the gallant and cynical abode
+ Of Messieurs your pretty Frenchmen,--A jolly and beaming air,
+ Rubicund faces, not ignorant of wine,
+ These are the passports which, legible if you look on us,
+ Our troop produces to you for that end.
+
+ Non, lui dis-je, des passe-ports
+ Nous n'eumes jamais la folie.
+ Il en faudrait, je crois, de forts
+ Pour ressusciter a la vie
+ De chez Pluton le roi des morts;
+ Mais de l'empire germanique
+ Au sejour galant et cynique
+ De Messieurs vos jolis Francais,
+ Un air rebondissant et frais,
+ Une face rouge et bachique,
+ Sont les passe-ports qu'en nos traits
+ Vous produit ici notre clique.
+
+"No, Messieurs, said the provident Master of Passports; no salvation
+without passport. Seeing then that Necessity had got us in the dilemma
+of either manufacturing passports ourselves or not entering Strasburg,
+we took the former branch of the alternative and manufactured one;--in
+which feat, the Prussian arms, which I had on my seal, were marvellously
+furthersome."
+
+This is a fact, as the old Newspapers and confirmatory Fassmann more
+directly apprise us. "The Landlord [or Postmaster] at Kehl, having
+signified that there was no crossing without Passport," Friedrich, at
+first, somewhat taken aback, bethought him of his watch-seal with the
+Royal Arms on it; and soon manufactured the necessary Passport, signeted
+in due form;--which, however, gave a suspicion to the Innkeeper as to
+the quality of his Guest. After which, Tuesday evening, 23d August,
+"they at once got across to Strasburg," says my Newspaper Friend, "and
+put up at the SIGN OF THE RAVEN, there." Or in Friedrich's own jingle:--
+
+"We arrived at Strasburg; and the Custom-house corsair, with his
+inspectors, seemed content with our evidences.
+
+ These scoundrels spied us,
+ With one eye reading our passport,
+ With the other ogling our purse.
+ Gold, which was always a resource,
+ Which brought, Jove to the enjoyment
+ Of Danae whom he caressed;
+ Gold, by which Caesar governed
+ The world happy under his sway;
+ Gold, more a divinity than Mars or Love;
+ Wonder-working Gold introduced us
+ That evening, within the walls of Strasburg."
+
+[Given thus far, with several slight errors, in Voltaire, ii.
+24-26;--the remainder, long unknown, had to be fished up, patch by patch
+(Preuss, _OEuvres de Frederic,_ xiv. 159-161).]
+
+ Ces scelerats nous epiaient,
+ D'un oeil le passe-port lisaient,
+ De l'autre lorgnaient notre bourse.
+ L'or, qui toujours fut de ressource,
+ Par lequel Jupin jouissait
+ De Danae, qu'il caressait;
+ L'or, par qui Cesar gouvernait
+ Le monde heureux sous son empire;
+ L'or, plus dieu que Mars et l'Amour,
+ Le soir, dans les murs de Strasbourg.
+
+Sad doggerel; permissible perhaps as a sample of the Friedrich
+manufacture, surely not otherwise! There remains yet more than half
+of it; readers see what their foolish craving has brought upon them!
+Doggerel out of which no clear story, such story as there is, can be
+had; though, except the exaggeration and contortion, there is nothing
+of fiction in it. We fly to the Newspaper, happily at least a prose
+composition, which begins at this point; and shall use the
+Doggerel henceforth as illustration only or as repetition in the
+Friedrich-mirror, of a thing OTHERWISE made clear to us:--
+
+Having got into Strasburg and the RAVEN HOTEL; Friedrich now on French
+ground at last, or at least on Half-French, German-French, is intent to
+make the most of circumstances. The Landlord, with one of Friedrich's
+servants, is straightway despatched into the proper coffee-houses to
+raise a supper-party of Officers; politely asks any likely Officer,
+"If he will not do a foreign Gentleman [seemingly of some distinction,
+signifies Boniface] the honor to sup with him at the Raven?"--"No, by
+Jupiter!" answer the most, in their various dialects: "who is he that
+we should sup with him?" Three, struck by the singularity of the thing,
+undertake; and with these we must be content. Friedrich--or call him
+M. le Comte Dufour, with Pfuhl, Schaffgotsch and such escort as we
+see--politely apologizes on the entrance of these officers: "Many
+pardons, gentlemen, and many thanks. Knowing nobody; desirous
+of acquaintance:--since you are so good, how happy, by a little
+informality, to have brought brave Officers to keep me company, whom I
+value beyond other kinds of men!"
+
+The Officers found their host a most engaging gentleman: his supper was
+superb, plenty of wine, "and one red kind they had never tasted before,
+and liked extremely;"--of which he sent some bottles to their lodging
+next day. The conversation turned on military matters, and was enlivened
+with the due sallies. This foreign Count speaks French wonderfully; a
+brilliant man, whom the others rather fear: perhaps something more than
+a Count? The Officers, loath to go, remembered that their two battalions
+had to parade next morning, that it was time to be in bed: "I will go to
+your review," said the Stranger Count: the delighted Officers undertake
+to come and fetch him, they settle with him time and method; how happy!
+
+On the morrow, accordingly, they call and fetch him; he looks at the
+review; review done, they ask him to supper for this evening: "With
+pleasure!" and "walks with them about the Esplanade, to see the guard
+march by." Before parting, he takes their names, writes them in his
+tablets; says, with a smile, "He is too much obliged ever to forget
+them." This is Wednesday, the 24th of August, 1740; Field-Marshal
+Broglio is Commandant in Strasburg, and these obliging Officers are "of
+the regiment Piedmont,"--their names on the King's tablets I never heard
+mentioned by anybody (or never till the King's Doggerel was fished up
+again). Field-Marshal Broglio my readers have transiently seen, afar
+off;--"galloping with only one boot," some say "almost in his shirt,"
+at the Ford of Secchia, in those Italian campaigns, five years ago, the
+Austrians having stolen across upon him:--he had a furious gallop, with
+no end of ridicule, on that occasion; is now Commandant here; and we
+shall have a great deal more to do with him within the next year or two.
+
+"This same day, 24th, while I [the Newspaper volunteer Reporter or Own
+Correspondent, seemingly a person of some standing, whose words carry
+credibility in the tone of them] was with Field-Marshal Broglio our
+Governor here, there came two gentlemen to be presented to him; 'German
+Cavaliers' they were called; who, I now find, must have been the Prince
+of Prussia and Algarotti. The Field-Marshal,"--a rather high-stalking
+white-headed old military gentleman, bordering on seventy, of
+Piedmontese air and breed, apt to be sudden and make flounderings, but
+the soul of honor, "was very polite to the two Cavaliers, and kept them
+to dinner. After dinner there came a so-styled 'Silesian Nobleman,' who
+likewise was presented to the Field-Marshal, and affected not to know
+the other two: him I now find to have been the Prince of Anhalt."
+
+Of his Majesty's supper with the Officers that Wednesday, we are left
+to think how brilliant it was: his Majesty, we hear farther, went to the
+Opera that night,--the Polichinello or whatever the "Italian COMODIE"
+was;--"and a little girl came to his box with two lottery-tickets
+fifteen pence each, begging the foreign Gentleman for the love of Heaven
+to buy them of her; which he did, tearing them up at once, and giving
+the poor creature four ducats," equivalent to two guineas, or say in
+effect even five pounds of the present British currency. The fame of
+this foreign Count and his party at The Raven is becoming very loud
+over Strasburg, especially in military circles. Our volunteer Own
+Correspondent proceeds (whom we mean to contrast with the Royal Doggerel
+by and by):--
+
+"Next morning," Thursday, 25th August, "as the Marshal with above two
+hundred Officers was out walking on the Esplanade, there came a soldier
+of the Regiment Luxemburg, who, after some stiff fugling motions, of the
+nature of salutation partly, and partly demand for privacy, intimated to
+the Marshal surprising news: That the Stranger in The Raven was the
+King of Prussia in person; he, the soldier, at present of the Regiment
+Luxemburg, had in other days, before he deserted, been of the Prussian
+Crown-Prince's regiment; had consequently seen him in Berlin, Potsdam
+and elsewhere a thousand times and more, and even stood sentry where
+he was: the fact is beyond dispute, your Excellency! said this
+soldier."--Whew!
+
+Whereupon a certain Colonel, Marquis de Loigle, with or without a hint
+from Broglio, makes off for The Raven; introduces himself, as was easy;
+contrives to get invited to stay dinner, which also was easy. During
+dinner the foreign Gentleman expressed some wish to see their fortress.
+Colonel Loigle sends word to Broglio; Broglio despatches straightway an
+Officer and fine carriage: "Will the foreign Gentleman do me the honor?"
+The foreign Gentleman, still struggling for incognito, declines the
+uppermost seat of honor in the carriage; the two Officers, Loigle and
+this new one, insist on taking the inferior place. Alas, the incognito
+is pretty much out. Calling at some coffee-house or the like on the
+road, a certain female, "Madame de Fienne," named the foreign Gentleman
+"Sire,"--which so startled him that, though he utterly declined such
+title, the two Officers saw well how it was.
+
+"After survey of the works, the two attendant Officers had returned to
+the Field-Marshal; and about 4 P.M. the high Stranger made appearance
+there. But the thing had now got wind, 'King of Prussia here incognito!'
+The place was full of Officers, who came crowding about him: he escaped
+deftly into the Marechal's own Cabinet; sat there, an hour, talking to
+the Marechal [little admiring the Marechal's talk, as we shall find],
+still insisting on the incognito,"--to which Broglio, put out in his
+high paces by this sudden thing, and apt to flounder, as I have heard,
+was not polite enough to conform altogether. "What shall I do, in this
+sudden case?" poor Broglio is thinking to himself: "must write to Court;
+perhaps try to detain--?" Friedrioh's chief thought naturally is, One
+cannot be away out of this too soon. "Sha'n't we go to the Play, then,
+Monsieur le Marechal? Play-hour is come!"--Own Correspondent of the
+Newspaper proceeds:--
+
+"The Marechal then went to the Play, and all his Officers with him;
+thinking their royal prize was close at their heels. Marechal and
+Officers fairly ahead, coast once clear, their royal prize hastened
+back to The Raven, paid his bill; hastily summoning Schaffgotsch and
+the others within hearing; shot off like lightning; and was seen in
+Strasburg no more. Algarotti, who was in the box with Broglio, heard the
+news in the house; regretful rumor among the Officers, 'He is gone!' In
+about a quarter of an hour Algarotti too slipped out; and vanished by
+extra post"--straight towards Wesel; but could not overtake the King
+(whose road, in the latter part of it, went zigzag, on business as
+is likely), nor see him again till they met in that Town. [From
+_Helden-Geschichte_ (i. 420-424), &c.]
+
+This is the Prose Truth of those fifty or eight-and-forty hours in
+Strasburg, which were so mythic and romantic at that time. Shall we now
+apply to the Royal Doggerel again, where we left off, and see the other
+side of the picture? Once settled in The Raven, within Strasburg's
+walls, the Doggerel continues:--
+
+"You fancy well that there was now something to exercise my curiosity;
+and what desire I had to know the French Nation in France itself.
+
+ There I saw at length those French,
+ Of whom you have sung the glories;
+ A people despised by the English,
+ Whom their sad rationality fills with black bile;
+ Those French, whom our Germans
+ Reckon all to be destitute of sense;
+ Those French, whose History consists of Love-stories,
+ I mean the wandering kind of Love, not the constant;
+ Foolish this People, headlong, high-going,
+ Which sings beyond endurance;
+ Lofty in its good fortune, crawling in its bad;
+ Of an unpitying extent of babble,
+ To hide the vacancy of its ignorant mind.
+ Of the Trifling it is a tender lover;
+ The Trifling alone takes possession of its brain.
+ People flighty, indiscreet, imprudent,
+ Turning like the weathercock to every wind.
+ Of the ages of the Caesars those of the Louises are the shadow;
+ Paris is the ghost, of Rome, take it how you will.
+ No, of those vile French you are not one:
+ You think; they do not think at all.
+
+ La je vis enfin ces Francais
+ Dont vous avez chante la gloire;
+ Peuple meprise' des Anglais,
+ Que leur triste raison remplit de bile noire;
+ Ces Francais, que nos Allemands
+ Pensent tous prives de bon sens;
+ Ces Francais, do nt l'amour pourrait dicter l'histoire,
+ Je dis l'amour volage, et non l'amour constant;
+ Ce peuple fou, brusque et galant,
+ Chansonnier insupportable,
+ Superbe en sa fortune, en son malheur rampant,
+ D'un bavardage impitoyable,
+ Pour cacher le creux d'un esprit ignorant,
+ Tendre amant de la bagatelle,
+ Elle entre seule en sa cervelle;
+ Leger, indiscret, imprudent,
+ Comme ume girouette il revire a tout vent.
+ Des siecles des Cesars ceux des Louis sont l'ombre;
+ Rome efface Paris en tout sens, en tout point.
+ Non, des vils Francais vous n'etes pas du nombre;
+ Vous pensez, ils ne pensent point.
+
+"Pardon, dear Voltaire, this definition of the French; at worst, it is
+only of those in Strasburg I speak. To scrape acquaintance, I had to
+invite some Officers on our arrival, whom of course I did not know.
+
+ Three of them came at once,
+ Gayer, more content than Kings;
+ Singing with rusty voice.
+ In verse, their amorous exploits,
+ Set to a hornpipe.
+
+ Trois d'eux s'en vinrent a la fois,
+ Plus gais, plus contents que des rois,
+ Chantant d'une voix enrouee,
+ En vers, leurs amoureux exploits,
+ Ajustes sur une bourree.
+
+"M. de la Crochardiere and M. Malosa [two names from the tablets, third
+wanting] had just come from a dinner where the wine had not been spared.
+
+ Of their hot friendship I saw the flame grow,
+ The Universe would have taken us for perfect friends:
+ But the instant of good-night blew out the business;
+ Friendship disappeared without regrets,
+ With the games, the wine, the table and the viands.
+
+
+ De leur chaude amitie je vis croitre le flamme,
+ L'univers nous eut pris pour des amis parfaits;
+ Mais l'instant des adieux en detruisit la trame,
+ L'amitie disparut, ssns causer des regrets,
+ Avec le jeu, le vin, et la table, et les mets.
+
+"Next day, Monsieur the Gouverneur of the Town and Province, Marechal of
+France, Chevalier of the Orders of the King, &c. &c.,--Marechal Duc de
+Broglio, in fact," who was surprised at Secchia in the late War,--
+
+ This General always surprised.
+ Whom with regret, young Louis [your King]
+ Saw without breeches in Italy
+
+["With only one boot," was the milder rumor; which we adopted (supra,
+vol. vi. p. 472), but this sadder one, too, was current; and "Broglio's
+breeches," or the vain aspiration after them, like a vanished ghost of
+breeches, often enough turn up in the old Pamphlets.]
+
+ Galloping to hide away his life
+ From the Germans, unpolite fighters;--
+
+
+ Ce general toujours surpris,
+ Qu'a regret le jeune Louis
+ Vit sans culottes en Italie,
+ Courir pour derober sa vie
+ Aux Germains, guerriers impolis.
+
+this General wished to investigate your Comte Dufour,--foreign Count,
+who the instant he arrives sets about inviting people to supper that are
+perfect strangers. He took the poor Count for a sharper; and prudently
+advised M. de la Crochardiere not to be duped by him. It was unluckily
+the good Marechal that proved to be duped.
+
+ He was born for surprise.
+ His white hair, his gray beard,
+ Formed a reverend exterior.
+ Outsides are often deceptive:
+ He that, by the binding, judges
+ Of a Book and its Author
+ May, after a page of reading,
+ Chance to recognize his mistake.
+
+ Il etait ne pour la surprise.
+ Ses cheveux blancs, sa barbe grise,
+ Formaient un sage exterieur.
+ Le dehors est souvent trompeur;
+ Qui juge par la reliure
+ D'un ouvrage et de son auteur
+ Dans une page de lecture
+ Peut reconnaitre son erreur.
+
+"That was my own experience; for of wisdom I could find nothing except
+in his gray hair and decrepit appearance. His first opening betrayed
+him; no great well of wit this Marechal,
+
+ Who, drunk with his own grandeur,
+ Informs you of his name and his titles,
+ And authority as good as unlimited.
+ He cited to me all the records
+ Where his name is registered,
+ Babbled about his immense power,
+ About his valor, his talents
+ So salutary to France;--He forgot that, three years ago
+
+[Six to a nearness,--"15th September, 1734," if your Majesty will be
+exact.]
+
+ Men did not praise his prudence.
+
+ Qui, de sa grandeur enivre;
+ Decline son nom et ses titres,
+ Et son pouvoir a rien borne.
+ Il me cita tous les registres
+ Ou son nom est enregistre;
+ Bavard de son pouvoir immense,
+ De sa valeur, de ces talents
+ Si salutaires a la France:
+ Il oubliait, passe trois ans,
+ Qu'on ne louait pas sa prudence.
+
+"Not satisfied with seeing the Marechal, I saw the guard mounted
+
+ By these Frenchmen, burning with glory,
+ Who, on four sous a day,
+ Will make of Kings and of Heroes the memory flourish:
+ Slaves crowned by the hands of Victory,
+ Unlucky herds whom the Court
+ Tinkles hither and thither by the sound of fife and drum.
+
+ A ces Francais brulants de gloire,
+ Dotes de quatre sous par jour,
+ Qui des rois, des heros font fleurir la memoire,
+ Esclaves couronnes des mains de la victoire,
+ Troupeaux malheureux que la cour
+ Dirige au seul bruit du tambour.
+
+"That was my fated term. A deserter from our troops got eye on me,
+recognised me and denounced me.
+
+ This wretched gallows-bird got eye on me;
+ Such is the lot of all earthly things;
+ And so of our fine mystery
+ The whole secret came to light."
+
+ Ce malheureux pendard me vit,
+ C'est le sort de toutes les choses;
+ Ainsi de motre pot aux roses
+ Tout le secret se decouvrit.
+
+Well; we must take this glimpse, such as it is, into the interior of the
+young man,--fine buoyant, pungent German spirit, roadways for it very
+bad, and universal rain-torrents falling, yet with coruscations from
+a higher quarter;--and you can forget, if need be, the "Literature"
+of this young Majesty, as you would a staccato on the flute by him! In
+after months, on new occasion rising, "there was no end to his gibings
+and bitter pleasantries on the ridiculous reception Broglio had given
+him at Strasburg," says Valori, [_Memoires,_ i. 88.]--of which this
+Doggerel itself offers specimen.
+
+"Probably the weakest Piece I ever translated?" exclaims one, who has
+translated several such. Nevertheless there is a straggle of pungent
+sense in it,--like the outskirts of lightning, seen in that dismally wet
+weather, which the Royal Party had. Its wit is very copious, but slashy,
+bantery, and proceeds mainly by exaggeration and turning topsy-turvy;
+a rather barren species of wit. Of humor, in the fine poetic sense, no
+vestige. But there is surprising veracity,--truthfulness unimpeachable,
+if you will read well. What promptitude, too;--what funds for
+conversation, when needed! This scraggy Piece, which is better than the
+things people often talk to one another, was evidently written as fast
+as the pen could go.--"It is done, if such a Hand could have DONE it, in
+the manner of Bachaumont and La Chapelle," says Voltaire scornfully, in
+that scandalous VIE PRIVEE;--of which phrase this is the commentary, if
+readers need one:--
+
+"Some seventy or eighty years before that date, a M. Bachaumont and a
+M. la Chapelle, his intimate, published, in Prose skipping off into
+dancings of Verse every now and then, 'a charming RELATION of a certain
+VOYAGE or Home Tour' (whence or whither, or correctly when, this Editor
+forgets), ["First printed in 1665," say the Bibliographies; "but known
+to La Fontaine some time before." Good!--Bachaumont, practically an
+important and distinguished person, not literary by trade, or indeed
+otherwise than by ennui, was he that had given (some fifteen years
+before) the Nickname FRONDE (Bickering of Schoolboys) to the wretched
+Historical Object which is still so designated in French annals.] which
+they had made in partnership. 'RELATION' capable still of being read, if
+one were tolerably idle;--it was found then to be charming, by all the
+world; and gave rise to a new fashion in writing; which Voltaire often
+adopts, and is supremely good at; and in which Friedrich, who is also
+fond of it, by no means succeeds so well."
+
+Enough, Friedrich got to Wesel, back to his business, in a day or two;
+and had done, as we forever have, with the Strasburg Escapade and its
+Doggerel.
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH FINDS M. DE MAUPERTUIS; NOT YET M. DE VOLTAIRE.
+
+Friedrich got to Wesel on the 29th; found Maupertuis waiting there,
+according to appointment: an elaborately polite, somewhat sublime
+scientific gentleman; ready to "engraft on the Berlin crab-tree,"
+and produce real apples and Academics there, so soon as the King, the
+proprietor, may have leisure for such a thing. Algarotti has already
+the honor of some acquaintance with Maupertuis. Maupertuis has been
+at Brussels, on the road hither; saw Voltaire and even Madame,--which
+latter was rather a ticklish operation, owing to grudges and tiffs of
+quarrel that had risen, but it proved successful under the delicate
+guidance of Voltaire. Voltaire is up to oiling the wheels: "There you
+are, Monsieur, like the [don't name What, though profane Voltaire does,
+writing to Maupertuis a month ago]--Three Kings running after you!" A
+new Pension to you from France; Russia outbidding France to have you;
+and then that LETTER of Friedrich's, which is in all the Newspapers:
+"Three Kings,"--you plainly great man, Trismegistus of the Sciences
+called Pure! Madame honors you, has always done: one word of apology
+to the high female mind, it will work wonders;--come now! [Voltaire,
+_OEuvres,_ lxxii. 217, 216, 230 (Hague, 21st July, 1740, and Brussels,
+9th Aug. &c).]
+
+No reader guesses in our time what a shining celestial body the
+Maupertuis, who is now fallen so dim again, then was to mankind. In
+cultivated French society there is no such lion as M. Maupertuis since
+he returned from flattening the Earth in the Arctic regions. "The Exact
+Sciences, what else is there to depend on?" thinks French cultivated
+society: "and has not Monsieur done a feat in that line?" Monsieur,
+with fine ex-military manners, has a certain austere gravity, reticent
+loftiness and polite dogmatism, which confirms that opinion. A studious
+ex-military man,--was Captain of Dragoons once, but too fond of
+study,--who is conscious to himself, or who would fain be conscious,
+that he is, in all points, mathematical, moral and other, the man. A
+difficult man to live with in society. Comes really near the limit of
+what we call genius, of originality, poetic greatness in thinking;--but
+never once can get fairly over said limit, though always struggling
+dreadfully to do so. Think of it! A fatal kind of man; especially if
+you have made a lion of him at any time. Of his envies, deep-hidden
+splenetic discontents and rages, with Voltaire's return for them, there
+will be enough to say in the ulterior stages. He wears--at least ten
+years hence he openly wears, though I hope it is not yet so flagrant--"a
+red wig with yellow bottom (CRINIERE JAUNE);" and as Flattener of the
+Earth, is, with his own flattish red countenance and impregnable stony
+eyes, a man formidable to look upon, though intent to be amiable if
+you do the proper homage. As to the quarrel with Madame take this Note;
+which may prove illustrative of some things by and by:--
+
+Maupertuis is well known at Cirey; such a lion could not fail there. All
+manner of Bernouillis, Clairauts, high mathematical people, are frequent
+guests at Cirey: reverenced by Madame,--who indeed has had her
+own private Professor of Mathematics; one Konig from Switzerland
+(recommended by those Bernouillis), diligently teaching her the Pure
+Sciences this good while back, not without effect; and has only just
+parted with him, when she left on this Brussels expedition. A BON
+GARCON, Voltaire says; though otherwise, I think, a little noisy on
+occasion. There has been no end of Madame's kindness to him, nay to his
+Brother and him,--sons of a Theological Professorial Syriac-Hebrew kind
+of man at Berne, who has too many sons;--and I grieve to report that
+this heedless Konig has produced an explosion in Madame's feelings,
+such as little beseemed him. On the road to Paris, namely, as we drove
+hitherward to the Honsbruck Lawsuit by way of Paris, in Autumn last,
+there had fallen out some dispute, about the monads, the VIS VIVA,
+the infinitely little, between Madame and Konig; dispute which rose
+CRESCENDO in disharmonious duet, and "ended," testifies M. de Voltaire,
+"in a scene TRESDESAGREABLE." Madame, with an effort, forgave the
+thoughtless fellow, who is still rather young, and is without malice.
+But thoughtless Konig, strong in his opinion about the infinitely
+little, appealed to Maupertuis: "Am not I right, Monsieur?" "HE is right
+beyond question!" wrote Maupertuis to Madame; "somewhat dryly," thinks
+Voltaire: and the result is, there is considerable rage in one celestial
+mind ever since against another male one in red wig and yellow bottom;
+and they are not on speaking terms, for a good many months past.
+Voltaire has his heart sore ("J'EN AI LE COEUR PERCE") about it, needs
+to double-dose Maupertuis with flattery; and in fact has used the utmost
+diplomacy to effect some varnish of a reconcilement as Maupertuis
+passed on this occasion. As for Konig, who had studied in some Dutch
+university, he went by and by to be Librarian to the Prince of Orange;
+and we shall not fail to hear of him again,--once more upon the
+infinitely little. [From _OEuvres de Voltaire,_ ii. 126, lxxii. (20,
+216, 230), lxiii. (229-239), &c. &c.]
+
+Voltaire too, in his way, is fond of these mathematical people; eager
+enough to fish for knowledge, here as in all elements, when he has the
+chance offered: this is much an interest of his at present. And he
+does attain sound ideas, outlines of ideas, in this province,--though
+privately defective in the due transcendency of admiration for it;--was
+wont to discuss cheerily with Konig, about VIS VIVA, monads, gravitation
+and the infinitely little; above all, bows to the ground before the
+red-wigged Bashaw, Flattener of the Earth, whom for Madame's sake and
+his own he is anxious to be well with. "Fall on your face nine times, ye
+esoteric of only Impure Science!"--intimates Maupertuis to mankind. "By
+all means!" answers M. de Voltaire, doing it with alacrity; with a kind
+of loyalty, one can perceive, and also with a hypocrisy grounded on love
+of peace. If that is the nature of the Bashaw, and one's sole mode of
+fishing knowledge from him, why not? thinks M. de Voltaire. His patience
+with M. de Maupertuis, first and last, was very great. But we shall find
+it explode at length, a dozen years hence, in a conspicuous manner!--
+
+"Maupertuis had come to us to Cirey, with Jean Bernouilli," says
+Voltaire; "and thenceforth Maupertuis, who was born the most jealous of
+men, took me for the object of this passion, which has always been very
+dear to him." [VIE PRIVEE.] Husht, Monsieur!--Here is a poor rheumatic
+kind of Letter, which illustrates the interim condition, after that
+varnish of reconcilement at Brussels:--
+
+VOLTAIRE TO M. DE MAUPERTUIS (at Wesel, waiting for the King, or with
+him rather).
+
+"BRUSSELS, 29th August (1740), _3d year since the world flattened._
+
+"How the Devil, great Philosopher, would you have had me write to you at
+Wesel? I fancied you gone from Wesel, to seek the King of Sages on his
+Journey somewhere. I had understood, too, they were so delighted to have
+you in that fortified lodge (BOUGE FORTIFIE) that you must be taking
+pleasure there, for he that gives pleasure gets it.
+
+"You have already seen the jolly Ambassador of the amiablest Monarch in
+the world,"--Camas, a fattish man, on his road to Versailles (who called
+at Brussels here, with fine compliments, and a keg of Hungary Wine, as
+YOU may have heard whispered). "No doubt M. de Camas is with you. For my
+own share, I think it is after you that he is running at present. But
+in truth, at the hour while I say this, you are with the King;"--a lucky
+guess; King did return to Wesel this very day. "The Philosopher and the
+Prince perceive already that they are made for each other. You and M.
+Algarotti will say, FACIAMUS HIC TRIA TABERNACULA: as to me, I can only
+make DUO TABERNACULA,"--profane Voltaire!
+
+"Without doubt I would be with you if I were not at Brussels; but my
+heart is with you all the same; and is the subject, all the same, of a
+King who is, formed to reign over every thinking and feeling being. I do
+not despair that Madame du Chatelet will find herself somewhere on
+your route: it will be a scene in a fairy tale;--she will arrive with a
+SUFFICIENT REASON [as your Leibnitz says] and with MONADS. She does not
+love you the less though she now believes the universe a PLENUM, and has
+renounced the notion of VOID. Over her you have an ascendant which you
+will never lose. In fine, my dear Monsieur, I wish as ardently as she to
+embrace you the soonest possible. I recommend myself to your friendship
+in the Court, worthy of you, where you now are."--TOUT A VOUS, somewhat
+rheumatic! [Voltaire, lxxii. p. 243.]
+
+Always an anxious almost tremulous desire to conciliate this big glaring
+geometrical bully in red wig. Through the sensitive transparent being of
+M. de Voltaire, you may see that feeling almost painfully busy in every
+Letter he writes to the Flattener of the Earth.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV. -- VOLTAIRE'S FIRST INTERVIEW WITH FRIEDRICH.
+
+At Wesel, in the rear of all this travelling and excitement, Friedrich
+falls unwell; breaks down there into an aguish feverish distemper,
+which, for several months after, impeded his movements, would he have
+yielded to it. He has much business on hand, too,--some of it of prickly
+nature just now;--but is intent as ever on seeing Voltaire, among
+the first things. Diligently reading in the Voltaire-Friedrich
+Correspondence (which is a sad jumble of misdates and opacities, in
+the common editions), [Preuss (the recent latest Editor, and the only
+well-informed one, as we said) prints with accuracy; but cannot be read
+at all (in the sense of UNDERSTOOD) without other light.] this of
+the aguish condition frequently turns up; "Quartan ague," it seems;
+occasionally very bad; but Friedrich struggles with it; will not be
+cheated of any of his purposes by it.
+
+He had a busy fortnight here; busier than we yet imagine. Much
+employment there naturally is of the usual Inspection sort; which fails
+in no quarter of his Dominions, but which may be particularly important
+here, in these disputed Berg-Julich Countries, when the time of decision
+falls. How he does his Inspections we know;--and there are still
+weightier matters afoot here, in a silent way, of which we shall have to
+speak before long, and all the world will speak. Business enough,
+parts of it grave and silent, going on, and the much that is public,
+miscellaneous, small: done, all of it, in a rapid-punctual precise
+manner;--and always, after the crowded day, some passages of Supper
+with the Sages, to wind up with on melodious terms. A most alert and
+miscellaneously busy young King, in spite of the ague.
+
+It was in these Cleve Countries, and now as probably as afterwards,
+that the light scene recorded in Laveaux's poor HISTORY, and in all the
+Anecdote-Books, transacted itself one day. Substance of the story is
+true; though the details of it go all at random,--somewhat to this
+effect:--
+
+"Inspecting his Finance Affairs, and questioning the parties interested,
+Friedrich notices a certain Convent in Cleve, which appears to have,
+payable from the Forest-dues, considerable revenues bequeathed by the
+old Dukes, 'for masses to be said on their behalf.' He goes to look at
+the place; questions the Monks on this point, who are all drawn out
+in two rows, and have broken into TE-DEUM at sight of him: 'Husht! You
+still say those Masses, then?' 'Certainly, your Majesty!'--'And what
+good does anybody get of them?' 'Your Majesty, those old Sovereigns are
+to obtain Heavenly mercy by them, to be delivered out of Purgatory by
+them.'--'Purgatory? It is a sore thing for the Forests, all this while!
+And they are not yet out, those poor souls, after so many hundred years
+of praying?' Monks have a fatal apprehension, No. 'When will they be
+out, and the thing complete?' Monks cannot say. 'Send me a courier
+whenever it is complete!' sneers the King, and leaves them to their
+TE-DEUM." [C. Hildebrandt's Modern Edition of the (mostly dubious)
+_Anekdoten und Charakterzuge aus dem Leben Friedrichs des Grossen_ (and
+a very ignorant and careless Edition it is; 6 vols. 12mo, Halberstadt,
+1829), ii. 160; Laveaus (whom we already cited), _Vie de Frederic;_
+&c. &c. Nicolai's _Anekdoten_ alone, which are not included in this
+Hildebrandt Collection, are of sure authenticity; the rest, occasionally
+true, and often with a kind of MYTHIC truth in them worth attending to,
+are otherwise of all degrees of dubiety, down to the palpably false and
+absurd.]
+
+Mournful state of the Catholic Religion so called! How long must
+these wretched Monks go on doing their lazy thrice-deleterious torpid
+blasphemy; and a King, not histrionic but real, merely signify that he
+laughs at them and it? Meseems a heavier whip than that of satire might
+be in place here, your Majesty? The lighter whip is easier;--Ah yes,
+undoubtedly! cry many men. But horrible accounts are running up, enough
+to sink the world at last, while the heavier whip is lazily withheld,
+and lazy blasphemy, fallen torpid, chronic, and quite unconscious of
+being blasphemous, insinuates itself into the very heart's-blood of
+mankind! Patience, however; the heavy whip too is coming,--unless
+universal death be coming. King Friedrich is not the man to wield such
+whip. Quite other work is in store for King Friedrich; and Nature will
+not, by any suggestion of that terrible task, put him out in the one
+he has. He is nothing of a Luther, of a Cromwell; can look upon fakirs
+praying by their rotatory calabash, as a ludicrous platitude; and grin
+delicately as above, with the approval of his wiser contemporaries.
+Speed to him on his own course!
+
+What answer Friedrich found to his English proposals,--answer due here
+on the 24th from Captain Dickens,--I do not pointedly learn; but can
+judge of it by Harrington's reply to that Despatch of Dickens's,
+which entreated candor and open dealing towards his Prussian Majesty.
+Harrington is at Herrenhausen, still with the Britannic Majesty there;
+both of them much at a loss about their Spanish War, and the French
+and other aspects upon it: "Suppose his Prussian Majesty were to give
+himself to France against us!" We will hope, not. Harrington's reply
+is to the effect, "Hum, drum:--Berg and Julich, say you? Impossible to
+answer; minds not made up here:--What will his Prussian Majesty do for
+US?" Not much, I should guess, till something more categorical come
+from you! His Prussian Majesty is careful not to spoil anything by
+over-haste; but will wait and try farther to the utmost, Whether England
+or France is the likelier bargain for him.
+
+Better still, the Prussian Majesty is intent to do something for himself
+in that Berg-Julich matter: we find him silently examining these Wesel
+localities for a proper "entrenched Camp," Camp say of 40,000, against a
+certain contingency that may be looked for. Camp which will much occupy
+the Gazetteers when they get eye on it. This is one of the concerns
+he silently attends to, on occasion, while riding about in the Cleve
+Countries. Then there is another small item of business, important to
+do well, which is now in silence diligently getting under way at Wesel;
+which also is of remarkable nature, and will astonish the Gazetteer and
+Diplomatic circles. This is the affair with the Bishop of Liege, called
+also the Affair of Herstal, which his Majesty has had privately laid up
+in the corner of his mind, as a thing to be done during this Excursion.
+Of which the reader shall hear anon, to great lengths,--were a certain
+small preliminary matter, Voltaire's Arrival in these parts, once off
+our hands.
+
+Friedrich's First Meeting with Voltaire! These other high things were
+once loud in the Gazetteer and Diplomatic circles, and had no doubt
+they were the World's History; and now they are sunk wholly to the
+Nightmares, and all mortals have forgotten them,--and it is such a task
+as seldom was to resuscitate the least memory of them, on just cause
+of a Friedrich or the like, so impatient are men of what is putrid and
+extinct:--and a quite unnoticed thing, Voltaire's First Interview,
+all readers are on the alert for it, and ready to demand of me
+impossibilities about it! Patience, readers. You shall see it, without
+and within, in such light as there was, and form some actual notion
+of it, if you will co-operate. From the circumambient inanity of Old
+Newspapers, Historical shot-rubbish, and unintelligible Correspondences,
+we sift out the following particulars, of this First Meeting, or actual
+Osculation of the Stars.
+
+The Newspapers, though their eyes were not yet of the Argus quality now
+familiar to us, have been intent on Friedrich during this Baireuth-Cleve
+Journey, especially since that sudden eclipse of him at Strasburg
+lately; forming now one scheme of route for him, now another;
+Newspapers, and even private friends, being a good deal uncertain
+about his movements. Rumor now ran, since his reappearance in the Cleve
+Countries, that Friedrich meant to have a look at Holland before going
+home, And that had, in fact, been a notion or intention of Friedrich's.
+"Holland? We could pass through Brussels on the way, and see Voltaire!"
+thought he.
+
+In Brussels this was, of course, the rumor of rumors. As Voltaire's
+Letters, visibly in a twitter, still testify to us. King of
+Prussia coming! Madame du Chatelet, the "Princess Tour" (that is,
+Tour-and-Taxis), all manner of high Dames are on the tiptoe. Princess
+Tour hopes she shall lodge this unparalleled Prince in her Palace: "You,
+Madame?" answers the Du Chatelet, privately, with a toss of her head:
+"His Majesty, I hope, belongs more to M. de Voltaire and me: he shall
+lodge here, please Heaven!" Voltaire, I can observe, has sublime
+hostelry arrangements chalked out for his Majesty, in case he go to
+Paris; which he does n't, as we know. Voltaire is all on the alert,
+awake to the great contingencies far and near; the Chatelet-Voltaire
+breakfast-table,--fancy it on those interesting mornings, while the post
+comes round! [Voltaire, xxii. 238-256 (Letters 22d August-22d September,
+1740).]
+
+Alas, in the first days of September,--Friedrich's Letter is dated
+"Wesel, 2d" (and has the STRASBURD DOGGEREL enclosed in it),--the
+Brussels Postman delivers far other intelligence at one's door; very
+mortifying to Madame: "That his Majesty is fallen ill at Wesel; has
+an aguish fever hanging on him, and only hopes to come:" VOILA,
+Madame!--Next Letter, Wesel, Monday, 5th September, is to the effect:
+"Do still much hope to come; to-morrow is my trembling day; if that
+prove to be off!"--Out upon it, that proves not to be off; that is on:
+next Letter, Tuesday, September 6th, which comes by express (Courier
+dashing up with it, say on the Thursday following) is,--alas,
+Madame!--here it is:--
+
+KING FRIEDRICH TO M. DE VOLTAIRE AT BRUSSELS.
+
+"WESEL, 6th September, 1740. "MY DEAR VOLTAIRE,--In spite of myself,
+I have to yield to the Quartan Fever, which is more tenacious than a
+Jansenist; and whatever desire I had of going to Antwerp and Brussels, I
+find myself not in a condition to undertake such a journey without risk.
+I would ask of you, then, if the road from Brussels to Cleve would not
+to you seem too long for a meeting; it is the one means of seeing you
+which remains to me. Confess that I am unlucky; for now when I could
+dispose of my person, and nothing hinders me from seeing you, the fever
+gets its hand into the business, and seems to intend disputing me that
+satisfaction.
+
+"Let us deceive the fever, my dear Voltaire; and let me at least have
+the pleasure of embracing you. Make my best excuses [polite, rather than
+sincere] to Madame the MARQUISE, that I cannot have the satisfaction of
+seeing her at Brussels. All that are about me know the intention I was
+in; which certainly nothing but the fever could have made me change.
+
+"Sunday next I shall be at a little Place near Cleve,"--Schloss of
+Moyland, which, and the route to which, this Courier can tell you
+of;--"where I shall be able to possess you at my ease. If the sight of
+you don't cure me, I will send for a Confessor at once. Adieu; you know
+my sentiments and my heart. [Preuss, _OEuvres de Frederic,_ xxii. 27.]
+FREDERIC."
+
+After which the Correspondence suddenly extinguishes itself; ceases for
+about a fortnight,--in the bad misdated Editions even does worse;--and
+we are left to thick darkness, to our own poor shifts; Dryasdust being
+grandly silent on this small interest of ours. What is to be done?
+
+
+
+
+PARTICULARS OF FIRST INTERVIEW, ON SEVERE SCRUTINY.
+
+Here, from a painful Predecessor whose Papers I inherit, are some old
+documents and Studies on the subject,--sorrowful collection, in fact,
+of what poor sparks of certainty were to be found hovering in that
+dark element;--which do at last (so luminous are certainties always,
+or "sparks" that will shine steady) coalesce into some feeble general
+twilight, feeble but indubitable; and even show the sympathetic reader
+how they were searched out and brought together. We number and label
+these poor Patches of Evidence on so small a matter; and leave them to
+the curious:--
+
+No. 1. DATE OF THE FIRST INTERVIEW. It is certain Voltaire did arrive at
+the little Schloss of Moyland, September 11th, Sunday night,--which is
+the "Sunday" just specified in Friedrich's Letter. Voltaire had at once
+decided on complying,--what else?--and lost no time in packing himself:
+King's Courier on Thursday late; Voltaire on the road on Saturday early,
+or the night before. With Madame's shrill blessing (not the most
+musical in this vexing case), and plenty of fuss. "Was wont to travel
+in considerable style," I am told; "the innkeepers calling him 'Your
+Lordship' (M. LE COMTE)." Arrives, sure enough, Sunday night; old Schloss
+of Moyland, six miles from Cleve; "moonlight," I find,--the Harvest
+Moon. Visit lasted three days. [Rodenbeck, p. 21; Preuss, &c. &c.]
+
+No. 2. VOLTAIRE'S DRIVE THITHER. Schloss Moyland: How far from Brussels,
+and by what route? By Louvain, Tillemont, Tongres to Maestricht; then
+from Maestricht up the Maas (left bank) to Venlo, where cross; through
+Geldern and Goch to Cleve: between the Maas and Rhine this last portion.
+Flat damp country; tolerably under tillage; original constituents bog
+and sand. Distances I guess to be: To Tongres 60 miles and odd; to
+Maestricht 12 or 15, from Maestricht 75; in all 150 miles English. Two
+days' driving? There is equinoctial moon, and still above twelve hours
+of sunlight for "M. le Comte."
+
+No. 3. OF THE PLACE WHERE. Voltaire, who should have known, calls it
+"PETIT CHATEAU DE MEUSE;" which is a Castle existing nowhere but in
+Dreams. Other French Biographers are still more imaginary. The little
+Schloss of Moyland--by no means "Meuse," nor even MORS, which Voltaire
+probably means in saying CHATEAU DE MEUSE--was, as the least inquiry
+settles beyond question, the place where Voltaire and Friedrich first
+met. Friedrich Wilhelm used often to lodge there in his Cleve journeys:
+he made thither for shelter, in the sickness that overtook him in friend
+Ginkel's house, coming home from the Rhine Campaign in 1734; lay there
+for several weeks after quitting Ginkel's. Any other light I can
+get upon it, is darkness visible. Busching pointedly informs me,
+[_Erdbeschreibung_, v. 659, 677.] "It is a Parish [or patch of country
+under one priest], and Till AND it are a Jurisdiction" (pair of patches
+under one court of justice):--which does not much illuminate the
+inquiring mind. Small patch, this of Moyland, size not given; "was
+bought," says he, "in 1695, by Friedrich afterwards First King, from
+the Family of Spaen,"--we once knew a Lieutenant Spaen, of those Dutch
+regions,--"and was named a Royal Mansion ever thereafter." Who lived in
+it; what kind of thing was it, is it? ALTUM SILENTIUM, from Busching and
+mankind. Belonged to the Spaens, fifty years ago;--some shadow of
+our poor banished friend the Lieutenant resting on it? Dim enough old
+Mansion, with "court" to it, with modicum of equipment; lying there in
+the moonlight;--did not look sublime to Voltaire on stepping out. So
+that all our knowledge reduces itself to this one point: of finding
+Moyland in the Map, with DATE, with REMINISCENCE to us, hanging by
+it henceforth! Good. [Stieler's _Deutschland_ (excellent Map in 25
+Pieces), Piece 12.--Till is a mile or two northeast from Moyland;
+Moyland about 5 or 6 southeast from Cleve.]
+
+Mors--which is near the Town of Ruhrort, about midway between Wesel
+and Dusseldorf--must be some forty miles from Moyland, forty-five from
+Cleve; southward of both. So that the place, "A DEUX LIEUES DE CLEVES,"
+is, even by Voltaire's showing, this Moyland; were there otherwise any
+doubt upon it. "CHATEAU DE MEUSE"--hanging out a prospect of MORS
+to us--is bad usage to readers. Of an intelligent man, not to say a
+Trismegistus of men, one expects he will know in what town he is, after
+three days' experience, as here. But he does not always; he hangs out a
+mere "shadow of Mars by moonlight," till we learn better. Duvernet, his
+Biographer, even calls it "SLEUS-MEUSE;" some wonderful idea of Sluices
+and a River attached to it, in Duvernet's head! [Duvernet (2d FORM of
+him,--that is, _Vie de Voltaire_ par T. J. D. V.), p. 117.]
+
+
+
+
+WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF THE INTERVIEW TWENTY YEARS AFTERWARDS
+
+Of the Interview itself, with general bird's-eye view of the Visit
+combined (in a very incorrect state), there is direct testimony by
+Voltaire himself. Voltaire himself, twenty years after, in far other
+humor, all jarred into angry sarcasm, for causes we shall see by and
+by,--Voltaire, at the request of friends, writes down, as his Friedrich
+Reminiscences, that scandalous VIE PRIVEE above spoken of, a most sad
+Document; and this is the passage referring to "the little Place in
+the neighborhood of Cleve," where Friedrich now waited for him: errors
+corrected by our laborious Friend. After quoting something of that
+Strasburg Doggerel, the whole of which is now too well known to us,
+Voltaire proceeds:--
+
+"From Strasburg he," King Friedrich, "went to see his Lower German
+Provinces; he said he would come and see me incognito at Brussels. We
+prepared a fine house for him,"--were ready to prepare such hired
+house as we had for him, with many apologies for its slight degree
+of perfection (ERROR FIRST),--"but having fallen ill in the little
+Mansion-Royal of Meuse (CHATEAU DE MEUSE), a couple of leagues from
+Cleve,"--fell ill at Wesel; and there is no Chateau de MEUSE in the
+world (ERRORS 2d AND 3d),--"he wrote to me that he expected I would
+make the advances. I went, accordingly, to present my profound homages.
+Maupertuis, who already had his views, and was possessed with the rage
+of being President to an Academy, had of his own accord,"--no, being
+invited, and at my suggestion (ERROR 4th),--"presented himself there;
+and was lodged with Algarotti and Keyserling [which latter, I suppose,
+had come from Berlin, not being of the Strasburg party, he] in a garret
+of this Palace.
+
+"At the door of the court, I found, by way of guard, one soldier.
+Privy-Councillor Rambonet, Minister of State--[very subaltern man; never
+heard of him except in the Herstal Business, and here] was walking in
+the court; blowing in his fingers to keep them warm." Sunday night,
+11th September, 1740; world all bathed in moonshine; and mortals mostly
+shrunk into their huts, out of the raw air. "He" Rambonet "wore big
+linen ruffles at his wrists, very dirty [visibly so in the moonlight?
+ERROR 5th extends AD LIBITUM over all the following details]; a holed
+hat; an old official periwig,"--ruined into a totally unsymmetric state,
+as would seem,--"one side of which hung down into one of his pockets,
+and the other scarcely crossed his shoulder. I was told, this man
+was now intrusted with an affair of importance here; and that proved
+true,"--the Herstal Affair.
+
+"I was led into his Majesty's apartment. Nothing but four bare walls
+there. By the light of a candle, I perceived, in a closet, a little
+truckle-bed two feet and a half broad, on which lay a man muffled up in
+a dressing-gown of coarse blue duffel: this was the King, sweating and
+shivering under a wretched blanket there, in a violent fit of fever. I
+made my reverence, and began the acquaintance by feeling his pulse, as
+if I had been his chief physician. The fit over, he dressed himself,
+and took his place at table. Algarotti, Keyserling, Maupertuis, and the
+King's Envoy to the States-General"--one Rasfeld (skilled in HERSTAL
+matters, I could guess),--"we were of this supper, and discussed,
+naturally in a profound manner, the Immortality of the Soul, Liberty,
+Fate, the Androgynes of Plato [the ANDROGYNOI, or Men-Women, in
+Plato's CONVIVIUM; by no means the finest symbolic fancy of the divine
+Plato],--and other small topics of that nature." [Voltaire, _OEuvres,_
+(Piece once called VIE PRIVEE), ii. 26, 27.]
+
+This is Voltaire's account of the Visit,--which included three
+"Suppers," all huddled into one by him here;--and he says nothing
+more of it; launching off now into new errors, about HERSTAL, the
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL, and so forth: new and uglier errors, with much more of
+mendacity and serious malice in them, than in this harmless half-dozen
+now put on the score against him.
+
+Of this Supper-Party, I know by face four of the guests: Maupertuis,
+Voltaire, Algarotti, Keyserling;--Rasfeld, Rambonet can sit as simulacra
+or mute accompaniment. Voltaire arrived on Sunday evening; stayed till
+Wednesday. Wednesday morning, 14th of the month, the Party broke up:
+Voltaire rolling off to left hand, towards Brussels, or the Hague; King
+to right, on inspection business, and circuitously homewards. Three
+Suppers there had been, two busy Days intervening; discussions about
+Fate and the Androgynoi of Plato by no means the one thing done by
+Voltaire and the rest, on this occasion. We shall find elsewhere, "he
+declaimed his MAHOMET" (sublime new Tragedy, not yet come out), in the
+course of these three evenings, to the "speechless admiration" of his
+Royal Host, for one; and, in the daytime, that he even drew his pen
+about the Herstal Business, which is now getting to its crisis, and
+wrote one of the Manifestoes, still discoverable. And we need not doubt,
+in spite of his now sneering tone, that things ran high and grand here,
+in this paltry little Schloss of Moyland; and that those three were
+actually Suppers of the Gods, for the time being.
+
+"Councillor Rambonet," with the holed hat and unsymmetric wig,
+continues Voltaire in the satirical vein, "had meanwhile mounted a hired
+hack (CHEVAL DE LOUAGE;" mischievous Voltaire, I have no doubt he went
+on wheels, probably of his own): "he rode all night; and next morning
+arrived at the gates of Liege; where he took Act in the name of the
+King his Master, whilst 2,000 men of the Wesel Troops laid Liege under
+contribution. The pretext of this fine Marching of Troops,"--not a
+pretext at all, but the assertion, correct in all points, of just claims
+long trodden down, and now made good with more spirit than had been
+expected,--"was certain rights which the King pretended to, over a
+suburb of Liege. He even charged me to work at a Manifesto; and I made
+one, good or bad; not doubting but a King with whom I supped, and who
+called me his friend, must be in the right. The affair soon settled
+itself by means of a million of ducats,"--nothing like the sum, as we
+shall see,--"which he exacted by weight, to clear the costs of the Tour
+to Strasburg, which, according to his complaint in that Poetic Letter
+[Doggerel above given], were so heavy."
+
+That is Voltaire's view; grown very corrosive after Twenty Years. He
+admits, with all the satire: "I naturally felt myself attached to him;
+for he had wit, graces; and moreover he was a King, which always forms
+a potent seduction, so weak is human nature. Usually it is we of the
+writing sort that flatter Kings: but this King praised me from head to
+foot, while the Abbe Desfontaines and other scoundrels (GREDINS) were
+busy defaming me in Paris at least once a week."
+
+
+
+
+WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF THE INTERVIEW AT THE TIME.
+
+But let us take the contemporary account, which also we have at first
+hand; which is almost pathetic to read; such a contrast between ruddy
+morning and the storms of the afternoon! Here are two Letters from
+Voltaire; fine transparent human Letters, as his generally are: the
+first of them written directly on getting back to the Hague, and to the
+feeling of his eclipsed condition.
+
+VOLTAIRE TO M. DE MAUPERTUIS (with the King). "THE HAGUE, 18th
+September, 1740.
+
+"I serve you, Monsieur, sooner than I promised; and that is the way you
+ought to be served. I send you the answer of M. Smith,"--probably some
+German or Dutch SCHMIDT, spelt here in English, connected with the
+Sciences, say with water-carriage, the typographies, or one need not
+know what; "you will see where the question stands.
+
+"When we both left Cleve,"--14th of the month, Wednesday last; 18th
+is Sunday, in this old cobwebby Palace, where I am correcting
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL,--"and you took to the right,"--King, homewards, got to
+HAM that evening,--"I could have thought I was at the Last Judgment,
+where the Bon Dieu separates the elect from the damned. DIVUS FREDERICUS
+said to you, 'Sit down at my right hand in the Paradise of Berlin;' and
+to me, 'Depart, thou accursed, into Holland.'
+
+"Here I am accordingly in this phlegmatic place of punishment, far
+from the divine fire which animates the Friedrichs, the Maupertuis, the
+Algarottis. For God's love, do me the charity of some sparks in these
+stagnant waters where I am,"--stiffening, cooling,--"stupefying
+to death. Instruct me of your pleasures, of your designs. You will
+doubtless see M. de Valori,"--readers know de Valori; his Book has been
+published; edited, as too usual, by a Human Nightmare, ignorant of his
+subject and indeed of almost all other things, and liable to mistakes
+in every page; yet partly readable, if you carry lanterns, and love "MON
+GROS VALORI:"--"offer him, I pray you, my respects. If I do not write to
+him, the reason is, I have no news to send: I should be as exact as I am
+devoted, if my correspondence could be useful or agreeable to him.
+
+"Won't you have me send you some Books? If I be still in Holland when
+your orders come, I will obey in a moment. I pray you do not forget me
+to M. de Keyserling,"--Caesarion whom we once had at Cirey; a headlong
+dusky little man of wit (library turned topsy-turvy, as Wilhelmina
+called him), whom we have seen.
+
+"Tell me, I beg, if the enormous monad of Volfius--[Wolf, would the
+reader like to hear about him? If so, he has only to speak!] is arguing
+at Marburg, at Berlin, or at Hall [HALLE, which is a very different
+place].
+
+"Adieu, Monsieur: you can address your orders to me 'At the Hague:'
+they will be forwarded wherever I am; and I shall be, anywhere on
+earth,--Yours forever (A VOUS POUR JAMAIS)." [Voltaire, lxxii. 252.]
+
+Letter Second, of which a fragment may be given, is to one Cideville, a
+month later; all the more genuine as there was no chance of the King's
+hearing about this one. Cideville, some kind of literary Advocate at
+Rouen (who is wearisomely known to the reader of Voltaire's Letters),
+had done, what is rather an endemical disorder at this time, some Verses
+for the King of Prussia, which he wished to be presented to his Majesty.
+The presentation, owing to accidents, did not take place; hear how
+Voltaire, from his cobweb Palace at the Hague, busy with ANTI-MACHIAVEL,
+Van Duren and many other things,--18th October, 1740, on which day we
+find him writing many Letters,--explains the sad accident:--
+
+VOLTAIRE TO M. DE CIDEVILLE (at Rouen).
+
+"AT THE HAGUE, KING OF PRUSSIA'S PALACE, 18th October, 1740.
+
+"... This is my case, dear Cideville. When you sent me, enclosed in
+your Letter, those Verses (among which there are some of charming and
+inimitable turn) for our Marcus Aurelius of the North, I did well design
+to pay my court to him with them. He was at that time to have come to
+Brussels incognito: we expected him there; but the Quartan Fever, which
+unhappily he still has, deranged all his projects. He sent me a courier
+to Brussels,"--mark that point, my Cideville;--"and so I set out to find
+him in the neighborhood of Cleve.
+
+"It was there I saw one of the amiablest men in the world, who forms the
+charm of society, who would be everywhere sought after if he were not
+King; a philosopher without austerity; full of sweetness, complaisance
+and obliging ways (AGREMENS); not remembering that he is King when he
+meets his friends; indeed so completely forgetting it that he made me
+too almost forget it, and I needed an effort of memory to recollect that
+I here saw sitting at the foot of my bed a Sovereign who had an Army
+of 100,000 men. That was the moment to have read your amiable Verses to
+him:"--yes; but then?--"Madame du Chatelet, who was to have sent them
+to me, did not, NE L'A PA FAIT." Alas, no, they are still at Brussels,
+those charming Verses; and I, for a month past, am here in my cobweb
+Palace! But I swear to you, the instant I return to Brussels, I, &c. &c.
+[Voltaire, lxii. 282.]
+
+Finally, here is what Friedrich thought of it, ten days after parting
+with Voltaire. We will read this also (though otherwise ahead of us as
+yet); to be certified on all sides, and sated for the rest of our lives,
+concerning the Friedrich-Voltaire First Interview.
+
+KING FRIEDRICH TO M. JORDAN (at Berlin).
+
+POTSDAM, 24th September, 1740.
+
+"Most respectable Inspector of the poor, the invalids, orphans, crazy
+people and Bedlams,--I have read with mature meditation the very
+profound Jordanic Letter which was waiting here;"--and do accept your
+learned proposal.
+
+"I have seen that Voltaire whom I was so curious to know; but I saw him
+with the Quartan hanging on me, and my mind as unstrung as my body. With
+men of his kind one ought not to be sick; one ought even to be specially
+well, and in better health than common, if one could.
+
+"He has the eloquence of Cicero, the mildness of Pliny, the wisdom of
+Agrippa; he combines, in short, what is to be collected of virtues and
+talents from the three greatest men of Antiquity. His intellect is at
+work incessantly; every drop of ink is a trait of wit from his pen.
+He declaimed his MAHOMET to us, an admirable Tragedy which he has
+done,"--which the Official people smelling heresies in it ("toleration,"
+"horrors of fanaticism," and the like) will not let him act, as readers
+too well know:--"he transported us out of ourselves; I could only admire
+and hold my tongue. The Du Chatelet is lucky to have him: for of the
+good things he flings out at random, a person who had no faculty but
+memory might make a brilliant Book. That Minerva has just published her
+Work on PHYSICS: not wholly bad. It was Konig"--whom we know, and whose
+late tempest in a certain teapot--"that dictated the theme to her: she
+has adjusted, ornamented here and there with some touch picked from
+Voltaire at her Suppers. The Chapter on Space is pitiable; the"--in
+short, she is still raw in the Pure Sciences, and should have waited....
+
+"Adieu, most learned, most scientific, most profound Jordan,--or rather
+most gallant, most amiable, most jovial Jordan;--I salute thee, with
+assurance of all those old feelings which thou hast the art of inspiring
+in every one that knows thee. VALE.
+
+"I write the moment of my arrival: be obliged to me, friend; for I have
+been working, I am going to work still, like a Turk, or like a Jordan."
+[_OEuvres de Frederic,_ xvii. 71.]
+
+This is hastily thrown off for Friend Jordan, the instant after his
+Majesty's circuitous return home. Readers cannot yet attend his
+Majesty there, till they have brought the Affair of Herstal, and other
+remainders of the Cleve Journey, along with them.
+
+
+
+Chapter V. -- AFFAIR OF HERSTAL.
+
+This Rambonet, whom Voltaire found walking in the court of the old
+Castle of Moyland, is an official gentleman, otherwise unknown to
+History, who has lately been engaged in a Public Affair; and is now
+off again about it, "on a hired hack" or otherwise,--with very good
+instructions in his head. Affair which, though in itself but small,
+is now beginning to make great noise in the world, as Friedrich wends
+homewards out of his Cleve Journey. He has set it fairly alight,
+Voltaire and he, before quitting Moyland; and now it will go of itself.
+The Affair of Herstal, or of the Bishop of Liege; Friedrich's first
+appearance on the stage of politics. Concerning which some very brief
+notice, if intelligible, will suffice readers of the present day.
+
+Heristal, now called Herstal, was once a Castle known to all mankind;
+King Pipin's Castle, who styled himself "Pipin of Heristal," before he
+became King of the Franks and begot Charlemagne. It lies on the Maas, in
+that fruitful Spa Country; left bank of the Maas, a little to the north
+of Liege; and probably began existence as a grander place than Liege
+(LUTTICH), which was, at first, some Monastery dependent on secular
+Herstal and its grandeurs:--think only how the race has gone between
+these two entities; spiritual Liege now a big City, black with the
+smoke of forges and steam-mills; Herstal an insignificant Village,
+accidentally talked of for a few weeks in 1740, and no chance ever to be
+mentioned again by men.
+
+Herstal, in the confused vicissitudes of a thousand years, had passed
+through various fortunes, and undergone change of owners often enough.
+Fifty years ago it was in the hands of the Nassau-Orange House; Dutch
+William, our English Protestant King, who probably scarce knew of his
+possessing it, was Lord of Herstal till his death. Dutch William had no
+children to inherit Herstal: he was of kinship to the Prussian House, as
+readers are aware; and from that circumstance, not without a great deal
+of discussion, and difficult "Division of the Orange Heritage," this
+Herstal had, at the long last, fallen to Friedrich Wilhelm's share;
+it and Neuchatel, and the Cobweb Palace, and some other places and
+pertinents.
+
+For Dutch William was of kin, we say; Friedrich I. of Prussia, by his
+Mother the noble Wife of the Great Elector, was full cousin to Dutch
+William: and the Marriage Contracts were express,--though the High
+Mightinesses made difficulties, and the collateral Orange branches were
+abundantly reluctant, when it came to the fulfilling point. For indeed
+the matter was intricate. Orange itself, for example, what was to be
+done with the Principality of Orange? Clearly Prussia's; but it lies
+imbedded deep in the belly of France, that will be a Caesarean-Operation
+for you! Had not Neuchatel happened just then to fall home to France (or
+in some measure to France) and be heirless, Prussia's Heritage of Orange
+would have done little for Prussia! Principality of Orange was, by
+this chance, long since, mainly in the First King's time, got settled:
+[Neuchatel, 3d November, 1707, to Friedrich I., natives preferring him
+to "Fifteen other Claimants;" Louis XIV. loudly protesting: not till
+Treaty of Utrecht (14th March 1713, first month of Friedrich Wilhelm's
+reign) would Louis XIV., on cession of Orange, consent and sanction.]
+but there needed many years more of good waiting, and of good pushing,
+on Friedrich Wilhelm's part; and it was not till 1732 that Friedrich
+Wilhelm got the Dutch Heritages finally brought to the square: Neuchatel
+and Valengin, as aforesaid, in lieu of Orange; and now furthermore,
+the Old Palace at Loo (that VIEILLE COUR and biggest cobwebs), with
+pertinents, with Garden of Honslardik; and a string of items, bigger and
+less, not worth enumerating. Of the items, this Herstal was one;--and
+truly, so far as this went, Friedrich Wilhelm often thought he had
+better never have seen it, so much trouble did it bring him.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE HERSTALLERS HAD BEHAVED TO FRIEDRICH WILHELM.
+
+The Herstal people, knowing the Prussian recruiting system and other
+rigors, were extremely unwilling to come under Friedrich Wilhelm's sway,
+could they have helped it. They refused fealty, swore they never would
+swear: nor did they, till the appearance, or indubitable foreshine, of
+Friedrich Wilhelm's bayonets advancing on them from the East, brought
+compliance. And always after, spite of such quasi-fealty, they showed
+a pig-like obstinacy of humor; a certain insignificant, and as it were
+impertinent, deep-rooted desire to thwart, irritate and contradict the
+said Friedrich Wilhelm. Especially in any recruiting matter that might
+arise, knowing that to be the weak side of his Prussian Majesty.
+All this would have amounted to nothing, had it not been that their
+neighbor, the Prince Bishop of Liege, who imagined himself to have some
+obscure claims of sovereignty over Herstal, and thought the present a
+good opportunity for asserting these, was diligent to aid and abet the
+Herstal people in such their mutinous acts. Obscure claims; of which
+this is the summary, should the reader not prefer to skip it:--
+
+"The Bishop of Liege's claims on Herstal (which lie wrapt from mankind
+in the extensive jungle of his law-pleadings, like a Bedlam happily
+fallen extinct) seem to me to have grown mainly from two facts more or
+less radical.
+
+"FACT FIRST. In Kaiser Barbarossa's time, year 1171, Herstal had
+been given in pawn to the Church of Liege, for a loan, by the then
+proprietor, Duke of Lorraine and Brabant. Loan was repaid, I do not
+learn when, and the Pawn given back; to the satisfaction of said Duke,
+or Duke's Heirs; never quite to the satisfaction of the Church, which
+had been in possession, and was loath to quit, after hoping to continue.
+'Give us back Herstal; it ought to be ours!' Unappeasable sigh or
+grumble to this effect is heard thenceforth, at intervals, in the
+Chapter of Liege, and has not ceased in Friedrich's time. But as the
+world, in its loud thoroughfares, seldom or never heard, or could hear,
+such sighing in the Chapter, nothing had come of it,--till--
+
+"FACT SECOND. In Kaiser Karl V.'s time, the Prince Bishop of Liege
+happened to be a Natural Son of old Kaiser Max's;--and had friends at
+headquarters, of a very choice nature. Had, namely, in this sort, Kaiser
+Karl for Nephew or Half-Nephew; and what perhaps was still better, as
+nearer hand, had Karl's Aunt, Maria Queen of Hungary, then Governess of
+the Netherlands, for Half-Sister. Liege, in these choice circumstances,
+and by other good chances that turned up, again got temporary clutch
+or half-clutch of Herstal, for a couple of years (date 1546-1548, the
+Prince of Orange, real proprietor, whose Ancestor had bought it for
+money down, being then a minor); once, and perhaps a second time in like
+circumstance; but had always to renounce it again, when the Prince of
+Orange came to maturity. And ever since, the Chapter of Liege sighs as
+before, 'Herstal is perhaps in a sense ours. We had once some kind of
+right to it!'--sigh inaudible in the loud public thoroughfares. That is
+the Bishop's claim. The name of him, if anybody care for it, is 'Georg
+Ludwig, titular COUNT OF BERG,' now a very old man: Bishop of Liege, he,
+and has been snatching at Herstal again, very eagerly by any skirt or
+tagrag that might happen to fly loose, these eight years past, in a
+rash and provoking manner; [_Delices du Pais de Liege_ (Liege, 1738);
+_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 57-62.]--age eighty-two at present; poor old
+fool, he had better have sat quiet. There lies a rod in pickle for him,
+during these late months; and will be surprisingly laid on, were the
+time come!"
+
+"I have Law Authority over Herstal, and power of judging there in the
+last appeal," said this Bishop:--"You!" thought Friedrich Wilhelm, who
+was far off, and had little time to waste.--"Any Prussian recruiter that
+behaves ill, bring him to me!" said the Bishop, who was on the spot.
+And accordingly it had been done; one notable instance two years ago:
+a Prussian Lieutenant locked in the Liege jail, on complaint of riotous
+Herstal; thereupon a Prussian Officer of rank (Colonel Kreutzen, worthy
+old Malplaquet gentleman) coming as Royal Messenger, not admitted to
+audience, nay laid hold of by the Liege bailiff instead; and other
+unheard-of procedures. [_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 63-73.] So that
+Friedrich Wilhelm had nothing but trouble with this petty Herstal, and
+must have thought his neighbor Bishop a very contentious high-flying
+gentleman, who took great liberties with the Lion's whiskers, when he
+had the big animal at an advantage.
+
+The episcopal procedures, eight years ago, about the First Homaging of
+Herstal, had been of similar complexion; nor had other such failed in
+the interim, though this last outrage exceeded them all. This last began
+in the end of 1738; and span itself out through 1739, when Friedrich
+Wilhelm lay in his final sickness, less able to deal with it than
+formerly. Being a peaceable man, unwilling to awaken conflagrations for
+a small matter, Friedrich Wilhelm had offered, through Kreutzen on
+this occasion, to part with Herstal altogether; to sell it, for 100,000
+thalers, say 16,000 pounds, to the high-flying Bishop, and honestly wash
+his hands of it. But the high-flying Bishop did not consent, gave no
+definite answer; and so the matter lay,--like an unsettled extremely
+irritating paltry little matter,--at the time Friedrich Wilhelm died.
+
+The Gazetteers and public knew little about these particulars, or had
+forgotten them again; but at the Prussian Court they were in lively
+remembrance. What the young Friedrich's opinion about them had been we
+gather from this succinct notice of the thing, written seven or eight
+years afterwards, exact in all points, and still carrying a breath of
+the old humor in it. "A miserable Bishop of Liege thought it a proud
+thing to insult the late King. Some subjects of Herstal, which belongs
+to Prussia, had revolted; the Bishop gave them his protection. Colonel
+Kreutzen was sent to Liege, to compose the thing by treaty; credentials
+with him, full power, and all in order. Imagine it, the Bishop would not
+receive him! Three days, day after day, he saw this Envoy apply at his
+Palace, and always denied him entrance. These things had grown past
+endurance." [Preuss, _OEuvres (Memoires de Brandebourg)_, end ii. 53.]
+And Friedrich had taken note of Herstal along with him, on this Cleve
+Journey; privately intending to put Herstal and the high-flying Bishop
+on a suitabler footing, before his return from those countries.
+
+For indeed, on Friedrich's Accession, matters had grown worse, not
+better. Of course there was Fealty to be sworn; but the Herstal people,
+abetted by the high-flying Bishop, have declined swearing it. Apology
+for the past, prospect of amendment for the future, there is less than
+ever. What is the young King to do with this paltry little Hamlet
+of Herstal? He could, in theory, go into some Reichs-Hofrath,
+some Reichs-Kammergericht (kind of treble and tenfold English
+Court-of-Chancery, which has lawsuits 250 years old),--if he were
+a theoretic German King. He can plead in the Diets, and the Wetzlar
+Reichs-Kammergericht without end: "All German Sovereigns have power
+to send their Ambassador thither, who is like a mastiff chained in the
+back-yard [observes Friedrich elsewhere] with privilege of barking at
+the Moon,"--unrestricted privilege of barking at the Moon, if that will
+avail a practical man, or King's Ambassador. Or perhaps the Bishop of
+Liege will bethink him, at last, what considerable liberty he is taking
+with some people's whiskers? Four months are gone; Bishop of Liege has
+not in the least bethought him: we are in the neighborhood in person,
+with note of the thing in our memory.
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH TAKES THE ROD OUT OF PICKLE.
+
+Accordingly the Rath Rambonet, whom Voltaire found at Moyland that
+Sunday night, had been over at Liege; went exactly a week before; with
+this message of very peremptory tenor from his Majesty:--
+
+TO THE PRINCE BISHOP OF LIEGE.
+
+"WESEL, 4th September, 1740.
+
+"MY COUSIN,--Knowing all the assaults (ATTEINTES) made by you upon
+my indisputable rights over my free Barony of Herstal; and how
+the seditious ringleaders there, for several years past, have been
+countenanced (BESTARKET) by you in their detestable acts of disobedience
+against me,--I have commanded my Privy Councillor Rambonet to repair to
+your presence, and in my name to require from you, within two days, a
+distinct and categorical answer to this question: Whether you are still
+minded to assert your pretended sovereignty over Herstal; and whether
+you will protect the rebels at Herstal, in their disorders and
+abominable disobedience?
+
+"In case you refuse, or delay beyond the term, the Answer which I hereby
+of right demand, you will render yourself alone responsible, before the
+world, for the consequences which infallibly will follow. I am, with
+much consideration,--My Cousin,--
+
+"Your very affectionate Cousin,
+
+"FRIEDRICH." [_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 75, 111.]
+
+Rambonet had started straightway for Liege, with this missive; and had
+duly presented it there, I guess on the 7th,--with notice that he would
+wait forty-eight hours, and then return with what answer or no-answer
+there might be. Getting no written answer, or distinct verbal one;
+getting only some vague mumblement as good as none, Rambonet had
+disappeared from Liege on the 9th; and was home at Moyland when Voltaire
+arrived that Sunday evening,--just walking about to come to heat again,
+after reporting progress to the above effect.
+
+Rambonet, I judge, enjoyed only one of those divine Suppers at Moyland;
+and dashed off again, "on hired hack" or otherwise, the very next
+morning; that contingency of No-answer having been the anticipated one,
+and all things put in perfect readiness for it. Rambonet's new errand
+was to "take act," as Voltaire calls it, "at the Gates of Liege,"--to
+deliver at Liege a succinct Manifesto, Pair of Manifestoes, both in
+Print (ready beforehand), and bearing date that same Sunday, "Wesel,
+11th September;" much calculated to amaze his Reverence at Liege.
+Succinct good Manifestoes, said to be of Friedrich's own writing; the
+essential of the two is this:--
+
+_Exposition of the Reasons which have induced his Majesty the King of
+Prussia to make just Reprisals on the Prince Bishop of Liege._
+
+"His Majesty the King of Prussia, being driven beyond bounds by the rude
+proceedings of the Prince Bishop of Liege, has with regret seen himself
+forced to recur to the Method of Arms, in order to repress the violence
+and affront which the Bishop has attempted to put upon him. This
+resolution has cost his Majesty much pain; the rather as he is, by
+principle and disposition, far remote from whatever could have the least
+relation to rigor and severity.
+
+"But seeing himself compelled by the Bishop of Liege to take new
+methods, he had no other course but to maintain the justice of his
+rights (LA JUSTICE DE SES DROITS), and demand reparation for the
+indignity done upon his Minister Von Kreuzen, as well as for the
+contempt with which the Bishop of Liege has neglected even to answer the
+Letter of the King.
+
+"As too much rigor borders upon cruelty, so too much patience resembles
+weakness. Thus, although the King would willingly have sacrificed his
+interests to the public peace and tranquillity, it was not possible to
+do so in reference to his honor; and that is the chief motive which has
+determined him to this resolution, so contrary to his intentions.
+
+"In vain has it been attempted, by methods of mildness, to come to a
+friendly agreement: it has been found, on the contrary, that the King's
+moderation only increased the Prince's arrogance; that mildness of
+conduct on one side only furnished resources to pride on the other; and
+that, in fine, instead of gaining by soft procedure, one was insensibly
+becoming an object of vexation and disdain.
+
+"There being no means to have justice but in doing it for oneself, and
+the King being Sovereign enough for such a duty,--he intends to make
+the Prince of Liege feel how far he was in the wrong to abuse such
+moderation so unworthily. But in spite of so much unhandsome behavior on
+the part of this Prince, the King will not be inflexible; satisfied with
+having shown the said Prince that he can punish him, and too just
+to overwhelm him. FREDERIC. "WESEL, September 11th, 1740."
+[_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 77. Said to be by Friedrich himself (Stenzel,
+iv. 59).]
+
+Whether Rambonet insinuated his Paper-Packet into the Palace of Seraing,
+left it at the Gate of Liege (fixed by nail, if he saw good), or in what
+manner he "took act," I never knew; and indeed Rambonet vanishes
+from human History at this point: it is certain only that he did his
+Formality, say two days hence;--and that the Fact foreshadowed by it is
+likewise in the same hours, hour after hour, getting steadily done.
+
+For the Manifestoes printed beforehand, dated Wesel, 11th September,
+were not the only thing ready at Wesel; waiting, as on the slip, for the
+contingency of No-answer. Major-General Borck, with the due Battalions,
+squadrons and equipments, was also ready. Major-General Borck, the same
+who was with us at Baireuth lately, had just returned from that journey,
+when he got orders to collect 2,000 men, horse and foot, with the due
+proportion of artillery, from the Prussian Garrisons in these parts;
+and to be ready for marching with them, the instant the contingency of
+No-answer arrives,--Sunday, 11th, as can be foreseen. Borck knows his
+route: To Maaseyk, a respectable Town of the Bishop's, the handiest for
+Wesel; to occupy Maaseyk and the adjoining "Counties of Lotz and Horn;"
+and lie there at the Bishop's charge till his Reverence's mind alter.
+
+Borck is ready, to the last pontoon, the last munition-loaf; and no
+sooner is signal given of the No-answer come, than Borck, that same
+"Sunday, 11th," gets under way; marches, steady as clock-work, towards
+Maaseyk (fifty miles southwest of him, distance now lessening every
+hour); crosses the Maas, by help of his pontoons; is now in the Bishop's
+Territory, and enters Maaseyk, evening of "Wednesday, 14th,"--that
+very day Voltaire and his Majesty had parted, going different ways from
+Moyland; and probably about the same hour while Rambonet was "taking act
+at the Gate of Liege," by nail-hammer or otherwise. All goes punctual,
+swift, cog hitting pinion far and near, in this small Herstal Business;
+and there is no mistake made, and a minimum of time spent.
+
+Borck's management was throughout good: punctual, quietly exact, polite,
+mildly inflexible. Fain would the Maaseyk Town-Baths have shut their
+gates on him; desperately conjuring him, "Respite for a few hours, till
+we send to Liege for instructions!" But it was to no purpose. "Unbolt,
+IHR HERREN; swift, or the petard will have to do it!" Borck publishes
+his Proclamation, a mild-spoken rigorous Piece; signifies to the Maaseyk
+Authorities, That he has to exact a Contribution of 20,000 thalers
+(3,000 pounds) here, Contribution payable in three days; that he
+furthermore, while he continues in these parts, will need such and such
+rations, accommodations, allowances,--"fifty LOUIS (say guineas) daily
+for his own private expenses," one item;--and, in mild rhadamanthine
+language, waves aside all remonstrance, refusal or delay, as superfluous
+considerations: Unless said Contribution and required supplies come in,
+it will be his painful duty to bring them in. [_Helden-Geschichte,_ i.
+427; ii. 113.]
+
+The high-flying Bishop, much astonished, does now eagerly answer his
+Prussian Majesty, "Was from home, was ill, thought he had answered; is
+the most ill-used of Bishops;" and other things of a hysteric character.
+[Ib. ii. 85, 86 (date, 16th September).] And there came forth, as
+natural to the situation, multitudinous complainings, manifestoings,
+applications to the Kaiser, to the French, to the Dutch, of a very
+shrieky character on the Bishop of Liege's part; sparingly, if at all
+noticed on Friedrich's: the whole of which we shall consider ourselves
+free to leave undisturbed in the rubbish-abysses, as henceforth
+conceivable to the reader. "SED SPEM STUPENDE FEFELLIT EVENTUS," shrieks
+the poor old Bishop, making moan to the Kaiser: "ECCE ENIM, PRAEMISSA
+DUNTAXAT UNA LITERA, one Letter," and little more, "the said King of
+Borussia has, with about 2,000 horse and foot, and warlike engines,
+in this month of September, entered the Territory of Liege;"
+[_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 88.] which is an undeniable truth, but an
+unavailing. Borck is there, and "2,000 good arguments with him,"
+as Voltaire defines the phenomenon. Friedrich, except to explain
+pertinently what my readers already know, does not write or speak
+farther on the subject; and readers and he may consider the Herstal
+Affair, thus set agoing under Borck's auspices, as in effect finished;
+and that his Majesty has left it on a satisfactory footing, and may
+safely turn his back on it, to wait the sure issue at Berlin before
+long.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF HERSTAL.
+
+Voltaire told us he himself "did one Manifesto, good or bad," on this
+Herstal business:--where is that Piece, then, what has become of it?
+Dig well in the realms of Chaos, rectifying stupidities more or less
+enormous, the Piece itself is still discoverable; and, were pieces by
+Voltaire much a rarity instead of the reverse, might be resuscitated
+by a good Editor, and printed in his WORKS. Lies buried in the lonesome
+rubbish-mountains of that _Helden-Geschichte,_--let a SISTE VIATOR,
+scratched on the surface, mark where. [Ib. ii. 98-98.] Apparently that
+is the Piece by Voltaire? Yes, on reading that, it has every internal
+evidence; distinguishes itself from the surrounding pieces, like a slab
+of compact polished stone, in a floor rammed together out of ruinous old
+bricks, broken bottles and mortar-dust;--agrees, too, if you examine
+by the microscope, with the external indications, which are sure and
+at last clear, though infinitesimally small; and is beyond doubt
+Voltaire's, if it were now good for much.
+
+It is not properly a Manifesto, but an anonymous memoir published in the
+Newspapers, explaining to impartial mankind, in a legible brief manner,
+what the old and recent History of Herstal, and the Troubles of Herstal,
+have been, and how chimerical and "null to the extreme of nullity
+(NULLES DE TOUT NULLITE)" this poor Bishop's pretensions upon it are.
+Voltaire expressly piques himself on this Piece; [Letter to Friedrich:
+dateless, datable "soon after 17th September;" which the rash dark
+Editors have by guess misdated "August; "or, what was safer for them,
+omitted it altogether. _OEuvres de Voltaire_ (Paris, 1818, 40 vols.)
+gives the Letter, xxxix. 442 (see also ibid. 453, 463); later Editors,
+and even Preuss, take the safer course.] brags also how he settled "M.
+de Fenelon [French Ambassador at the Hague], who came to me the day
+before yesterday," much out of square upon the Herstal Business, till
+I pulled him straight. And it is evident (beautifully so, your Majesty)
+how Voltaire busied himself in the Gazettes and Diplomatic circles,
+setting Friedrich's case right; Voltaire very loyal to Friedrich and
+his Liege Cause at that time;--and the contrast between what his
+contemporary Letters say on the subject, and what his ulterior Pasquil
+called VIE PRIVEE says, is again great.
+
+The dull stagnant world, shaken awake by this Liege adventure, gives
+voice variously; and in the Gazetteer and Diplomatic circles it is much
+criticised, by no means everywhere in the favorable tone at this first
+blush of the business. "He had written an ANTI-Machiavel," says the Abbe
+St. Pierre, and even says Voltaire (in the PASQUIL, not the contemporary
+LETTERS), "and he acts thus!" Truly he does, Monsieur de Voltaire; and
+all men, with light upon the subject, or even with the reverse upon it,
+must make their criticisms. For the rest, Borck's "2,000 arguments" are
+there; which Borck handles well, with polite calm rigor: by degrees the
+dust will fall, and facts everywhere be seen for what they are.
+
+As to the high-flying Bishop, finding that hysterics are but wasted on
+Friedrich and Borck, and produce no effect with their 2,000 validities,
+he flies next to the Kaiser, to the Imperial Diet, in shrill-sounding
+Latin obtestations, of which we already gave a flying snatch: "Your
+HUMILISSIMUS and FIDELISSIMUS VASSALLUS, and most obsequient Servant,
+Georgius Ludovicus; meek, modest, and unspeakably in the right: Was ever
+Member of the Holy Roman Empire so snubbed, and grasped by the windpipe,
+before? Oh, help him, great Kaiser, bid the iron gripe loosen itself!"
+[_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii, 86-116.] The Kaiser does so, in heavy
+Latin rescripts, in German DEHORTATORIUMS more than one, of a sulky,
+imperative, and indeed very lofty tenor; "Let Georgius Ludovicus go,
+foolish rash young Dilection (LIEBDEN, not MAJESTY, we ourselves being
+the only Majesty), and I will judge between you; otherwise--!" said the
+Kaiser, ponderously shaking his Olympian wig, and lifting his gilt cane,
+or sceptre of mankind, in an Olympian manner. Here are some touches of
+his second sublimest DEHORTATORIUM addressed to Friedrich, in a very
+compressed state: [_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 127; a FIRST and milder
+(ibid. 73).]--
+
+We Karl the Sixth, Kaiser of (TITLES ENOUGH),... "Considering these, in
+the Holy Roman Reich, almost unheard-of violent Doings (THATLICHKEITEN),
+which We, in Our Supreme-Judge Office, cannot altogether justify, nor
+will endure... We have the trust that you yourself will magnanimously
+see How evil counsellors have misled your Dilection to commence your
+Reign, not by showing example of Obedience to the Laws appointed for all
+members of the Reich, for the weak and for the strong alike, but by such
+Doings (THATHANDLUNGEN) as in all quarters must cause a great surprise.
+
+"We give your Dilection to know, therefore, That you must straightway
+withdraw those troops which have broken into the Liege Territory; make
+speedy restitution of all that has been extorted;--especially General
+von Borck to give back at once those 50 louis d'or daily drawn by him,
+to renounce his demand of the 20,000 thalers, to make good all damage
+done, and retire with his whole military force (MILITZ) over the Liege
+boundaries;--and in brief, that you will, by law or arbitration, manage
+to agree with the Prince Bishop of Liege, who wishes it very much. These
+things We expect from your Dilection, as Kurfurst of Brandenburg, within
+the space of Two Months from the Issuing of this; and remain,"--Yours as
+you shall demean yourself,--KARL.
+
+"Given at Wien, 4th of October, 1740."--The last Dehortatorium ever
+signed by Karl VI. In two weeks after he ate too many mushrooms,--and
+immense results followed!
+
+Dehortatoriums had their interest, at Berlin and elsewhere, for the
+Diplomatic circles; but did not produce the least effect on Borck or
+Friedrich; though Friedrich noted the Kaiser's manner in these things,
+and thought privately to himself, as was evident to the discerning,
+"What an amount of wig on that old gentleman!" A notable Kaiser's
+Ambassador, Herr Botta, who had come with some Accession compliments,
+in these weeks, was treated slightingly by Friedrich; hardly admitted
+to Audience; and Friedrich's public reply to the last Dehortatorium had
+almost something of sarcasm in it: Evil counsellors yourself, Most Dread
+Kaiser! It is you that are "misled by counsellors, who might chance to
+set Germany on fire, were others as unwise as they!" Which latter phrase
+was remarkable to mankind.--There is a long account already run up
+between that old gentleman, with his Seckendorfs, Grumkows, with his
+dull insolencies, wiggeries, and this young gentleman, who has nearly
+had his heart broken and his Father's house driven mad by them! Borck
+remains at his post; rations duly delivered, and fifty louis a day for
+his own private expenses; and there is no answer to the Kaiser, or in
+sharp brief terms (about "chances of setting Germany on fire"), rather
+worse than none.
+
+Readers see, as well as Friedrich did, what the upshot of this affair
+must be;--we will now finish it off, and wash our hands of it, before
+following his Majesty to Berlin. The poor Bishop had applied, shrieking,
+to the French for help;--and there came some colloquial passages between
+Voltaire and Fenelon, if that were a result. He had shrieked in like
+manner to the Dutch, but without result of any kind traceable in that
+quarter: nowhere, except from the Kaiser, is so much as a DEHORTATORIUM
+to be got. Whereupon the once high-flying, now vainly shrieking Bishop
+discerns clearly that there is but one course left,--the course which
+has lain wide open for some years past, had not his flight gone too high
+for seeing it. Before three weeks are over, seeing how Dehortatoriums
+go, he sends his Ambassadors to Berlin, his apologies, proposals:
+[Ambassadors arrived 28th September; last Dehortatorium not yet out.
+Business was completed 20th October (Rodenbeck, IN DIEBUS).] "Would not
+your Majesty perhaps consent to sell this Herstal, as your Father of
+glorious memory was pleased to be willing once?"--
+
+Friedrich answers straightway to the effect: "Certainly! Pay me the
+price it was once already offered for: 100,000 thalers, PLUS the
+expenses since incurred. That will be 180,000 thalers, besides what you
+have spent already on General Borck's days' wages. To which we will add
+that wretched little fraction of Old Debt, clear as noon, but never paid
+nor any part of it; 60,000 thalers, due by the See of Liege ever since
+the Treaty of Utrecht; 60,000, for which we will charge no interest:
+that will make 240,000 thalers,--36,000 pounds, instead of the old sum
+you might have had it at. Produce that cash; and take Herstal, and all
+the dust that has risen out of it, well home with you." [Stenzel, iv.
+60, who counts in gulden, and is not distinct.] The Bishop thankfully
+complies in all points; negotiation speedily done ("20th Oct." the final
+date): Bishop has not, I think, quite so much cash on hand; but will pay
+all he has, and 4 per centum interest till the whole be liquidated. His
+Ambassadors "get gold snuffboxes;" and return mildly glad!
+
+And thus, in some six weeks after Borck's arrival in those parts,
+Borck's function is well done. The noise of Gazettes and Diplomatic
+circles lays itself again; and Herstal, famous once for King Pipin, and
+famous again for King Friedrich, lapses at length into obscurity, which
+we hope will never end. Hope;--though who can say? ROUCOUX, quite close
+upon it, becomes a Battle-ground in some few years; and memorabilities
+go much at random in this world!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI. -- RETURNS BY HANOVER; DOES NOT CALL ON HIS ROYAL UNCLE
+THERE.
+
+Friedrich spent ten days on his circuitous journey home; considerable
+inspection to be done, in Minden, Magdeburg, not to speak of other
+businesses he had. The old Newspapers are still more intent upon him,
+now that the Herstal Affair has broken into flame: especially the
+English Newspapers; who guess that there are passages of courtship going
+on between great George their King and him. Here is one fact, correct in
+every point, for the old London Public: "Letters from Hanover say, that
+the King of Prussia passed within a small distance of that City the
+16th inst. N.S., on his return to Berlin, but did not stop at
+Herrenhausen;"--about which there has been such hoping and speculating
+among us lately. [_Daily Post,_ 22d September, 1740; other London
+Newspapers from July 31st downwards.] A fact which the extinct Editor
+seems to meditate for a day or two; after which he says (partly in
+ITALICS), opening his lips the second time, like a Friar Bacon's Head
+significant to the Public: "Letters from Hanover tell us that the
+Interview, which it was said his Majesty was to have with the King of
+Prussia, did not take place, for certain PRIVATE REASONS, which our
+Correspondent leaves us to guess at!"
+
+It is well known Friedrich did not love his little Uncle, then or
+thenceforth; still less his little Uncle him: "What is this Prussia,
+rising alongside of us, higher and higher, as if it would reach our own
+sublime level!" thinks the little Uncle to himself. At present there is
+no quarrel between them; on the contrary, as we have seen, there is a
+mutual capability of helping one another, which both recognize; but
+will an interview tend to forward that useful result? Friedrich, in
+the intervals of an ague, with Herstal just broken out, may have wisely
+decided, No. "Our sublime little Uncle, of the waxy complexion, with the
+proudly staring fish-eyes,--no wit in him, not much sense, and a great
+deal of pride,--stands dreadfully erect, 'plumb and more,' with the
+Garter-leg advanced, when one goes to see him; and his remarks are
+not of an entertaining nature. Leave him standing there: to him let
+Truchsess and Bielfeld suffice, in these hurries, in this ague that is
+still upon us." Upon which the dull old Newspapers, Owls of Minerva
+that then were, endeavor to draw inferences. The noticeable fact is,
+Friedrich did, on this occasion, pass within a mile or two of his
+royal Uncle, without seeing him; and had not, through life, another
+opportunity; never saw the sublime little man at all, nor was again so
+near him.
+
+I believe Friedrich little knows the thick-coming difficulties of
+his Britannic Majesty at this juncture; and is too impatient of these
+laggard procedures on the part of a man with eyes A FLEUR-DE-TETE.
+Modern readers too have forgotten Jenkins's Ear; it is not till
+after long study and survey that one begins to perceive the anomalous
+profundities of that phenomenon to the poor English Nation and its poor
+George II.
+
+The English sent off, last year, a scanty Expedition, "six ships of the
+line," only six, under Vernon, a fiery Admiral, a little given to be
+fiery in Parliamentary talk withal; and these did proceed to Porto-Bello
+on the Spanish Main of South America; did hurl out on Porto-Bello such
+a fiery destructive deluge, of gunnery and bayonet-work, as quickly
+reduced the poor place to the verge of ruin, and forced it to surrender
+with whatever navy, garrison, goods and resources were in it, to the
+discretion of fiery Vernon,--who does not prove implacable, he or his,
+to a petitioning enemy. Yes, humble the insolent, but then be merciful
+to them, say the admiring Gazetteers. "The actual monster," how cheering
+to think, "who tore off Mr. Jenkins's Ear, was got hold of [actual
+monster, or even three or four different monsters who each did it, the
+"hold got" being mythical, as readers see], and naturally thought he
+would be slit to ribbons; but our people magnanimously pardoned him,
+magnanimously flung him aside out of sight;" [_Gentleman's Magazine,_ x.
+124, 145 (date of the Event is 3d December N.S., 1739).] impossible to
+shoot a dog in cold blood.
+
+Whereupon Vernon returned home triumphant; and there burst forth such a
+jubilation, over the day of small things, as is now astonishing to
+think of. Had the Termagant's own Thalamus and Treasury been bombarded
+suddenly one night by red-hot balls, Madrid City laid in ashes, or Baby
+Carlos's Apanage extinguished from Creation, there could hardly have
+been greater English joy (witness the "Porto-Bellos" they still have,
+new Towns so named); so flamy is the murky element growing on that
+head. And indeed had the cipher of tar-barrels burnt, and of ale-barrels
+drunk, and the general account of wick and tallow spent in illuminations
+and in aldermanic exertions on the matter, been accurately taken, one
+doubts if Porto-Bello sold, without shot fired, to the highest bidder,
+at its floweriest, would have covered such a sum. For they are a
+singular Nation, if stirred up from their stagnancy; and are much in
+earnest about this Spanish War.
+
+It is said there is now another far grander Expedition on the stocks:
+military this time as well as naval, intended for the Spanish Main;--but
+of that, for the present, we will defer speaking. Enough, the Spanish
+War is a most serious and most furious business to those old English;
+and, to us, after forced study of it, shines out like far-off
+conflagration, with a certain lurid significance in the then night of
+things. Night otherwise fallen dark and somniferous to modern mankind.
+As Britannic Majesty and his Walpoles have, from the first, been dead
+against this Spanish War, the problem is all the more ominous, and the
+dreadful corollaries that may hang by it the more distressing to the
+royal mind.
+
+For example, there is known, or as good as known, to be virtually some
+Family Compact, or covenanted Brotherhood of Bourbonism, French and
+Spanish: political people quake to ask themselves, "How will the French
+keep out of this War, if it continue any length of time? And in that
+case, how will Austria, Europe at large? Jenkins's Ear will have kindled
+the Universe, not the Spanish Main only, and we shall be at a fine
+pass!" The Britannic Majesty reflects that if France take to fighting
+him, the first stab given will probably be in the accessiblest quarter
+and the intensely most sensitive,--our own Electoral Dominions where
+no Parliament plagues us, our dear native country, Hanover. Extremely
+interesting to know what Friedrich of Prussia will do in such
+contingency?
+
+Well, truly it might have been King George's best bargain to close
+with Friedrich; to guarantee Julich and Berg, and get Fredrich to stand
+between the French and Hanover; while George, with an England behind
+him, in such humor, went wholly into that Spanish Business, the one
+thing needful to them at present. Truly; but then again, there are
+considerations: "What is this Friedrich, just come out upon the world?
+What real fighting power has he, after all that ridiculous drilling and
+recruiting Friedrich Wilhelm made? Will he be faithful in bargain; is
+not, perhaps, from of old, his bias always toward France rather? And
+the Kaiser, what will the Kaiser say to it?" These are questions for
+a Britannic Majesty! Seldom was seen such an insoluble imbroglio of
+potentialities; dangerous to touch, dangerous to leave lying;--and his
+Britannic Majesty's procedures upon it are of a very slow intricate
+sort; and will grow still more so, year after year, in the new
+intricacies that are coming, and be a weariness to my readers and me.
+For observe the simultaneous fact. All this while, Robinson at Vienna
+is dunning the Imperial Majesty to remember old Marlborough days and the
+Laws of Nature; and declare for us against France, in case of the
+worst. What an attempt! Imperial Majesty has no money; Imperial Majesty
+remembers recent days rather, and his own last quarrel with France
+(on the Polish-Election score), in which you Sea-Powers cruelly stood
+neuter! One comfort, and pretty much one only, is left to a nearly
+bankrupt Imperial heart; that France does at any rate ratify Pragmatic
+Sanction, and instead of enemy to that inestimable Document has become
+friend,--if only she be well let alone. "Let well alone," says the sad
+Kaiser, bankrupt of heart as well as purse: "I have saved the Pragmatic,
+got Fleury to guarantee it; I will hunt wild swine and not shadows
+any more: ask me not!" And now this Herstal business; the Imperial
+Dehortatoriums, perhaps of a high nature, that are like to come? More
+hopeless proposition the Britannic Majesty never made than this to the
+Kaiser. But he persists in it, orders Robinson to persist; knocks at the
+Austrian door with one hand, at the Prussian or Anti-Austrian with
+the other; and gazes, with those proud fish-eyes, into perils and
+potentialities and a sea of troubles. Wearisome to think of, were
+not one bound to it! Here, from a singular CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF
+ENGLAND, not yet got into print, are two Excerpts; which I will request
+the reader to try if he can take along with him, in view of much that is
+Coming:--
+
+1. A JUST WAR.--"This War, which posterity scoffs at as the WAR OF
+JENKINS'S EAR, was, if we examine it, a quite indispensable one; the
+dim much-bewildered English, driven into it by their deepest instincts,
+were, in a chaotic inarticulate way, right and not wrong in taking it as
+the Commandment of Heaven. For such, in a sense, it was; as shall by and
+by appear. Not perhaps since the grand Reformation Controversy, under
+Oliver Cromwell and Elizabeth, had there, to this poor English People
+(who are essentially dumb, inarticulate, from the weight of meaning
+they have, notwithstanding the palaver one hears from them in certain
+epochs), been a more authentic cause of War. And, what was the fatal
+and yet foolish circumstance, their Constitutional Captains, especially
+their King, would never and could never regard it as such; but had to be
+forced into it by the public rage, there being no other method left in
+the case.
+
+"I say, a most necessary War, though of a most stupid appearance; such
+the fatality of it:--begun, carried on, ended, as if by a People in a
+state of somnambulism! More confused operation never was. A solid
+placid People, heavily asleep (and snoring much, shall we say,
+and inarticulately grunting and struggling under indigestions,
+Constitutional and other? Do but listen to the hum of those extinct
+Pamphlets and Parliamentary Oratories of theirs!),--yet an honestly
+intending People; and keenly alive to any commandment from Heaven, that
+could pierce through the thick skin of them into their big obstinate
+heart. Such a commandment, then and there, was that monition about
+Jenkins's Ear. Upon which, so pungent was it to them, they started
+violently out of bed, into painful sleep-walking; and went, for twenty
+years and more, clambering and sprawling about, far and wide, on the
+giddy edge of precipices, over house-tops and frightful cornices and
+parapets; in a dim fulfilment of the said Heaven's command. I reckon
+that this War, though there were intervals, Treaties of Peace more than
+one, and the War had various names,--did not end till 1763. And then, by
+degrees, the poor English Nation found that (at, say, a thousand times
+the necessary expense, and with imminent peril to its poor head, and all
+the bones of its body) it had actually succeeded,--by dreadful exertions
+in its sleep! This will be more apparent by and by; and may be a kind of
+comfort to the sad English reader, drearily surveying such somnambulisms
+on the part of his poor ancestors."
+
+2. TWO DIFFICULTIES.--"There are Two grand Difficulties in this
+Farce-Tragedy of a war; of which only one, and that not the worst of
+the Pair, is in the least surmised by the English hitherto. Difficulty
+First, which is even worse than the other, and will surprisingly
+attend the English in all their Wars now coming, is: That their
+fighting-apparatus, though made of excellent material, cannot
+fight,--being in disorganic condition; one branch of it, especially the
+'Military' one as they are pleased to call it, being as good as totally
+chaotic, and this in a quiet habitual manner, this long while back.
+With the Naval branch it is otherwise; which also is habitual there.
+The English almost as if by nature can sail, and fight, in ships; cannot
+well help doing it. Sailors innumerable are bred to them; they are
+planted in the Ocean, opulent stormy Neptune clipping them in all
+his moods forever: and then by nature, being a dumb, much-enduring,
+much-reflecting, stout, veracious and valiant kind of People, they
+shine in that way of life, which specially requires such. Without much
+forethought, they have sailors innumerable, and of the best quality.
+The English have among them also, strange as it may seem to the cursory
+observer, a great gift of organizing; witness their Arkwrights and
+others: and this gift they may often, in matters Naval more than
+elsewhere, get the chance of exercising. For a Ship's Crew, or even a
+Fleet, unlike a land Army, is of itself a unity, its fortunes disjoined,
+dependent on its own management; and it falls, moreover, as no land army
+can, to the undivided guidance of one man,--who (by hypothesis, being
+English) has now and then, from of old, chanced to be an organizing man;
+and who is always much interested to know and practise what has been
+well organized. For you are in contact with verities, to an unexampled
+degree, when you get upon the Ocean, with intent to sail on it, much
+more to fight on it;--bottomless destruction raging beneath you and on
+all hands of you, if you neglect, for any reason, the methods of keeping
+it down, and making it float you to your aim!
+
+"The English Navy is in tolerable order at that period. But as to the
+English Army,--we may say it is, in a wrong sense, the wonder of
+the world, and continues so throughout the whole of this History and
+farther! Never before, among the rational sons of Adam, were Armies
+sent out on such terms,--namely without a General, or with no General
+understanding the least of his business. The English have a notion that
+Generalship is not wanted; that War is not an Art, as playing Chess is,
+as finding the Longitude, and doing the Differential Calculus are (and
+a much deeper Art than any of these); that War is taught by Nature, as
+eating is; that courageous soldiers, led on by a courageous Wooden Pole
+with Cocked-hat on it, will do very well. In the world I have not found
+opacity of platitude go deeper among any People. This is Difficulty
+First, not yet suspected by an English People, capable of great opacity
+on some subjects.
+
+"Difficulty Second is, That their Ministry, whom they had to force into
+this War, perhaps do not go zealously upon it. And perhaps even, in the
+above circumstances, they totally want knowledge how to go upon it, were
+they never so zealous; Difficulty Second might be much helped, were it
+not for Difficulty First. But the administering of War is a thing
+also that does not come to a man like eating.--This Second Difficulty,
+suspicion that Walpole and perhaps still higher heads want zeal, gives
+his Britannic Majesty infinite trouble; and"----And so, in short,
+he stands there, with the Garter-leg advanced, looking loftily into a
+considerable sea of troubles,--that day when Friedrich drove past him,
+Friday, 16th September, 1740, and never came so near him again.
+
+The next business for Friedrich was a Visit at Brunswick, to the
+Affinities and Kindred, in passing; where also was an important
+little act to be done: Betrothal of the young Prince, August Wilhelm,
+Heir-Presumptive whom we saw in Strasburg, to a Princess of that
+House, Louisa Amelia, younger Sister of Friedrich's own Queen. A modest
+promising arrangement; which turned out well enough,--though the young
+Prince, Father to the Kings that since are, was not supremely fortunate
+otherwise. [Betrothal was 20th September, 1740; Marriage, 5th January,
+1742 (Buchholz, i. 207).] After which, the review at Magdeburg; and home
+on the 24th, there to "be busy as a Turk or as a M. Jordan,"--according
+to what we read long since.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII. -- WITHDRAWS TO REINSBERG, HOPING A PEACEABLE WINTER.
+
+By this Herstal token, which is now blazing abroad, now and for a month
+to come, it can be judged that the young King of Prussia intends to
+stand on his own footing, quite peremptorily if need be; and will by
+no means have himself led about in Imperial harness, as his late Father
+was. So that a dull Public (Herrenhausen very specially), and Gazetteer
+Owls of Minerva everywhere, may expect events. All the more indubitably,
+when that spade-work comes to light in the Wesel Country. It is
+privately certain (the Gazetteers not yet sure about it, till they see
+the actual spades going), this new King does fully intend to assert his
+rights on Berg-Julich; and will appear there with his iron ramrods, the
+instant old Kur-Pfalz shall decease, let France and the Kaiser say No
+to it or say Yes. There are, in fact, at a fit place, "Buderich in
+the neighborhood of Wesel," certain rampart-works, beginnings as of
+an Entrenched Camp, going on;--"for Review purposes merely," say the
+Gazetteers, IN ITALICS. Here, it privately is Friedrich's resolution,
+shall a Prussian Army, of the due strength (could be well-nigh 100,000
+strong if needful), make its appearance, directly on old Kur-Pfalz's
+decease, if one live to see such event. [Stenzel, iv. 61.] France and
+the Kaiser will probably take good survey of that Buderich phenomenon
+before meddling.
+
+To do his work like a King, and shun no peril and no toil in the course
+of what his work may be, is Friedrich's rule and intention. Nevertheless
+it is clear he expects to approve himself magnanimous rather in the
+Peaceable operations than in the Warlike; and his outlooks are, of all
+places and pursuits, towards Reinsberg and the Fine Arts, for the time
+being. His Public activity meanwhile they describe as "prodigious,"
+though the ague still clings to him; such building, instituting,
+managing: Opera-House, French Theatre, Palace for his Mother;--day by
+day, many things to be recorded by Editor Formey, though the rule about
+them here is silence except on cause.
+
+No doubt the ague is itself privately a point of moment. Such a
+vexatious paltry little thing, in this bright whirl of Activities,
+Public and other, which he continues managing in spite of it; impatient
+to be rid of it. But it will not go: there IT reappears always, punctual
+to its "fourth day,"--like a snarling street-dog, in the high Ball-room
+and Work-room. "He is drinking Pyrmont water;" has himself proposed
+Quinquina, a remedy just come up, but the Doctors shook their heads; has
+tried snatches of Reinsberg, too short; he intends soon to be out there
+for a right spell of country, there to be "happy," and get quit of his
+ague. The ague went,--and by a remedy which surprised the whole world,
+as will be seen!
+
+
+
+
+WILHELMINA'S RETURN-VISIT.
+
+Monday, 17th October, came the Baireuth Visitors; Wilhelmina all in a
+flutter, and tremor of joy and sorrow, to see her Brother again, her old
+kindred and the altered scene of things. Poor Lady, she is perceptibly
+more tremulous than usual; and her Narrative, not in dates only, but in
+more memorable points, dances about at a sad rate; interior agitations
+and tremulous shrill feelings shivering her this way and that, and
+throwing things topsy-turvy in one's recollection. Like the magnetic
+needle, shaky but steadfast (AGITEE MAI CONSTANTE). Truer nothing can
+be, points forever to the Pole; but also what obliquities it makes; will
+shiver aside in mad escapades, if you hold the paltriest bit of old iron
+near it,--paltriest clack of gossip about this loved Brother of mine!
+Brother, we will hope, silently continues to be Pole, so that the needle
+always comes back again; otherwise all would go to wreck. Here, in
+abridged and partly rectified form, are the phenomena witnessed:--
+
+"We arrived at Berlin the end of October [Monday, 17th, as above said].
+My younger Brothers, followed by the Princes of the Blood and by all
+the Court, received us at the bottom of the stairs. I was led to my
+apartment, where I found the Reigning Queen, my Sisters [Ulrique,
+Amelia], and the Princesses [of the Blood, as above, Schwedt and the
+rest]. I learned with much chagrin that the King was ill of tertian ague
+[quartan; but that is no matter]. He sent me word that, being in his
+fit, he could not see me; but that he depended on having that pleasure
+to-morrow. The Queen Mother, to whom I went without delay, was in a dark
+condition; rooms all hung with their lugubrious drapery; everything yet
+in the depth of mourning for my Father. What a scene for me! Nature has
+her rights; I can say with truth, I have almost never in my life been so
+moved as on this occasion." Interview with Mamma--we can fancy it--"was
+of the most touching." Wilhelmina had been absent eight years. She
+scarcely knows the young ones again, all so grown;--finds change on
+change: and that Time, as he always is, has been busy. That night the
+Supper-Party was exclusively a Family one.
+
+Her Brother's welcome to her on the morrow, though ardent enough, she
+found deficient in sincerity, deficient in several points; as indeed a
+Brother up to the neck in business, and just come out of an ague-fit,
+does not appear to the best advantage. Wilhelmina noticed how ill he
+looked, so lean and broken-down (MAIGRE ET DEFAIT) within the last two
+months; but seems to have taken no account of it farther, in striking
+her balances with Friedrich. And indeed in her Narrative of this Visit,
+not, we will hope, in the Visit itself, she must have been in a high
+state of magnetic deflection,--pretty nearly her maximum of such,
+discoverable in those famous MEMOIRS,--such a tumult is there in her
+statements, all gone to ground-and-lofty tumbling in this place; so
+discrepant are the still ascertainable facts from this topsy-turvy
+picture of them, sketched by her four years hence (in 1744). The truest
+of magnetic needles; but so sensitive, if you bring foreign iron near
+it!
+
+Wilhelmina was loaded with honors by an impartial Berlin Public that is
+Court Public; "but, all being in mourning, the Court was not brilliant.
+The Queen Mother saw little company, and was sunk in sorrow;--had not
+the least influence in affairs, so jealous was the new King of his
+Authority,--to the Queen Mother's surprise," says Wilhelmina. For the
+rest, here is a King "becoming truly unpopular [or, we fancy so, in
+our deflected state, and judging by the rumor of cliques]; a general
+discontent reigning in the Country, love of his subjects pretty much
+gone; people speaking of him in no measured terms [in certain cliques].
+Cares nothing about those who helped him as Prince Royal, say some;
+others complain of his avarice [meaning steady vigilance in outlay]
+as surpassing the late King's; this one complained of his violences of
+temper (EMPORTEMENS); that one of his suspicions, of his distrust, his
+haughtinesses, his dissimulation" (meaning polite impenetrability
+when he saw good). Several circumstances, known to Wilhelmina's own
+experience, compel Wilhelmina's assent on those points. "I would
+have spoken to him about them, if my Brother of Prussia [young August
+Wilhelm, betrothed the other day] and the Queen Regnant had
+not dissuaded me. Farther on I will give the explanation of all
+this,"--never did it anywhere. "I beg those who may one day read these
+MEMOIRS, to suspend their judgment on the character of this great Prince
+till I have developed it." [Wilhelmina, ii. 326.] O my Princess, you
+are true and bright, but you are shrill; and I admire the effect of
+atmospheric electricity, not to say, of any neighboring marine-store
+shop, or miserable bit of broken pan, on one of the finest magnetic
+needles ever made and set trembling!
+
+Wilhelmina is incapable of deliberate falsehood; and this her impression
+or reminiscence, with all its exaggeration, is entitled to be heard in
+evidence so far. From this, and from other sources, readers will assure
+themselves that discontents were not wanting; that King Friedrich was
+not amiable to everybody at this time,--which indeed he never grew to be
+at any other time. He had to be a King; that was the trade he followed,
+not the quite different one of being amiable all round. Amiability is
+good, my Princess; but the question rises, "To whom?--for example,
+to the young gentleman who shot himself in Lobegun?" There are young
+gentlemen and old sometimes in considerable quantities, to whom, if you
+were in your duty, as a King of men (or even as a "King of one man and
+his affairs," if that is all your kingdom), you should have been
+hateful instead of amiable! That is a stern truth; too much forgotten by
+Wilhelmina and others. Again, what a deadening and killing circumstance
+is it in the career of amiability, that you are bound not to be
+communicative of your inner man, but perpetually and strictly the
+reverse! It may be doubted if a good King can be amiable; certainly he
+cannot in any but the noblest ages, and then only to a select few. I
+should guess Friedrich was at no time fairly loved, not by those nearest
+to him. He was rapid, decisive; of wiry compact nature; had nothing of
+his Father's amplitudes, simplicities; nothing to sport with and fondle,
+far from it. Tremulous sensibilities, ardent affections; these we
+clearly discover in him, in extraordinary vivacity; but he wears them
+under his polished panoply, and is outwardly a radiant but metallic
+object to mankind. Let us carry this along with us in studying him;
+and thank Wilhelmina for giving us hint of it in her oblique
+way.--Wilhelmima's love for her Brother rose to quite heroic pitch in
+coming years, and was at its highest when she died. That continuation
+of her MEMOIRS in which she is to develop her Brother's character,
+was never written: it has been sought for in modern times; and a few
+insignificant pages, with evidence that there is not, and was not, any
+more, are all that has turned up. [Pertz, _Ueber die Denkwurdigkeiten
+der Markgrafin van Bayreuth_ (Paper read in the _Akademie der
+Wissenschaften,_ Berlin, 25th April, 1850)].
+
+Incapable of falsity prepense, we say; but the known facts, which stand
+abundantly on record if you care to search them out, are merely as
+follows: Friedrich, with such sincerity as there might be, did welcome
+Wilhelmina on the morrow of her arrival; spoke of Reinsberg, and of air
+and rest, and how pleasant it would be; rolled off next morning, having
+at last gathered up his businesses, and got them well in hand, to
+Reinsberg accordingly; whither Wilhelmina, with the Queen Regnant and
+others of agreeable quality, followed in two days; intending a long and
+pleasant spell of country out there. Which hope was tolerably fulfilled,
+even for Wilhelmina, though there did come unexpected interruptions, not
+of Friedrich's bringing.
+
+
+
+
+UNEXPECTED NEWS AT REINSBERG.
+
+Friedrich's pursuits and intended conquests, for the present, are of
+peaceable and even gay nature. French Theatre, Italian Opera-House,
+these are among the immediate outlooks. Voltaire, skilled in French
+acting, if anybody ever were, is multifariously negotiating for a
+Company of that kind,--let him be swift, be successful. [Letters of
+Voltaire (PASSIM, in these months).] An Italian Opera there shall
+be; the House is still to be built: Captain Knobelsdorf, who built
+Reinsberg, whom we have known, is to do it. Knobelsdorf has gone
+to Italy on that errand; "went by Dresden, carefully examining the
+Opera-House there, and all the famed Opera-Houses on his road." Graun,
+one of the best judges living, is likewise off to Italy, gathering
+singers. Our Opera too shall be a successful thing, and we hope, a
+speedy. Such are Friedrich's outlooks at this time.
+
+A miscellaneous pleasant company is here; Truchsess and Bielfeld, home
+from Hanover, among them; Wilhelmina is here;--Voltaire himself perhaps
+coming again. Friedrich drinks his Pyrmont waters; works at his public
+businesses all day, which are now well in hand, and manageable by
+couriers; at evening he appears in company, and is the astonishment of
+everybody; brilliant, like a new-risen sun, as if he knew of no illness,
+knew of no business, but lived for amusement only. "He intends Private
+Theatricals withal, and is getting ready Voltaire's MORT DE CESAR."
+[Preuss, _Thronbesteigung,_ p. 415.] These were pretty days at
+Reinsberg. This kind of life lasted seven or eight weeks,--in spite of
+interruptions of subterranean volcanic nature, some of which were surely
+considerable. Here, in the very first week, coming almost volcanically,
+is one, which indeed is the sum of them all.
+
+Tuesday forenoon, 25th October, 1740, Express arrives at Reinsberg;
+direct from Vienna five days ago; finds Friedrich under eclipse, hidden
+in the interior, laboring under his ague-fit: question rises, Shall
+the Express be introduced, or be held back? The news he brings is huge,
+unexpected, transcendent, and may agitate the sick King. Six or seven
+heads go wagging on this point,--who by accident are namable, if readers
+care: "Prince August Wilhelm," lately betrothed; "Graf Truchsess,"
+home from Hanover; "Colonel Graf von Finkenstein," old Tutor's Son, a
+familiar from boyhood upwards; "Baron Pollnitz" kind of chief Goldstick
+now, or Master of the Ceremonies, not too witty, but the cause of wit;
+"Jordan, Bielfeld," known to us; and lastly, "Fredersdorf," Major-domo
+and Factotum, who is grown from Valet to be Purse-Keeper, confidential
+Manager, and almost friend,--a notable personage in Friedrich's History.
+They decide, "Better wait!"
+
+They wait accordingly; and then, after about an hour, the trembling-fit
+being over, and Fredersdorf having cautiously preluded a little, and
+prepared the way, the Despatch is delivered, and the King left with his
+immense piece of news. News that his Imperial Majesty Karl VI. died,
+after short illness, on Thursday, the 20th last. Kaiser dead: House
+of Hapsburg, and its Five Centuries of tough wrestling, and
+uneasy Dominancy in this world, ended, gone to the distaff:--the
+counter-wrestling Ambitions and Cupidities not dead; and nothing but
+Pragmatic Sanction left between the fallen House and them! Friedrich
+kept silence; showed no sign how transfixed he was to hear such tidings;
+which, he foresaw, would have immeasurable consequences in the world.
+
+One of the first was, that it cured Friedrich of his ague. It braced
+him (it, and perhaps "a little quinquina which he now insisted on") into
+such a tensity of spirit as drove out his ague like a mere hiccough;
+quite gone in the course of next week; and we hear no more of that
+importunate annoyance. He summoned Secretary Eichel, "Be ready in
+so many minutes hence;" rose from his bed, dressed himself; [Preuss,
+_Thronbesteigung,_ p. 416.]--and then, by Eichel's help, sent off e
+ for Schwerin his chief General, and Podewils his chief Minister. A
+resolution, which is rising or has risen in the Royal mind, will be
+ready for communicating to these Two by the time they arrive, on the
+second day hence. This done, Friedrich, I believe, joined his company in
+the evening; and was as light and brilliant as if nothing had happened.
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII. -- THE KAISER'S DEATH.
+
+The Kaiser's death came upon the Public unexpectedly; though not quite
+so upon observant persons closer at hand. He was not yet fifty-six
+out; a firm-built man; had been of sound constitution, of active, not
+intemperate habits: but in the last six years, there had come such
+torrents of ill luck rolling down on him, he had suffered immensely, far
+beyond what the world knew of; and to those near him, and anxious for
+him, his strength seemed much undermined. Five years ago, in summer
+1735, Robinson reported, from a sure hand: "Nothing can equal the
+Emperor's agitation under these disasters [brought upon him by Fleury
+and the Spaniards, as after-clap to his Polish-Election feat]. His
+good Empress is terrified, many times, he will die in the course of
+the night, when singly with her he gives a loose to his affliction,
+confusion and despair." Sea-Powers will not help; Fleury and mere ruin
+will engulf! "What augments this agitation is his distrust in every one
+of his own Ministers, except perhaps Bartenstein," [Robinson to Lord
+Warrington, 5th July, 1735 (in State-Paper Office).]--who is not much
+of a support either, though a gnarled weighty old stick in his way
+("Professor at Strasburg once"): not interesting to us here. The rest
+his Imperial Majesty considers to be of sublimated blockhead type,
+it appears. Prince Eugene had died lately, and with Eugene all good
+fortune.
+
+And then, close following, the miseries of that Turk War, crashing
+down upon a man! They say, Duke Franz, Maria Theresa's Husband, nominal
+Commander in those Campaigns, with the Seckendorfs and Wallises under
+him going such a road, was privately eager to have done with the
+Business, on any terms, lest the Kaiser should die first, and leave it
+weltering. No wonder the poor Kaiser felt broken, disgusted with the
+long Shadow-Hunt of Life; and took to practical field-sports rather.
+An Army that cannot fight, War-Generals good only to be locked in
+Fortresses, an Exchequer that has no money; after such wagging of the
+wigs, and such Privy-Councilling and such War-Councilling:--let us hunt
+wild swine, and not think of it! That, thank Heaven, we still have;
+that, and Pragmatic Sanction well engrossed, and generally sworn to by
+mankind, after much effort!--
+
+The outer Public of that time, and Voltaire among them more deliberately
+afterwards, spoke of "mushrooms," an "indigestion of mushrooms;" and
+it is probable there was something of mushrooms concerned in the event,
+Another subsequent Frenchman, still more irreverent, adds to this of
+the "excess of mushrooms," that the Kaiser made light of it. "When the
+Doctors told him he had few hours to live, he would not believe it; and
+bantered his Physicians on the sad news. 'Look me in the eyes,' said he;
+'have I the air of one dying? When you see my sight growing dim, then
+let the sacraments be administered, whether I order or not.'" Doctors
+insisting, the Kaiser replied: "'Since you are foolish fellows, who know
+neither the cause nor the state of my disorder, I command that, once
+I am dead, you open my body, to know what the matter was; you can then
+come and let me know!"' [_Anecdotes Germaniques_ (Paris, 1769), p.
+692.]--in which also there is perhaps a glimmering of distorted truth,
+though, as Monsieur mistakes even the day ("18th October," says he, not
+20th), one can only accept it as rumor from the outside.
+
+Here, by an extremely sombre domestic Gentleman of great punctuality
+and great dulness, are the authentic particulars, such as it was good to
+mention in Vienna circles. [(Anonymous) _Des &c. Romischen Kaisers Carl
+VI. Leben und Thaten_ (Frankfurt und Leipzig, 1741), pp. 220-227.] An
+extremely dull Gentleman, but to appearance an authentic; and so little
+defective in reverence that he delicately expresses some astonishment at
+Death's audacity this year, in killing so many Crowned Heads. "This
+year 1740," says he, "though the weather throughout Europe had been
+extraordinarily fine," or fine for a cold year, "had already witnessed
+several Deaths of Sovereigns: Pope Clement XII., Friedrich Wilhelm of
+Prussia, the Queen Dowager of Spain [Termagant's old stepmother, not
+Termagant's self by a great way]. But that was not enough:
+unfathomable Destiny ventured now on Imperial Heads (WAGTE SICH AUCH AN
+KAISER-KRONEN): Karl VI., namely, and Russia's great, Monarchess;"--an
+audacity to be remarked. Of Russia's great Monarchess (Czarina Anne,
+with the big cheek) we will say nothing at present; but of Karl VI.
+only,--abridging much, and studying arrangement.
+
+"Thursday, October 13th, returning from Halbthurn, a Hunting Seat of
+his," over in Hungary some fifty miles, "to the Palace Favorita at
+Vienna, his Imperial Majesty felt slightly indisposed,"--indigestion of
+mushrooms or whatever it was: had begun AT Halbthurn the night before,
+we rather understand, and was the occasion of his leaving. "The Doctors
+called it cold on the stomach, and thought it of no consequence. In
+the night of Saturday, it became alarming;" inflammation, thought the
+Doctors, inflammation of the liver, and used their potent appliances,
+which only made the danger come and go; "and on the Tuesday, all day,
+the Doctors did not doubt his Imperial Majesty was dying. ["Look me
+in the eyes; pack of fools; you will have to dissect me, you will then
+know:" Any truth in all that? No matter.]
+
+"At noon of that Tuesday he took the Sacrament, the Pope's Nuncio
+administering. His Majesty showed uncommonly great composure of soul,
+and resignation to the Divine Will;" being indeed "certain,"--so
+he expressed it to "a principal Official Person sunk in grief"
+(Bartenstein, shall we guess?), who stood by him--"certain of his
+cause," not afraid in contemplating that dread Judgment now near: "Look
+at me! A man that is certain of his cause can enter on such a Journey
+with good courage and a composed mind (MIT GUTEM UND DELASSENEM MUTH)."
+To the Doctors, dubitating what the disease was, he said, "If Gazelli"
+my late worthy Doctor, "were still here, you would soon know; but as it
+is, you will learn it when you dissect me;"--and once asked to be shown
+the Cup where his heart would lie after that operation.
+
+"Sacrament being over," Tuesday afternoon, "he sent for his Family, to
+bless them each separately. He had a long conversation with Grand Duke
+Franz," titular of Lorraine, actual of Tuscany, "who had assiduously
+attended him, and continued to do so, during the whole illness."
+The Grand Duke's Spouse,--Maria Theresa, the noble-hearted and the
+overwhelmed; who is now in an interesting state again withal; a little
+Kaiserkin (Joseph II.) coming in five months; first child, a little
+girl, is now two years old;--"had been obliged to take to bed three days
+ago; laid up of grief and terror (VOR SCHMERZEN UND SCHRECKEN), ever
+since Sunday the 16th. Nor would his Imperial Majesty permit her to
+enter this death-room, on account of her condition, so important to the
+world; but his Majesty, turning towards that side where her apartment
+was, raised his right hand, and commanded her Husband, and the
+Archduchess her younger Sister, to tell his Theresa, That he blessed her
+herewith, notwithstanding her absence." Poor Kaiser, poor Theresa! "Most
+distressing of all was the scene with the Kaiserin. The night before,
+on getting knowledge of the sad certainty, she had fainted utterly away
+(STARKE OHNMACHT), and had to be carried into the Grand Duchess's [Maria
+Theresa's] room. Being summoned now with her Children, for the last
+blessing, she cried as in despair, 'Do not leave me, Your Dilection,
+do not (ACH EUER LIEBDEN VERLASSEN MICH DOCH NICHT)!'" Poor good souls!
+"Her Imperial Majesty would not quit the room again, but remained to the
+last.
+
+"Wednesday, 19th, all day, anxiety, mournful suspense;" poor weeping
+Kaiserin and all the world waiting; the Inevitable visibly struggling
+on. "And in the night of that day [night of 19th-20th Oct., 1740],
+between one and two in the morning, Death snatched away this most
+invaluable Monarch (DEN PREISWURDIGSTEN MONARCHEN) in the 66th year of
+his life;" and Kaiser Karl VI., and the House of Hapsburg and its Five
+tough Centuries of good and evil in this world had ended. The poor
+Kaiserin "closed the eyes" that could now no more behold her; "kissed
+his hands, and was carried out more dead than alive." [Anonymous, UT
+SUPRA, pp. 220-227.--Adelung, _Pragmatische Staatsgeschichte_ (Gotha,
+1762-1767), ii. 120. JOHANN CHRISTOPH Adelung; the same who did the
+DICTIONARY and many other deserving Books; here is the precise Title:
+_"Pragmatische Staatsgeschichte Europens,"_ that is, "Documentary
+History of Europe, from Kaiser Karl's Death, 1740, till Peace of Paris,
+1763." A solid, laborious and meritorious Work, of its kind; extremely
+extensive (9 vols. 4to, some of which are double and even treble),
+mostly in the undigested, sometimes in the quite uncooked or raw
+condition; perhaps about a fifth part of it consists of "Documents"
+proper, which are shippable. It cannot help being dull, waste, dreary,
+but is everywhere intelligible (excellent Indexes too),--and offers an
+unhappy reader by far the best resource attainable for survey of that
+sad Period.]
+
+A good affectionate Kaiserin, I do believe; honorable, truthful, though
+unwitty of speech, and converted by Grandpapa in a peculiar manner,
+For her Kaiser too, after all, I have a kind of love. Of brilliant
+articulate intellect there is nothing; nor of inarticulate (as
+in Friedrich Wilhelm's case) anything considerable: in fact his
+Shadow-Hunting, and Duelling with the Termagant, seemed the reverse of
+wise. But there was something of a high proud heart in it, too, if we
+examine; and even the Pragmatic Sanction, though in practice not
+worth one regiment of iron ramrods, indicates a profoundly fixed
+determination, partly of loyal nature, such as the gods more or less
+reward. "He had been a great builder," say the Histories; "was a great
+musician, fit to lead orchestras, and had composed an Opera,"--poor
+Kaiser. There came out large traits of him, in Maria Theresa again,
+under an improved form, which were much admired by the world. He looks,
+in his Portraits, intensely serious; a handsome man, stoically grave;
+much the gentleman, much the Kaiser or Supreme Gentleman. As, in life
+and fact, he was; "something solemn in him, even when he laughs," the
+people used to say. A man honestly doing his very best with his poor
+Kaisership, and dying of chagrin by it. "On opening the body, the
+liver-region proved to be entirely deranged; in the place where the
+gall-bladder should have been, a stone of the size of a pigeon's egg was
+found grown into the liver, and no gall-bladder now there."
+
+That same morning, with earliest daylight, "Thursday, 20th, six A.M.,"
+Maria Theresa is proclaimed by her Heralds over Vienna: "According
+to Pragmatic Sanction, Inheritress of all the," &c. &c.;--Sovereign
+Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia, for chief items.
+"At seven her Majesty took the Oath from the Generals and Presidents
+of Tribunals,--said, through her tears, 'All was to stand on the old
+footing, each in his post,'"--and the other needful words. Couriers
+shoot forth towards all Countries;--one express courier to Regensburg,
+and the enchanted Wiggeries there, to say That a new Kaiser will be
+needed; REICHS-Vicar or Vicars (Kur-Sachsen and whoever more, for
+they are sometimes disagreed about it) will have to administer in the
+interim.
+
+A second courier we saw arrive at Reinsberg; he likewise may be
+important. The Bavarian Minister, Karl Albert Kur-Baiern's man, shot off
+his express, like the others; answer is, by return of courier, or even
+earlier (for a messenger was already on the road), Make protest! "We
+Kur-Baiern solemnly protest against Pragmatic Sanction, and the
+assumption of such Titles by the Daughter of the late Kaiser. King of
+Bohemia, and in good part even of Austria, it is not you, Madam, but
+of right WE; as, by Heaven's help, it is our fixed resolution to make
+good!" Protest was presented, accordingly, with all the solemnities,
+without loss of a moment. To which Bartenstein and the Authorities
+answered "Pooh-pooh," as if it were nothing. It is the first ripple of
+an immeasurable tide or deluge in that kind, threatening to submerge
+the new Majesty of Hungary;--as had been foreseen at Reinsberg; though
+Bartenstein and the Authorities made light of it, answering "Pooh-pooh,"
+or almost "Ha-ha," for the present.
+
+Her Hungarian Majesty's chief Generals, Seckendorf, Wallis, Neipperg,
+sit in their respective prison-wards at this time (from which she soon
+liberates them): Kur-Baiern has lodged protest; at Reinsberg there will
+be an important resolution ready:--and in the Austrian Treasury (which
+employs 40,000 persons, big and little) there is of cash or available,
+resource, 100,000 florins, that is to say, 10,000 pounds net. [Mailath,
+_Geschichte des Oestreichischen Kaiserstaats_ (Hamburg, 1850), v. 8.]
+And unless Pragmatic sheepskin hold tighter than some persons
+expect, the affairs of Austria and of this young Archduchess are in a
+threatening way.
+
+His Britannic Majesty was on the road home, about Helvoetsluys or on
+the sea for Harwich, that night the Kaiser died; of whose illness he
+had heard nothing. At London, ten days after, the sudden news struck
+dismally upon his Majesty and the Political Circles there: "No help,
+then, from that quarter, in our Spanish War; perhaps far other than
+help!"--Nay, certain Gazetteers were afraid the grand new Anti-Spanish
+Expedition itself, which was now, at the long last, after such
+confusions and delays, lying ready, in great strength, Naval and
+Military, would be countermanded,--on Pragmatic-Sanction considerations,
+and the crisis probably imminent. [London Newspapers (31st Oct.-6th
+Nov., 1740)]. But it was not countermanded; it sailed all the same,
+"November 6th" (seventh day after the bad news); and made towards--Shall
+we tell the reader, what is Officially a dead secret, though by this
+time well guessed at by the Public, English and also Spanish?--towards
+Carthagena, to reinforce fiery Vernon, in the tropical latitudes; and
+overset Spanish America, beginning with that important Town!
+
+Commodore Anson, he also, after long fatal delays, is off, several weeks
+ago; [29th (18th) September, 1740.] round Cape Horn; hoping (or
+perhaps already not hoping) to co-operate from the Other Ocean, and be
+simultaneous with Vernon,--on these loose principles of keeping time!
+Commodore Anson does, in effect, make a Voyage which is beautiful, and
+to mankind memorable; but as to keeping tryst with Vernon, the very gods
+could not do it on those terms!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX. -- RESOLUTION FORMED AT REINSBERG IN CONSEQUENCE.
+
+Thursday, 27th October, two days after the Expresses went for them,
+Schwerin and Podewils punctually arrived at Reinsberg. They were carried
+into the interior privacies, "to long conferences with his Majesty that
+day, and for the next four days; Majesty and they even dining privately
+together;" grave business of state, none guesses how grave, evidently
+going on. The resolution Friedrich laid before them, fruit of these two
+days since the news from Vienna, was probably the most important ever
+formed in Prussia, or in Europe during that Century: Resolution to make
+good our Rights on Silesia, by this great opportunity, the best that
+will ever offer. Resolution which had sprung, I find, and got to sudden
+fixity in the head of the young King himself; and which met with little
+save opposition from all the other sons of Adam, at the first blush and
+for long afterwards. And, indeed, the making of it good (of it, and of
+the immense results that hung by it) was the main business of this young
+King's Life henceforth; and cost him Labors like those of Hercules, and
+was in the highest degree momentous to existing and not yet existing
+millions of mankind,--to the readers of this History especially.
+
+It is almost touching to reflect how unexpectedly, like a bolt out of
+the blue, all this had come upon Friedrich; and how it overset his fine
+program for the winter at Reinsberg, and for his Life generally. Not
+the Peaceable magnanimities, but the Warlike, are the thing appointed
+Friedrich this winter, and mainly henceforth. Those "GOLDEN or soft
+radiances" which we saw in him, admirable to Voltaire and to Friedrich,
+and to an esurient philanthropic world,--it is not those, it is "the
+STEEL-BRIGHT or stellar kind," that are to become predominant in
+Friedrich's existence: grim hail-storms, thunders and tornado for
+an existence to him, instead of the opulent genialities and halcyon
+weather, anticipated by himself and others! Indisputably enough to us,
+if not yet to Friedrich, "Reinsberg and Life to the Muses" are done.
+On a sudden, from the opposite side of the horizon, see, miraculous
+Opportunity, rushing hitherward,--swift, terrible, clothed with
+lightning like a courser of the gods: dare you clutch HIM by the
+thundermane, and fling yourself upon him, and make for the Empyrean by
+that course rather? Be immediate about it, then; the time is now, or
+else never!--No fair judge can blame the young man that he laid hold
+of the flaming Opportunity in this manner, and obeyed the new omen. To
+seize such an opportunity, and perilously mount upon it, was the part of
+a young magnanimous King, less sensible to the perils, and more to the
+other considerations, than one older would have been.
+
+Schwerin and Podewils were, no doubt, astonished to learn what the Royal
+purpose was; and could not want for commonplace objections many and
+strong, had this been the scene for dwelling on them, or dressing them
+out at eloquent length. But they knew well this was not the scene for
+doing more than, with eloquent modesty, hint them; that the Resolution,
+being already taken, would not alter for commonplace; and that the
+question now lying for honorable members was, How to execute it? It is
+on this, as I collect, that Schwerin and Podewils in the King's company
+did, with extreme intensity, consult during those four days; and were,
+most probably, of considerable use to the King, though some of their
+modifications adopted by him turned out, not as they had predicted,
+but as he. On all the Military details and outlines, and on all the
+Diplomacies of this business, here are two Oracles extremely worth
+consulting by the young King.
+
+To seize Silesia is easy: a Country open on all but the south side; open
+especially on our side, where a battalion of foot might force it; the
+three or four fortresses, of which only two, Glogau and Neisse, can
+be reckoned strong, are provided with nothing as they ought to be;
+not above 3,000 fighting men in the whole Province, and these little
+expecting fight. Silesia can be seized: but the maintaining of it?--We
+must try to maintain it, thinks Friedrich.
+
+At Reinsberg it is not yet known that Kur-Baiern has protested; but it
+is well guessed he means to do so, and that France is at his back in
+some sort. Kur-Baiern, probably Kur-Sachsen, and plenty more, France
+being secretly at their back. What low condition Austria stands in, all
+its ready resources run to the lees, is known; and that France, getting
+lively at present with its Belleisles and adventurous spirits not
+restrainable by Fleury, is always on the watch to bring Austria lower;
+capable, in spite of Pragmatic Sanction, to snatch the golden moment,
+and spring hunter-like on a moribund Austria, were the hunting-dogs once
+out and in cry. To Friedrich it seems unlikely the Pragmatic Sanction
+will be a Law of Nature to mankind, in these circumstances. His opinion
+is, "the old political system has expired with the Kaiser." Here
+is Europe, burning in one corner of it by Jenkins's Ear, and such a
+smoulder of combustible material awakening nearer hand: will not Europe,
+probably, blaze into general War; Pragmatic Sanction going to waste
+sheepskin, and universal scramble ensuing? In which he who has 100,000
+good soldiers, and can handle them, may be an important figure in urging
+claims, and keeping what he has got hold of!--
+
+Friedrich's mind, as to the fact, is fixed: seize Silesia we will: but
+as to the manner of doing it, Schwerin and Podewils modify him. Their
+counsel is: "Do not step out in hostile attitude at the very first,
+saying, 'These Duchies, Liegnitz, Brieg, Wohlau, Jagerndorf, are
+mine, and I will fight for them;' say only, 'Having, as is well known,
+interests of various kinds in this Silesia, I venture to take charge of
+it in the perilous times now come, and will keep it safe for the real
+owner.' Silesia seized in this fashion," continue they, "negotiate
+with the Queen of Hungary; offer her help, large help in men and
+money, against her other enemies; perhaps she will consent to do us
+right?"--"She never will consent," is Friedrich's opinion. "But it is
+worth trying?" urge the Ministers.--"Well," answers Friedrich, "be it in
+that form; that is the soft-spoken cautious form: any form will do, if
+the fact be there." That is understood to have been the figure of
+the deliberation in this conclave at Reinsberg, during the four days.
+[Stenzel (from what sources he does not clearly say, no doubt from
+sources of some authenticity) gives this as summary of it, iv. 61-65.]
+And now it remains only to fix the Military details, to be ready in
+a minimum of time; and to keep our preparations and intentions in
+impenetrable darkness from all men, in the interim. Adieu, Messieurs.
+
+And so, on the 1st of November, fifth morning since they came, Schwerin
+and Podewils, a world of new business silently ahead of them, return to
+Berlin, intent to begin the same. All the Kings will have to take their
+resolution on this matter; wisely, or else unwisely. King Friedrich's,
+let it prove the wisest or not, is notably the rapidest,--complete, and
+fairly entering upon action, on November 1st. At London the news of
+the Kaiser's death had arrived the day before; Britannic Majesty and
+Ministry, thrown much into the dumps by it, much into the vague, are
+nothing like so prompt with their resolution on it. Somewhat sorrowfully
+in the vague. In fact, they will go jumbling hither and thither for
+about three years to come, before making up their minds to a resolution:
+so intricate is the affair to the English Nation and them! Intricate
+indeed; and even imaginary,--definable mainly as a bottomless abyss of
+nightmare dreams to the English Nation and them! Productive of strong
+somnambulisms, as my friend has it!--
+
+
+
+
+MYSTERY IN BERLIN, FOR SEVEN WEEKS, WHILE THE PREPARATIONS GO ON;
+VOLTAIRE VISITS FRIEDRICH TO DECIPHER IT, BUT CANNOT.
+
+Podewils and Schwerin gone, King Friedrich, though still very busy in
+working-hours, returns to his society and its gayeties and brilliancies;
+apparently with increased appetite after these four days of abstinence.
+Still busy in his working-hours, as a King must be; couriers coming and
+going, hundreds of businesses despatched each day; and in the evening
+what a relish for society,--Praetorius is quite astonished at it. Music,
+dancing, play-acting, suppers of the gods, "not done till four in the
+morning sometimes," these are the accounts Praetorius hears at Berlin.
+"From all persons who return from Reinsberg," writes he, "the unanimous
+report is, That the King works, the whole day through, with an assiduity
+that is unique; and then, in the evening, gives himself to the pleasures
+of society, with a vivacity of mirth and sprightly humor which makes
+those Evening-Parties charming." [Excerpt, in Preuss, _Thronbesteigung,
+_ p. 418.] So it had to last, with frequent short journeys on
+Friedrich's part, and at last with change to Berlin as head-quarters,
+for about seven weeks to come,--till the beginning of December, and the
+day of action, namely. A notable little Interim in Friedrich's History
+and that of Europe.
+
+Friedrich's secret, till almost the very end, remained impenetrable;
+though, by degrees, his movements excited much guessing in the Gazetteer
+and Diplomatic world everywhere. Military matters do seem to be getting
+brisk in Prussia; arsenals much astir; troops are seen mustering,
+marching, plainly to a singular degree. Marching towards the Austrian
+side, towards Silesia, some note. Yes; but also towards Cleve,
+certain detachments of troops are marching,--do not men see? And
+the Intrenchment at Buderich in those parts, that is getting forward
+withal,--though privately there is not the least prospect of using it,
+in these altered circumstances. Friedrich already guesses that if
+he could get Silesia, so invaluable on the one skirt of him, he mill
+probably have to give up his Berg-Julich claims on the other; I fancy
+he is getting ready to do so, should the time come for such alternative.
+But he labors at Buderich, all the same, and "improves the roads in that
+quarter,"--which at least may help to keep an inquisitive public at
+bay. These are seven busy weeks on Friedrich's part, and on the world's:
+constant realities of preparation, on the one part, industriously
+veiled; on the other part, such shadows, guessings, spyings, spectral
+movements above ground and below; Diplomatic shadows fencing, Gazetteer
+shadows rumoring;--dreams of a world as if near awakening to something
+great! "All Officers on furlough have been ordered to their posts,"
+writes Bielfeld, on those vague terms of his: "On arriving at Berlin,
+you notice a great agitation in all departments of the State. The
+regiments are ordered to prepare their equipages, and to hold themselves
+in readiness for marching. There are magazines being formed at
+Frankfurt-on-Oder and at Crossen,"--handy for Silesia, you would
+say? "There are considerable trains of Artillery getting ready, and the
+King has frequent conferences with his Generals." [Bielfeld, i. 165
+(Berlin, 30th November, is the date he puts to it).] The authentic fact
+is: "By the middle of November, Troops, to the extent of 30,000 and
+more, had got orders to be ready for marching in three weeks hence;
+their public motions very visible ever since, their actual purpose a
+mystery to all mortals except three."
+
+Towards the end of November, it becomes the prevailing guess that the
+business is immediate, not prospective; that Silesia may be in the wind,
+not Julich and Berg. Which infinitely quickens the shadowy rumorings and
+Diplomatic fencings of mankind. The French have their special Ambassador
+here; a Marquis de Beauvau, observant military gentleman, who came with
+the Accession Compliment some time ago, and keeps his eyes well open,
+but cannot see through mill-stones. Fleury is intensely desirous to know
+Friedrich's secret; but would fain keep his own (if he yet have one),
+and is himself quite tacit and reserved. To Fleury's Marquis de
+Beauvau Friedrich is very gracious; but in regard to secrets, is for
+a reciprocal procedure. Could not Voltaire go and try? It is thought
+Fleury had let fall some hint to that effect, carried by a bird of the
+air. Sure enough Voltaire does go; is actually on visit to his royal
+Friend; "six days with him at Reinsberg;" perhaps near a fortnight in
+all (20 November-2 December or so), hanging about those Berlin regions,
+on the survey. Here is an unexpected pleasure to the parties;--but in
+regard to penetrating of secrets, an unproductive one!
+
+Voltaire's ostensible errand was, To report progress about the
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL, the Van Duren nonsense; and, at any rate, to settle the
+Money-accounts on these and other scores; and to discourse Philosophies,
+for a day or two, with the First of Men. The real errand, it is pretty
+clear, was as above. Voltaire has always a wistful eye towards political
+employment, and would fain make himself useful in high quarters. Fleury
+and he have their touches of direct Correspondence now and then; and
+obliquely there are always intermediates and channels. Small hint,
+the slightest twinkle of Fleury's eyelashes, would be duly speeded
+to Voltaire, and set him going. We shall see him expressly missioned
+hither, on similar errand, by and by; though with as bad success as at
+present.
+
+Of this his First Visit to Berlin, his Second to Friedrich, Voltaire in
+the VIE PRIVEE says nothing. But in his SIECLE DE LOUIS XV. he drops,
+with proud modesty, a little foot-note upon it: "The Author was with the
+King of Prussia at that time; and can affirm that Cardinal de Fleury was
+totally astray in regard to the Prince he had now to do with." To
+which a DATE slightly wrong is added; the rest being perfectly correct.
+[_OEuvres_ (Siecle de Louis XV., c. 6), xxviii. 74.] No other details
+are to be got anywhere, if they were of importance; the very dates of it
+in the best Prussian Books are all slightly awry. Here, by accident,
+are two poor flint-sparks caught from the dust whirlwind, which yield
+a certain sufficing twilight, when put in their place; and show us both
+sides of the matter, the smooth side and the seamy:--
+
+1. FRIEDRICH TO ALGAROTTI, AT BERLIN. From "Reinsberg, 21st Nov.,"
+showing the smooth side.
+
+"MY DEAR SWAN OF PADUA,--Voltaire has arrived; all sparkling with new
+beauties, and far more sociable than at Cleve. He is in very good humor;
+and makes less complaining about his ailments than usual. Nothing can be
+more frivolous than our occupations here:" mere verse-making, dancing,
+philosophizing, then card-playing, dining, flirting; merry as birds on
+the bough (and Silesia invisible, except to oneself and two others).
+[_OEuvres de Frederic,_ xviii. 25.]
+
+2. FRIEDRICH TO JORDAN, AT BERLIN. "RUPPIN, 28th November."... Thy
+Miser [Voltaire, now gone to Berlin, of whom Jordan is to send news, as
+of all things else], thy Miser shall drink to the lees of his insatiable
+desire (SIC) to enrich himself: he shall have the 3,000 thalers (450
+pounds). He was with me six days: that will be at the rate of 500
+thalers (75 pounds) a day. That is paying dear for one's merry-andrew
+(C'EST BIEN PAYER UN FOU); never had court-fool such wages before." [Ib.
+xvii. 72. Particulars of the money-payment (travelling expenses chiefly,
+rather exorbitant, and THIS journey added to the list; and no whisper of
+the considerable Van-Duren moneys, and copyright of ANTI-MACHIAVEL, in
+abatement) are in Rodenbeck, i. 27. Exact sum paid is 3,300 thalers;
+2,000 a good while ago, 1,300 at this time, which settles the greedy
+bill.]
+
+Which latter, also at first hand, shows us the seamy side. And here,
+finally, with date happily appended, is a poetic snatch, in Voltaire's
+exquisite style, which with the response gives us the medium view:--
+
+VOLTAIRE'S ADIEU (_"Billet de Conge,_ 2 December, 1740").
+
+ "Non, malgre vos vertus, non, malgre vos appas,
+ Mon ame n'est point satisfaite;
+ Non, vous n'etes qu'une coquette,
+ Qui subjuguez les coeurs, et ne rous donnez pas."
+
+FRIEDRICH'S RESPONSE.
+
+ "Mon ame sent le prix de vos divins appas;
+ Mais ne presumez point qu'elle soit satisfaite.
+ Traitre, vous me quittez pour suivre une coquette;
+ Moi je ne vous quitterais pas."
+
+[_OEuvres de Frederic_ (xiv. 167); _OEuvres de Voltaire;_ &c. &c.]
+
+--Meaning, perhaps, in brief English: V. "Ah, you are but a beautiful
+coquette; you charm away our hearts, and do not give your own [won't
+tell me your secret at all]!" F. "Treacherous Lothario, it is you that
+quit me for a coquette [your divine Emilie; and won't stay here, and be
+of my Academy]; but however--!" Friedrich looked hopingly on the French,
+but could not give his secret except by degrees and with reciprocity.
+Some days hence he said to Marquis de Beauvau, in the Audience of leave,
+a word which was remembered.
+
+
+
+
+VIEW OF FRIEDRICH BEHIND THE VEIL.
+
+As to Friedrich himself, since about the middle of November his plans
+seem to have been definitely shaped out in all points; Troops so many,
+when to be on march, and how; no important detail uncertain since then.
+November 17th, he jots down a little Note, which is to go to Vienna,
+were the due hour come, by a special Ambassador, one Count Gotter,
+acquainted with the ground there; and explain to her Hungarian Majesty,
+what his exact demands are, and what the exact services he will render.
+Of which important little Paper readers shall hear again. Gotter's
+demands are at first to be high: Our Four Duchies, due by law so long;
+these and even more, considering the important services we propose; this
+is to be his first word;--but, it appears, he is privately prepared to
+put up with Two Duchies, if he can have them peaceably: Duchies of Sagan
+and Glogau, which are not of the Four at all, but which lie nearest us,
+and are far below the value of the Four, to Austria especially. This
+intricate point Friedrich has already settled in his mind. And indeed it
+is notably the habit of this young King to settle matters with himself
+in good time: and in regard to all manner of points, he will be found,
+on the day of bargaining about them, to have his own resolution formed
+and definitely fixed;--much to his advantage over conflicting parties,
+who have theirs still flying loose.
+
+Another thing of much concernment is, To secure himself from danger
+of Russian interference. To this end he despatches Major Winterfeld to
+Russia, a man well known to him;--day of Winterfeld's departure is not
+given; day of his arrival in Petersburg is "19th December" just coming.
+Russia, at present, is rather in a staggering condition; hopeful for
+Winterfeld's object. On the 28th of October last, only eight days after
+the Kaiser, Czarina Anne of Russia, she with the big cheek, once of
+Courland, had died; "audacious Death," as our poor friend had it,
+"venturing upon another Crowned Head" there. Bieren her dear
+Courlander, once little better than a Horse-groom, now Duke of Courland,
+Quasi-Husband to the late Big Cheek, and thereby sovereign of Russia,
+this long while past, is left Official Head in Russia. Poor little
+Anton Ulrich and his august Spouse, well enough known to us, have indeed
+produced a Czar Iwan, some months ago, to the joy of mankind: but Czar
+Iwan is in his cradle: Father and Mother's function is little other than
+to rock the cradle of Iwan; Bieren to be Regent and Autocrat over him
+and them in the interim. To their chagrin, to that of Feldmarschall
+Munnich and many others: the upshot of which will be visible before
+long. Czarina Anne's death had seemed to Friedrich the opportune removal
+of a dangerous neighbor, known to be in the pay of Austria: here now are
+new mutually hostile parties springing up; chance, surely, of a bargain
+with some of them? He despatches Winterfeld on this errand;--probably
+the fittest man in Prussia for it. How soon and perfectly Winterfeld
+succeeded, and what Winterfeld was, and something of what a Russia he
+found it, we propose to mention by and by.
+
+These, and all points of importance, Friedrich has settled with himself
+some time ago. What his own private thoughts on the Silesian Adventure
+are, readers will wish to know, since they can at first hand. Hear
+Friedrich himself, whose veracity is unquestionable to such as know
+anything of him:--
+
+"This Silesian Project fulfilled all his (the King's) political
+views,"--summed them all well up into one head. "It was a means of
+acquiriug reputation; of increasing the power of the State; and
+of terminating what concerned that long-litigated question of the
+Berg-Julich Succession;"--can be sure of getting that, at lowest;
+intends to give that up, if necessary.
+
+"Meanwhile, before entirely determining, the King weighed the risks
+there were in undertaking such a War, and the advantages that were to
+be hoped from it. On one side, presented itself the potent House of
+Austria, not likely to want resources with so many vast Provinces under
+it; an Emperor's Daughter attacked, who would naturally find allies in
+the King of England, in the Dutch Republic, and so many Princes of the
+Empire who had signed the Pragmatic Sanction." Russia was--or had
+been, and might again be--in the pay of Vienna. Saxony might have some
+clippings from Bohemia thrown to it, and so be gained over. Scanty
+Harvest, 1740, threatened difficulties as to provisioning of troops.
+"The risks were great. One had to apprehend the vicissitudes of war. A
+single battle lost might be decisive. The King had no allies; and his
+troops, hitherto without experience, would have to front old Austrian
+soldiers, grown gray in harness, and trained to war by so many
+campaigns.
+
+"On the other side were hopeful considerations,"--four in number: FIRST,
+Weak condition of the Austrian Court, Treasury empty, War-Apparatus
+broken in pieces; inexperienced young Princess to defend a disputed
+succession, on those terms. SECOND, There WILL be allies; France and
+England always in rivalry, both meddling in these matters, King is sure
+to get either the one or the other.--THIRD, Silesian War lies handy to
+us, and is the only kind of Offensive War that does; Country bordering
+on our frontier, and with the Oder running through it as a sure
+high-road for everything. FOURTH, "What suddenly turned the balance,"
+or at least what kept it steady in that posture,--"news of the Czarina's
+death arrives:" Russia has ceased to count against us; and become a
+manageable quantity. On, therefore!--
+
+"Add to these reasons," says the King, with a candor which has not been
+well treated in the History Books, "Add to these reasons, an Army ready
+for acting; Funds, Supplies all found [lying barrelled in the Schloss at
+Berlin];--and perhaps the desire of making oneself a name," from which
+few of mortals able to achieve it are exempt in their young time: "all
+this was cause of the War which the King now entered upon." [_OEuvres de
+Frederic_ (Histoire de mon Temps), i. 128.]
+
+"Desire to make himself a name; how shocking!" exclaim several
+Historians. "Candor of confession that he may have had some such desire;
+how honest!" is what they do not exclaim. As to the justice of his
+Silesian Claims, or even to his own belief about their justice,
+Friedrich affords not the least light which can be new to readers here.
+He speaks, when business requires it, of "those known rights" of his,
+and with the air of a man who expects to be believed on his word; but
+it is cursorily, and in the business way only; and there is not here
+or elsewhere the least pleading:--a man, you would say, considerably
+indifferent to our belief on that head; his eyes set on the practical
+merely. "Just Rights? What are rights, never so just, which you cannot
+make valid? The world is full of such. If you have rights and can assert
+them into facts, do it; that is worth doing!"--
+
+We must add two Notes, two small absinthine drops, bitter but wholesome,
+administered by him to the Old Dessauer, whose gloomy wonder over all
+this military whirl of Prussian things, and discontent that he, lately
+the head authority, has never once been spoken to on it, have been
+great. Guessing, at last, that it was meant for Austria, a Power rather
+dear to Leopold, he can suppress himself no longer; but breaks out into
+Cassandra prophesyings, which have piqued the young King, and provoke
+this return:--
+
+1. "REINSBERG, 24th November, 1740.--I have received your Letter, and
+seen with what inquietude you view the approaching march of my Troops.
+I hope you will set your mind at ease on that score; and wait
+with patience what I intend with them and you. I have made all my
+dispositions; and Your Serenity will learn, time enough, what my orders
+are, without disquieting yourself about them, as nothing has been
+forgotten or delayed."--FRIEDRICH.
+
+Old Dessauer, cut to the bone, perceives he will have to quit that
+method and never resume it; writes next how painful it is to an old
+General to see himself neglected, as if good for nothing, while his
+scholars are allowed to gather laurels. Friedrich's answer is of
+soothing character:--
+
+2. "BERLIN, 2d DECEMBER, 1740.--You may be assured I honor your merits
+and capacity as a young Officer ought to honor an old one, who has given
+the world so many proofs of his talent (DEXTERITAT); nor will I neglect
+Your Serenity on any occasion when you can help me by your good Counsel
+and co-operation." But it is a mere "bagatelle" this that I am now upon;
+though, next year, it may become serious.
+
+For the rest, Saxony being a neighbor whose intentions one does not
+know, I have privately purposed Your Serenity should keep an outlook
+that way, in my absence. Plenty of employment coming for Your Serenity.
+"But as to this present Expedition, I reserve it for myself alone; that
+the world may not think the King of Prussia marches with a Tutor to
+the Field."--FRIEDRICH. [Orlich, _Geschichte der Schlesischen Kriege_
+(Berlin, 1841), i. 38, 39.]
+
+And therewith Leopold, eagerly complying, has to rest satisfied; and
+beware of too much freedom with this young King again.
+
+"Berlin, December 2d," is the date of that last Note to the Dessauer;
+date also of Voltaire's ADIEU with the RESPONSE;--on which same day,
+"Friday, December 2d," as I find from the Old Books, his Majesty,
+quitting the Reinsberg sojourn, "had arrived in Berlin about 2 P.M.;
+accompanied by Prince August Wilhelm [betrothed at Brunswick lately];
+such a crowd on the streets as if they had never seen him before." He
+continued at Berlin or in the neighborhood thenceforth. Busy days these;
+and Berlin a much whispering City, as Regiment after Regiment marches
+away. King soon to follow, as is thought,--"who himself sometimes
+deigns to take the Regiments into highest own eyeshine, HOCHST-EIGENEN
+AUGENSCHEIN" (that is, to review them), say the reverential Editors.
+December 6th--But let us follow the strict sequence of Phenomena at
+Berlin.
+
+
+
+
+EXCELLENCY BOTTA HAS AUDIENCE; THEN EXCELLENCY DICKENS, AND OTHERS:
+DECEMBER 6th, THE MYSTERY IS OUT.
+
+Of course her Hungarian Majesty, and her Bartensteins and Ministries,
+heard enough of those Prussian rumors, interior Military activities,
+and enigmatic movements; but they seem strangely supine on the matter;
+indeed, they seem strangely supine on such matters; and lean at ease
+upon the Sea-Powers, upon Pragmatic Sanction and other Laws of Nature.
+But at length even they become painfully interested as to Friedrich's
+intentions; and despatch an Envoy to sift him a little: an expert
+Marchese di Botta, Genoese by birth, skilful in the Russian and
+other intricacies; who was here at Berlin lately, doing the Accession
+Compliment (rather ill received at that time), and is fit for the job.
+Perhaps Botta will penetrate him? That is becoming desirable, in spite
+of the gay Private Theatricals at Reinsberg, and the Berlin Carnival
+Balls he is so occupied with.
+
+England is not less interested, and the diligent Sir Guy is doing his
+best; but can make out nothing satisfactory;--much the reverse indeed;
+and falls into angry black anticipations. "Nobody here, great or small,"
+says his Excellency, "dares make any representation to this young Prince
+against the measures he is pursuing; though all are sensible of the
+confusion which must follow. A Prince who had the least regard to honor,
+truth and justice, could not act the part he is going to do." Alas, no,
+Excellency Dickens! "But it is plain his only view was, to deceive us
+all, and conceal for a while his ambitious and mischievous designs."
+[Despatch, 29th November-3d December, 1740: Raumer, p. 58.] "Never was
+such dissimulation!" exclaims the Diplomatic world everywhere, being
+angered at it, as if it were a vice on the part of a King about to
+invade Silesia. Dissimulation, if that mean mendacity, is not the name
+of the thing; it is the art of wearing a polite cloak of darkness, and
+the King is little disturbed what name they call it.
+
+Botta did not get to Berlin till December 1st, had no Audience till the
+5th;--by which time it is becoming evident to Excellency Dickens, and to
+everybody, that Silesia is the thing meant. Botta hints as much in that
+first Audience, December 5th: "Terrible roads, those Silesian ones, your
+Majesty!" says Botta, as if historically merely, but with a glance of the
+eye. "Hm," answers his Majesty in the same tone, "the worst that comes
+of them is a little mud!"--Next day, Dickens had express Audience,
+"Berlin, Tuesday 6th:" a smartish, somewhat flurried Colloquy with the
+King; which, well abridged, may stand as follows:--
+
+DICKENS.... "Indivisibility of the Austrian Monarchy, Sire!"--KING.
+"Indivisibility? What do you mean?"--DICKENS. "The maintenance of the
+Pragmatic Sanction."--KING. "Do you intend to support it? I hope not;
+for such is not my intention." (There is for you!)...
+
+DICKENS. "England and Holland will much wonder at the measures your
+Majesty was taking, at the moment when your Majesty proposed to join
+with them, and were making friendly proposals!" (Has been a deceitful
+man, Sir Guy, at least an impenetrable;--but this latter is rather
+strong on your part!) "What shall I write to England?" ("When I
+mentioned this," says Dickens, "the King grew red in the face," eyes
+considerably flashing, I should think.)
+
+KING. "You can have no instructions to ask that question! And if you
+had, I have an answer ready for you. England has no right to inquire
+into my designs. Your great Sea-Armaments, did I ask you any questions
+about them? No; I was and am silent on that head; only wishing you
+good luck, and that you may not get beaten by the Spaniards." (Dickens
+hastily draws in his rash horns again; after a pass or two, King's
+natural color returns.)...
+
+KING. "Austria as a Power is necessary against the Turks. But in
+Germany, what need of Austria being so superlative? Why should not, say,
+Three Electors united be able to oppose her?... Monsieur, I find it
+is your notion in England, as well as theirs in France, to bring other
+Sovereigns under your tutorage, and lead them about. Understand that
+I will not be led by either.... Tush, YOU are like the Athenians, who,
+when Philip of Macedon was ready to invade them, spent their time in
+haranguing!"
+
+DICKENS.... "Berg and Julich, if we were to guarantee them?"--KING. "Hm.
+Don't so much mind that Rhine Country: difficulties there,--Dutch always
+jealous of one. But, on the other Frontier, neither England nor Holland
+could take umbrage,"--points clearly to Silesia, then, your Excellency
+Dickens? [Raumer, (from State-Paper Office), pp. 63, 64.]
+
+Alas, yes! Troops and military equipments are, for days past, evidently
+wending towards Frankfurt, towards Crossen, and even the Newspapers
+now hint that something is on hand in that quarter. Nay, this same day,
+TUESDAY, 6th DECEMBER, there has come out brief Official Announcement,
+to all the Foreign Ministers at Berlin, Excellency Dickens among them,
+"That his Royal Majesty, our most all-gracious Herr, has taken the
+resolution to advance a Body of Troops into Schlesien,"--rather out of
+friendly views towards Austria (much business lying between us about
+Schlesien), not out of hostile views by any means, as all Excellencies
+shall assure their respective Courts. [Copy of the Paper in
+_Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 447.] Announcement which had thrown the
+Excellency Dickens into such a frame of mind, before he got his Audience
+to-day!--
+
+SATURDAY following, which was December 10th, Marquis de Beauvau had his
+Audience of leave; intending for Paris shortly: Audience very gracious;
+covertly hinting, on both sides, more than it said; ending in these
+words, on the King's side, which have become famous: "Adieu, then, M. le
+Marquis. I believe I am going to play your game; if the aces fall to
+me, we will share (_Je vais, je crois, jouer votre jeu: si les as me
+viennent, nous partagerons)!_" [Voltaire, _OEuvres_ (Siecle de Louis XV.,
+c. 6), xxviii. 74.]
+
+To Botta, all this while, Friedrich strove to be specially civil; took
+him out to Charlottenburg, that same Saturday, with the Queen and other
+guests; but Botta, and all the world, being now certain about Silesia,
+and that no amount of mud, or other terror on the roads, would be
+regarded, Botta's thoughts in this evening party are not of cheerful
+nature. Next day, Sunday, December 11th, he too gets his Audience of
+leave; and cannot help bursting out, when the King plainly tells him
+what is now afoot, and that the Prussian Ambassador has got instructions
+what to offer upon it at Vienna. "Sire, you are going to ruin the House
+of Austria," cried Botta, "and to plunge yourself into destruction (VOUS
+ABIMER) at the same time!"--"Depends on the Queen," said Friedrich,
+"to accept the Offers I have made her." Botta sank silent, seemed to
+reflect, but gathering himself again, added with an ironical air and
+tone of voice, "They are fine Troops, those of yours, Sire. Ours have
+not the same splendor of appearance; but they have looked the wolf in
+the face. Think, I conjure you, what you are getting into!" Friedrich
+answered with vivacity, a little nettled at the ironical tone of Botta,
+and his mixed sympathy and menace: "You find my troops are beautiful;
+perhaps I shall convince you they are good too." Yes, Excellency Botta,
+goodish troops; and very capable "to look the wolf in the face,"--or
+perhaps in the tail too, before all end! "Botta urged and entreated that
+at least there should be some delay in executing this project. But
+the King gave him to understand that it was now too late, and that the
+Rubicon was passed." [Friedrich's own Account (_OEuvres,_ ii. 57).]
+
+The secret is now out, therefore; Invasion of Silesia certain and close
+at hand. "A day or two before marching," may have been this very day
+when Botta got his audience, the King assembled his Chief Generals, all
+things ready out in the Frankfurt-Crossen region yonder; and spoke to
+them as follows; briefly and to the point:--
+
+"Gentlemen, I am undertaking a War, in which I have no allies but your
+valor and your good-will. My cause is just; my resources are what we
+ourselves can do; and the issue lies in Fortune. Remember continually
+the glory which your Ancestors acquired in the plains of Warsaw, at
+Fehrbellin, and in the Expedition to Preussen [across the Frische Haf on
+ice, that time]. Your lot is in your own hands: distinctions and rewards
+wait upon your fine actions which shall merit them.
+
+"But what need have I to excite you to glory? It is the one thing you
+keep before your eyes; the sole object worthy of your labors. We
+are going to front troops who, under Prince Eugene, had the highest
+reputation. Though Prince Eugene is gone, we shall have to measure our
+strength against brave soldiers: the greater will be the honor if we
+can conquer. Adieu, go forth. I will follow you straightway to the
+rendezvous of glory which awaits us." [_OEuvres de Frederic,_ ii.58.]
+
+
+
+
+MASKED BALL, AT BERLIN, 12th-13th DECEMBER.
+
+On the evening of Monday, 12th, there was, as usual, Masked (or
+Half-Masked) Ball, at the Palace. As usual; but this time it has become
+mentionable in World-History. Bielfeld, personally interested, gives
+us a vivid glance into it;--which, though pretending to be real and
+contemporaneous, is unfortunately MYTHICAL only, and done at a great
+interval of years (dates, and even slight circumstances of fact,
+refusing to conform);--which, however, for the truth there is in it,
+we will give, as better than nothing. Bielfeld's pretended date is,
+"Berlin, 15th December;" should have been 14th,--wrong by a day, after
+one's best effort!
+
+"BERLIN, 15th DECEMBER, 1740. As for me, dear Sister, I am like a
+shuttlecock whom the Kings of Prussia and of England hit with their
+rackets, and knock to and fro. The night before last, I was at the
+Palace Evening Party (ASSEMBLEE); which is a sort of Ball, where you go
+in domino, but without mask on the face. The Queen was there, and all
+the Court. About eight o'clock the King also made his appearance. His
+Majesty, noticing M. de G---[that is DE GUIDIKEN, or Guy Dickens],
+English Minister, addressed him; led him into the embrasure of a window,
+and talked alone with him for more than an hour [uncertain, probably
+apocryphal this]. I threw, from time to time, a stolen glance at this
+dialogue, which appeared to me to be very lively. A moment after, being
+just dancing with Madame the Countess de--THREE ASTERISKS,--I felt
+myself twitched by the domino; and turning, was much surprised to see
+that it was the King; who took me aside, and said, 'Are your boots
+oiled (VOS BOTTES SONT-ELLES GRAISSIES, Are you ready for a journey)?'
+I replied, 'Sire, they will always be so for your Majesty's
+service.'--'Well, then, Truchsess and you are for England; the day after
+to-morrow you go. Speak to M. de Podewils!'--This was said like a flash
+of lightning. His Majesty passed into another apartment; and I, I went
+to finish my minuet with the Lady; who had been not less astonished to
+see me disappear from her eyes, in the middle of the dance, than I was
+at what the King said to me." [Bielfeld, i. 167, 168.] Next morning, I--
+
+The fact is, next morning, Truchsess and I began preparation for the
+Court of London,--and we did there, for many months afterwards, strive
+our best to keep the Britannic Majesty in some kind of tune, amid the
+prevailing discord of events;--fact interesting to some. And the other
+fact, interesting to everybody, though Bielfeld has not mentioned it,
+is, That King Friedrich, the same next morning, punctually "at the
+stroke of 9," rolled away Frankfurt-ward,--into the First Silesian War!
+Tuesday, "13th December, this morning, the King, privately quitting the
+Ball, has gone [after some little snatch of sleep, we will hope] for
+Frankfurt, to put himself at the head of his Troops." [Dickens (in
+State-Paper Office), 13th December, 1740; see also _Helden-Geschichte,_
+i. 452; &c. &c.] Bellona his companion for long years henceforth,
+instead of Minerva and the Muses, as he had been anticipating.
+
+Hereby is like to be fulfilled (except that Friedrich himself is perhaps
+this "little stone") what Friedrich prophesied to his Voltaire, the
+day after hearing of the Kaiser's death: "I believe there will, by June
+next, be more talk of cannon, soldiers, trenches, than of actresses, and
+dancers for the ballet. This small Event changes the entire system of
+Europe. It is the little stone which Nebuchadnezzar saw, in his dream,
+loosening itself, and rolling down on the Image made of Four Metals,
+which it shivers to ruin." [Friedrich to Voltaire, busy gathering actors
+at that time, 26th October, 1740 (_OEuvres de Frederic,_ xxii. 49).]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Friedrich II. of Prussia,
+Vol. XI. (of XXI.), by Thomas Carlyle
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+Project Gutenberg's Etext History of Friedrich II of Prussia V 11
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+History of Friedrich II of Prussia V 11
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+BOOK XI.
+
+FRIEDRICH TAKES THE REINS IN HAND.
+
+June-December, 1740.
+
+
+Chapter I.
+
+PHENOMENA OF FRIEDRICH'S ACCESSION.
+
+In Berlin, from Tuesday, 31st May, 1740, day of the late King's
+death, till the Thursday following, the post was stopped and the
+gates closed; no estafette can be despatched, though Dickens and
+all the Ambassadors are busy writing. On the Thursday, Regiments,
+Officers, principal Officials having sworn, and the new King being
+fairly in the saddle, estafettes and post-boys shoot forth at the
+top of their speed; and Rumor, towards every point of the compass,
+apprises mankind what immense news there is. [Dickens (in State-
+Paper Office), 4th June, 1740.]
+
+A King's Accession is always a hopeful phenomenon to the public;
+more especially a young King's, who has been talked of for his
+talents and aspirings,--for his sufferings, were it nothing more,
+--and whose ANTI-MACHIAVEL is understood to be in the press.
+Vaguely everywhere there has a notion gone abroad that this young
+King will prove considerable. Here at last has a Lover of
+Philosophy got upon the throne, and great philanthropies and
+magnanimities are to be expected, think rash editors and idle
+mankind. Rash editors in England and elsewhere, we observe, are
+ready to believe that Friedrich has not only disbanded the Potsdam
+Giants; but means to "reduce the Prussian Army one half" or so,
+for ease (temporary ease which we hope will be lasting) of parties
+concerned; and to go much upon emancipation, political rose-water,
+and friendship to humanity, as we now call it.
+
+At his first meeting of Council, they say, he put this question,
+"Could not the Prussian Army be reduced to 45,000?" The excellent
+young man. To which the Council had answered, "Hardly, your
+Majesty! The Julich-and-Berg affair is so ominous hitherto!"
+These may be secrets, and dubious to people out of doors, thinks a
+wise editor; but one thing patent to the day was this, surely
+symbolical enough: On one of his Majesty's first drives to Potsdam
+or from it, a thousand children,--in round numbers a thousand of
+them, all with the RED STRING round their necks, and liable to be
+taken for soldiers, if needed in the regiment of their Canton,--
+"a thousand children met this young King at a turn of his road;
+and with shrill unison of wail, sang out: "Oh, deliver us from
+slavery,"--from the red threads, your Majesty. Why should poor we
+be liable to suffer hardship for our Country or otherwise, your
+Majesty! Can no one else be got to do it? sang out the thousand
+children. And his Majesty assented on the spot, thinks the rash
+editor. [<italic> Gentleman's Magazine <end italic> (London,
+1740), x. 318; Newspapers, &c.] "Goose, Madam?" exclaimed a
+philanthropist projector once, whose scheme of sweeping chimneys
+by pulling a live goose down through them was objected to:
+"Goose, Madam? You can take two ducks, then, if you are so sorry
+for the goose!"--Rash editors think there is to be a reign of
+Astraea Redux in Prussia, by means of this young King; and forget
+to ask themselves, as the young King must by no means do, How far
+Astraea may be possible, for Prussia and him?
+
+At home, too, there is prophesying enough, vague hope enough,
+which for most part goes wide of the mark. This young King, we
+know, did prove considerable; but not in the way shaped out for
+him by the public;--it was in far other ways! For no public in the
+least knows, in such cases: nor does the man himself know, except
+gradually and if he strive to learn. As to the public,--
+"Doubtless," says a friend of mine, "doubtless it was the Atlantic
+Ocean that carried Columbus to America; lucky for the Atlantic,
+and for Columbus and us: but the Atlantic did not quite vote that
+way from the first; nay ITS votes, I believe, were very various at
+different stages of the matter!" This is a truth which kings and
+men, not intending to be drift-logs or waste brine obedient to the
+Moon, are much called to have in mind withal, from perhaps an
+early stage of their voyage.
+
+Friedrich's actual demeanor in these his first weeks, which is
+still decipherable if one study well, has in truth a good deal of
+the brilliant, of the popular-magnanimous; but manifests strong
+solid quality withal, and a head steadier than might have been
+expected. For the Berlin world is all in a rather Auroral
+condition; and Friedrich too is,--the chains suddenly cut loose,
+and such hopes opened for the young man. He has great things
+ahead; feels in himself great things, and doubtless exults in the
+thought of realizing them. Magnanimous enough, popular, hopeful
+enough, with Voltaire and the highest of the world looking on:--
+but yet he is wise, too; creditably aware that there are limits,
+that this is a bargain, and the terms of it inexorable. We discern
+with pleasure the old veracity of character shining through this
+giddy new element; that all these fine procedures are at least
+unaffected, to a singular degree true, and the product of nature,
+on his part; and that, in short, the complete respect for Fact,
+which used to be a quality of his, and which is among the highest
+and also rarest in man, has on no side deserted him at present.
+
+A trace of airy exuberance, of natural exultancy, not quite
+repressible, on the sudden change to freedom and supreme power
+from what had gone before: perhaps that also might be legible, if
+in those opaque bead-rolls which are called Histories of Friedrich
+anything human could with certainty be read! He flies much about
+from place to place; now at Potsdam, now at Berlin, at
+Charlottenburg, Reinsberg; nothing loath to run whither business
+calls him, and appear in public: the gazetteer world, as we
+noticed, which has been hitherto a most mute world, breaks out
+here and there into a kind of husky jubilation over the great
+things he is daily doing, and rejoices in the prospect of having a
+Philosopher King; which function the young man, only twenty-eight
+gone, cannot but wish to fulfil for the gazetteers and the world.
+He is a busy man; and walks boldly into his grand enterprise of
+"making men happy," to the admiration of Voltaire and an
+enlightened public far and near.
+
+Bielfeld speaks of immense concourses of people crowding about
+Charlottenburg, to congratulate, to solicit, to &c.; tells us how
+he himself had to lodge almost in outhouses, in that royal village
+of hope, His emotions at Reinsberg, and everybody's, while
+Friedrich Wilhelm lay dying, and all stood like greyhounds on the
+slip; and with what arrow-swiftness they shot away when the great
+news came: all this he has already described at wearisome length,
+in his fantastic semi-fabulous way. [Bielfeld, i. 68-77; ib. 81.]'
+Friedrich himself seemed moderately glad to see Bielfeld; received
+his high-flown congratulations with a benevolent yet somewhat
+composed air; and gave him afterwards, in the course of weeks, an
+unexpectedly small appointment: To go to Hanover, under Truchsess
+von Waldburg, and announce our Accession. Which is but a simple,
+mostly formal service; yet perhaps what Bielfeld is best equal to.
+
+The Britannic Majesty, or at least his Hanover people have been
+beforehand with this civility; Baron Munchhausen, no doubt by
+orders given for such contingency, had appeared at Berlin with the
+due compliment and condolence almost on the first day of the New
+Reign; first messenger of all on that errand; Britannic Majesty
+evidently in a conciliatory humor,--having his dangerous Spanish
+War on hand. Britannic Majesty in person, shortly after, gets
+across to Hanover; and Friedrich despatches Truchsess, with
+Bielfeld adjoined, to return the courtesy.
+
+Friedrich does not neglect these points of good manners;
+along with which something of substantial may be privately
+conjoined. For example, if he had in secret his eye on Julich and
+Berg, could anything be fitter than to ascertain what the French
+will think of such an enterprise? What the French; and next to
+them what the English, that is to say, Hanoverians, who meddle
+much in affairs of the Reich. For these reasons and others he
+likewise, probably with more study than in the Bielfeld case,
+despatches Colonel Camas to make his compliment at the French
+Court, and in an expert way take soundings there. Camas, a fat
+sedate military gentleman, of advanced years, full of observation,
+experience and sound sense,--"with one arm, which he makes do the
+work of two, and nobody can notice that the other arm resting in
+his coat-breast is of cork, so expert is he,"--will do in this
+matter what is feasible; probably not much for the present. He is
+to call on Voltaire, as he passes, who is in Holland again, at the
+Hague for some months back; and deliver him "a little cask of
+Hungary Wine," which probably his Majesty had thought exquisite.
+Of which, and the other insignificant passages between them, we
+hear more than enough in the writings and correspondences of
+Voltaire about this time.
+
+In such way Friedrich disposes of his Bielfelds; who are rather
+numerous about him now and henceforth. Adventurers from all
+quarters, especially of the literary type, in hopes of being
+employed, much hovered round Friedrich through his whole reign.
+But they met a rather strict judge on arriving; it cannot be said
+they found it such a Goshen as they expected.
+
+Favor, friendly intimacy, it is visible from the first, avails
+nothing with this young King; beyond and before all things he will
+have his work done, and looks out exclusively for the man ablest
+to do it. Hence Bielfeld goes to Hanover, to grin out euphuisms,
+and make graceful courtbows to our sublime little Uncle there.
+On the other hand, Friedrich institutes a new Knighthood, ORDER OF
+MERIT so called; which indeed is but a small feat, testifying mere
+hope and exuberance as yet; and may even be made worse than
+nothing, according to the Knights he shall manage to have.
+Happily it proved a successful new Order in this last all-
+essential particular; and, to the end of Friedrich's life,
+continued to be a great and coveted distinction among
+the Prussians.
+
+Beyond doubt this is a radiant enough young Majesty; entitled to
+hope, and to be the cause of hope. Handsome, to begin with;
+decidedly well-looking, all say, and of graceful presence, though
+hardly five feet seven, and perhaps stouter of limb than the
+strict Belvedere standard. [Height, it appears, was five feet five
+inches (Rhenish), which in English measure is five feet seven or a
+hair's-breadth less. Preuss, twice over, by a mistake unusual with
+him, gives "five feet two inches three lines" as the correct
+cipher (which it is of NAPOLEON'S measure in FRENCH feet);
+then settles on the above dimensions from unexceptionable
+authority (Preuss, <italic> Buch fur Jedermann, <end italic>
+i. 18; Preuss, <italic> Fredrich der Grosse, <end italic> i. 39
+and 419).] Has a fine free expressive face; nothing of austerity
+in it; not a proud face, or not too proud, yet rapidly flashing on
+you all manner of high meanings. [Wille's Engraving after Pesne
+(excellent, both Picture and Engraving) is reckoned the best
+Likeness in that form.] Such a man, in the bloom of his years;
+with such a possibility ahead, and Voltaire and mankind waiting
+applausive!--Let us try to select, and extricate into coherence
+and visibility out of those Historical dust-heaps, a few of the
+symptomatic phenomena, or physiognomic procedures of Friedrich in
+his first weeks of Kingship, by way of contribution to some
+Portraiture of his then inner-man.
+
+
+FRIEDRICH WILL MAKE MEN HAPPY: CORN-MAGAZINES.
+
+On the day after his Accession, Officers and chief Ministers
+taking the Oath, Friedrich, to his Officers, "on whom he counts
+for the same zeal now which he had witnessed as their comrade,"
+recommends mildness of demeanor from the higher to the lower, and
+that the common soldier be not treated with harshness when not
+deserved: and to his Ministers he is still more emphatic, in the
+like or a higher strain. Officially announcing to them, by Letter,
+that a new Reign has commenced, he uses these words, legible soon
+after to a glad Berlin public: "Our grand care will be, To further
+the Country's well-being, and to make every one of our subjects
+(EINEN JEDEN UNSERER UNTERTHANEN) contented and happy. Our will
+is, not that you strive to enrich Us by vexation of Our subjects;
+but rather that you aim steadily as well towards the advantage of
+the Country as Our particular interest, forasmuch as We make no
+difference between these two objects," but consider them one and
+the same. This is written, and gets into print within the month;
+and his Majesty, that same day (Wednesday, 2d June), when it came
+to personal reception, and actual taking of the Oath, was pleased
+to add in words, which also were printed shortly, this comfortable
+corollary: "My will henceforth is, If it ever chance that my
+particular interest and the general good of my Countries should
+seem to go against each other,--in that case, my will is, That the
+latter always be preferred." [Dickens, Despatch, 4th June, 1740:
+Preuss, <italic> Friedrichs Jugend und Thronbesteigung <end
+italic> (Berlin, 1840), p. 325;--quoting from the Berlin
+Newspapers of 28th June and 2d July, 1740.]
+
+This is a fine dialect for incipient Royalty; and it is brand-
+new at that time. It excites an admiration in the then
+populations, which to us, so long used to it and to what commonly
+comes of it, is not conceivable at once. There can be no doubt the
+young King does faithfully intend to develop himself in the way of
+making men happy; but here, as elsewhere, are limits which he will
+recognize ahead, some of them perhaps nearer than was expected.
+
+Meanwhile his first acts, in this direction, correspond to these
+fine words. The year 1740, still grim with cold into the heart of
+summer, bids fair to have a late poor harvest, and famine
+threatens to add itself to other hardships there have been.
+Recognizing the actualities of the case, what his poor Father
+could not, he opens the Public Granaries,--a wise resource they
+have in Prussian countries against the year of scarcity;--orders
+grain to be sold out, at reasonable rates, to the suffering poor;
+and takes the due pains, considerable in some cases, that this be
+rendered feasible everywhere in his dominions. "Berlin, 2d June,"
+is the first date of this important order; fine program to his
+Ministers, which, we read, is no sooner uttered, than some
+performance follows. An evident piece of wisdom and humanity;
+for which doubtless blessings of a very sincere kind rise to him
+from several millions of his fellow-mortals.
+
+Nay furthermore, as can be dimly gathered, this scarcity
+continuing, some continuous mode of management was set on foot for
+the Poor; and there is nominated, with salary, with outline of
+plan and other requisites, as "Inspector of the Poor," to his own
+and our surprise, M. Jordan, late Reader to the Crown-Prince, and
+still much the intimate of his royal Friend. Inspector who seems
+to do his work very well. And in the November coming this is what
+we see: "One thousand poor old women, the destitute of Berlin, set
+to spin," at his Majesty's charges; vacant houses, hired for them
+in certain streets and suburbs, have been new-planked,
+partitioned, warmed; and spinning is there for any diligent female
+soul. There a thousand of them sit, under proper officers, proper
+wages, treatment;--and the hum of their poor spindles, and of
+their poor inarticulate old hearts, is a comfort, if one chance to
+think of it.--Of "distressed needlewomen" who cannot sew, nor be
+taught to do it; who, in private truth, are mutinous maid-servants
+come at last to the net upshot of their anarchies; of these, or of
+the like incurable phenomena, I hear nothing in Berlin; and can
+believe that, under this King, Indigence itself may still have
+something of a human aspect, not a brutal or diabolic as is
+commoner in some places.--This is one of Friedrich's first acts,
+this opening of the Corn-magazines, and arrangements for the
+Destitute; [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> i. 367.
+Rodenbeck, <italic> Tagebuch aus Friedrichs des Grossen
+Regentenleben <end italic> (Berlin, 1840), i. 2, 26 (2d June,
+October, 1740): a meritorious, laborious, though essentially
+chaotic Book, unexpectedly futile of result to the reader; settles
+for each Day of Friedrich's Reign, so far as possible, where
+Friedrich was and what doing; fatally wants all index &c., as
+usual.] and of this there can be no criticism. The sound of hungry
+pots set boiling, on judicious principles; the hum of those old
+women's spindles in the warm rooms: gods and men are well pleased
+to hear such sounds; and accept the same as part, real though
+infinitesimally small, of the sphere-harmonies of this Universe!
+
+
+ABOLITION OF LEGAL TORTURE.
+
+Friedrich makes haste, next, to strike into Law-improvements.
+It is but the morrow after this of the Corn-magazines, by
+KABINETS-ORDRE (Act of Parliament such as they can have in that
+Country, where the Three Estates sit all under one Three-cornered
+Hat, and the debates are kept silent, and only the upshot of them,
+more or less faithfully, is made public),--by Cabinet Order,
+3d June, 1740, he abolishes the use of Torture in Criminal Trials.
+[Preuss, <italic> Friedrichs Jugend und Thronbesteigung <end
+italic> (Berlin, 1840,--a minor Book of Preuss's), p. 340.
+Rodenbeck, i. 14 ("3d June").] Legal Torture, "Question" as they
+mildly call it, is at an end from this date. Not in any Prussian
+Court shall a "question" try for answer again by that savage
+method. The use of Torture had, I believe, fallen rather obsolete
+in Prussia; but now the very threat of it shall vanish,--the
+threat of it, as we may remember, had reached Friedrich himself,
+at one time. Three or four years ago, it is farther said, a dark
+murder happened in Berlin: Man killed one night in the open
+streets; murderer discoverable by no method,--unless he were a
+certain CANDIDATUS of Divinity to whom some trace of evidence
+pointed, but who sorrowfully persisted in absolute and total
+denial. This poor Candidatus had been threatened with the rack;
+and would most likely have at length got it, had not the real
+murderer been discovered,--much to the discredit of the rack in
+Berlin. This Candidatus was only threatened; nor do I know when
+the last actual instance in Prussia was; but in enlightened
+France, and most other countries, there was as yet no scruple upon
+it. Barbier, the Diarist at Paris, some time after this, tells us
+of a gang of thieves there, who were regularly put to the torture;
+and "they blabbed too, ILS ONT JASE," says Barbier with official
+jocosity. [Barbier, <italic> Journal Historique du Regne de Louis
+XV. <end italic> (Paris, 1849), ii. 338 (date "Dec. 1742").]
+
+Friedrich's Cabinet Order, we need not say, was greeted
+everywhere, at home and abroad, by three rounds of applause;--in
+which surely all of us still join; though the PER CONTRA also is
+becoming visible to some of us, and our enthusiasm grows less
+complete than formerly. This was Friedrich's first step in Law-
+Reform, done on his fourth day of Kingship. A long career in that
+kind lies ahead of him; in reform of Law, civil as well as
+criminal, his efforts ended with life only. For his love of
+Justice was really great; and the mendacities and wiggeries,
+attached to such a necessary of life as Law, found no favor from
+him at any time.
+
+
+WILL HAVE PHILOSOPHERS ABOUT HIM, AND A REAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
+
+To neglect the Philosophies, Fine Arts, interests of Human
+Culture, he is least of all likely. The idea of building up the
+Academy of Sciences to its pristine height, or far higher, is
+evidently one of those that have long lain in the Crown-Prince's
+mind, eager to realize themselves. Immortal Wolf, exiled but safe
+at Marburg, and refusing to return in Friedrich Wilhelm's time,
+had lately dedicated a Book to the Crown-Prince; indicating that
+perhaps, under a new Reign, he might be more persuadable.
+Friedrich makes haste to persuade; instructs the proper person,
+Reverend Herr Reinbeck, Head of the Consistorium at Berlin, to
+write and negotiate. "All reasonable conditions shall be granted"
+the immortal Wolf,--and Friedrich adds with his own hand as
+Postscript: "I request you (IHN) to use all diligence about Wolf.
+A man that seeks truth, and loves it, must be reckoned precious in
+any human society; and I think you will make a conquest in the
+realm of truth if you persuade Wolf hither again." [In <italic>
+OEuvres de Frederic <end italic> (xxvii. ii. 185), the Letter
+given.] This is of date June 6th; not yet a week since Friedrich
+came to be King. The Reinbeck-Wolf negotiation which ensued can be
+read in Busching by the curious. [Busching's <italic> Beitrage
+<end italic> (? Freiherr von Wolf), i. 63-137.] It represents to
+us a croaky, thrifty, long-headed old Herr Professor, in no haste
+to quit Marburg except for something better: "obliged to wear
+woollen shoes and leggings;" "bad at mounting stairs;" and
+otherwise needing soft treatment. Willing, though with caution, to
+work at an Academy of Sciences;--but dubious if the French are so
+admirable as they seem to themselves in such operations.
+Veteran Wolf, one dimly begins to learn, could himself build a
+German Academy of Sciences, to some purpose, if encouraged!
+This latter was probably the stone of stumbling in that direction.
+Veteran Wolf did not get to be President in the New Academy of
+Sciences; but was brought back, "streets all in triumph," to his
+old place at Halle; and there, with little other work that was
+heard of, but we hope in warm shoes and without much mounting of
+stairs, lived peaceably victorious the rest of his days.
+Friedrich's thoughts are not of a German home-built Academy, but
+of a French one: and for this he already knows a builder;
+has silently had him in his eye, these two years past,--Voltaire
+giving hint, in the LETTER we once heard of at Loo. Builder shall
+be that sublime Maupertuis; scientific lion of Paris, ever since
+his feat in the Polar regions, and the charming Narrative he gave
+of it. "What a feat, what a book!" exclaimed the Parisian
+cultivated circles, male and female, on that occasion;
+and Maupertuis, with plenty of bluster in him carefully
+suppressed, assents in a grandly modest way. His Portraits are in
+the Printshops ever since; one very singular Portrait, just coming
+out (at which there is some laughing): a coarse-featured,
+blusterous, rather triumphant-looking man, blusterous, though
+finely complacent for the nonce; in copious dressing-gown and fur
+cap; comfortably SQUEEZING the Earth and her meridians flat (as if
+HE had done it), with his left hand; and with the other, and its
+outstretched finger, asking mankind, "Are not you aware, then?"--
+"Are not we!" answers Voltaire by and by, with endless waggeries
+upon him, though at present so reverent. Friedrich, in these same
+days, writes this Autograph; which who of men or lions
+could resist?
+
+
+TO MONSIEUR DE MAUPERTUIS, at Paris.
+
+(No date;--datable, June, 1740.)
+
+"My heart and my inclination excited in me, from the moment I
+mounted the throne, the desire of having you here, that you might
+put our Berlin Academy into the shape you alone are capable of
+giving it. Come, then, come and insert into this wild crab-tree
+the graft of the Sciences, that it may bear fruit. You have shown
+the Figure of the Earth to mankind; show also to a King how sweet
+it is to possess such a man as you.
+
+"Monsieur de Maupertuis,--votre tres-affectionne
+
+"FEDERIC" (SIC).
+[<italic> OEuvres, <end italic> xvii. i. 334. The fantastic
+"Federic," instead of "Frederic," is, by this time, the common
+signature to French Letters.]
+
+This Letter--how could Maupertuis prevent some accident in such a
+case?--got into the Newspapers; glorious for Friedrich, glorious
+for Maupertuis; and raised matters to a still higher pitch.
+Maupertuis is on the road, and we shall see him before long.
+
+
+AND EVERY ONE SHALL GET TO HEAVEN IN HIS OWN WAY.
+
+Here is another little fact which had immense renown at home and
+abroad, in those summer months and long afterwards.
+
+June 22d, 1740, the GEISTLICHE DEPARTEMENT (Board of Religion, we
+may term it) reports that the Roman-Catholic Schools, which have
+been in use these eight years past, for children of soldiers
+belonging to that persuasion, "are, especially in Berlin,
+perverted, directly in the teeth of Royal Ordinance, 1732, to
+seducing Protestants into Catholicism;" annexed, or ready for
+annexing, "is the specific Report of Fiscal-General to this
+effect:"--upon which, what would it please his Majesty to direct
+us to do?
+
+His Majesty writes on the margin these words, rough and ready,
+which we give with all their grammatical blotches on them;
+indicating a mind made up on one subject, which was much more
+dubious then, to most other minds, than it now is:--
+
+"Die Religionen Musen (MUSSEN) alle Tollerirt (TOLERIRT) werden,
+und Mus (MUSS) der Fiscal nuhr (NUR) das Auge darauf haben, das
+(DASS) keine der andern abrug Tuhe (ABBRUCH THUE), den (DENN) hier
+mus (MUSS) ein jeder nach seiner Fasson Selich (FACON SELIG)
+werden." [Preuss, <italic> Thronbesteigung, <end italic> p. 333;
+Rodenbeck, IN DIE.
+
+Which in English might run as follows:--
+
+"All Religions must be tolerated (TOLLERATED), and the Fiscal must
+have an eye that none of them make unjust encroachment on the
+other; for in this Country every man must get to Heaven in his
+own way."
+
+Wonderful words; precious to the then leading spirits, and which
+(the spelling and grammar being mended) flew abroad over all the
+world: the enlightened Public everywhere answering his Majesty,
+once more, with its loudest "Bravissimo!" on this occasion.
+With what enthusiasm of admiring wonder, it is now difficult to
+fancy, after the lapse of sixscore years! And indeed, in regard to
+all these worthy acts of Human Improvement which we are now
+concerned with, account should be held (were it possible) on
+Friedrich's behalf how extremely original, and bright with the
+splendor of new gold, they then were: and how extremely they are
+fallen dim, by general circulation, since that. Account should be
+held; and yet it is not possible, no human imagination is adequate
+to it, in the times we are now got into.
+
+
+FREE PRESS, AND NEWSPAPERS THE BEST INSTRUCTORS.
+
+Toleration, in Friedrich's spiritual circumstances, was perhaps no
+great feat to Friedrich: but what the reader hardly expected of
+him was Freedom of the Press, or an attempt that way!
+From England, from Holland, Friedrich had heard of Free Press, of
+Newspapers the best Instructors: it is a fact that he hastens to
+plant a seed of that kind at Berlin; sets about it "on the second
+day of his reign," so eager is he. Berlin had already some meagre
+INTELLIGENZ-BLATT (Weekly or Thrice-Weekly Advertiser), perhaps
+two; but it is a real Newspaper, frondent with genial leafy
+speculation, and food for the mind, that Friedrich is intent upon:
+a "Literary-Political Newspaper," or were it even two Newspapers,
+one French, one German; and he rapidly makes the arrangements for
+it; despatches Jordan, on the second day, to seek some fit
+Frenchman. Arrangements are soon made: a Bookselling Printer,
+Haude, Bookseller once to the Prince-Royal,--whom we saw once in a
+domestic flash-of-lightning long ago, [Antea, Book vi. c. 7.]--is
+encouraged to proceed with the improved German article, MERCURY or
+whatever they called it; vapid Formey, a facile pen, but not a
+forcible, is the Editor sought out by Jordan for the French one.
+And, in short, No. 1 of Formey shows itself in print within a
+month; ["2d July, 1740:" Preuss, <italic> Thronbesteigung, <end
+italic> p. 330; and Formey, <italic> Souvenirs, <end italic>
+i. 107, rectified by the exact Herr Preuss.] and Haude and he,
+Haude picking up some grand Editor in Hamburg, do their best for
+the instruction of mankind.
+
+In not many months, Formey, a facile and learned but rather vapid
+gentleman, demitted or was dismissed; and the Journals coalesced
+into one, or split into two again; and went I know not what road,
+or roads, in time coming,--none that led to results worth naming.
+Freedom of the Press, in the case of these Journals, was never
+violated, nor was any need for violating it. General Freedom of
+the Press Friedrich did not grant, in any quite Official or steady
+way; but in practice, under him, it always had a kind of real
+existence, though a fluctuating, ambiguous one. And we have to
+note, through Friedrich's whole reign, a marked disinclination to
+concern himself with Censorship, or the shackling of men's poor
+tongues and pens; nothing but some officious report that there was
+offence to Foreign Courts, or the chance of offence, in a poor
+man's pamphlet, could induce Friedrich to interfere with him or
+it,--and indeed his interference was generally against his
+Ministers for having wrong informed him, and in favor of the poor
+Pamphleteer appealing at the fountain-head. [Anonymous (Laveaux),
+<italic> Vie de Frederic II., Roi de Prusse <end italic>
+(Strasbourg, 1787), iv. 82. A worthless, now nearly forgotten
+Book; but competent on this point, if on any; Laveaux (a handy
+fellow, fugitive Ex-Monk, with fugitive Ex-Nun attached) having
+lived much at Berlin, always in the pamphleteering line.]
+To the end of his life, disgusting Satires against him,
+<italic> Vie Privee <end italic> by Voltaire, <italic> Matinees du
+Roi de Prusse, <end italic> and still worse Lies and Nonsenses,
+were freely sold at Berlin, and even bore to be printed there,
+Friedrich saying nothing, caring nothing. He has been known to
+burn Pamphlets publicly,--one Pamphlet we shall ourselves see on
+fire yet;--but it was without the least hatred to them, and for
+official reasons merely. To the last, he would answer his
+reporting Ministers, "LE PRESSE EST LIBRE (Free press, you must
+consider)!"--grandly reluctant to meddle with the press, or go
+down upon the dogs barking at his door. Those ill effects of Free
+Press (first stage of the ill effects) he endured in this manner;
+but the good effects seem to have fallen below his expectation.
+Friedrich's enthusiam for freedom of the press, prompt enough, as
+we see, never rose to the extreme pitch, and it rather sank than
+increased as he continued his experiences of men and things.
+This of Formey and the two Newspapers was the only express attempt
+he made in that direction; and it proved a rather disappointing
+one. The two Newspapers went their way thenceforth, Friedrich
+sometimes making use of them for small purposes, once or twice
+writing an article himself, of wildly quizzical nature, perhaps to
+be noticed by us when the time comes; but are otherwise, except
+for chronological purposes, of the last degree of insignificance
+to gods or men.
+
+"Freedom of the Press," says my melancholic Friend, "is a noble
+thing; and in certain Nations, at certain epochs, produces
+glorious effects,--chiefly in the revolutionary line, where that
+has grown indispensable. Freedom of the Press is possible, where
+everybody disapproves the least abuse of it; where the
+'Censorship' is, as it were, exercised by all the world. When the
+world (as, even in the freest countries, it almost irresistibly
+tends to become) is no longer in a case to exercise that salutary
+function, and cannot keep down loud unwise speaking, loud unwise
+persuasion, and rebuke it into silence whenever printed, Freedom
+of the Press will not answer very long, among sane human
+creatures: and indeed, in Nations not in an exceptional case, it
+becomes impossible amazingly soon!"--
+
+All these are phenomena of Friedrich's first week. Let these
+suffice as sample, in that first kind. Splendid indications
+surely; and shot forth in swift enough succession, flash following
+flash, upon an attentive world. Betokening, shall we say, what
+internal sea of splendor, struggling to disclose itself, probably
+lies in this young King; and how high his hopes go for mankind and
+himself? Yes, surely;--and introducing, we remark withal, the "New
+Era," of Philanthropy, Enlightenment and so much else; with French
+Revolution, and a "world well suicided" hanging in the rear!
+Clearly enough, to this young ardent Friedrich, foremost man of
+his Time, and capable of DOING its inarticulate or dumb aspirings,
+belongs that questionable honor; and a very singular one it would
+have seemed to Friedrich, had he lived to see what it meant!
+
+Friedrich's rapidity and activity, in the first months of his
+reign, were wonderful to mankind; as indeed through life he
+continued to be a most rapid and active King. He flies about;
+mustering Troops, Ministerial Boards, passing Edicts, inspecting,
+accepting Homages of Provinces;--decides and does, every day that
+passes, an amazing number of things. Writes many Letters, too;
+finds moments even for some verses; and occasionally draws a
+snatch of melody from his flute.
+
+His Letters are copiously preserved; but, as usual, they are in
+swift official tone, and tell us almost nothing. To his Sisters he
+writes assurances; to his friends, his Suhms, Duhans, Voltaires,
+eager invitations, general or particular, to come to him.
+"My state has changed," is his phrase to Voltaire and other dear
+intimates; a tone of pensiveness, at first even of sorrow and
+pathos traceable in it; "Come to me,"--and the tone, in an old
+dialect, different from Friedrich's, might have meant, "Pray for
+me." An immense new scene is opened, full of possibilities of good
+and bad. His hopes being great, his anxieties, the shadow of them,
+are proportionate. Duhan (his good old Tutor) does arrive,
+Algarotti arrives, warmly welcomed, both: with Voltaire there are
+difficulties; but surely he too will, before long, manage to
+arrive. The good Suhm, who had been Saxon Minister at Petersburg
+to his sorrow this long while back, got in motion soon enough;
+but, alas, his lungs were ruined by the Russian climate, and he
+did not arrive. Something pathetic still in those final LETTERS of
+Suhm. Passionately speeding on, like a spent steed struggling
+homeward; he has to pause at Warsaw, and in a few days dies
+there,--in a way mournful to Friedrich and us! To Duhan, and
+Duhan's children afterwards, he was punctually, not too lavishly,
+attentive; in like manner to Suhm's Nephews, whom the dying man
+had recommended to him.--We will now glance shortly at a second
+and contemporaneous phasis of Friedrich's affairs.
+
+
+INTENDS TO BE PRACTICAL WITHAL, AND EVERY INCH A KING.
+
+Friedrich is far indeed from thinking to reduce his Army, as the
+Foreign Editor imagines. On the contrary, he is, with all
+industry, increasing it. He changed the Potsdam Giants into four
+regiments of the usual stature; he is busy bargaining with his
+Brother-in-law of Brunswick, and with other neighbors, for still
+new regiments;--makes up, within the next few months, Eight
+Regiments, an increase of, say, 16,000 men. It would appear he
+means to keep an eye on the practicalities withal; means to have a
+Fighting-Apparatus of the utmost potentiality, for one thing.!
+Here are other indications.
+
+We saw the Old Dessauer, in a sad hour lately, speaking beside the
+mark; and with what Olympian glance, suddenly tearless, the new
+King flashed out upon him, knowing nothing of "authority" that
+could reside in any Dessauer. Nor was that a solitary experience;
+the like befell wherever needed. Heinrich of Schwedt, the Ill
+Margraf, advancing with jocose countenance in the way of old
+comradeship, in those first days, met unexpected rebuff, and was
+reduced to gravity on the sudden: "JETZT BIN ICH KONIG,--My
+Cousin, I am now King!" a fact which the Ill Margraf could never
+get forgotten again. Lieutenant-General Schulenburg, too, the
+didactic Schulenburg, presuming, on old familiarity, and willing
+to wipe out the misfortune of having once condemned us to death,
+which nobody is now upbraiding him with, rushes up from Landsberg,
+unbidden, to pay his congratulations and condolences, driven by
+irresistible exuberance of loyalty: to his astonishment, he is
+reminded (thing certain, manner of the thing not known), That an
+Officer cannot quit his post without order; that he, at this
+moment, ought to be in Landsberg! [Stenzel, iv. 41; Preuss,
+<italic> Thronbesteigung; <end italic> &c.] Schulenburg has a hard
+old military face; but here is a young face too, which has grown
+unexpectedly rigorous. Fancy the blank look of little Schulenburg;
+the light of him snuffed out in this manner on a sudden. It is
+said he had thoughts of resigning, so indignant was he: no doubt
+he went home to Landsberg gloomily reflective, with the pipe-clay
+of his mind in such a ruinous condition. But there was no
+serious anger, on Friedrich's part; and he consoled his little
+Schulenburg soon after, by expediting some promotion he had
+intended him. "Terribly proud young Majesty this," exclaim the
+sweet voices. And indeed, if they are to have a Saturnian Kingdom,
+by appearance it will be on conditions only!
+
+Anticipations there had been, that old unkindnesses against the
+Crown-Prince, some of which were cruel enough, might be remembered
+now: and certain people had their just fears, considering what
+account stood against them; others, VICE VERSA, their hopes.
+But neither the fears nor the hopes realized themselves;
+especially the fears proved altogether groundless. Derschau, who
+had voted Death in that Copenick Court-Martial, upon the Crown-
+Prince, is continued in his functions, in the light of his King's
+countenance, as if nothing such had been. Derschau, and all others
+so concerned; not the least question was made of them, nor of what
+they had thought or had done or said, on an occasion once so
+tragically vital to a certain man.
+
+Nor is reward much regulated by past services to the Crown-Prince,
+or even by sufferings endured for him. "Shocking ingratitude.!"
+exclaim the sweet voices here too,--being of weak judgment, many
+of them! Poor Katte's Father, a faithful old Soldier, not capable
+of being more, he does, rather conspicuously, make Feldmarschall,
+make Reichsgraf; happy, could these honors be a consolation to the
+old man. The Munchows of Custrin,--readers remember their kindness
+in that sad time; how the young boy went into petticoats again,
+and came to the Crown-Prince's cell with all manner of
+furnishings,--the Munchows, father and sons, this young gentleman
+of the petticoats among them, he took immediate pains to reward by
+promotion: eldest son was advanced into the General Directorium;
+two younger sons, to Majorship, to Captaincy, in their respective
+Regiments; him of the petticoats "he had already taken altogether
+to himself," [Preuss, i. 66.] and of him we shall see a glimpse at
+Wilhelmina's shortly, as a "milkbeard (JEUNE MORVEUX)" in personal
+attendance on his Majesty. This was a notable exception. And in
+effect there came good public service, eminent some of it, from
+these Munchows in their various departments. And it was at length
+perceived to have been, in the main, because they were of visible
+faculty for doing work that they had got work to do; and the
+exceptional case of the Munchows became confirmatory of the rule.
+
+Lieutenant Keith, again, whom we once saw galloping from Wesel to
+save his life in that bad affair of the Crown-Prince's and his,
+was nothing like so fortunate. Lieutenant Keith, by speed on that
+Wesel occasion, and help of Chesterfield's Secretary, got across
+to England; got into the Portuguese service; and has there been
+soldiering, very silently, these ten years past,--skin and body
+safe, though his effigy was cut in four quarters and nailed to the
+gallows at Wesel;--waiting a time that would come. Time being
+come, Lieutenant Keith hastened home; appealed to his effigy on
+the gallows;--and was made a Lieutenant-Colonel merely, with some
+slight appendages, as that of STALLMEISTER (Curator of the
+Stables) and something else; income still straitened, though
+enough to live upon. [Preuss, <italic> Friedrich mit Verwandten
+und Freunden, <end italic> p. 281.] Small promotion, in comparison
+with hope, thought the poor Lieutenant; but had to rest satisfied
+with it; and struggle to understand that perhaps he was fit for
+nothing bigger, and that he must exert himself to do this small
+thing well. Hardness of heart in high places! Friedrich, one is
+glad to see, had not forgotten the poor fellow, could he have done
+better with him. Some ten years hence, quite incidentally, there
+came to Keith, one morning, a fine purse of money from his
+Majesty, one pretty gift in Keith's experience;--much the topic in
+Berlin, while a certain solemn English gentleman happened to be
+passing that way (whom we mean to detain a little by and by), who
+reports it for us with all the circumstances. [Sir Jonas Hanway,
+<italic> Travels, <end italic> &c. (London, 1753), ii. 202.
+Date of the Gift is 1750.]
+
+Lieutenant Spaen too had got into trouble for the Crown-Prince's
+sake, though we have forgotten him again; had "admitted Katte to
+interviews," or we forget what;--had sat his "year in Spandau" in
+consequence; been dismissed the Prussian service, and had taken
+service with the Dutch. Lieutenant Spaen either did not return at
+all, or disliked the aspects when he did, and immediately withdrew
+to Holland again. Which probably was wise of him. At a late
+period, King Friedrich, then a great King, on one of his Cleve
+Journeys, fell in with Spaen; who had become a Dutch General of
+rank, and was of good manners and style of conversation:
+King Friedrich was charmed to see him; became his guest for the
+night; conversed delightfully with him, about old Prussian matters
+and about new; and in the colloquy never once alluded to that
+interesting passage in his young life and Spaen's. [Nicolai,
+<italic> Anekdoten, <end italic> vi. 178.] Hard as polished steel!
+thinks Spaen perhaps; but, if candid, must ask himself withal, Are
+facts any softer, or the Laws of Kingship to a man that holds it?
+--Keith silently did his Lieutenant-Colonelcy with the appendages,
+while life lasted: of the Page Keith, his Brother, who indeed had
+blabbed upon the Prince, as we remember, and was not entitled to
+be clamorous, I never heard that there was any notice taken;
+and figure him to myself as walking with shouldered firelock, a
+private Fusileer, all his life afterwards, with many reflections
+on things bygone. [These and the other Prussian Keiths are all of
+Scotch extraction; the Prussians, in natural German fashion,
+pronounce their name KAH-IT (English "KITE" with nothing of the Y
+in it), as may be worth remembering in a more important instance.]
+
+Old friendship, it would seem, is without weight in public
+appointments here: old friends are somewhat astonished to find
+this friend of theirs a King every inch! To old comrades, if they
+were useless, much more if they were worse than useless, how
+disappointing! "One wretched Herr [name suppressed, but known at
+the time, and talked of, and whispered of], who had, like several
+others, hoping to rise that way, been industrious in encouraging
+the Crown-Prince's vices as to women, was so shocked at the return
+he now met, that in despair he hanged himself in LobeJun"
+(Lobegun, Magdeburg Country): here is a case for the humane!
+[Kuster, <italic> Characterzuge des &c. von Saldern <end italic>
+(Berlin, 1793), p. 63.]
+
+Friend Keyserling himself, "Caesarion" that used to be, can get
+nothing, though we love him much; being an idle topsy-turvy fellow
+with revenues of his own. Jordan, with his fine-drawn wit, French
+logics, LITERARY TRAVELS, thin exactitude; what can be done for
+Jordan? Him also his new Majesty loves much; and knows that,
+without some official living, poor Jordan has no resource.
+Jordan, after some waiting and survey, is made "Inspector of the
+Poor;"--busy this Autumn looking out for vacant houses, and
+arrangements for the thousand spinning women;--continues to be
+employed in mixed literary services (hunting up of Formey, for
+Editor, was one instance), and to be in much real intimacy.
+That also was perhaps about the real amount of amiable Jordan.
+To get Jordan a living by planting him in some office which he
+could not do; to warm Jordan by burning our royal bed for him:
+that had not entered into the mind of Jordan's royal friend.
+The Munchows he did promote; the Finks, sons of his Tutor
+Finkenstein: to these and other old comrades, in whom he had
+discovered fitness, it is no doubt abundantly grateful to him to
+recognize and employ it. As he notably does, in these and in other
+instances. But before all things he has decided to remember that
+he is King; that he must accept the severe laws of that trust, and
+do IT, or not have done anything.
+
+An inverse sign, pointing in the same way, is the passionate
+search he is making in Foreign Countries for such men as will suit
+him. In these same months, for example, he bethinks him of two
+Counts Schmettau, in the Austrian Service, with whom he had made
+acquaintance in the Rhine Campaign; of a Count von Rothenburg,
+whom he saw in the French Camp there; and is negotiating to have
+them if possible. The Schmettaus are Prussian by birth, though in
+Austrian Service; them he obtains under form of an Order home,
+with good conditions under it; they came, and proved useful men
+to him. Rothenburg, a shining kind of figure in Diplomacy as well
+as Soldiership, was Alsatian German, foreign to Prussia; but him
+too Friedrich obtained, and made much of, as will be notable by
+and by. And in fact the soul of all these noble tendencies in
+Friedrich, which surely are considerable, is even this, That he
+loves men of merit, and does not love men of none; that he has an
+endless appetite for men of merit, and feels, consciously and
+otherwise, that they are the one thing beautiful, the one thing
+needful to him.
+
+This, which is the product of all fine tendencies, is likewise
+their centre or focus out of which they start again, with some
+chance of fulfilment;--and we may judge in how many directions
+Friedrich was willing to expand himself, by the multifarious kinds
+he was inviting, and negotiating for. Academicians,--and not
+Maupertuis only, but all manner of mathematical geniuses (Euler
+whom he got, 's Gravesande, Muschenbroek whom he failed of);
+and Literary geniuses innumerable, first and last. Academicians,
+Musicians, Players, Dancers even; much more Soldiers and Civil-
+Service men: no man that carries any honest "CAN DO" about with
+him but may expect some welcome here. Which continued through
+Friedrich's reign; and involved him in much petty trouble, not
+always successful in the lower kinds of it. For his Court was the
+cynosure of ambitious creatures on the wing, or inclined for
+taking wing: like a lantern kindled in the darkness of the world;
+--and many owls impinged upon him; whom he had to dismiss
+with brevity.
+
+Perhaps it had been better to stand by mere Prussian or German
+merit, native to the ground? Or rather, undoubtedly it had!
+In some departments, as in the military, the administrative,
+diplomatic, Friedrich was himself among the best of judges: but in
+various others he had mainly (mainly, by no means blindly or
+solely) to accept noise of reputation as evidence of merit; and in
+these, if we compute with rigor, his success was intrinsically not
+considerable. The more honor to him that he never wearied of
+trying. "A man that does not care for merit," says the adage,
+"cannot himself have any." But a King that does not care for
+merit, what shall we say of such a King!--
+
+
+BEHAVIOR TO HIS MOTHER; TO HIS WIFE.
+
+One other fine feature, significant of many, let us notice:
+his affection for his Mother. When his Mother addressed him as
+"Your Majesty," he answered, as the Books are careful to tell us:
+"Call me Son; that is the Title of all others most agreeable to
+me!" Words which, there can be no doubt, came from the heart.
+Fain would he shoot forth to greatness in filial piety, as
+otherwise; fain solace himself in doing something kind to his
+Mother. Generously, lovingly; though again with clear view of the
+limits. He decrees for her a Title higher than had been customary,
+as well as more accordant with his feelings; not "Queen Dowager,"
+but "Her Majesty the Queen Mother." He decides to build her a new
+Palace; "under the Lindens" it is to be, and of due magnificence:
+in a month or two, he had even got bits of the foundation dug,
+and the Houses to be pulled down bought or bargained for;
+[Rodenbeck, p. 15 (30th June-23d Aug. 1740); and correct Stenzel
+(iv. 44).]--which enterprise, however, was renounced, no doubt
+with consent, as the public aspects darkened. Nothing in the way
+of honor, in the way of real affection heartily felt and
+demonstrated, was wanting to Queen Sophie in her widowhood.
+But, on the other hand, of public influence no vestige was
+allowed, if any was ever claimed; and the good kind Mother lived
+in her Monbijou, the centre and summit of Berlin society;
+and restricted herself wisely to private matters. She has her
+domesticities, family affections, readings, speculations;
+gives evening parties at Monbijou. One glimpse of her in 1742 we
+get, that of a perfectly private royal Lady; which though it has
+little meaning, yet as it is authentic, coming from Busching's
+hand, may serve as one little twinkle in that total darkness, and
+shall be left to the reader and his fancy:--
+
+A Count Henkel, a Thuringian gentleman, of high speculation, high
+pietistic ways, extremely devout, and given even to writing of
+religion, came to Berlin about some Silesian properties,--a man I
+should think of lofty melancholic aspect; and, in severe type,
+somewhat of a lion, on account of his Book called "DEATH-BED
+SCENES, in four Volumes." Came to Berlin; and on the 15th August,
+1742, towards evening (as the ever-punctual Busching looking into
+Henkel's Papers gives it), "was presented to the Queen Mother;
+who retained him to supper; supper not beginning till about ten
+o'clock. The Queen Mother was extremely gracious to Henkel;
+but investigated him a good deal, and put a great many questions,"
+not quite easy to answer in that circle, "as, Why he did not play?
+What he thought of comedies and operas? What Preachers he was
+acquainted with in Berlin? Whether he too was a Writer of Books?
+[covertly alluding to the DEATH-BED SCENES, notes Busching].
+And abundance of other questioning. She also recounted many
+fantastic anecdotes (VIEL ABENTEUERLICHES) about Count von
+Zinzendorf [Founder of HERNNHUTH, far-shining spiritual Paladin of
+that day, whom her Majesty thinks rather a spiritual Quixote]; and
+declared that they were strictly true." [Busching's <italic>
+Beitrage, <end italic> iv. 27.]' Upon which, EXIT Henkel, borne by
+Busching, and our light is snuffed out.
+
+This is one momentary glance I have met with of Queen Sophie in
+her Dowager state. The rest, though there were seventeen years of
+it in all, is silent to mankind and me; and only her death, and
+her Son's great grief about it, so great as to be surprising, is
+mentioned in the Books.
+
+Actual painful sorrow about his Father, much more any new outburst
+of weeping and lamenting, is not on record, after that first
+morning. Time does its work; and in such a whirl of occupations,
+sooner than elsewhere: and the loved Dead lie silent in their
+mausoleum in our hearts,--serenely sad as Eternity, not in loud
+sorrow as of Time. Friedrich was pious as a Son, however he might
+be on other heads. To the last years of his life, as from the
+first days of his reign, it was evident in what honor he held
+Friedrich Wilhelm's memory; and the words "my Father," when they
+turned up in discourse, had in that fine voice of his a tone which
+the observers noted. "To his Mother he failed no day, when in
+Berlin, however busy, to make his visit; and he never spoke to
+her, except hat in hand."
+
+With his own Queen, Friedrich still consorts a good deal, in these
+first times; is with her at Charlottenburg, Berlin, Potsdam,
+Reinsberg, for a day or two, as occasion gives; sometimes at
+Reinsberg for weeks running, in the intervals of war and business:
+glad to be at rest amid his old pursuits, by the side of a kind
+innocent being familiar to him. So it lasts for a length of time.
+But these happy intervals, we can remark, grow rarer: whether the
+Lady's humor, as they became rarer, might not sink withal, and
+produce an acceleration in the rate of decline? She was thought to
+be capable of "pouting (FAIRE LA FACHEE)," at one period! We are
+left to our guesses; there is not anywhere the smallest whisper to
+guide us. Deep silence reigns in all Prussian Books.--To feel or
+to suspect yourself neglected, and to become MORE amiable
+thereupon (in which course alone lies hope), is difficult for any
+Queen! Enough, we can observe these meetings, within two or three
+years, have become much rarer; and perhaps about the end of the
+third or fourth year, they altogether cease; and pass merely into
+the formal character. In which state they continued fixed, liable
+to no uncertainty; and were transacted, to the end of Friedrich's
+life, with inflexible regularity as the annual reviews were.
+This is a curious section of his life; which there will be other
+opportunities of noticing. But there is yet no thought of it
+anywhere, nor for years to come; though fables to the contrary
+were once current in Books. [Laveaux, &c.]
+
+
+NO CHANGE IN HIS FATHER'S METHODS OR MINISTRIES.
+
+In the old mode of Administration, in the Ministries, Government
+Boards, he made no change. These administrative methods of his
+wise Father's are admirable to Friedrich, who knows them well;
+and they continue to be so. These men of his Father's, them also
+Friedrich knows, and that they were well chosen. In methods or in
+men, he is inclined to make the minimum of alteration at present.
+One Finance Hofrath of a projecting turn, named Eckart, who had
+abused the last weak years of Friedrich Wilhelm, and much
+afflicted mankind by the favor he was in: this Eckart Friedrich
+appointed a commission to inquire into; found the public right in
+regard to Eckart, and dismissed him with ignominy, not with much
+other punishment. Minister Boden, on the contrary, high in the
+Finance Department, who had also been much grumbled at, Friedrich
+found to be a good man: and Friedrich not only retained Boden, but
+advanced him; and continued to make more and more use of him in
+time coming. His love of perfection in work done, his care of
+thrift, seemed almost greater than his late Father's had been,--to
+the disappointment of many. In the other Departments, Podewils,
+Thulmeyer and the rest went on as heretofore;--only in general
+with less to do, the young King doing more himself than had been
+usual. Valori, "MON GROS VALORI (my fat Valori)," French Minister
+here, whom we shall know better, writes home of the new King of
+Prussia: "He begins his government, as by all appearance he will
+carry it on, in a highly satisfactory way: everywhere traits of
+benevolence, sympathy for his subjects, respect shown to the
+memory of the Deceased," [<italic>Memoires des Negociations du
+Marquis de Valori <end italic> (a Paris, 1820), i. 20 ("June 13th,
+1740"). A valuable Book, which we shall often have to quote:
+edited in a lamentably ignorant manner.]--no change made, where it
+evidently is not for the better.
+
+Friedrich's "Three principal Secretaries of State," as we should
+designate them, are very remarkable. Three Clerks he found, or had
+known of, somewhere in the Public Offices; and now took, under
+some advanced title, to be specially his own Private Clerks:
+three vigorous long-headed young fellows, "Eichel, Schuhmacher,
+Lautensack" the obscure names of them; [Rodenbeck, 15th June,
+1740.] out of whom, now and all along henceforth, he got
+immensities of work in that kind. They lasted all his life;
+and, of course, grew ever more expert at their function.
+Close, silent; exact as machinery: ever ready, from the smallest
+clear hint, marginal pencil-mark, almost from a glance of the eye,
+to clothe the Royal Will in official form, with the due rugged
+clearness and thrift of words. "Came punctually at four in the
+morning in summer, five in winter;" did daily the day's work;
+and kept their mouths well shut. A very notable Trio of men;
+serving his Majesty and the Prussian Nation as Principal
+Secretaries of State, on those cheap terms;--nay almost as Houses
+of Parliament with Standing Committees and appendages, so many
+Acts of Parliament admittedly rather wise, being passed daily by
+his Majesty's help and theirs!--Friedrich paid them rather well;
+they saw no society; lived wholly to their work, and to their own
+families. Eichel alone of the three was mentioned at all by
+mankind, and that obscurely; an "abstruse, reserved, long-headed
+kind of man;" and "made a great deal of money in the end,"
+insinuates Busching, [<italic> Beitrage, <end italic} v. 238, &c.]
+no friend of Friedrich's or his.
+
+In superficial respects, again, Friedrich finds that the Prussian
+King ought to have a King's Establishment, and maintain a decent
+splendor among his neighbors,--as is not quite the case at
+present. In this respect he does make changes. A certain quantity
+of new Pages, new Goldsticks; some considerable, not too
+considerable, new furbishing of the Royal Household,--as it were,
+a fair coat of new paint, with gilding not profuse,--brought it to
+the right pitch for this King, About "a hundred and fifty" new
+figures of the Page and Goldstick kind, is the reckoning given.
+[<italic> Helden Geschichte, <end italic> i. 353.] So many of
+these; and there is an increase of 16,000 to one's Army going on:
+that is the proportion noticeable. In the facts as his Father left
+them Friedrich persisted all his life; in the semblances or outer
+vestures he changed, to this extent for the present.--These are
+the Phenomena of Friedrich's Accession, noted by us.
+
+Readers see there is radiance enough, perhaps slightly in excess,
+but of intrinsically good quality, in the Aurora of this new
+Reign. A brilliant valiant young King; much splendor of what we
+could call a golden or soft nature (visible in those "New-Era"
+doings of his, in those strong affections to his Friends); and
+also, what we like almost better in him, something of a STEEL-
+BRIGHT or stellar splendor (meaning, clearness of eyesight,
+intrepidity, severe loyalty to fact),--which is a fine addition to
+the softer element, and will keep IT and its philanthropies and
+magnanimities well under rule. Such a man is rare in this world;
+how extremely rare such a man born King! He is swift and he is
+persistent; sharply discerning, fearless to resolve and perform;
+carries his great endowments lightly, as if they were not heavy to
+him. He has known hard misery, been taught by stripes; a light
+stoicism sits gracefully on him.
+
+"What he will grow to?" Probably to something considerable.
+Very certainly to something far short of his aspirations;
+far different from his own hopes; and the world's concerning him.
+It is not we, it is Father Time that does the controlling and
+fulfilling of our hopes; and strange work he makes of them and us.
+For example, has not Friedrich's grand "New Era," inaugurated by
+him in a week, with the leading spirits all adoring, issued since
+in French Revolution and a "world well suicided,"--the leading
+spirits much thrown out in consequence! New Era has gone to great
+lengths since Friedrich's time; and the leading spirits do not now
+adore it, but yawn over it, or worse! Which changes to us the then
+aspect of Friedrich, and his epoch and his aspirations, a good
+deal.--On the whole, Friedrich will go his way, Time and the
+leading spirits going theirs; and, like the rest of us, will grow
+to what he can. His actual size is not great among the Kingdoms:
+his outward resources are rather to be called small. The Prussian
+Dominion at that date is, in extent, about four-fifths of an
+England Proper, and perhaps not one-fifth so fertile:
+subject Population is well under Two Millions and a Half; Revenue
+not much above One Million Sterling,' [The exact statistic cipher
+is, at Friedrich's Accession: PRUSSIAN TERRITORIES, 2,275 square
+miles German (56,875 English); POPULATION, 2,240,000; ANNUAL
+REVENUE, 7,371,707 thalers 7 groschen (1,105,756 pounds without
+the pence). See Prenss, <italic> Buch fur Jedermann, <end italic>
+i. 49; Stenzel, iii. 692; &c.]--very small, were not thrift such
+a VECTIGAL.
+
+This young King is magnanimous; not much to be called ambitious,
+or not in the vulgar sense almost at all,--strange as it may sound
+to readers. His hopes at this time are many;--and among them,
+I perceive, there is not wanting secretly, in spite of his
+experiences, some hope that he himself may be a good deal
+"happier" than formerly. Nor is there any ascetic humor, on his
+part, to forbid trial. He is much determined to try.
+Probably enough, as we guess and gather, his agreeablest
+anticipations, at this time, were of Reinsberg: How, in the
+intervals of work well done, he would live there wholly to the
+Muses; have his chosen spirits round him, his colloquies, his
+suppers of the gods. Why not? There might be a King of Intellects
+conceivable withal; protecting, cherishing, practically guiding
+the chosen Illuminative Souls of this world. A new Charlemagne,
+the smallest new Charlemagne of Spiritual type, with HIS Paladins
+round him; how glorious, how salutary in the dim generations now
+going!--These too were hopes which proved signally futile.
+Rigorous Time could not grant these at all;--granted, in his own
+hard way, other things instead. But, all along, the Life-element,
+the Epoch, though Friedrich took it kindly and never complained,
+was ungenial to such a man.
+
+"Somewhat of a rotten Epoch, this into which Friedrich has been
+born, to shape himself and his activities royal and other!"--
+exclaims Smelfungus once: "In an older earnest Time, when the
+eternally awful meanings of this Universe had not yet sunk into
+dubieties to any one, much less into levities or into mendacities,
+into huge hypocrisies carefully regulated,--so luminous, vivid and
+ingenuous a young creature had not wanted divine manna in his
+Pilgrimage through Life. Nor, in that case, had he come out of it
+in so lean a condition. But the highest man of us is born brother
+to his Contemporaries; struggle as he may, there is no escaping
+the family likeness. By spasmodic indignant contradiction of them,
+by stupid compliance with them,--you will inversely resemble, if
+you do not directly; like the starling, you can't get out!--Most
+surely, if there do fall manna from Heaven, in the given
+Generation, and nourish in us reverence and genial nobleness day
+by day, it is blessed and well. Failing that, in regard to our
+poor spiritual interests, there is sure to be one of two results:
+mockery, contempt, disbelief, what we may call SHORT-DIET to the
+length of very famine (which was Friedrich's case); or else slow-
+poison, carefully elaborated and provided by way of
+daily nourishment.
+
+"Unhappy souls, these same! The slow-poison has gone deep into
+them. Instead of manna, this long while back, they have been
+living on mouldy corrupt meats sweetened by sugar-of-lead;
+or perhaps, like Voltaire, a few individuals prefer hunger, as the
+cleaner alternative; and in contemptuous, barren, mocking humor,
+not yet got the length of geniality or indignation, snuff the
+east-wind by way of spiritual diet. Pilgriming along on such
+nourishment, the best human soul fails to become very ruddy!--
+Tidings about Heaven are fallen so uncertain, but the Earth and
+her joys are still Interesting: 'Take to the Earth and her joys;--
+let your soul go out, since it must; let your five senses and
+their appetites be well alive.' That is a dreadful 'Sham-Christian
+Dispensation' to be born under! You wonder at the want of heroism
+in the Eighteenth Century. Wonder rather at the degree of heroism
+it had; wonder how many souls there still are to be met with in it
+of some effective capability, though dieting in that way,--nothing
+else to be had in the shops about. Carterets, Belleisles,
+Friedrichs, Voltaires; Chathams, Franklins, Choiseuls: there is an
+effective stroke of work, a fine fire of heroic pride, in this man
+and the other; not yet extinguished by spiritual famine or slow-
+poison; so robust is Nature the mighty Mother!--
+
+"But in general, that sad Gospel, 'Souls extinct, Stomachs well
+alive!' is the credible one, not articulately preached, but
+practically believed by the abject generations, and acted on as it
+never was before. What immense sensualities there were, is known;
+and also (as some small offset, though that has not yet begun in
+1740) what immense quantities of Physical Labor and contrivance
+were got out of mankind, in that Epoch and down to this day.
+As if, having lost its Heaven, it had struck desperately down into
+the Earth; as if it were a BEAVER-kind, and not a mankind any
+more. We had once a Barbaossa; and a world all grandly true.
+But from that to Karl VI., and HIS Holy Romish Reich in such a
+state of 'Holiness'--!" I here cut short my abstruse Friend.
+
+Readers are impatient to have done with these miscellaneous
+preludings, and to be once definitely under way, such a Journey
+lying ahead. Yes, readers; a Journey indeed! And, at this point,
+permit me to warn you that, where the ground, where Dryasdust and
+the Destinies, yield anything humanly illustrative of Friedrich
+and his Work, one will have to linger, and carefully gather it,
+even as here. Large tracts occur, bestrewn with mere pedantisms,
+diplomatic cobwebberies, learned marine-stores, and inhuman
+matter, over which we shall have to skip empty-handed: this also
+was among the sad conditions of our Enterprise, that it has to go
+now too slow and again too fast; not in proportion to natural
+importance of objects, but to several inferior considerations
+withal. So busy has perverse Destiny been on it; perverse Destiny,
+edacious Chance;--and the Dryasdusts, too, and Nightmares, in
+Prussia as elsewhere, we know how strong they are!
+
+Friedrich's character in old age has doubtless its curious
+affinities, its disguised identities, with these prognostic
+features and indications of his youth: and to our readers,--if we
+do ever get them to the goal, of seeing Friedrich a little with
+their own eyes and judgments,--there may be pleasant contrasts and
+comparisons of that kind in store, one day. But the far commoner
+experience (which also has been my own),--here is Smelfungus's
+stern account of that:--
+
+"My friend, you will be luckier than I, if, after ten years, not
+to say, in a sense, twenty years, thirty years, of reading and
+rummaging in those sad Prussian Books, ancient and new (which
+often are laudably authentic, too, and exact as to details), you
+can gather any character whatever of Friedrich, in any period of
+his life, or conceive him as a Human Entity at all! It is strange,
+after such thousand-fold writing, but it is true, his History is
+considerably unintelligible to mankind at this hour; left chaotic,
+enigmatic, in a good many points,--the military part of it alone
+being brought to clearness, and rendered fairly conceivable and
+credible to those who will study. And as to the Man himself, or
+what his real Physiognomy can have been--! Well, it must be owned
+few men were of such RAPIDITY of face and aspect; so difficult to
+seize the features of. In his action, too, there was such
+rapidity, such secrecy, suddenness: a man that could not be read,
+even by the candid, except as in flashes of lightning. And then
+the anger of by-standers, uncandid, who got hurt by him; the hasty
+malevolences, the stupidities, the opacities: enough, in modern
+times, what is saying much, perhaps no man's motives, intentions,
+and procedure have been more belied, misunderstood,
+misrepresented, during his life. Nor, I think, since that, have
+many men fared worse, by the Limner or Biographic class, the
+favorable to him and the unfavorable; or been so smeared of and
+blotched of, and reduced to a mere blur and dazzlement of cross-
+lights, incoherences, incredibilities, in which nothing, not so
+much as a human nose, is clearly discernible by way of feature!"--
+Courage, reader, nevertheless; on the above terms let us march
+according to promise.
+
+
+
+Chapter II.
+
+THE HOMAGINGS.
+
+Young Friedrich, as his Father had done, considers it unnecessary
+to be crowned. Old Friedrich, first of the name, and of the King
+series, we did see crowned, with a pinch of snuff tempering the
+solemnities. That Coronation once well done suffices all his
+descendants hitherto. Such an expense of money,--of diluted
+mendacity too! Such haranguing, gesturing, symbolic fugling, all
+grown half false:--avoid lying, even with your eyes, or knees, or
+the coat upon your back, so far as you easily can!
+
+Nothing of Coronation: but it is thought needful to have the
+HULDIGUNGEN (Homagings) done, the Fealties sworn; and the young
+Majesty in due course goes about, or gives directions, now here
+now there, in his various Provinces, getting that accomplished.
+But even in that, Friedrich is by no means strait-laced or
+punctilious; does it commonly by Deputy: only in three places,
+Konigsberg, Berlin, Cleve, does he appear in person. Mainly by
+deputy; and always with the minimum of fuss, and no haranguing
+that could be avoided. Nowhere are the old STANDE (Provincial
+Parliaments) assembled, now or afterwards: sufficient for this and
+for every occasion are the "Permanent Committees of the STANDE;"
+nor is much speaking, unessential for despatch of business, used
+to these.
+
+"STANDE--of Ritterschaft mainly, of Gentry small and great--
+existed once in all those Countries, as elsewhere," says one
+Historian; "and some of them, in Preussen, for example, used to be
+rather loud, and inclined to turbulence, till the curb, from a
+judicious bridle-hand, would admonish them. But, for a long while
+past,--especially since the Great Elector's time, who got an
+'Excise Law' passed, or the foundations of a good Excise Law laid;
+[Preuss, iv. 432; and <italic> Thronbesteigung, <end italic>
+pp. 379-383.] and, what with Excise, what with Domain-Farms, had a
+fixed Annual Budget, which he reckoned fair to both parties,--they
+have been dying out for want of work; and, under Friedrich
+Wilhelm, may be said to have gone quite dead. What work was left
+for them? Prussian Budget is fixed, many things are fixed:
+why talk of them farther? The Prussian King, nothing of a fool
+like certain others,"--which indeed is the cardinal point, though
+my Author does not say so,--"is respectfully aware of the facts
+round him; and can listen to the rumors too, so far as he finds
+good. The King sees himself terribly interested to get into the
+right course in all things, and avoid the wrong one! Probably he
+does, in his way, seek 'wise Advice concerning the arduous matters
+of the Kingdom;' nay I believe he is diligent to have it of the
+wisest:--who knows if STANDE would always give it wiser;
+especially STANDE in the haranguing condition?"--Enough, they are
+not applied to. There is no Freedom in that Country. "No Freedom
+to speak of," continues he: "but I do a little envy them their
+Fixed Budget, and some other things. What pleasure there can be in
+having your household arrangements tumbled into disorder every new
+Year, by a new-contrived scale of expenses for you, I never could
+ascertain!"--
+
+Friedrich is not the man to awaken Parliamentary sleeping-dogs
+well settled by his Ancestors. Once or twice, out of Preussen, in
+Friedrich Wilhelm's time, there was heard some whimper, which
+sounded like the beginning of a bark. But Friedrich Wilhelm was on
+the alert for it: Are you coming in with your NIE POZWALAM (your
+LIBERUM VETO), then? None of your Polish vagaries here. "TOUT LE
+PAYS SERA RUINE (the whole Country will be ruined)," say you?
+(Such had been the poor Marshal or Provincial SPEAKER'S
+Remonstrance on one occasion): "I don't believe a word of that.
+But I do believe the Government by JUNKERS [Country Squires] and
+NIE POZWALAM will be ruined,"--as it is fully meant to be! "I am
+establishing the King's Sovereignty like a rock of bronze (ICH
+STABILIRE DIE SOUVERAINETAT WIE EINEN ROCHER VON BRONZE)," some
+extremely strong kind of rock! [Forster, b. iii.
+(<italic> Urkundenbuch, <end italic> i. 50); Preuss, iv. 420 n.
+"NIE POZWALAM" (the formula of LIBERUM VETO) signifies "I Don't
+Permit!"] This was one of Friedrich Wilhelm's marginalia in
+response to such a thing; and the mutinous whimper died out again.
+Parliamentary Assemblages are sometimes Collective Wisdoms, but
+by no means always so. In Magdeburg we remember what trouble
+Friedrich Wilhelm had with his unreasonable Ritters.
+Ritters there, in their assembled capacity, had the Reich behind
+them, and could not be dealt with like Preussen: but Friedrich
+Wilhelm, by wise slow methods, managed Magdeburg too, and reduced
+it to silence, or to words necessary for despatch of business.
+
+In each Province, a Permanent Committee--chosen, I suppose, by
+King and Knights assenting; chosen I know not how, but admitted to
+be wisely chosen--represents the once Parliament or STANDE; and
+has its potency for doing good service in regard to all Provincial
+matters, from roads and bridges upwards, and is impotent to do the
+least harm. Roads and bridges, Church matters, repartition of the
+Land-dues, Army matters,--in fact they are an effective non-
+haranguing Parliament, to the King's Deputy in every such
+Province; well calculated to illuminate and forward his subaltern
+AMTmen and him. Nay, we observe it is oftenest in the way of gifts
+and solacements that the King articulately communicates with these
+Committees or their Ritterschafts. Projects for Draining of Bogs,
+for improved Highways, for better Husbandry; loans granted them,
+Loan-Banks established for the Province's behoof:--no need of
+parliamentary eloquence on such occasions, but of something
+far different.
+
+It is from this quiescent, or busy but noiseless kind of STANDE
+and Populations that Friedrich has his HULDIGUNG to take;--and the
+operation, whether done personally or by deputy, must be an
+abundantly simple one. He, for his part, is fortunate enough to
+find everywhere the Sovereignty ESTABLISHED; "rock of bronze" not
+the least shaken in his time. He will graciously undertake, by
+Written Act, which is read before the STANDE, King or King's
+Deputy witnessing there, "To maintain the privileges" of his
+STANDE and Populations; the STANDE answer, on oath, with lifted
+hand, and express invocation of Heaven, That they will obey him as
+true subjects; And so--doubtless with something of dining
+superadded, but no whisper of it put on record--the HULDIGUNG will
+everywhere very quietly transact itself.
+
+The HULDIGUNG itself is nothing to us, even with Friedrich there,
+--as at Konigsberg, Berlin, Cleve, the three exceptional places.
+To which, nevertheless, let us briefly attend him, for the sake of
+here and there some direct glimpse we may get of the then
+Friedrich's actual physiognomy and ways. Other direct view, or the
+chance of such, is not conceded us out of those sad Prussian
+Books; which are very full on this of the HULDIGUNG, if silent on
+so many other points. [Preuss, <italic> Thronbesteigung, <end
+italic> p. 382.]
+
+
+FRIEDRICH ACCEPTS THE HOMAGES, PERSONALLY, IN THREE PLACES.
+
+To Konigsberg is his first excursion on this errand. Preussen has
+perhaps, or may be suspected of having, some remnants of sour
+humors left in it, and remembrances of STANDE with haranguings and
+even mutinies: there if anywhere the King in person may do good on
+such an occasion, He left Berlin, July 7th, bound thitherward;
+here is Note of that first Royal Tour,--specimen of several
+hundreds such, which he had to do in the course of the next
+forty-five years.
+
+"Friend Algarotti, charming talker, attended him; who else,
+official and non-official, ask not. The Journey is to be
+circuitous; to combine various businesses, and also to have its
+amusements. They went by Custrin; glancing at old known Country,
+which is at its greenest in this season. By Custrin, across the
+Neumark, into Pommern; after that by an intricate winding route;
+reviewing regiments, inspecting garrisons, now here now there;
+doing all manner of inspections; talking I know not what; oftenest
+lodging with favored Generals, if it suited. Distance to
+Konigsberg, by the direct road, is about 500 miles; by this
+winding one, it must have been 800: Journey thither took nine days
+in all. Obliquely through Pommern, almost to the coast of the
+Baltic; their ultimatum there a place called Coslin, where they
+reviewed with strictness,--omitting Colberg, a small Sea-Fortress
+not far rearward, time being short. Thence into West-Preussen,
+into Polish Territory, and swiftly across that; keeping Dantzig
+and its noises wide enough to the left: one night in Poland;
+and the next they are in Ost-Preussen, place called Liebstadt,--
+again on home-ground, and diligently reviewing there.
+
+"The review at Liebstadt is remarkable in this, That the
+regiments, one regiment especially, not being what was fit, a
+certain Grenadier-Captain got cashiered on the spot; and the old
+Commandant himself was soon after pensioned, and more gently sent
+his ways. So strict is his Majesty. Contrariwise, he found
+Lieutenant-General von Katte's Garrison, at Angerburg, next day,
+in a very high perfection; and Colonel Posadowsky's regiment
+specially so; with which latter gentleman he lodged that night,
+and made him farther happy by the ORDER OF MERIT: Colonel
+Posadowsky, Garrison of Angerburg, far off in East-Preussen,
+Chevalier of the Order of Merit henceforth, if we ever meet him
+again. To the good old Lieutenant-General von Katte, who no doubt
+dined with them, his Majesty handed, on the same occasion, a
+Patent of Feldmarschall;--intends soon to make him Graf; and did
+it, as readers know. Both Colonel and General attended him
+thenceforth, still by a circuitous route, to Konigsberg, to assist
+in the solemnities there. By Gumbinnen, by Trakehnen,--the Stud of
+Trakehnen: that also his Majesty saw, and made review of;
+not without emotion, we can fancy, as the sleek colts were trotted
+out on those new terms! At Trakehnen, Katte and the Colonel would
+be his Majesty's guests, for the night they stayed. This is their
+extreme point eastward; Konigsberg now lies a good way west of
+them. But at Trakehnen they turn; and, Saturday, 16th July, 1740,
+after another hundred miles or so, along the pleasant valley of
+the Pregel, get to Konigsberg: ready to begin business on Monday
+morning,--on Sunday if necessary." [From Preuss, <italic>
+Thronbesteigung, <end italic> pp. 382, 385; Rodenbeck, p. 16; &c.]
+
+On Sunday there did a kind of memorability occur: The HULDIGUNGS-
+PREDIGT (Homage Sermon)--by a reverend Herr Quandt, chief Preacher
+there. Which would not be worth mentioning, except for this
+circumstance, that his Majesty exceedingly admired Quandt, and
+thought him a most Demosthenic genius, and the best of all the
+Germans. Quandt's text was in these words: <italic> "Thine are we,
+David, and on thy side, thou Son of Jesse; Peace, peace be unto
+thee, and peace be to thine helpers; for thy God helpeth thee."
+<end italic> [<italic> First Chronicles, <end italic> xii. 18.]
+Quandt began, in a sonorous voice, raising his face with
+respectful enthusiasm to the King, "Thine are we, O Friedrich, and
+on thy side, thou Son of Friedrich Wilhelm;" and so went on:
+sermon brief, sonorous, compact, and sticking close to its text.
+Friedrich stood immovable, gazing on the eloquent Demosthenic
+Quandt, with admiration heightened by surprise;--wrote of Quandt
+to Voltaire; and, with sustained enthusiasm, to the Public long
+afterwards; and to the end of his days was wont to make Quandt an
+exception, if perhaps almost the only one, from German barbarism,
+and disharmony of mind and tongue. So that poor Quandt cannot ever
+since get entirely forgotten, but needs always to be raked up
+again, for this reason when others have ceased: an almost
+melancholy adventure for poor Quandt and Another!--
+
+The HULDIGUNG was rather grand; Harangue and Counter-harangue
+permitted to the due length, and proper festivities following:
+but the STANDE could not manage to get into vocal covenanting or
+deliberating at all; Friedrich before leaving Berlin had answered
+their hint or request that way, in these words: "We are likewise
+graciously inclined to give to the said STANDE, before their
+Homaging, the same assurance which they got from our Herr Father's
+Majesty, who is now with God,"--general assurance that their, and
+everybody's, "Rights shall be maintained [as we see they are],--
+with which, it is hoped (HOFFENTLICH), they will be content, and
+get to peace upon this matter (SICH DABEI BERUHIGEN WERDEN)."
+[Preuss, <italic> Thronbesteigung, <end italic> p. 380.] It will
+be best for them!
+
+Friedrich gave away much corn here; that is, opened his Corn-
+Granaries, on charitable terms, and took all manner of measures,
+here as in other places, for relief of the scarcity there was.
+Of the illuminations, never so grand, the reader shall hear
+nothing. A "Torch-Procession of the Students" turned out a pretty
+thing:--Students marching with torches, with fine wind-music,
+regulated enthusiasm, fine succinct address to his Majesty;
+and all the world escorting, with its "Live Forever!" Friedrich
+gave the Students "a TRINK-GELAG (Banquet of Liquors)," how
+arranged I do not know: and to the Speaker of the Address, a
+likely young gentleman with VON to his name, he offered an
+Ensigncy of Foot ("in Camas's Fusileer Regiment,"--Camas now gone
+to Paris, embassying), which was joyfully accepted.
+Joyfully accepted;--and it turned out well for all parties;
+the young gentleman having risen, where merit was the rule of
+rising, and become Graf and Lieutenant-General, in the course of
+the next fifty years. [Preuss, <italic> Thronbesteigung, <end
+italic> p. 387.]
+
+Huldigung and Torch-Procession over, the Royal Party dashed
+rapidly off, next morning (21st July), homewards by the shortest
+route; and, in three days more, by Frankfurt-on-Oder (where a
+glimpse of General Schwerin, a favorite General, was to be had),
+were safe in Berlin; received with acclamation, nay with
+"blessings and even tears" some say, after this pleasant
+Fortnight's Tour. General Schwerin, it is rumored, will be made
+Feldmarschall straightway, the Munchows are getting so promoted as
+we said; edicts are coming out, much business speeding forward,
+and the tongues of men keep wagging.
+
+Berlin HULDIGUNG--and indeed, by Deputy, that of nearly all the
+other Towns--was on Tuesday, August 2d. At Berlin his Majesty was
+present in the matter: but, except the gazing multitudes, and
+hussar regiments, ranked in the Schloss-Platz and streets
+adjoining, there was little of notable in it; the upholstery
+arrangements thrifty in the extreme. His Majesty is prone to
+thrift in this of the Huldigung, as would appear; perhaps
+regarding the affair as scenic merely. Here, besides this of
+Berlin, is another instance just occurring. It appears, the
+Quedlinburg people, shut out from the light of the actual Royal
+Countenance, cannot do their Homaging by Deputy, without at least
+a Portrait of the King and of the Queen: How manage? asks the
+Official Person. "Have a Couple of Daubs done in Berlin, three
+guineas apiece; send them these," answers the King! [<italic> "On
+doit faire barbouiller de mauvaises copies a Berlin, la piece a 20
+ecus. {end italic>--FR." Preuss, ii. (<italic> Urkundenbuch, <end
+italic> s. 222).]
+
+Here in the Berlin Schloss, scene the Large Hall within doors,
+there is a "platform raised three steps; and on this, by way of a
+kind of throne, an arm-chair covered with old black velvet;" the
+whole surmounted by a canopy also of old black velvet: not a
+sublime piece of upholstery; but reckoned adequate.
+Friedrich mounted the three steps; stood before the old chair, his
+Princes standing promiscuously behind it; his Ritters in quantity,
+in front and to right and left, on the floor. Some Minister of the
+Interior explains suitably, not at too great length, what they are
+met for; some junior Official, junior but of quality, responded
+briefly, for himself and his order, to the effect, "Yea, truly:"
+the HULDIGUNGENS-URKUNDE (Deed of Homage) was then read by the
+proper Clerk, and the Ritters all swore; audibly, with lifted
+hands. This is the Ritter Huldigung.
+
+His Majesty then steps out to the Balcony, for Oath and Homage of
+the general Population. General population gave its oath, and
+"three great shouts over and above." "ES LEBE DER KONIG!" thrice,
+with all their throats. Upon which a shower of Medals, "Homage-
+Medals," gold and silver (quantity not mentioned) rained down upon
+them, in due succession; and were scrambled for, in the usual way.
+"His Majesty," they write, and this is perhaps the one point worth
+notice, "his Majesty, contrary to custom and to etiquette,
+remained on the Balcony, some time after the ceremony, perhaps a
+full half-hour;"--silent there, "with his look fixed attentively
+on the immeasurable multitude before the Schloss; and seemed sunk
+in deep reflection (BETRACHTUNG):"--an almost awfully eloquent
+though inarticulate phenomenon to his Majesty, that of those
+multitudes scrambling and huzzaing there! [Preuss, <italic>
+Thronbesteigung, <end italic> p. 389.]
+
+These, with the Cleve one, are all the Hornagings Friedrich was
+personally present at; the others he did by Deputy, all in one day
+(2d August); and without fuss. Scenic matters these; in which,
+except where he can, as in the Konigsberg case, combine
+inspections and grave businesses with them, he takes no interest.
+However, he is now, for the sake chiefly of inspections and other
+real objects, bent on a Journey to Cleve;--the fellow of that to
+Konigsberg: Konigsberg, Preussen, the easternmost outlying wing of
+his long straggling Dominions; and then Cleve-Julich, its
+counterpart on the southwestern side,--there also, with such
+contingencies hanging over Cleve-Julich, it were proper to make
+some mustering of the Frontier garrisons and affairs. [In regard
+to the Day of HULDIGUNG at Cleve, which happily is not of the
+least moment to us, Preuss (<italic> Thronbesteigung, <end italic>
+p, 390) and <italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> (i. 423) seem
+to be in flat contradiction.] His Majesty so purposes: and we
+purpose again to accompany,--not for inspection and mustering, but
+for an unexpected reason. The grave Journey to Cleve has an
+appendage, or comic side-piece, hanging to it; more than one
+appendage; which the reader must not miss!--Before setting out,
+read these two Fractions, snatched from the Diplomatist Wastebag;
+looking well, we gain there some momentary view of Friedrich on
+the business side. Of Friedrich, and also of Another:--
+
+Sunday, 14th August, 1740, Dickens, who has been reporting
+hitherto in a favorable, though in a languid exoteric manner, not
+being in any height of favor, England or he,--had express Audience
+of his Majesty; being summoned out to Potsdam for that end:
+"Sunday evening, about 7 P.M."--Majesty intending to be off on the
+Cleve Journey to-morrow. Let us accompany Dickens. Readers may
+remember, George II. has been at Hanover for some weeks past;
+Bielfeld diligently grinning euphemisms and courtly graciosities
+to him; Truchsess hinting, on opportunity, that there are perhaps
+weighty businesses in the rear; which, however, on the Britannic
+side, seem loath to start. Britannic Majesty is much at a loss
+about his Spanish War, so dangerous for kindling France and the
+whole world upon him. In regard to which Prussia might be so
+important, for or against.--This, in compressed form, is what
+Dickens witnesses at Potsdam that Sunday evening from 7 P.M.:--
+
+"Audience lasted above an hour: King turned directly upon
+business; wishes to have 'Categorical Answers' as to Three Points
+already submitted to his Britannic Majesty's consideration.
+Clear footing indispensable between us. What you want of me? say
+it, and be plain. What I want of you is, These three things:--
+ "1. Guarantee for Julich and Berg. All the world knows WHOSE
+these Duchies are. Will his Britannic Majesty guarantee me there?
+And if so, How, and to what lengths, will he proceed about it?
+ "2. Settlement about Ost-Friesland. Expectancy of Ost-Friesland
+soon to fall heirless, which was granted me long since, though
+Hanover makes hagglings, counter-claimings: I must have some
+Settlement about that.
+ "3. The like about those perplexities in Mecklenburg.
+No difficulty there if we try heartily, nor is there such pressing
+haste about it.
+
+"These are my three claims on England; and I will try to serve
+England as far in return, if it will tell me how. 'Ah, beware of
+throwing yourself into the arms of France!' modestly suggests
+Dickens.--'Well, if France will guarantee me those Duchies, and
+you will not do anything?' answers his Majesty with a fine laugh:
+'England I consider my most natural friend and ally; but I must
+know what there is to depend on there. Princes are ruled by their
+interest; cannot follow their feelings. Let me have an explicit
+answer; say, at Wesel, where I am to be on the 24th,'" ten days
+hence. Britannic Majesty is at Hanover, and can answer within that
+time. "This he twice told me, 'Wesel, 24th,' in the course of our
+interview. Permit me to recommend the matter to your Lordship,"--
+my Lord Harrington, now attending the Britannic Majesty.
+
+"During the whole audience," adds Dickens, "the King was in
+extreme good humor; and not only heard with attention all the
+considerations I offered, but was not the least offended at any
+objections I made to what he said. It is undoubtedly the best way
+to behave with frankness to him." These last are Dickens's own
+words; let them modestly be a memorandum to your Lordship.
+This King goes himself direct to the point; and
+straightforwardness, as a primary condition, will profit your
+Lordship with him. [Dickens (in State-Paper Office, 17th
+August, 1740).]
+
+Most true advice, this;--and would perhaps be followed, were it
+quite easy! But things are very complicated. And the Britannic
+Majesty, much plagued with Spanish War and Parliamentary noises in
+that unquiet Island, is doubtless glad to get away to Hanover for
+a little; and would fain be on holiday in these fine rural months.
+Which is not well possible either. Jenkins's Ear, rising at last
+like a fiery portent, has kindled the London Fog over yonder, in a
+strange way, and the murky stagnancy is all getting on fire;
+the English intent, as seldom any Nation was, to give the
+Spaniards an effectual beating. Which they hope they can,--though
+unexpected difficulties will occur. And, in the mean while, what
+a riddle of potentialities for his poor Majesty to read, and pick
+his way from!--
+
+Bielfeld, in spite of all this, would fain be full of admiration
+for the Britannic Majesty. Confesses he is below the middle size,
+in fact a tiny little creature, but then his shape is perfect;
+leg much to be commended,--which his Majesty knows, standing
+always with one leg slightly advanced, and the Order of the Garter
+on it, that mankind may take notice. Here is Bielfeld's
+description faithfully abridged:--
+
+"Big blue eyes, perhaps rather of parboiled character, though
+proud enough; eyes flush with his face or more, rather IN RELIEF
+than on a level with it,"--A FLEUR DE TETE, after the manner of a
+fish, if one might say so, and betokening such an intellect behind
+them! "Attitude constrained, leg advanced in that way;
+his courtiers call it majestic. Biggish mouth, strictly shut in
+the crescent or horse-shoe form (FERMEE EN CROISSANT); curly wig
+(A NOEUDS, reminding you of lamb's-wool, color not known);
+eyebrows, however, you can see are ashy-blond; general tint is
+fundamentally livid; but when in good case, the royal skin will
+take tolerably bright colors (PREND D'ASSEZ BELLES COULEURS).
+As to the royal mind and understanding, what shall Bielfeld say?
+That his Majesty sometimes makes ingenious and just remarks, and
+is laudably serious at all times, and can majestically hold his
+tongue, and stand with advanced leg, and eyes rather more than
+flush. Sense of his dignity is high, as it ought to be; on great
+occasions you see pride and a kind of joy mantling in the royal
+countenance. Has been known to make explosions, and to be very
+furious to Prince Fred and others, when pricked into:--but, my
+friend, what mortal is exempt from failings? Majesty reads the
+English Newspapers every morning in bed, which are often biting.
+Majesty has his Walmoden, a Hanoverian Improper Female, Countess
+of Yarmouth so called; quiet, autumnal, fair complexioned, stupid;
+who is much a comfort to him. She keeps out of mischief, political
+or other; and gives Bielfeld a gracious nod now and then."
+[Bielfeld, i. 158.] Harrington is here too;--and Britannic Majesty
+and he are busy governing the English Nation on these terms.--
+We return now to the Prussian Majesty.
+
+About six weeks after that of Dickens,--Cleve Journey and much
+else now ended,--Praetorius the Danish Envoy, whom we slightly
+knew at Reinsberg once, gives this testimony; writing home to an
+Excellency at Copenhagen, whose name we need not inquire into:--
+
+"To give your Excellency a just idea of the new Government here,
+I must observe that hitherto the King of Prussia does as it were
+everything himself; and that, excepting the Finance Minister von
+Boden, who preaches frugality, and finds for that doctrine
+uncommon acceptance, almost greater even than in the former reign,
+his Majesty allows no counselling from any Minister; so that Herr
+von Podewils, who is now the working hand in the department of
+Foreign Affairs, has nothing given him to do but to expedite the
+orders he receives from the Cabinet, his advice not being asked
+upon any matter; and so it is with the other Ministers.
+People thought the loss of Herr von Thulmeyer," veteran Foreign
+Minister whom we have transiently heard of in the Double-Marriage
+time, and perhaps have even seen at London or elsewhere, [Died 4th
+August (Rodenbeck, p. 20).] "would be irreparable; so expert was
+he, and a living archive in that business: however, his post seems
+to have vanished with himself. His salary is divided between Herr
+von Podewils," whom the reader will sometimes hear of again,
+"Kriegsrath (Councillor of War) von Ilgen," son of the old
+gentleman we used to know, "and Hofrath Sellentin who is RENDANT
+OF THE LEGATIONS-KASSE" (Ambassadors' Paymaster, we could guess,
+Ambassador Body having specialty of cash assigned it, comparable
+with the specialty of value received from it, in this strict
+frugal Country),--neither of which two latter names shall the
+reader be troubled with farther. "A good many resolutions, and
+responses by the King, I have seen: they combine laconic
+expression with an admirable business eye (GESCHAFTSBLICK).
+Unhappily,"--at least for us in the Diplomatic line, for your
+Excellency and me unhappily,--"there is nobody about the King who
+possesses his complete confidence, or whom we can make use of in
+regard to the necessary introductions and preliminary movements.
+Hereby it comes that,--as certain things can only be handled with
+cautious foresight and circumlocution, and in the way of beginning
+wide,--an Ambassador here is more thrown out of his course than in
+any other Court; and knows not, though his object were steadily in
+sight, what road to strike into for getting towards it." [Preuss,
+<italic> Thronbesteigung, <end italic> p. 377 (2d October, 1740).]
+
+
+
+Chapter III.
+
+FRIEDRICH MAKES AN EXCURSION, NOT OF DIRECT SORT
+INTO THE CLEVE COUNTRIES.
+
+King Friedrich did not quite keep his day at Wesel; indeed this
+24th was not the first day, but the last of several, he had
+appointed to himself for finis to that Journey in the Cleve
+Countries; Journey rather complex to arrange. He has several
+businesses ahead in those parts; and, as usual, will group them
+with good judgment, and thrift of time. Not inspections merely,
+but amusements, meetings with friends, especially French friends:
+the question is, how to group them with skill, so that the
+necessary elements may converge at the right moment, and one shot
+kill three or four birds. This is Friedrich's fine way,
+perceptible in all these Journeys. The French friends, flying each
+on his own track, with his own load of impediments, Voltaire with
+his Madame for instance, are a difficult element in such problem;
+and there has been, and is, much scheming and corresponding about
+it, within the last month especially.
+
+Voltaire is now at Brussels, with his Du Chatelet, prosecuting
+that endless "lawsuit with the House of Honsbruck,"--which he, and
+we, are both desirous to have done with. He is at the Hague, too,
+now and then; printing, about to print, the ANTI-MACHIAVEL;
+corresponding, to right and left, quarrelling with Van Duren the
+Printer; lives, while there, in the VIEILLE COUR, in the vast
+dusky rooms with faded gilding, and grand old Bookshelves "with
+the biggest spider-webs in Europe." Brussels is his place for Law-
+Consultations, general family residence; the Hague and that old
+spider-web Palace for correcting Proof-sheets; doing one's own
+private studies, which we never quite neglect. Fain would
+Friedrich see him, fain he Friedrich; but there is a divine
+Emilie, there is a Maupertuis, there are--In short, never were
+such difficulties, in the cooking of an egg with water boiling;
+and much vain correspondence has already been on that subject, as
+on others equally extinct. Correspondence which is not pleasant
+reading at this time; the rather as no reader can, without endless
+searching, even understand it. Correspondence left to us, not in
+the cosmic, elucidated or legible state; left mainly as the
+Editorial rubbish-wagons chose to shoot it; like a tumbled quarry,
+like the ruins of a sacked city;--avoidable by readers who are not
+forced into it! [Herr Preuss's edition (<italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> vols. xxi. xxii. xxiii.) has come out since
+the above was written: it is agreeably exceptional; being, for the
+first time, correctly printed, and the editor himself having
+mostly understood it,--though the reader still cannot, on the
+terms there allowed.] Take the following select bricks as sample,
+which are of some use; the general Heading is,
+
+KING FRIEDERIC TO M. DE VOLTAIRE (at the Hague, or at Brussels).
+
+"CHARLOTTENBURG, 12th JUNE, 1740.--... My dear Voltaire, resist no
+longer the eagerness I have to see you. Do in my favor whatever
+your humanity allows. In the end of August, I go to Wesel, and
+perhaps farther. Promise that you will come and join me; for I
+could not live happy, nor die tranquil, without having embraced
+you! Thousand compliments to the Marquise," divine Emilie. "I am
+busy with both hands [Corn-Magazines, Free Press, Abolition of
+Torture, and much else]; working at the Army with the one hand, at
+the People and the Fine Arts with the other."
+
+"BERLIN, 5th AUGUST, 1740.--... I will write to Madame du
+Chatelet, in compliance with your wish:" mark it, reader.
+"To speak to you frankly concerning her journey, it is Voltaire,
+it is you, it is my Friend that I desire to see; and the divine
+Emilie with all her divinity is only the Accessory of the Apollo
+Newtonized.
+
+"I cannot yet say whether I shall travel [incognito into foreign
+parts a little] or not travel;" there have been rumors, perhaps
+private wishes; but--... "Adieu, dear friend; sublime spirit,
+first-born of thinking beings. Love me always sincerely, and be
+persuaded that none can love and esteem you more than I.
+VALE. FEDERIC."
+
+"BERLIN, 6th AUGUST [which is next day].--You will have received a
+Letter from me dated yesterday; this is the second I write to you
+from Berlin; I refer you to what was in the other. If it must be
+(FAUT) that Emilie accompany Apollo, I consent; but if I could see
+you alone, that is what I would prefer. I should be too much
+dazzled; I could not stand so much splendor all at once; it would
+overpower me. I should need the veil of Moses to temper the united
+radiance of your two divinities." ... In short, don't bring her,
+if you please.
+
+"REMUSBERG [poetic for REINSBERG], 8th AUGUST, 1740.--... My dear
+Voltaire, I do believe Van Duren costs you more trouble and pains
+than you had with HENRI QUATRE. In versifying the Life of a Hero,
+you wrote the history of your own thoughts; but in coercing a
+scoundrel you fence with an enemy who is not worthy of you."
+To punish him, and cut short his profits, "PRINT, then, as you
+wish [your own edition of the ANTI-MACHIAVEL, to go along with
+his, and trip the feet from it]. FAITES ROULER LA PRESSE; erase,
+change, correct; do as you see best; your judgment about it shall
+be mine."--"In eight days I leave for [where thinks the reader?
+"DANTZIG" deliberately print all the Editors, careful Preuss among
+them; overturning the terrestrial azimuths for us, and making day
+night!]--for Leipzig, and reckon on being at Frankfurt on the 22d.
+In case you could be there, I expect, on my passage, to give you
+lodging! At Cleve or in Holland, I depend for certain on embracing
+you." [Preuss, <italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> xx.
+pp. 5, 19-21; Voltaire, <italic> OEuvres, <end italic> lxxii. 226,
+&c. (not worth citing, in comparison).]
+
+Intrinsically the Friedrich correspondence at this time, with
+Voltaire especially, among many friends now on the wing towards
+Berlin and sending letters, has,--if you are forced into
+struggling for some understanding of it, and do get to read parts
+of it with the eyes of Friedrich and Voltaire,--has a certain
+amiability; and is nothing like so waste and dreary as it looks in
+the chaotic or sacked-city condition. Friedrich writes with
+brevity, oftenest on practicalities (the ANTI-MACHIAVEL, the
+coming Interview, and the like), evidently no time to spare;
+writes always with considerable sincerity; with friendliness,
+much admiration, and an ingenuous vivacity, to M. de Voltaire.
+Voltaire, at his leisure in Brussels or the Old Palace and its
+spider-webs, writes much more expansively; not with insincerity,
+he either;--with endless airy graciosities, and ingenious twirls,
+and touches of flattering unction, which latter, he is aware, must
+not be laid on too thick. As thus:--
+
+In regard to the ANTI-MACHIAVEL,--Sire, deign to give me your
+permissions as to the scoundrel of a Van Duren; well worth while,
+Sire,--"IT is a monument for the latest posterity; the only Book
+worthy of a King for these fifteen hundred years."
+
+This is a strongish trowelful, thrown on direct, with adroitness;
+and even this has a kind of sincerity. Safer, however, to do it in
+the oblique or reflex way,--by Ambassador Cumas, for example:--
+
+"I will tell you boldly, Sir [you M. de Camas], I put more value
+on this Book (ANTI-MACHIAVEL) than on the Emperor Julian's CAESAR,
+or on the MAXIMS of Marcus Aurelius,"--I do indeed, having a kind
+of property in it withal! [Voltaire, <italic> OEuvres, <end
+italic> lxxii. 280 (to Camas, 18th October, 1740).]
+
+In fact, Voltaire too is beautiful, in this part of the
+Correspondence; but much in a twitter,--the Queen of Sheba, not
+the sedate Solomon, in prospect of what is coming. He plumes
+himself a little, we perceive, to his d'Argentals and French
+Correspondents, on this sublime intercourse he has got into with a
+Crowned Head, the cynosure of mankind:---Perhaps even you, my best
+friend, did not quite know me, and what merits I had!
+Plumes himself a little; but studies to be modest withal; has not
+much of the peacock, and of the turkey has nothing, to his old
+friends. All which is very naive and transparent; natural and even
+pretty, on the part of M. de Voltaire as the weaker vessel.--
+For the rest, it is certain Maupertuis is getting under way at
+Paris towards the Cleve rendezvous. Brussels, too, is so near
+these Cleve Countries; within two days' good driving:--if only the
+times and routes would rightly intersect?
+
+Friedrich's intention is by no means for a straight journey
+towards Cleve: he intends for Baireuth first, then back from
+Baireuth to Cleve,--making a huge southward elbow on the map, with
+Baireuth for apex or turning-point:--in this manner he will make
+the times suit, and have a convergence at Cleve. To Baireuth;--who
+knows if not farther? All summer there has gone fitfully a rumor,
+that he wished to see France; perhaps Paris itself incognito?
+The rumor, which was heard even at Petersburg, [Raumer's <italic>
+Beitrage <end italic> (English Translation, London, 1837), p. 15
+(Finch's Despatch, 24th June, 1740).] is now sunk dead again;
+but privately, there is no doubt, a glimpse of the sublime French
+Nation would be welcome to Friedrich. He could never get to
+Travelling in his young time; missed his Grand Tour altogether,
+much as he wished it; and he is capable of pranks!--Enough, on
+Monday morning, 15th August, 1740, [Rodenbeck, p. 15, slightly in
+error: see Dickens's Interview, supra, p. 187.] Friedrich and
+Suite leave Potsdam; early enough; go, by Leipzig, by the route
+already known to readers, through Coburg and the Voigtland
+regions; Wilhelmina has got warning, sits eagerly expecting her
+Brother in the Hermitage at Baireuth, gladdest of shrill sisters;
+and full of anxieties how her Brother would now be. The travelling
+party consisted, besides the King, of seven persons: Prince August
+Wilhelm, King's next Brother, Heir-apparent if there come no
+children, now a brisk youth of eighteen; Leopold Prince of Anhalt-
+Dessau, Old Dessauer's eldest, what we may call the "Young
+Dessauer;" Colonel von Borck, whom we shall hear of again;
+Colonel von Stille, already heard of (grave men of fifty, these
+two); milk-beard Munchow, an Adjutant, youngest of the promoted
+Munchows; Algarotti, indispensable for talk; and Fredersdorf, the
+House-Steward and domestic Factotum, once Private in Schwerin's
+Regiment, whom Bielfeld so admired at Reinsberg, foreseeing what
+he would come to. One of Friedrich's late acts was to give
+Factotum Fredersdorf an Estate of Land (small enough, I fancy, but
+with country-house on it) for solace to the leisure of so useful a
+man,--studious of chemistry too, as I have heard. Seven in all,
+besides the King. [Rodenbeck, p. 19 (and for Chamberlain
+Fredersdorf's estate, p. 15).] Direct towards Baireuth, incognito,
+and at the top of their speed. Wednesday, 17th, they actually
+arrive. Poor Wilhelmina, she finds her Brother changed; become a
+King in fact, and sternly solitary; alone in soul, even as a King
+must be! [Wilhelmina, ii. 322, 323.]--
+
+"Algarotti, one of the first BEAUX-ESPRITS of this age," as
+Wilhelmina defines him,--Friend Algarotti, the young Venetian
+gentleman of elegance, in dusky skin, in very white linen and
+frills, with his fervid black eyes, "does the expenses of the
+conversation." He is full of elegant logic, has speculations on
+the great world and the little, on Nature, Art, Papistry, Anti-
+Papistry, and takes up the Opera in an earnest manner, as capable
+of being a school of virtue and the moral sublime. His respectable
+Books on the Opera and other topics are now all forgotten, and
+crave not to be mentioned. To me he is not supremely beautiful,
+though much the gentleman in manners as in ruffles, and
+ingeniously logical:--rather yellow to me, in mind as in skin, and
+with a taint of obsolete Venetian Macassar. But to Friedrich he is
+thrice-dear; who loves the Sharp faceted cut of the man, and does
+not object to his yellow or Extinct-Macassar qualities of mind.
+Thanks to that wandering Baltimore for picking up such a jewel and
+carrying him Northward! Algarotti himself likes the North: here in
+our hardy climates,--especially at Berlin, and were his loved
+Friedrich NOT a King,--Algarotti could be very happy in the
+liberty allowed. At London, where there is no King, or none to
+speak of, and plenty of free Intelligences, Carterets, Lytteltons,
+young Pitts and the like, he is also well, were it not for the
+horrid smoke upon one's linen, and the little or no French of
+those proud Islanders.
+
+Wilhelmina seems to like him here; is glad, at any rate, that he
+does the costs of conversation, better or worse. In the rest is no
+hope. Stille, Borck are accomplished military gentlemen; but of
+tacit nature, reflective, practical, rather than discursive, and
+do not waste themselves by incontinence of tongue. Stille, by his
+military Commentaries, which are still known to soldiers that
+read, maintains some lasting remembrance of himself: Borck we
+shall see engaged in a small bit of business before long. As to
+Munchow, the JEUNE MORVEUX of an Adjutant, he, though his manners
+are well enough, and he wears military plumes in his hat, is still
+an unfledged young creature, "bill still yellow," so to speak;--
+and marks himself chiefly by a visible hankering after that
+troublesome creature Marwitz, who is always coquetting.
+Friedrich's conversation, especially to me Wilhelmina, seems
+"GUINDE, set on stilts," likewise there are frequent cuts of
+banter in him; and it is painfully evident he distinguishes my
+Sister of Anspach and her foolish Husband, whom he has invited
+over hither in a most eager manner, beyond what a poor Wilhelmina
+with her old love can pretend to. Patience, my shrill Princess,
+Beauty of Baireuth and the world; let us hope all will come right
+again! My shrill Princess--who has a melodious strength like that
+of war-fifes, too--knows how to be patient; and veils many things,
+though of a highly unhypocritical nature.
+
+These were Three great Days at Baireuth; Wilhelmina is to come
+soon, and return the visit at Berlin. To wait upon the King, known
+though incognito, "the Bishop of Bamberg" came driving over:
+[<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> i. 419.] Schonborn,
+Austrian Kanzler, or who? His old City we once saw (and plenty of
+hanged malefactors swinging round it, during that JOURNEY TO THE
+REICH);--but the Bishop himself never to our knowledge, Bishop
+being absent then, I hope it is the same Bishop of Bamberg, whom
+a Friend of Busching's, touring there about that same time, saw
+dining in a very extraordinary manner, with medieval trumpeters,
+"with waiters in spurs and buff-belts;" [Busching's <italic>
+Beitrage; <end italic>--Schlosser (<italic> History of the
+Eighteenth Century <end italic>) also quotes the scene.] if it is
+not, I have not the slightest shadow of acquaintance with him,--
+there have been so many Bishops of Bamberg with whom one wishes to
+have none! On the third day Friedrich and his company went away,
+towards Wurzburg; and Wilhelmina was left alone with her
+reflections. "I had had so much to say to him; I had got nothing
+said at all:" alas, it is ever so. "The King was so changed, grown
+so much bigger (GRANDI), you could not have known him again;"
+stands finely erect and at full breadth, every inch a King;
+his very stature, you would say, increased.--Adieu, my Princess,
+pearl of Princesses; all readers will expect your return-visit at
+Berlin, which is to be soon.
+
+
+FRIEDRICH STRIKES OFF TO THE LEFT, AND HAS A VIEW OF
+STRASBURG FOR TWO DAYS.
+
+Through Wurzburg, Frankfurt-on-Mayn, speeds Friedrich;--
+Wilhelmina and mankind understand that it is homewards and to
+Cleve; but at Frankfurt, in deepest privacy, there occurs a sudden
+whirl southward,--up the Rhine-Valley; direct towards Strasburg,
+for a sight of France in that quarter! So has Friedrich decided,--
+not quite suddenly, on new Letters here, or new computations about
+Cleve; but by forethought taken at Baireuth, as rather appears.
+From Frankfurt to Strasburg, say 150 miles; from Strasburg home,
+is not much farther than from Frankfurt home: it can be done,
+then; husht!
+
+The incognito is to be rigorous: Friedrich becomes COMTE DUFOUR, a
+Prussian-French gentleman; Prince August Wilhelm is Graf von
+Schaffgotsch, Algarotti is Graf von Pfuhl, Germans these two;
+what Leopold, the Young Dessauer, called himself,--still less what
+the others, or whether the others were there at all, and not
+shoved on, direct towards Wesel, out of the way as is likelier,--
+can remain uncertain to readers and me. From Frankfurt, then, on
+Monday morning, 22d August, 1740, as I compute, through old known
+Philipsburg Campaign country, and the lines of Ettlingen and
+Stollhofen; there the Royal Party speeds eagerly (weather very
+bad, as appears): and it is certain they are at Kehl on Tuesday
+evening; looking across the long Rhine Bridge, Strasburg and its
+steeples now close at hand.
+
+This looks to be a romantic fine passage in the History of the
+young King;--though in truth it is not, and proves but a feeble
+story either to him or us. Concerning which, however, the reader,
+especially if he should hear that there exists precise Account of
+it, Two Accounts indeed, one from the King's own hand, will not
+fail of a certain craving to become acquainted with details.
+This craving, foolish rather than wise, we consider it thriftiest
+to satisfy at once; and shall give the King's NARRATIVE entire,
+though it is a jingling lean scraggy Piece, partly rhyme, "in the
+manner of Bachaumont and La Chapelle;" written at the gallop, a
+few days hence, and despatched to Voltaire:--"You," dear Voltaire,
+"wish to know what I have been about, since leaving Berlin;
+annexed you will find a description of it," writes Friedrich.
+[<italic> OEuvres, <end italic> xxii. 25 (Wesel, 2d Septemher,
+1740).] Out of Voltaire's and other people's waste-baskets, it has
+at length been fished up, patch by patch, and pasted together by
+victorious modern Editors; and here it is again entire. The other
+Narrative, which got into the Newspapers soon after, is likewise
+of authentic nature,--Fassmann, our poor old friend, confirming
+it, if that were needful,--and is happily in prose. [Given in
+<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> i. 420-423;--see likewise
+Fassmann's <italic> Merkwurdigster Regierungs-Antritt <end italic>
+(poor old Book on FRIEDRICH'S ACCESSION); Preuss
+(<italic> Thronbesteigung, <end italic> pp. 395-400); &c. &c.]
+Holding these two Pieces well together, and giving the King's
+faithfully translated, in a complete state, it will be possible to
+satisfy foolish cravings, and make this Strasburg Adventure
+luminous enough.
+
+
+ KING FRIEDRICH TO VOLTAIRE (from Wesel, 2d September, 1740),
+ CHIEFLY IN DOGGEREL, CONCERNING THE RUN TO STRASBURG.
+Part of it, incorrect, in Voltaire, <italic> OEuvres <end italic>
+(scandalous Piece now called <italic> Memoires, <end italic> once
+<italic> Vie Privee du Roi de Prusse <end italic>), ii. 24-26;
+finally, in Preuss, <italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic>
+xiv. 156-161, the real and complete affair, as fished up by
+victorious Preuss and others.
+
+"I have just finished a Journey, intermingled with singular
+adventures, sometimes pleasant, sometimes the reverse. You know I
+had set out for Baireuth,"--BRUXELLES the beautiful French Editor
+wrote, which makes Egyptian darkness of the Piece!--"to see a
+Sister whom I love no less than esteem. On the road [thither or
+thence; or likeliest, THERE], Algarotti and I consulted the map,
+to settle our route for returning by Wesel. Frankfurt-on-Mayn
+comes always as a principal stage;--Strasburg was no great
+roundabout: we chose that route in preference. The INCOGNITO was
+decided, names pitched upon [Comte Dufour, and the others];
+story we were to tell: in fine, all was arranged and concerted to
+a nicety as well as possible. We fancied we should get to
+Strasburg in three days [from Baireuth].
+
+But Heaven, which disposes of all things,
+Differently regulated this thing.
+With lank-sided coursers,
+Lineal descendants from Rosinante,
+With ploughmen in the dress of postilions,
+Blockheads of impertinent nature;
+Our carriages sticking fast a hundred times in the road,
+We went along with gravity at a leisurely pace,
+Knocking against the crags.
+The atmosphere in uproar with loud thunder,
+The rain-torrents streaming over the Earth
+Threatened mankind with the Day of Judgment [VERY BAD WEATHER],
+And in spite of our impatience,
+Four good days are, in penance,
+Lost forever in these jumblings.
+
+<italic>
+Mais le ciel, qui de tout dispose,
+Regla differemment la chose.
+Avec de coursiers efflanques,
+En ligne droites issus de Rosinante,
+Et des paysans en postillons masques,
+Dutors de race impertinente,
+Notre carrosse en cent lieux accroche,
+Nous allions gravement, d'une allure indolente,
+Gravitant contre les rochers.
+Les airs emus par le bruyant tonnerre,
+Les torrents d'eau repandus sur la terre,
+Du dernier jour menacaient les humains;
+Et malgre notre impatience,
+Quatre bons jours en penitence
+Sont pour jamais perdus dans les charrains.
+<end italic>
+
+"Had all our fatalities been limited to stoppages of speed on the
+journey, we should have taken patience; but, after frightful
+roads, we found lodgings still frightfuler.
+
+For greedy landlords
+Seeing us pressed by hunger
+Did, in a more than frugal manner,
+In their infernal hovels,
+Poisoning instead of feeding,
+Steal from us our crowns.
+O age different [in good cheer] from that of Lucullus!
+
+<italic>
+Car des hotes interesses,
+De la faim nous voyant presses,
+D'une facon plus que frugale,
+Dans une chaumiere infernale,
+En nous empoisonnant,
+Nous volaient nos ecus.
+O siecle different des temps de Lucullus!
+<end italic>
+
+"Frightful roads; short of victual, short of drink: nor was that
+all. We had to undergo a variety of accidents; and certainly our
+equipage must have had a singular air, for in every new place we
+came to, they took us for something different.
+
+Some took us for Kings,
+Some for pickpockets well disguised;
+Others for old acquaintances.
+At times the people crowded out,
+Looked us in the eyes,
+Like clowns impertinently curious.
+Our lively Italian [Algarotti] swore;
+For myself I took patience;
+The young Count [my gay younger Brother, eighteen at present]
+ quizzed and frolicked;
+The big Count [Heir-apparent of Dessau] silently swung his head,
+Wishing this fine Journey to France,
+In the bottom of his heart, most christianly at the Devil.
+
+<italic>
+Les uns nous prenaient pour des rois,
+D'autres pour des filous courtois,
+D'autrespour gens de connaissance;
+Parfois le peuple s'attroupait,
+Entre les yeux nous regardait
+En badauds curieux, remplis d'impertinence.
+Notre vif Italien jurait,
+Pour moi je prenais patience,
+Le jeune Comte folatrait,
+Le grand Comte se dandinait,
+Et ce beau vogage de France
+Dans le fond de son coeur chretiennement damnait.
+<end italic>
+
+"We failed not, however, to struggle gradually along; at last we
+arrived in that Stronghold, where [as preface to the War of 1734,
+known to some of us]--
+
+Where the garrison, too supple,
+Surrendered so piteously
+After the first blurt of explosion
+From the cannon of the French.
+
+<italic>
+Ou a garnison, troupe flasque,
+Se rendit si piteusement
+Apres la premiere bourasque
+Du canon francais foudroyant.
+<end italic>
+
+
+You recognize Kehl in this description. It was in that fine
+Fortress,--where, by the way, the breaches are still lying
+unrepaired [Reich being a slow corpus in regard to such things],
+--that the Postmaster, a man of more foresight than we, asked
+If we had got passports?
+
+No, said I to him; of passports
+We never had the whim.
+Strong ones I believe it would need
+To recall, to our side of the limit,
+Subjects of Pluto King of the Dead:
+But, from the Germanic Empire
+Into the gallant and cynical abode
+Of Messieurs your pretty Frenchmen,--
+A jolly and beaming air,
+Rubicund faces, not ignorant of wine,
+These are the passports which, legible if you look on us,
+Our troop produces to you for that end.
+
+<italic>
+Non, lui dis-je, des passe-ports
+Nous n'eumes jamais la folie.
+Il en faudrait, je crois, de forts
+Pour ressusciter a la vie
+De chez Pluton le roi des morts;
+Mais de l'empire germanique
+Au sejour galant et cynique
+De Messieurs vos jolis Francais,
+Un air rebondissant et frais,
+Une face rouge et bachique,
+Sont les passe-ports qu'en nos traits
+Vous produit ici notre clique.
+<end italic>
+
+"No, Messieurs, said the provident Master of Passports;
+no salvation without passport. Seeing then that Necessity
+had got us in the dilemma of either manufacturing passports
+ourselves or not entering Strasburg, we took the former branch
+of the alternative and manufactured one;--in which feat, the
+Prussian arms, which I had on my seal, were marvellously
+furthersome."
+
+This is a fact, as the old Newspapers and confirmatory Fassmann
+more directly apprise us. "The Landlord [or Postmaster] at Kehl,
+having signified that there was no crossing without Passport,"
+Friedrich, at first, somewhat taken aback, bethought him of his
+watch-seal with the Royal Arms on it; and soon manufactured the
+necessary Passport, signeted in due form;--which, however, gave a
+suspicion to the Innkeeper as to the quality of his Guest.
+After which, Tuesday evening, 23d August, "they at once got across
+to Strasburg," says my Newspaper Friend, "and put up at the SIGN
+OF THE RAVEN, there." Or in Friedrich's own jingle:--
+
+"We arrived at Strasburg; and the Custom-house corsair, with his
+inspectors, seemed content with our evidences.
+
+These scoundrels spied us,
+With one eye reading our passport,
+With the other ogling our purse.
+Gold, which was always a resource,
+Which brought, Jove to the enjoyment
+Of Danae whom he caressed;
+Gold, by which Caesar governed
+The world happy under his sway;
+Gold, more a divinity than Mars or Love;
+Wonder-working Gold introduced us
+That evening, within the walls of Strasburg."
+[Given thus far, with several slight errors, in Voltaire, ii.
+24-26;--the remainder, long unknown, had to be fished up, patch by
+patch (Preuss, <italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> xiv.
+159-161).]
+
+<italic>
+Ces scelerats nous epiaient,
+D'un oeil le passe-port lisaient,
+De l'autre lorgnaient notre bourse.
+L'or, qui toujours fut de ressource,
+Par lequel Jupin jouissait
+De Danae, qu'il caressait;
+L'or, par qui Cesar gouvernait
+Le monde heureux sous son empire;
+L'or, plus dieu que Mars et l'Amour,
+Le soir, dans les murs de Strasbourg.
+<end italic>
+
+Sad doggerel; permissible perhaps as a sample of the Friedrich
+manufacture, surely not otherwise! There remains yet more than
+half of it; readers see what their foolish craving has brought
+upon them! Doggerel out of which no clear story, such story as
+there is, can be had; though, except the exaggeration and
+contortion, there is nothing of fiction in it. We fly to the
+Newspaper, happily at least a prose composition, which begins at
+this point; and shall use the Doggerel henceforth as illustration
+only or as repetition in the Friedrich-mirror, of a thing
+OTHERWISE made clear to us:--
+
+Having got into Strasburg and the RAVEN HOTEL; Friedrich now on
+French ground at last, or at least on Half-French, German-French,
+is intent to make the most of circumstances. The Landlord, with
+one of Friedrich's servants, is straightway despatched into the
+proper coffee-houses to raise a supper-party of Officers; politely
+asks any likely Officer, "If he will not do a foreign Gentleman
+[seemingly of some distinction, signifies Boniface] the honor to
+sup with him at the Raven?"--"No, by Jupiter!" answer the most, in
+their various dialects: "who is he that we should sup with him?"
+Three, struck by the singularity of the thing, undertake; and with
+these we must be content. Friedrich--or call him M. le Comte
+Dufour, with Pfuhl, Schaffgotsch and such escort as we see--
+politely apologizes on the entrance of these officers:
+"Many pardons, gentlemen, and many thanks. Knowing nobody;
+desirous of acquaintance:--since you are so good, how happy, by a
+little informality, to have brought brave Officers to keep me
+company, whom I value beyond other kinds of men!"
+
+The Officers found their host a most engaging gentleman:
+his supper was superb, plenty of wine, "and one red kind they had
+never tasted before, and liked extremely;"--of which he sent some
+bottles to their lodging next day. The conversation turned on
+military matters, and was enlivened with the due sallies.
+This foreign Count speaks French wonderfully; a brilliant man,
+whom the others rather fear: perhaps something more than a Count?
+The Officers, loath to go, remembered that their two battalions
+had to parade next morning, that it was time to be in bed: "I will
+go to your review," said the Stranger Count: the delighted
+Officers undertake to come and fetch him, they settle with him
+time and method; how happy!
+
+On the morrow, accordingly, they call and fetch him; he looks at
+the review; review done, they ask him to supper for this evening:
+"With pleasure!" and "walks with them about the Esplanade, to see
+the guard march by." Before parting, he takes their names, writes
+them in his tablets; says, with a smile, "He is too much obliged
+ever to forget them." This is Wednesday, the 24th of August, 1740;
+Field-Marshal Broglio is Commandant in Strasburg, and these
+obliging Officers are "of the regiment Piedmont,"--their names on
+the King's tablets I never heard mentioned by anybody (or never
+till the King's Doggerel was fished up again). Field-Marshal
+Broglio my readers have transiently seen, afar off;--"galloping
+with only one boot," some say "almost in his shirt," at the Ford
+of Secchia, in those Italian campaigns, five years ago, the
+Austrians having stolen across upon him:--he had a furious gallop,
+with no end of ridicule, on that occasion; is now Commandant here;
+and we shall have a great deal more to do with him within the next
+year or two.
+
+"This same day, 24th, while I [the Newspaper volunteer Reporter or
+Own Correspondent, seemingly a person of some standing, whose
+words carry credibility in the tone of them] was with Field-
+Marshal Broglio our Governor here, there came two gentlemen to be
+presented to him; 'German Cavaliers' they were called; who, I now
+find, must have been the Prince of Prussia and Algarotti.
+The Field-Marshal,"--a rather high-stalking white-headed old
+military gentleman, bordering on seventy, of Piedmontese air and
+breed, apt to be sudden and make flounderings, but the soul of
+honor, "was very polite to the two Cavaliers, and kept them to
+dinner. After dinner there came a so-styled 'Silesian Nobleman,'
+who likewise was presented to the Field-Marshal, and affected not
+to know the other two: him I now find to have been the Prince
+of Anhalt."
+
+Of his Majesty's supper with the Officers that Wednesday, we are
+left to think how brilliant it was: his Majesty, we hear farther,
+went to the Opera that night,--the Polichinello or whatever the
+"Italian COMODIE" was;--"and a little girl came to his box with
+two lottery-tickets fifteen pence each, begging the foreign
+Gentleman for the love of Heaven to buy them of her; which he did,
+tearing them up at once, and giving the poor creature four
+ducats," equivalent to two guineas, or say in effect even five
+pounds of the present British currency. The fame of this foreign
+Count and his party at The Raven is becoming very loud over
+Strasburg, especially in military circles. Our volunteer Own
+Correspondent proceeds (whom we mean to contrast with the Royal
+Doggerel by and by):--
+
+"Next morning," Thursday, 25th August, "as the Marshal with above
+two hundred Officers was out walking on the Esplanade, there came
+a soldier of the Regiment Luxemburg, who, after some stiff fugling
+motions, of the nature of salutation partly, and partly demand for
+privacy, intimated to the Marshal surprising news: That the
+Stranger in The Raven was the King of Prussia in person; he, the
+soldier, at present of the Regiment Luxemburg, had in other days,
+before he deserted, been of the Prussian Crown-Prince's regiment;
+had consequently seen him in Berlin, Potsdam and elsewhere a
+thousand times and more, and even stood sentry where he was:
+the fact is beyond dispute, your Excellency! said this
+soldier."--Whew!
+
+Whereupon a certain Colonel, Marquis de Loigle, with or without a
+hint from Broglio, makes off for The Raven; introduces himself, as
+was easy; contrives to get invited to stay dinner, which also was
+easy. During dinner the foreign Gentleman expressed some wish to
+see their fortress. Colonel Loigle sends word to Broglio;
+Broglio despatches straightway an Officer and fine carriage:
+"Will the foreign Gentleman do me the honor?" The foreign
+Gentleman, still struggling for incognito, declines the uppermost
+seat of honor in the carriage; the two Officers, Loigle and this
+new one, insist on taking the inferior place. Alas, the incognito
+is pretty much out. Calling at some coffee-house or the like on
+the road, a certain female, "Madame de Fienne," named the foreign
+Gentleman "Sire,"--which so startled him that, though he utterly
+declined such title, the two Officers saw well how it was.
+
+"After survey of the works, the two attendant Officers had
+returned to the Field-Marshal; and about 4 P.M. the high Stranger
+made appearance there. But the thing had now got wind, 'King of
+Prussia here incognito!' The place was full of Officers, who came
+crowding about him: he escaped deftly into the Marechal's own
+Cabinet; sat there, an hour, talking to the Marechal [little
+admiring the Marechal's talk, as we shall find], still insisting
+on the incognito,"--to which Broglio, put out in his high paces by
+this sudden thing, and apt to flounder, as I have heard, was not
+polite enough to conform altogether. "What shall I do, in this
+sudden case?" poor Broglio is thinking to himself: "must write to
+Court; perhaps try to detain--?" Friedrioh's chief thought
+naturally is, One cannot be away out of this too soon. "Sha'n't we
+go to the Play, then, Monsieur le Marechal? Play-hour is come!"--
+Own Correspondent of the Newspaper proceeds:--
+
+"The Marechal then went to the Play, and all his Officers with
+him; thinking their royal prize was close at their heels.
+Marechal and Officers fairly ahead, coast once clear, their royal
+prize hastened back to The Raven, paid his bill; hastily summoning
+Schaffgotsch and the others within hearing; shot off like
+lightning; and was seen in Strasburg no more. Algarotti, who was
+in the box with Broglio, heard the news in the house; regretful
+rumor among the Officers, 'He is gone!' In about a quarter of an
+hour Algarotti too slipped out; and vanished by extra post"--
+straight towards Wesel; but could not overtake the King (whose
+road, in the latter part of it, went zigzag, on business as is
+likely), nor see him again till they met in that Town.
+[From <italic> Helden-Geschichte <end italic> (i. 420-424), &c.]
+
+This is the Prose Truth of those fifty or eight-and-forty hours in
+Strasburg, which were so mythic and romantic at that time.
+Shall we now apply to the Royal Doggerel again, where we left off,
+and see the other side of the picture? Once settled in The Raven,
+within Strasburg's walls, the Doggerel continues:--
+
+"You fancy well that there was now something to exercise my
+curiosity; and what desire I had to know the French Nation in
+France itself.
+
+There I saw at length those French,
+Of whom you have sung the glories;
+A people despised by the English,
+Whom their sad rationality fills with black bile;
+Those French, whom our Germans
+Reckon all to be destitute of sense;
+Those French, whose History consists of Love-stories,
+I mean the wandering kind of Love, not the constant;
+Foolish this People, headlong, high-going,
+Which sings beyond endurance;
+Lofty in its good fortune, crawling in its bad;
+Of an unpitying extent of babble,
+To hide the vacancy of its ignorant mind.
+Of the Trifling it is a tender lover;
+The Trifling alone takes possession of its brain.
+People flighty, indiscreet, imprudent,
+Turning like the weathercock to every wind.
+Of the ages of the Caesars those of the Louises are the shadow;
+Paris is the ghost, of Rome, take it how you will.
+No, of those vile French you are not one:
+You think; they do not think at all.
+
+<italic>
+La je vis enfin ces Francais
+Dont vous avez chante la gloire;
+Peuple meprise' des Anglais,
+Que leur triste raison remplit de bile noire;
+Ces Francais, que nos Allemands
+Pensent tous prives de bon sens;
+Ces Francais, do nt l'amour pourrait dicter l'histoire,
+Je dis l'amour volage, et non l'amour constant;
+Ce peuple fou, brusque et galant,
+Chansonnier insupportable,
+Superbe en sa fortune, en son malheur rampant,
+D'un bavardage impitoyable,
+Pour cacher le creux d'un esprit ignorant,
+Tendre amant de la bagatelle,
+Elle entre seule en sa cervelle;
+Leger, indiscret, imprudent,
+Comme ume girouette il revire a tout vent.
+Des siecles des Cesars ceux des Louis sont l'ombre;
+Rome efface Paris en tout sens, en tout point.
+Non, des vils Francais vous n'etes pas du nombre;
+Vous pensez, ils ne pensent point.
+<end italic>
+
+"Pardon, dear Voltaire, this definition of the French; at worst,
+it is only of those in Strasburg I speak. To scrape acquaintance,
+I had to invite some Officers on our arrival, whom of course I did
+not know.
+
+Three of them came at once,
+Gayer, more content than Kings;
+Singing with rusty voice.
+In verse, their amorous exploits,
+Set to a hornpipe.
+
+<italic>
+Trois d'eux s'en vinrent a la fois,
+Plus gais, plus contents que des rois,
+Chantant d'une voix enrouee,
+En vers, leurs amoureux exploits,
+Ajustes sur une bourree.
+<end italic>
+
+"M. de la Crochardiere and M. Malosa [two names from the tablets,
+third wanting] had just come from a dinner where the wine had not
+been spared.
+
+Of their hot friendship I saw the flame grow,
+The Universe would have taken us for perfect friends:
+But the instant of good-night blew out the business;
+Friendship disappeared without regrets,
+With the games, the wine, the table and the viands.
+
+<italic>
+De leur chaude amitie je vis croitre le flamme,
+L'univers nous eut pris pour des amis parfaits;
+Mais l'instant des adieux en detruisit la trame,
+L'amitie disparut, ssns causer des regrets,
+Avec le jeu, le vin, et la table, et les mets.
+<end italic>
+
+"Next day, Monsieur the Gouverneur of the Town and Province,
+Marechal of France, Chevalier of the Orders of the King, &c. &c.,
+--Marechal Duc de Broglio, in fact," who was surprised at Secchia
+in the late War,--
+
+This General always surprised.
+Whom with regret, young Louis [your King]
+Saw without breeches in Italy
+["With only one boot," was the milder rumor; which we adopted
+(supra, vol. vi. p. 472), but this sadder one, too, was current;
+and "Broglio's breeches," or the vain aspiration after them, like
+a vanished ghost of breeches, often enough turn up in the
+old Pamphlets.]
+Galloping to hide away his life
+From the Germans, unpolite fighters;--
+
+<italic>
+Ce general toujours surpris,
+Qu'a regret le jeune Louis
+Vit sans culottes en Italie,
+Courir pour derober sa vie
+Aux Germains, guerriers impolis.
+<end italic>
+
+this General wished to investigate your Comte Dufour,--foreign
+Count, who the instant he arrives sets about inviting people to
+supper that are perfect strangers. He took the poor Count for a
+sharper; and prudently advised M. de la Crochardiere not to be
+duped by him. It was unluckily the good Marechal that proved to
+be duped.
+
+He was born for surprise.
+His white hair, his gray beard,
+Formed a reverend exterior.
+Outsides are often deceptive:
+He that, by the binding, judges
+Of a Book and its Author
+May, after a page of reading,
+Chance to recognize his mistake.
+
+<italic>
+Il etait ne pour la surprise.
+Ses cheveux blancs, sa barbe grise,
+Formaient un sage exterieur.
+Le dehors est souvent trompeur;
+Qui juge par la reliure
+D'un ouvrage et de son auteur
+Dans une page de lecture
+Peut reconnaitre son erreur.
+<end italic>
+
+"That was my own experience; for of wisdom I could find nothing
+except in his gray hair and decrepit appearance. His first opening
+betrayed him; no great well of wit this Marechal,
+
+Who, drunk with his own grandeur,
+Informs you of his name and his titles,
+And authority as good as unlimited.
+He cited to me all the records
+Where his name is registered,
+Babbled about his immense power,
+About his valor, his talents
+So salutary to France;--
+He forgot that, three years ago
+[Six to a nearness,--"15th September, 1734," if your Majesty will
+be exact.]
+Men did not praise his prudence.
+
+<italic>
+Qui, de sa grandeur enivre;
+Decline son nom et ses titres,
+Et son pouvoir a rien borne.
+Il me cita tous les registres
+Ou son nom est enregistre;
+Bavard de son pouvoir immense,
+De sa valeur, de ces talents
+Si salutaires a la France:
+Il oubliait, passe trois ans,
+Qu'on ne louait pas sa prudence.
+<end italic>
+
+"Not satisfied with seeing the Marechal, I saw the guard mounted
+
+By these Frenchmen, burning with glory,
+Who, on four sous a day,
+Will make of Kings and of Heroes the memory flourish:
+Slaves crowned by the hands of Victory,
+Unlucky herds whom the Court
+Tinkles hither and thither by the sound of fife and drum.
+
+<italic>
+A ces Francais brulants de gloire,
+Dotes de quatre sous par jour,
+Qui des rois, des heros font fleurir la memoire,
+Esclaves couronnes des mains de la victoire,
+Troupeaux malheureux que la cour
+Dirige au seul bruit du tambour.
+<end italic>
+
+"That was my fated term. A deserter from our troops got eye on me,
+recognised me and denounced me.
+
+This wretched gallows-bird got eye on me;
+Such is the lot of all earthly things;
+And so of our fine mystery
+The whole secret came to light."
+
+<italic>
+Ce malheureux pendard me vit,
+C'est le sort de toutes les choses;
+Ainsi de motre pot aux roses
+Tout le secret se decouvrit.
+<end italic>
+
+Well; we must take this glimpse, such as it is, into the interior
+of the young man,--fine buoyant, pungent German spirit, roadways
+for it very bad, and universal rain-torrents falling, yet with
+coruscations from a higher quarter;--and you can forget, if need
+be, the "Literature" of this young Majesty, as you would a
+staccato on the flute by him! In after months, on new occasion
+rising, "there was no end to his gibings and bitter pleasantries
+on the ridiculous reception Broglio had given him at Strasburg,"
+says Valori, [<italic> Memoires, <end italic> i. 88.]--of which
+this Doggerel itself offers specimen.
+
+"Probably the weakest Piece I ever translated?" exclaims one, who
+has translated several such. Nevertheless there is a straggle of
+pungent sense in it,--like the outskirts of lightning, seen in
+that dismally wet weather, which the Royal Party had. Its wit is
+very copious, but slashy, bantery, and proceeds mainly by
+exaggeration and turning topsy-turvy; a rather barren species of
+wit. Of humor, in the fine poetic sense, no vestige. But there is
+surprising veracity,--truthfulness unimpeachable, if you will read
+well. What promptitude, too;--what funds for conversation, when
+needed! This scraggy Piece, which is better than the things people
+often talk to one another, was evidently written as fast as the
+pen could go.--"It is done, if such a Hand could have DONE it, in
+the manner of Bachaumont and La Chapelle," says Voltaire
+scornfully, in that scandalous VIE PRIVEE;--of which phrase this
+is the commentary, if readers need one:--
+
+"Some seventy or eighty years before that date, a M. Bachaumont
+and a M. la Chapelle, his intimate, published, in Prose skipping
+off into dancings of Verse every now and then, 'a charming
+RELATION of a certain VOYAGE or Home Tour' (whence or whither, or
+correctly when, this Editor forgets), ["First printed in 1665,"
+say the Bibliographies; "but known to La Fontaine some time
+before." Good!--Bachaumont, practically an important and
+distinguished person, not literary by trade, or indeed otherwise
+than by ennui, was he that had given (some fifteen years before)
+the Nickname FRONDE (Bickering of Schoolboys) to the wretched
+Historical Object which is still so designated in French annals.]
+which they had made in partnership. 'RELATION' capable still of
+being read, if one were tolerably idle;--it was found then to be
+charming, by all the world; and gave rise to a new fashion in
+writing; which Voltaire often adopts, and is supremely good at;
+and in which Friedrich, who is also fond of it, by no means
+succeeds so well."
+
+Enough, Friedrich got to Wesel, back to his business, in a day or
+two; and had done, as we forever have, with the Strasburg Escapade
+and its Doggerel.
+
+
+FRIEDRICH FINDS M. DE MAUPERTUIS; NOT YET M. DE VOLTAIRE.
+
+Friedrich got to Wesel on the 29th; found Maupertuis waiting
+there, according to appointment: an elaborately polite, somewhat
+sublime scientific gentleman; ready to "engraft on the Berlin
+crab-tree," and produce real apples and Academics there, so soon
+as the King, the proprietor, may have leisure for such a thing.
+Algarotti has already the honor of some acquaintance with
+Maupertuis. Maupertuis has been at Brussels, on the road hither;
+saw Voltaire and even Madame,--which latter was rather a ticklish
+operation, owing to grudges and tiffs of quarrel that had risen,
+but it proved successful under the delicate guidance of Voltaire.
+Voltaire is up to oiling the wheels: "There you are, Monsieur,
+like the [don't name What, though profane Voltaire does, writing
+to Maupertuis a month ago]--Three Kings running after you!" A new
+Pension to you from France; Russia outbidding France to have you;
+and then that LETTER of Friedrich's, which is in all the
+Newspapers: "Three Kings,"--you plainly great man, Trismegistus of
+the Sciences called Pure! Madame honors you, has always done:
+one word of apology to the high female mind, it will work wonders;
+--come now! [Voltaire, <italic> OEuvres, <end italic> lxxii. 217,
+216, 230 (Hague, 21st July, 1740, and Brussels, 9th Aug. &c).]
+
+No reader guesses in our time what a shining celestial body the
+Maupertuis, who is now fallen so dim again, then was to mankind.
+In cultivated French society there is no such lion as
+M. Maupertuis since he returned from flattening the Earth in the
+Arctic regions. "The Exact Sciences, what else is there to depend
+on?" thinks French cultivated society: "and has not Monsieur done
+a feat in that line?" Monsieur, with fine ex-military manners, has
+a certain austere gravity, reticent loftiness and polite
+dogmatism, which confirms that opinion. A studious ex-military
+man,--was Captain of Dragoons once, but too fond of study,--who is
+conscious to himself, or who would fain be conscious, that he is,
+in all points, mathematical, moral and other, the man. A difficult
+man to live with in society. Comes really near the limit of what
+we call genius, of originality, poetic greatness in thinking;--but
+never once can get fairly over said limit, though always
+struggling dreadfully to do so. Think of it! A fatal kind of man;
+especially if you have made a lion of him at any time. Of his
+envies, deep-hidden splenetic discontents and rages, with
+Voltaire's return for them, there will be enough to say in the
+ulterior stages. He wears--at least ten years hence he openly
+wears, though I hope it is not yet so flagrant--"a red wig with
+yellow bottom (CRINIERE JAUNE);" and as Flattener of the Earth,
+is, with his own flattish red countenance and impregnable stony
+eyes, a man formidable to look upon, though intent to be amiable
+if you do the proper homage. As to the quarrel with Madame take
+this Note; which may prove illustrative of some things by
+and by:--
+
+Maupertuis is well known at Cirey; such a lion could not fail
+there. All manner of Bernouillis, Clairauts, high mathematical
+people, are frequent guests at Cirey: reverenced by Madame,--who
+indeed has had her own private Professor of Mathematics; one Konig
+from Switzerland (recommended by those Bernouillis), diligently
+teaching her the Pure Sciences this good while back, not without
+effect; and has only just parted with him, when she left on this
+Brussels expedition. A BON GARCON, Voltaire says; though
+otherwise, I think, a little noisy on occasion. There has been no
+end of Madame's kindness to him, nay to his Brother and him,--sons
+of a Theological Professorial Syriac-Hebrew kind of man at Berne,
+who has too many sons;--and I grieve to report that this heedless
+Konig has produced an explosion in Madame's feelings, such as
+little beseemed him. On the road to Paris, namely, as we drove
+hitherward to the Honsbruck Lawsuit by way of Paris, in Autumn
+last, there had fallen out some dispute, about the monads, the VIS
+VIVA, the infinitely little, between Madame and Konig; dispute
+which rose CRESCENDO in disharmonious duet, and "ended," testifies
+M. de Voltaire, "in a scene TRESDESAGREABLE." Madame, with an
+effort, forgave the thoughtless fellow, who is still rather young,
+and is without malice. But thoughtless Konig, strong in his
+opinion about the infinitely little, appealed to Maupertuis:
+"Am not I right, Monsieur?" "HE is right beyond question!" wrote
+Maupertuis to Madame; "somewhat dryly," thinks Voltaire: and the
+result is, there is considerable rage in one celestial mind ever
+since against another male one in red wig and yellow bottom;
+and they are not on speaking terms, for a good many months past.
+Voltaire has his heart sore ("J'EN AI LE COEUR PERCE") about it,
+needs to double-dose Maupertuis with flattery; and in fact has
+used the utmost diplomacy to effect some varnish of a
+reconcilement as Maupertuis passed on this occasion. As for Konig,
+who had studied in some Dutch university, he went by and by to be
+Librarian to the Prince of Orange; and we shall not fail to hear
+of him again,--once more upon the infinitely little.
+[From <italic> OEuvres de Voltaire, <end italic> ii. 126, lxxii.
+(20, 216, 230), lxiii. (229-239), &c. &c.]
+
+Voltaire too, in his way, is fond of these mathematical people;
+eager enough to fish for knowledge, here as in all elements, when
+he has the chance offered: this is much an interest of his at
+present. And he does attain sound ideas, outlines of ideas, in
+this province,--though privately defective in the due
+transcendency of admiration for it;--was wont to discuss cheerily
+with Konig, about VIS VIVA, monads, gravitation and the infinitely
+little; above all, bows to the ground before the red-wigged
+Bashaw, Flattener of the Earth, whom for Madame's sake and his own
+he is anxious to be well with. "Fall on your face nine times, ye
+esoteric of only Impure Science!"--intimates Maupertuis to
+mankind. "By all means!" answers M. de Voltaire, doing it with
+alacrity; with a kind of loyalty, one can perceive, and also with
+a hypocrisy grounded on love of peace. If that is the nature of
+the Bashaw, and one's sole mode of fishing knowledge from him,
+why not? thinks M. de Voltaire. His patience with M. de
+Maupertuis, first and last, was very great. But we shall
+find it explode at length, a dozen years hence, in a
+conspicuous manner!--
+
+"Maupertuis had come to us to Cirey, with Jean Bernouilli," says
+Voltaire; "and thenceforth Maupertuis, who was born the most
+jealous of men, took me for the object of this passion, which has
+always been very dear to him." [VIE PRIVEE.] Husht, Monsieur!--
+Here is a poor rheumatic kind of Letter, which illustrates the
+interim condition, after that varnish of reconcilement
+at Brussels:--
+
+ VOLTAIRE TO M. DE MAUPERTUIS (at Wesel, waiting for the King,
+ or with him rather).
+
+ "BRUSSELS, 29th August (1740), <italic> 3d year since
+ the world flattened. <end italic>
+"How the Devil, great Philosopher, would you have had me write to
+you at Wesel? I fancied you gone from Wesel, to seek the King of
+Sages on his Journey somewhere. I had understood, too, they were
+so delighted to have you in that fortified lodge (BOUGE FORTIFIE)
+that you must be taking pleasure there, for he that gives pleasure
+gets it.
+
+"You have already seen the jolly Ambassador of the amiablest
+Monarch in the world,"--Camas, a fattish man, on his road to
+Versailles (who called at Brussels here, with fine compliments,
+and a keg of Hungary Wine, as YOU may have heard whispered).
+"No doubt M. de Camas is with you. For my own share, I think it is
+after you that he is running at present. But in truth, at the hour
+while I say this, you are with the King;"--a lucky guess; King did
+return to Wesel this very day. "The Philosopher and the Prince
+perceive already that they are made for each other. You and
+M. Algarotti will say, FACIAMUS HIC TRIA TABERNACULA: as to me,
+I can only make DUO TABERNACULA,"--profane Voltaire!
+
+"Without doubt I would be with you if I were not at Brussels;
+but my heart is with you all the same; and is the subject, all the
+same, of a King who is, formed to reign over every thinking and
+feeling being. I do not despair that Madame du Chatelet will find
+herself somewhere on your route: it will be a scene in a fairy
+tale;--she will arrive with a SUFFICIENT REASON [as your Leibnitz
+says] and with MONADS. She does not love you the less though she
+now believes the universe a PLENUM, and has renounced the notion
+of VOID. Over her you have an ascendant which you will never lose.
+In fine, my dear Monsieur, I wish as ardently as she to embrace
+you the soonest possible. I recommend myself to your friendship in
+the Court, worthy of you, where you now are."--TOUT A VOUS,
+somewhat rheumatic! [Voltaire, lxxii. p. 243.]
+
+Always an anxious almost tremulous desire to conciliate this big
+glaring geometrical bully in red wig. Through the sensitive
+transparent being of M. de Voltaire, you may see that feeling
+almost painfully busy in every Letter he writes to the Flattener
+of the Earth.
+
+
+
+Chapter IV.
+
+VOLTAIRE'S FIRST INTERVIEW WITH FRIEDRICH.
+
+At Wesel, in the rear of all this travelling and excitement,
+Friedrich falls unwell; breaks down there into an aguish feverish
+distemper, which, for several months after, impeded his movements,
+would he have yielded to it. He has much business on hand, too,--
+some of it of prickly nature just now;--but is intent as ever on
+seeing Voltaire, among the first things. Diligently reading in the
+Voltaire-Friedrich Correspondence (which is a sad jumble of
+misdates and opacities, in the common editions), [Preuss (the
+recent latest Editor, and the only well-informed one, as we said)
+prints with accuracy; but cannot be read at all (in the sense of
+UNDERSTOOD) without other light.] this of the aguish condition
+frequently turns up; "Quartan ague," it seems; occasionally very
+bad; but Friedrich struggles with it; will not be cheated of any
+of his purposes by it.
+
+He had a busy fortnight here; busier than we yet imagine.
+Much employment there naturally is of the usual Inspection sort;
+which fails in no quarter of his Dominions, but which may be
+particularly important here, in these disputed Berg-Julich
+Countries, when the time of decision falls. How he does his
+Inspections we know;--and there are still weightier matters afoot
+here, in a silent way, of which we shall have to speak before
+long, and all the world will speak. Business enough, parts of it
+grave and silent, going on, and the much that is public,
+miscellaneous, small: done, all of it, in a rapid-punctual precise
+manner;--and always, after the crowded day, some passages of
+Supper with the Sages, to wind up with on melodious terms. A most
+alert and miscellaneously busy young King, in spite of the ague.
+
+It was in these Cleve Countries, and now as probably as
+afterwards, that the light scene recorded in Laveaux's poor
+HISTORY, and in all the Anecdote-Books, transacted itself one day.
+Substance of the story is true; though the details of it go all at
+random,--somewhat to this effect:--
+
+"Inspecting his Finance Affairs, and questioning the parties
+interested, Friedrich notices a certain Convent in Cleve, which
+appears to have, payable from the Forest-dues, considerable
+revenues bequeathed by the old Dukes, 'for masses to be said on
+their behalf.' He goes to look at the place; questions the Monks
+on this point, who are all drawn out in two rows, and have broken
+into TE-DEUM at sight of him: 'Husht! You still say those Masses,
+then?' 'Certainly, your Majesty!'--'And what good does anybody get
+of them?' 'Your Majesty, those old Sovereigns are to obtain
+Heavenly mercy by them, to be delivered out of Purgatory by
+them.'--'Purgatory? It is a sore thing for the Forests, all this
+while! And they are not yet out, those poor souls, after so many
+hundred years of praying?' Monks have a fatal apprehension, No.
+'When will they be out, and the thing complete?' Monks cannot say.
+'Send me a courier whenever it is complete!' sneers the King, and
+leaves them to their TE-DEUM." [C. Hildebrandt's Modern Edition
+of the (mostly dubious) <italic> Anekdoten und Charakterzuge aus
+dem Leben Friedrichs des Grossen <end italic> (and a very ignorant
+and careless Edition it is; 6 vols. 12mo, Halberstadt, 1829), ii.
+160; Laveaus (whom we already cited), <italic> Vie de Frederic;
+<end italic> &c. &c. Nicolai's <italic> Anekdoten <end italic>
+alone, which are not included in this Hildebrandt Collection, are
+of sure authenticity; the rest, occasionally true, and often with
+a kind of MYTHIC truth in them worth attending to, are otherwise
+of all degrees of dubiety, down to the palpably false and absurd.]
+
+Mournful state of the Catholic Religion so called! How long must
+these wretched Monks go on doing their lazy thrice-deleterious
+torpid blasphemy; and a King, not histrionic but real, merely
+signify that he laughs at them and it? Meseems a heavier whip than
+that of satire might be in place here, your Majesty? The lighter
+whip is easier;--Ah yes, undoubtedly! cry many men. But horrible
+accounts are running up, enough to sink the world at last, while
+the heavier whip is lazily withheld, and lazy blasphemy, fallen
+torpid, chronic, and quite unconscious of being blasphemous,
+insinuates itself into the very heart's-blood of mankind!
+Patience, however; the heavy whip too is coming,--unless universal
+death be coming. King Friedrich is not the man to wield such whip.
+Quite other work is in store for King Friedrich; and Nature will
+not, by any suggestion of that terrible task, put him out in the
+one he has. He is nothing of a Luther, of a Cromwell; can look
+upon fakirs praying by their rotatory calabash, as a ludicrous
+platitude; and grin delicately as above, with the approval of his
+wiser contemporaries. Speed to him on his own course!
+
+What answer Friedrich found to his English proposals,--answer due
+here on the 24th from Captain Dickens,--I do not pointedly learn;
+but can judge of it by Harrington's reply to that Despatch of
+Dickens's, which entreated candor and open dealing towards his
+Prussian Majesty. Harrington is at Herrenhausen, still with the
+Britannic Majesty there; both of them much at a loss about their
+Spanish War, and the French and other aspects upon it: "Suppose
+his Prussian Majesty were to give himself to France against us!"
+We will hope, not. Harrington's reply is to the effect, "Hum,
+drum:--Berg and Julich, say you? Impossible to answer; minds not
+made up here:--What will his Prussian Majesty do for US?"
+Not much, I should guess, till something more categorical come
+from you! His Prussian Majesty is careful not to spoil anything by
+over-haste; but will wait and try farther to the utmost, Whether
+England or France is the likelier bargain for him.
+
+Better still, the Prussian Majesty is intent to do something for
+himself in that Berg-Julich matter: we find him silently examining
+these Wesel localities for a proper "entrenched Camp," Camp say of
+40,000, against a certain contingency that may be looked for.
+Camp which will much occupy the Gazetteers when they get eye on
+it. This is one of the concerns he silently attends to, on
+occasion, while riding about in the Cleve Countries. Then there is
+another small item of business, important to do well, which is now
+in silence diligently getting under way at Wesel; which also is of
+remarkable nature, and will astonish the Gazetteer and Diplomatic
+circles. This is the affair with the Bishop of Liege, called also
+the Affair of Herstal, which his Majesty has had privately laid up
+in the corner of his mind, as a thing to be done during this
+Excursion. Of which the reader shall hear anon, to great lengths,
+--were a certain small preliminary matter, Voltaire's Arrival in
+these parts, once off our hands.
+
+Friedrich's First Meeting with Voltaire! These other high things
+were once loud in the Gazetteer and Diplomatic circles, and had no
+doubt they were the World's History; and now they are sunk wholly
+to the Nightmares, and all mortals have forgotten them,--and it is
+such a task as seldom was to resuscitate the least memory of them,
+on just cause of a Friedrich or the like, so impatient are men of
+what is putrid and extinct:--and a quite unnoticed thing,
+Voltaire's First Interview, all readers are on the alert for it,
+and ready to demand of me impossibilities about it! Patience,
+readers. You shall see it, without and within, in such light as
+there was, and form some actual notion of it, if you will
+co-operate. From the circum-ambient inanity of Old Newspapers,
+Historical shot-rubbish, and unintelligible Correspondences, we
+sift out the following particulars, of this First Meeting, or
+actual Osculation of the Stars.
+
+The Newspapers, though their eyes were not yet of the Argus
+quality now familiar to us, have been intent on Friedrich during
+this Baireuth-Cleve Journey, especially since that sudden eclipse
+of him at Strasburg lately; forming now one scheme of route for
+him, now another; Newspapers, and even private friends, being a
+good deal uncertain about his movements. Rumor now ran, since his
+reappearance in the Cleve Countries, that Friedrich meant to have
+a look at Holland before going home, And that had, in fact, been a
+notion or intention of Friedrich's. "Holland? We could pass
+through Brussels on the way, and see Voltaire!" thought he.
+
+In Brussels this was, of course, the rumor of rumors.
+As Voltaire's Letters, visibly in a twitter, still testify to us.
+King of Prussia coming! Madame du Chatelet, the "Princess Tour"
+(that is, Tour-and-Taxis), all manner of high Dames are on the
+tiptoe. Princess Tour hopes she shall lodge this unparalleled
+Prince in her Palace: "You, Madame?" answers the Du Chatelet,
+privately, with a toss of her head: "His Majesty, I hope, belongs
+more to M. de Voltaire and me: he shall lodge here, please
+Heaven!" Voltaire, I can observe, has sublime hostelry
+arrangements chalked out for his Majesty, in case he go to Paris;
+which he does n't, as we know. Voltaire is all on the alert, awake
+to the great contingencies far and near; the Chatelet-Voltaire
+breakfast-table,--fancy it on those interesting mornings, while
+the post comes round! [Voltaire, xxii. 238-256 (Letters 22d
+August-22d September, 1740).]
+
+Alas, in the first days of September,--Friedrich's Letter is dated
+"Wesel, 2d" (and has the STRASBURD DOGGEREL enclosed in it),--the
+Brussels Postman delivers far other intelligence at one's door;
+very mortifying to Madame: "That his Majesty is fallen ill at
+Wesel; has an aguish fever hanging on him, and only hopes to
+come:" VOILA, Madame!--Next Letter, Wesel, Monday, 5th September,
+is to the effect: "Do still much hope to come; to-morrow is my
+trembling day; if that prove to be off!"--Out upon it, that proves
+not to be off; that is on: next Letter, Tuesday, September 6th,
+which comes by express (Courier dashing up with it, say on the
+Thursday following) is,--alas, Madame!--here it is:--
+
+KING FRIEDRICH TO M. DE VOLTAIRE AT BRUSSELS.
+
+ "WESEL, 6th September, 1740.
+"MY DEAR VOLTAIRE,--In spite of myself, I have to yield to the
+Quartan Fever, which is more tenacious than a Jansenist;
+and whatever desire I had of going to Antwerp and Brussels, I find
+myself not in a condition to undertake such a journey without
+risk. I would ask of you, then, if the road from Brussels to Cleve
+would not to you seem too long for a meeting; it is the one means
+of seeing you which remains to me. Confess that I am unlucky;
+for now when I could dispose of my person, and nothing hinders me
+from seeing you, the fever gets its hand into the business, and
+seems to intend disputing me that satisfaction.
+
+"Let us deceive the fever, my dear Voltaire; and let me at least
+have the pleasure of embracing you. Make my best excuses [polite,
+rather than sincere] to Madame the MARQUISE, that I cannot have
+the satisfaction of seeing her at Brussels. All that are about me
+know the intention I was in; which certainly nothing but the fever
+could have made me change.
+
+"Sunday next I shall be at a little Place near Cleve,"--Schloss of
+Moyland, which, and the route to which, this Courier can tell you
+of;--"where I shall be able to possess you at my ease. If the
+sight of you don't cure me, I will send for a Confessor at once.
+Adieu; you know my sentiments and my heart. [Preuss, <italic>
+OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> xxii. 27.] FREDERIC."
+
+After which the Correspondence suddenly extinguishes itself;
+ceases for about a fortnight,--in the bad misdated Editions even
+does worse;--and we are left to thick darkness, to our own poor
+shifts; Dryasdust being grandly silent on this small interest of
+ours. What is to be done?
+
+
+PARTICULARS OF FIRST INTERVIEW, ON SEVERE SCRUTINY.
+
+Here, from a painful Predecessor whose Papers I inherit, are some
+old documents and Studies on the subject,--sorrowful collection,
+in fact, of what poor sparks of certainty were to be found
+hovering in that dark element;--which do at last (so luminous are
+certainties always, or "sparks" that will shine steady) coalesce
+into some feeble general twilight, feeble but indubitable;
+and even show the sympathetic reader how they were searched out
+and brought together. We number and label these poor Patches of
+Evidence on so small a matter; and leave them to the curious:--
+
+No. 1. DATE OF THE FIRST INTERVIEW. It is certain Voltaire did
+arrive at the little Schloss of Moyland, September llth, Sunday
+night,--which is the "Sunday" just specified in Friedrich's
+Letter. Voltaire had at once decided on complying,--what else?--
+and lost no time in packing himself: King's Courier on Thursday
+late; Voltaire on the road on Saturday early, or the night before.
+With Madame's shrill blessing (not the most musical in this vexing
+case), and plenty of fuss. "Was wont to travel in considerable
+style," I am told; "the innkeepers calling him "Your Lordship
+(M. LE COMTE)." Arrives, sure enough, Sunday night; old Schloss of
+Moyland, six miles from Cleve; "moonlight," I find,--the Harvest
+Moon. Visit lasted three days. [Rodenbeck, p. 21; Preuss, &c. &c.]
+
+No. 2. VOLTAIRE'S DRIVE THITHER. Schloss Moyland: How far from
+Brussels, and by what route? By Louvain, Tillemont, Tongres to
+Maestricht; then from Maestricht up the Maas (left bank) to Venlo,
+where cross; through Geldern and Goch to Cleve: between the Maas
+and Rhine this last portion. Flat damp country; tolerably under
+tillage; original constituents bog and sand. Distances I guess to
+be: To Tongres 60 miles and odd; to Maestricht 12 or 15, from
+Maestricht 75; in all 150 miles English. Two days' driving?
+There is equinoctial moon, and still above twelve hours of
+sunlight for "M. le Comte."
+
+No. 3. OF THE PLACE WHERE. Voltaire, who should have known, calls
+it "PETIT CHATEAU DE MEUSE;" which is a Castle existing nowhere
+but in Dreams. Other French Biographers are still more imaginary.
+The little Schloss of Moyland--by no means "Meuse," nor even MORS,
+which Voltaire probably means in saying CHATEAU DE MEUSE--was, as
+the least inquiry settles beyond question, the place where
+Voltaire and Friedrich first met. Friedrich Wilhelm used often to
+lodge there in his Cleve journeys: he made thither for shelter, in
+the sickness that overtook him in friend Ginkel's house, coming
+home from the Rhine Campaign in 1734; lay there for several weeks
+after quitting Ginkel's. Any other light I can get upon it, is
+darkness visible. Busching pointedly informs me,
+[<italic> Erdbeschreibung, v. 659, 677.] "It is a Parish [or patch
+of country under one priest], and Till AND it are a Jurisdiction"
+(pair of patches under one court of justice):--which does not much
+illuminate the inquiring mind. Small patch, this of Moyland, size
+not given; "was bought," says he, "in 1695, by Friedrich
+afterwards First King, from the Family of Spaen,"--we once knew a
+Lieutenant Spaen, of those Dutch regions,--"and was named a Royal
+Mansion ever thereafter." Who lived in it; what kind of thing was
+it, is it? ALTUM SILENTIUM, from Busching and mankind. Belonged to
+the Spaens, fifty years ago;--some shadow of our poor banished
+friend the Lieutenant resting on it? Dim enough old Mansion, with
+"court" to it, with modicum of equipment; lying there in the
+moonlight;--did not look sublime to Voltaire on stepping out.
+So that all our knowledge reduces itself to this one point:
+of finding Moyland in the Map, with DATE, with REMINISCENCE to us,
+hanging by it henceforth! Good. [Stieler's <italic> Deutschland
+<end italic> (excellent Map in 25 Pieces), Piece 12.--Till is a
+mile or two northeast from Moyland; Moyland about 5 or 6 southeast
+from Cleve.]
+
+Mors--which is near the Town of Ruhrort, about midway between
+Wesel and Dusseldorf--must be some forty miles from Moyland,
+forty-five from Cleve; southward of both. So that the place,
+"A DEUX LIEUES DE CLEVES," is, even by Voltaire's showing, this
+Moyland; were there otherwise any doubt upon it. "CHATEAU DE
+MEUSE"--hanging out a prospect of MORS to us--is bad usage to
+readers. Of an intelligent man, not to say a Trismegistus of men,
+one expects he will know in what town he is, after three days'
+experience, as here. But he does not always; he hangs out a mere
+"shadow of Mars by moonlight," till we learn better. Duvernet, his
+Biographer, even calls it "SLEUS-MEUSE;" some wonderful idea of
+Sluices and a River attached to it, in Duvernet's head! [Duvernet
+(2d FORM of him,--that is, <italic> Vie de Voltaire <end italic>
+par T. J. D. V.), p. 117.]
+
+
+WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF THE INTERVIEW TWENTY YEARS AFTERWARDS
+
+Of the Interview itself, with general bird's-eye view of the Visit
+combined (in a very incorrect state), there is direct testimony by
+Voltaire himself. Voltaire himself, twenty years after, in far
+other humor, all jarred into angry sarcasm, for causes we shall
+see by and by,--Voltaire, at the request of friends, writes down,
+as his Friedrich Reminiscences, that scandalous VIE PRIVEE above
+spoken of, a most sad Document; and this is the passage referring
+to "the little Place in the neighborhood of Cleve," where
+Friedrich now waited for him: errors corrected by our laborious
+Friend. After quoting something of that Strasburg Doggerel, the
+whole of which is now too well known to us, Voltaire proceeds:--
+
+"From Strasburg he," King Friedrich, "went to see his Lower German
+Provinces; he said he would come and see me incognito at Brussels.
+We prepared a fine house for him,"--were ready to prepare such
+hired house as we had for him, with many apologies for its slight
+degree of perfection (ERROR FIRST),--"but having fallen ill in the
+little Mansion-Royal of Meuse (CHATEAU DE MEUSE), a couple of
+leagues from Cleve,"--fell ill at Wesel; and there is no Chateau
+de MEUSE in the world (ERRORS 2d AND 3d),--"he wrote to me that he
+expected I would make the advances. I went, accordingly, to
+present my profound homages. Maupertuis, who already had his
+views, and was possessed with the rage of being President to an
+Academy, had of his own accord,"--no, being invited, and at my
+suggestion (ERROR 4th),--"presented himself there; and was lodged
+with Algarotti and Keyserling [which latter, I suppose, had come
+from Berlin, not being of the Strasburg party, he] in a garret of
+this Palace.
+
+"At the door of the court, I found, by way of guard, one soldier.
+Privy-Councillor Rambonet, Minister of State--[very subaltern man;
+never heard of him except in the Herstal Business, and here] was
+walking in the court; blowing in his fingers to keep them warm."
+Sunday night, 11th September, 1740; world all bathed in moonshine;
+and mortals mostly shrunk into their huts, out of the raw air.
+"He" Rambonet "wore big linen ruffles at his wrists, very dirty
+[visibly so in the moonlight? ERROR 5th extends AD LIBITUM over
+all the following details]; a holed hat; an old official
+periwig,"--ruined into a totally unsymmetric state, as would
+seem,--"one side of which hung down into one of his pockets, and
+the other scarcely crossed his shoulder. I was told, this man was
+now intrusted with an affair of importance here; and that proved
+true,"--the Herstal Affair.
+
+"I was led into his Majesty's apartment. Nothing but four bare
+walls there. By the light of a candle, I perceived, in a closet, a
+little truckle-bed two feet and a half broad, on which lay a man
+muffled up in a dressing-gown of coarse blue duffel: this was the
+King, sweating and shivering under a wretched blanket there, in a
+violent fit of fever. I made my reverence, and began the
+acquaintance by feeling his pulse, as if I had been his chief
+physician. The fit over, he dressed himself, and took his place at
+table. Algarotti, Keyserling, Maupertuis, and the King's Envoy to
+the States-General"--one Rasfeld (skilled in HERSTAL matters, I
+could guess),--"we were of this supper, and discussed, naturally
+in a profound manner, the Immortality of the Soul, Liberty, Fate,
+the Androgynes of Plato [the ANDROGYNOI, or Men-Women, in Plato's
+CONVIVIUM; by no means the finest symbolic fancy of the divine
+Plato],--and other small topics of that nature." [Voltaire,
+<italic> OEuvres, <end italic> (Piece once called VIE PRIVEE),
+ii. 26, 27.]
+
+This is Voltaire's account of the Visit,--which included three
+"Suppers," all huddled into one by him here;--and he says nothing
+more of it; launching off now into new errors, about HERSTAL, the
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL, and so forth: new and uglier errors, with much
+more of mendacity and serious malice in them, than in this
+harmless half-dozen now put on the score against him.
+
+Of this Supper-Party, I know by face four of the guests:
+Maupertuis, Voltaire, Algarotti, Keyserling;--Rasfeld, Rambonet
+can sit as simulacra or mute accompaniment. Voltaire arrived on
+Sunday evening; stayed till Wednesday. Wednesday morning, 14th of
+the month, the Party broke up: Voltaire rolling off to left hand,
+towards Brussels, or the Hague; King to right, on inspection
+business, and circuitously homewards. Three Suppers there had
+been, two busy Days intervening; discussions about Fate and the
+Androgynoi of Plato by no means the one thing done by Voltaire and
+the rest, on this occasion. We shall find elsewhere, "he declaimed
+his MAHOMET" (sublime new Tragedy, not yet come out), in the
+course of these three evenings, to the "speechless admiration" of
+his Royal Host, for one; and, in the daytime, that he even drew
+his pen about the Herstal Business, which is now getting to its
+crisis, and wrote one of the Manifestoes, still discoverable.
+And we need not doubt, in spite of his now sneering tone, that
+things ran high and grand here, in this paltry little Schloss of
+Moyland; and that those three were actually Suppers of the Gods,
+for the time being.
+
+"Councillor Rambonet,', with the holed hat and unsymmetric wig,
+continues Voltaire in the satirical vein, "had meanwhile mounted a
+hired hack (CHEVAL DE LOUAGE;" mischievous Voltaire, I have no
+doubt he went on wheels, probably of his own): "he rode all night;
+and next morning arrived at the gates of Liege; where he took Act
+in the name of the King his Master, whilst 2,000 men of the Wesel
+Troops laid Liege under contribution. The pretext of this fine
+Marching of Troops,"--not a pretext at all, but the assertion,
+correct in all points, of just claims long trodden down, and now
+made good with more spirit than had been expected,--"was certain
+rights which the King pretended to, over a suburb of Liege.
+He even charged me to work at a Manifesto; and I made one, good or
+bad; not doubting but a King with whom I supped, and who called me
+his friend, must be in the right. The affair soon settled itself
+by means of a million of ducats,"--nothing like the sum, as we
+shall see,--"which he exacted by weight, to clear the costs of the
+Tour to Strasburg, which, according to his complaint in that
+Poetic Letter [Doggerel above given], were so heavy."
+
+That is Voltaire's view; grown very corrosive after Twenty Years.
+He admits, with all the satire: "I naturally felt myself attached
+to him; for he had wit, graces; and moreover he was a King, which
+always forms a potent seduction, so weak is human nature.
+Usually it is we of the writing sort that flatter Kings: but this
+King praised me from head to foot, while the Abbe Desfontaines and
+other scoundrels (GREDINS) were busy defaming me in Paris at least
+once a week."
+
+WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF THE INTERVIEW AT THE TIME.
+
+But let us take the contemporary account, which also we have at
+first hand; which is almost pathetic to read; such a contrast
+between ruddy morning and the storms of the afternoon! Here are
+two Letters from Voltaire; fine transparent human Letters, as his
+generally are: the first of them written directly on getting back
+to the Hague, and to the feeling of his eclipsed condition.
+
+VOLTAIRE TO M. DE MAUPERTUIS (with the King).
+
+"THE HAGUE, 18th September, 1740.
+"I serve you, Monsieur, sooner than I promised; and that is the
+way you ought to be served. I send you the answer of M. Smith,"--
+probably some German or Dutch SCHMIDT, spelt here in English,
+connected with the Sciences, say with water-carriage, the
+typographies, or one need not know what; "you will see where the
+question stands.
+
+"When we both left Cleve,"--14th of the month, Wednesday last;
+18th is Sunday, in this old cobwebby Palace, where I am correcting
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL,--"and you took to the right,"--King, homewards,
+got to HAM that evening,--"I could have thought I was at the Last
+Judgment, where the Bon Dieu separates the elect from the damned.
+DIVUS FREDERICUS said to you, 'Sit down at my right hand in the
+Paradise of Berlin;' and to me, 'Depart, thou accursed, into
+Holland.'
+
+"Here I am accordingly in this phlegmatic place of punishment, far
+from the divine fire which animates the Friedrichs, the
+Maupertuis, the Algarottis. For God's love, do me the charity of
+some sparks in these stagnant waters where I am,"--stiffening,
+cooling,--"stupefying to death. Instruct me of your pleasures, of
+your designs. You will doubtless see M. de Valori,"--readers know
+de Valori; his Book has been published; edited, as too usual, by a
+Human Nightmare, ignorant of his subject and indeed of almost all
+other things, and liable to mistakes in every page; yet partly
+readable, if you carry lanterns, and love "MON GROS VALORI:"--
+"offer him, I pray you, my respects. If I do not write to him, the
+reason is, I have no news to send: I should be as exact as I am
+devoted, if my correspondence could be useful or agreeable to him.
+
+"Won't you have me send you some Books? If I be still in Holland
+when your orders come, I will obey in a moment. I pray you do not
+forget me to M. de Keyserling,"--Caesarion whom we once had at
+Cirey; a headlong dusky little man of wit (library turned topsy-
+turvy, as Wilhelmina called him), whom we have seen.
+
+"Tell me, I beg, if the enormous monad of Volfius--[Wolf, would
+the reader like to hear about him? If so, he has only to speak!]
+is arguing at Marburg, at Berlin, or at Hall [HALLE, which is a
+very different place].
+
+"Adieu, Monsieur: you can address your orders to me 'At the
+Hague:' they will be forwarded wherever I am; and I shall be,
+anywhere on earth,--Yours forever (A VOUS POUR JAMAIS)."
+[Voltaire, lxxii. 252.]
+
+Letter Second, of which a fragment may be given, is to one
+Cideville, a month later; all the more genuine as there was no
+chance of the King's hearing about this one. Cideville, some kind
+of literary Advocate at Rouen (who is wearisomely known to the
+reader of Voltaire's Letters), had done, what is rather an
+endemical disorder at this time, some Verses for the King of
+Prussia, which he wished to be presented to his Majesty.
+The presentation, owing to accidents, did not take place;
+hear how Voltaire, from his cobweb Palace at the Hague, busy with
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL, Van Duren and many other things,--18th October,
+1740, on which day we find him writing many Letters,--explains the
+sad accident:--
+
+VOLTAIRE TO M. DE CIDEVILLE (at Rouen).
+
+"AT THE HAGUE, KING OF PRUSSIA'S PALACE,
+18th October, 1740.
+
+"... This is my case, dear Cideville. When you sent me, enclosed
+in your Letter, those Verses (among which there are some of
+charming and inimitable turn) for our Marcus Aurelius of the
+North, I did well design to pay my court to him with them. He was
+at that time to have come to Brussels incognito: we expected him
+there; but the Quartan Fever, which unhappily he still has,
+deranged all his projects. He sent me a courier to Brussels,"--
+mark that point, my Cideville;--"and so I set out to find him in
+the neighborhood of Cleve.
+
+"It was there I saw one of the amiablest men in the world, who
+forms the charm of society, who would be everywhere sought after
+if he were not King; a philosopher without austerity; full of
+sweetness, complaisance and obliging ways (AGREMENS);
+not remembering that he is King when he meets his friends; indeed
+so completely forgetting it that he made me too almost forget it,
+and I needed an effort of memory to recollect that I here saw
+sitting at the foot of my bed a Sovereign who had an Army of
+100,000 men. That was the moment to have read your amiable Verses
+to him:"--yes; but then?--"Madame du Chatelet, who was to have
+sent them to me, did not, NE L'A PA FAIT." Alas, no, they are
+still at Brussels, those charming Verses; and I, for a month past,
+am here in my cobweb Palace! But I swear to you, the instant I
+return to Brussels, I, &c. &c. [Voltaire, lxii. 282.]
+
+Finally, here is what Friedrich thought of it, ten days after
+parting with Voltaire. We will read this also (though otherwise
+ahead of us as yet); to be certified on all sides, and sated for
+the rest of our lives, concerning the Friedrich-Voltaire
+First Interview.
+
+KING FRIEDRICH TO M. JORDAN (at Berlin).
+
+POTSDAM, 24th September, 1740.
+
+"Most respectable Inspector of the poor, the invalids, orphans,
+crazy people and Bedlams,--I have read with mature meditation the
+very profound Jordanic Letter which was waiting here;"--and do
+accept your learned proposal.
+
+"I have seen that Voltaire whom I was so curious to know; but I
+saw him with the Quartan hanging on me, and my mind as unstrung as
+my body. With men of his kind one ought not to be sick; one ought
+even to be specially well, and in better health than common, if
+one could.
+
+"He has the eloquence of Cicero, the mildness of Pliny, the wisdom
+of Agrippa; he combines, in short, what is to be collected of
+virtues and talents from the three greatest men of Antiquity.
+His intellect is at work incessantly; every drop of ink is a trait
+of wit from his pen. He declaimed his MAHOMET to us, an admirable
+Tragedy which he has done,"--which the Official people smelling
+heresies in it ("toleration," "horrors of fanaticism," and the
+like) will not let him act, as readers too well know:--"he
+transported us out of ourselves; I could only admire and hold my
+tongue. The Du Chatelet is lucky to have him: for of the good
+things he flings out at random, a person who had no faculty but
+memory might make a brilliant Book. That Minerva has just
+published her Work on PHYSICS: not wholly bad. It was Konig"--whom
+we know, and whose late tempest in a certain teapot--"that
+dictated the theme to her: she has adjusted, ornamented here and
+there with some touch picked from Voltaire at her Suppers.
+The Chapter on Space is pitiable; the"--in short, she is still raw
+in the Pure Sciences, and should have waited. ...
+
+"Adieu, most learned, most scientific, most profound Jordan,--or
+rather most gallant, most amiable, most jovial Jordan;--I salute
+thee, with assurance of all those old feelings which thou hast the
+art of inspiring in every one that knows thee. VALE.
+
+"I write the moment of my arrival: be obliged to me, friend; for I
+have been working, I am going to work still, like a Turk, or like
+a Jordan." [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> xvii. 71.]
+
+This is hastily thrown off for Friend Jordan, the instant after
+his Majesty's circuitous return home. Readers cannot yet attend
+his Majesty there, till they have brought the Affair of Herstal,
+and other remainders of the Cleve Journey, along with them.
+
+
+
+Chapter V.
+
+AFFAIR OF HERSTAL.
+
+This Rambonet, whom Voltaire found walking in the court of the old
+Castle of Moyland, is an official gentleman, otherwise unknown to
+History, who has lately been engaged in a Public Affair; and is
+now off again about it, "on a hired hack" or otherwise,--with very
+good instructions in his head. Affair which, though in itself but
+small, is now beginning to make great noise in the world, as
+Friedrich wends homewards out of his Cleve Journey. He has set it
+fairly alight, Voltaire and he, before quitting Moyland; and now
+it will go of itself. The Affair of Herstal, or of the Bishop of
+Liege; Friedrich's first appearance on the stage of politics.
+Concerning which some very brief notice, if intelligible, will
+suffice readers of the present day.
+
+Heristal, now called Herstal, was once a Castle known to all
+mankind; King Pipin's Castle, who styled himself "Pipin of
+Heristal," before he became King of the Franks and begot
+Charlemagne. It lies on the Maas, in that fruitful Spa Country;
+left bank of the Maas, a little to the north of Liege;
+and probably began existence as a grander place than Liege
+(LUTTICH), which was, at first, some Monastery dependent on
+secular Herstal and its grandeurs:--think only how the race has
+gone between these two entities; spiritual Liege now a big City,
+black with the smoke of forges and steam-mills; Herstal an
+insignificant Village, accidentally talked of for a few weeks in
+1740, and no chance ever to be mentioned again by men.
+
+Herstal, in the confused vicissitudes of a thousand years, had
+passed through various fortunes, and undergone change of owners
+often enough. Fifty years ago it was in the hands of the Nassau-
+Orange House; Dutch William, our English Protestant King, who
+probably scarce knew of his possessing it, was Lord of Herstal
+till his death. Dutch William had no children to inherit Herstal:
+he was of kinship to the Prussian House, as readers are aware;
+and from that circumstance, not without a great deal of
+discussion, and difficult "Division of the Orange Heritage," this
+Herstal had, at the long last, fallen to Friedrich Wilhelm's
+share; it and Neuchatel, and the Cobweb Palace, and some other
+places and pertinents.
+
+For Dutch William was of kin, we say; Friedrich I. of Prussia, by
+his Mother the noble Wife of the Great Elector, was full cousin to
+Dutch William: and the Marriage Contracts were express,--though
+the High Mightinesses made difficulties, and the collateral Orange
+branches were abundantly reluctant, when it came to the fulfilling
+point. For indeed the matter was intricate. Orange itself, for
+example, what was to be done with the Principality of Orange?
+Clearly Prussia's; but it lies imbedded deep in the belly of
+France, that will be a Caesarean-Operation for you! Had not
+Neuchatel happened just then to fall home to France (or in some
+measure to France) and be heirless, Prussia's Heritage of Orange
+would have done little for Prussia! Principality of Orange was, by
+this chance, long since, mainly in the First King's time, got
+settled: [Neuchatel, 3d November, 1707, to Friedrich I., natives
+preferring him to "Fifteen other Claimants;" Louis XIV. loudly
+protesting: not till Treaty of Utrecht (14th March 1713, first
+month of Friedrich Wilhelm's reign) would Louis XIV., on cession
+of Orange, consent and sanction.] but there needed many years more
+of good waiting, and of good pushing, on Friedrich Wilhelm's part;
+and it was not till 1732 that Friedrich Wilhelm got the Dutch
+Heritages finally brought to the square: Neuchatel and Valengin,
+as aforesaid, in lieu of Orange; and now furthermore, the Old
+Palace at Loo (that VIEILLE COUR and biggest cobwebs), with
+pertinents, with Garden of Honslardik; and a string of items,
+bigger and less, not worth enumerating. Of the items, this Herstal
+was one;--and truly, so far as this went, Friedrich Wilhelm often
+thought he had better never have seen it, so much trouble did it
+bring him.
+
+
+HOW THE HERSTALLERS HAD BEHAVED TO FRIEDRICH WILHELM.
+
+The Herstal people, knowing the Prussian recruiting system and
+other rigors, were extremely unwilling to come under Friedrich
+Wilhelm's sway, could they have helped it. They refused fealty,
+swore they never would swear: nor did they, till the appearance,
+or indubitable foreshine, of Friedrich Wilhelm's bayonets
+advancing on them from the East, brought compliance. And always
+after, spite of such quasi-fealty, they showed a pig-like
+obstinacy of humor; a certain insignificant, and as it were
+impertinent, deep-rooted desire to thwart, irritate and contradict
+the said Friedrich Wilhelm. Especially in any recruiting matter
+that might arise, knowing that to be the weak side of his Prussian
+Majesty. All this would have amounted to nothing, had it not been
+that their neighbor, the Prince Bishop of Liege, who imagined
+himself to have some obscure claims of sovereignty over Herstal,
+and thought the present a good opportunity for asserting these,
+was diligent to aid and abet the Herstal people in such their
+mutinous acts. Obscure claims; of which this is the summary,
+should the reader not prefer to skip it:--
+
+"The Bishop of Liege's claims on Herstal (which lie wrapt from
+mankind in the extensive jungle of his law-pleadings, like a
+Bedlam happily fallen extinct) seem to me to have grown mainly
+from two facts more or less radical.
+
+"FACT FIRST. In Kaiser Barbarossa's time, year 1171, Herstal had
+been given in pawn to the Church of Liege, for a loan, by the then
+proprietor, Duke of Lorraine and Brabant. Loan was repaid, I do
+not learn when, and the Pawn given back; to the satisfaction of
+said Duke, or Duke's Heirs; never quite to the satisfaction of the
+Church, which had been in possession, and was loath to quit, after
+hoping to continue. 'Give us back Herstal; it ought to be ours!'
+Unappeasable sigh or grumble to this effect is heard thenceforth,
+at intervals, in the Chapter of Liege, and has not ceased in
+Friedrich's time. But as the world, in its loud thoroughfares,
+seldom or never heard, or could hear, such sighing in the Chapter,
+nothing had come of it,--till--
+
+"FACT SECOND. In Kaiser Karl V.'s time, the Prince Bishop of Liege
+happened to be a Natural Son of old Kaiser Max's;--and had friends
+at headquarters, of a very choice nature. Had, namely, in this
+sort, Kaiser Karl for Nephew or Half-Nephew; and what perhaps was
+still better, as nearer hand, had Karl's Aunt, Maria Queen of
+Hungary, then Governess of the Netherlands, for Half-Sister.
+Liege, in these choice circumstances, and by other good chances
+that turned up, again got temporary clutch or half-clutch of
+Herstal, for a couple of years (date 1546-1548, the Prince of
+Orange, real proprietor, whose Ancestor had bought it for money
+down, being then a minor); once, and perhaps a second time in like
+circumstance; but had always to renounce it again, when the Prince
+of Orange came to maturity. And ever since, the Chapter of Liege
+sighs as before, 'Herstal is perhaps in a sense ours. We had once
+some kind of right to it!'--sigh inaudible in the loud public
+thoroughfares. That is the Bishop's claim. The name of him, if
+anybody care for it, is 'Georg Ludwig, titular COUNT OF BERG,' now
+a very old man: Bishop of Liege, he, and has been snatching at
+Herstal again, very eagerly by any skirt or tagrag that might
+happen to fly loose, these eight years past, in a rash and
+provoking manner; [<italic> Delices du Pais de Liege <end italic>
+(Liege, 1738); <italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic>
+ii. 57-62.]--age eighty-two at present; poor old fool, he had
+better have sat quiet. There lies a rod in pickle for him, during
+these late months; and will be surprisingly laid on, were the
+time come!"
+
+"I have Law Authority over Herstal, and power of judging there in
+the last appeal," said this Bishop:--"You!" thought Friedrich
+Wilhelm, who was far off, and had little time to waste.--
+"Any Prussian recruiter that behaves ill, bring him to me!" said
+the Bishop, who was on the spot. And accordingly it had been done;
+one notable instance two years ago: a Prussian Lieutenant locked
+in the Liege jail, on complaint of riotous Herstal; thereupon a
+Prussian Officer of rank (Colonel Kreutzen, worthy old Malplaquet
+gentleman) coming as Royal Messenger, not admitted to audience,
+nay laid hold of by the Liege bailiff instead; and other unheard-
+of procedures. [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii.
+63-73.] So that Friedrich Wilhelm had nothing but trouble with
+this petty Herstal, and must have thought his neighbor Bishop a
+very contentious high-flying gentleman, who took great liberties
+with the Lion's whiskers, when he had the big animal at
+an advantage.
+
+The episcopal procedures, eight years ago, about the First
+Homaging of Herstal, had been of similar complexion; nor had other
+such failed in the interim, though this last outrage exceeded them
+all. This last began in the end of 1738; and span itself out
+through 1739, when Friedrich Wilhelm lay in his final sickness,
+less able to deal with it than formerly. Being a peaceable man,
+unwilling to awaken conflagrations for a small matter, Friedrich
+Wilhelm had offered, through Kreutzen on this occasion, to part
+with Herstal altogether; to sell it, for 100,000 thalers, say
+16,000 pounds, to the high-flying Bishop, and honestly wash his
+hands of it. But the high-flying Bishop did not consent, gave no
+definite answer; and so the matter lay,--like an unsettled
+extremely irritating paltry little matter,--at the time Friedrich
+Wilhelm died.
+
+The Gazetteers and public knew little about these particulars, or
+had forgotten them again; but at the Prussian Court they were in
+lively remembrance. What the young Friedrich's opinion about them
+had been we gather from this succinct notice of the thing, written
+seven or eight years afterwards, exact in all points, and still
+carrying a breath of the old humor in it. "A miserable Bishop of
+Liege thought it a proud thing to insult the late King.
+Some subjects of Herstal, which belongs to Prussia, had revolted;
+the Bishop gave them his protection. Colonel Kreutzen was sent to
+Liege, to compose the thing by treaty; credentials with him, full
+power, and all in order. Imagine it, the Bishop would not receive
+him! Three days, day after day, he saw this Envoy apply at his
+Palace, and always denied him entrance. These things had grown
+past endurance." [Preuss, <italic> OEuvres (Memoires de
+Brandebourg), end italic> ii. 53.] And Friedrich had taken note of
+Herstal along with him, on this Cleve Journey; privately intending
+to put Herstal and the high-flying Bishop on a suitabler footing,
+before his return from those countries.
+
+For indeed, on Friedrich's Accession, matters had grown worse, not
+better. Of course there was Fealty to be sworn; but the Herstal
+people, abetted by the high-flying Bishop, have declined swearing
+it. Apology for the past, prospect of amendment for the future,
+there is less than ever. What is the young King to do with this
+paltry little Hamlet of Herstal? He could, in theory, go into some
+Reichs-Hofrath, some Reichs-Kammergericht (kind of treble and
+tenfold English Court-of-Chancery, which has lawsuits 250 years
+old),--if he were a theoretic German King. He can plead in the
+Diets, and the Wetzlar Reichs-Kammergericht without end:
+"All German Sovereigns have power to send their Ambassador
+thither, who is like a mastiff chained in the back-yard [observes
+Friedrich elsewhere] with privilege of barking at the Moon,"--
+unrestricted privilege of barking at the Moon, if that will avail
+a practical man, or King's Ambassador. Or perhaps the Bishop of
+Liege will bethink him, at last, what considerable liberty he is
+taking with some people's whiskers? Four months are gone;
+Bishop of Liege has not in the least bethought him: we are in the
+neighborhood in person, with note of the thing in our memory.
+
+
+FRIEDRICH TAKES THE ROD OUT OF PICKLE.
+
+Accordingly the Rath Rambonet, whom Voltaire found at Moyland that
+Sunday night, had been over at Liege; went exactly a week before;
+with this message of very peremptory tenor from his Majesty:--
+
+TO THE PRINCE BISHOP OF LIEGE.
+
+"WESEL, 4th September, 1740.
+
+"MY COUSIN,--Knowing all the assaults (ATTEINTES) made by you upon
+my indisputable rights over my free Barony of Herstal; and how the
+seditious ringleaders there, for several years past, have been
+countenanced (BESTARKET) by you in their detestable acts of
+disobedience against me,--I have commanded my Privy Councillor
+Rambonet to repair to your presence, and in my name to require
+from you, within two days, a distinct and categorical answer to
+this question: Whether you are still minded to assert your
+pretended sovereignty over Herstal; and whether you will
+protect the rebels at Herstal, in their disorders and
+abominable disobedience?
+
+"In case you refuse, or delay beyond the term, the Answer which I
+hereby of right demand, you will render yourself alone
+responsible, before the world, for the consequences which
+infallibly will follow. I am, with much consideration,--
+My Cousin,--
+
+"Your very affectionate Cousin,
+
+"FRIEDRICH."
+[<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 75, 111.]
+
+Rambonet had started straightway for Liege, with this missive;
+and had duly presented it there, I guess on the 7th,--with notice
+that he would wait forty-eight hours, and then return with what
+answer or no-answer there might be. Getting no written answer, or
+distinct verbal one; getting only some vague mumblement as good as
+none, Rambonet had disappeared from Liege on the 9th; and was home
+at Moyland when Voltaire arrived that Sunday evening,--just
+walking about to come to heat again, after reportiag progress to
+the above effect.
+
+Rambonet, I judge, enjoyed only one of those divine Suppers at
+Moyland; and dashed off again, "on hired hack" or otherwise, the
+very next morning; that contingency of No-answer having been the
+anticipated one, and all things put in perfect readiness for it.
+Rambonet's new errand was to "take act," as Voltaire calls it, "at
+the Gates of Liege,"--to deliver at Liege a succinct Manifesto,
+Pair of Manifestoes, both in Print (ready beforehand), and bearing
+date that same Sunday, "Wesel, 11th September;" much calculated to
+amaze his Reverence at Liege. Succinct good Manifestoes, said to
+be of Friedrich's own writing; the essential of the two is this:--
+
+
+<italic> Exposition of the Reasons which have induced his Majesty
+the King of Prussia to make just Reprisals on the Prince Bishop of
+Liege. <end italic>
+
+"His Majesty the King of Prussia, being driven beyond bounds by
+the rude proceedings of the Prince Bishop of Liege, has with
+regret seen himself forced to recur to the Method of Arms, in
+order to repress the violence and affront which the Bishop has
+attempted to put upon him. This resolution has cost his Majesty
+much pain; the rather as he is, by principle and disposition, far
+remote from whatever could have the least relation to rigor
+and severity.
+
+"But seeing himself compelled by the Bishop of Liege to take new
+methods, he had no other course but to maintain the justice of his
+rights (LA JUSTICE DE SES DROITS), and demand reparation for the
+indignity done upon his Minister Von Kreuzen, as well as for the
+contempt with which the Bishop of Liege has neglected even to
+answer the Letter of the King.
+
+"As too much rigor borders upon cruelty, so too much patience
+resembles weakness. Thus, although the King would willingly have
+sacrificed his interests to the public peace and tranquillity, it
+was not possible to do so in reference to his honor; and that is
+the chief motive which has determined him to this resolution, so
+contrary to his intentions.
+
+"In vain has it been attempted, by methods of mildness, to come to
+a friendly agreement: it has been found, on the contrary, that the
+King's moderation only increased the Prince's arrogance;
+that mildness of conduct on one side only furnished resources to
+pride on the other; and that, in fine, instead of gaining by soft
+procedure, one was insensibly becoming an object of vexation
+and disdain.
+
+"There being no means to have justice but in doing it for oneself,
+and the King being Sovereign enough for such a duty,--he intends
+to make the Prince of Liege feel how far he was in the wrong to
+abuse such moderation so unworthily. But in spite of so much
+unhandsome behavior on the part of this Prince, the King will not
+be inflexible; satisfied with having shown the said Prince that he
+can punish him, and too just to overwhelm him. FREDERIC.
+"WESEL, September 11th, 174O."
+[<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 77. Said to be by
+Friedrich himself (Stenzel, iv. 59).]
+
+Whether Rambonet insinuated his Paper-Packet into the Palace of
+Seraing, left it at the Gate of Liege (fixed by nail, if he saw
+good), or in what manner he "took act," I never knew; and indeed
+Rambonet vanishes from human History at this point: it is certain
+only that he did his Formality, say two days hence;--and that the
+Fact foreshadowed by it is likewise in the same hours, hour after
+hour, getting steadily done.
+
+For the Manifestoes printed beforehand, dated Wesel, 11th
+September, were not the only thing ready at Wesel; waiting, as on
+the slip, for the contingency of No-answer. Major-General Borck,
+with the due Battalions, squadrons and equipments, was also ready.
+Major-General Borck, the same who was with us at Baireuth lately,
+had just returned from that journey, when he got orders to collect
+2,000 men, horse and foot, with the due proportion of artillery,
+from the Prussian Garrisons in these parts; and to be ready for
+marching with them, the instant the contingency of No-answer
+arrives,--Sunday, 11th, as can be foreseen. Borck knows his route:
+To Maaseyk, a respectable Town of the Bishop's, the handiest
+for Wesel; to occupy Maaseyk and the adjoining "Counties of Lotz
+and Horn;" and lie there at the Bishop's charge till his
+Reverence's mind alter.
+
+Borck is ready, to the last pontoon, the last munition-loaf;
+and no sooner is signal given of the No-answer come, than Borck,
+that same "Sunday, 11th," gets under way; marches, steady as
+clock-work, towards Maaseyk (fifty miles southwest of him,
+distance now lessening every hour); crosses the Maas, by help of
+his pontoons; is now in the Bishop's Territory, and enters
+Maaseyk, evening of "Wednesday, 14th,"--that very day Voltaire and
+his Majesty had parted, going different ways from Moyland; and
+probably about the same hour while Rambonet was "taking act at the
+Gate of Liege," by nail-hammer or otherwise. All goes punctual,
+swift, cog hitting pinion far and near, in this small Herstal
+Business; and there is no mistake made, and a minimum of
+time spent.
+
+Borck's management was throughout good: punctual, quietly exact,
+polite, mildly inflexible. Fain would the Maaseyk Town-Baths have
+shut their gates on him; desperately conjuring him, "Respite for a
+few hours, till we send to Liege for instructions!" But it was to
+no purpose. "Unbolt, IHR HERREN; swift, or the petard will have to
+do it!" Borck publishes his Proclamation, a mild-spoken rigorous
+Piece; signifies to the Maaseyk Authorities, That he has to exact
+a Contribution of 20,000 thalers (3,000 pounds) here, Contribution
+payable in three days; that he furthermore, while he continues in
+these parts, will need such and such rations, accommodations,
+allowances,--"fifty LOUIS (say guineas) daily for his own private
+expenses," one item;--and, in mild rhadamanthine language, waves
+aside all remonstrance, refusal or delay, as superfluous
+considerations: Unless said Contribution and required supplies
+come in, it will be his painful duty to bring them in.
+[<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> i. 427; ii. 113.]
+
+The high-flying Bishop, much astonished, does now eagerly answer
+his Prussian Majesty, "Was from home, was ill, thought he had
+answered; is the most ill-used of Bishops;" and other things of a
+hysteric character. [Ib. ii. 85, 86 (date, 16th September).]
+And there came forth, as natural to the situation, multitudinous
+complainings, manifestoings, applications to the Kaiser, to the
+French, to the Dutch, of a very shrieky character on the Bishop of
+Liege's part; sparingly, if at all noticed on Friedrich's:
+the whole of which we shall consider ourselves free to leave
+undisturbed in the rubbish-abysses, as henceforth conceivable to
+the reader. "SED SPEM STUPENDE FEFELLIT EVENTUS," shrieks the poor
+old Bishop, making moan to the Kaiser: "ECCE ENIM, PRAEMISSA
+DUNTAXAT UNA LITERA, one Letter," and little more, "the said King
+of Borussia has, with about 2,000 horse and foot, and warlike
+engines, in this month of September, entered the Territory of
+Liege;" [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 88.] which
+is an undeniable truth, but an unavailing. Borck is there, and
+"2,000 good arguments with him," as Voltaire defines the
+phenomenon. Friedrich, except to explain pertinently what my
+readers already know, does not write or speak farther on the
+subject; and readers and he may consider the Herstal Affair, thus
+set agoing under Borck's auspices, as in effect finished; and that
+his Majesty has left it on a satisfactory footing, and may safely
+turn his back on it, to wait the sure issue at Berlin before long.
+
+
+WHAT VOLTAIRE THOUGHT OF HERSTAL.
+
+Voltaire told us he himself "did one Manifesto, good or bad," on
+this Herstal business:--where is that Piece, then, what has become
+of it? Dig well in the realms of Chaos, rectifying stupidities
+more or less enormous, the Piece itself is still discoverable;
+and, were pieces by Voltaire much a rarity instead of the reverse,
+might be resuscitated by a good Editor, and printed in his WORKS.
+Lies buried in the lonesome rubbish-mountains of that <italic>
+Helden-Geschichte, <end italic>--let a SISTE VIATOR, scratched on
+the surface, mark where. [Ib. ii. 98-98.] Apparently that is the
+Piece by Voltaire? Yes, on reading that, it has every internal
+evidence; distinguishes itself from the surrounding pieces, like a
+slab of compact polished stone, in a floor rammed together out of
+ruinous old bricks, broken bottles and mortar-dust;--agrees, too,
+if you examine by the microscope, with the external indications,
+which are sure and at last clear, though infinitesimally small;
+and is beyond doubt Voltaire's, if it were now good for much.
+
+It is not properly a Manifesto, but an anonymous memoir published
+in the Newspapers, explaining to impartial mankind, in a legible
+brief manner, what the old and recent History of Herstal, and the
+Troubles of Herstal, have been, and how chimerical and "null to
+the extreme of nullity (NULLES DE TOUT NULLITE)" this poor
+Bishop's pretensions upon it are. Voltaire expressly piques
+himself on this Piece; [Letter to Priedrich: dateless, datable
+"soon after 17th September;" which the rash dark Editors have by
+guess misdated "August; "or, what was safer for them, omitted it
+altogether. <italic> OEuvres de Voltaire <end italic> (Paris,
+1818, 40 vols.) gives the Letter, xxxix. 442 (see also ibid. 453,
+463); later Editors, and even Preuss, take the safer course.]
+brags also how he settled "M. de Fenelon [French Ambassador at the
+Hague], who came to me the day before yesterday," much out of
+square upon the Herstal Business, till I pulled him straight.
+And it is evident (beautifully so, your Majesty) how Voltaire
+busied himself in the Gazettes and Diplomatic circles, setting
+Friedrich's case right; Voltaire very loyal to Friedrich and his
+Liege Cause at that time;--and the contrast between what his
+contemporary Letters say on the subject, and what his ulterior
+Pasquil called VIE PRIVEE says, is again great.
+
+The dull stagnant world, shaken awake by this Liege adventure,
+gives voice variously; and in the Gazetteer and Diplomatic circles
+it is much criticised, by no means everywhere in the favorable
+tone at this first blush of the business. "He had written an ANTI-
+Machiavel," says the Abbe St. Pierre, and even says Voltaire (in
+the PASQUIL, not the contemporary LETTERS), "and he acts thus!"
+Truly he does, Monsieur de Voltaire; and all men, with light upon
+the subject, or even with the reverse upon it, must make their
+criticisms. For the rest, Borck's "2,000 arguments" are there;
+which Borck handles well, with polite calm rigor: by degrees the
+dust will fall, and facts everywhere be seen for what they are.
+
+As to the high-flying Bishop, finding that hysterics are but
+wasted on Friedrich and Borck, and produce no effect with their
+2,000 validities, he flies next to the Kaiser, to the Imperial
+Diet, in shrill-sounding Latin obtestations, of which we already
+gave a flying snatch: "Your HUMILISSIMUS and FIDELISSIMUS
+VASSALLUS, and most obsequient Servant, Georgius Ludovicus;
+meek, modest, and unspeakably in the right: Was ever Member of the
+Holy Roman Empire so snubbed, and grasped by the windpipe, before?
+Oh, help him, great Kaiser, bid the iron gripe loosen itself!"
+[<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii, 86-116.] The Kaiser
+does so, in heavy Latin rescripts, in German DEHORTATORIUMS more
+than one, of a sulky, imperative, and indeed very lofty tenor;
+"Let Georgius Ludovicus go, foolish rash young Dilection (LIEBDEN,
+not MAJESTY, we ourselves being the only Majesty), and I will
+judge between you; otherwise--!" said the Kaiser, ponderously
+shaking his Olympian wig, and lifting his gilt cane, or sceptre of
+mankind, in an Olympian manner. Here are some touches of his
+second sublimest DEHORTATORIUM addressed to Friedrich, in a very
+compressed state: [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic>
+ii. 127; a FIRST and milder (ibid. 73).]--
+
+We Karl the Sixth, Kaiser of (TITLES ENOUGH), ... "Considering
+these, in the Holy Roman Reich, almost unheard-of violent Doings
+(THATLICHKEITEN), which We, in Our Supreme-Judge Office, cannot
+altogether justify, nor will endure ... We have the trust that you
+yourself will magnanimously see How evil counsellors have misled
+your Dilection to commence your Reign, not by showing example of
+Obedience to the Laws appointed for all members of the Reich, for
+the weak and for the strong alike, but by such Doings
+(THATHANDLUNGEN) as in all quarters must cause a great surprise.
+
+"We give your Dilection to know, therefore, That you must
+straightway withdraw those troops which have broken into the Liege
+Territory; make speedy restitution of all that has been extorted;
+--especially General von Borck to give back at once those 50 louis
+d'or daily drawn by him, to renounce his demand of the 20,000
+thalers, to make good all damage done, and retire with his whole
+military force (MILITZ) over the Liege boundaries;--and in brief,
+that you will, by law or arbitration, manage to agree with the
+Prince Bishop of Liege, who wishes it very much. These things We
+expect from your Dilection, as Kurfurst of Brandenburg, within the
+space of Two Months from the Issuing of this; and remain,"--
+Yours as you shall demean yourself,--KARL.
+
+"Given at Wien, 4th of October, 1740."--The last Dehortatorium
+ever signed by Karl VI. In two weeks after he ate too many
+mushrooms,--and immense results followed!
+
+Dehortatoriums had their interest, at Berlin and elsewhere, for
+the Diplomatic circles; but did not produce the least effect on
+Borck or Friedrich; though Friedrich noted the Kaiser's manner in
+these things, and thought privately to himself, as was evident to
+the discerning, "What an amount of wig on that old gentleman!"
+A notable Kaiser's Ambassador, Herr Botta, who had come with some
+Accession compliments, in these weeks, was treated slightingly by
+Friedrich; hardly admitted to Audience; and Friedrich's public
+reply to the last Dehortatorium had almost something of sarcasm in
+it: Evil counsellors yourself, Most Dread Kaiser! It is you that
+are "misled by counsellors, who might chance to set Germany on
+fire, were others as unwise as they!" Which latter phrase was
+remarkable to mankind.--There is a long account already run up
+between that old gentleman, with his Seckendorfs, Grumkows, with
+his dull insolencies, wiggeries, and this young gentleman, who has
+nearly had his heart broken and his Father's house driven mad by
+them! Borck remains at his post; rations duly delivered, and fifty
+louis a day for his own private expenses; and there is no answer
+to the Kaiser, or in sharp brief terms (about "chances of setting
+Germany on fire"), rather worse than none.
+
+Readers see, as well as Friedrich did, what the upshot of this
+affair must be;--we will now finish it off, and wash our hands of
+it, before following his Majesty to Berlin. The poor Bishop had
+applied, shrieking, to the French for help;--and there came some
+colloquial passages between Voltaire and Fenelon, if that were a
+result. He had shrieked in like manner to the Dutch, but without
+result of any kind traceable in that quarter: nowhere, except from
+the Kaiser, is so much as a DEHORTATORIUM to be got. Whereupon the
+once high-flying, now vainly shrieking Bishop discerns clearly
+that there is but one course left,--the course which has lain wide
+open for some years past, had not his flight gone too high for
+seeing it. Before three weeks are over, seeing how Dehortatoriums
+go, he sends his Ambassadors to Berlin, his apologies, proposals:
+[Ambassadors arrived 28th September; last Dehortatorium not yet
+out. Business was completed 20th October (Rodenbeck, IN DIEBUS).]
+"Would not your Majesty perhaps consent to sell this Herstal, as
+your Father of glorious memory was pleased to be willing once?"--
+
+Friedrich answers straightway to the effect: "Certainly! Pay me
+the price it was once already offered for: 100,000 thalers, PLUS
+the expenses since incurred. That will be 180,000 thalers, besides
+what you have spent already on General Borck's days' wages.
+To which we will add thatwretched little fraction of Old Debt,
+clear as noon, but never paid nor any part of it; 60,000 thalers,
+due by the See of Liege ever since the Treaty of Utrecht; 60,000,
+for which we will charge no interest: that will make 240,000
+thalers,--36,000 pounds, instead of the old sum you might have had
+it at. Produce that cash; and take Herstal, and all the dust that
+has risen out of it, well home with you." [Stenzel, iv. 60, who
+counts in gulden, and is not distinct.] The Bishop thankfully
+complies in all points; negotiation speedily done ("20th Oct." the
+final date): Bishop has not, I think, quite so much cash on hand;
+but will pay all he has, and 4 per centum interest till the whole
+be liquidated. His Ambassadors "get gold snuffboxes;" and return
+mildly glad!
+
+And thus, in some six weeks after Borck's arrival in those parts,
+Borck's function is well done. The noise of Gazettes and
+Diplomatic circles lays itself again; and Herstal, famous once for
+King Pipin, and famous again for King Friedrich, lapses at length
+into obscurity, which we hope will never end. Hope;--though who
+can say? ROUCOUX, quite close upon it, becomes a Battle-ground in
+some few years; and memorabilities go much at random in
+this world!
+
+
+
+Chapter VI.
+
+RETURNS BY HANOVER; DOES NOT CALL ON HIS ROYAL UNCLE THERE.
+
+Friedrich spent ten days on his circuitous journey home;
+considerable inspection to be done, in Minden, Magdeburg, not to
+speak of other businesses he had. The old Newspapers are still
+more intent upon him, now that the Herstal Affair has broken into
+flame: especially the English Newspapers; who guess that there are
+passages of courtship going on between great George their King and
+him. Here is one fact, correct in every point, for the old London
+Public: "Letters from Hanover say, that the King of Prussia passed
+within a small distance of that City the 16th inst. N.S., on his
+return to Berlin, but did not stop at Herrenhausen;"--about which
+there has been such hoping and speculating among us lately.
+[<italic> Daily Post, <end italic> 22d September, 1740;
+other London Newspapers from July 31st downwards.] A fact which
+the extinct Editor seems to meditate for a day or two; after which
+he says (partly in ITALICS), opening his lips the second time,
+like a Friar Bacon's Head significant to the Public: "Letters from
+Hanover tell us that the Interview, which it was said his Majesty
+was to have with the King of Prussia, did not take place, for
+certain PRIVATE REASONS, which our Correspondent leaves us to
+guess at!"
+
+It is well known Friedrich did not love his little Uncle, then or
+thenceforth; still less his little Uncle him: "What is this
+Prussia, rising alongside of us, higher and higher, as if it would
+reach our own sublime level!" thinks the little Uncle to himself.
+At present there is no quarrel between them; on the contrary, as
+we have seen, there is a mutual capability of helping one another,
+which both recognize; but will an interview tend to forward that
+useful result? Friedrich, in the intervals of an ague, with
+Herstal just broken out, may have wisely decided, No. "Our sublime
+little Uncle, of the waxy complexion, with the proudly staring
+fish-eyes,--no wit in him, not much sense, and a great deal of
+pride,--stands dreadfully erect, 'plumb and more,' with the
+Garter-leg advanced, when one goes to see him; and his remarks are
+not of an entertaining nature. Leave him standing there: to him
+let Truchsess and Bielfeld suffice, in these hurries, in this ague
+that is still upon us." Upon which the dull old Newspapers, Owls
+of Minerva that then were, endeavor to draw inferences.
+The noticeable fact is, Friedrich did, on this occasion, pass
+within a mile or two of his royal Uncle, without seeing him;
+and had not, through life, another opportunity; never saw the
+sublime little man at all, nor was again so near him.
+
+I believe Friedrich little knows the thick-coming difficulties of
+his Britannic Majesty at this juncture; and is too impatient of
+these laggard procedures on the part of a man with eyes A FLEUR-
+DE-TETE. Modern readers too have forgotten Jenkins's Ear; it is
+not till after long study and survey that one begins to perceive
+the anomalous profundities of that phenomenon to the poor English
+Nation and its poor George II.
+
+The English sent off, last year, a scanty Expedition, "six ships
+of the line," only six, under Vernon, a fiery Admiral, a little
+given to be fiery in Parliamentary talk withal; and these did
+proceed to Porto-Bello on the Spanish Main of South America; did
+hurl out on Porto-Bello such a fiery destructive deluge, of
+gunnery and bayonet-work, as quickly reduced the poor place to the
+verge of ruin, and forced it to surrender with whatever navy,
+garrison, goods and resources were in it, to the discretion of
+fiery Vernon,--who does not prove implacable, he or his, to a
+petitioning enemy. Yes, humble the insolent, but then be merciful
+to them, say the admiring Gazetteers. "The actual monster," how
+cheering to think, "who tore off Mr. Jenkins's Ear, was got hold
+of [actual monster, or even three or four different monsters who
+each did it, the "hold got" being mythical, as readers see], and
+naturally thought he would be slit to ribbons; but our people
+magnanimously pardoned him, magnanimously flung him aside out of
+sight;" [<italic> Gentleman's Magazine, <end italic> x. 124, 145
+(date of the Event is 3d December N.S., 1739).] impossible to
+shoot a dog in cold blood.
+
+Whereupon Vernon returned home triumphant; and there burst forth
+such a jubilation, over the day of small things, as is now
+astonishing to think of. Had the Termagant's own Thalamus and
+Treasury been bombarded suddenly one night by red-hot balls,
+Madrid City laid in ashes, or Baby Carlos's Apanage extinguished
+from Creation, there could hardly have been greater English joy
+(witness the "Porto-Bellos" they still have, new Towns so named);
+so flamy is the murky element growing on that head. And indeed had
+the cipher of tar-barrels burnt, and of ale-barrels drunk, and the
+general account of wick and tallow spent in illuminations and in
+aldermanic exertions on the matter, been accurately taken, one
+doubts if Porto-Bello sold, without shot fired, to the highest
+bidder, at its floweriest, would have covered such a sum. For they
+are a singular Nation, if stirred up from their stagnancy; and are
+much in earnest about this Spanish War.
+
+It is said there is now another far grander Expedition on the
+stocks: military this time as well as naval, intended for the
+Spanish Main;--but of that, for the present, we will defer
+speaking. Enough, the Spanish War is a most serious and most
+furious business to those old English; and, to us, after forced
+study of it, shines out like far-off conflagration, with a certain
+lurid significance in the then night of things. Night otherwise
+fallen dark and somniferous to modern mankind. As Britannic
+Majesty and his Walpoles have, from the first, been dead against
+this Spanish War, the problem is all the more ominous, and the
+dreadful corollaries that may hang by it the more distressing to
+the royal mind.
+
+For example, there is known, or as good as known, to be virtually
+some Family Compact, or covenanted Brotherhood of Bourbonism,
+French and Spanish: political people quake to ask themselves, "How
+will the French keep out of this War, if it continue any length of
+time? And in that case, how will Austria, Europe at large?
+Jenkins's Ear will have kindled the Universe, not the Spanish Main
+only, and we shall be at a fine pass!" The Britannic Majesty
+reflects that if France take to fighting him, the first stab given
+will probably be in the accessiblest quarter and the intensely
+most sensitive,--our own Electoral Dominions where no Parliament
+plagues us, our dear native country, Hanover. Extremely
+interesting to know what Friedrich of Prussia will do in
+such contingency?
+
+Well, truly it might have been King George's best bargain to close
+with Friedrich; to guarantee Julich and Berg, and get Fredrich to
+stand between the French and Hanover; while George, with an
+England behind him, in such humor, went wholly into that Spanish
+Business, the one thing needful to them at present. Truly;
+but then again, there are considerations: "What is this Friedrich,
+just come out upon the world? What real fighting power has he,
+after all that ridiculous drilling and recruiting Friedrich
+Wilhelm made? Will he be faithful in bargain; is not, perhaps,
+from of old, his bias always toward France rather? And the Kaiser,
+what will the Kaiser say to it?" These are questions for a
+Britannic Majesty! Seldom was seen such an insoluble imbroglio of
+potentialities; dangerous to touch, dangerous to leave lying;--and
+his Britannic Majesty's procedures upon it are of a very slow
+intricate sort; and will grow still more so, year after year, in
+the new intricacies that are coming, and be a weariness to my
+readers and me. For observe the simultaneous fact. All this while,
+Robinson at Vienna is dunning the Imperial Majesty to remember old
+Marlborough days and the Laws of Nature; and declare for us
+against France, in case of the worst. What an attempt!
+Imperial Majesty has no money; Imperial Majesty remembers recent
+days rather, and his own last quarrel with France (on the Polish-
+Election score), in which you Sea-Powers cruelly stood neuter!
+One comfort, and pretty much one only, is left to a nearly
+bankrupt Imperial heart; that France does at any rate ratify
+Pragmatic Sanction, and instead of enemy to that inestimable
+Document has become friend,--if only she be well let alone.
+"Let well alone," says the sad Kaiser, bankrupt of heart as well
+as purse: "I have saved the Pragmatic, got Fleury to guarantee it;
+I will hunt wild swine and not shadows any more: ask me not!"
+And now this Herstal business; the Imperial Dehortatoriums,
+perhaps of a high nature, that are like to come? More hopeless
+proposition the Britannic Majesty never made than this to the
+Kaiser. But he persists in it, orders Robinson to persist;
+knocks at the Austrian door with one hand, at the Prussian or
+Anti-Austrian with the other; and gazes, with those proud fish-
+eyes, into perils and potentialities and a sea of troubles.
+Wearisome to think of, were not one bound to it! Here, from a
+singular CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND, not yet got into
+print, are two Excerpts; which I will request the reader to
+try if he can take along with him, in view of much that
+is Coming:--
+
+1. A JUST WAR.--"This War, which posterity scoffs at as the WAR OF
+JENKINS'S EAR, was, if we examine it, a quite indispensable one;
+the dim much-bewildered English, driven into it by their deepest
+instincts, were, in a chaotic inarticulate way, right and not
+wrong in taking it as the Commandment of Heaven. For such, in a
+sense, it was; as shall by and by appear. Not perhaps since the
+grand Reformation Controversy, under Oliver Cromwell and
+Elizabeth, had there, to this poor English People (who are
+essentially dumb, inarticulate, from the weight of meaning they
+have, notwithstanding the palaver one hears from them in certain
+epochs), been a more authentic cause of War. And, what was the
+fatal and yet foolish circumstance, their Constitutional Captains,
+especially their King, would never and could never regard it as
+such; but had to be forced into it by the public rage, there being
+no other method left in the case.
+
+"I say, a most necessary War, though of a most stupid appearance;
+such the fatality of it:--begun, carried on, ended, as if by a
+People in a state of somnambulism! More confused operation never
+was. A solid placid People, heavily asleep (and snoring much,
+shall we say, and inarticulately grunting and struggling under
+indigestions, Constitutional and other? Do but listen to the hum
+of those extinct Pamphlets and Parliamentary Oratories of
+theirs!),--yet an honestly intending People; and keenly alive to
+any commandment from Heaven, that could pierce through the thick
+skin of them into their big obstinate heart. Such a commandment,
+then and there, was that monition about Jenkins's Ear. Upon which,
+so pungent was it to them, they started violently out of bed, into
+painful sleep-walking; and went, for twenty years and more,
+clambering and sprawling about, far and wide, on the giddy edge of
+precipices, over house-tops and frightful cornices and parapets;
+in a dim fulfilment of the said Heaven's command. I reckon that
+this War, though there were intervals, Treaties of Peace more than
+one, and the War had various names,--did not end till 1763.
+And then, by degrees, the poor English Nation found that (at, say,
+a thousand times the necessary expense, and with imminent peril to
+its poor head, and all the bones of its body) it had actually
+succeeded,--by dreadful exertions in its sleep! This will be more
+apparent by and by; and may be a kind of comfort to the sad
+English reader, drearily surveying such somnambulisms on the part
+of his poor ancestors."
+
+2. TWO DIFFICULTIES.--"There are Two grand Difficulties in this
+Farce-Tragedy of a war; of which only one, and that not the worst
+of the Pair, is in the least surmised by the English hitherto.
+Difficulty First, which is even worse than the other, and will
+surprisingly attend the English in all their Wars now coming, is:
+That their fighting-apparatus, though made of excellent material,
+cannot fight,--being in disorganic condition; one branch of it,
+especially the 'Military' one as they are pleased to call it,
+being as good as totally chaotic, and this in a quiet habitual
+manner, this long while back. With the Naval branch it is
+otherwise; which also is habitual there. The English almost as if
+by nature can sail, and fight, in ships; cannot well help doing
+it. Sailors innumerable are bred to them; they are planted in the
+Ocean, opulent stormy Neptune clipping them in all his moods
+forever: and then by nature, being a dumb, much-enduring, much-
+reflecting, stout, veracious and valiant kind of People, they
+shine in that way of life, which specially requires such.
+Without much forethought, they have sailors innumerable, and of
+the best quality. The English have among them also, strange as it
+may seem to the cursory observer, a great gift of organizing;
+witness their Arkwrights and others: and this gift they may often,
+in matters Naval more than elsewhere, get the chance of
+exercising. For a Ship's Crew, or even a Fleet, unlike a land
+Army, is of itself a unity, its fortunes disjoined, dependent on
+its own management; and it falls, moreover, as no land army can,
+to the undivided guidance of one man,--who (by hypothesis, being
+English) has now and then, from of old, chanced to be an
+organizing man; and who is always much interested to know and
+practise what has been well organized. For you are in contact with
+verities, to an unexampled degree, when you get upon the Ocean,
+with intent to sail on it, much more to fight on it;--bottomless
+destruction raging beneath you and on all hands of you, if you
+neglect, for any reason, the methods of keeping it down, and
+making it float you to your aim!
+
+The English Navy is in tolerable order at that period. But as to
+the English Army,--we may say it is, in a wrong sense, the wonder
+of the world, and continues so throughout the whole of this
+History and farther! Never before, among the rational sons of
+Adam, were Armies sent out on such terms,--namely without a
+General, or with no General understanding the least of his
+business. The English have a notion that Generalship is not
+wanted; that War is not an Art, as playing Chess is, as finding
+the Longitude, and doing the Differential Calculus are (and a much
+deeper Art than any of these); that War is taught by Nature, as
+eating is; that courageous soldiers, led on by a courageous Wooden
+Pole with Cocked-hat on it, will do very well. In the world I have
+not found opacity of platitude go deeper among any People. This is
+Difficulty First, not yet suspected by an English People, capable
+of great opacity on some subjects.
+
+"Difficulty Second is, That their Ministry, whom they had to force
+into this War, perhaps do not go zealously upon it. And perhaps
+even, in the above circumstances, they totally want knowledge how
+to go upon it, were they never so zealous; Difficulty Second might
+be much helped, were it not for Difficulty First. But the
+administering of War is a thing also that does not come to a man
+like eating.--This Second Difficulty, suspicion that Walpole and
+perhaps still higher heads want zeal, gives his Britannic Majesty
+infinite trouble; and"--
+
+--And so, in short, he stands there, with the Garter-leg advanced,
+looking loftily into a considerable sea of troubles,--that day
+when Friedrich drove past him, Friday, 16th September, 1740, and
+never came so near him again.
+
+The next business for Friedrich was a Visit at Brunswick, to the
+Affinities and Kindred, in passing; where also was an important
+little act to be done: Betrothal of the young Prince, August
+Wilhelm, Heir-Presumptive whom we saw in Strasburg, to a Princess
+of that House, Louisa Amelia, younger Sister of Friedrich's own
+Queen. A modest promising arrangement; which turned out well
+enough,--though the young Prince, Father to the Kings that since
+are, was not supremely fortunate otherwise. [Betrothal was 20th
+September, 1740; Marriage, 5th January, 1742 (Buchholz, i. 207).]
+After which, the review at Magdeburg; and home on the 24th, there
+to "be busy as a Turk or as a M. Jordan,"--according to what we
+read long since.
+
+
+
+Chapter VII.
+
+WITHDRAWS TO REINSBERG, HOPING A PEACEABLE WINTER.
+
+By this Herstal token, which is now blazing abroad, now and for a
+month to come, it can be judged that the young King of Prussia
+intends to stand on his own footing, quite peremptorily if need
+be; and will by no means have himself led about in Imperial
+harness, as his late Father was. So that a dull Public
+(Herrenhausen very specially), and Gazetteer Owls of Minerva
+everywhere, may expect events. All the more indubitably, when that
+spade-work comes to light in the Wesel Country. It is privately
+certain (the Gazetteers not yet sure about it, till they see the
+actual spades going), this new King does fully intend to assert
+his rights on Berg-Julich; and will appear there with his iron
+ramrods, the instant old Kur-Pfalz shall decease, let France and
+the Kaiser say No to it or say Yes. There are, in fact, at a fit
+place, "Buderich in the neighborhood of Wesel," certain rampart-
+works, beginnings as of an Entrenched Camp, going on;--"for Review
+purposes merely," say the Gazetteers, IN ITALICS. Here, it
+privately is Friedrich's resolution, shall a Prussian Army, of
+the due strength (could be well-nigh 100,000 strong if needful),
+make its appearance, directly on old Kur-Pfalz's decease, if one
+live to see such event. [Stenzel, iv. 61.] France and the Kaiser
+will probably take good survey of that Buderich phenomenon
+before meddling.
+
+To do his work like a King, and shun no peril and no toil in the
+course of what his work may be, is Friedrich's rule and intention.
+Nevertheless it is clear he expects to approve himself magnanimous
+rather in the Peaceable operations than in the Warlike; and his
+outlooks are, of all places and pursuits, towards Reinsberg and
+the Fine Arts, for the time being. His Public activity meanwhile
+they describe as "prodigious," though the ague still clings to
+him; such building, instituting, managing: Opera-House, French
+Theatre, Palace for his Mother;--day by day, many things to be
+recorded by Editor Formey, though the rule about them here is
+silence except on cause.
+
+No doubt the ague is itself privately a point of moment. Such a
+vexatious paltry little thing, in this bright whirl of Activities,
+Public and other, which he continues managing in spite of it;
+impatient to be rid of it. But it will not go: there IT reappears
+always, punctual to its "fourth day,"--like a snarling street-dog,
+in the high Ball-room and Work-room. "He is drinking Pyrmont
+water;" has himself proposed Quinquina, a remedy just come up, but
+the Doctors shook their heads; has tried snatches of Reinsberg,
+too short; he intends soon to be out there for a right spell of
+country, there to be "happy," and get quit of his ague. The ague
+went,--and by a remedy which surprised the whole world, as will
+be seen!
+
+
+
+WILHELMINA'S RETURN-VISIT.
+
+Monday, 17th October, came the Baireuth Visitors; Wilhelmina all
+in a flutter, and tremor of joy and sorrow, to see her Brother
+again, her old kindred and the altered scene of things. Poor Lady,
+she is perceptibly more tremulous than usual; and her Narrative,
+not in dates only, but in more memorable points, dances about at a
+sad rate; interior agitations and tremulous shrill feelings
+shivering her this way and that, and throwing things topsy-turvy
+in one's recollection. Like the magnetic needle, shaky but
+steadfast (AGITEE MAI CONSTANTE). Truer nothing can be, points
+forever to the Pole; but also what obliquities it makes;
+will shiver aside in mad escapades, if you hold the paltriest bit
+of old iron near it,--paltriest clack of gossip about this loved
+Brother of mine! Brother, we will hope, silently continues to be
+Pole, so that the needle always comes back again; otherwise all
+would go to wreck. Here, in abridged and partly rectified form,
+are the phenomena witnessed:--
+
+"We arrived at Berlin the end of October [Monday, 17th, as
+above said]. My younger Brothers, followed by the Princes of the
+Blood and by all the Court, received us at the bottom of the
+stairs. I was led to my apartment, where I found the Reigning
+Queen, my Sisters [Ulrique, Amelia], and the Princesses [of the
+Blood, as above, Schwedt and the rest]. I learned with much
+chagrin that the King was ill of tertian ague [quartan; but that
+is no matter]. He sent me word that, being in his fit, he could
+not see me; but that he depended on having that pleasure
+to-morrow. The Queen Mother, to whom I went without delay, was in
+a dark condition; rooms all hung with their lugubrious drapery;
+everything yet in the depth of mourning for my Father. What a
+scene for me! Nature has her rights; I can say with truth, I have
+almost never in my life been so moved as on this occasion."
+Interview with Mamma--we can fancy it--"was of the most touching."
+Wilhelmina had been absent eight years. She scarcely knows the
+young ones again, all so grown;--finds change on change: and that
+Time, as he always is, has been busy. That night the Supper-Party
+was exclusively a Family one.
+
+Her Brother's welcome to her on the morrow, though ardent enough,
+she found deficient in sincerity, deficient in several points;
+as indeed a Brother up to the neck in business, and just come out
+of an ague-fit, does not appear to the best advantage.
+Wilhelmina noticed how ill he looked, so lean and broken-down
+(MAIGRE ET DEFAIT) within the last two months; but seems to have
+taken no account of it farther, in striking her balances with
+Friedrich. And indeed in her Narrative of this Visit, not, we will
+hope, in the Visit itself, she must have been in a high state of
+magnetic deflection,--pretty nearly her maximum of such,
+discoverable in those famous MEMOIRS,--such a tumult is there in
+her statements, all gone to ground-and-lofty tumbling in this
+place; so discrepant are the still ascertainable facts from this
+topsy-turvy picture of them, sketched by her four years hence (in
+1744). The truest of magnetic needles; but so sensitive, if you
+bring foreign iron near it!
+
+Wilhelmina was loaded with honors by an impartial Berlin Public
+that is Court Public; "but, all being in mourning, the Court was
+not brilliant. The Queen Mother saw little company, and was sunk
+in sorrow;--had not the least influence in affairs, so jealous was
+the new King of his Authority,--to the Queen Mother's surprise,"
+says Wilhelmina. For the rest, here is a King "becoming truly
+unpopular [or, we fancy so, in our deflected state, and judging by
+the rumor of cliques]; a general discontent reigning in the
+Country, love of his subjects pretty much gone; people speaking of
+him in no measured terms [in certain cliques]. Cares nothing about
+those who helped him as Prince Royal, say some; others complain of
+his avarice [meaning steady vigilance in outlay] as surpassing the
+late King's; this one complained of his violences of temper
+(EMPORTEMENS); that one of his suspicions, of his distrust, his
+haughtinesses, his dissimulation" (meaning polite impenetrability
+when he saw good). Several circumstances, known to Wilhelmina's
+own experience, compel Wilhelmina's assent on those points.
+"I would have spoken to him about them, if my Brother of Prussia
+[young August Wilhelm, betrothed the other day] and the Queen
+Regnant had not dissuaded me. Farther on I will give the
+explanation of all this,"--never did it anywhere. "I beg those who
+may one day read these MEMOIRS, to suspend their judgment on the
+character of this great Prince till I have developed it."
+[Wilhelmina, ii. 326.] O my Princess, you are true and bright, but
+you are shrill; and I admire the effect of atmospheric
+electricity, not to say, of any neighboring marine-store shop, or
+miserable bit of broken pan, on one of the finest magnetic needles
+ever made and set trembling!
+
+Wilhelmina is incapable of deliberate falsehood; and this her
+impression or reminiscence, with all its exaggeration, is entitled
+to be heard in evidence so far. From this, and from other sources,
+readers will assure themselves that discontents were not wanting;
+that King Friedrich was not amiable to everybody at this time,--
+which indeed he never grew to be at any other time. He had to be a
+King; that was the trade he followed, not the quite different one
+of being amiable all round. Amiability is good, my Princess;
+but the question rises, "To whom?-for example, to the young
+gentleman who shot himself in Lobegun?" There are young gentlemen
+and old sometimes in considerable quantities, to whom, if you were
+in your duty, as a King of men (or even as a "King of one man and
+his affairs," if that is all your kingdom), you should have been
+hateful instead of amiable! That is a stern truth; too much
+forgotten by Wilhelmina and others. Again, what a deadening and
+killing circumstance is it in the career of amiability, that you
+are bound not to be communicative of your inner man, but
+perpetually and strictly the reverse! It may be doubted if a good
+King can be amiable; certainly he cannot in any but the noblest
+ages, and then only to a select few. I should guess Friedrich was
+at no time fairly loved, not by those nearest to him. He was
+rapid, decisive; of wiry compact nature; had nothing of his
+Father's amplitudes, simplicities; nothing to sport with and
+fondle, far from it. Tremulous sensibilities, ardent affections;
+these we clearly discover in him, in extraordinary vivacity; but
+he wears them under his polished panoply, and is outwardly a
+radiant but metallic object to mankind. Let us carry this along
+with us in studying him; and thank Wilhelmina for giving us hint
+of it in her oblique way.--Wilhelmima's love for her Brother rose
+to quite heroic pitch in coming years, and was at its highest when
+she died. That continuation of her MEMOIRS in which she is to
+develop her Brother's character, was never written: it has been
+sought for in modern times; and a few insignificant pages, with
+evidence that there is not, and was not, any more, are all that
+has turned up. [Pertz, <italic> Ueber die Denkwurdigkeiten der
+Markgrafin van Bayreuth <end italic> (Paper read in the
+<italic> Akademie der Wissenschaften, <end italic> Berlin,
+25th April, 1850).
+
+Incapable of falsity prepense, we say; but the known facts, which
+stand abundantly on record if you care to search them out, are
+merely as follows: Friedrich, with such sincerity as there might
+be, did welcome Wilhelmina on the morrow of her arrival; spoke of
+Reinsberg, and of air and rest, and how pleasant it would be;
+rolled off next morning, having at last gathered up his
+businesses, and got them well in hand, to Reinsberg accordingly;
+whither Wilhelmina, with the Queen Regnant and others of agreeable
+quality, followed in two days; intending a long and pleasant spell
+of country out there. Which hope was tolerably fulfilled, even for
+Wilhelmina, though there did come unexpected interruptions, not of
+Friedrich's bringing.
+
+
+UNEXPECTED NEWS AT REINSBERG.
+
+Friedrich's pursuits and intended conquests, for the present, are
+of peaceable and even gay nature. French Theatre, Italian Opera-
+House, these are among the immediate outlooks. Voltaire, skilled
+in French acting, if anybody ever were, is multifariously
+negotiating for a Company of that kind,--let him be swift, be
+successful. [Letters of Voltaire (PASSIM, in these months).]
+An Italian Opera there shall be; the House is still to be built:
+Captain Knobelsdorf, who built Reinsberg, whom we have known, is
+to do it. Knobelsdorf has gone to Italy on that errand; "went by
+Dresden, carefully examining the Opera-House there, and all the
+famed Opera-Houses on his road." Graun, one of the best judges
+living, is likewise off to Italy, gathering singers. Our Opera
+too shall be a successful thing, and we hope, a speedy. Such are
+Friedrich's outlooks at this time.
+
+A miscellaneous pleasant company is here; Truchsess and Bielfeld,
+home from Hanover, among them; Wilhelmina is here;--Voltaire
+himself perhaps coming again. Friedrich drinks his Pyrmont waters;
+works at his public businesses all day, which are now well in
+hand, and manageable by couriers; at evening he appears in
+company, and is the astonishment of everybody; brilliant, like a
+new-risen sun, as if he knew of no illness, knew of no business,
+but lived for amusement only. "He intends Private Theatricals
+withal, and is getting ready Voltaire's MORT DE CESAR." [Preuss,
+<italic> Thronbesteigung, <end italic> p. 415.] These were pretty
+days at Reinsberg. This kind of life lasted seven or eight weeks,
+--in spite of interruptions of subterranean volcanic nature, some
+of which were surely considerable. Here, in the very first week,
+coming almost volcanically, is one, which indeed is the sum of
+them all.
+
+Tuesday forenoon, 25th October, 1740, Express arrives at
+Reinsberg; direct from Vienna five days ago; finds Friedrich under
+eclipse, hidden in the interior, laboring under his ague-fit:
+question rises, Shall the Express be introduced, or be held back?
+The news he brings is huge, unexpected, transcendent, and may
+agitate the sick King. Six or seven heads go wagging on this
+point,--who by accident are namable, if readers care: "Prince
+August Wilhelm," lately betrothed; "Graf Truchsess," home from
+Hanover; "Colonel Graf von Finkenstein," old Tutor's Son, a
+familiar from boyhood upwards; "Baron Pollnitz" kind of chief
+Goldstick now, or Master of the Ceremonies, not too witty, but the
+cause of wit; "Jordan, Bielfeld," known to us; and lastly,
+"Fredersdorf," Major-domo and Factotum, who is grown from Valet to
+be Purse-Keeper, confidential Manager, and almost friend,--
+a notable personage in Friedrich's History. They decide,
+"Better wait!"
+
+They wait accordingly; and then, after about an hour, the
+trembling-fit being over, and Fredersdorf having cautiously
+preluded a little, and prepared the way, the Despatch is
+delivered, and the King left with his immense piece of news.
+News that his Imperial Majesty Karl VI. died, after short illness,
+on Thursday, the 20th last. Kaiser dead: House of Hapsburg, and
+its Five Centuries of tough wrestling, and uneasy Dominancy in
+this world, ended, gone to the distaff:--the counter-wrestling
+Ambitions and Cupidities not dead; and nothing but Pragmatic
+Sanction left between the fallen House and them! Friedrich kept
+silence; showed no sign how transfixed he was to hear such
+tidings; which, he foresaw, would have immeasurable consequences
+in the world.
+
+One of the first was, that it cured Friedrich of his ague.
+It braced him (it, and perhaps "a little quinquina which he now
+insisted on") into such a tensity of spirit as drove out his ague
+like a mere hiccough; quite gone in the course of next week;
+and we hear no more of that importunate annoyance. He summoned
+Secretary Eichel, "Be ready in so many minutes hence;" rose from
+his bed, dressed himself; [Preuss, <italic> Thronbesteigung, <end
+italic> p. 416.]--and then, by Eichel's help, sent off expresses
+for Schwerin his chief General, and Podewils his chief Minister.
+A resolution, which is rising or has risen in the Royal mind, will
+be ready for communicating to these Two by the time they arrive,
+on the second day hence. This done, Friedrich, I believe, joined
+his company in the evening; and was as light and brilliant as if
+nothing had happened.
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII.
+
+THE KAISER'S DEATH.
+
+The Kaiser's death came upon the Public unexpectedly; though not
+quite so upon observant persons closer at hand. He was not yet
+fifty-six out; a firm-built man; had been of sound constitution,
+of active, not intemperate habits: but in the last six years,
+there had come such torrents of ill luck rolling down on him, he
+had suffered immensely, far beyond what the world knew of; and to
+those near him, and anxious for him, his strength seemed much
+undermined. Five years ago, in summer 1735, Robinson reported,
+from a sure hand: "Nothing can equal the Emperor's agitation under
+these disasters [brought upon him by Fleury and the Spaniards,
+as after-clap to his Polish-Election feat]. His good Empress is
+terrified, many times, he will die in the course of the night,
+when singly with her he gives a loose to his affliction, confusion
+and despair." Sea-Powers will not help; Fleury and mere ruin will
+engulf! "What augments this agitation is his distrust in every one
+of his own Ministers, except perhaps Bartenstein," [Robinson to
+Lord Warrington, 5th July, 1735 (in State-Paper Office).]--who is
+not much of a support either, though a gnarled weighty old stick
+in his way ("Professor at Strasburg once"): not interesting to us
+here. The rest his Imperial Majesty considers to be of sublimated
+blockhead type, it appears. Prince Eugene had died lately, and
+with Eugene all good fortune.
+
+And then, close following, the miseries of that Turk War, crashing
+down upon a man! They say, Duke Franz, Maria Theresa's Husband,
+nominal Commander in those Campaigns, with the Seckendorfs and
+Wallises under him going such a road, was privately eager to have
+done with the Business, on any terms, lest the Kaiser should die
+first, and leave it weltering. No wonder the poor Kaiser felt
+broken, disgusted with the long Shadow-Hunt of Life; and took to
+practical field-sports rather. An Army that cannot fight, War-
+Generals good only to be locked in Fortresses, an Exchequer that
+has no money; after such wagging of the wigs, and such Privy-
+Councilling and such War-Councilling:--let us hunt wild swine, and
+not think of it! That, thank Heaven, we still have; that, and
+Pragmatic Sanction well engrossed, and generally sworn to by
+mankind, after much effort!--
+
+The outer Public of that time, and Voltaire among them more
+deliberately afterwards, spoke of "mushrooms," an "indigestion of
+mushrooms;" and it is probable there was something of mushrooms
+concerned in the event, Another subsequent Frenchman, still more
+irreverent, adds to this of the "excess of mushrooms," that the
+Kaiser made light of it. "When the Doctors told him he had few
+hours to live, he would not believe it; and bantered his
+Physicians on the sad news. 'Look me in the eyes,' said he;
+'have I the air of one dying? When you see my sight growing dim,
+then let the sacraments be administered, whether I order or not.'"
+Doctors insisting, the Kaiser replied: "'Since you are foolish
+fellows, who know neither the cause nor the state of my disorder,
+I command that, once I am dead, you open my body, to know what the
+matter was; you can then come and let me know!"'
+[<italic> Anecdotes Germaniques <end italic> (Paris, 1769),
+p. 692.]--in which also there is perhaps a glimmering of distorted
+truth, though, as Monsieur mistakes even the day ("18th October,"
+says he, not 2Oth), one can only accept it as rumor from the
+outside.
+
+Here, by an extremely sombre domestic Gentleman of great
+punctuality and great dulness, are the authentic particulars, such
+as it was good to mention in Vienna circles. [(Anonymous) <italic>
+Des &c. Romischen Kaisers Carl VI. Leben und Thaten <end italic>
+(Frankfurt und Leipzig, 1741), pp. 220-227.] An extremely dull
+Gentleman, but to appearance an authentic; and so little defective
+in reverence that he delicately expresses some astonishment at
+Death's audacity this year, in killing so many Crowned Heads.
+"This year 1740," says he, "though the weather throughout Europe
+had been extraordinarily fine," or fine for a cold year, "had
+already witnessed several Deaths of Sovereigns: Pope Clement XII.,
+Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia, the Queen Dowager of Spain
+[Termagant's old stepmother, not Termagant's self by a great way].
+But that was not enough: unfathomable Destiny ventured now on
+Imperial Heads (WAGTE SICH AUCH AN KAISER-KRONEN): Karl VI.,
+namely, and Russia's great, Monarchess;"--an audacity to be
+remarked. Of Russia's great Monarchess (Czarina Anne, with the big
+cheek) we will say nothing at present; but of Karl VI. only,--
+abridging much, and studying arrangement.
+
+"Thursday, October 13th, returning from Halbthurn, a Hunting Seat
+of his," over in Hungary some fifty miles, "to the Palace Favorita
+at Vienna, his Imperial Majesty felt slightly indisposed,"--
+indigestion of mushrooms or whatever it was: had begun AT
+Halbthurn the night before, we rather understand, and was the
+occasion of his leaving. "The Doctors called it cold on the
+stomach, and thought it of no consequence. In the night of
+Saturday, it became alarming;" inflammation, thought the Doctors,
+inflammation of the liver, and used their potent appliances, which
+only made the danger come and go; "and on the Tuesday, all day,
+the Doctors did not doubt his Imperial Majesty was dying.
+["Look me in the eyes; pack of fools; you will have to dissect me,
+you will then know:" Any truth in all that? No matter.]
+
+"At noon of that Tuesday he took the Sacrament, the Pope's Nuncio
+administering. His Majesty showed uncommonly great composure of
+soul, and resignation to the Divine Will;" being indeed
+"certain,"--so he expressed it to "a principal Official Person
+sunk in grief" (Bartenstein, shall we guess?), who stood by him--
+"certain of his cause," not afraid in contemplating that dread
+Judgment now near: "Look at me! A man that is certain of his cause
+can enter on such a Journey with good courage and a composed mind
+(MIT GUTEM UND DELASSENEM MUTH)." To the Doctors, dubitating what
+the disease was, he said, "If Gazelli" my late worthy Doctor,
+"were still here, you would soon know; but as it is, you will
+learn it when you dissect me;"--and once asked to be shown the Cup
+where his heart would lie after that operation.
+
+"Sacrament being over," Tuesday afternoon, "he sent for his
+Family, to bless them each separately. He had a long conversation
+with Grand Duke Franz," titular of Lorraine, actual of Tuscany,
+"who had assiduously attended him, and continued to do so, during
+the whole illness." The Grand Duke's Spouse,--Maria Theresa, the
+noble-hearted and the overwhelmed; who is now in an interesting
+state again withal; a little Kaiserkin (Joseph II.) coming in five
+months; first child, a little girl, is now two years old;--"had
+been obliged to take to bed three days ago; laid up of grief and
+terror (VOR SCHMERZEN UND SCHRECKEN), ever since Sunday the 16th.
+Nor would his Imperial Majesty permit her to enter this death-
+room, on account of her condition, so important to the world;
+but his Majesty, turning towards that side where her apartment
+was, raised his right hand, and commanded her Husband, and the
+Archduchess her younger Sister, to tell his Theresa, That he
+blessed her herewith, notwithstanding her absence." Poor Kaiser,
+poor Theresa! "Most distressing of all was the scene with the
+Kaiserin. The night before, on getting knowledge of the sad
+certainty, she had fainted utterly away (STARKE OHNMACHT), and had
+to be carried into the Grand Duchess's [Maria Theresa's] room.
+Being summoned now with her Children, for the last blessing, she
+cried as in despair, 'Do not leave me, Your Dilection, do not (ACH
+EUER LIEBDEN VERLASSEN MICH DOCH NICHT)!'" Poor good souls!
+"Her Imperial Majesty would not quit the room again, but remained
+to the last.
+
+"Wednesday, 19th, all day, anxiety, mournful suspense;" poor
+weeping Kaiserin and all the world waiting; the Inevitable visibly
+struggling on. "And in the night of that day [night of 19th-20th
+Oct., 1740], between one and two in the morning, Death snatched
+away this most invaluable Monarch (DEN PREISWURDIGSTEN MONARCHEN)
+in the 66th year of his life;" and Kaiser Karl VI., and the House
+of Hapsburg and its Five tough Centuries of good and evil in this
+world had ended. The poor Kaiserin "closed the eyes" that could
+now no more behold her; "kissed his hands, and was carried out
+more dead than alive." [Anonymous, UT SUPRA, pp. 220-227.--
+Adelung, <italic> Pragmatische Staatsgeschichte <end italic>
+(Gotha, 1762-1767), ii. 120. JOHANN CHRISTOPH Adelung; the same
+who did the DICTIONARY aud many other deserving Books; here is the
+precise Title: <italic> "Pragmatische Staatsgeschichte Europens,"
+<end italic> that is, "Documentary History of Europe, from Kaiser
+Karl's Death, 1740, till Peace of Paris, 1763." A solid, laborious
+and meritorious Work, of its kind; extremely extensive (9 vols.
+4to, some of which are double and even treble), mostly in the
+undigested, sometimes in the quite uncooked or raw condition;
+perhaps about a fifth part of it consists of "Documents" proper,
+which are shippable. It cannot help being dull, waste, dreary, but
+is everywhere intelligible (excellent Indexes too),--and offers an
+unhappy reader by far the best resource attainable for survey of
+that sad Period.]
+
+A good affectionate Kaiserin, I do believe; honorable, truthful,
+though unwitty of speech, and converted by Grandpapa in a peculiar
+manner, For her Kaiser too, after all, I have a kind of love.
+Of brilliant articulate intellect there is nothing; nor of
+inarticulate (as in Friedrich Wilhelm's case) anything
+considerable: in fact his Shadow-Hunting, and Duelling with the
+Termagant, seemed the reverse of wise. But there was something of
+a high proud heart in it, too, if we examine; and even the
+Pragmatic Sanction, though in practice not worth one regiment of
+iron ramrods, indicates a profoundly fixed determination, partly
+of loyal nature, such as the gods more or less reward. "He had
+been a great builder," say the Histories; "was a great musician,
+fit to lead orchestras, and had composed an Opera,"--poor Kaiser.
+There came out large traits of him, in Maria Theresa again, under
+an improved form, which were much admired by the world. He looks,
+in his Portraits, intensely serious; a handsome man, stoically
+grave; much the gentleman, much the Kaiser or Supreme Gentleman.
+As, in life and fact, he was; "something solemn in him, even when
+he laughs," the people used to say. A man honestly doing his very
+best with his poor Kaisership, and dying of chagrin by it.
+"On opening the body, the liver-region proved to be entirely
+deranged; in the place where the gall-bladder should have been, a
+stone of the size of a pigeon's egg was found grown into the
+liver, and no gall-bladder now there."
+
+That same morning, with earliest daylight, "Thursday, 20th, six
+A.M.," Maria Theresa is proclaimed by her Heralds over Vienna:
+"According to Pragmatic Sanction, Inheritress of all the," &c.
+&c.;--Sovereign Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary and
+Bohemia, for chief items. "At seven her Majesty took the Oath from
+the Generals and Presidents of Tribunals,--said, through her
+tears, 'All was to stand on the old footing, each in his post,'"--
+and the other needful words. Couriers shoot forth towards all
+Countries;--one express courier to Regensburg, and the enchanted
+Wiggeries there, to say That a new Kaiser will be needed;
+REICHS-Vicar or Vicars (Kur-Sachsen and whoever more, for they are
+sometimes disagreed about it) will have to administer in
+the interim.
+
+A second courier we saw arrive at Reinsberg; he likewise may be
+important. The Bavarian Minister, Karl Albert Kur-Baiern's man,
+shot off his express, like the others; answer is, by return of
+courier, or even earlier (for a messenger was already on the
+road), Make protest! "We Kur-Baiern solemnly protest against
+Pragmatic Sanction, and the assumption of such Titles by the
+Daughter of the late Kaiser. King of Bohemia, and in good part
+even of Austria, it is not you, Madam, but of right WE; as, by
+Heaven's help, it is our fixed resolution to make good!"
+Protest was presented, accordingly, with all the solemnities,
+without loss of a moment. To which Bartenstein and the Authorities
+answered "Pooh-pooh," as if it were nothing. It is the first
+ripple of an immeasurable tide or deluge in that kind, threatening
+to submerge the new Majesty of Hungary;--as had been foreseen at
+Reinsberg; though Bartenstein and the Authorities made light of
+it, answering "Pooh-pooh," or almost "Ha-ha," for the present.
+
+Her Hungarian Majesty's chief Generals, Seckendorf, Wallis,
+Neipperg, sit in their respective prison-wards at this time (from
+which she soon liberates them): Kur-Baiern has lodged protest;
+at Reinsberg there will be an important resolution ready:--and in
+the Austrian Treasury (which employs 40,000 persons, big and
+little) there is of cash or available, resource, 100,000 florins,
+that is to say, 10,000 pounds net. [Mailath, <italic> Geschichte
+des Oestreichischen Kaiserstaats <end italic> (Hamburg, 1850),
+v. 8.] And unless Pragmatic sheepskin hold tighter than some
+persons expect, the affairs of Austria and of this young
+Archduchess are in a threatening way.
+
+His Britannic Majesty was on the road home, about Helvoetsluys or
+on the sea for Harwich, that night the Kaiser died; of whose
+illness he had heard nothing. At London, ten days after, the
+sudden news struck dismally upon his Majesty and the Political
+Circles there: "No help, then, from that quarter, in our Spanish
+War; perhaps far other than help!"--Nay, certain Gazetteers were
+afraid the grand new Anti-Spanish Expedition itself, which was
+now, at the long last, after such confusions and delays, lying
+ready, in great strength, Naval and Military, would be
+countermanded,--on Pragmatic-Sanction considerations, and the
+crisis probably imminent. [London Newspapers (31st Oct.-6th Nov.,
+1740). But it was not countermanded; it sailed all the same,
+"November 6th" (seventh day after the bad news); and made towards
+--Shall we tell the reader, what is Officially a dead secret,
+though by this time well guessed at by the Public, English and
+also Spanish?--towards Carthagena, to reinforce fiery Vernon, in
+the tropical latitudes; and overset Spanish America, beginning
+with that important Town!
+
+Commodore Anson, he also, after long fatal delays, is off, several
+weeks ago; [29th (18th) September, 1740.] round Cape Horn; hoping
+(or perhaps already not hoping) to co-operate from the Other
+Ocean, and be simultaneous with Vernon,--on these loose principles
+of keeping time! Commodore Anson does, in effect, make a Voyage
+which is beautiful, and to mankind memorable; but as to keeping
+tryst with Vernon, the very gods could not do it on those terms!
+
+
+
+Chapter IX.
+
+RESOLUTION FORMED AT REINSBERG IN CONSEQUENCE.
+
+Thursday, 27th October, two days after the Expresses went for
+them, Schwerin and Podewils punctually arrived at Reinsberg.
+They were carried into the interior privacies, "to long
+conferences with his Majesty that day, and for the next four days;
+Majesty and they even dining privately together;" grave business
+of state, none guesses how grave, evidently going on.
+The resolution Friedrich laid before them, fruit of these two days
+since the news from Vienna, was probably the most important ever
+formed in Prussia, or in Europe during that Century: Resolution to
+make good our Rights on Silesia, by this great opportunity, the
+best that will ever offer. Resolution which had sprung, I find,
+and got to sudden fixity in the head of the young King himself;
+and which met with little save opposition from all the other sons
+of Adam, at the first blush and for long afterwards. And, indeed,
+the making of it good (of it, and of the immense results that hung
+by it) was the main business of this young King's Life henceforth;
+and cost him Labors like those of Hercules, and was in the highest
+degree momentous to existing and not yet existing millions of
+mankind,--to the readers of this History especially.
+
+It is almost touching to reflect how unexpectedly, like a bolt out
+of the blue, all this had come upon Friedrich; and how it overset
+his fine program for the winter at Reinsberg, and for his Life
+generally. Not the Peaceable magnanimities, but the Warlike, are
+the thing appointed Friedrich this winter, and mainly henceforth.
+Those "GOLDEN or soft radiances" which we saw in him, admirable to
+Voltaire and to Friedrich, and to an esurient philanthropic
+world,--it is not those, it is "the STEEL-BRIGHT or stellar kind,"
+that are to become predominant in Friedrich's existence:
+grim hail-storms, thunders and tornado for an existence to him,
+instead of the opulent genialities and halcyon weather,
+anticipated by himself and others! Indisputably enough to us, if
+not yet to Friedrich, "Reinsberg and Life to the Muses" are done.
+On a sudden, from the opposite side of the horizon, see,
+miraculous Opportunity, rushing hitherward,--swift, terrible,
+clothed with lightning like a courser of the gods: dare you clutch
+HIM by the thundermane, and fling yourself upon him, and make for
+the Empyrean by that course rather? Be immediate about it, then;
+the time is now, or else never!--No fair judge can blame the young
+man that he laid hold of the flaming Opportunity in this manner,
+and obeyed the new omen. To seize such an opportunity, and
+perilously mount upon it, was the part of a young magnanimous
+King, less sensible to the perils, and more to the other
+considerations, than one older would have been.
+
+Schwerin and Podewils were, no doubt, astonished to learn what the
+Royal purpose was; and could not want for commonplace objections
+many and strong, had this been the scene for dwelling on them, or
+dressing them out at eloquent length. But they knew well this was
+not the scene for doing more than, with eloquent modesty, hint
+them; that the Resolution, being already taken, would not alter
+for commonplace; and that the question now lying for honorable
+members was, How to execute it? It is on this, as I collect, that
+Schwerin and Podewils in the King's company did, with extreme
+intensity, consult during those four days; and were, most
+probably, of considerable use to the King, though some of their
+modifications adopted by him turned out, not as they had
+predicted, but as he. On all the Military details and outlines,
+and on all the Diplomacies of this business, here are two Oracles
+extremely worth consulting by the young King.
+
+To seize Silesia is easy: a Country open on all but the south
+side; open especially on our side, where a battalion of foot might
+force it; the three or four fortresses, of which only two, Glogau
+and Neisse, can be reckoned strong, are provided with nothing as
+they ought to be; not above 3,000 fighting men in the whole
+Province, and these little expecting fight. Silesia can be seized:
+but the maintaining of it?--We must try to maintain it,
+thinks Friedrich.
+
+At Reinsberg it is not yet known that Kur-Baiern has protested;
+but it is well guessed he means to do so, and that France is at
+his back in some sort. Kur-Baiern, probably Kur-Sachsen, and
+plenty more, France being secretly at their back. What low
+condition Austria stands in, all its ready resources run to the
+lees, is known; and that France, getting lively at present with
+its Belleisles and adventurous spirits not restrainable by Fleury,
+is always on the watch to bring Austria lower; capable, in spite
+of Pragmatic Sanction, to snatch the golden moment, and spring
+hunter-like on a moribund Austria, were the hunting-dogs once out
+and in cry. To Friedrich it seems unlikely the Pragmatic Sanction
+will be a Law of Nature to mankind, in these circumstances.
+His opinion is, "the old political system has expired with the
+Kaiser." Here is Europe, burning in one corner of it by Jenkins's
+Ear, and such a smoulder of combustible material awakening nearer
+hand: will not Europe, probably, blaze into general War;
+Pragmatic Sanction going to waste sheepskin, and universal
+scramble ensuing? In which he who has 100,000 good soldiers, and
+can handle them, may be an important figure in urging claims, and
+keeping what he has got hold of!--
+
+Friedrich's mind, as to the fact, is fixed: seize Silesia we will:
+but as to the manner of doing it, Schwerin and Podewils modify
+him. Their counsel is: "Do not step out in hostile attitude at the
+very first, saying, 'These Duchies, Liegnitz, Brieg, Wohlau,
+Jagerndorf, are mine, and I will fight for them;' say only,
+'Having, as is well known, interests of various kinds in this
+Silesia, I venture to take charge of it in the perilous times now
+come, and will keep it safe for the real owner.' Silesia seized in
+this fashion," continue they, "negotiate with the Queen of
+Hungary; offer her help, large help in men and money, against her
+other enemies; perhaps she will consent to do us right?"--
+"She never will consent," is Friedrich's opinion. "But it is worth
+trying?" urge the Ministers.--"Well," answers Friedrich, "be it in
+that form; that is the soft-spoken cautious form: any form will
+do, if the fact be there." That is understood to have been the
+figure of the deliberation in this conclave at Reinsberg, during
+the four days. [Stenzel (from what sources he does not clearly
+say, no doubt from sources of some authenticity) gives this as
+summary of it, iv. 61-65.] And now it remains only to fix the
+Military details, to be ready in a minimum of time; and to keep
+our preparations and intentions in impenetrable darkness from all
+men, in the interim. Adieu, Messieurs.
+
+And so, on the 1st of November, fifth morning since they came,
+Schwerin and Podewils, a world of new business silently ahead of
+them, return to Berlin, intent to begin the same. All the Kings
+will have to take their resolution on this matter; wisely, or else
+unwisely. King Friedrich's, let it prove the wisest or not, is
+notably the rapidest,--complete, and fairly entering upon action,
+on November 1st. At London the news of the Kaiser's death had
+arrived the day before; Britannic Majesty and Ministry, thrown
+much into the dumps by it, much into the vague, are nothing like
+so prompt with their resolution on it. Somewhat sorrowfully in the
+vague. In fact, they will go jumbling hither and thither for about
+three years to come, before making up their minds to a resolution:
+so intricate is the affair to the English Nation and them!
+Intricate indeed; and even imaginary,--definable mainly as a
+bottomless abyss of nightmare dreams to the English Nation and
+them! Productive of strong somnambulisms, as my friend has it!--
+
+
+MYSTERY IN BERLIN, FOR SEVEN WEEKS, WHILE THE PREPARATIONS GO
+ON; VOLTAIRE VISITS FRIEDRICH TO DECIPHER IT, BUT CANNOT.
+
+Podewils and Schwerin gone, King Friedrich, though still very busy
+in working-hours, returns to his society and its gayeties and
+brilliancies; apparently with increased appetite after these four
+days of abstinence. Still busy in his working-hours, as a King
+must be; couriers coming and going, hundreds of businesses
+despatched each day; and in the evening what a relish for
+society,--Praetorius is quite astonished at it. Music, dancing,
+play-acting, suppers of the gods, "not done till four in the
+morning sometimes," these are the accounts Praetorius hears at
+Berlin. "From all persons who return from Reinsberg," writes he,
+"the unanimous report is, That the King works, the whole day
+through, with an assiduity that is unique; and then, in the
+evening, gives himself to the pleasures of society, with a
+vivacity of mirth and sprightly humor which makes those Evening-
+Parties charming." [Excerpt, in Preuss, <italic> Thronbesteigung,
+<end italic> p. 418.] So it had to last, with frequent short
+journeys on Friedrich's part, and at last with change to Berlin as
+head-quarters, for about seven weeks to come,--till the beginning
+of December, and the day of action, namely. A notable little
+Interim in Friedrich's History and that of Europe.
+
+Friedrich's secret, till almost the very end, remained
+impenetrable; though, by degrees, his movements excited much
+guessing in the Gazetteer and Diplomatic world everywhere.
+Military matters do seem to be getting brisk in Prussia; arsenals
+much astir; troops are seen mustering, marching, plainly to a
+singular degree. Marching towards the Austrian side, towards
+Silesia, some note. Yes; but also towards Cleve, certain
+detachments of troops are marching,--do not men see? And the
+Intrenchment at Buderich in those parts, that is getting forward
+withal,--though privately there is not the least prospect of using
+it, in these altered circumstances. Friedrich already guesses that
+if he could get Silesia, so invaluable on the one skirt of him, he
+mill probably have to give up his Berg-Julich claims on the other;
+I fancy he is getting ready to do so, should the time come for
+such alternative. But he labors at Buderich, all the same, and
+"improves the roads in that quarter,"--which at least may help to
+keep an inquisitive public at bay. These are seven busy weeks on
+Friedrich's part, and on the world's: constant realities of
+preparation, on the one part, industriously veiled; on the other
+part, such shadows, guessings, spyings, spectral movements above
+ground and below; Diplomatic shadows fencing, Gazetteer shadows
+rumoring;--dreams of a world as if near awakening to something
+great! "All Officers on furlough have been ordered to their
+posts," writes Bielfeld, on those vague terms of his: "On arriving
+at Berlin, you notice a great agitation in all departments of the
+State. The regiments are ordered to prepare their equipages, and
+to hold themselves in readiness for marching. There are magazines
+being formed at Frankfurt-on-Oder and at Crossen,"--handy for
+Silesia, you would say? "There are considerable trains of
+Artillery getting ready, and the King has frequent conferences
+with his Generals." [Bielfeld, i. 165 (Berlin, 30th November, is
+the date he puts to it).] The authentic fact is: "By the middle of
+November, Troops, to the extent of 30,000 and more, had got orders
+to be ready for marching in three weeks hence; their public
+motions very visible ever since, their actual purpose a mystery to
+all mortals except three.
+
+Towards the end of November, it becomes the prevailing guess that
+the business is immediate, not prospective; that Silesia may be in
+the wind, not Julich and Berg. Which infinitely quickens the
+shadowy rumorings and Diplomatic fencings of mankind. The French
+have their special Ambassador here; a Marquis de Beauvau,
+observant military gentleman, who came with the Accession
+Compliment some time ago, and keeps his eyes well open, but cannot
+see through mill-stones. Fleury is intensely desirous to know
+Friedrich's secret; but would fain keep his own (if he yet have
+one), and is himself quite tacit and reserved. To Fleury's Marquis
+de Beauvau Friedrich is very gracious; but in regard to secrets,
+is for a reciprocal procedure. Could not Voltaire go and try?
+It is thought Fleury had let fall some hint to that effect,
+carried by a bird of the air. Sure enough Voltaire does go;
+is actually on visit to his royal Friend; "six days with him at
+Reinsberg;" perhaps near a fortnight in all (20 November-
+2 December or so), hanging about those Berlin regions, on the
+survey. Here is an unexpected pleasure to the parties;--but in
+regard to penetrating of secrets, an unproductive one!
+
+Voltaire's ostensible errand was, To report progress about the
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL, the Van Duren nonsense; and, at any rate, to
+settle the Money-accounts on these and other scores; and to
+discourse Philosophies, for a day or two, with the First of Men.
+The real errand, it is pretty clear, was as above. Voltaire has
+always a wistful eye towards political employment, and would fain
+make himself useful in high quarters. Fleury and he have their
+touches of direct Correspondence now and then; and obliquely there
+are always intermediates and channels. Small hint, the slightest
+twinkle of Fleury's eyelashes, would be duly speeded to Voltaire,
+and set him going. We shall see him expressly missioned hither,
+on similar errand, by and by; though with as bad success as
+at present.
+
+Of this his First Visit to Berlin, his Second to Friedrich,
+Voltaire in the VIE PRIVEE says nothing. But in his SIECLE DE
+LOUIS XV. he drops, with proud modesty, a little foot-note upon
+it: "The Author was with the King of Prussia at that time; and can
+affirm that Cardinal de Fleury was totally astray in regard to the
+Prince he had now to do with." To which a DATE slightly wrong is
+added; the rest being perfectly correct. [<italic> OEuvres <end
+italic> (Siecle de Louis XV., c. 6), xxviii. 74.] No other details
+are to be got anywhere, if they were of importance; the very dates
+of it in the best Prussian Books are all slightly awry. Here, by
+accident, are two poor flint-sparks caught from the dust
+whirlwind, which yield a certain sufficing twilight, when put in
+their place; and show us both sides of the matter, the smooth side
+and the seamy:--
+
+1. FRIEDRICH TO ALGAROTTI, AT BERLIN. From "Reinsberg,
+21st Nov.," showing the smooth side.
+
+"MY DEAR SWAN OF PADUA,--Voltaire has arrived; all sparkling with
+new beauties, and far more sociable than at Cleve. He is in very
+good humor; and makes less complaining about his ailments than
+usual. Nothing can be more frivolous than our occupations here:"
+mere verse-making, dancing, philosophizing, then card-playing,
+dining, flirting; merry as birds on the bough (and Silesia
+invisible, except to oneself and two others). [<italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> xviii. 25.]
+
+2. FRIEDRICH TO JORDAN, AT BERLIN.
+"RUPPIN, 28th November.
+"... Thy Miser [Voltaire, now gone to Berlin, of whom Jordan is to
+send news, as of all things else], thy Miser shall drink to the
+lees of his insatiable desire (SIC) to enrich himself: he shall
+have the 3,000 thalers (450 pounds). He was with me six days:
+that will be at the rate of 500 thalers (75 pounds) a day. That is
+paying dear for one's merry-andrew (C'EST BIEN PAYER UN FOU);
+never had court-fool such wages before." [Ib. xvii. 72.
+Particulars of the money-payment (travelling expenses chiefly,
+rather exorbitant, and THIS journey added to the list; and no
+whisper of the considerable Van-Duren moneys, and copyright of
+ANTI-MACHIAVEL, in abatement) are in Rodenbeck, i. 27. Exact sum
+paid is 3,300 thalers; 2,000 a good while ago, 1,300 at this time,
+which settles the greedy bill.]
+
+Which latter, also at first hand, shows us the seamy side.
+And here, finally, with date happily appended, is a poetic snatch,
+in Voltaire's exquisite style, which with the response gives us
+the medium view:--
+
+VOLTAIRE'S ADIEU (<italic> "Billet de Conge, <end italic>
+2 December, 1740").
+
+"Non, malgre vos vertus, non, malgre vos appas,
+ Mon ame n'est point satisfaite;
+ Non, vous n'etes qu'une coquette,
+Qui subjuguez les coeurs, et ne rous donnez pas."
+
+FRIEDRICH'S RESPONSE.
+
+"Mon ame sent le prix de vos divins appas;
+Mais ne presumez point qu'elle soit satisfaite.
+Traitre, vous me quittez pour suivre une coquette;
+ Moi je ne vous quitterais pas."
+[<italic> OEuvres de Frederic <end italic> (xiv. 167);
+<italic> OEuvres de Voltaire; <end italic> &c. &c.]
+
+--Meaning, perhaps, in brief English: V. "Ah, you are but a
+beautiful coquette; you charm away our hearts, and do not give
+your own [won't tell me your secret at all]!" F. "Treacherous
+Lothario, it is you that quit me for a coquette [your divine
+Emilie; and won't stay here, and be of my Academy];
+but however--!" Friedrich looked hopingly on the French, but could
+not give his secret except by degrees and with reciprocity.
+Some days hence he said to Marquis de Beauvau, in the Audience of
+leave, a word which was remembered.
+
+
+VIEW OF FRIEDRICH BEHIND THE VEIL.
+
+As to Friedrich himself, since about the middle of November his
+plans seem to have been definitely shaped out in all points;
+Troops so many, when to be on march, and how; no important detail
+uncertain since then. November 17th, he jots down a little Note,
+which is to go to Vienna, were the due hour come, by a special
+Ambassador, one Count Gotter, acquainted with the ground there;
+and explain to her Hungarian Majesty, what his exact demands are,
+and what the exact services he will render. Of which important
+little Paper readers shall hear again. Gotter's demands are at
+first to be high: Our Four Duchies, due by law so long; these and
+even more, considering the important services we propose; this is
+to be his first word;--but, it appears, he is privately prepared
+to put up with Two Duchies, if he can have them peaceably:
+Duchies of Sagan and Glogau, which are not of the Four at all, but
+which lie nearest us, and are far below the value of the Four, to
+Austria especially. This intricate point Friedrich has already
+settled in his mind. And indeed it is notably the habit of this
+young King to settle matters with himself in good time: and in
+regard to all manner of points, he will be found, on the day of
+bargaining about them, to have his own resolution formed and
+definitely fixed;--much to his advantage over conflicting parties,
+who have theirs still flying loose.
+
+Another thing of much concernment is, To secure himself from
+danger of Russian interference. To this end he despatches Major
+Winterfeld to Russia, a man well known to him;--day of
+Winterfeld's departure is not given; day of his arrival in
+Petersburg is "19th December" just coming. Russia, at present, is
+rather in a staggering condition; hopeful for Winterfeld's object.
+On the 28th of October last, only eight days after the Kaiser,
+Czarina Anne of Russia, she with the big cheek, once of Courland,
+had died; "audacious Death," as our poor friend had it, "venturing
+upon another Crowned Head" there. Bieren her dear Courlander, once
+little better than a Horse-groom, now Duke of Courland, Quasi-
+Husband to the late Big Cheek, and thereby sovereign of Russia,
+this long while past, is left Official Head in Russia. Poor little
+Anton Ulrich and his august Spouse, well enough known to us, have
+indeed produced a Czar Iwan, some months ago, to the joy of
+mankind: but Czar Iwan is in his cradle: Father and Mother's
+function is little other than to rock the cradle of Iwan;
+Bieren to be Regent and Autocrat over him and them in the interim.
+To their chagrin, to that of Feldmarschall Munnich and many
+others: the upshot of which will be visible before long.
+Czarina Anne's death had seemed to Friedrich the opportune removal
+of a dangerous neighbor, known to be in the pay of Austria:
+here now are new mutually hostile parties springing up; chance,
+surely, of a bargain with some of them? He despatches Winterfeld
+on this errand;--probably the fittest man in Prussia for it.
+How soon and perfectly Winterfeld succeeded, and what Winterfeld
+was, and something of what a Russia he found it, we propose to
+mention by and by.
+
+These, and all points of importance, Friedrich has settled with
+himself some time ago. What his own private thoughts on the
+Silesian Adventure are, readers will wish to know, since they can
+at first hand. Hear Friedrich himself, whose veracity is
+unquestionable to such as know anything of him:--
+
+"This Silesian Project fulfilled all his (the King's) political
+views,"--summed them all well up into one head. "It was a means of
+acquiriug reputation; of increasing the power of the State; and of
+terminating what concerned that long-litigated question of the
+Berg-Julich Succession;"--can be sure of getting that, at lowest;
+intends to give that up, if necessary.
+
+"Meanwhile, before entirely determining, the King weighed the
+risks there were in undertaking such a War, and the advantages
+that were to be hoped from it. On one side, presented itself the
+potent House of Austria, not likely to want resources with so many
+vast Provinces under it; an Emperor's Daughter attacked, who would
+naturally find allies in the King of England, in the Dutch
+Republic, and so many Princes of the Empire who had signed the
+Pragmatic Sanction." Russia was--or had been, and might again be--
+in the pay of Vienna. Saxony might have some clippings from
+Bohemia thrown to it, and so be gained over. Scanty Harvest, 1740,
+threatened difficulties as to provisioning of troops. "The risks
+were great. One had to apprehend the vicissitudes of war. A single
+battle lost might be decisive. The King had no allies; and his
+troops, hitherto without experience, would have to front old
+Austrian soldiers, grown gray in harness, and trained to war by so
+many campaigns.
+
+"On the other side were hopeful considerations,"--four in number:
+FIRST, Weak condition of the Austrian Court, Treasury empty, War-
+Apparatus broken in pieces; inexperienced young Princess to defend
+a disputed succession, on those terms. SECOND, There WILL be
+allies; France and England always in rivalry, both meddling in
+these matters, King is sure to get either the one or the other.--
+THIRD, Silesian War lies handy to us, and is the only kind of
+Offensive War that does; Country bordering on our frontier, and
+with the Oder running through it as a sure high-road for
+everything. FOURTH, "What suddenly turned the balance," or at
+least what kept it steady in that posture,--"news of the Czarina's
+death arrives:" Russia has ceased to count against us; and become
+a manageable quantity. On, therefore!--
+
+"Add to these reasons," says the King, with a candor which has not
+been well treated in the History Books, "Add to these reasons, an
+Army ready for acting; Funds, Supplies all found [lying barrelled
+in the Schloss at Berlin];--and perhaps the desire of making
+oneself a name," from which few of mortals able to achieve it are
+exempt in their young time: "all this was cause of the War which
+the King now entered upon." [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic <end
+italic> (Histoire de mon Temps), i. 128.]
+
+"Desire to make himself a name; how shocking!" exclaim several
+Historians. "Candor of confession that he may have had some such
+desire; how honest!" is what they do not exclaim. As to the
+justice of his Silesian Claims, or even to his own belief about
+their justice, Friedrich affords not the least light which can be
+new to readers here. He speaks, when business requires it, of
+"those known rights" of his, and with the air of a man who expects
+to be believed on his word; but it is cursorily, and in the
+business way only; and there is not here or elsewhere the least
+pleading:--a man, you would say, considerably indifferent to our
+belief on that head; his eyes set on the practical merely.
+"Just Rights? What are rights, never so just, which you cannot
+make valid? The world is full of such. If you have rights and can
+assert them into facts, do it; that is worth doing!"--
+
+We must add two Notes, two small absinthine drops, bitter but
+wholesome, administered by him to the Old Dessauer, whose gloomy
+wonder over all this military whirl of Prussian things, and
+discontent that he, lately the head authority, has never once been
+spoken to on it, have been great. Guessing, at last, that it was
+meant for Austria, a Power rather dear to Leopold, he can suppress
+himself no longer; but breaks out into Cassandra prophesyings,
+which have piqued the young King, and provoke this return:--
+
+1. "REINSBERG, 24th November, 1740.--I have received your Letter,
+and seen with what inquietude you view the approaching march of my
+Troops. I hope you will set your mind at ease on that score;
+and wait with patience what I intend with them and you. I have
+made all my dispositions; and Your Serenity will learn, time
+enough, what my orders are, without disquieting yourself about
+them, as nothing has been forgotten or delayed."--FRIEDRICH.
+
+Old Dessauer, cut to the bone, perceives he will have to quit that
+method and never resume it; writes next how painful it is to an
+old General to see himself neglected, as if good for nothing,
+while his scholars are allowed to gather laurels. Friedrich's
+answer is of soothing character:--
+
+2. "BERLIN, 2d DECEMBER, 1740.--You may be assured I honor your
+merits and capacity as a young Officer ought to honor an old one,
+who has given the world so many proofs of his talent (DEXTERITAT);
+nor will I neglect Your Serenity on any occasion when you can help
+me by your good Counsel and co-operation." But it is a mere
+"bagatelle" this that I am now upon; though, next year, it may
+become serious.
+
+For the rest, Saxony being a neighbor whose intentions one does
+not know, I have privately purposed Your Serenity should keep an
+outlook that way, in my absence. Plenty of employment coming for
+Your Serenity. "But as to this present Expedition, I reserve it
+for myself alone; that the world may not think the King of Prussia
+marches with a Tutor to the Field."--FRIEDRICH. [Orlich, <italic>
+Geschichte der Schlesischen Kriege <end italic> (Berlin, 1841),
+i. 38, 39.]
+
+And therewith Leopold, eagerly complying, has to rest satisfied;
+and beware of too much freedom with this young King again.
+
+"Berlin, December 2d," is the date of that last Note to the
+Dessauer; date also of Voltaire's ADIEU with the RESPONSE;--
+on which same day, "Friday, December 2d," as I find from the Old
+Books, his Majesty, quitting the Reinsberg sojourn, "had arrived
+in Berlin about 2 P.M.; accompanied by Prince August Wilhelm
+[betrothed at Brunswick lately]; such a crowd on the streets as if
+they had never seen him before." He continued at Berlin or in the
+neighborhood thenceforth. Busy days these; and Berlin a much
+whispering City, as Regiment after Regiment marches away.
+King soon to follow, as is thought,--"who himself sometimes deigns
+to take the Regiments into highest own eyeshine, HOCHST-EIGENEN
+AUGENSCHEIN" (that is, to review them), say the reverential
+Editors. December 6th--But let us follow the strict sequence of
+Phenomena at Berlin.
+
+
+EXCELLENCY BOTTA HAS AUDIENCE; THEN EXCELLENCY DICKENS,
+AND OTHERS: DECEMBER 6th, THE MYSTERY IS OUT.
+
+Of course her Hungarian Majesty, and her Bartensteins and
+Ministries, heard enough of those Prussian rumors, interior
+Military activities, and enigmatic movements; but they seem
+strangely supine on the matter; indeed, they seem strangely
+supine on such matters; and lean at ease upon the Sea-Powers, upon
+Pragmatic Sanction and other Laws of Nature. But at length even
+they become painfully interested as to Friedrich's intentions;
+and despatch an Envoy to sift him a little: an expert Marchese di
+Botta, Genoese by birth, skilful in the Russian and other
+intricacies; who was here at Berlin lately, doing the Accession
+Compliment (rather ill received at that time), and is fit for the
+job. Perhaps Botta will penetrate him? That is becoming desirable,
+in spite of the gay Private Theatricals at Reinsberg, and the
+Berlin Carnival Balls he is so occupied with.
+
+England is not less interested, and the diligent Sir Guy is doing
+his best; but can make out nothing satisfactory;--much the reverse
+indeed; and falls into angry black anticipations. "Nobody here,
+great or small," says his Excellency, "dares make any
+representation to this young Prince against the measures he is
+pursuing; though all are sensible of the confusion which must
+follow. A Prince who had the least regard to honor, truth and
+justice, could not act the part he is goingto do." Alas, no,
+Excellency Dickens! "But it is plain his only view was, to deceive
+us all, and conceal for a while his ambitious and mischievous
+designs." [Despatch, 29th November-3d December, 1740: Raumer,
+p. 58.] "Never was such dissimulation!" exclaims the Diplomatic
+world everywhere, being angered at it, as if it were a vice on the
+part of a King about to invade Silesia. Dissimulation, if that
+mean mendacity, is not the name of the thing; it is the art of
+wearing a polite cloak of darkness, and the King is little
+disturbed what name they call it.
+
+Botta did not get to Berlin till December lst, had no Audience
+till the 5th;--by which time it is becoming evident to Excellency
+Dickens, and to everybody, that Silesia is the thing meant.
+Botta hints as much in that first Audience, December 5th:
+"Terrible roads, those Silesian ones, your Majesy!" says Botta, as
+if historically merely, but with a glance of the eye. "Hm,"
+answers his Majesty in the same tone, "the worst that comes of
+them is a little mud!"--Next day, Dickens had express Audience,
+"Berlin, Tuesday 6th:" a smartish, somewhat flurried Colloquy with
+the King; which, well abridged, may stand as follows:--
+
+DICKENS. ... "Indivisibility of the Austrian Monarchy, Sire!"--
+KING. "Indivisibility? What do you mean?"--DICKENS. "The
+maintenance of the Pragmatic Sanction."--KING. "Do you intend to
+support it? I hope not; for such is not my intention." (There is
+for you!) ...
+
+DICKENS. "England and Holland will much wonder at the measures
+your Majesty was taking, at the moment when your Majesty proposed
+to join with them, and were making friendly proposals!" (Has been
+a deceitful man, Sir Guy, at least an impenetrable;--but this
+latter is rather strong on your part!) "What shall I write to
+England?" ("When I mentioned this," says Dickens, "the King grew
+red in the face," eyes considerably flashing, I should think.)
+
+KING. "You can have no instructions to ask that question! And if
+you had, I have an answer ready for you. England has no right to
+inquire into my designs. Your great Sea-Armaments, did I ask you
+any questions about them? No; I was and am silent on that head;
+only wishing you good luck, and that you may not get beaten by the
+Spaniards." (Dickens hastily draws in his rash horns again;
+after a pass or two, King's natural color returns.) ...
+
+KING. "Austria as a Power is necessary against the Turks. But in
+Germany, what need of Austria being so superlative? Why should
+not, say, Three Electors united be able to oppose her? ...
+Monsieur, I find it is your notion in England, as well as theirs
+in France, to bring other Sovereigns under your tutorage, and lead
+them about. Understand that I will not be led by either. ... Tush,
+YOU are like the Athenians, who, when Philip of Macedon was ready
+to invade them, spent their time in haranguing!"
+
+DICKENS. ... "Berg and Julich, if we were to guarantee them?"--
+KING. "Hm. Don't so much mind that Rhine Country: difficulties
+there,--Dutch always jealous of one. But, on the other Frontier,
+neither England nor Holland could take umbrage,"--points clearly
+to Silesia, then, your Excellency Dickens? [Raumer, (from State-
+Paper Office), pp. 63, 64.]
+
+Alas, yes! Troops and military equipments are, for days past,
+evidently wending towards Frankfurt, towards Crossen, and even the
+Newspapers now hint that something is on hand in that quarter.
+Nay, this same day, TUESDAY, 6th DECEMBER, there has come out
+brief Official Announcement, to all the Foreign Ministers at
+Berlin, Excellency Dickens among them, "That his Royal Majesty,
+our most all-gracious Herr, has taken the resolution to advance a
+Body of Troops into Schlesien,"--rather out of friendly views
+towards Austria (much business lying between us about Schlesien),
+not out of hostile views by any means, as all Excellencies shall
+assure their respective Courts. [Copy of the Paper in <italic>
+Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> i. 447.] Announcement which had
+thrown the Excellency Dickens into such a frame of mind, before he
+got his Audience to-day!--
+
+SATURDAY following, which was December l0th, Marquis de Beauvau
+had his Audience of leave; intending for Paris shortly:
+Audience very gracious; covertly hinting, on both sides, more than
+it said; ending in these words, on the King's side, which have
+become famous: "Adieu, then, M. le Marquis. I believe I am going
+to play your game; if the aces fall to me, we will share (<italic>
+Je vais, je crois, jouer votre jeu: si les as me viennent, nous
+partagerons)!" [Voltaire, <italic> OEuvres <end italic> (Siecle de
+Louis XV., c. 6), xxviii. 74.]
+
+To Botta, all this while, Friedrich strove to be specially civil;
+took him out to Charlottenburg, that same Saturday, with the Queen
+and other guests; but Botta, and all the world, being now certain
+about Silesia, and that no amount of mud, or other terror on the
+roads, would be regarded, Botta's thoughts in this evening party
+are not of cheerful nature. Next day, Sunday, December 11th, he
+too gets his Audience of leave; and cannot help bursting out, when
+the King plainly tells him what is now afoot, and that the
+Prussian Ambassador has got instructions what to offer upon it at
+Vienna. "Sire, you are going to ruin the House of Austria," cried
+Botta, "and to plunge yourself into destruction (VOUS ABIMER) at
+the same time!"--"Depends on the Queen," said Friedrich, "to
+accept the Offers I have made her." Botta sank silent, seemed to
+reflect, but gathering himself again, added with an ironical air
+and tone of voice, "They are fine Troops, those of yours, Sire.
+Ours have not the same splendor of appearance; but they have
+looked the wolf in the face. Think, I conjure you, what you are
+getting into!" Friedrich answered with vivacity, a little nettled
+at the ironical tone of Botta, and his mixed sympathy and menace:
+"You find my troops are beautiful; perhaps I shall convince you
+they are good too." Yes, Excellency Botta, goodish troops;
+and very capable "to look the wolf in the face,"--or perhaps in
+the tail too, before all end! "Botta urged and entreated that at
+least there should be some delay in executing this project.
+But the King gave him to understand that it was now too late, and
+that the Rubicon was passed." [Friedrich's own Account (<italic>
+OEuvres, <end italic> ii. 57).]
+
+The secret is now out, therefore; Invasion of Silesia certain and
+close at hand. "A day or two before marching," may have been this
+very day when Botta got his audience, the King assembled his Chief
+Generals, all things ready out in the Frankfurt-Crossen region
+yonder; and spoke to them as follows; briefly and to the point:--
+
+"Gentlemen, I am undertaking a War, in which I have no allies but
+your valor and your good-will. My cause is just; my resources are
+what we ourselves can do; and the issue lies in Fortune.
+Remember continually the glory which your Ancestors acquired in
+the plains of Warsaw, at Fehrbellin, and in the Expedition to
+Preussen [across the Frische Haf on ice, that time]. Your lot is
+in your own hands: distinctions and rewards wait upon your fine
+actions which shall merit them.
+
+"But what need have I to excite you to glory? It is the one thing
+you keep before your eyes; the sole object worthy of your labors.
+We are going to front troops who, under Prince Eugene, had the
+highest reputation. Though Prince Eugene is gone, we shall have to
+measure our strength against brave soldiers: the greater will be
+the honor if we can conquer. Adieu, go forth. I will follow you
+straightway to the rendezvous of glory which awaits us."
+[<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> ii.58.]
+
+
+MASKED BALL, AT BERLIN, 12th-13th DECEMBER.
+
+On the evening of Monday, 12th, there was, as usual, Masked (or
+Half-Masked) Ball, at the Palace. As usual; but this time it has
+become mentionable in World-History. Bielfeld, personally
+interested, gives us a vivid glance into it;--which, though
+pretending to be real and contemporaneous, is unfortunately
+MYTHICAL only, and done at a great interval of years (dates, and
+even slight circumstances of fact, refusing to conform);--which,
+however, for the truth there is in it, we will give, as better
+than nothing. Bielfeld's pretended date is, "Berlin, 15th
+December;" should have been 14th,--wrong by a day, after one's
+best effort!
+
+"BERLIN, 15th DECEMBER, 1740. As for me, dear Sister, I am like a
+shuttlecock whom the Kings of Prussia and of England hit with
+their rackets, and knock to and fro. The night before last, I was
+at the Palace Evening Party (ASSEMBLEE); which is a sort of Ball,
+where you go in domino, but without mask on the face. The Queen
+was there, and all the Court. About eight o'clock the King also
+made his appearance. His Majesty, noticing M. de G---[that is DE
+GUIDIKEN, or Guy Dickens], English Minister, addressed him;
+led him into the embrasure of a window, and talked alone with him
+for more than an hour [uncertain, probably apocryphal this].
+I threw, from time to time, a stolen glance at this dialogue,
+which appeared to me to be very lively. A moment after, being just
+dancing with Madame the Countess de--THREE ASTERISKS,--I felt
+myself twitched by the domino; and turning, was much surprised to
+see that it was the King; who took me aside, and said, 'Are your
+boots oiled (VOS BOTTES SONT-ELLES GRAISSIES, Are you ready for a
+journey)? ' I replied, 'Sire, they will always be so for your
+Majesty's service.'--'Well, then, Truchsess and you are for
+England; the day after to-morrow you go. Speak to M. de
+Podewils!'--This was said like a flash of lightning. His Majesty
+passed into another apartment; and I, I went to finish my minuet
+with the Lady; who had been not less astonished to see me
+disappear from her eyes, in the middle of the dance, than I was at
+what the King said to me." [Bielfeld, i. 167, 168.]
+Next morning, I--
+
+The fact is, next morning, Truchsess and I began preparation for
+the Court of London,--and we did there, for many months
+afterwards, strive our best to keep the Britannic Majesty in some
+kind of tune, amid the prevailing discord of events;--fact
+interesting to some. And the other fact, interesting to everybody,
+though Bielfeld has not mentioned it, is, That King Friedrich, the
+same next morning, punctually "at the stroke of 9," rolled away
+Frankfurt-ward,--into the First Silesian War! Tuesday, "13th
+December, this morning, the King, privately quitting the Ball, has
+gone [after some little snatch of sleep, we will hope] for
+Frankfurt, to put himself at the head of his Troops." [Dickens (in
+State-Paper Office), 13th December, 1740; see also <italic>
+Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> i. 452; &c. &c.] Bellona his
+companion for long years henceforth, instead of Minerva and the
+Muses, as he had been anticipating.
+
+Hereby is like to be fulfilled (except that Friedrich himself is
+perhaps this "little stone") what Friedrich prophesied to his
+Voltaire, the day after hearing of the Kaiser's death: "I believe
+there will, by June next, be more talk of cannon, soldiers,
+trenches, than of actresses, and dancers for the ballet.
+This small Event changes the entire system of Europe. It is the
+little stone which Nebuchadnezzar saw, in his dream, loosening
+itself, and rolling down on the Image made of Four Metals, which
+it shivers to ruin." [Friedrich to Voltaire, busy gathering actors
+at that time, 26th October, 1740 (<italic> OEuvres de Frederic,
+<end italic> xxii. 49).]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Etext History of Friedrich II of Prussia V 11
+
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