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+The Project Gutenberg Etext Life and Adventures of Baron Trenck
+Volume 2
+#2 in our series by Baron Trenck
+
+
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+Title: The Life and Adventures of Baron Trenck - Volume 2
+
+Author: Baron Trenck
+
+Translator: Thomas Holcroft
+
+June, 2001 [Etext #2669]
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext Life and Adventures of Baron Trenck
+*****This file should be named 2labt10.txt or 2labt10.zip******
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+from the 1892 Cassell & Co. edition. Proofing was by Bridie, Rab
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+This etext was scanned by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+from the 1892 Cassell & Co. edition. Proofing was by Bridie, Rab
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+
+
+LIFE AND ADVENTURE OF BARON TRENCK - VOLUME 2
+
+
+
+
+TRANSLATED BY THOMAS HOLCROFT
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+
+
+Thomas Holcroft, the translator of these Memoirs of Baron Trenck,
+was the author of about thirty plays, among which one, The Road to
+Ruin, produced in 1792, has kept its place upon the stage. He was
+born in December, 1745, the son of a shoemaker who did also a little
+business in horse-dealing. After early struggles, during which he
+contrived to learn French, German, and Italian, Holcroft contributed
+to a newspaper, turned actor, and wrote plays, which appeared
+between the years 1791 and 1806. He produced also four novels, the
+first in 1780, the last in 1807. He was three times married, and
+lost his first wife in 1790. In 1794, his sympathy with ideals of
+the French revolutionists caused him to be involved with Hardy,
+Horne Tooke, and Thelwall, in a charge of high treason; but when
+these were acquitted, Holcroft and eight others were discharged
+without trial.
+
+Holcroft earned also by translation. He translated, besides these
+Memoirs of Baron Trenck, Mirabeau's Secret History of the Court of
+Berlin, Les Veillees du Chateau of Madame de Genlis, and the
+posthumous works of Frederick II., King of Prussia, in thirteen
+volumes.
+
+The Memoirs of Baron Trenck were first published at Berlin as his
+Merkwurdige Lebensbeschreibung, in three volumes octavo, in 1786 and
+1787. They were first translated into French by Baron Bock (Metz,
+1787); more fully by Letourneur (Paris, 1788); and again by himself
+(Strasbourg, 1788), with considerable additions. Holcroft
+translated from the French versions.
+
+H.M.
+
+
+
+THE LIFE OF BARON TRENCK.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+
+Blessed shade of a beloved sister! The sacrifice of my adverse and
+dreadful fate! Thee could I never avenge! Thee could the blood of
+Weingarten never appease! No asylum, however sacred, should have
+secured him, had he not sought that last of asylums for human
+wickedness and human woes--the grave! To thee do I dedicate these
+few pages, a tribute of thankfulness; and, if future rewards there
+are, may the brightest of these rewards be thine. For us, and not
+for ours, may rewards be expected from monarchs who, in apathy, have
+beheld our mortal sufferings. Rest, noble soul, murdered though
+thou wert by the enemies of thy brother. Again my blood boils,
+again my tears roll down my cheeks, when I remember thee, thy
+sufferings in my cause, and thy untimely end! I knew it not; I
+sought to thank thee; I found thee in the grave; I would have made
+retribution to thy children, but unjust, iron-hearted princes had
+deprived me of the power. Can the virtuous heart conceive
+affliction more cruel? My own ills I would have endured with
+magnanimity; but thine are wrongs I have neither the power to forget
+nor heal.
+
+Enough of this. -
+
+The worthy Emperor, Francis I., shed tears when I afterwards had the
+honour of relating to him in person my past miseries; I beheld them
+flow, and gratitude threw me at his feet. His emotion was so great
+that he tore himself away. I left the palace with all the
+enthusiasm of soul which such a scene must inspire.
+
+He probably would have done more than pitied me, but his death soon
+followed. I relate this incident to convince posterity that Francis
+I. possessed a heart worthy an emperor, worthy a man. In the
+knowledge I have had of monarchs he stands alone. Frederic and
+Theresa both died without doing me justice; I am now too old, too
+proud, have too much apathy, to expect it from their successors.
+Petition I will not, knowing my rights; and justice from courts of
+law, however evident my claims, were in these courts vain indeed to
+expect. Lawyers and advocates I know but too well, and an army to
+support my rights I have not.
+
+What heart that can feel but will pardon me these digressions! At
+the exact and simple recital of facts like these, the whole man must
+be roused, and the philosopher himself shudder.
+
+Once more:- I heard nothing of what had happened for some days; at
+length, however, it was the honest Gelfhardt's turn to mount guard;
+but the ports being doubled, and two additional grenadiers placed
+before my door, explanation was exceedingly difficult. He, however,
+in spite of precaution, found means to inform me of what had
+happened to his two unfortunate comrades.
+
+The King came to a review at Magdeburg, when he visited Star-Fort,
+and commanded a new cell to be immediately made, prescribing himself
+the kind of irons by which I was to be secured. The honest
+Gelfhardt heard the officer say this cell was meant for me, and gave
+me notice of it, but assured me it could not be ready in less than a
+month. I therefore determined, as soon as possible, to complete my
+breach in the wall, and escape without the aid of any one. The
+thing was possible; for I had twisted the hair of my mattress into a
+rope, which I meant to tie to a cannon, and descend the rampart,
+after which I might endeavour to swim across the Elbe, gain the
+Saxon frontiers, and thus safely escape.
+
+On the 26th of May I had determined to break into the next casemate;
+but when I came to work at the bricks, I found them so hard and
+strongly cemented that I was obliged to defer the labour till the
+following day. I left off, weary and spent, at daybreak, and should
+any one enter my dungeon, they must infallibly discover the breach.
+How dreadful is the destiny by which, through life, I have been
+persecuted, and which has continually plunged me headlong into
+calamity, when I imagined happiness was at hand!
+
+The 27th of May was a cruel day in the history of my life. My cell
+in the Star-Fort had been finished sooner than Gelfhardt had
+supposed; and at night, when I was preparing to fly, I heard a
+carriage stop before my prison. O God! what was my terror, what
+were the horrors of this moment of despair! The locks and bolts
+resounded, the doors flew open, and the last of my poor remaining
+resources was to conceal my knife. The town-major, the major of the
+day, and a captain entered; I saw them by the light of their two
+lanterns. The only words they spoke were, "Dress yourself," which
+was immediately done. I still wore the uniform of the regiment of
+Cordova. Irons were given me, which I was obliged myself to fasten
+on my wrists and ankles; the town-major tied a bandage over my eyes,
+and, taking me under the arm, they thus conducted me to the
+carriage. It was necessary to pass through the city to arrive at
+the Star-Fort; all was silent, except the noise of the escort; but
+when we entered Magdeburg I heard the people running, who were
+crowding together to obtain a sight of me. Their curiosity was
+raised by the report that I was going to be beheaded. That I was
+executed on this occasion in the Star-Fort, after having been
+conducted blindfold through the city, has since been both affirmed
+and written; and the officers had then orders to propagate this
+error that the world might remain in utter ignorance concerning me.
+I, indeed, knew otherwise, though I affected not to have this
+knowledge; and, as I was not gagged, I behaved as if I expected
+death, reproached my conductors in language that even made them
+shudder, and painted their King in his true colours, as one who,
+unheard, had condemned an innocent subject by a despotic exertion of
+power.
+
+My fortitude was admired, at the moment when it was supposed I
+thought myself leading to execution. No one replied, but their
+sighs intimated their compassion; certain it is, few Prussians
+willingly execute such commands. The carriage at length stopped,
+and I was brought into my new cell. The bandage was taken from my
+eyes. The dungeon was lighted by a few torches. God of heaven!
+what were my feelings when I beheld the whole floor covered with
+chains, a fire-pan, and two grim men standing with their smiths'
+hammers!
+
+* * * * * *
+
+To work went these engines of despotism! Enormous chains were fixed
+to my ankle at one end, and at the other to a ring which was
+incorporated in the wall. This ring was three feet from the ground,
+and only allowed me to move about two or three feet to the right and
+left. They next riveted another huge iron ring, of a hand's
+breadth, round my naked body, to which hung a chain, fixed into an
+iron bar as thick as a man's arm. This bar was two feet in length,
+and at each end of it was a handcuff. The iron collar round my neck
+was not added till the year 1756.
+
+* * * * * *
+
+No soul bade me good night. All retired in dreadful silence; and I
+heard the horrible grating of four doors, that were successively
+locked and bolted upon me!
+
+Thus does man act by his fellow, knowing him to be innocent, having
+received the commands of another man so to act.
+
+O God! Thou alone knowest how my heart, void as it was of guilt,
+beat at this moment. There sat I, destitute, alone, in thick
+darkness, upon the bare earth, with a weight of fetters
+insupportable to nature, thanking Thee that these cruel men had not
+discovered my knife, by which my miseries might yet find an end.
+Death is a last certain refuge that can indeed bid defiance to the
+rage of tyranny. What shall I say? How shall I make the reader
+feel as I then felt? How describe my despondency, and yet account
+for that latent impulse that withheld my hand on this fatal, this
+miserable night?
+
+This misery I foresaw was not of short duration; I had heard of the
+wars that were lately broken out between Austria and Prussia.
+Patiently to wait their termination, amid sufferings and
+wretchedness such as mine, appeared impossible, and freedom even
+then was doubtful. Sad experience had I had of Vienna, and well I
+knew that those who had despoiled me of my property most anxiously
+would endeavour to prevent my return. Such were my meditations!
+such my night thoughts! Day at length returned; but where was its
+splendour? Fled! I beheld it not; yet was its glimmering obscurity
+sufficient to show me what was my dungeon.
+
+In breadth it was about eight feet; in length, ten. Near me once
+more stood a night-table; in a corner was a seat, four bricks broad,
+on which I might sit, and recline against the wall. Opposite the
+ring to which I was fastened, the light was admitted through a semi-
+circular aperture, one foot high, and two in diameter. This
+aperture ascended to the centre of the wall, which was six feet
+thick, and at this central part was a close iron grating, from
+which, outward, the aperture descended, and its two extremities were
+again secured by strong iron bars. My dungeon was built in the
+ditch of the fortification, and the aperture by which the light
+entered was so covered by the wall of the rampart that, instead of
+finding immediate passage, the light only gained admission by
+reflection. This, considering the smallness of the aperture, and
+the impediments of grating and iron bars, must needs make the
+obscurity great; yet my eyes, in time, became so accustomed to this
+glimmering that I could see a mouse run. In winter, however, when
+the sun did not shine into the ditch, it was eternal night with me.
+Between the bars and the grating was a glass window, most curiously
+formed, with a small central casement, which might be opened to
+admit the air. My night-table was daily removed, and beside me
+stood a jug of water. The name of TRENCK was built in the wall, in
+red brick, and under my feet was a tombstone with the name of TRENCK
+also cut on it, and carved with a death's head. The doors to my
+dungeon were double, of oak, two inches thick; without these was an
+open space or front cell, in which was a window, and this space was
+likewise shut in by double doors. The ditch, in which this dreadful
+den was built, was enclosed on both sides by palisades, twelve feet
+high, the key of the door of which was entrusted to the officer of
+the guard, it being the King's intention to prevent all possibility
+of speech or communication with the sentinels. The only motion I
+had the power to make was that of jumping upward, or swinging my
+arms to procure myself warmth. When more accustomed to these
+fetters, I became capable of moving from side to side, about four
+feet; but this pained my shin-bones.
+
+The cell had been finished with lime and plaster but eleven days,
+and everybody supposed it would be impossible I should exist in
+these damps above a fortnight. I remained six months, continually
+immersed in very cold water, that trickled upon me from the thick
+arches under which I was; and I can safely affirm that, for the
+first three months, I was never dry; yet did I continue in health.
+I was visited daily, at noon, after relieving guard, and the doors
+were then obliged to be left open for some minutes, otherwise the
+dampness of the air put out their candles.
+
+This was my situation, and here I sat, destitute of friends,
+helplessly wretched, preyed on by all the torture of thought that
+continually suggested the most gloomy, the most horrid, the most
+dreadful of images. My heart was not yet wholly turned to stone; my
+fortitude was sunken to despondency; my dungeon was the very cave of
+despair; yet was my arm restrained, and this excess of misery
+endured.
+
+How then may hope be wholly eradicated from the heart of man? My
+fortitude, after some time, began to revive; I glowed with the
+desire of convincing the world I was capable of suffering what man
+had never suffered before; perhaps of at last emerging from this
+load of wretchedness triumphant over my enemies. So long and
+ardently did my fancy dwell on this picture, that my mind at length
+acquired a heroism which Socrates himself certainly never possessed.
+Age had benumbed his sense of pleasure, and he drank the poisonous
+draught with cool indifference; but I was young, inured to high
+hopes, yet now beholding deliverance impossible, or at an immense, a
+dreadful distance. Such, too, were the other sufferings of soul and
+body, I could not hope they might be supported and live.
+
+About noon my den was opened. Sorrow and compassion were painted on
+the countenances of my keepers. No one spoke; no one bade me good
+morrow. Dreadful indeed was their arrival; for, unaccustomed to the
+monstrous bolts and bars, they were kept resounding for a full half-
+hour before such soul-chilling, such hope-murdering impediments were
+removed. It was the voice of tyranny that thundered.
+
+My night-table was taken out, a camp-bed, mattress, and blankets
+were brought me; a jug of water set down, and beside it an
+ammunition loaf of six pounds' weight. "That you may no more
+complain of hunger," said the town-major, "you shall have as much
+bread as you can eat." The door was shut, and I again left to my
+thoughts.
+
+What a strange thing is that called happiness! How shall I express
+my extreme joy when, after eleven months of intolerable hunger, I
+was again indulged with a full feast of coarse ammunition bread?
+The fond lover never rushed more eagerly to the arias of his
+expecting bride, the famished tiger more ravenously on his prey,
+than I upon this loaf. I ate, rested; surveyed the precious morsel;
+ate again; and absolutely shed tears of pleasure. Breaking bit
+after bit, I had by evening devoured all my loaf.
+
+Oh, Nature! what delight hast thou combined with the gratification
+of thy wants! Remember this, ye who gorge, ye who rack invention to
+excite appetite, and yet which you cannot procure! Remember how
+simple are the means that will give a crust of mouldy bread a
+flavour more exquisite than all the spices of the East, or all the
+profusion of land or sea! Remember this, grow hungry, and indulge
+your sensuality.
+
+Alas! my enjoyment was of short duration. I soon found that excess
+is followed by pain and repentance. My fasting had weakened
+digestion, and rendered it inactive. My body swelled, my water-jug
+was emptied; cramps, colics, and at length inordinate thirst racked
+me all the night. I began to pour curses on those who seemed to
+refine on torture, and, after starving me so long, to invite me to
+gluttony. Could I not have reclined on my bed, I should indeed have
+been driven, this night, to desperation; yet even this was but a
+partial relief; for, not yet accustomed to my enormous fetters, I
+could not extend myself in the same manner I was afterwards taught
+to do by habit. I dragged them, however, so together as to enable
+me to sit down on the bare mattress. This, of all my nights of
+suffering, stands foremost. When they opened my dungeon next day
+they found me in a truly pitiable situation, wondered at my
+appetite, brought me another loaf; I refused to accept it, believing
+I nevermore should have occasion for bread; they, however, left me
+one, gave me water, shrugged up their shoulders, wished me farewell,
+as, according to all appearance, they never expected to find me
+alive, and shut all the doors, without asking whether I wished or
+needed further assistance.
+
+Three days had passed before I could again eat a morsel of bread;
+and my mind, brave in health, now in a sick body became
+pusillanimous, so that I determined on death. The irons, everywhere
+round my body, and their weight, were insupportable; nor could I
+imagine it was possible I should habituate myself to them, or endure
+them long enough to expect deliverance. Peace was a very distant
+prospect. The King had commanded that such a prison should be built
+as should exclude all necessity of a sentinel, in order that I might
+not converse with and seduce them from what is called their duty:
+and, in the first days of despair, deliverance appeared impossible;
+and the fetters, the war, the pain I felt, the place, the length of
+time, each circumstance seemed equally impossible to support. A
+thousand reasons convinced me it was necessary to end my sufferings.
+I shall not enter into theological disputes: let those who blame me
+imagine themselves in my situation; or rather let them first
+actually endure my miseries, and then let them reason. I had often
+braved death in prosperity, and at this moment it seemed a blessing.
+
+Full of these meditations, every minute's patience appeared
+absurdity, and resolution meanness of soul; yet I wished my mind
+should be satisfied that reason, and not rashness, had induced the
+act. I therefore determined, that I might examine the question
+coolly, to wait a week longer, and die on the fourth of July. In
+the meantime I revolved in my mind what possible means there were of
+escape, not fearing, naked and chained, to rush and expire on the
+bayonets of my enemies.
+
+The next day I observed, as the four doors were opened, that they
+were only of wood, therefore questioned whether I might not even cut
+off the locks with the knife that I had so fortunately concealed:
+and should this and every other means fail, then would be the time
+to die. I likewise determined to make an attempt to free myself of
+my chains. I happily forced my right hand through the handcuff,
+though the blood trickled from my nails. My attempts on the left
+were long ineffectual; but by rubbing with a brick, which I got from
+my seat, on the rivet that had been negligently closed, I effected
+this also.
+
+The chain was fastened to the run round my body by a hook, one end
+of which was not inserted in the rim; therefore, by setting my foot
+against the wall, I had strength enough so far to bend this hook
+back, and open it, as to force out the link of the chain. The
+remaining difficulty was the chain that attached my foot to the
+wall: the links of this I took, doubled, twisted, and wrenched,
+till at length, nature having bestowed on me great strength, I made
+a desperate effort, sprang forcibly up, and two links at once flew
+off.
+
+Fortunate, indeed, did I think myself: I hastened to the door,
+groped in the dark to find the clinkings of the nails by which the
+lock was fastened, and discovered no very large piece of wood need
+be cut. Immediately I went to work with my knife, and cut through
+the oak door to find its thickness, which proved to be only one
+inch, therefore it was possible to open all the four doors in four-
+and-twenty hours.
+
+Again hope revived in my heart. To prevent detection I hastened to
+put on my chains; but, O God! what difficulties had I to surmount!
+After much groping about, I at length found the link that had flown
+off; this I hid: it being my good fortune hitherto to escape
+examination, as the possibility of ridding myself of such chains was
+in nowise suspected. The separated iron links I tied together with
+my hair ribbon; but when I again endeavoured to force my hand into
+the ring, it was so swelled that every effort was fruitless. The
+whole might was employed upon the rivet, but all labour was in vain.
+
+Noon was the hour of visitation, and necessity and danger again
+obliged me to attempt forcing my hand in, which at length, after
+excruciating torture, I effected. My visitors came, and everything
+had the appearance of order. I found it, however, impossible to
+force out my right hand while it continued swelled.
+
+I therefore remained quiet till the day fixed, and on the determined
+fourth of July, immediately as my visitors had closed the doors upon
+me, I disencumbered myself of my irons, took my knife, and began my
+Herculean labour on the door. The first of the double doors that
+opened inwards was conquered in less than an hour; the other was a
+very different task. The lock was soon cut round, but it opened
+outwards; there was therefore no other means left but to cut the
+whole door away above the bar.
+
+Incessant and incredible labour made this possible, though it was
+the more difficult as everything was to be done by feeling, I being
+totally in the dark; the sweat dropped, or rather flowed, from my
+body; my fingers were clotted in my own blood, and my lacerated
+hands were one continued wound.
+
+Daylight appeared: I clambered over the door that was half cut
+away, and got up to the window in the space or cell that was between
+the double doors, as before described. Here I saw my dungeon was in
+the ditch of the first rampart: before me I beheld the road from
+the rampart, the guard but fifty paces distant, and the high
+palisades that were in the ditch, and must be scaled before I could
+reach the rampart. Hope grew stronger; my efforts were redoubled.
+The first of the next double doors was attacked, which likewise
+opened inward, and was soon conquered. The sun set before I had
+ended this, and the fourth was to be cut away as the second had
+been. My strength failed; both my hands were raw; I rested awhile,
+began again, and had made a cut of a foot long, when my knife
+snapped, and the broken blade dropped to the ground!
+
+God of Omnipotence! what was I at this moment? Was there, God of
+Mercies! was there ever creature of Thine more justified than I in
+despair? The moon shone very clear; I cast a wild and distracted
+look up to heaven, fell on my knees, and in the agony of my soul
+sought comfort: but no comfort could be found; nor religion nor
+philosophy had any to give. I cursed not Providence, I feared not
+annihilation, I dared not Almighty vengeance; God the Creator was
+the disposer of my fate; and if He heaped afflictions upon me He had
+not given me strength to support, His justice would not therefore
+punish me. To Him, the Judge of the quick and dead, I committed my
+soul, seized the broken knife, gashed through the veins of my left
+arm and foot, sat myself tranquilly down, and saw the blood flow.
+Nature, overpowered fainted, and I know not how long I remained,
+slumbering, in this state. Suddenly I heard my own name, awoke, and
+again heard the words, "Baron Trenck!" My answer was, "Who calls?"
+And who indeed was it--who but my honest grenadier Gelfhardt--my
+former faithful friend in the citadel! The good, the kind fellow
+had got upon the rampart, that he might comfort me.
+
+"How do you do?" said Gelfhardt. "Weltering in my blood," answered
+I; "to-morrow you will find me dead."--"Why should you die?" replied
+he. "It is much easier for you to escape here than from the
+citadel! Here is no sentinel, and I shall soon find means to
+provide you with tools; if you can only break out, leave the rest to
+me. As often as I am on guard, I will seek opportunity to speak to
+you. In the whole Star-Fort, there are but two sentinels: the one
+at the entrance, and the other at the guard-house. Do not despair;
+God will succour you; trust to me." The good man's kindness and
+discourse revived my hopes: I saw the possibility of an escape. A
+secret joy diffused itself through my soul. I immediately tore my
+shirt, bound up my wounds, and waited the approach of day; and the
+sun soon after shone through the window, to me, with unaccustomed
+brightness.
+
+Let the reader judge how far it was chance, or the effect of Divine
+providence, that in this dreadful hour my heart again received hope.
+Who was it sent the honest Gelfhardt, at such a moment, to my
+prison? For, had it not been for him, I had certainly, when I awoke
+from my slumbers, cut more effectually through my arteries.
+
+Till noon I had time to consider what might further be done: yet
+what could be done, what expected, but that I should now be much
+more cruelly treated, and even more insupportably ironed than
+before--finding, as they must, the doors cut through and my fetters
+shaken off?
+
+After mature consideration, I therefore made the following
+resolution, which succeeded happily, and even beyond my hopes.
+Before I proceed, however, I will speak a few words concerning my
+situation at this moment. It is impossible to describe how much I
+was exhausted. The prison swam with blood; and certainly but little
+was left in my body. With painful wounds, swelled and torn hands, I
+there stood shirtless, felt an inclination to sleep almost
+irresistible, and scarcely had strength to keep my legs, yet was I
+obliged to rouse myself, that I might execute my plan.
+
+With the bar that separated my hands, I loosened the bricks of my
+seat, which, being newly laid, was easily done, and heaped them up
+in the middle of my prison. The inner door was quite open, and with
+my chains I so barricaded the upper half of the second as to prevent
+any one climbing over it. When noon came and the first of the doors
+was unlocked, all were astonished to find the second open. There I
+stood, besmeared with blood, the picture of horror, with a brick in
+one hand, and in the other my broken knife, crying, as they
+approached, "Keep off, Mr. Major, keep off! Tell the governor I
+will live no longer in chains, and that here I stand, if so he
+pleases, to be shot; for so only will I be conquered. Here no man
+shall enter--I will destroy all that approach; here are my weapons;
+lucre will I die in despite of tyranny." The major was terrified,
+wanted resolution, and made his report to the governor. I meantime
+sat down on my bricks, to wait what might happen: my secret intent,
+however, was not so desperate as it appeared. I sought only to
+obtain a favourable capitulation.
+
+The governor, General Borck, presently came, attended by the town-
+major and some officers, and entered the outward cell, but sprang
+back the moment he beheld a figure like me, standing with a brick
+and uplifted arm. I repeated what I had told the major, and he
+immediately ordered six grenadiers to force the door. The front
+cell was scarcely six feet broad, so that no more than two at a time
+could attack my intrenchment, and when they saw my threatening
+bricks ready to descend, they leaped terrified back. A short pause
+ensued, and the old town-major, with the chaplain, advanced towards
+the door to soothe me: the conversation continued some time: whose
+reasons were most satisfactory, and whose cause was the most just, I
+leave to the reader. The governor grew angry, and ordered a fresh
+attack. The first grenadier was knocked down, and the rest ran back
+to avoid my missiles.
+
+The town-major again began a parley. "For God's sake, my dear
+Trenck," said he, "in what have I injured you, that you endeavour to
+effect my ruin? I must answer for your having, through my
+negligence, concealed a knife. Be persuaded, I entreat you. Be
+appeased. You are not without hope, nor without friends." My
+answer was--"But will you not load me with heavier irons than
+before?"
+
+He went out, spoke with the governor, and gave me his word of honour
+that the affair should be no further noticed, and that everything
+should be exactly reinstated as formerly.
+
+Here ended the capitulation, and my wretched citadel was taken. The
+condition I was in was viewed with pity; my wounds were examined, a
+surgeon sent to dress them, another shirt was given me, and the
+bricks, clotted with blood, removed. I, meantime, lay half dead on
+my mattress; my thirst was excessive. The surgeon ordered me some
+wine. Two sentinels were stationed in the front cell, and I was
+thus left four days in peace, unironed. Broth also was given me
+daily, and how delicious this was to taste, how much it revived and
+strengthened me, is wholly impossible to describe. Two days I lay
+in a slumbering kind of trance, forced by unquenchable thirst to
+drink whenever I awoke. My feet and hands were swelled; the pains
+in my back and limbs were excessive.
+
+On the fifth day the doors were ready; the inner was entirely plated
+with iron, and I was fettered as before: perhaps they found further
+cruelty unnecessary. The principal chain, however, which fastened
+me to the wall, like that I had before broken, was thicker than the
+first. Except this, the capitulation was strictly kept. They
+deeply regretted that, without the King's express commands, they
+could not lighten my afflictions, wished me fortitude and patience,
+and barred up my doors.
+
+It is necessary I should here describe my dress. My hands being
+fixed and kept asunder by an iron bar, and my feet chained to the
+wall, I could neither put on shirt nor stockings in the usual mode;
+the shirt was therefore tied, and changed once a fortnight; the
+coarse ammunition stockings were buttoned on the sides; a blue
+garment, of soldier's cloth, was likewise tied round me, and I had a
+pair of slippers for my feet. The shirt was of the army linen; and
+when I contemplated myself in this dress of a malefactor, chained
+thus to the wall in such a dungeon, vainly imploring mercy or
+justice, my conscience void of reproach, my heart of guilt--when I
+reflected on my former splendour in Berlin and Moscow, and compared
+it with this sad, this dreadful reverse of destiny, I was sunk in
+grief, or roused to indignation, that might have hurried the
+greatest hero or philosopher to madness or despair. I felt what can
+only be imagined by him who has suffered like me, after having like
+me flourished, if such can be found.
+
+Pride, the justness of my cause, the unbounded confidence I had in
+my own resolution, and the labours of an inventive head and iron
+body--these only could have preserved my life. These bodily
+labours, these continued inventions, and projected plans to obtain
+my freedom, preserved my health. Who would suppose that a man
+fettered as I was could find means of exercising himself? By
+swinging my arms, acting with the upper part of my body, and leaping
+upwards, I frequently put myself in a strong perspiration. After
+thus wearying myself I slept soundly, and often thought how many
+generals, obliged to support the inclemencies of weather, and all
+the dangers of the field--how many of those who had plunged me into
+this den of misery, would have been most glad could they, like me,
+have slept with a quiet conscience. Often did I reflect how much
+happier I was than those tortured on the bed of sickness by gout,
+stone, and other terrible diseases. How much happier was I in
+innocence than the malefactor doomed to suffer the pangs of death,
+the ignominy of men, and the horrors of internal guilt!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+
+In the following part of my history it will appear I often had much
+money concealed under the ground and in the walls of my den, yet
+would I have given a hundred ducats for a morsel of bread, it could
+not have been procured. Money was to me useless. In this I
+resembled the miser, who hoards, yet hives in wretchedness, having
+no joy in gentle acts of benevolence. As proudly might I delight
+myself with my hidden treasure as such misers; nay, more, for I was
+secure from robbers.
+
+Had fastidious pomp been my pleasure, I might have imagined myself
+some old field-marshal bedridden, who hears two grenadier sentinels
+at his door call, "Who goes there?" My honour, indeed, was still
+greater; for, during my last year's imprisonment, my door was
+guarded by no less than four. My vanity also might have been
+flattered: I might hence conclude how high was the value set upon
+my head, since all this trouble was taken to hold me in security.
+Certain it is that in my chains I thought more rationally, more
+nobly, reasoned more philosophically on man, his nature, his zeal,
+his imaginary wants, the effects of his ambition, his passions, and
+saw more distinctly his dream of earthly good, than those who had
+imprisoned, or those who guarded me. I was void of the fears that
+haunt the parasite who servilely wears the fetters of a court, and
+daily trembles for the loss of what vice and cunning have acquired.
+Those who had usurped the Sclavonian estates, and feasted
+sumptuously from the service of plate I had been robbed of, never
+ate their dainties with so sweet an appetite as I my ammunition
+bread, nor did their high-flavoured wines flow so limpid as my cold
+water.
+
+Thus, the man who thinks, being pure of heart, will find consolation
+when under the most dreadful calamities, convinced, as he must be,
+that those apparently most are frequently least happy, insensible as
+they are of the pleasures they might enjoy. Evil is never so great
+as it appears.
+
+
+"Sweet are the uses of adversity,
+Which, like the toad, ugly and venomous,
+Wears yet a precious jewel in his head."
+As you LIKE IT.
+
+
+Happy he who, like me, having suffered, can become an example to his
+suffering brethren!
+
+YOUTH, prosperous, and imagining eternal prosperity, read my history
+attentively, though I should be in my grave! Read feelingly, and
+bless my sleeping dust, if it has taught thee wisdom or fortitude!
+
+FATHER, reading this, say to thy children, I felt thus like them, in
+blooming youth, little prophesied of misfortune, which after fell so
+heavy on me, and by which I am even still persecuted! Say that I
+had virtue, ambition, was educated in noble principles; that I
+laboured with all the zeal of enthusiastic youth to become wiser,
+better, greater than other men; that I was guilty of no crimes, was
+the friend of men, was no deceiver of man or woman; that I first
+served my own country faithfully, and after, every other in which I
+found bread; that I was never, during life, once intoxicated; was no
+gamester, no night rambler, no contemptible idler; that yet, through
+envy and arbitrary power, I have fallen to misery such as none but
+the worst of criminals ought to feel.
+
+BROTHER, fly those countries where the lawgiver himself knows no
+law, where truth and virtue are punished as crimes; and, if fly you
+cannot, be it your endeavour to remain unknown, unnoticed; in such
+countries, seek not favour or honourable employ, else will you
+become, when your merits are known, as I have been, the victim of
+slander and treachery: the behests of power will persecute you, and
+innocence will not shield you from the shafts of wicked men who are
+envious, or who wish to obtain the favour of princes, though by the
+worst of means.
+
+SIRE, imagine not that thou readest a romance. My head is grey,
+like thine. Read, yet despise not the world, though it has treated
+me thus unthankfully. Good men have I also found, who have
+befriended me in misfortunes, and there, where I had least claim,
+have I found them most. May my book assist thee in noble thoughts;
+mayest thou die as tranquilly as I shall render up my soul to appear
+before the Judge of me and my persecutors. Be death but thought a
+transition from motion to rest. Few are the delights of this world
+for him who, like me, has learned to know it. Murmur not, despair
+not of Providence. Me, through storms, it has brought to haven;
+through many griefs to self-knowledge; and through prisons to
+philosophy. He only can tranquilly descend to annihilation who
+finds reason not to repent he has once existed. My rudder broke not
+amid the rocks and quicksands, but my bark was cast upon the strand
+of knowledge. Yet, even on these clear shores are impenetrable
+clouds. I have seen more distinctly than it is supposed men ought
+to see. Age will decay the faculties, and mental, like bodily
+sight, must then decrease. I even grew weary of science, and envied
+the blind-born, or those who, till death, have been wilfully
+hoodwinked. How often have I been asked, "What didst thou see?"
+And when I answered with sincerity and truth, how often have I been
+derided as a liar, and been persecuted by those who determined not
+to see themselves, as an innovator singular and rash!
+
+Sire, I further say to thee, teach thy descendants to seek the
+golden mean, and say with Gellert--"The boy Fritz needs nothing;--
+his stupidity will insure his success, Examine our wealthy and
+titled lords, what are their abilities and honours, then inquire how
+they were attained, and, if thou canst, discover in what true
+happiness consists."
+
+Once more to my prison. The failure of my escape, and the recovery
+of life from this state of despair, led me to moralise deeper than I
+had ever done before; and in this depth of thought I found
+unexpected consolation and fortitude, and a firm persuasion I yet
+should accomplish my deliverance.
+
+Gelfhardt, my honest grenadier, had infused fresh hope, and my mind
+now busily began to meditate new plans. A sentinel was placed
+before my door, that I might be more narrowly watched, and the
+married men of the Prussian states were appointed to this duty, who,
+as I will hereafter show, were more easy to persuade in aiding my
+flight than foreign fugitives. The Pomeranian will listen, and is
+by nature kind, therefore may easily be moved, and induced to
+succour distress.
+
+I began to be more accustomed to my irons, which I had before found
+so insupportable; I could comb out my long hair, and could tie it at
+last with one hand. My beard, which had so long remained unshaven,
+gave me a grim appearance, and I began to pluck it up by the roots.
+The pain at first was considerable, especially about the lips; but
+this also custom conquered, and I performed this operation in the
+following years, once in six weeks, or two months, as the hair thus
+plucked up required that length of time before the nails could again
+get hold. Vermin did not molest me; the dampness of my den was
+inimical to them. My limbs never swelled, because of the exercise I
+gave myself, as before described. The greatest pain I found was in
+the continued unvivifying dimness in which I lived.
+
+I had read much, had lived in, and seen much of the world. Vacuity
+of thought, therefore, I was little troubled with; the former
+transactions of my life, and the remembrance of the persons I had
+known, I revolved so often in my mind, that they became as familiar
+and connected as if the events had each been written in the order it
+occurred. Habit made this mental exercise so perfect to me, that I
+could compose speeches, fables, odes, satires, all of which I
+repeated aloud, and had so stored my memory with them that I was
+enabled, after I had obtained my freedom, to commit to writing two
+volumes of my prison labours. Accustomed to this exercise, days
+that would otherwise have been days of misery appeared but as a
+moment. The following narrative will show how munch esteem, how
+many friends, these compositions procured me, even in my dungeon;
+insomuch that I obtained light, paper, and finally freedom itself.
+For these I have to thank the industrious acquirements of my youth;
+therefore do I counsel all my readers so to employ their time.
+Riches, honours, the favours of fortune, may be showered by monarchs
+upon the most worthless; but monarchs can give and take, say and
+unsay, raise and pull down. Monarchs, however, can neither give
+wisdom nor virtue. Arbitrary power itself, in the presence of
+these, is foiled.
+
+How wisely has Providence ordained that the endowments of industry,
+learning, and science, given by ourselves, cannot be taken from us;
+while, on the contrary, what others bestow is a fantastical dream,
+from which any accident may awaken us! The wrath of Frederic could
+destroy legions, and defeat armies; but it could not take from me
+the sense of honour, of innocence, and their sweet concomitant,
+peace of mind--could not deprive me of fortitude and magnanimity. I
+defied his power, rested on the justice of my cause, found in myself
+expedients wherewith to oppose him, was at length crowned with
+conquest, and came forth to the world the martyr of suffering
+virtue.
+
+Some of my oppressors now rot in dishonourable graves. Others,
+alas! in Vienna, remain immured in houses of correction, as Krugel
+and Zeto, or beg their bread, like Gravenitz and Doo. Nor are the
+wealthy possessors of my estates more fortunate, but look down with
+shame wherever I and my children appear. We stand erect, esteemed,
+and honoured, while their injustice is manifest to the whole world.
+
+Young man, be industrious: for without industry can none of the
+treasures I have described be purchased. Thy labour will reward
+itself; then, when assaulted by misfortune, or even misery, learn of
+me and smile; or, shouldst thou escape such trials, still labour to
+acquire wisdom, that in old age thou mayest find content and
+happiness.
+
+The years in my dungeon passed away as days, those moments excepted
+when, thinking on the great world, and the deeds of great men, my
+ambition was roused: except when, contemplating the vileness of my
+chains, and the wretchedness of my situation, I laboured for
+liberty, and found my labours endless and ineffectual; except while
+I remembered the triumph of my enemies, and the splendour in which
+those lived by whom I had been plundered. Then, indeed, did I
+experience intervals that approached madness, despair, and horror:
+beholding myself destitute of friend or protector, the Empress
+herself, for whose sake I suffered, deserting me; reflecting on past
+times and past prosperity; remembering how the good and virtuous,
+from the cruel nature of my punishment, must be obliged to conclude
+me a wretch and a villain, and that all means of justification were
+cut off: O God! How did my heart beat! with what violence! What
+would I not have undertaken, in these suffering moments, to have put
+my enemies to shame! Vengeance and rage then rose rebellious
+against patience; long-suffering philosophy vanished, and the
+poisoned cup of Socrates would have been the nectar of the gods.
+
+Man deprived of hope is man destroyed. I found but little
+probability in all my plans and projects; yet did I trust that some
+of them should succeed, yet did I confide in them and my honest
+Gelfhardt, and that I should still free myself from my chains.
+
+The greatest of all my incitements to patient endurance was love. I
+had left behind me, in Vienna, a lady for whom the world still was
+dear to me; her would I neither desert nor afflict. To her and my
+sister was my existence still necessary. For their sakes, who had
+lost and suffered so much for mine, would I preserve my life; for
+them no difficulty, no suffering was too great; yet, alas! when
+long-desired liberty was restored, I found them both in their
+graves. The joy, for which I had borne so much, was no more to be
+tasted.
+
+About three weeks after my attempt to escape, the good Gelfhardt
+first came to stand sentinel over me; and the sentinel they had so
+carefully set was indeed the only hope I could have of escape; for
+help must be had from without, or this was impossible.
+
+The effort I had made had excited too munch surprise and alarm for
+me to pass without strict examination; since, on the ninth day after
+I was confined, I had, in eighteen hours, so far broken through a
+prison built purposely for myself, by a combination of so many
+projectors, and with such extreme precaution, that it had been
+universally declared impenetrable.
+
+Gelfhardt scarcely had taken his post before we had free opportunity
+of conversing together; for, when I stood with one foot on my
+bedstead, I could reach the aperture through which light was
+admitted.
+
+Gelfhardt described the situation of my dungeon, and our first plan
+was to break under the foundation which he had seen laid, and which
+he affirmed to be only two feet deep.
+
+Money was the first thing necessary. Gelfhardt was relieved during
+his guard, and returned bringing within him a sheet of paper rolled
+on a wire, which he passed through my grating; as he also did a
+piece of small wax candle, some burning amadone (a kind of tinder),
+a match, and a pen. I now had light, and I pricked my finger, and
+wrote with my blood to my faithful friend, Captain Ruckhardt, at
+Vienna, described my situation in a few words, sent him an
+acquittance for three thousand florins on my revenues, and requested
+he would dispose of a thousand florins to defray the expenses of his
+journey to Gummern, only two miles from Magdeburg. Here he was
+positively to be on the 15th of August. About noon, on this same
+day, he was to walk with a letter in his hand; and a man was there
+to meet him, carrying a roll of smoking tobacco, to whom he must
+remit the two thousand florins, and return to Vienna.
+
+I returned the written paper to Gelfhardt by the same means it had
+been received, gave him my instructions, and he sent his wife with
+it to Gummern, by whom it was safely put in the post.
+
+My hopes daily rose, and as often as Gelfhardt mounted guard, so
+often did we continue our projects. The 15th of August came, but it
+was some days before Gelfhardt was again on guard; and oh! how did
+my heart palpitate when he came and exclaimed, "All is right! we
+have succeeded." He returned in the evening, and we began to
+consider by what means he could convey the money to me. I could
+not, with my hands chained to an iron bar, reach the aperture of the
+window that admitted air--besides that it was too small. It was
+therefore agreed that Gelfhardt should, on the next guard, perform
+the office of cleaning my dungeon, and that he then should convey
+the money to me in the water-jug.
+
+This luckily was done. How great was my astonishment when, instead
+of one, I found two thousand florins! For I had permitted him to
+reserve half to himself, as a reward for his fidelity; he, however,
+had kept but five pistoles, which he persisted was enough.
+
+Worthy Gelfhardt! This was the act of a Pomeranian grenadier! How
+rare are such examples! Be thy name and mine ever united! Live
+thou while the memory of me shall live! Never did my acquaintance
+with the great bring to my knowledge a soul so noble, so
+disinterested!
+
+It is true, I afterwards prevailed on him to accept the whole
+thousand; but we shall soon see he never had them, and that his
+foolish wife, three years after, suffered by their means; however,
+she suffered alone, for he soon marched to the field, and therefore
+was unpunished.
+
+Having money to carry on my designs, I began to put my plan of
+burrowing under the foundation into execution. The first thing
+necessary was to free myself from my fetters. To accomplish this,
+Gelfhardt supplied me with two small files, and by the aid of these,
+this labour, though great, was effected.
+
+The cap, or staple, of the foot ring was made so wide that I could
+draw it forward a quarter of an inch. I filed the iron which passed
+through it on the inside; the more I filed this away, the farther I
+could draw the cap down, till at last the whole inside iron, through
+which the chains passed, was cut quite through! by this means I
+could slip off the ring, while the cap on the outside continued
+whole, and it was impossible to discover any cut, as only the
+outside could be examined. My hands, by continued efforts, I so
+compressed as to be able to draw them out of the handcuffs. I then
+filed the hinge, and made a screw-driver of one of the foot-long
+flooring nails, by which I could take out the screw at pleasure, so
+that at the time of examination no proofs could appear. The rim
+round my body was but a small impediment, except the chain, which
+passed from my hand-bar: and this I removed, by filing an aperture
+in one of the links, which, at the necessary hour, I closed with
+bread, rubbed over with rusty-iron, first drying it by the heat of
+my body; and would wager any sum that, without striking the chain
+link by link, with a hammer, no one not in the secret would have
+discovered the fracture.
+
+The window was never strictly examined; I therefore drew the two
+staples by which the iron bars were fixed to the wall, and which I
+daily replaced, carefully plastering them over. I procured wire
+from Gelfhardt, and tried how well I could imitate the inner
+grating: finding I succeeded tolerably, I cut the real grating
+totally away, and substituted an artificial one of my own
+fabricating, by which I obtained a free communication with the
+outside, additional fresh air, together with all necessary
+implements, tinder, and candles.
+
+That the light might not be seen, I hung the coverlid of my bed
+before the window, so that I could work fearless and undetected.
+
+Every thing prepared, I went to work. The floor of my dungeon was
+not of stone, but oak plank, three inches thick; three beds of which
+were laid crossways, and were fastened to each other by nails half
+an inch in diameter, and a foot long. Raving worked round the head
+of a nail, I made use of the hole at the end of the bar, which
+separated my hands, to draw it out, and this nail, sharpened upon my
+tombstone, made an excellent chisel.
+
+I now cut through the board more than an inch in width, that I might
+work downwards, and having drawn away a piece of board which was
+inserted two inches under the wall, I cut this so as exactly to fit;
+the small crevice it occasioned I stopped up with bread and strewed
+over with dust, so as to prevent all suspicious appearance. My
+labour under this was continued with less precaution, and I had soon
+worked through my nine-inch planks. Under them I came to a fine
+white sand, on which the Star Fort was built. My chips I carefully
+distributed beneath the boards. If I had not help from without, I
+could proceed no farther; for to dig were useless, unless I could
+rid myself of my rubbish. Gelfhardt supplied me with some ells of
+cloth, of which I made long narrow bags, stuffed them with earth,
+and passed them between the iron bars, to Gelfhardt, who, as he was
+on guard, scattered or conveyed away their contents.
+
+Furnished with room to secrete them under the floor, I obtained more
+instruments, together with a pair of pistols, powder, ball, and a
+bayonet.
+
+I now discovered that the foundation of my prison, instead of two,
+was sunken four feet deep. Time, labour, and patience were all
+necessary to break out unheard and undiscovered; but few things are
+impossible, where resolution is not wanting.
+
+The hole I made was obliged to be four feet deep, corresponding with
+the foundation, and wide enough to kneel and stoop in: the lying
+down on the floor to work, the continual stooping to throw out the
+earth, the narrow space in which all must be performed, these made
+the labour incredible: and, after this daily labour, all things
+were to be replaced, and my chains again resumed, which alone
+required some hours to effect. My greatest aid was in the wax
+candles, and light I had procured; but as Gelfhardt stood sentinel
+only once a fortnight, my work was much delayed; the sentinels were
+forbidden to speak to me under pain of death: and I was too fearful
+of being betrayed to dare to seek new assistance.
+
+Being without a stove, I suffered much this winter from cold; yet my
+heart was cheerful as I saw the probability of freedom; and all were
+astonished to find me in such good spirits.
+
+Gelfhardt also brought me supplies of provisions, chiefly consisting
+of sausages and salt meats, ready dressed, which increased my
+strength, and when I was not digging, I wrote satires and verses:
+thus time was employed, and I contented even in prison.
+
+Lulled into security, an accident happened that will appear almost
+incredible, and by which every hope was nearly frustrated.
+
+Gelfhardt had been working with me, and was relieved in the morning.
+As I was replacing the window, which I was obliged to remove on
+these occasions, it fell out of my hand, and three of the glass
+panes were broken. Gelfhardt was not to return till guard was again
+relieved: I had therefore no opportunity of speaking with him, or
+concerting any mode of repair. I remained nearly an hour
+conjecturing and hesitating; for certainly had the broken window
+been seen, as it was impossible I should reach it when fettered, I
+should immediately have been more rigidly examined, and the false
+grating must have been discovered.
+
+I therefore came to a resolution, and spoke to the sentinel (who was
+amusing himself with whistling), thus: "My good fellow, have pity,
+not upon me, but upon your comrades, who, should you refuse, will
+certainly be executed: I will throw you thirty pistoles through the
+window, if you will do me a small favour." He remained some moments
+silent, and at last answered in a low voice, "What, have you money,
+then?"--I immediately counted thirty pistoles, and threw them
+through the window. He asked what he was to do: I told him my
+difficulty, and gave him the size of the panes in paper. The man
+fortunately was bold and prudent. The door of the pallisadoes,
+through the negligence of the officer, had not been shut that day:
+he prevailed on one of his comrades to stand sentinel for him,
+during half an hour, while he meantime ran into the town, and
+procured the glass, on the receipt of which I instantly threw him
+out ten more pistoles. Before the hour of noon and visitation came,
+everything was once more reinstated, my glaziery performed to a
+miracle, and the life of my worthy Gelfhardt preserved!--Such is the
+power of money in this world! This is a very remarkable incident,
+for I never spoke after to the man who did me this signal service.
+
+Gelfhardt's alarm may easily be imagined; he some days after
+returned to his post, and was the more astonished as he knew the
+sentinel who had done me this good office; that he had five
+children, and a man most to be depended on by his officers, of any
+one in the whole grenadier company.
+
+I now continued my labour, and found it very possible to break out
+under the foundation; but Gelfhardt had been so terrified by the
+late accident, that he started a thousand difficulties, in
+proportion as my end was more nearly accomplished; and at the moment
+when I wished to concert with him the means of flight, he persisted
+it was necessary to find additional help, to escape in safety, and
+not bring both him and myself to destruction. At length we came to
+the following determination, which, however, after eight months'
+incessant labour, rendered my whole project abortive.
+
+I wrote once more to Ruckhardt, at Vienna; sent him a new assignment
+for money, and desired he would again repair to Gummern, where he
+should wait six several nights, with two spare horses, on the glacis
+of Klosterbergen, at the time appointed, everything being prepared
+for flight. Within these six days Gelfhardt would have found means,
+either in rotation, or by exchanging the guard, to have been with
+me. Alas! the sweet hope of again beholding the face of the sun, of
+once more obtaining my freedom, endured but three days: Providence
+thought proper otherwise to ordain. Gelfhardt sent his wife to
+Gummern with the letter, and this silly woman told the post-master
+her husband had a lawsuit at Vienna, that therefore she begged he
+would take particular care of the letter, for which purpose she
+slipped ten rix-dollars into his hand.
+
+This unexpected liberality raised the suspicions of the Saxon post-
+master, who therefore opened the letter, read the contents, and
+instead of sending it to Vienna, or at least to the general post-
+master at Dresden, he preferred the traitorous act of taking it
+himself to the governor of Magdeburg, who then, as at present, was
+Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick.
+
+What were my terrors, what my despair, when I beheld the Prince
+himself, about three o'clock in the afternoon, enter my prison with
+his attendants, present my letter, and ask, in an authoritative
+voice, who had carried it to Gummern. My answer was, "I know not."
+Strict search was immediately made by smiths, carpenters, and
+masons, and after half an hour's examination, they discovered
+neither my hole nor the manner in which I disencumbered myself of my
+chains; they only saw that the middle grating, in the aperture where
+the light was admitted, had been removed. This was boarded up the
+next day, only a small air-hole left, of about six inches diameter.
+
+The Prince began to threaten; I persisted I had never seen the
+sentinel who had rendered me this service, nor asked his name.
+Seeing his attempts all ineffectual, the governor, in a milder tone,
+said, "You have ever complained, Baron Trenck, of not having been
+legally sentenced, or heard in your own defence; I give you my word
+of honour, this you shall be, and also that you shall be released
+from your fetters, if you will only tell me who took your letter."
+To this I replied, with all the fortitude of innocence, "Everybody
+knows, my lord, I have never deserved the treatment I have met with
+in my country. My heart is irreproachable. I seek to recover my
+liberty by every means in my power: but were I capable of betraying
+the man whose compassion has induced him to succour my distress;
+were I the coward that could purchase happiness at his expense, I
+then should, indeed, deserve to wear those chains with which I am
+loaded. For myself, do with me what you please: yet remember I am
+not wholly destitute: I am still a captain in the Imperial service,
+and a descendant of the house of Trenck."
+
+Prince Ferdinand stood for a moment unable to answer; then renewed
+his threats, and left my dungeon. I have since been told that, when
+he was out of hearing, he said to those around him, "I pity his hard
+fate, and cannot but admire his strength of mind!"
+
+I must here remark that, when we remember the usual circumspection
+of this great man, we are obliged to wonder at his imprudence in
+holding a conversation of such a kind with me, which lasted a
+considerable time, in the presence of the guard. The soldiers of
+the whole garrison had afterwards the utmost confidence, as they
+were convinced I would not meanly devote others to destruction, that
+I might benefit myself. This was the way to gain me esteem and
+intercourse among the men, especially as the Duke had said he knew I
+must have money concealed, for that I had distributed some to the
+sentinels.
+
+He had scarcely been gone an hour, before I heard a noise near my
+prison. I listened--what could it be? I heard talking, and learned
+a grenadier had hanged himself to the pallisadoes of my prison.
+
+The officer of the town-guard, and the town-major again entered my
+dungeon to fetch a lanthorn they had forgotten, and the officer at
+going out, told me in a whisper, "One of your associates has just
+hanged himself."
+
+It was impossible to imagine my terror or sensations; I believed it
+could be only my kind, my honest Gelfhardt. After many gloomy
+thoughts, and lamenting the unhappy end of so worthy a fellow, I
+began to recollect what the Prince had promised me, if I would
+discover the accomplice. I knocked at the door, and desired to
+speak to the officer; he came to the window and asked me what I
+wanted; I requested he would inform the governor that if he would
+send me light, pen, ink, and paper, I would discover my whole
+secret.
+
+These were accordingly sent, an hour's time was granted; the door
+was shut, and I was left alone. I sat myself down, began to write
+on my night-table, and was about to insert the name of Gelfhardt,
+but my blood thrilled, and shrank back to my heart. I shuddered,
+rose, went to the aperture of the window and called, "Is there no
+man who in compassion will tell me the name of him who has hanged
+himself, that I may deliver many others from destruction?" The
+window was not nailed up till the next day; I therefore wrapped five
+pistoles in a paper, threw them out, called to the sentinel, and
+said, "Friend, take these, and save thy comrades; or go and betray
+me, and bring down innocent blood upon thy head!"
+
+The paper was taken up; a pause of silence ensued: I heard sighs,
+and presently after a low voice said, "his name is Schutz; he
+belonged to the company of Ripps." I had never heard the name
+before, or known the man, but I however immediately wrote SCHUTZ,
+instead of Gelfhardt. Having finished the letter I called the
+lieutenant, who took that and the light away, and again barred up
+the door of my dungeon. The Duke, however, suspected there must be
+some evasion, and everything remained in the same state: I obtained
+neither hearing nor court-martial. I learned, in the sequel, the
+following circumstances, which will display the truth of this
+apparently incredible story.
+
+While I was imprisoned in the citadel, a sentinel came to the post
+under my window, cursed and blasphemed, exclaiming aloud against the
+Prussian service, and saying, if Trenck only knew my mind, he would
+not long continue in his hole! I entered into discourse with him,
+and he told me, if I could give him money to purchase a boat, in
+which he might cross the Elbe, he would soon make my doors fly open,
+and set me free.
+
+Money at that time I had none; but I gave him a diamond shirt-
+buckle, worth five hundred ferns, which I had concealed. I never
+heard more from this man; he spoke to me no more. He often stood
+sentinel over me, which I knew by his Westphalian dialect, and I as
+often addressed myself to him, but ineffectually; he would make no
+answer.
+
+This Schutz must have sold my buckle, and let his riches be seen;
+for, when the Duke left me, the lieutenant on guard said to him--
+"You must certainly be the rascal who carried Trenck's letter; you
+have, for some time past, spent much money, and we have seen you
+with louis-d'ors. How came you by them?" Schutz was terrified, his
+conscience accused him, he imagined I should betray him, knowing he
+had deceived me. He, therefore, in the first agonies of despair,
+came to the pallisadoes, and hung himself before the door of my
+dungeon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+
+How wonderful is the hand of Providence! The wicked man fell a
+sacrifice to his crime, after having escaped a whole year, and the
+faithful, the benevolent-hearted Gelfhardt was thereby saved.
+
+The sentinels were now doubled, that any intercourse with them might
+be rendered more difficult. Gelfhardt again stood guard, but he had
+scarcely opportunity, without danger, to speak a few words: he
+thanked me for having preserved him, wished me better fortune, and
+told me the garrison, in a few days, would take the field.
+
+This was dreadful news: my whole plan was destroyed at a breath.
+I, however, soon recovered fresh hopes. The hole I had sunken was
+not discovered: I had five hundred florins, candles, and
+implements.
+
+The seven years' war broke out about a week after, and the regiment
+took the field. Major Weyner came, for the last time, and committed
+me to the care of the new major of the militia, Bruckhausen, who was
+one of the most surly and stupid of men. I shall often have
+occasion to mention this man.
+
+All the majors and lieutenants of the guard, who had treated me with
+compassion and esteem, now departed, and I became an old prisoner in
+a new world. I acquired greater confidence, however, by remembering
+that both officers and men in the militia were much easier to gain
+over than in the regulars; the truth of which opinion was soon
+confirmed.
+
+Four lieutenants were appointed, with their men, to mount guard at
+the Star Fort in turn, and before a year had passed, three of them
+were in my interest.
+
+The regiments had scarcely taken the field ere the new governor,
+General Borck, entered my prison, like what he was, an imperious,
+cruel tyrant. The King, in giving him the command, had informed him
+he must answer for my person with his head: he therefore had full
+power to treat me with whatever severity he pleased.
+
+Borck was a stupid man, of an unfeeling heart, the slave of despotic
+orders; and as often as he thought it possible I might rid myself of
+my fetters and escape, his heart palpitated with fear. In addition
+to this, he considered me as the vilest of men and traitors, seeing
+his King had condemned me to imprisonment so cruel, and his
+barbarity towards me was thus the effect of character and meanness
+of soul. He entered my dungeon not as an officer, to visit a
+brother officer in misery, but as an executioner to a felon. Smiths
+then made their appearance, and a monstrous iron collar, of a hand's
+breadth, was put round my neck, and connected with the chains of the
+feet by additional heavy links. My window was walled up, except a
+small air-hole. He even at length took away my bed, gave me no
+straw, and quitted me with a thousand revilings on the Empress-
+Queen, her whole army, and myself. In words, however, I was little
+in his debt, and he was enraged even to madness.
+
+What my situation was under this additional load of tyranny, and the
+command of a man so void of human pity, the reader may imagine. My
+greatest good fortune consisted in the ability I still had to
+disencumber myself of all the irons that were connected with the
+ankle-rims, and the provision I had of light, paper, and implements;
+and though it was apparently impossible I should break out
+undiscovered by both sentinels, yet had I the remaining hope of
+gaining some officer, by money, who, as in Glatz, should assist my
+escape.
+
+Had the commands of the King been literally obeyed escape would have
+been wholly impossible; for, by this, all communication would have
+been totally cut off with the sentinels. To this effect the four
+keys of the four doors were each to be kept by different persons;
+one with the governor, another with the town-major, the third with
+the major of the day, and the fourth with the lieutenant of the
+guard. I never could have found opportunity to have spoken with any
+one of them singly. These commands at first were rigidly observed,
+with this exception, that the governor made his appearance only
+every week. Magdeburg became so full of prisoners that the town-
+major was obliged to deliver up his key to the major of the day, and
+the governor's visitations wholly subsided, the citadel being an
+English mile and a half distant from the Star Fort.
+
+General Walrabe, who had been a prisoner ever since the year 1746,
+was also at the Star Fort, but he had apartments, and three thousand
+rix-dollars a year. The major of the day and officer of the guard
+dined with him daily, and generally stayed till evening. Either
+from compassion, or a concurrence of fortunate circumstances, these
+gentlemen entrusted the keys to the lieutenant on guard, by which
+means I could speak with each of them alone when they made their
+visits, and they themselves at length sought these opportunities.
+My consequent undertakings I shall relate, with all the arts and
+inventions of a wretched prisoner endeavouring to escape.
+
+Borck had selected three majors and four lieutenants for this
+service as those he could best trust. My situation was truly
+deplorable. The enormous iron round my neck pained me, and
+prevented motion; and I durst not attempt to disengage myself from
+the pendant chains till I had, for some months, carefully observed
+the mode of their examination, and which parts they supposed were
+perfectly secure. The cruelty of depriving me of my bed was still
+greater: I was obliged to sit upon the bare ground, and lean with
+my head against the damp wall. The chains that descended from the
+neck collar were obliged to be supported first with one band, and
+then with the other; for, if thrown behind, they would have
+strangled me, and if hanging forward occasioned most excessive
+headaches. The bar between my hands held one down, while leaning on
+my elbow; I supported with the other my chains; and this so benumbed
+the muscles and prevented circulation, that I could perceive my arms
+sensibly waste away. The little sleep I could have in such a
+situation may easily be supposed, and, at length, body and mind sank
+under this accumulation of miserable suffering, and I fell ill of a
+burning fever.
+
+The tyrant Borck was inexorable; he wished to expedite my death, and
+rid himself of his troubles and his terrors. Here did I experience
+what was the lamentable condition of a sick prisoner, without bed,
+refreshment, or aid from human being. Reason, fortitude, heroism,
+all the noble qualities of the mind, decay when the corporal
+faculties are diseased; and the remembrance of my sufferings, at
+this dreadful moment, still agitates, still inflames my blood, so as
+almost to prevent an attempt to describe what they were.
+
+Yet hope had not totally forsaken me. Deliverance seemed possible,
+especially should peace ensue; and I sustained, perhaps, what mortal
+man never bore, except myself, being, as I was, provided with
+pistols, or any such immediate mode of despatch.
+
+I continued ill about two months, and was so reduced at last that I
+had scarcely strength to lift the water-jug to my mouth. What must
+the sufferings of that man be who sits two months on the bare ground
+in a dungeon so damp, so dark, so horrible, without bed or straw,
+his limbs loaded as mine were, with no refreshment but dry
+ammunition bread, without so much as a drop of broth, without
+physic, without consoling friend, and who, under all these
+afflictions, must trust, for his recovery, to the efforts of nature
+alone
+
+Sickness itself is sufficient to humble the mightiest mind; what,
+then, is sickness, with such an addition of torment? The burning
+fever, the violent headaches, my neck swelled and inflamed with the
+irons, enraged me almost to madness. The fever and the fetters
+together flayed my body so that it appeared like one continued
+wound--Enough! Enough! The malefactor extended living on the
+wheel, to whom the cruel executioner refuses the last stroke--the
+blow of death--must yet, in some short period, expire: he suffers
+nothing I did not then suffer; and these, my excruciating pangs,
+continued two dreadful months--Yet, can it be supposed? There came
+a day! A day of horror, when these mortal pangs were beyond
+imagination increased. I sat scorched with this intolerable fever,
+in which nature and death were contending; and when attempting to
+quench my burning entrails with cold water, the jug dropped from my
+feeble hands, and broke! I had four-and-twenty hours to remain
+without water. So intolerable, so devouring was my thirst, I could
+have drank human blood! Ay, in my madness, had it been the blood of
+my father!
+
+* * * * * *
+
+Willingly would I have seized my pistols, but strength had forsaken
+me, I could not open the place I was obliged to render so secure.
+
+My visitors next day supposed me gone at last. I lay motionless,
+with my tongue out of my mouth. They poured water down my throat,
+and I revived.
+
+Oh, God! Oh, God! How pure, how delicious, how exquisite was this
+water! My insatiable thirst soon emptied the jug; they filled it
+anew, bade me farewell, hoped death would soon relieve my mortal
+sufferings, and departed.
+
+The lamentable state in which I lay at length became the subject of
+general conversation, that all the ladies of the town united with
+the officers, and prevailed on the tyrant, Borck, to restore me my
+bed.
+
+Oh, Nature, what are thy operations? From the day I drank water in
+such excess I gathered strength, and to the astonishment of every
+one, soon recovered. I had moved the heart of the officer who
+inspected my prison; and after six months, six cruel months of
+intense misery, the day of hope again began to dawn.
+
+One of the majors of the day entrusted his key to Lieutenant
+Sonntag, who came alone, spoke in confidence, and related his own
+situation, complained of his debts, his poverty, his necessities;
+and I made him a present of twenty-five louis-d'ors, for which he
+was so grateful that our friendship became unshaken.
+
+The three lieutenants all commiserated me, and would sit hours with
+me, when a certain major had the inspection; and he himself, after a
+time, would even pass half the day with me. He, too, was poor: and
+I gave him a draft for three thousand florins; hence new projects
+took birth.
+
+Money became necessary; I had disbursed all I possessed, a hundred
+florins excepted, among the officers. The eldest son of Captain K-
+, who officiated as major, had been cashiered: his father
+complained to me of his distress, and I sent him to my sister, not
+far from Berlin, from whom he received a hundred ducats. He
+returned and related her joy at hearing from me. He found her
+exceedingly ill; and she informed me, in a few lines, that my
+misfortunes, and the treachery of Weingarten, had entailed poverty
+upon her, and an illness which had endured more than two years. She
+wished me a happy deliverance from my chains, and, in expectation of
+death, committed her children to my protection. She, however, grew
+better, and married a second time, Colonel Pape; but died in the
+year 1758. I shall forbear to relate her history: it indeed does
+no honour to the ashes of Frederic, and would but less dispose my
+own heart to forgiveness, by reviving the memory of her oppressions
+and griefs.
+
+K-n returned happy with the money: all things were concerted with
+the father. I wrote to the Countess Bestuchef, also to the Grand
+Duke, afterwards Peter III., recommended the young soldier, and
+entreated every possible succour for myself.
+
+K-n departed through Hamburg, for Petersburg, where, in consequence
+of my recommendation, he became a captain, and in a short time
+major. He took his measures so well that I, by the intervention of
+his father, and a Hamburg merchant, received two thousand rubles
+from the Countess, while the service he rendered me made his own
+fortune in Russia.
+
+To old K- , who was as poor as he was honest, I gave three hundred
+ducats; and he, till death, continued my grateful friend. I
+distributed nearly as much to the other officers; and matters
+proceeded so far that Lieutenant Glotin gave back the keys to the
+major without locking my prison, himself passing half the night with
+me. Money was given to the guard to drink; and thus everything
+succeeded to my wish, and the tyrant Borck was deceived. I had a
+supply of light; had books, newspapers, and my days passed swiftly
+away. I read, I wrote, I busied myself so thoroughly that I almost
+forgot I was a prisoner. When, indeed, the surly, dull blockhead,
+Major Bruckhausen, had the inspection, everything had to be
+carefully reinstated. Major Z- , the second of the three, was also
+wholly mine. He was particularly attached to me; for I had promised
+to marry his daughter, and, should I die in prison, to bequeath him
+a legacy of ten thousand florins,
+
+Lieutenant Sonntag got false handcuffs made for me, that were so
+wide I could easily draw my hands out; the lieutenants only examined
+my irons, the new handcuffs were made perfectly similar to the old,
+and Bruckhausen had too much stupidity to remark any difference.
+
+The remainder of my chains I could disencumber myself of at
+pleasure. When I exercised myself, I held them in my hands, that
+the sentinel might be deceived by their clanking. The neck-iron was
+the only one I durst not remove; it was likewise too strongly
+riveted. I filed through the upper link of the pendant chain,
+however, by which means I could take it off, and this I concealed
+with bread in the manner before mentioned.
+
+So I could disencumber myself of most of my fetters, and sleep in
+ease. I again obtained sausages and cold meat, and thus my
+situation, bad as it still was, became less miserable. Liberty,
+however, was most desirable: but, alas! not one of the three
+lieutenants had the courage of a Schell: Saxony, too, was in the
+hands of the Prussians, and flight, therefore, more dangerous.
+Persuasion was in vain with men determined to risk nothing, but, if
+they went, to go in safety. Will, indeed, was not wanting in Glotin
+and Sonntag; but the first was a poltroon, and the latter a man of
+scruples, who thought this step might likewise be the ruin of his
+brother at Berlin.
+
+The sentinels were doubled, therefore my escape through my hole,
+which had been two years dug, could not, unperceived by them, be
+effected: still less could I, in the face of the guard, clamber the
+twelve feet high pallisadoes. The following labour, therefore,
+though Herculean, was undertaken.
+
+Lieutenant Sonntag, measuring the interval between the hole I had
+dug and the entrance in the gallery in the principal rampart, found
+it to be thirty-seven feet. Into this it was possible I might, by
+mining, penetrate. The difficulty of the enterprise was lessened by
+the nature of the ground, a fine white sand. Could I reach the
+gallery my freedom was certain. I had been informed how many steps
+to the right or left must be taken, to find the door that led to the
+second rampart: and, on the day when I should be ready for flight,
+the officer was secretly to leave this door open. I had light, and
+mining tools, and was further to rely on money and my own
+discretion.
+
+I began and continued this labour about six months. I have already
+noticed the difficulty of scraping out the earth with my hands, as
+the noise of instruments would have been heard by the sentinels. I
+had scarcely mined beyond my dungeon wall before I discovered the
+foundation of the rampart was not more than a foot deep; a capital
+error certainly in so important a fortress. My labour became the
+lighter, as I could remove the foundation stones of my dungeon, and
+was not obliged to mine so deep.
+
+My work at first proceeded so rapidly, that, while I had room to
+throw back my sand, I was able in one night to gain three feet; but
+ere I had proceeded ten feet I discovered all my difficulties.
+Before I could continue my work I was obliged to make room for
+myself, by emptying the sand out of my hole upon the floor of the
+prison, and this itself was an employment of some hours. The sand
+was obliged to be thrown out by the hand, and after it thus lay
+heaped in my prison, must again be returned into the hole; and I
+have calculated that after I had proceeded twenty feet, I was
+obliged to creep under ground, in my hole, from fifteen hundred to
+two thousand fathoms, within twenty-four hours, in the removal and
+replacing of the sand. This labour ended, care was to be taken that
+in none of the crevices of the floor there might be any appearance
+of this fine white sand. The flooring was the next to be exactly
+replaced, and my chains to be resumed. So severe was the fatigue of
+one day, in this mode, that I was always obliged to rest the three
+following.
+
+To reduce my labour as much as possible, I was constrained to make
+the passage so small that my body only had space to pass, and I had
+not room to draw my arm back to my head. The work, too, must all be
+done naked, otherwise the dirtiness of my shirt must have been
+remarked; the sand was wet, water being found at the depth of four
+feet, where the stratum of the gravel began. At length the
+expedient of sand-bags occurred to me, by which it might be removed
+out and in more expeditiously. I obtained linen from the officers,
+but not in sufficient quantities; suspicions would have been excited
+at observing so much linen brought into the prison. At last I took
+my sheets and the ticking that enclosed my straw, and cut them up
+for sand-bags, taking care to lie down on my bed, as if ill, when
+Bruckhausen paid his visit.
+
+The labour, towards the conclusion, became so intolerable as to
+incite despondency. I frequently sat contemplating the heaps of
+sand, during a momentary respite from work; and thinking it
+impossible I could have strength or time again to replace all things
+as they were, resolved patiently to wait the consequence, and leave
+everything in its present disorder. Yes! I can assure the reader
+that, to effect concealment, I have scarcely had time in twenty-four
+hours to sit down and eat a morsel of bread. Recollecting, however,
+the efforts, and all the progress I had made, hope would again
+revive, and exhausted strength return: again would I begin my
+labours, that I might preserve my secret and my expectations: yet
+has it frequently happened that my visitors have entered a few
+minutes after I had reinstated everything in its place.
+
+When my work was within six or seven feet of being accomplished, a
+new misfortune happened that at once frustrated all further
+attempts. I worked, as I have said, under the foundation of the
+rampart near where the sentinels stood. I could disencumber myself
+of my fetters, except my neck collar and its pendent chain. This,
+as I worked, though it was fastened, got loose, and the clanking was
+heard by one of the sentinels about fifteen feet from my dungeon.
+The officer was called, they laid their ears to the ground, and
+heard me as I went backward and forward to bring my earth bags.
+This was reported the next day; and the major, who was my best
+friend, with the town-major, and a smith and mason, entered my
+prison. I was terrified. The lieutenant by a sign gave me to
+understand I was discovered. An examination was begun, but the
+officers would not see, and the smith and mason found all, as they
+thought, safe. Had they examined my bed, they would have seen the
+ticking and sheets were gone.
+
+The town-major, who was a dull man, was persuaded the thing was
+impossible, and said to the sentinel, "Blockhead! you have heard
+some mole underground, and not Trenck. How, indeed, could it be,
+that lee should work underground, at such a distance from his
+dungeon?" Here the scrutiny ended.
+
+There was now no time for delay. Had they altered their hour of
+coming, they must have found me at work: but this, during ten
+years, never happened: for the governor and town-major were stupid
+men, and the others, poor fellows, wishing me all success, were
+willingly blind. In a few days I could have broken out, but, when
+ready, I was desirous to wait for the visitation of the man who had
+treated me so tyranically, Bruckhausen, that his own negligence
+might be evident. But this man, though he wanted understanding, did
+not want good fortune. He was ill for some time, and his duty
+devolved on K- .
+
+He recovered; and the visitation being over, the doors were no
+sooner barred than I began my supposed last labour. I had only
+three feet farther to proceed, and it was no longer necessary I
+should bring out the sand, I having room to throw it behind me.
+What my anxiety was, what my exertions were, may well be imagined.
+My evil genius, however, had decreed that the same sentinel, who had
+heard me before, should be that day on guard. He was piqued by
+vanity, to prove he was not the blockhead he had been called; he
+therefore again laid his ear to the ground, and again heard me
+burrowing. Ho called his comrades first, next thee major; lee came,
+and heard me likewise; they then went without the pallisadoes, and
+heard me working near the door, at which place I was to break into
+the gallery. This door they immediately opened, entered the gallery
+with lanthorns, and waited to catch the hunted fox when unearthed.
+
+Through the first small breach I made I perceived a light, and saw
+the heads of those who were expecting me. This was indeed a
+thunder-stroke! I crept back, made my way through the sand I had
+cast behind me, and awaited my fate with shuddering! I had the
+presence of mind to conceal my pistols, candles, paper, and some
+money, under the floor which I could remove. The money was disposed
+of in various holes, well concealed also between the panels of the
+doors; and under different cracks in the floor I hid my small files
+and knives. Scarcely were these disposed of before the doors
+resounded: the floor was covered with sand and sand-bags: my
+handcuffs, however, and the separating bar, I had hastily resumed
+that they might suppose I had worked with them on, which they were
+silly enough to credit, highly to my future advantage.
+
+No man was more busy on this occasion than the brutal and stupid
+Bruckhausen, who put many interrogatories, to which I made no reply,
+except assuring him that I should have completed my work some days
+sooner, had it not been his good fortune to fall sick, and that this
+only had been the cause of my failure.
+
+The man was absolutely terrified with apprehension; he began to fear
+me, grew more polite, and even supposed nothing was impossible to
+me.
+
+It was too late to remove the sand; therefore the lieutenant and
+guard continued with me, so that this night at least I did not want
+company. When the morning came, the hole was first filled up; the
+planking was renewed. The tyrant Borck was ill, and could not come,
+otherwise my treatment would have been still more lamentable. The
+smiths had ended before the evening, and the irons were heavier than
+ever. The foot chains, instead of being fastened as before, were
+screwed and riveted; all else remained as formerly. They were
+employed in the flooring till the next day, so that I could not
+sleep, and at last I sank down with weariness.
+
+The greatest of my misfortunes was they again deprived me of my bed,
+because I had cut it up for sand-bags. Before the doors were barred
+Bruckhausen and another major examined my body very narrowly. They
+often had asked me where I concealed all my implements? My answer
+was, "Gentlemen, Beelzebub is my best and most intimate friend; he
+brings me everything I want, supplies me with light: we play whole
+nights at piquet, and, guard me as you please, he will finally
+deliver me out of your power."
+
+Some were astonished, others laughed. At length, as they were
+barring the last door, I called, "Come back, gentlemen! you have
+forgotten something of great importance." In the interim I had
+taken up one of my hidden files. When they returned, "Look ye,
+gentlemen," said I, "here is a proof of the friendship Beelzebub has
+for me, he has brought me this in a twinkling." Again they
+examined, and again they shut their doors. While they were so
+doing, I took out a knife, and ten louis-d'ors, called, and they re
+turned, grumbling curses; I then shewed the knife and the louis-
+d'ors. Their consternation was excessive; and I diverted my
+misfortunes by jesting at such blundering, short-sighted keepers.
+It was soon rumoured through Magdeburg, especially among the simple
+and vulgar, that I was a magician to whom the devil brought all I
+asked.
+
+One Major Holtzkammer, a very selfish man, profited by this report.
+A foolish citizen had offered him fifty dollars if he might only be
+permitted to see me through the door, being very desirous to see a
+wizard. Holtzkammer told me, and we jointly determined to sport
+with his credulity. The major gave me a mask with a monstrous nose,
+which I put on when the doors were opening, and threw myself in an
+heroic attitude. The affrighted burger drew back; but Holtzkammer
+stopped him, and said, "Have patience for some quarter of an hour,
+and you shall see he will assume quite a different countenance."
+The burger waited, my mask was thrown by, and my face appeared
+whitened with chalk, and made ghastly. The burger again shrank
+back; Holtzkammer kept him in conversation, and I assumed a third
+farcical form. I tied my hair under my nose, and a pewter dish to
+my breast, and when the door a third time opened, I thundered,
+"Begone, rascals, or I'll set your necks--awry!" They both ran:
+and the silly burger, eased of his fifty dollars, scampered first.
+
+The major, in vain, laid his injunctions on the burger never to
+reveal what he had beheld, it being a breach of duty in him to admit
+any persons whatever to the sight of me. In a few days, the
+necromancer Trenck was the theme of every alehouse in Magdeburg, and
+the person was named who had seen me change my form thrice in the
+space of one hour. Many false and ridiculous circumstances were
+added, and at last the story reached the governor's ears. The
+citizen was cited, and offered to take his oath of what himself and
+the major had seen. Holtzkammer accordingly suffered a severe
+reprimand, and was some days under arrest. We frequently laughed,
+however, at this adventure, which had rendered me so much the
+subject of conversation. Miraculous reports were the more easily
+credited, because no one could comprehend how, in despite of the
+load of irons I carried, and all the vigilance of my guards, I
+should be continually able to make new attempts, while those
+appointed to examine my dungeon seemed, as it were, blinded and
+bewildered. A proof this, how easy it is to deceive the credulous,
+and whence have originated witchcraft, prophecies, and miracles.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+
+My last undertaking had employed me more than twelve months, and so
+weakened me that I appeared little better than a skeleton.
+Notwithstanding the greatness of my spirit, I should have sunk into
+despondency, at seeing an end like this to all my labours, had I not
+still cherished a secret hope of escaping, founded on the friends I
+had gained among the officers.
+
+I soon felt the effects of the loss of my bed, and was a second time
+attacked by a violent fever, which would this time certainly have
+consumed me had not the officers, unknown to the governor, treated
+me with all possible compassion. Bruckhausen alone continued my
+enemy, and the slave of his orders; on his day of examination rules
+and commands in all their rigour were observed, nor durst I free
+myself from my irons, till I had for some weeks remarked those parts
+on which he invariably fixed his attention. I then cut through the
+link, and closed up the vacancy with bread. My hands I could always
+draw out, especially after illness had consumed the flesh off my
+bones. Half a year had elapsed before I had recovered sufficient
+strength to undertake, anew, labours like the past.
+
+Necessity at length taught me the means of driving Bruckhausen from
+my dungeon, and of inducing him to commit his office to another. I
+learnt his olfactory nerves were somewhat delicate, and whenever I
+heard the doors unbar, I took care to make a stir in my night-table.
+This made him give back, and at length he would come no farther than
+the door. Such are the hard expedients of a poor unhappy prisoner!
+
+One day he came, bloated with pride, just after a courier had
+brought the news of victory, and spoke of the Austrians, and the
+august person of the Empress-Queen with so much virulence, that, at
+last, enraged almost to madness, I snatched the sword of an officer
+from its sheath, and should certainly have ended him, had he not
+made a hasty retreat. From that day forward he durst no more come
+without guards to examine the dungeon. Two men always preceded him,
+with their bayonets fixed, and their pieces presented, behind whom
+he stood at the door. This was another fortunate incident, as I
+dreaded only his examination.
+
+The following anecdote will afford a specimen of this man's
+understanding. While digging in the earth I found a cannon-ball,
+and laid it in the middle of my prison. When he came to examine--
+"What in the name of God is that?" said he. "It is a part of the
+ammunition," answered I, "that my Familiar brings me. The cannon
+will be here anon, and you will then see fine sport!" He was
+astonished, told this to others, nor could conceive such a ball
+might by any natural means enter my prison.
+
+I wrote a satire on him, when the late Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel was
+governor of Magdeburg; and I had permission to write as will
+hereafter appear: the Land-grave gave it to him to read himself;
+and so gross was his conception, that though his own phraseology was
+introduced, part of his history and his character painted, yet he
+did not perceive the jest, but laughed heartily with the hearers.
+The Landgrave was highly diverted, and after I obtained my freedom,
+restored me the manuscript written in my own blood.
+
+About the time that my last attempt at escaping failed, General
+Krusemarck came to my prison, whom I had formerly lived with in
+habits of intimacy, when cornet of the body guard. Without
+testifying friendship, esteem, or compassion, he asked, among other
+things, in an authoritative tone, how I could employ my time to
+prevent tediousness? I answered in as haughty a mood as he
+interrogated: for never could misfortune bend my mind. I told him,
+"I always could find sources of entertainment in my own thoughts;
+and that, as for my dreams, I imagined they would at least be as
+peaceful and pleasant as those of my oppressors." "Had you in
+time," replied he, "curbed this fervour of yours, had you asked
+pardon of the King, perhaps you would have been in very different
+circumstances; but he who has committed an offence in which he
+obstinately persists, endeavouring only to obtain freedom by
+seducing men from their duty, deserves no better fate."
+
+Justly was my anger roused! "Sir," answered I, "you are a general
+of the King of Prussia, I am an Austrian captain. My royal mistress
+will protect, perhaps deliver me, or, at least, revenge my death; I
+have a conscience void of reproach. You, yourself, well know I have
+not deserved these chains. I place my hope in time, and the
+justness of my cause, calumniated and condemned, as I have been,
+without legal sentence or hearing. In such a situation, the
+philosopher will always be able to brave and despise the tyrant."
+
+He departed with threats, and his last words were, "The bird shall
+soon be taught to sing another tune." The effects of this courteous
+visit were soon felt. An order came that I should be prevented
+sleeping, and that the sentinels should call, and wake me every
+quarter of an hour; which dreadful order was immediately executed.
+
+This was indeed a punishment intolerable to nature! Yet did custom
+at length teach me to answer in my sleep. Four years did this
+unheard of cruelty continue! The noble Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel at
+length put an end to it a year before I was released from my
+dungeon, and once again, in mercy, suffered me to sleep in peace.
+
+Under this new affliction, I wrote an Elegy which may be found in
+the second volume of my works, a few lines of which I shall cite.
+
+
+Wake me, ye guards, for hark, the quarter strikes!
+Sport with my woes, laugh loud at my miseries
+Hearken if you hear my chains clank! Knock! Beat!
+Of an inexorable tyrant be ye
+Th' inexorable instruments! Wake me, ye slaves;
+Ye do but as you're bade. Soon shall he lie
+Sleepless, or dreaming, the spectres of conscience
+Behold and shriek, who me deprives of rest.
+
+Wake me: Again the quarter strikes! Call loud
+Rip up all my bleeding wounds, and shrink not!
+Yet think 'tis I that answer, God that hears!
+To every wretch in chains sleep is permitted:
+I, I alone, am robb'd of this last refuge
+Of sinking nature! Hark! Again they thunder!
+Again they iterate yells of Trenck and death.
+
+Peace to thy anger, peace, thou suffering heart!
+Nor indignant beat, adding tenfold pangs to pain.
+
+Ye burthened limbs, arise from momentary
+Slumbers! Shake your chains! Murmur not, but rise!
+And ye! Watch-dogs of Power! let loose your rage:
+Fear not, for I am helpless, unprotected.
+And yet, not so--The noble mind, within
+Itself, resources finds innumerable.
+
+Thou, Oh God, thought'st good me t' imprison thus:
+Thou, Oh God, in Thy good time, wilt me deliver.
+
+Wake me then, nor fear! My soul slumbers not.
+And who can say but those who fetter me,
+May, ere to-morrow, groan themselves in fetters!
+Wake me! For lo! their sleep's less sweet than mine.
+
+Call! Call! From night to morn, from twilight to dawn,
+Incessant! Yea, in God's name, Call! Call! Call!
+Amen! Amen! Thy will, Oh God, be done!
+Yet surely Thou at length shalt hear my sighs!
+Shalt burst my prison doors! Shalt shew me fair
+Creation! Yea, the very heav'n of heav'ns!
+
+
+With whom these orders originated, unexampled in the history even of
+tyranny, I shall not venture to say. The major, who was my friend,
+advised me to persist in not answering. I followed his advice; and
+it produced this good effect that we mutually forced each other to a
+capitulation: they restored me my bed, and I was obliged to reply.
+
+Immediately after this regulation, the sub-governor, General Borck,
+my bitter enemy, became insane, was dispossessed of his post, and
+Lieutenant-General Reichmann, the benevolent friend of humanity, was
+made sub-governor.
+
+About the same time the Court fled from Berlin, and the Queen, the
+Prince of Prussia, the Princess Amelia, and the Margrave Henry,
+chose Magdeburg for their residence. Bruckhausen grew more polite,
+probably perceiving I was not wholly deserted, and that it was yet
+possible I might obtain my freedom. The cruel are usually cowards,
+and there is reason to suppose Bruckhausen was actuated by his fears
+to treat me with greater respect.
+
+The worthy new governor had not indeed the power to lighten my
+chains, or alter the general regulations; what he could, he did. If
+he did not command, he connived at the doors being occasionally at
+first, and at length, daily, kept open some hours, to admit daylight
+and fresh air. After a time, they were open the whole day, and only
+closed by the officers when they returned from their visit to
+Walrabe.
+
+Having light, I began to carve, with a nail, on the pewter cup in
+which I drank, satirical verses and various figures, and attained so
+much perfection that my cups, at last, were considered as master-
+pieces, both of engraving and invention, and were sold dear, as rare
+curiosities. My first attempts were rude, as may well be imagined.
+My cup was carried to town, and shown to visitors by the governor,
+who sent me another. I improved, and each of the inspecting
+officers wished to possess one. I grew more expert, and spent a
+whole year in this employment, which thus passed swiftly away. The
+perfection I had now acquired obtained me the permission of candle-
+light, and this continued till I was restored to freedom.
+
+The King gave orders these cups should all be inspected by
+government, because I wished, by my verses and devices, to inform
+the world of my fate. But this command was not obeyed; the officers
+made merchandise of my cups, and sold them at last for twelve ducats
+each. Their value increased so much, when I was released from
+prison, that they are now to be found in various museums throughout
+Europe. Twelve years ago the late Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel
+presented one of them to my wife; and another came, in a very
+unaccountable manner, from the Queen-Dowager of Prussia to Paris. I
+have given prints of both these, with the verses they contained, in
+my works; whence it may be seen how artificially they were engraved.
+
+A third fell into the hands of Prince Augustus Lobkowitz, then a
+prisoner of war at Magdeburg, who, on his return to Vienna,
+presented it to the Emperor, who placed it in his museum. Among
+other devices on this cup, was a landscape, representing a vineyard
+and husbandmen, and under it the following words:- By my labours my
+vineyard flourished, and I hoped to have gathered the fruit; but
+Ahab came. Alas! for Naboth.
+
+The allusion was so pointed, both to the wrongs done me in Vienna,
+and my sufferings in Prussia, that it made a very strong impression
+on the Empress-Queen, who immediately commanded her minister to make
+every exertion for my deliverance. She would probably at last have
+even restored me to my estates, had not the possessors of them been
+so powerful, or had she herself lived one year longer. To these my
+engraved cups was I indebted for being once more remembered at
+Vienna. On the same cup, also, was another engraving of a bird in a
+cage, held by a Turk, with the following inscription:- The bird
+sings even in the storm; open his cage, break his fetters, ye
+friends of virtue, and his songs shall be the delight of your
+abodes!
+
+There is another remarkable circumstance attending these cups. All
+were forbidden under pain of death to hold conversation with me, or
+to supply me with pen and ink; yet by this open permission of
+writing what I pleased on pewter, was I enabled to inform the world
+of all I wished, and to prove a man of merit was oppressed. The
+difficulties of this engraving will be conceived, when it is
+remembered that I worked by candle-light on shining pewter, attained
+the art of giving light and shade, and by practice could divide a
+cup into two-and-thirty compartments as regularly with a stroke of
+the hand as with a pair of compasses. The writing was so minute
+that it could only be read with glasses. I could use but one hand,
+both, being separated by the bar, and therefore held the cup between
+my knees. My sole instrument was a sharpened nail, yet did I write
+two lines on the rim only.
+
+My labour became so excessive, that I was in danger of distraction
+or blindness. Everybody wished for cups, and I wished to oblige
+everybody, so that I worked eighteen hours a day. The reflection of
+the light from the pewter was injurious to my eyes, and the labour
+of invention for apposite subjects and verses was most fatiguing. I
+had learnt only architectural drawing.
+
+Enough of these cups, which procured me so much honour, so many
+advantages, and helped to shorten so many mournful hours. My
+greatest encumbrance was the huge iron collar, with its enormous
+appendages, which, when suffered to press the arteries in the back
+of my neck, occasioned intolerable headaches. I sat too much, and a
+third time fell sick. A Brunswick sausage, secretly given me by a
+friend, occasioned an indigestion, which endangered my life; a
+putrid fever followed, and my body was reduced to a skeleton.
+Medicines, however, were conveyed to me by the officers, and, now
+and then, warm food.
+
+After my recovery, I again thought it necessary to endeavour to
+regain my liberty. I had but forty louis-d'ors remaining, and these
+I could not get till I had first broken up the flooring.
+
+Lieutenant Sonntag was consumptive, and obtained his discharge. I
+supplied bins with money to defray the expenses of his journey, and
+with an order that four hundred florins should be annually paid him
+from my effects till his death or my release. I commissioned him to
+seek an audience from the Empress, endeavour to excite her
+compassion in my behalf, and to remit me four thousand florins, for
+which I gave a proper acquittance, by the way of Hamburgh. The
+money-draft was addressed to my administrators, Counsellors Kempf
+and Huttner.
+
+But no one, alas! in Vienna, wished my return; they had already
+begun to share my property, of which they never rendered me an
+account. Poor Sonntag was arrested as a spy, imprisoned, ill
+treated for some weeks, and, at last, when naked and destitute,
+received a hundred florins, and was escorted beyond the Austrian
+confines. The worthy man fell a shameful sacrifice to his honesty,
+could never obtain an audience of the Empress, and returned poor and
+miserable on foot to Berlin, where he was twelve months secretly
+maintained by his brother, and with whom he died. He wrote an
+account of all this to the good Knoblauch, my Hamburgh agent, and I,
+from my small store, sent him a hundred ducats.
+
+How much must I despair of finding any place of refuge on earth,
+hearing accounts like these from Vienna.
+
+A friend, whom I will never name, by the aid of one of the
+lieutenants, secretly visited me, and supplied me with six hundred
+ducats. The same friend, in the year 1763, paid four thousand
+florins to the imperial envoy, Baron Reidt, at Berlin, for the
+furthering of my freedom, as I shall presently more fully show.
+Thus I had once more money.
+
+About this time the French army advanced to within five miles of
+Magdeburg. This important fortress was, at that time, the key of
+the whole Prussian power. It required a garrison of sixteen
+thousand men, and contained not more than fifteen hundred. The
+French might have marched in unopposed, and at once have put an end
+to the war. The officers brought me all the news, and my hopes rose
+as they approached. What was my astonishment when the major
+informed me that three waggons had entered the town in the night,
+had been sent back loaded with money, and that the French were
+retreating. This, I can assure my readers, on my honour, is
+literally truth, to the eternal disgrace of the French general. The
+major, who informed me, was himself an eye-witness of the fact. It
+was pretended the money was for the army of the King, but everybody
+could guess whither it was going; it left the town without a convoy,
+and the French were then in the neighbourhood. Such were the allies
+of Maria Theresa; the receivers of this money are known in Paris.
+Not only were my hopes this way frustrated, but in Russia likewise,
+where the Countess of Bestuchef and the Chancellor had fallen into
+disgrace.
+
+I now imagined another, and, indeed, a fearful and dangerous
+project. The garrison of Magdeburg at this moment consisted but of
+nine hundred militia, who were discontented men. Two majors and two
+lieutenants were in my interest. The guard of the Star Fort
+amounted but to a hundred and fifteen men. Fronting the gate of
+this fort was the town gate, guarded only by twelve men and an
+inferior officer; beside these lay the casemates, in which were
+seven thousand Croat prisoners. Baron K-y, a captain, and prisoner
+of war, also was in our interest, and would hold his comrades ready
+at a certain place and time to support my undertaking. Another
+friend was, under some pretence, to hold his company ready, with
+their muskets loaded, and the plan was such that I should have had
+four hundred men in arms ready to carry it into execution.
+
+The officer was to have placed the two men we most suspected and
+feared, as sentinels over me; he was to command them to take away my
+bed, and when encumbered, I was to spring out, and shut them in the
+prison. Clothing and arms were to have been procured, and brought
+me into my prison; the town-gate was to have been surprised; I was
+to have run to the casemate, and called to the Croats, "Trenck to
+arms!" My friends, at the same instant, were to break forth, and
+the plan was so well concerted that it could not have failed.
+Magdeburg, the magazine of the army, the royal treasury, arsenal,
+all would have been mine; and sixteen thousand men, who were then
+prisoners of war, would have enabled me to keep possession.
+
+The most essential secret, by which all this was to have been
+effected, I dare not reveal; suffice it to say, everything was
+provided for, everything made secure; I shall only add that the
+garrison, in the harvest months, was exceedingly weakened, because
+the farmers paid the captains a florin per man each day, and the men
+for their labour likewise, to obtain hands. The sub-governor
+connived at the practice.
+
+One Lieutenant G- procured a furlough to visit his friends; but,
+supplied by me with money, he went to Vienna. I furnished him with
+a letter, addressed to Counsellors Kempf and Huttner, including a
+draft for two thousand ducats; wherein I said that, by these means,
+I should not only soon be at liberty, but in possession of the
+fortress of Magdeburg; and that the bearer was entrusted with the
+rest.
+
+The lieutenant came safe to Vienna, underwent a thousand
+interrogatories, and his name was repeatedly asked. This,
+fortunately, he concealed. They advised him not to be concerned in
+so dangerous an undertaking; told him I had not so much money due to
+me, and gave him, instead of two thousand ducats, one thousand
+florins. With these he left Vienna, but with very prudent
+suspicions which prevented him ever returning to Magdeburg. A month
+had scarcely passed before the late Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel, then
+chief governor, entered my prison, showed me my letter, and demanded
+to know who had carried the letter, and who were to free me and
+betray Magdeburg. Whether the letter was sent immediately to the
+King or the governor I know not; it is sufficient that I was once
+more betrayed at Vienna. The truth was, the administrators of my
+effects had acted as if I were deceased, and did not choose to
+refund two thousand ducats. They wished not I should obtain my
+freedom, in a manner that would have obliged the government to have
+rewarded me, and restore the effects they had embezzled and the
+estates they had seized. What happened afterwards at Vienna, which
+will be related in its place, will incontestably prove this surmise
+to be well founded.
+
+These bad men did not, it is true, die in the manner they ought, but
+they are all dead, and I am still living, an honest, though poor
+man: they did not die so. Be this read and remembered by their
+luxurious heirs, who refuse to restore my children to their rights.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+
+My consternation on the appearance of the Landgrave, with my letter
+in his hand, may well be supposed; I had the presence of mind,
+however, to deny my handwriting, and affect astonishment at so
+crafty a trick. The Landgrave endeavoured to convict me, told me
+what Lieutenant Kemnitz had repeated at Vienna concerning my
+possessing myself of Magdeburg, and thereby showed me how fully I
+had been betrayed. But as no such person existed as Lieutenant
+Kemnitz, and as my friend had fortunately concealed his name, the
+mystery remained impenetrable, especially as no one could conceive
+how a prisoner, in my situation, could seduce or subdue the whole
+garrison. The worthy prince left my prison, apparently satisfied
+with my defence; his heart felt no satisfaction in the misfortunes
+of others.
+
+The next day a formal examination was taken, at which the sub-
+governor Reichmann presided. I was accused as a traitor to my
+country; but I obstinately denied my handwriting. Proofs or
+witnesses there were none, and in answer to the principal charge, I
+said, "I was no criminal, but a man calumniated, illegally
+imprisoned, and loaded with irons; that the King, in the year 1746,
+had cashiered me, and confiscated my parental inheritance; that
+therefore the laws of nature enforced me to seek honour and bread in
+a foreign service; and that, finding these in Austria, I became an
+officer and a faithful subject of the Empress-Queen; that I had been
+a second time unoffendingly imprisoned; that here I was treated as
+the worst of malefactors, and my only resource was to seek my
+liberty by such means as I could; were I therefore in this attempt
+to destroy Magdeburg, and occasion the loss of a thousand lives, I
+should still be guiltless. Had I been heard and legally sentenced,
+previous to my imprisonment at Glatz, I should have been, and still
+continued, a criminal; but not having been guilty of any small, much
+less of any great crime, equal to my punishment, if such crime could
+be, I was therefore not accountable for consequences; I owed neither
+fidelity nor duty to the King of Prussia; for by the word of his
+power he had deprived me of bread, honour, country, and freedom."
+
+Here the examination ended, without further discovery; the officers,
+however, falling under suspicion, were all removed, and thus I lost
+my best friends; yet it was not long before I had gained two others,
+which was no difficult matter, as I knew the national character, and
+that none but poor men were made militia officers. Thus was the
+governor's precaution fruitless, and almost everybody secretly
+wished I might obtain my freedom.
+
+I shall never forget the noble manner in which I was treated on this
+occasion by the Landgrave. This I personally acknowledged, some
+years afterwards, in the city of Cassel, when I heard many things
+which confirmed all my surmises concerning Vienna. The Landgrave
+received me with all grace, favour, and distinction. I revere his
+memory, and seek to honour his name. He was the friend of
+misfortune. When I not long afterwards fell ill, he sent me his own
+physician, and meat from his table, nor would he suffer me, during
+two months, to be wakened by the sentinels. He likewise removed the
+dreadful collar from my neck; for which he was severely reprimanded
+by the King, as he himself has since assured me.
+
+I might fill a volume with incidents attending two other efforts to
+escape, but I will not weary the reader's patience with too much
+repetition. I shall merely give an abstract of both.
+
+When I had once more gained the officers, I made a new attempt at
+mining my way out. Not wanting for implements, my chains and the
+flooring were soon cut through, and all was so carefully replaced
+that I was under no fear of examination. I here found my concealed
+money, pistols, and other necessaries, but till I had rid myself of
+some hundredweight of sand, it was impossible to proceed. For this
+purpose I made two different openings in the floor: out of the real
+hole I threw a great quantity of sand into my prison; after which I
+closed it with all possible care. I then worked at the second with
+so much noise, that I was certain they must hear me without. About
+midnight the doors began to thunder, and in they came, detecting me,
+as I intended they should. None of them could conceive why I should
+wish to break out under the door, where there was a triple guard to
+pass. The sentinels remained, and in the morning prisoners were
+sent to wheel away the sand. The hole was walled up and boarded,
+and my fetters were renewed. They laughed at the ridiculousness of
+my undertaking, but punished me by depriving me of my light and bed,
+which, however, in a fortnight were both restored. Of the other
+hole, out of which most of the earth had been thrown, no one was
+aware. The major and lieutenant were too much my friends to remark
+that they had removed thrice the quantity of sand the false opening
+could contain. They supposed this strange attempt having failed, it
+would be my last, and Bruckhausen grew negligent.
+
+The governor and sub-governor both visited me after some weeks, but
+far from imitating the brutality of Borck, the Landgrave spoke to me
+with mildness, promised me his interest to regain my freedom, when
+peace should be concluded; told me I had more friends than I
+supposed, and assured me I had not been forgotten by the Court at
+Vienna.
+
+He promised me every alleviation, and I gave him my word I would no
+more attempt to escape while he remained governor. My manner
+enforced conviction and he ordered my neck-collar to be taken off,
+my window to be unclosed, my doors to be left open two hours every
+day, a stove to be put in my dungeon, finer linen for my shirts, and
+paper to amuse myself by writing my thoughts. The sheets were to be
+numbered when given, and then returned, by the town-major, that I
+might not abuse this liberty.
+
+Ink was not allowed me, I therefore pricked my fingers, suffered the
+blood to trickle into a pot; by these means I procured a substitute
+for ink, both to write and draw.
+
+I now engraved my cups, and versified. I had opportunity to display
+my abilities to awaken compassion. My emulation was increased by
+knowing that my works were seen at Courts, that the Princess Amelia
+and the Queen herself testified their satisfaction. I had subjects
+to engrave from sent me; and the wretch whom the King intended to
+bury alive, whose name no man was to mention, never was more famous
+than while he vented his groans in his dungeon. My writings
+produced their effect, and really regained my freedom. To my
+cultivation of the sciences and presence of mind I am indebted for
+all; these all the power of Frederic could not deprive me of. Yes!
+This liberty I procured, though he answered all petitions in my
+behalf--"He is a dangerous man: and so long as I live he shall
+never see the light!" Yet have I seen it during his life: after
+his death I have seen it without revenging myself, otherwise than by
+proving my virtue to a monarch who oppressed because he knew me not,
+because be would not recall the hasty sentence of anger, or own he
+might be mistaken. He died convinced of my integrity, yet without
+affording me retribution! Man is formed by misfortune; virtue is
+active in adversity. It is indifferent to me that the companions of
+my youth have their ears gratified, delighted with the titles of
+General! Field-Marshal I have learned to live without such
+additions; I am known in my works.
+
+I returned to my dungeon. Here, after my last conference with the
+Landgrave, I waited my fate with a mind more at ease than that of a
+prince in a palace. The newspapers they brought me bespoke
+approaching peace, on which my dependence was placed, and I passed
+eighteen months calmly, and without further attempt to escape.
+
+The father of the Landgrave died; and Magdeburg now lost its
+governor. The worthy Reichmann, however, testified for me all
+compassion and esteem; I had books, and my time was employed.
+Imprisonment and chains to me were become habitual, and freedom in
+hope approached.
+
+About this time I wrote the poems, "The Macedonian Hero," "The Dream
+Realised," and some fables. The best of my poems are now lost to
+me. The mind's sensibility when the body is imprisoned is strongly
+roused, nor can all the aids of the library equal this advantage.
+Perhaps I may recover some in Berlin; if so, the world may learn
+what my thoughts then were. When I was at liberty, I had none but
+such as I remembered, and these I committed to writing. On my first
+visit to the Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel I received a volume of them
+written in my own blood; but there were eight of these which I shall
+never regain.
+
+The death of Elizabeth, the deposing of Peter III., and the
+accession of Catherine II. produced peace. On the receipt of this
+intelligence I tried to provide for all contingencies. The worthy
+Captain K- had opened me a correspondence with Vienna: I was
+assured of support; but was assured the administrators and those who
+possessed my estates would throw every impediment in the way of
+freedom. I tried to persuade another officer to aid my escape, but
+in vain.
+
+I therefore opened my old hole, and my friends assisted me to
+disembarrass myself of sand. My money melted away, but they
+provided me with tools, gunpowder, and a good sword. I had remained
+so long quiet that my flooring was not examined.
+
+My intent was to wait the peace; and should I continue in chains,
+then would I have my subterranean passage to the rampart ready for
+escape. For my further security, an old lieutenant had purchased a
+house in the suburbs, where I might lie concealed. Gummern, in
+Saxony, is two miles from Magdeburg; here a friend, with two good
+horses, was to wait a year, to ride on the glacis of Klosterbergen
+on the first and fifteenth of each month, and at a given signal to
+hasten to my assistance.
+
+My passage had to be ready in case of emergency; I removed the upper
+planking, broke up the two beds, cut the boards into chips, and
+burnt them in my stove. By this I obtained so much additional room
+as to proceed half way with my mine. Linen again was brought me,
+sand-bags made, and thus I successfully proceeded to all but the
+last operation. Everything was so well concealed that I had nothing
+to fear from inspection, especially as the new come garrison could
+not know what was the original length of the planks.
+
+I must here relate a dreadful accident, which I cannot remember
+without shuddering, and the terror of which has often haunted my
+very dreams.
+
+While mining under the rampart, as I was carrying out the sand-bag,
+I struck my foot against a stone which fell down and closed up the
+passage.
+
+What was my horror to find myself buried alive! After a short
+reflection, I began to work the sand away from the side, that I
+might turn round. There were some feet of empty space, into which I
+threw the sand as I worked it away; but the small quantity of air
+soon made it so foul that I a thousand times wished myself dead, and
+made several attempts to strangle myself. Thirst almost deprived me
+of my senses, but as often as I put my mouth to the sand I inhaled
+fresh air. My sufferings were incredible, and I imagine I passed
+eight hours in this situation. My spirits fainted; again I
+recovered and began to labour, but the earth was as high as my chin,
+and I had no more space where I might throw the sand. I made a more
+desperate effort, drew my body into a ball, and turned round; I now
+faced the stone; there being an opening at the top, I respired
+fresher air. I rooted away the sand under the stone, and let it
+sink so that I might creep over; at length I once more arrived in my
+dungeon!
+
+The morning was advanced; I sat down so exhausted that I supposed it
+was impossible I had strength to conceal my hole. After half an
+hour's rest, my fortitude returned: again I went to work, and
+scarcely had I ended before my visitors approached.
+
+They found me pale: I complained of headache, and continued some
+days affected by the fatigue I had sustained. After a time strength
+returned; but perhaps of all my nights of horror this was the most
+horrible. I repeatedly dreamt I was buried in the centre of the
+earth; and now, though three and twenty years are elapsed, my sleep
+is still haunted by this vision.
+
+After this accident, when I worked in my cavity, I hung a knife
+round my neck, that if I should be enclosed I might shorten my
+miseries. Over the stone that had fallen several others hung
+tottering, under which I was obliged to creep. Nothing, however,
+could deter me from trying to obtain my liberty.
+
+When my passage was ready, I wrote letters to my friends at Vienna,
+and also a memorial to my Sovereign. When the militia left
+Magdeburg and the regulars returned, I took leave of my friends who
+had behaved so benevolently. Several weeks elapsed before they
+departed and I learnt that General Reidt was appointed ambassador
+from Vienna to Berlin.
+
+I had seen the world; I knew this General was not averse to a bribe:
+I wrote him a letter, conjuring him to act with ardour in my behalf.
+I enclosed a draft for six thousand florins on my effects at Vienna,
+and he received four thousand from one of my relations. I have to
+thank these ten thousand florins for my freedom, which I obtained
+nine months after. My vouchers show the six thousand florins were
+paid in April, 1763, to the order of General Reidt. The other four
+thousand I repaid, when at liberty, to my friend.
+
+I received intelligence before the garrison departed that no
+stipulation had been made on my behalf at the peace of Hubertsberg.
+The Vienna plenipotentiaries, after the articles were signed,
+mentioned my name to Hertzberg, with but few assurances of every
+effort being made to move Frederic, a promise on which I could much
+better rely than on my protectors at Vienna, who had left me in
+misfortune. I determined to wait three months longer, and should I
+still find myself neglected, to owe my escape to myself.
+
+On the change of the garrison, the officers were more difficult to
+gain than the former. The majors obeyed their orders; their help
+was unnecessary; but still I sighed for my old friends. I had only
+ammunition-bread again for food.
+
+My time hung very heavy; everything was examined on the change of
+the garrison. A stricter scrutiny might occur, and my projects be
+discovered. This had nearly been effected, as I shall here relate.
+I had so tamed a mouse that it would eat from my mouth; in this
+small animal I discovered proofs of intelligence.
+
+This mouse had nearly been my ruin. I had diverted myself with it
+one night; it had been nibbling at my door and capering on a
+trencher. The sentinels hearing our amusement, called the officers:
+they heard also, and thought all was not right. At daybreak the
+town-major, a smith, and mason entered; strict search was begun;
+flooring, walls, chains, and my own person were all scrutinised, but
+in vain. They asked what was the noise they had heard; I mentioned
+the mouse, whistled, and it came and jumped upon my shoulder.
+Orders were given I should be deprived of its society; I entreated
+they would spare its life. The officer on guard gave me his word he
+would present it to a lady, who would treat it with tenderness.
+
+He took it away and turned it loose in the guardroom, but it was
+tame to me alone, and sought a hiding place. It had fled to my
+prison door, and, at the hour of visitation, ran into my dungeon,
+testifying its joy by leaping between my legs. It is worthy of
+remark that it had been taken away blindfold, that is to say,
+wrapped in a handkerchief. The guard-room was a hundred paces from
+the dungeon.
+
+All were desirous of obtaining this mouse, but the major carried it
+off for his lady; she put it into a cage, where it pined, and in a
+few days died.
+
+The loss of this companion made me quite melancholy, yet, on the
+last examination, I perceived it had so eaten the bread by which I
+had concealed the crevices I had made in cutting the floor, that the
+examiners must be blind not to discover them. I was convinced my
+faithful little friend had fallen a necessary victim to its master's
+safety. This accident determined me not to wait the three months.
+
+I have related that horses were to be kept ready, on the first and
+fifteenth, and I only suffered the first of August to pass, because
+I would not injure Major Pfuhl, who had treated me with more
+compassion than his comrades, and whose day of visitation it was.
+On the fifteenth I determined to fly. This resolution formed, I
+waited in expectation of the day, when a new and remarkable
+succession of accidents happened.
+
+An alarm of fire had obliged the major to repair to the town; he
+committed the keys to the lieutenant. The latter, coming to visit
+me, asked--"Dear Trenck, have you never, during seven years that you
+have been under the guard of the militia, found a man like Schell?"
+"Alas! sir," answered I, "such friends are rare; the will of many
+has been good; each knew I could make his fortune, but none had
+courage enough for so desperate an attempt! Money I have
+distributed freely, but have received little help."
+
+"How do you obtain money in this dungeon?" "From a correspondent at
+Vienna, by whom I am still supplied." "If I can serve you, command
+me: I will do it without asking any return." So saying, I took
+fifty ducats from between the panels, and gave them to the
+lieutenant. At first he refused, but at length accepted them with
+fear. He left me, promised to return, pretended to shut the door,
+and kept his word. He now said debt obliged him to desert; that
+this had long been his determination, and that, desirous to assist
+me at the same time if he could find the means, I had only to show
+how this might be effected.
+
+We continued two hours in conference: a plan was formed, approved,
+and a certainty of success demonstrated; especially when I told him
+I had two horses waiting. We vowed eternal friendship; I gave him
+fifty ducats, and his debts, not amounting to more than two hundred
+rix-dollars, which he never could have discharged out of his pay.
+
+He was to prepare four keys to resemble those of my dungeon; the
+latter were to be exchanged on the day of flight, being kept in the
+guard-room while the major was with General Walrabe. He was to give
+the grenadiers on guard leave of absence, or send them into the town
+on various pretences. The sentinels he was to call from their duty,
+and those placed over me were to be sent into my dungeon to take
+away my bed; while encumbered with this, I was to spring out and
+lock them in, after which we were to mount our horses, which were
+kept ready, and ride to Gummern. Every thing was to be prepared
+within a week, when he was to mount guard. We had scarcely formed
+our project before the sentinels called the major was coming; he
+accordingly barred the door, and the major passed to General
+Walrabe.
+
+No man was happier than myself; my hopes of escape were triple; the
+mediation at Berlin, the mine I had made, and my friend the
+lieutenant.
+
+When most my mind ought to have been clear, I seemed to have lost my
+understanding. I came to a resolution which will appear extravagant
+and pitiable. I was stupid enough, mad enough, to form the design
+of casting myself on the magnanimity of the Great Frederic! Should
+this fail, I still thought my lieutenant a saviour.
+
+Having heated my imagination with this scheme, I waited the
+visitation with anxiety. The major entered, I bespoke him thus:
+
+"I know, sir, the great Prince Ferdinand is again in Magdeburg.
+Inform him that he may examine my prison, double the sentinels, and
+give me his commands, stating what hour will please him I should
+make my appearance on the glacis of Klosterbergen. If I prove
+myself capable of this, I then hope for the protection of Prince
+Ferdinand: and that he will relate my proceeding to the King, who
+may he convinced of my innocence."
+
+The major was astonished; the proposal he held to be ridiculous, and
+the performance impossible. I persisted; he returned with the sub-
+governor, Reichmann, the town-major, Riding, and the major of
+inspection. The answer they delivered was, that the Prince promised
+me his protection, the King's favour, and a release from my chains,
+should I prove my assertion. I required they would appoint a time;
+they ridiculed the thing as impossible, and said that it would be
+sufficient could I prove the practicability of such a scheme; but
+should I refuse, they would break up the flooring, and place
+sentinels in my dungeon, adding, the governor would not admit of any
+breaking out.
+
+After promises of good faith, I disencumbered myself of my chains,
+raised my flooring, gave them my implements, and two keys, my
+friends had procured me, to the doors of the subterranean gallery.
+This gallery I desired them to sound with their sword hilts, at the
+place through which I was to break, which might be done in a few
+minutes. I described the road I was to take through the gallery,
+informed them that two of the doors had not been shut for six
+months, and to the others they had the keys; adding, I had horses
+waiting at the glacis, that would be now ready; the stables for
+which were unknown to them. They went, examined, returned, put
+questions, which I answered with precision. They left me with
+seeming friendship, came back, told me the Prince was astonished at
+what he had heard, that he wished me all happiness, and then took me
+unfettered, to the guard-house. The major came in the evening,
+treated us with a supper, assured me everything would happen to my
+wishes, and that Prince Ferdinand had written to Berlin.
+
+The guard was reinforced next day. The whole guard loaded with ball
+before my eyes, the drawbridges were raised in open day, and
+precautions were taken as if I intended to make attempts as
+desperate as those I had made at Glatz.
+
+I now saw workmen employed on my dungeon, and carts bringing quarry-
+stones. The officers on guard behaved with kindness, kept a good
+table, at which I ate; but two sentinels, and an under-officer,
+never quitted the guard-room. Conversation was cautious, and this
+continued five or six days; at length, it was the lieutenant's turn
+to mount guard; he appeared to be as friendly as formerly, but
+conference was difficult; he found an opportunity to express his
+astonishment at my ill-timed discovery, told me the Prince knew
+nothing of the affair, and that the report through the garrison was,
+I had been surprised in making a new attempt.
+
+My dungeon was completed in a week. The town-major re-conducted me
+to it. My foot was chained to the wall with links twice as strong
+as formerly; the remainder of my irons were never after added.
+
+The dungeon was paved with flag-stones. That part of my money only
+was saved which I had concealed in the panels of the door, and the
+chimney of my stove; some thirty louis-d'ors, hidden about my
+clothes, were taken from me.
+
+While the smith was riveting my chains, I addressed the sub-
+governor. "Is this the fulfilment of the pledge of the Prince?
+Think not you deceive me, I am acquainted with the false reports
+that have been spread; the truth will soon come to light, and the
+unworthy be put to shame. Nay, I forewarn you that Trenck shall not
+be much longer in your power; for were you to build your dungeon of
+steel, it would be insufficient to contain me."
+
+They smiled at me. Reichmann told me I might soon obtain my freedom
+in a proper manner. My firm reliance on my friend, the lieutenant,
+gave me a degree of confidence that amazed them all.
+
+It is necessary to explain this affair. When I obtained my liberty,
+I visited Prince Ferdinand. He informed me the majors had not made
+a true report. Their story was, they had caught me at work, and,
+had it not been for their diligence, I should have made my escape.
+Prince Ferdinand heard the truth, and informed the King, who only
+waited an opportunity to restore me to liberty.
+
+Once more I was immured. I waited in hope for the day when my
+deliverer was to mount guard. What again was my despair when I saw
+another lieutenant! I buoyed myself up with the hope that accident
+was the occasion of this; but I remained three weeks, and saw him no
+more. I heard at length that he had left the corps of grenadiers,
+and was no longer to mount guard at the Star Fort. He has my
+forgiveness, and I applaud myself for never having said anything by
+which he might be injured. He might have repented his promise, he
+might have trusted another friend with the enterprise, and have been
+himself betrayed; but, be it as it may, his absence cut off all
+hope.
+
+I now repented my folly and vanity; I had brought my misfortunes on
+myself. I had myself rendered my dungeon impenetrable. Death would
+have followed but for the dependence I placed in the court of
+Vienna.
+
+The officers remarked the loss of my fortitude and thoughtfulness;
+the verses I wrote were desponding. The only comfort they could
+give was--"Patience, dear Trenck; your condition cannot be worse;
+the King may not live for ever." Were I sick, they told me I might
+hope my sufferings would soon have an end. If I recovered they
+pitied me, and lamented their continuance. What man of my rank and
+expectations ever endured what I did, ever was treated as I have
+been treated!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+
+Peace had been concluded nine months. I was forgotten. At last,
+when I supposed all hope lost, the 25th of December, and the day of
+freedom, came. At the hour of parade, Count Schlieben, lieutenant
+of the guards, brought orders for my release!
+
+The sub-governor supposed me weaker in intellect than I was, and
+would not too suddenly tell me these tidings. He knew not the
+presence of mind, the fortitude, which the dangers I had seen had
+made habitual.
+
+My doors for the LAST TIME resounded! Several people entered; their
+countenances were cheerful, and the sub-governor at their head at
+length said, "This time, my dear Trenck, I am the messenger of good
+news. Prince Ferdinand has prevailed on the King to let your irons
+be taken off." Accordingly, to work went the smith. "You shall
+also," continued he, "have a better apartment." "I am free, then,"
+said I. "Speak! fear not! I can moderate my transports."
+
+"Then you are free!" was the reply.
+
+The sub-governor first embraced me, and afterwards his attendants.
+
+He asked me what clothes I would wish. I answered, the uniform of
+my regiment. The tailor took my measure. Reichmann told him it
+must be made by the morning. The man excused himself because it was
+Christmas Eve. "So, then, this gentleman must remain in his dungeon
+because it is holiday with you." The tailor promised to be ready.
+
+I was taken to the guard-room, congratulations were universal, and
+the town-major administered the oath customary to all state
+prisoners.
+
+1st. That I should avenge myself on no man.
+
+2nd. That I should neither enter the Prussian nor Saxon states.
+
+3rd. That I should never relate by speech or in writing what had
+happened to me.
+
+4th. And that, so long as the King lived, I should neither serve in
+a civil nor military capacity.
+
+Count Schlieben delivered me a letter from the imperial minister,
+General Reidt, to the following purport:- That he rejoiced at having
+found an opportunity of obtaining my liberty from the King, and that
+I must obey the requisitions of Count Schlieben, whose orders were
+to accompany me to Prague.
+
+"Yes, dear Trenck," said Schlieben, "I am to conduct you through
+Dresden to Prague, with orders not to suffer you to speak to any one
+on the road. I have received three hundred ducats, to defray the
+expenses of travelling. As all things cannot be prepared today,
+the, sub-governor has determined we shall depart to-morrow night."
+
+I acquiesced, and Count Schlieben remained with me; the others
+returned to town, and I dined with the major and officers on guard,
+with General Walrabe in his prison.
+
+Once at liberty, I walked about the fortifications, to collect the
+money I had concealed in my dungeon. To every man on guard I gave a
+ducat, to the sentinels, each three, and ten ducats to be divided
+among the relief-guard. I sent the officer on guard a present from
+Prague, and the remainder of my money I bestowed on the widow of the
+worthy Gelfhardt. He was no more, and she had entrusted the
+thousand florins to a young soldier, who, spending them too freely,
+was suspected, betrayed her, and she passed two years in prison.
+Gelfhardt never received any punishment; he was in the field. Had
+he left any children, I should have provided for them. To the widow
+of the man who hung himself before my prison door, in the year 1756,
+I gave thirty ducats, lent me by Schlieben.
+
+The night was riotous, the guard made merry, and I passed most of it
+in their company. I was visited by all the generals of the garrison
+on Christmas morning, for I was not allowed to enter the town. I
+dressed, viewed myself in the glass, and found pleasure; but the
+tumult of my passions, the congratulations I received, and the
+vivacity round me, prevented my remembering incidents minutely.
+
+Yet how wonderful an alteration in the countenances of those by whom
+I had been guarded! I was treated with friendship, attention, and
+flattery. And why? Because these fetters had dropped off which I
+had never justly borne.
+
+Evening came, and with it Count Schlieben, a waggon, and four post-
+horses. After an affecting farewell, we departed. I shed tears at
+leaving Magdeburg. It seems strange that I lived here ten years,
+yet never saw the town.
+
+The duration of my imprisonment at Magdeburg was nearly ten years,
+and with the term of my imprisonment at Glatz, the time is eleven
+years. Thus was I robbed of time, my body weakened, my health
+impaired, so that in my decline of life, a second time, I suffer the
+gloom and chains of the dungeon at Magdeburg.
+
+The reader would now hope that my calamities were at an end; yet,
+upon my honour, I would prefer the suffering of the Star Fort to
+those I have since endured in Austria, especially while Krugel and
+Zetto were my referendaries and curators.
+
+At this moment I am obliged to be guarded in my expressions. I have
+put my enemies to shame; but the hope of justice or reward is vain.
+No rewards are bestowed on him who, with the consciousness of
+integrity, demands, and does not deplore. The facts I shall relate
+will seem incredible, yet I have, in my own hands, the vouchers of
+their veracity.
+
+"If my right hand is guilty of writing untruths in this book, may
+the executioner sever it from my body, and, in the memory of
+posterity, may I live a villain!"
+
+I will proceed with my history.
+
+On the 2nd of January I arrived, with Count Schlieben, at Prague;
+the same day he delivered me to the governor, the Duke of Deuxponts.
+He received me with kindness; we dined with him two days, and all
+Prague were anxious to see a man who had surmounted ten years of
+suffering so unheard of as mine. Here I received three thousand
+florins, and paid General Reidt his three hundred ducats, which he
+had advanced Count Schlieben, for my journey, the repayment of which
+he demanded in his letter, although he had received ten thousand
+florins. The expense of returning I also paid to Schlieben, made
+him a present, and provided myself with some necessaries. After
+remaining a few days at Prague, a courier arrived from Vienna, to
+whom I was obliged to pay forty florins, with an order from
+government to bring me from Prague to Vienna. My sword was
+demanded; Captain Count Wela, and two inferior officers, entered the
+carriage, which I was obliged to purchase, in company with me, and
+brought me to Vienna. I took up a thousand florins more, in Prague,
+to defray these expenses, and was obliged, in Vienna, to pay the
+captain fifty ducats for travelling charges back.
+
+I was brought back like a criminal, was sent as a prisoner to the
+barracks, there kept in the chamber of Lieutenant Blonket, with
+orders that I should be suffered to write to no one, speak to no
+one, without a ticket from the counsellors Kempt or Huttner.
+
+Thus I remained six weeks; at length, the colonel of the regiment of
+Poniatowsky, the present field-marshal, Count Alton, spoke to me. I
+related what I supposed were the reasons of my being kept a prisoner
+in Vienna; and to the exertions of this man am I indebted that the
+intentions of my enemies were frustrated, which were to have me
+imprisoned as insane in the fortress of Glatz. Had they once
+removed me from Vienna, I should certainly have pined away my life
+in a madhouse. Yet I could never obtain justice against these men.
+The Empress was persuaded that my brain was affected, and that I
+uttered threats against the King of Prussia. The election of a king
+of the Romans was then in agitation, and the court was apprehensive
+lest I should offend the Prussian envoy. General Reidt had been
+obliged to promise Frederic that I should not appear in Vienna, and
+that they should hold a wary eye over me. The Empress-Queen felt
+compassion for my supposed disease, and asked if no assistance could
+be afforded me; to which they answered, I had several times let
+blood, but that I still was a dangerous man. They added, that I had
+squandered four thousand florins in six days at Prague; that it
+would be proper to appoint guardians to impede such extravagancies.
+
+Count Alton spoke of me and my hard destiny to the Countess Parr,
+mistress of the ceremonies to the Empress-Queen. The late Emperor
+entered the chamber, and asked whether I ever had any lucid
+intervals. "May it please your Majesty," answered Alton, "he has
+been seven weeks in my barracks, and I never met a more reasonable
+man. There is mystery in this affair, or he could not be treated as
+a madman. That he is not so in anywise I pledge my honour."
+
+The next day the Emperor sent Count Thurn, grand-master of the
+Archduke Leopold, to speak to me. In him I found an enlightened
+philosopher, and a lover of his country. To him I related how I had
+twice been betrayed, twice sold at Vienna, during my imprisonment;
+to him showed that my administrators had acted in this vile manner
+that I might be imprisoned for life, and they remain in possession
+of my effects. We conversed for two hours, during which many things
+were said that prudence will not permit me to repeat. I gained his
+confidence, and he continued my friend till death. He promised me
+protection, and procured me an audience of the Emperor.
+
+I spoke with freedom; the audience lasted an hour. At length the
+Emperor retired into the next apartment. I saw the tears drop from
+his eyes. I fell at his feet, and wished for the presence of a
+Rubens or Apelles, to preserve a scene so honourable to the memory
+of the monarch, and paint the sensations of an innocent man,
+imploring the protection of a compassionate prince. The Emperor
+tore himself from me, and I departed with sensations such as only
+those can know who, themselves being virtuous, have met with wicked
+men. I returned to the barracks with joy, and an order the next day
+came for my release. I went with Count Alton to the Countess Parr,
+and by her mediation I obtained an audience with the Empress.
+
+I cannot describe how much she pitied my sufferings and admired my
+fortitude. She told me she was informed of the artifices practised
+against me in Vienna; she required me to forgive my enemies, and
+pass all the accounts of my administrators. "Do not complain of
+anything," said she, "but act as I desire--I know all--you shall be
+recompensed by me; you deserve reward and repose, and these you
+shall enjoy."
+
+I must either sign whatever was given to sign, or be sent to a
+madhouse. I received orders to accompany M. Pistrich to Counsellor
+Ziegler; thither I went, and the next day was obliged to sign, in
+their presence, the following conditions:-
+
+First--That I acknowledged the will of Trenck to be valid.
+
+Secondly--That I renounced all claim to the Sclavonian estates,
+relying alone on her Majesty's favour.
+
+Thirdly--That I solemnly acquitted my accountants and curators.
+And,
+
+Lastly--That I would not continue in Vienna.
+
+This I must sign, or languish in prison.
+
+How did my blood boil while I signed! This confidence I had in
+myself assured me I could obtain employment in any country of
+Europe, by the labours of my mind, and the recital of all my woes.
+At that time I had no children; I little regretted what I had lost,
+or the poor portion that remained.
+
+I determined to avoid Austria eternally. My pride would never
+suffer me, by insidious arts, to approach the throne. I knew no
+such mode of soliciting for justice, hence I was not a match for my
+enemies; hence my misfortunes. Appeals to justice were represented
+as the splenetic effusions of a man never to be satisfied. My too
+sensitive heart was corroded by the treatment I met at Vienna. I,
+who with so much fortitude had suffered so much in the cause of
+Vienna, I, on whom the eyes of Germany were fixed, to behold what
+should be the reward of these sufferings, I was again, in this
+country, kept a prisoner, and delivered to those by whom I had been
+plundered as a man insane!
+
+Before my intended departure to seek my fortune, I fell ill, and
+sickness almost brought me to the grave. The Empress, in her great
+clemency, sent one of her physicians and a friar to my assistance,
+both of whom I was obliged to pay.
+
+At this time I refused a major's commission, for which I was obliged
+to pay the fees. Being excluded from actual service, to me the
+title was of little value; my rank in the army had been equal ten
+years before in other service. The following words, inserted in my
+commission, are not unworthy of remark:- "Her Majesty, in
+consequence of my fidelity for her service, demonstrated during a
+long imprisonment, my endowments and virtues, had been graciously
+pleased to grant me, in the Imperial service, the rank of major."--
+The rank of major!--From this preamble who would not have expected
+either the rank of general, or the restoration of my great
+Sclavonian estates? I had been fifteen years a captain of cavalry,
+and then was I made an invalid major three-and-twenty years ago, and
+an invalid major I still remain! Let all that has been related be
+called to mind, the manner in which I had been pillaged and
+betrayed; let Vienna, Dantzic, and Magdeburg he remembered; and be
+this my promotion remembered also! Let it be known that the
+commission of major might be bought for a few thousand florins!
+Thirty thousand florins only of the money I had been robbed of would
+have purchased a colonel's commission. I should then have been a
+companion for generals.
+
+During the thirty-six years that I have been in the service of
+Austria, I never had any man of rank, any great general, my enemy,
+except Count Grassalkowitz, and he was only my enemy because he had
+conceived a friendship for my estates.
+
+My character was never calumniated, nor did any worthy man ever
+speak of me but with respect. Who were, who are, my enemies?--
+Jesuits, monks, unprincipled advocates, wishing to become my
+curators, referendaries, who died despicable, or now live in houses
+of correction. Such as live, live in dread of a similar end, for
+the Emperor Joseph is able to discover the truth. Alas! the truth
+is discovered so late; age has now nearly rendered me an invalid.
+Men with hearts so base ought, indeed, to become the scavengers of
+society, that, terrified by their example, succeeding judges may not
+rack the heart of an honest man, seize on the possessions of the
+orphan and the widow, and expel virtue out of Austria.
+
+I attended the levee of Prince Kaunitz. Not personally known to
+him, he viewed in me a crawling insect. I thought somewhat more
+proudly; my actions were upright, and so should my body be. I
+quitted the apartment, and was congratulated by the mercenary Swiss
+porter on my good fortune of having obtained an audience!
+
+I applied to the field-marshal, from whom I received this answer--
+"If you cannot purchase, my dear Trenck, it will be impossible to
+admit you into service; besides, you are too old to learn our
+manoeuvres." I was then thirty-seven. I briefly replied, "Your
+excellency mistakes my character. I did not come to Vienna to serve
+as an invalid major. My curators have taken good care I should have
+no money to purchase; but had I millions, I would never obtain rank
+in the army by that mode." I quitted the room with a shrug. The
+next day I addressed a memorial to the Empress. I did not re-demand
+my Sclavonian estates, I only petitioned.
+
+First--That those who had carried off quintals of silver and gold
+from the premises, and had rendered no account to me or the
+treasury, should refund at least a part.
+
+Secondly--That they should be obliged to return the thirty-six
+thousand florins taken from my inheritance, and applied to a
+hospital.
+
+Thirdly--That the thirty-six thousand florins might be repaid, which
+Count Grassalkowitz had deducted from the allodial estates, for
+three thousand six hundred pandours who had fallen in the service of
+the Empress; I not being bound to pay for the lives of men who had
+died in defence of the Empress.
+
+Fourthly--I required that fifteen thousand florins, which had been
+deducted from my capital, and applied to the Bohemian
+fortifications, should likewise be restored, together with the
+fifteen thousand which had been unduly paid to the regiment of
+Trenck.
+
+Fifthly--I reclaimed the twelve thousand florins which I had been
+robbed of at Dantzic by the treachery of the Imperial Resident,
+Abramson; and public satisfaction from the magistracy of Dantzic,
+who had delivered me up, so contrary to the laws of nations, to the
+Prussian power.
+
+I likewise claimed the interest of six per cent, for seventy-six
+thousand florins, detained by the Hungarian Chamber, which amounted
+to twenty thousand florins; I having been allowed five per cent.,
+and at last four.
+
+I insisted on the restoration of my Sclavonian estates, and a proper
+allowance for improvements, which the very sentence of the court had
+granted, and which amounted to eighty thousand florins.
+
+I petitioned for an arbitrator; I solicited justice concerning
+rights, but received no answer to this and a hundred other
+petitions!
+
+I must here speak of transactions during my imprisonment. I had
+bought a house in Vienna in the year 1750; the price was sixteen
+thousand florins, thirteen thousand of which I had paid by
+instalments. The receipts were among my writings; these writings,
+with my other effects, were taken from me at Dantzic, in the year
+1754; nor have I, to this hour, been able to learn more than that my
+writings were sent to the administrators of my affairs at Vienna.
+With respect to my houses and property in Dantzic, in what manner
+these were disposed of no one could or would say.
+
+After being released at Magdeburg, I inquired concerning my house,
+but no longer found it mine. Those who had got possession of my
+writings must have restored the acquittances to the seller,
+consequently he could re-demand the whole sum. My house was in
+other hands, and I was brought in debtor six thousand florins for
+interest and costs of suit. Thus were house and money gone. Whom
+can I accuse?
+
+Again, I had maintained, at my own expense Lieutenant Schroeder, who
+had deserted from Glatz, and for whom I obtained a captain's
+commission in the guard of Prince Esterhazy, at Eisenstadt. His
+misconduct caused him to be cashiered. In my administrator's
+accounts I found the following
+
+"To Captain Schroeder, for capital, interest, and costs of suit,
+sixteen hundred florins."
+
+It was certain I was not a penny indebted to this person; I had no
+redress, having been obliged to pass and sign all their accounts.
+
+I, four years afterwards, obtained information concerning this
+affair: I met Schroeder, knew him, and inquired whether he had
+received these sixteen hundred florins. He answered in the
+affirmative. "No one believed you would ever more see the light. I
+knew you would serve me, and that you would relieve my necessities.
+I went and spoke to Dr. Berger; he agreed we should halve the sum,
+and his contrivance was, I should make oath I had lent you a
+thousand florins, without having received your note. The money was
+paid me by M. Frauenberger, to whom I agreed to send a present of
+Tokay, for Madam Huttner."
+
+This was the manner in which my curators took care of my property!
+Many instances I could produce, but I am too much agitated by the
+recollection. I must speak a word concerning who and what my
+curators were.
+
+The Court Counsellor, Kempf, was my administrator, and Counsellor
+Huttner my referendary. The substitute of Kempf was Frauenberger,
+who, being obliged to act as a clerk at Prague during the war,
+appointed one Krebs as a sub-substitute; whether M. Krebs had also a
+sub-substitute is more than I am able to say.
+
+Dr. Bertracker was fidei commiss-curator, though there was no fidei
+commissum existing. Dr. Berger, as Fidei Commiss-Advocate, was
+superintendent, and to them all salaries were to be paid.
+
+Let us see what was the business this company had to transact. I
+had seventy-six thousand florins in the Hungarian Chamber, the
+interest of which was to be yearly received, and added to the
+capital: this was their employment, and was certainly so trifling
+that any man would have performed it gratis. The war made money
+scarce, and the discounting of bills with my ducats was a profitable
+trade to my curators. Had it been honestly employed, I should have
+found my capital increased, after my imprisonment, full sixty
+thousand florins. Instead of these I received three thousand
+florins at Prague, and found my capital diminished seven thousand
+florins.
+
+Frauenberger and Berger died rich; and I must be confined as a
+madman, lest this deputy should have been proved a rogue. This is
+the clue to the acquittal I was obliged to sign:- Madam K- was a
+lady of the bedchamber at court; she could approach the throne: her
+chamber employments, indeed, procured her the keys of doors that to
+me were eternally locked.
+
+Not satisfied with this, Kempf applied to the Empress, informed her
+they were acquitted, not recompensed, and that Frauenberger required
+four thousand florins for remuneration. The Empress laid an
+interdict on the half of my income and pension. Thus was I obliged
+to live in poverty; banished the Austrian dominions, where my
+seventy-six thousand florins were reduced to sixty-three, the
+interest of which I could only receive; and that burthened by the
+above interdict, the fidei commissum, and administratorship.
+
+The Empress during my sickness ordered that my captain's pay, during
+my ten years' imprisonment, should be given me, amounting to eight
+thousand florins; which pay she also settled on me as a pension. By
+this pension I never profited; for, during twenty-three years, that
+and more was swallowed by journeys to Vienna, chicanery of courtiers
+and agents, and costs of suits. Of the eight thousand florins three
+were stolen; the court physician must be paid thrice as much as
+another, and what remained after my recovery was sunk in the
+preparations I had made to seek my fortune elsewhere.
+
+How far my captain's pay was matter of right or favour, let the
+world judge, being told I went in the service of Vienna to the city
+of Dantzic. Neither did this restitution of pay equal the sum I had
+sent the Imperial Minister to obtain my freedom. I remained nine
+months in my dungeon after the articles were signed, unthought of;
+and, when mentioned by the Austrians, the King had twice rejected
+the proposal of my being set free. The affair happened as follows,
+as I received it from Prince Henry, Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick,
+and the Minister, Count Hertzberg:- General Reidt had received my
+ten thousand florins full six months, and seemed to remember me no
+more. One gala day, on the 21st of December, the King happened to
+be in good humour; and Her Majesty the Queen, the Princess Amelia,
+and the present monarch, said to the Imperial Minister, "This is a
+fit opportunity for you to speak in behalf of Trenck." He
+accordingly waited his time, did speak, and the King replied, "Yes."
+
+The joy of the whole company appeared so great that Frederic THE
+GREAT was offended!
+
+Other circumstances which contributed to promote this affair, the
+reader will collect from my history. That there were persons in
+Vienna who desired to detain me in prison is indubitable, from their
+proceedings after my return. My friends in Berlin and my money were
+my deliverers.
+
+Walking round Vienna, having recovered from my sickness, the broad
+expanse of heaven inspired a consciousness of freedom and pleasure
+indescribable. I heard the song of the lark. My heart palpitated,
+my pulse quickened, for I recollected I was not in chains.
+"Happen," said I, "what may, my will and heart are free."
+
+An incident happened which furthered my project of getting away from
+Austria. Marshal Laudohn was going to Aix-la-Chapelle to take the
+waters. He went to take his leave of the Countess Parr; I was
+present the Empress entered the chamber, and the conversation
+turning upon Laudohn's journey, she said to me, "The baths are
+necessary to the re-establishment of your health, Trenck." I was
+ready, and followed him in two days, where we remained about three
+months.
+
+The mode of life at Aix-la-Chapelle and Spa pleased me, where men of
+all nations meet, and where princes mingle with persons of all
+ranks. One day here procured me more pleasure than a whole life in
+Vienna.
+
+I had scarcely remained a month before the Countess Parr wrote to me
+that the Empress had provided for me, and would make my fortune as
+soon as I returned to Vienna. I tried to discover in what it
+consisted, but in vain. The death of the Emperor Francis at
+Innsbruck occasioned the return of General Laudohn, and I followed
+him, on foot, to Vienna.
+
+By means of the Countess Parr I obtained an audience. The Empress
+said to me, "I will prove to you, Trenck, that I keep my word. I
+have insured your fortune; I will give you a rich and prudent wife."
+I replied, "Most gracious Sovereign, I cannot determine to marry,
+and, if I could, my choice is already made at Aix-la-Chapelle."--
+"How! are you married, then?"--"Not yet, please your Majesty."--"Are
+you promised?"
+
+"Yes."--"Well, well, no matter for that; I will take care of that
+affair; I am determined on marrying you to the rich widow of M-, and
+she approves my choice. She is a good, kind woman, and has fifty
+thousand florins a year. You are in want of such a wife."
+
+I was thunderstruck. This bride was a canting hypocrite of sixty-
+three, covetous, and a termagant. I answered, "I must speak the
+truth to your Majesty; I could not consent did she possess the
+treasures of the whole earth. I have made my choice, which, as an
+honest man, I must not break." The Empress said, "Your unhappiness
+is your own work. Act as you think proper; I have done." Here my
+audience ended. I was not actually affianced at that time to my
+present wife, but love had determined my choice.
+
+Marshal Laudohn promoted the match. He was acquainted with my heart
+and the warmth of my passion, and perceived that I could not conquer
+the desire of vengeance on men by whom I had been so cruelly
+treated. He and Professor Gellert advised me to take this mode of
+calming passions that often inspired projects too vast, and that I
+should fly the company of the great. This counsel was seconded by
+my own wishes. I returned to Aix-la-Chapelle in December, 1766, and
+married the youngest daughter of the former Burgomaster De Broe. He
+was dead; he had lived on his own estate in Brussels, where my wife
+was born and educated. My wife's mother was sister to the Vice-
+Chancellor of Dusseldorf, Baron Robert, Lord of Roland. My wife was
+with me in most parts of Europe. She was then young, handsome,
+worthy, and virtuous, has borne me eleven children, all of whom she
+has nursed herself; eight of them are still living and have been
+properly educated. Twenty-two years she has borne a part of all my
+sufferings, and well deserves reward.
+
+During my abode in Vienna I made one effort more. I sought an
+audience with the present Emperor Joseph, related all that had
+happened to me, and remarked such defects as I had observed in the
+regulations of the country. He heard me, and commanded me to commit
+my thoughts to writing. My memorial was graciously received. I
+also gave a full account of what had happened to me in various
+countries, which prudence has occasioned me to express more
+cautiously in these pages. My memorial produced no effect, and I
+hastened back to Aix-la-Chapelle.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+
+For some years I lived in peace; my house was the rendezvous of the
+first people, who came to take the waters. I began to be more known
+among the very first and best people. I visited Professor Gellert
+at Leipzig, and asked his advice concerning what branch of
+literature he thought it was probable I might succeed in. He most
+approved my fables and tales, and blamed the excessive freedom with
+which I spoke in political writings. I neglected his advice, and
+many of the ensuing calamities were the consequence.
+
+I received orders to correspond with His Majesty's private
+secretary, Baron Roder; suffice it to say, my attempts to serve my
+country were frustrated; I saw defects too clearly, spoke my
+thoughts too frankly, and wanted sufficient humility ever to obtain
+favour.
+
+In the year 1767 I wrote "The Macedonian Hero," which became famous
+throughout all Germany. The poem did me honour, but entailed new
+persecutions; yet I never could repent: I have had the honour of
+presenting it to five reigning princes, by none of whom it has been
+burnt. The Empress alone was highly enraged. I had spoken as
+Nathan did to David, and the Jesuits now openly became my enemies.
+
+The following trick was played me in 1768. A friend in Brussels was
+commissioned to receive my pay, from whom I learnt an interdict had
+been laid upon it by the court called Hofkriegsrath, in Vienna, in
+which I was condemned to pay seven hundred florins to one Bussy,
+with fourteen years' interest.
+
+Bussy was a known swindler. I therefore journeyed, post-haste, to
+Vienna. No hearing; no satisfactory account was to be obtained.
+The answer was, "Sentence is passed, therefore all attempts are too
+late."
+
+I applied to the Emperor Joseph, pledged my head to prove the
+falsification of this note; and entreated a revision of the cause.
+My request was granted and my attorney, Weyhrauch, was an upright
+man. When he requested a day of revision to be appointed, he was
+threatened to be committed by the referendary. Zetto, should he
+interfere and defend the affairs of Trenck. He answered firmly,
+"His defence is my business: I know my cause to be good."
+
+Four months did I continue in Vienna before the day was appointed to
+revise this cause. It now appeared there were erasures and holes
+through the paper in three places; all in court were convinced the
+claim ought to be annulled, and the claimant punished. Zetto
+ordered the parties to withdraw, and then so managed that the judges
+resolved that the case must be laid before the court with formal and
+written proofs.
+
+This gave time for new knavery; I was obliged to return to Aix-la-
+Chapelle, and four years elapsed before this affair was decided.
+Two priests, in the interim, took false oaths that they had seen me
+receive money. At length, however, I proved that the note was dated
+a year after I had been imprisoned at Magdeburg. Further, my
+attorney proved the writs of the court had been falsified. Zetto,
+referendary, and Bussy, were the forgers; but I happened to be too
+active, and my attorney too honest, to lose this case. I was
+obliged to make three very expensive journeys from Aix-la-Chapelle
+to Vienna, lest judgement should go by default. Sentence at last
+was pronounced. I gained my cause, and the note was declared a
+forgery, but the costs, amounting to three thousand five hundred
+florins, I was obliged to pay, for Bussy could not: nor was he
+punished, though driven from Vienna for his villainous acts. Zetto,
+however, still continued for eleven years my persecutor, till he was
+deprived of his office, and condemned to the House of Correction.
+
+My knowledge of the world increased at Aix-la-Chapelle, where men of
+all characters met. In the morning I conversed with a lord in
+opposition, in the afternoon with an orator of the King's party, and
+in the evening with an honest man of no party. I sent Hungarian
+wine into England, France, Holland, and the Empire. This occasioned
+me to undertake long journeys, and as my increased acquaintance gave
+me opportunities of receiving foreigners with politeness an my own
+house, I was also well received wherever I went.
+
+The income I should have had from Vienna was engulfed by law-suits,
+attorneys, and the journeys I undertook; having been thrice cited to
+appear, in person, before the Hofkriegsrath. No hope remained. I
+was described as a dangerous malcontent, who had deserted his native
+land. I nevertheless remained an honest man; one who could provide
+for his necessities without the favour of courts; one whose
+acquaintance was esteemed. In Vienna alone was I unsought,
+unemployed, and obscure.
+
+One day an accident happened which made me renowned as a magician,
+as one who had power over fogs and clouds.
+
+I had a quarrel with the Palatine President, Baron Blankart,
+concerning a hunting district. I wrote to him that he should repair
+to the spot in dispute, whither I would attend with sword and
+pistol, hoping he would there give me satisfaction for the affront I
+had received. Thither I went, with two huntsmen and two friends,
+but instead of the baron I found two hundred armed peasants
+assembled.
+
+I sent one of my huntsmen to the army of the enemy, informing them
+that, if they did not retreat, I should fire. The day was fine, but
+a thick and impenetrable fog arose. My huntsman returned, with
+intelligence that, having delivered his message just as the fog came
+on, these heroes had all run away with fright.
+
+I advanced, fired my piece, as did my followers, and marched to the
+mansion of my adversary, where my hunting-horn was blown in triumph
+in his courtyard. The runaway peasants fired, but the fog prevented
+their taking aim.
+
+I returned home, where many false reports had preceded me. My wife
+expected I should be brought home dead; however, not the least
+mischief had happened.
+
+It soon was propagated through the country that I had raised a fog
+to render myself invisible, and that the truth of this could be
+justified by two hundred witnesses. All the monks of Aix-la-
+Chapelle, Juliers, and Cologne, preached concerning me, reviled me,
+and warned the people to beware of the arch-magician and Lutheran,
+Trenck.
+
+On a future occasion, this belief I turned to merriment. I went to
+hunt the wolf in the forests of Montjoie, and invited the townsmen
+to the chase. Towards evening I, and some forty of my followers,
+retired to rest in the charcoal huts, provided with wine and brandy.
+"My lads," said I, "it is necessary you should discharge your
+pieces, and load them anew; that to-morrow no wolf may escape, and
+that none of you excuse yourselves on your pieces missing fire."
+The guns were reloaded, and placed in a separate chamber. While
+they were merry-making, my huntsman drew the balls, and charged the
+pieces with powder, several of which he loaded with double charges.
+Some of their notched balls I put into my pocket.
+
+In the morning away went I and my fellows to the chase. Their
+conversation turned on my necromancy, and the manner in which I
+could envelope myself in a cloud, or make myself bullet-proof.
+"What is that you are talking about?" said I.--"Some of these
+unbelieving folks," answered my huntsman, "affirm your honour is
+unable to ward off balls."--"Well, then," said I, "fire away, and
+try." My huntsman fired. I pretended to parry with my hand, and
+called, "Let any man that is so inclined fire, but only one at a
+time." Accordingly they began, and, pretending to twist and turn
+about, I suffered them all to discharge their pieces. My people had
+carefully noticed that no man had reloaded his gun. Some of them
+received such blows from the guns that were doubly charged that they
+fell, terrified at the powers of magic. I advanced, holding in my
+hand some of the marked balls. "Let every one choose his own,"
+called I. All stood motionless, and many of them slunk home with
+their guns on their shoulders; some remained, and our sport was
+excellent.
+
+On Sunday the monks of Aix-la-Chapelle again began to preach. My
+black art became the theme of the whole country, and to this day
+many of the people make oath that they fired upon me, and that,
+after catching them, I returned the balls.
+
+My invulnerable qualities were published throughout Juliers, Aix-la-
+Chapelle, Maestricht, and Cologne, and perhaps this belief saved my
+life; the priests having propagated it from their pulpits, in a
+country which swarms with highway robbers, and where, for a single
+ducat, any man may hire an assassin.
+
+It is no small surprise that I should have preserved my life, in a
+town where there are twenty-three monasteries and churches, and
+where the monks are adored as deities. The Catholic clergy had been
+enraged against me by my poem of "The Macedonian Hero;" and in 1772
+I published a newspaper at Aix-la-Chapelle, and another work
+entitled, "The Friend of Men," in which I unmasked hypocrisy. A
+major of the apostolic Maria Theresa, writing thus in a town
+swarming with friars, and in a tone so undaunted, was unexampled.
+
+At present, now that freedom of opinion is encouraged by the
+Emperor, many essayists encounter bigotry and deceit with ridicule;
+or, wanting invention themselves, publish extracts from writings of
+the age of Luther. But I have the honour of having attacked the
+pillars of the Romish hierarchy in days more dangerous. I may boast
+of being the first German who raised a fermentation on the Upper
+Rhine and in Austria, so advantageous to truth, the progress of the
+understanding, and the happiness of futurity.
+
+My writings contain nothing inimical to the morality taught by
+Christ. I attacked the sale of indulgences, the avarice of Rome,
+the laziness, deceit, gluttony, robbery, and blood-sucking of the
+monks of Aix-la-Chapelle. The arch-priest, and nine of his
+coadjutors, declared every Sunday that I was a freethinker, a
+wizard, one whom every man, wishing well to God and the Church,
+ought to assassinate. Father Zunder declared me an outlaw, and a
+day was appointed on which my writings were to be burnt before my
+house, and its inhabitants massacred. My wife received letters
+warning her to fly for safety, which warning she obeyed. I and two
+of my huntsmen remained, provided with eighty-four loaded muskets.
+These I displayed before the window, that all might be convinced
+that I would make a defence. The appointed day came, and Father
+Zunder, with my writings in his hand, appeared ready for the attack;
+the other monks had incited the townspeople to a storm. Thus passed
+the day and night in suspense.
+
+In the morning a fire broke out in the town. I hastened, with my
+two huntsmen, well armed, to give assistance; we dashed the water
+from our buckets, and all obeyed my directions. Father Zunder and
+his students were there likewise. I struck his anointed ear with my
+leathern bucket, which no man thought proper to notice. I passed
+undaunted through the crowd; the people smiled, pulled off their
+hats, and wished me a good-morning. The people of Aix-la-Chapelle
+were bigots, but too cowardly to murder a man who was prepared for
+his own defence.
+
+As I was riding to Maestricht, a ball whistled by my ears, which, no
+doubt, was a messenger sent after me by these persecuting priests.
+
+When hunting near the convent of Schwartzenbruck, three Dominicans
+lay in ambush behind a hedge. One of their colleagues pointed out
+the place. I was on my guard with my gun, drew near, and called
+out, "Shoot, scoundrels! but do not kill me, for the devil stands
+ready for you at your elbow." One fired, and all ran: The ball hit
+my hat. I fired and wounded one desperately, whom the others
+carried off.
+
+In 1774, journeying from Spa to Limbourg, I was attacked by eight
+banditti. The weather was rainy, and my musket was in its case; my
+sabre was entangled in my belt, so that I was obliged to defend
+myself as with a club. I sprang from the carriage, and fought in
+defence of my life, striking down all before me, while my faithful
+huntsman protected me behind. I dispersed my assailants, hastened
+to my carriage, and drove away. One of these fellows was soon after
+hanged, and owned that the confessor of the banditti had promised
+absolution could they but despatch me, but that no man could shoot
+me, because Lucifer had rendered me invulnerable. My agility,
+fighting, too, for life, was superior to theirs, and they buried two
+of their gang, whom with my heavy sabre I had killed.
+
+To such excess of cruelty may the violence of priests be carried! I
+attacked only gross abuses--the deceit of the monks of Aix-la-
+Chapelle, Cologne, and Liege, where they are worse than cannibals.
+I wished to inculcate true Christian duties among my fellow-
+citizens, and the attempt was sufficient to irritate the selfish
+Church of Rome.
+
+From my Empress I had nothing to hope. Her confessor had painted me
+as a persecutor of the blessed Mother Church. Nor was this all.
+Opinions were propagated throughout Vienna that I was a dangerous
+man to the community.
+
+Hence I was always wronged in courts of judicature, where there are
+ever to be found wicked men. They thought they were serving the
+cause of God by injuring me. Yet they were unable to prevent my
+writings from producing me much money, or from being circulated
+through all Germany. The Aix-la-Chapelle Journal became so famous,
+that in the second year I had four thousand subscribers, by each of
+whom I gained a ducat.
+
+The postmasters, who gained considerably by circulating newspapers,
+were envious, because the Aix-la-Chapelle Journal destroyed several
+of the others, and they therefore formed a combination.
+
+Prince Charles of Sweden placed confidence in me during his
+residence at Aix-la-Chapelle and Spa, and I accompanied him into
+Holland. When I took my leave of him at Maestricht, he said to me,
+"When my father dies, either my brother shall be King, or we will
+lose our heads." The King died, and Prince Charles soon after said,
+in the postscript of one of his letters, "What we spoke of at
+Maestricht will soon be fully accomplished, and you may then come to
+Stockholm."
+
+On this, I inserted an article in my journal declaring a revolution
+had taken place in Sweden, that the king had made himself absolute.
+The other papers expressed their doubts, and I offered to wager a
+thousand ducats on the truth of the article published in my journal
+under the title of "Aix-la-Chapelle." The news of the revolution in
+Sweden was confirmed.
+
+My journal foretold the Polish partition six weeks sooner than any
+other; but how I obtained this news must not be mentioned. I was
+active in the defence of Queen Matilda of Denmark.
+
+The French Ministry were offended at the following pasquinade:- "The
+three eagles have rent the Polish bear, without losing a feather
+with which any man in the Cabinet of Versailles can write. Since
+the death of Mazarin, they write only with goose-quills."
+
+By desire of the King of Poland, I wrote a narrative of the attempt
+made to assassinate him, and named the nuncio who had given
+absolution to the conspirators in the chapel of the Holy Virgin.
+
+The house was now in flames. Rome insisted I should recall my
+words. Her nuncio, at Cologne, vented poison, daggers, and
+excommunication; the Empress-Queen herself thought proper to
+interfere. I obtained, for my justification, from Warsaw a copy of
+the examination of the conspirators. This I threatened to publish,
+and stood unmoved in the defence of truth.
+
+The Empress wrote to the Postmaster-General of the Empire, and
+commanded him to lay an interdict on the Aix-la-Chapelle Journal.
+Informed of this, I ended its publication with the year, but wrote
+an essay on the partition of Poland, which also did but increase my
+enemies.
+
+The magistracy of Aix-la-Chapelle is elected from the people, and
+the Burghers' court consists of an ignorant rabble. I know no
+exceptions but Baron Lamberte and De Witte; and this people assume
+titles of dignity, for which they are amenable to the court at
+Vienna. Knowing I should find little protection at Vienna, they
+imagined they might drive me from their town. I was a spy on their
+evil deeds, of whom they would have rid themselves. I knew that the
+two sheriffs, Kloss and Furth, and the recorder, Geyer, had robbed
+the town-chamber of forty thousand dollars, and divided the spoil.
+To these I was a dangerous man. For such reasons they sought a
+quarrel with me, pretending I had committed a trespass by breaking
+down a hedge, and cited me to appear at the town-house.
+
+The postmaster, Heinsberg, of Aix-la-Chapelle, although he had two
+thousand three hundred rix-dollars of mine in his possession,
+instituted false suits against me, obtained verdicts against me,
+seized on a cargo of wine at Cologne, and I incurred losses to the
+amount of eighteen thousand florins, which devoured the fortune of
+my wife, and by which she, with myself and my children, were reduced
+to poverty.
+
+The Gravenitz himself, in 1778, acknowledged how much he had injured
+me, affirmed he had been deceived, and promised he would try to
+obtain restitution. I forgave him, and he attempted to keep his
+promise; but his power declined; the bribes he had received became
+too public. He was dispossessed of his post, but, alas! too late
+for me. Two other of my judges are at this time obliged to sweep
+the streets of Vienna, where they are condemned to the House of
+Correction. Had this been their employment instead of being seated
+on the seat of judgment twenty years ago, I might have been more
+fortunate. It is a remarkable circumstance that I should so
+continually have been despoiled by unjust judges. Who would have
+had the temerity to affirm that their evil deeds should bring them
+to attend on the city scavenger? I indeed knew them but too well,
+and fearlessly spoke what I knew. It was my misfortune that I was
+acquainted with their malpractices sooner than gracious Sovereign.
+
+Let the scene close on my litigations at Aix-la-Chapelle and Vienna.
+May God preserve every honest man from the like! They have
+swallowed up my property, and that of my wife. Enough!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+
+From the year 1774 to 1777, I journeyed through England and France.
+I was intimate with Dr. Franklin, the American Minister, and with
+the Counts St. Germain and de Vergennes, who made me proposals to go
+to America; but I was prevented by my affection for my wife and
+children.
+
+My friend the Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel, who had been Governor of
+Magdeburg during my imprisonment, offered me a commission among the
+troops going to America, but I answered--"Gracious prince, my heart
+beats in the cause of freedom only; I will never assist in enslaving
+men. Were I at the head of your brave grenadiers. I should revolt
+to the Americans."
+
+During 1775 I continued at Aix-la-Chapelle my essays, entitled, "The
+Friend of Men." My writings had made some impression; the people
+began to read; the monks were ridiculed, but my partisans increased,
+and their leader got himself cudgelled.
+
+They did not now mention my name publicly, but catechised their
+penitents at confession. During this year people came to me from
+Cologne, Bonn, and Dusseldorf, to speak with me privately. When I
+inquired their business, they told me their clergy had informed them
+I was propagating a new religion, in which every man must sign
+himself to the devil, who then would supply them with money. They
+were willing to become converts to my faith, would Beelzebub but
+give them money, and revenge them on their priests. "My good
+friends," answered I, "your teachers have deceived you; I know of no
+devils but themselves. Were it true that I was founding a new
+religion, the converts to whom the devil would supply money, your
+priests, would be the first of my apostles, and the most catholic.
+I am an honest, moral man, as a Christian ought to be. Go home, in
+God's name, and do your duty."
+
+I forgot to mention that the recorder of the sheriff's court at Aix-
+la-Chapelle, who is called Baron Geyer, had associated himself in
+1778 with a Jew convert, and that this noble company swindled a
+Dutch merchant out of eighty thousand florins, by assuming the arms
+of Elector Palatine, and producing forged receipts and contracts.
+Geyer was taken in Amsterdam, and would have been hanged, but, by
+the aid of a servant, he escaped. He returned to Aix-la-Chapelle,
+where he enjoys his office. Three years ago he robbed the town-
+chamber. His wife was, at that time, generis communis, and procured
+him friends at court. The assertions of this gentleman found
+greater credit at Vienna than those of the injured Trenck! Oh,
+shame! Oh, world! world!
+
+My wine trade was so successful that I had correspondents and stores
+in London, Paris, Brussels, Hamburg, and the Hague, and had gained
+forty thousand florins. One unfortunate day destroyed all my hopes
+in the success of this traffic.
+
+In London I was defrauded of eighteen hundred guineas by a swindler.
+The fault was my brother-in-law's, who parted with the wine before
+he had received the money. When I had been wronged, and asked my
+friends' assistance, I was only laughed at, as if they were happy
+that an Englishman had the wit to cheat a German.
+
+Finding myself defrauded, I hastened to Sir John Fielding. He told
+me he knew I had been swindled, and that his friendship would make
+him active in my behalf; that he also knew the houses where my wine
+was deposited, and that a party of his runners should go with me,
+sufficiently strong for its recovery. I was little aware that he
+had, at that time, two hundred bottles of my best Tokay in his
+cellar. His pretended kindness was a snare; he was in partnership
+with robbers, only the stupid among whom he hanged, and preserved
+the most adroit for the promotion of trade.
+
+He sent a constable and six of his runners with me, commanding them
+to act under my orders. By good fortune I had a violent headache,
+and sent my brother-in-law, who spoke better English than I. Him
+they brought to the house of a Jew, and told him, "Your wine, sir,
+is here concealed." Though it was broad day, the door was locked,
+that he might be induced to act illegally. The constable desired
+him to break the door open, which he did; the Jews came running, and
+asked--"What do you want, gentlemen?"--"I want my wine," answered my
+brother.--"Take what is your own," replied a Jew; "but beware of
+touching my property. I have bought the wine."
+
+My brother attended the constable and runners into a cellar, and
+found a great part of my wine. He wrote to Sir John Fielding that
+he had found the wine, and desired to know how to act. Fielding
+answered: "It must be taken by the owner." My brother accordingly
+sent me the wine.
+
+Next day came a constable with a warrant, saying, "He wanted to
+speak with my brother, and that he was to go to Sir John Fielding."
+When he was in the street, he told him--"Sir, you are my prisoner."
+
+I went to Sir John Fielding, and asked him what it meant. This
+justice answered that my brother had been accused of felony. The
+Jews and swindlers had sworn the wine was a legal purchase. If I
+had not been paid, or was ignorant of the English laws, that was my
+fault. Six swindlers had sworn the wine was paid for, which
+circumstance he had not known, or he should not have granted me a
+warrant. My brother had also broken open the doors, and forcibly
+taken away wine which was not his own. They made oath of this, and
+he was charged with burglary and robbery.
+
+He desired me to give bail in a thousand guineas for my brother for
+his appearance in the Court of King's Bench; otherwise his trial
+would immediately come on, and in a few days he would be hanged.
+
+I hastened to a lawyer, who confirmed what had been told me, advised
+me to give bail, and he would then defend my cause. I applied to
+Lord Mansfield, and received the same answer. I told my story to
+all my friends, who laughed at me for attempting to trade in London
+without understanding the laws. My friend Lord Grosvenor said,
+"Send more wine to London, and we will pay you so well that you will
+soon recover your loss."
+
+I went to my wine-merchants, who had a stock of mine worth upwards
+of a thousand guineas. They gave bail for my brother, and he was
+released.
+
+Fielding, in the interim, sent his runners to my house, took back
+the wine, and restored it to the Jews. They threatened to prosecute
+me as a receiver of stolen goods. I fled from London to Paris,
+where I sold off my stock at half-price, honoured my bills, and so
+ended my merchandise.
+
+My brother returned to London in November, to defend his cause in
+the Court of King's Bench; but the swindlers had disappeared, and
+the lawyer required a hundred pounds to proceed. The conclusion was
+that my brother returned with seventy pounds less in his pocket,
+spent as travelling expenses, and the stock in the hands of my wine-
+merchants was detained on pretence of paying the bail. They brought
+me an apothecary's bill, and all was lost.
+
+The Swedish General Sprengporten came to Aix-la-Chapelle in 1776.
+He had planned and carried into execution the revolution so
+favourable to the King, but had left Sweden in discontent, and came
+to take the waters with a rooted hypochondria.
+
+He was the most dangerous man in Sweden, and had told the King
+himself, after the revolution, in the presence of his guards, "While
+Sprengporten can hold a sword, the King has nothing to command."
+
+It was feared he would go to Russia, and Prince Charles wrote to me
+in the name of the monarch, desiring I would exert myself to
+persuade him to return to Sweden. He was a man of pride, which
+rendered him either a fool or a madman. He despised everything that
+was not Swedish.
+
+The Prussian Minister, Count Hertzberg, the same year came to Aix-
+la-Chapelle. I enjoyed his society for three months, and
+accompanied this great man. To his liberality am I indebted that I
+can return to my country with honour.
+
+The time I had to spare was not spent in idleness; I attacked, in my
+weekly writings, those sharpers who attend at Aix-la-Chapelle and
+Spa to plunder both inhabitants and visitants, under the connivance
+of the magistracy; nor are there wanting foreign noblemen who become
+the associates of these pests of society. The publication of such
+truths endangered my life from the desperadoes, who, when detected,
+had nothing more to lose. How powerful is an innocent life, nothing
+can more fully prove than that I still exist, in despite of all the
+attempts of wicked monks and despicable sharpers.
+
+Though my life was much disturbed, yet I do not repent of my manner
+of acting; many a youth, many a brave man, have I detained from the
+gaming-table, and pointed out to them the most notorious sharpers.
+
+This was so injurious to Spa, that the Bishop of Liege himself, who
+enjoys a tax on all their winnings, and therefore protects such
+villains, offered me an annual pension of five hundred guineas if I
+would not come to Spa; or three per cent. on the winnings, would I
+but associate myself with Colonel N-t, and raise recruits for the
+gaming-table. My answer may easily be imagined; yet for this was I
+threatened to be excommunicated by the Holy Catholic Church!
+
+I and my family passed sixteen summers in Spa. My house became the
+rendezvous of the most respectable part of the company, and I was
+known to some of the most respectable characters in Europe.
+
+A contest arose between the town of Aix-la-Chapelle and Baron
+Blankart, the master of the hounds to the Elector Palatine: it
+originated in a dispute concerning precedence between the before-
+mentioned wife of the Recorder Geyer and the sister of the
+Burgomaster of Aix-la-Chapelle, Kahr, who governed that town with
+despotism.
+
+This quarrel was detrimental to the town and to the Elector
+Palatine, but profitable to Kahr, whose office it was to protect the
+rights of the town, and those persons who defended the claims of the
+Elector; the latter kept a faro bank, the plunder of which had
+enriched the town; and the former Kahr, under pretence of defending
+their cause, embezzled the money of the people; so that both parties
+endeavoured with all their power to prolong the litigation.
+
+It vexed me to see their proceedings. Those who suffered on each
+side were deceived; and I conceived the project of exposing the
+truth. For this purpose I journeyed to the court at Mannheim,
+related the facts to the Elector, produced a plan of accommodation,
+which he approved, and obtained power to act as arbitrator. The
+Minister of the Elector, Bekkers, pretended to approve my zeal,
+conducted me to an auberge, made me dine at his house, and said a
+commission was made out for my son, and forwarded to Aix-la-
+Chapelle--which was false; the moment he quitted me he sent to Aix-
+la-Chapelle to frustrate the attempt he pretended to applaud. He
+was himself in league with the parties. In fine, this silly
+interference brought me only trouble, expense, and chagrin. I made
+five journeys to Mannheim, till I became so dissatisfied that I
+determined to quit Aix-la-Chapelle, and purchase an estate in
+Austria.
+
+The Bavarian contest was at this time in agitation; my own affairs
+brought me to Paris, and here I learned intelligence of great
+consequence; this I communicated to the Grand Duke of Florence, on
+my return to Vienna. The Duke departed to join the army in Bohemia,
+and I again wrote to him, and thought it my duty to send a courier.
+The Duke showed my letter to the Emperor; but I remained unnoticed.
+
+I did not think myself safe in foreign countries during this time of
+war, and purchased the lordship of Zwerbach, with appurtenances,
+which, with the expenses, cost me sixty thousand florins.
+
+To conclude this purchase, I was obliged to solicit the referendary,
+Zetto, and his friend whom he had appointed as my curator, for my
+new estate was likewise made a fidei commissum, as my referendaries
+and curators would not let me escape contribution. The six thousand
+florins of which they emptied my purse would have done my family
+much service.
+
+In May, 1780, I went to Aix-la-Chapelle, where my wife's mother died
+in July; and in September my wife, myself, and family, all came to
+Vienna.
+
+My wife solicited the mistress of the ceremonies to obtain an
+audience. Her request was granted, and she gained the favour of the
+Empress. Her kindness was beyond expression: she introduced my
+wife to the Archduchess, and commanded her mistress of the
+ceremonies to present her everywhere. "You were unwilling," said
+she, "to accompany your husband into my country, but I hope to
+convince you that you may live happier in Austria than at Aix-la-
+Chapelle."
+
+She next day sent me her decree, assuring me of a pension of four
+hundred florins.
+
+My wife petitioned the Empress to grant me an audience: her request
+was complied with: and the Empress said to me: "This is the third
+time in which I would have made your fortune, had you been so
+disposed." She desired to see my children, and spoke of my
+writings. "How much good might you do," said she, "would you but
+write in the cause of religion!"
+
+We departed for Zwerbach, where we lived contentedly, but when we
+were preparing to return to Vienna, and solicited the restitution of
+part of my lost fortune, during this favour of the court, Theresa
+died, and all my hopes were overcast.
+
+I forgot to relate that the Archduchess, Maria Anna, desired me to
+translate a religious work, written in French by the Abbe Baudrand,
+into German. I replied I would obey Her Majesty's commands. I
+began my work, took passages from Baudrand, but inserted more of my
+own. The first volume was finished in six weeks; the Empress
+thought it admirable. The second soon followed, and I presented
+this myself.
+
+She asked me if it equalled the first; I answered, I hoped it would
+be found more excellent. "No," said she; "I never in my life read a
+better book:" and added, "she wondered how I could write so well and
+so quickly." I promised another volume within a month. Before the
+third was ready, Theresa died. She gave orders on her death-bed to
+have the writings of Baron Trenck read to her; and though her
+confessor well knew the injustice that had been done me, yet in her
+last moments he kept silence, though he had given me his sacred
+promise to speak in my behalf.
+
+After her death the censor commanded that I should print what I have
+stated in the preface to that third volume, and this was my only
+satisfaction.
+
+For one-and-thirty years had I been soliciting my rights, which I
+never could obtain, because the Empress was deceived by wicked men,
+and believed me a heretic. In the thirty-second, my wife had the
+good fortune to convince her this was false; she had determined to
+make me restitution; just at this moment she died.
+
+The pension granted my wife by the Empress in consequence of my
+misfortunes and our numerous family, we only enjoyed nine months.
+
+Of this she was deprived by the new monarch. He perhaps knew
+nothing of the affair, as I never solicited. Yet much has it
+grieved me. Perhaps I may find relief when the sighs wrung from me
+shall reach the heart of the father of his people in this my last
+writing. At present, nothing for me remains but to live unknown in
+Zwerbach.
+
+The Emperor thought proper to collect the moneys bestowed on
+hospitals into one fund. The system was a wise one. My cousin
+Trenck had bequeathed thirty-six thousand florins to a hospital for
+the poor of Bavaria. This act he had no right to do, having
+deducted the sum from the family estate. I petitioned the Emperor
+that these thirty-six thousand florins might be restored to me and
+my children, who were the people whom Trenck had indeed made poor,
+nothing of the property of his acquiring having been left to pay
+this legacy, but, on the contrary, the money having been exacted
+from mine.
+
+In a few days it was determined I should be answered in the same
+tone in which, for six-and-thirty years past, all my petitions had
+been answered:-
+
+"THE REQUEST OF THE PETITIONER CANNOT BE GRANTED."
+
+Fortune persecuted me in my retreat. Within six years two
+hailstorms swept away my crops; one year was a misgrowth; there were
+seven floods; a rot among my sheep: all possible calamities befell
+me and my manor.
+
+The estate had been ruined, the ponds were to drain, three farms
+were to be put into proper condition, and the whole newly stocked.
+This rendered me poor, especially as my wife's fortune had been sunk
+in lawsuits at Aix-la-Chapelle and Cologne.
+
+The miserable peasants had nothing, therefore could not pay: I was
+obliged to advance them money. My sons assisted me, and we laboured
+with our own hands: my wife took care of eight children, without so
+much as the help of a maid. We lived in poverty, obliged to earn
+our daily bread.
+
+The greatest of my misfortunes was my treatment in the military
+court, when Zetto and Krugel were my referendaries. Zetto had
+clogged me with a curator and when the cow had no more milk to give,
+they began to torture me with deputations, sequestrations,
+administrations, and executions. Nineteen times was I obliged to
+attend in Vienna within two years, at my own expense. Every six
+years must I pay an attorney to dispute and quarrel with the
+curator. I, in conclusion, was obliged to pay. If any affair was
+to be expedited, I, by a third hand, was obliged to send the
+referendary some ducats. Did he give judgment, still that judgment
+lay fourteen months inefficient, and, when it then appeared, the
+copy was false, and so was sent to the upper courts, the high
+referendary of which said I "must be dislodged from Zwerbach."
+
+They obliged me at last to purchase my naturalisation. I sent to
+Prussia for my pedigree; the attestation of this was sent me by
+Count Hertzberg. Although the family of Trenck had a hundred years
+been landholders in Hungary, yet was my attorney obliged to solicit
+the instrument called ritter-diploma, for which, under pain of
+execution, I must pay two thousand florins.
+
+By decree a Prussian nobleman is not noble in Austria, where every
+lackey can purchase a diploma, making him a knight of the Empire,
+for twelve hundred wretched florins!--where such men as P- and
+Grassalkowitz have purchased the dignity of a prince!
+
+Tortured by the courts, terrified by hailstorms, I determined to
+publish my works, in eight volumes, and this history of my life.
+
+Fourteen months accomplished this purpose. My labours found a
+favourable reception through all Germany, procured me money, esteem,
+and honour. By my writings only will I seek the means of existence,
+and by trying to obtain the approbation and the love of men.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+
+On the 22nd of August, 1786, the news arrived that Frederic the
+Great had left this world
+
+* * *
+
+The present monarch, the witness of my sufferings in my native
+country, sent me a royal passport to Berlin. The confiscation of my
+estates was annulled, and my deceased brother, in Prussia, had left
+my children his heirs.
+
+* * *
+
+I journey, within the Imperial permission, back to my country, from
+which I have been two-and-forty years expelled! I journey--not as a
+pardoned malefactor, but as a man whose innocence has been
+established by his actions, has been proved in his writings, and who
+is journeying to receive his reward.
+
+Here I shall once more encounter my old friends my relations, and
+those who have known me in the days of my affliction. Here shall I
+appear, not as my country's Traitor, but as my country's Martyr!
+
+Possible, though little probable, are still future storms. For
+these also I am prepared. Long had I reason daily to curse the
+rising sun, and, setting, to behold it with horror. Death to me
+appears a great benefit: a certain passage from agitation to peace,
+from motion to rest. As for my children, they, jocund in youth,
+delight in present existence. When I have fulfilled the duties of a
+father, to live or die will then be as I shall please.
+
+Thou, O God! my righteous Judge, didst ordain that I should be an
+example of suffering to the world; Thou madest me what I am, gavest
+me these strong passions, these quick nerves, this thrilling of the
+blood, when I behold injustice. Strong was my mind, that deeply it
+might meditate on deep subjects; strong my memory, that these
+meditations I might retain; strong my body, that proudly it might
+support all it has pleased Thee to inflict.
+
+Should I continue to exist, should identity go with me, and should I
+know what I was then, when I was called Trenck; when that
+combination of particles which Nature commanded should compose this
+body shall be decomposed, scattered, or in other bodies united; when
+I have no muscles to act, no brain to think, no retina on which
+pictures can mechanically be painted, my eyes wasted, and no tongue
+remaining to pronounce the Creator's name, should I still behold a
+Creator--then, oh then, will my spirit mount, and indubitably
+associate with spirits of the just who expectant wait for their
+golden harps and glorious crowns from the Most High God. For human
+weaknesses, human failings, arising from our nature, springing from
+our temperament, which the Creator has ordained, shall be even thus,
+and not otherwise; for these have I suffered enough on earth.
+
+Such is my confession of faith; in this have I lived, in this will I
+die. The duties of a man and of a Christian I have fulfilled; nay,
+often have exceeded, often have been too benevolent, too generous;
+perhaps also too proud, too vain. I could not bend, although liable
+to be broken.
+
+That I have not served the world, in acts and employments where best
+I might, is perhaps my own fault: the fault of my manner, which is
+now too radical to be corrected in this, my sixtieth year. Yes, I
+acknowledge my failing, acknowledge it unblushingly; nay, glory in
+the pride of a noble nature.
+
+For myself, I ask nothing of those who have read my history; to them
+do I commit my wife and children. My eldest son is a lieutenant in
+the Tuscan regiment of cavalry, under General Lasey, and does honour
+to his father's principles. The second serves his present Prussian
+Majesty, as ensign in the Posadowsky dragoons, with equal promise.
+The third is still a child. My daughters will make worthy men
+happy, for they have imbibed virtue and gentleness with their
+mother's milk. Monarchs may hereafter remember what I have
+suffered, what I have lost, and what is due to my ashes.
+
+Here do I declare--I will seek no other revenge against my enemies
+than that of despising their evil deeds. It is my wish, and shall
+be my endeavour, to forget the past; and having committed no
+offence, neither will I solicit monarchs for posts of honour; as I
+have ever lived a free man, a free man will I die.
+
+I conclude this part of my history on the evening preceding my
+journey to Berlin. God grant I may encounter no new afflictions, to
+be inserted in the remainder of this history.
+
+This journey I prepared to undertake, but my ever-envious fate threw
+me on the bed of sickness, insomuch that small hope remained that I
+ever should again behold the country of my forefathers. I seemed
+following the Great Frederic to the mansions of the dead; then
+should I never have concluded the history of my life, or obtained
+the victory by which I am now crowned.
+
+A variety of obstacles being overcome, I found it necessary to make
+a journey into Hungary, which was one of the most pleasant of my
+whole life.
+
+I have no words to express my ardent wishes for the welfare of a
+nation where I met with so many proofs of friendship. Wherever I
+appeared I was welcomed with that love and enthusiasm which only
+await the fathers of their country. The valour of my cousin Trenck,
+who died ingloriously in the Spielberg, the loss of my great
+Hungarian estates, the fame of my writings, and the cruelty of my
+sufferings, had gone before me. The officers of the army, the
+nobles of the land, alike testified the warmth of their esteem.
+
+Such is the reward of the upright; such too are the proofs that this
+nation knows the just value of fortitude and virtue. Have I not
+reason to publish my gratitude, and to recommend my children to
+those who, when I am no more, shall dare uprightly to determine
+concerning the rights which have unjustly been snatched from me in
+Hungary?
+
+Not a man in Hungary but will proclaim I have been unjustly dealt
+by; yet I have good reason to suspect I never shall find redress.
+Sentence had been already given; judges, more honest, cannot,
+without difficulty, reverse old decrees; and the present possessors
+of my estates are too powerful, too intimate with the governors of
+the earth, for me to hope I shall hereafter be more happy. God
+knows my heart; I wish the present possessors may render services to
+the state equal to those rendered by the family of the Trencks.
+
+There is little probability I shall ever behold my noble friends in
+Hungary more. Here I bid them adieu, promising them to pass the
+remainder of any life so as still to merit the approbation of a
+people with whose ashes I would most willingly have mingled my own.
+May the God of heaven preserve every Hungarian from a fate similar
+to mine!
+
+The Croats have ever been reckoned uncultivated; yet, among this
+uncultivated people I found more subscribers to my writings than
+among all the learned men of Vienna; and in Hungary, more than in
+all the Austrian dominions.
+
+The Hungarians, the unlettered Croats, seek information. The people
+of Vienna ask their confessors' permission to read instructive
+books. Various subscribers, having read the first volume of my
+work, brought it back, and re-demanded their money, because some
+monk had told them it was a book dangerous to be read. The judges
+of their courts have re-sold them to the booksellers for a few pence
+or given them to those who had the care of their consciences to
+burn.
+
+In Vienna alone was my life described as a romance; in Hungary I
+found the compassion of men, their friendship, and effectual aid.
+Had my book been the production of an Englishman, good wishes would
+not have been his only reward.
+
+We German writers have interested critics to encounter if we would
+unmask injustice; and if a book finds a rapid sale, dishonest
+printers issue spurious editions, defrauding the author of his
+labours.
+
+The encouragement of the learned produces able teachers, and from
+their seminaries men of genius occasionally come forth. The world
+is inundated with books and pamphlets; the undiscerning reader knows
+not which to select; the more intelligent are disgusted, or do not
+read at all, and thus a work of merit becomes as little profitable
+to the author as to the state.
+
+I left Vienna on the 5th of January, and came to Prague. Here I
+found nearly the same reception as in Hungary; my writings were
+read. Citizens, noblemen, and ladies treated me with like favour.
+May the monarch know how to value men of generous feelings and
+enlarged understandings!
+
+I bade adieu to Prague, and continued my journey to Berlin. In
+Bohemia, I took leave of my son, who saw his father and his two
+brothers, destined for the Prussian service, depart. He felt the
+weight of this separation; I reminded him of his duty to the state
+he served; I spoke of the fearful fate of his uncle and father in
+Austria, and of the possessors of our vast estates in Hungary. He
+shrank back--a look from his father pierced him to the soul--tears
+stood in his eyes--his youthful blood flowed quick, and the
+following expression burst suddenly from his lips:- "I call God to
+witness that I will prove myself worthy of my father's name; and
+that, while I live, his enemies shall be mine!"
+
+At Peterswald, on the road to Dresden, my carriage broke down: my
+life was endangered; and my son received a contusion in the arm.
+The erysipelas broke out on him at Berlin, and I could not present
+him to the King for a month after.
+
+I had been but a short time at Berlin before the well-known
+minister, Count Hertzberg, received me with kindness. Every man to
+whom his private worth is known will congratulate the state that has
+the wisdom to bestow on him so high an office. His scholastic and
+practical learning, his knowledge of languages, his acquaintance
+with sciences, are indeed wonderful. His zeal for his country is
+ardent, his love of his king unprejudiced, his industry admirable,
+his firmness that of a man. He is the most experienced man in the
+Prussian states. The enemies of his country may rely on his word.
+The artful he can encounter with art; those who menace, with
+fortitude; and with wise foresight can avert the rising storm. He
+seeks not splendour in sumptuous and ostentatious retinue; but if he
+can only enrich the state, and behold the poor happy, he is himself
+willing to remain poor. His estate, Briess, near Berlin, is no
+Chanteloup, but a model to those patriots who would study economy.
+Here he, every Wednesday, enjoys recreation. The services he
+renders the kingdom cost it only five thousand rix-dollars yearly;
+he, therefore, lives without ostentation, yet becoming his state,
+and with splendour when splendour is necessary. He does not plunder
+the public treasury that he may preserve his own private property.
+
+This man will live in the annals of Prussia: who was employed under
+the Great Frederic; had so much influence in the cabinets of Europe;
+and was a witness of the last actions, the last sensations, of his
+dying king; yet who never asked, nor ever received, the least
+gratuity. This is the minister whose conversation I had the
+happiness to partake at Aix-la-Chapelle and Spa, whose welfare is
+the wish of my heart, and whose memory I shall ever revere.
+
+I was received with distinction at his table, and became acquainted
+with those whose science had benefited the Prussian states; nor was
+anything more flattering to my self-love than that men like these
+should think me worthy their friendship.
+
+Not many days after I was presented to the court by the Prussian
+chamberlain, Prince Sacken, as it is not customary at Berlin for a
+foreign subject to be presented by the minister of his own court.
+Though a Prussian subject, I wore the Imperial uniform.
+
+The King received me with condescension; all eyes were directed
+towards me, each welcomed me to my country. This moved me the more
+as it was remarked by the foreign ministers, who asked who that
+Austrian officer could be who was received with so much affection
+and such evident joy in Berlin. The gracious monarch himself gave
+tokens of pleasure at beholding me thus surrounded. Among the rest
+came the worthy General Prittwitz, who said aloud -
+
+"This is the gentleman who might have ruined me to effect his own
+deliverance."
+
+Confused at so public a declaration, I desired him to expound this
+riddle; and he added -
+
+"I was obliged to be one of your guards on your unfortunate journey
+from Dantzic to Magdeburg, in 1754, when I was a lieutenant. On the
+road I continued alone with you in an open carriage. This gave you
+an opportunity to escape, but you forbore. I afterwards saw the
+danger to which I had exposed myself. Had you been less noble-
+minded, had such a prisoner escaped through my negligence, I had
+certainly been ruined. The King believed you alike dangerous and
+deserving of punishment. I here acknowledge you as my saviour, and
+am in gratitude your friend." I knew not that the generous man, who
+wished me so well, was the present General Prittwitz. That he
+should himself remind me of this incident does him the greater
+honour.
+
+Having been introduced at court, I thought it necessary to observe
+ceremonies, and was presented by the Imperial ambassador, Prince
+Reuss, to all foreign ministers, and such families as are in the
+habit of admitting such visits. I was received by the Prince Royal,
+the reigning Queen, the Queen-Dowager, and the royal family in their
+various places, with favour never to be forgotten. His Royal
+Highness Prince Henry invited me to a private audience, continued
+long in conversation with me, promised me his future protection,
+admitted me to his private concerts, and sometimes made me sup at
+court.
+
+A like reception I experienced in the palace of Prince Ferdinand of
+Brunswick, where I frequently dined and supped. His princess took
+delight in hearing my narratives, and loaded me with favour.
+
+Prince Ferdinand's mode of educating children is exemplary. The
+sons are instructed in the soldier's duties, their bodies are inured
+to the inclemencies of weather; they are taught to ride, to swim,
+and are steeled to all the fatigue of war. Their hearts are formed
+for friendship, which they cannot fail to attain. Happy the nation
+in defence of which they are to act!
+
+How ridiculous these their ROYAL HIGHNESSES appear who, though born
+to rule, are not deserving to be the lackeys to the least of those
+whom they treat with contempt; and yet who swell, strut, stride, and
+contemplate themselves as creatures essentially different by nature,
+and of a superior rank in the scale of beings, though, in reality,
+their minds are of the lowest, the meanest class.
+
+Happy the state whose prince is impressed with a sense that the
+people are not his property, but he the property of the people! A
+prince beloved by his people will ever render a nation more happy
+those he whose only wish is to inspire fear.
+
+The pleasure I received at Berlin was great indeed. When I went to
+court, the citizens crowded to see me, and when anyone among them
+said, "That is Trenck," the rest would cry, "Welcome once more to
+your country," while many would reach me their hands, with the tears
+standing in their eyes. Frequent were the scenes I experienced of
+this kind. No malefactor would have been so received. It was the
+reward of innocence; this reward was bestowed throughout the
+Prussian territories.
+
+Oh world, ill-judging world, deceived by show! Dost thou not
+blindly follow the opinion of the prince, be he severe, arbitrary,
+or just? Thy censure and thy praise equally originate in common
+report. In Magdeburg I lay, chained to the wall, ten years, sighing
+in wretchedness, every calamity of hunger, cold, nakedness, and
+contempt. And wherefore? Because the King, deceived by slanderers,
+pronounced me worthy of punishment. Because a wise King mistook me,
+and treated me with barbarity. Because a prudent King knew he had
+done wrong, yet would not have it so supposed. So was his heart
+turned to stone; nay, opposed by manly fortitude, was enraged to
+cruelty. Most men were convinced I was an innocent sufferer; "Yet
+did they all cry out the more, saying, let him be crucified!" My
+relations were ashamed to hear my name. My sister was barbarously
+treated because she assisted me in my misfortunes. No man durst
+avow himself my friend, durst own I merited compassion; or, much
+less, that the infallible King had erred. I was the most despised,
+forlorn man on earth; and when thus put on the rack, had I there
+expired, my epitaph would have been, "Here lies the traitor,
+Trenck."
+
+Frederic is dead, and the scene is changed; another monarch has
+ascended the throne, and the grub has changed to a beautiful
+butterfly! The witnesses to all I have asserted are still living,
+loudly now proclaim the truth, and embrace me with heart-felt
+affection.
+
+Does the worth of a man depend upon his actions? his reward or
+punishment upon his virtue? In arbitrary states, certainly not.
+They depend on the breath of a king! Frederic was the most
+penetrating prince of his age, but the most obstinate also. A vice
+dreadful to those whom he selected as victims, who must be
+sacrificed to the promoting of his arbitrary views.
+
+How many perished, the sin offerings of Frederic's obstinate self-
+will, whose orphan children now cry to God for vengeance! The dead,
+alas! cannot plead. Trial began and ended with execution. The few
+words--IT IS THE KING'S COMMAND--were words of horror to the poor
+condemned wretch denied to plead his innocence! Yet what is the
+Ukase (Imperial order) in Russia, Tel est notre bon plaisir (Such is
+our pleasure) in France, or the Allergnadigste Hofresolution (The
+all-gracious sentence of the court), pronounced with the sweet tone
+of a Vienna matron? In what do these differ from the arbitrary
+order of a military despot?
+
+Every prayer of man should be consecrated to man's general good; for
+him to obtain freedom and universal justice! Together should we cry
+with one voice, and, if unable to shackle arbitrary power, still
+should we endeavour to show how dangerous it is! The priests of
+liberty should offer up their thanks to the monarch who declares
+"the word of power" a nullity, and "the sentence" of justice
+omnipotent.
+
+Who can name the court in Europe where Louis, Peter, or Frederic,
+each and all surnamed The Great, have not been, and are not,
+imitated as models of perfection?. Lettres-de-cachet, the knout,
+and cabinet-orders, superseding all right, are become law!
+
+No reasoning, says the corporal to the poor grenadier, whom he
+canes!--No reasoning! exclaim judges; the court has decided.--No
+reasoning, rash and pertinacious Trenck, will the prudent reader
+echo. Throw thy pen in the fire, and expose not thyself to become
+the martyr of a state inquisition.
+
+My fate is, and must remain, critical and undecided. I have six-
+and-thirty years been in the service of Austria, unrewarded, and
+beholding the repeated and generous efforts I made effectually to
+serve that state, unnoticed. The Emperor Joseph supposes me old,
+that the fruit is wasted, and that the husk only remains. It is
+also supposed I should not be satisfied with a little. To continue
+to oppress him who has once been oppressed, and who possess
+qualities that may make injustice manifest, is the policy of states.
+My journey to Berlin has given the slanderer further opportunity of
+painting me as a suspicious character: I smile at the ineffectual
+attempt.
+
+I appeared in the Imperial uniform and belied such insinuations. To
+this purpose it was written to court, in November, when I went into
+Hungary, "The motions of Trenck ought to be observed in Hungary."
+Ye poor malicious blood-suckers of the virtuous! Ye shall not be
+able to hurt a hair of my head. Ye cannot injure the man who has
+sixty years lived in honour. I will not, in my old age, bring upon
+myself the reproach of inconstancy, treachery, or desire of revenge.
+I will betray no political secrets: I wish not to injure those by
+whom I have been injured.--Such acts I will never commit. I never
+yet descended to the office of spy, nor will I die a rewarded
+villain.
+
+Yes, I appeared in Berlin among the upright and the just. Instead
+of being its supposed enemy, I was declared an honour to my country.
+I appeared in the Imperial uniform and fulfilled the duties of my
+station: and now must the Prussian Trenck return to Austria, there
+to perform a father's duty.
+
+Yet more of what happened in Berlin.
+
+Some days after I had been presented to the King, I entreated a
+private audience, and on the 12th of February received the following
+letter:-
+
+"In answer to your letter of the 8th of this month, I inform you
+that, if you will come to me to-morrow, at five o'clock in the
+afternoon, I shall have the pleasure to speak with you; meantime, I
+pray God to take you into his holy keeping.
+
+"FREDERIC WILLIAM.
+
+"Berlin, Feb. 12, 1787."
+
+"P.S.--After signing the above, I find it more convenient to appoint
+to-morrow, at nine in the morning, about which time you will come
+into the apartment named the Marmor Kammer (marble chamber)."
+
+
+The anxiety with which I expected this wished-for interview may well
+be conceived. I found the Prussian Titus alone, and he continued in
+conversation with me more than an hour.
+
+How kind was the monarch! How great! How nobly did he console me
+for the past! How entirely did his assurance of favour overpower my
+whole soul! He had read the history of my life. When prince of
+Prussia, he had been an eyewitness, in Magdeburg, of my martyrdom,
+and my attempts to escape. His Majesty parted from me with tokens
+of esteem and condescension.--My eyes bade adieu, but my heart
+remained in the marble chamber, in company with a prince capable of
+sensations so dignified; and my wishes for his welfare are eternal.
+
+I have since travelled through the greater part of the Prussian
+states. Where is the country in which the people are all satisfied?
+Many complained of hard times, or industry unrewarded. My answer
+was:-
+
+"Friends, kneel with the rising sun, and thank the God of heaven
+that you are Prussians. I have seen and known much of this world,
+and I assure you, you are among the happiest people of Europe.
+Causes of complaint everywhere exist; but you have a king, neither
+obstinate, ambitious, covetous, nor cruel: his will is that his
+people should have cause of content, and should he err by chance,
+his heart is not to blame if the subject suffers."
+
+Prussia is neither wanting in able nor learned men. The warmth of
+patriots glows in their veins. Everything remains with equal
+stability, as under the reign of Frederic; and should the thunder
+burst, the ready conductors will render the shock ineffectual.
+
+Hertzberg still labours in the cabinet, still thinks, writes, and
+acts as he has done for years. The king is desirous that justice
+shall be done to his subjects, and will punish, perhaps, with more
+severity, whenever he finds himself deceived, than from the goodness
+of his disposition, might be supposed. The treasury is full, the
+army continues the same, and there is little reason to doubt but
+that industry, population, and wealth will increase. None but the
+vile and the wicked would leave the kingdom; while the oppressed and
+best subjects of other states would fly from their native country,
+certain of finding encouragement and security in Prussia.
+
+The personal qualities of Fredric William merit description. He is
+tall and handsome, his mien is majestic, and his accomplishments of
+mind and body would procure him the love of men, were he not a king.
+He is affable without deceit, friendly and kind in conversation, and
+stately when stateliness is necessary. He is bountiful, but not
+profuse; he knows that without economy the Prussian must sink. He
+is not tormented by the spirit of conquest, he wishes harm to no
+nation, yet he will certainly not suffer other nations to make
+encroachments, nor will he be terrified by menaces.
+
+The wise Frederic, when living, though himself learned, and a lover
+of the sciences, never encouraged them in his kingdom. Germany,
+under his reign, might have forgotten her language: he preferred
+the literature of France. Konigsberg, once the seminary of the
+North, contains, at present, few professors, or students; the former
+are fallen into disrepute, and are ill paid; the latter repair to
+Leipsic and Gottingen. We have every reason to suppose the present
+monarch, though no studious man himself, will encourage the
+academies of the literati, that men learned in jurisprudence and the
+sciences may not be wanting: which want is the more to be
+apprehended as the nobility must, without exception, serve in the
+army, so that learning has but few adherents, and these are deprived
+of the means of improvement.
+
+Frederic William is also too much the friend of men to suffer them
+to pine in prisons. He abhors the barbarity with which the soldiers
+are beaten: his officers will not be fettered hand and foot;
+slavish subordination will be banished, and the noble in heart will
+be the noble of the land. May he, in his people, find perfect
+content! May his people be ever worthy of such a prince! Long may
+he reign, and may his ministers be ever enlightened and honourable
+men!
+
+He sent for me a second time, conversed much with me, and confirmed
+those ideas which my first interview had inspired.
+
+On the 11th of March I presented my son at another audience, whom I
+intended for the Prussian service. The King bestowed a commission
+on him in the Posadowsky dragoons, at my request.
+
+I saw him at the review at Velau, and his superior officers formed
+great expectations from his zeal. Time will discover whether he who
+is in the Austrian, or this in the Prussian service, will first
+obtain the rewards due to their father. Should they both remain
+unnoticed, I will bestow him on the Grand Turk, rather than on
+European courts, whence equity to me and mine is banished.
+
+To Austria I owe no thanks; all that could be taken from me was
+taken. I was a captain before I entered those territories, and,
+after six-and-thirty years' service, I find myself in the rank of
+invalid major. The proof of all I have asserted, and of how little
+I am indebted to this state is most incontestable, since the history
+of my life is allowed by the royal censor to be publicly sold in
+Vienna.
+
+It is remarkable that one only of all the eight officers, with whom
+I served, in the body guard, in 1745, is dead. Lieutenant-colonel
+Count Blumenthal lives in Berlin; Pannewitz is commander of the
+Knights of Malta: both gave me a friendly reception. Wagnitz is
+lieutenant-general in the service of Hesse-Cassel; he was my tent
+comrade, and was acquainted with all that happened. Kalkreuter and
+Grethusen live on their estates, and Jaschinsky is now alive at
+Konigsberg, but superannuated, and tortured by sickness, and
+remorse. He, instead of punishment, has forty years enjoyed a
+pension of a thousand rix-dollars. I have seen my lands
+confiscated, of the income of which I have been forty-two years
+deprived, and never yet received retribution.
+
+Time must decide; the king is generous, and I have too much pride to
+become a beggar. The name of Trenck shall be found in the history
+of the acts of Frederic. A tyrant himself, he was the slave of his
+passions; and even did not think an inquiry into my innocence worth
+the trouble. To be ashamed of doing right, because he has done
+wrong, or to persist in error, that fools, and fools only, can think
+him infallible, is a dreadful principle in a ruler.
+
+Since I have been at Berlin, and was received there with so many
+testimonies of friendship, the newspapers of Germany have published
+various articles concerning me, intending to contribute to my honour
+or ease. They said my eldest daughter is appointed the governess of
+the young Princess. This has been the joke of some witty
+correspondent; for my eldest daughter is but fifteen, and stands in
+need of a governess herself. Perhaps they may suppose me mean
+enough to circulate falsehood.
+
+I daily receive letters from all parts of Germany, wherein the
+sensations of the feeling heart are evident. Among these letters
+was one which I received from Bahrdt, Professor at Halle, dated
+April 10, 1787 wherein he says, "Receive, noble German, the thanks
+of one who, like you, has encountered difficulties; yet, far
+inferior to those you have encountered. You, with gigantic
+strength, have met a host of foes, and conquered. The pests of men
+attacked me also. From town to town, from land to land, I was
+pursued by priestcraft and persecution; yet I acquired fame. I fled
+for refuge and repose to the states of Frederic, but found them not.
+I have eight years laboured under affliction with perseverance, but
+have found no reward. By industry have I made myself what I am; by
+ministerial favour, never. Worn out and weak, the history of your
+life, worthy sir, fell into my hands, and poured balsam into my
+wounds. There I saw sufferings immeasurably greater; there, indeed,
+beheld fortitude most worthy of admiration. Compared to you, of
+what could I complain? Receive, noble German, my warmest thanks;
+while I live they shall flow. And should you find a fortunate
+moment, in the presence of your King, speak of me as one consigned
+to poverty; as one whose talents are buried in oblivion. Say to
+him--'Mighty King! stretch forth thy hand, and dry up his tears.' I
+know the nobleness of your mind, and doubt not your good wishes."
+
+To the Professor's letter I returned the following answer:-
+
+
+"I was affected, sir, by your letter. I never yet was unmoved, when
+the pen was obedient to the dictates of the heart. I feel for your
+situation; and if my example can teach wisdom even to the wise, I
+have cause to triumph. This is the sweetest of rewards. At Berlin
+I have received much honour, but little more. Men are deaf to him
+who confides only in his right. What have I gained? Shadowy fame
+for myself, and the vapour of hope for my heirs!
+
+"Truth and Trenck, my good friend, flourish not in courts. You
+complain of priestcraft. He who would disturb their covetousness,
+he who speaks against the false opinions they scatter, considers not
+priests, and their aim, which is to dazzle the stupid and stupefy
+the wise. Deprecate their wrath! avoid their poisoned shafts, or
+they will infect tiny peace: will blast thy honour. And wherefore
+should we incur this danger. To cure ignorance of error is
+impossible. Let us then silently steal to our graves, and thus
+small we escape the breath of envy. He who should enjoy all even
+thought could grasp, should yet have but little. Having acquired
+this knowledge, the passions of the soul are lulled to apathy. I
+behold error, and I laugh; do thou, my friend, laugh also. If that
+can comfort us, men will do our memory justice--when we are dead!
+Fame plants her laurels over the grave, and there they flourish
+best.
+
+"BARON TRENCK
+
+"Schangulach, near Konigsberg,
+April 30th, 1787."
+
+"P.S--I have spoken, worthy Professor, the feelings of my heart, in
+answer to your kind panegyric. You will but do me justice, when you
+believe I think and act as I write with respect to my influence at
+court, it is as insignificant at Berlin as at Vienna or at
+Constantinople"
+
+
+Among the various letters I have received, as it may answer a good
+purpose, I hope the reader will not think the insertion of the
+following improper.
+
+In a letter from an unknown correspondent, who desired me to speak
+for this person at Berlin, eight others were enclosed. They came
+from the above person in distress, to this correspondent: and I was
+requested to let them appear in the Berlin Journal. I selected two
+of them, and here present them to the world, as it can do me injury,
+while they describe an unhappy victim of an extraordinary kind: and
+may perhaps obtain him some relief.
+
+Should this hope be verified, I am acquainted with him who wishes to
+remain concealed, can introduce him to the knowledge of such as
+might wish to interfere in his behalf. Should they not, the reader
+will still find them well-written and affecting letters; such as may
+inspire compassion. The following is the first of those I selected.
+
+
+LETTER I
+
+"Neuland, Feb 12th, 1787.
+
+"I thought I had so satisfactorily answered you by my last, that you
+would have left me in peaceful possession of my sorrows! but your
+remarks, entreaties, and remonstrances, succeed each other with such
+rapidity, that I am induced to renew the contest. Cowardice, I
+believe, you are convinced, is not a native in my heart, and should
+I now yield, you might suppose that age and the miseries I have
+suffered, had weakened my powers of mind as well as body; and that I
+ought to have been classed among the unhappy multitudes whose
+sufferings have sunk them to despondency.
+
+"Baron Trenck, that man of many woes, once so despised, but who now
+is held in admiration, where he was before so much the object of
+hatred; who now speaks so loudly in his own defence, where,
+formerly, the man who had but whispered his name would have lived
+suspected; Baron Trenck you propose as an example of salvation for
+me. You are wrong. Have you considered how dissimilar our past
+lives have been; how different, too, are our circumstances? Or,
+omitting these, have you considered to whom you would have me
+appeal?
+
+"In 1767, I became acquainted, in Vienna, with this sufferer of
+fortitude, this agreeable companion. We are taught that a noble
+aspect bespeaks a corresponding mind; this I believe him to possess.
+But what expectations can I form from Baron Trenck?
+
+"I will briefly answer the questions you have put. Baron Trenck was
+a man born to inherit great estates; this and the fire of his youth,
+fanned by flattering hopes from his famous kinsman, rendered him too
+haughty to his King; and this alone was the origin of all his future
+sufferings. I, on the contrary, though the son of a Silesian
+nobleman of property, did not inherit so much as the pay of a common
+soldier; the family having been robbed by the hand of power, after
+being accused by wickedness under the mask of virtue. You know my
+father's fate, the esteem in which he was held by the Empress
+Theresa; and that a pretended miracle was the occasion of his fall.
+Suddenly was he plunged from the height to which industry, talents,
+and virtue had raised him, to the depth of poverty. At length, at
+the beginning of the seven years' war, one of the King of Prussia's
+subjects represented him to the Austrian court as a dangerous
+correspondent of Marshal Schwerin's. Then at sixty years of age, my
+father was seized at Jagerndorf, and imprisoned in the fortress of
+Gratz, in Styria. He had an allowance just sufficient to keep him
+alive in his dungeon; but, for the space of seven years, never
+beheld the sun rise or set. I was a boy when this happened,
+however, I was not heard. I only received some pecuniary relief
+from the Empress, with permission to shed my blood in her defence.
+In this situation we first vowed eternal friendship; but from this I
+soon was snatched by my father's enemies. What the Empress had
+bestowed, her ministers tore from me. I was seized at midnight, and
+was brought, in company with two other officers, to the fortress of
+Gratz. Here I remained immured six years. My true name was
+concealed, and another given me.
+
+"Peace being restored, Trenck, I, and my father were released; but
+the mode of our release was very different. The first obtained his
+freedom at the intercession of Theresa, she, too, afforded him a
+provision. We, on the contrary, according to the amnesty,
+stipulated in the treaty of peace, were led from our dungeons as
+state prisoners, without inquiry concerning the verity or falsehood
+of our crimes. Extreme poverty, wretchedness, and misery, were our
+reward for the sufferings we had endured.
+
+"Not only was my health destroyed, but my jawbone was lost, eaten
+away by the scurvy. I laid before Frederic the Great the proofs of
+the calamities I had undergone, and the dismal state to which I was
+reduced, by his foe, and for his sake; entreated bread to preserve
+me and my father from starving, but his ear was deaf to my prayer,
+his heart insensible to my sighs.
+
+"Providence, however, raised me up a saviour,--Count Gellhorn was
+the man. After the taking of Breslau, he had been also sent a state
+prisoner to Gratz. During his imprisonment, he had heard the report
+of my sufferings and my innocence. No sooner did he learn I was
+released, than he became my benefactor, my friend, and restored me
+to the converse of men, to which I had so long been dead.
+
+"I defer the continuance of my narrative to the next post. The
+remembrance of past woes inflict new ones. I am eternally."
+
+
+LETTER II.
+
+
+"February 24, 1787.
+
+"Dear Friend,--After an interval of silence, remembering my promise,
+I again continue my story.
+
+"My personal sufferings have not been less than those of Trenck.
+His, I am acquainted with only from the inaccurate relations I have
+heard: my own I have felt. A colonel in the Prussian service,
+whose name was Hallasch, was four years my companion; he was insane,
+and believed himself the Christ that was to appear at the
+millennium: he persecuted me with his reveries, which I was obliged
+to listen to, and approve, or suffer violence from one stronger than
+myself.
+
+"The society of men or books, everything that could console or
+amuse, were forbidden me; and I considered it as wonderful that I
+did not myself grow mad, in the company of this madman. Four hard
+winters I existed without feeling the feeble emanation of a winter
+sun, much less the warmth of fire. The madman felt more pity than
+my keeper, and lent me his cloak to cover my body, though the other
+denied me a truss of straw, notwithstanding I had lost the use of my
+hands and feet. The place where we were confined was called a
+chamber; it rather resembled the temple of Cloacina. The noxious
+damps and vapours so poisoned my blood that an unskilful surgeon,
+who tortured me during nine months, with insult as a Prussian
+traitor, and state criminal, I lost the greatest part of my jaw.
+
+"Schottendorf was our governor and tyrant; a man who repaid the
+friendship he found in the mansion of my fathers--with cruelty. He
+was ripe for the sickle, and Time cut him off. Tormentini and Galer
+were his successors in office, by them we were carefully watched,
+but we were treated with commiseration. Their precautions rendered
+imprisonment less wretched. Ever shall I hold their memory sacred.
+Yet, benevolent as they were, their goodness was exceeded by that of
+Rottensteiner, the head gaoler. He considered his prisoners as his
+children; and he was their benefactor. Of this I had experience,
+during two years after the release of Hallasch.
+
+"Here I but cursorily describe misery, at which the monarch shall
+shudder, if the blood of a tyrant flow not in his veins. Theresa
+could not wish these things. But she was fallible, and not
+omniscient.
+
+"From the above narrative, you will perceive how opposite the
+effects must be which the histories of Baron Trenck and of myself
+must produce.
+
+"Trenck left his dungeon shielded from contempt; the day of freedom
+was the day of triumph. I, on the contrary, was exposed to every
+calamity. The spirit of Trenck again raised itself. I have
+laboured many a night that I might neither beg nor perish the
+following day: working for judges who neither knew law nor had
+powers of mind to behold the beauty of justice: settling accounts
+that, item after item, did not prove that the lord they were
+intended for, was an imbecile dupe.
+
+"Trenck remembers his calamities, but the remembrance is
+advantageous to himself and his family; while with me, the past did
+but increase, did but agonise, the present and the future. He was
+not like me, obliged to crouch in presence of those vulgar, those
+incapable minds, that do but consider the bent back as the footstool
+of pride. Every man is too busy to act in behalf of others; pity me
+therefore, but advise me not to hope assistance, by petitioning
+princes at second hand. I know your good wishes, and, for these, I
+have nothing to return but barren thanks.--I am, &c"
+
+
+The reasons why I published the foregoing letters are already
+stated, and will appear satisfactory to the reader. Once more to
+affairs that concern myself.
+
+I met at Berlin many old friends of both sexes; among others, an
+aged invalid came to see me, who was at Glatz, in 1746, when I cut
+my way through the guard. He was one of the sentinels before my
+door, whom I had thrown down the stairs.
+
+The hour of quitting Berlin, and continuing my journey into Prussia,
+towards Konigsberg, approached. On the eve of my departure, I had
+the happiness of conversing with her Royal Highness the Princess
+Amelia, sister of Frederic the Great. She protected me in my hour
+of adversity; heaped benefits upon me, and contributed to gain my
+deliverance. She received me as a friend, as an aged patriot; and
+laid her commands upon me to write to my wife, and request that she
+would come to Berlin, in the month of June, with her two eldest
+daughters. I received her promise that the happiness of the latter
+should be her care; nay, that she would remember my wife in her
+will.
+
+At this moment, when about to depart, she asked me if I had money
+sufficient for my journey: "Yes, madam," was my reply; "I want
+nothing, ask nothing; but may you remember my children!"
+
+The deep feeling with which I pronounced these words moved the
+princess; she showed me how she comprehended my meaning, and said,
+"Return, my friend, quickly: I shall be most happy to see you."
+
+I left the room: a kind of indecision came over me. I was inclined
+to remain longer at Berlin. Had I done so, my presence would have
+been of great advantage to my children. Alas! under the guidance of
+my evil genius, I began my journey. The purpose for which I came to
+Berlin was frustrated: for after my departure, the Princess Amelia
+died!
+
+Peace be to thy ashes, noble princess! Thy will was good, and be
+that sufficient. I shall not want materials to write a commentary
+on the history of Frederic, when, in company with thee, I shall
+wander on the banks of Styx; there the events that happened on this
+earth may be written without danger.
+
+So proceed we with our story.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+
+On the 22nd of March I pursued my journey to Konigsberg, but
+remained two days at the court of the Margrave of Brandenburg, where
+I was received with kindness. The Margrave had bestowed favours on
+me, during my imprisonment at Magdeburg.
+
+I departed thence through Soldin to Schildberg, here to visit my
+relation Sidau, who had married the daughter of my sister, which
+daughter my sister had by her first husband, Waldow, of whom I have
+before spoken. I found my kinsman a worthy man, and one who made
+the daughter of an unfortunate sister happy. I was received at his
+house within open arms; and, for the first time after an interval of
+two-and-forty years, beheld one of my own relations.
+
+On my journey thither, I had the pleasure to meet with Lieutenant-
+General Kowalsky: This gentleman was a lieutenant in the garrison
+of Glatz, in 1745, and was a witness of my leap from the wall of the
+rampart. He had read my history, some of the principal facts of
+which he was acquainted with. Should anyone therefore doubt
+concerning those incidents, I may refer to him, whose testimony
+cannot be suspected.
+
+From Schildberg I proceeded to Landsberg, on the Warta. Here I
+found my brother-in-law, Colonel Pape, commander of the Gotz
+dragoons, and the second husband of my deceased sister: and here I
+passed a joyous day. Everybody congratulated me on my return into
+my country.
+
+I found relations in almost every garrison. Never did man receive
+more marks of esteem throughout a kingdom. The knowledge of my
+calamities procured me sweet consolation; and I were insensible
+indeed, and ungrateful, did my heart remain unmoved on occasions
+like these.
+
+In Austria I never can expect a like reception; I am there mistaken,
+and I feel little inclination to labour at removing mistakes so
+rooted. Yet, even there am I by the general voice, approved. Yes,
+I am admired, but not known; pitied but not supported; honoured, but
+not rewarded.
+
+When at Berlin, I discovered an error I had committed in the
+commencement of my life. At the time I wrote I believed that the
+postmaster-general of Berlin, Mr Derschau, was my mother's brother,
+and the same person who, in 1742, was grand counsellor at Glogau,
+and afterwards, president in East Friesland. I was deceived; the
+Derschau who is my mother's brother is still living, and president
+at Aurich in East Friesland. The postmaster was the son of the old
+Derschau who died a general, and who was only distantly related to
+my mother. Neither is the younger Derschau, who is the colonel of a
+regiment at Burg, the brother of my mother, but only her first
+cousin; one of their sisters married Lieut.-Colonel Ostau, whose
+son, the President Ostau, now lives on his own estate, at Lablack in
+Prussia.
+
+I was likewise deceived in having suspected a lieutenant, named
+Mollinie, in the narrative I gave of my flight from Glatz, of having
+acted as a spy upon me at Braunau, and of having sent information to
+General Fouquet. I am sorry. This honest man is still alive, a
+captain in Brandenburg. He was affected at my suspicion, fully
+justified himself, and here I publicly apologise. He then was, and
+again is become my friend.
+
+I have received a letter from one Lieutenant Brodowsky. This
+gentleman is offended at finding his mother's name in my narrative,
+and demands I should retract my words.
+
+My readers will certainly allow the virtue of Madame Brodowsky, at
+Elbing, is not impeached. Although I have said I had the fortune to
+be beloved by her, I have nowhere intimated that I asked, or that
+she granted, improper favours.
+
+By the desire of a person of distinction, I shall insert an incident
+which I omitted in a former part. This person was an eye-witness of
+the incident I am about to relate, at Magdeburg, and reminded me of
+the affair. It was my last attempt but one at flight.
+
+The circumstances were these:-
+
+As I found myself unable to get rid of more sand, after having again
+cut through the planking, and mined the foundation, I made a hole
+towards the ditch, in which three sentinels were stationed. This I
+executed one night, it being easy, from the lightness of the sand,
+to perform the work in two hours.
+
+No sooner had I broken through, than I threw one of my slippers
+beside the palisades, that it might be supposed I had lost it when
+climbing over them. These palisades, twelve feet in length, were
+situated in the front of the principal fosse, and my sentinels stood
+within. There was no sentry-box at the place where I had broken
+through.
+
+This done, I returned into my prison, made another hole under the
+planking, where I could hide myself, and stopped up the passage
+behind me, so that it was not probable I could be seen or found.
+
+When daylight came, the sentinel saw the hole and gave the alarm,
+the slipper was found, and it was concluded that Trenck had escaped
+over the palisades, and was no longer in prison.
+
+Immediately the sub-governor came from Magdeburg, the guns were
+fired, the horse scoured the country, and the subterranean passages
+were all visited: no tidings came; no discovery was made, and the
+conclusion was I had escaped. That I should fly without the
+knowledge of the sentinels, was deemed impossible; the officer, and
+all the guard, were put under arrest, and everybody was surprised.
+
+I, in the meantime, sat quiet in my hole, where I heard their
+searches, and suppositions that I was gone.
+
+My heart bounded with joy, and I held escape to be indubitable.
+They would not place sentinels over the prison the following night,
+and I should then really have left my place of concealment, and,
+most probably have safely arrived in Saxony. My destiny, however,
+robbed me of all hope at the very moment when I supposed the
+greatest of my difficulties were conquered.
+
+Everything seemed to happen as I could wish. The whole garrison
+came, and visited the casemates, and all stood astonished at the
+miracle they beheld. In this state things remained till four
+o'clock in the afternoon. At length, an ensign of the militia came,
+a boy of about fifteen or sixteen years of age, who had more wit
+than any or all of them. He approached the hole, examined the
+aperture next the fosse, thought it appeared small, tried to enter
+it himself, found he could not, therefore concluded it was
+impossible a man of my size could have passed through, and
+accordingly called for a light.
+
+This was an accident I had not foreseen. Half stifled in my hole, I
+had opened the canal under the planking. No sooner had the youth
+procured a light, than he perceived my shirt, examined nearer, felt
+about, and laid hold of me by the arm. The fox was caught, and the
+laugh was universal. My confusion may easily be imagined. They all
+came round me, paid me their compliments, and finding nothing better
+was to be done, I laughed in company with them, and, thus laughing
+was led back with an aching heart to be sorrowfully enchained in my
+dungeon.
+
+I continued my journey, and arrived, on the fourth of April, at
+Konigsberg, where my brother expected my arrival. We embraced as
+brothers must, after the absence of two-and-forty years. Of all the
+brothers and sisters I had left in this city, he only remained. He
+lived a retired and peaceable life on his own estates. He had no
+children living. I continued a fortnight within him and his wife.
+
+Here, for the first time, I learned what had happened to my
+relations, during their absence. The wrath of the Great Frederic
+extended itself to all my family. My second brother was an ensign
+in the regiment of cuirassiers at Kiow, in 1746, when I first
+incurred disgrace from the King. Six years he served, fought at
+three battles, but, because his name was Trenck, never was promoted.
+Weary of expectation he quitted the army, married, and lived on his
+estates at Meicken, where he died about three years ago, and left
+two sons, who are an honour to the family of the Trencks.
+
+Fame spoke him a person capable of rendering the state essential
+service, as a military man; but he was my brother, and the King
+would never suffer his name to be mentioned.
+
+My youngest brother applied himself to the sciences; it was proposed
+that he should receive some civil employment, as he was an
+intelligent and well-informed man; but the King answered in the
+margin of the petition,
+
+
+"No Trenck is good for anything."
+
+
+Thus have all my family suffered, because of my unjust condemnation.
+My last-mentioned brother chose the life of a private man, and lived
+at his ease, in independence, among the first people of the kingdom.
+The hatred of the monarch extended itself to my sister, who had
+married the son of General Waldow, and lived in widowhood, from the
+year 1749, to her second marriage. The misfortunes of this woman,
+in consequence of the treachery of Weingarten, and the aid she sent
+to me in my prison at Magdeburg, I have before related. She was
+possessed of the fine estate of Hammer, near Landsberg on the Warta.
+The Russian army changed the whole face of the country, and laid it
+desert. She fled to Custrin, where everything was destroyed during
+the siege. The Prussian army also demolished the fine forests.
+
+After the war, the King assisted all the ruined families of
+Brandenburg; she alone obtained nothing, because she was my sister.
+She petitioned the King, who repined she must seek for redress from
+her dear brother. She died, in the flower of her age, a short time
+after she had married her second husband, the present Colonel Pape:
+her son, also, died last year. He was captain in the regiment of
+the Gotz dragoons. Thus were all my brothers and sisters punished
+because they were mine. Could it be believed that the great
+Frederic would revenge himself on the children and the children's
+children? Was it not sufficient that he should wreak his wrath on
+my head alone? Why has the name of Trenck been hateful to him, to
+the very hour of his death?
+
+One Derschau, captain of horse, and brother of my mother, addressed
+himself to the King, in 1753, alleging he was my nearest relation
+and feudal heir, and petitioned that he would bestow on him my
+confiscated estates of Great Sharlack. The King demanded that the
+necessary proofs should be sent from the chamber at Konigsberg. He
+was uninformed that I had two brothers living, that Great Sharlack
+was an ancient family inheritance, and that it appertained to my
+brothers, and not to Derschau. My brothers then announced
+themselves as the successors to this fief, and the King bestowed on
+them the estate of Great Sharlack conformable to the feudal laws.
+That it might be properly divided, it was put up to auction, and
+bought by the youngest of my brothers, who paid surplus to the
+other, and to my sister. He likewise paid debts charged upon it,
+according to the express orders of the court. The persons who
+called themselves my creditors were impostors, for I had no
+creditors; I was but nineteen when my estates were confiscated,
+consequently was not of age. By what right therefore, could such
+debts be demanded or paid? Let them explain this who can.
+
+The same thing happened when an account was given in to the Fiscus
+of the guardianship, although I acknowledge my guardians were men of
+probity. One of them was eight years in possession, and when he
+gave it up to my brothers he did not account with them for a single
+shilling. At present, therefore, the affair stands thus:- Frederic
+William has taken off the sentence of confiscation, and ordered me
+to be put in possession of my estates, by a gracious rescript:
+empowered by this I come and demand restitution; my brother answers,
+"I have bought and paid for the estate, am the legal possessor, have
+improved it so much that Great Sharlack, at present, is worth three
+or four times the sum it was at the time of confiscation. Let the
+Fiscus pay me its actual value, and then let them bestow it on whom
+they please. If the reigning king gives what his predecessor sold
+to me, I ought not thereby to be a loser."
+
+This is a problem which the people of Berlin must resolve. My
+brother has no children, and, without going to law, will bequeath
+Great Sharlack to mine, when he shall happen to die. If he is
+forced in effect to restore it without being reimbursed, the King
+instead of granting a favour, has not done justice. I do not
+request any restitution like this, since such restitution would be
+made without asking it as a favour of the King. If his Majesty
+takes off the confiscation because he is convinced it was originally
+violent and unjust, then have I a right to demand the rents of two-
+and-forty years. This I am to require from the Fiscus, not from my
+brother. And should the Fiscus only restore me the price for which
+it then sold, it would commit a manifest injustice, since all
+estates in the province of Prussia have, since 1746, tripled and
+quadrupled their value. If the estates descend only to my children
+after my death, I receive neither right nor favour; for, in this
+case, I obtain nothing for myself, and shall remain deprived of the
+rents, which, as the estate is at present farmed by my brother
+amount to four thousand rix-dollars per annum. This estate cannot
+be taken from him legally, since he enjoys it by right of purchase
+
+Such is the present state of the business. How the monarch shall
+think proper to decide, will be seen hereafter. I have demanded of
+the Fiscus that it shall make a fair valuation of Great Sharlack,
+reimburse my brother, and restore it to me. My brother has other
+estates. These he will dispose of by testament, according to his
+good pleasure. Be these things as they may, the purpose of my
+journey is accomplished.
+
+Thou, great God, has preserved me amidst my trouble. The purest
+gratitude penetrates my heart. Oh, that thou wouldst shield man
+from arbitrary power, and banish despotism from the earth!
+
+May this my narration be a lesson to the afflicted, afford hope to
+the despairing, fortitude to the wavering, and humanise the hearts
+of kings. Joyfully do I journey to the shores of death. My
+conscience is void of reproach, posterity shall bless my memory, and
+only the unfeeling, the wicked, the confessor of princes and the
+pious impostor, shall vent their rage against my writings. My mind
+is desirous of repose, and should this be denied me, still I will
+not murmur. I now wish to steal gently towards that last asylum,
+whither if I had gone in my youth, it must have been with colours
+flying. Grant, Almighty God, that the prayer I this day make may be
+heard, and that such may be the conclusion of my eventful life!
+
+
+
+HISTORY OF
+FRANCIS BARON TRENCK.
+WRITTEN BY
+FREDERICK BARON TRENCK,
+AS A NECESSARY SUPPLEMENT TO HIS OWN HISTORY.
+
+
+
+Francis Baron Trenck was born in 1714, in Calabria, a province of
+Sicily. His father was then a governor and lieutenant-colonel
+there, and died in 1743, at Leitschau, in Hungary, lord of the rich
+manors of Prestowacz, Pleternitz, and Pakratz, in Sclavonia, and
+other estates in Hungary. His christian name was John; he was my
+father's brother, and born in Konigsberg in Prussia.
+
+The name of his mother was Kettler; she was born in Courland.
+Trenck was a gentleman of ancient family; and his grandfather, who
+was mine also, was of Prussia. His father, who had served Austria
+to the age of sixty-eight, a colonel, and bore those wounds to his
+grave which attested his valour.
+
+Francis Baron Trenck was his only son; he had attained the rank of
+colonel during his father's life, and served with distinction in the
+army of Maria Theresa. The history of his life, which he published
+in 1747, when he was under confinement at Vienna, is so full of
+minute circumstances, and so poorly written, that I shall make but
+little use of it. Here I shall relate only what I have heard from
+his enemies themselves, and what I have myself seen. His father, a
+bold and daring soldier, idolised his only son, and wholly neglected
+his education, so that the passions of this son were most unbridled.
+Endowed with extraordinary talents, this ardent youth was early
+allowed to indulge the impetuous fire of his constitution.
+Moderation was utterly unknown to him, and good fortune most
+remarkably favoured all his enterprises. These were numerous,
+undertaken from no principle of virtue, nor actuated by any motives
+of morality. The love of money, and the desire of fame, were the
+passions of his soul. To his warlike inclination was added the
+insensibility of a heart natively wicked: and he found himself an
+actor, on the great scene of life, at a time when the earth was
+drenched with human gore, and when the sword decided the fate of
+nations: hence this chief of pandours, this scourge of the
+unprotected, became an iron-hearted enemy, a ferocious foe of the
+human race, a formidable enemy in private life, and a perfidious
+friend.
+
+Constitutionally sanguinary, addicted to pleasures, sensual, and
+brave; he was unappeased when affronted, prompt to act, in the
+moment of danger circumspect, and, when under the dominion of anger,
+cruel even to fury; irreconcilable, artful, fertile in invention,
+and ever intent on great projects. When youth and beauty inspired
+love, he then became supple, insinuating, amiable, gentle,
+respectful; yet, ever excited by pride, each conquest gave but new
+desires of adding another slave over whom he might domineer; and,
+whenever he encountered resistance, he then even ceased to be
+avaricious. A prudent and intelligent woman, turning this part of
+his character to advantage, might have formed this man to virtue,
+probity, and the love of the human race: but, from his infancy, his
+will had never suffered restraint, and he thought nothing
+impossible. As a soldier, he was bold even to temerity; capable of
+the most hazardous enterprise, and laughing at the danger he
+provoked. His projects were the more elevated because the
+acquirement of renown was the intent of all his actions. In council
+he was dangerous; everything must be conceded to his views. To him
+the means by which his end was to be obtained were indifferent.
+
+The Croats at this time were undisciplined, prone to rapine,
+thirsting for human blood, and only taught obedience by violence;
+these had been the companions of his infancy: these he undertook to
+subject, by servitude and fear, to military subordination, and from
+banditti to make them soldiers.
+
+With respect to his exterior, Nature had been prodigal of her
+favours. His height was six feet three inches, and the symmetry of
+his limbs was exact; his form was upright, his countenance
+agreeable, yet masculine, and his strength almost incredible. He
+could sever the head from the body of the largest ox with one stroke
+of his sabre, and was so adroit at this Turkish practice, that he at
+length could behead men in the manner boys do nettles. In the
+latter years of his life, his aspect had become terrible; for,
+during the Bavarian war, he had been scorched by the explosion of a
+powder-barrel, and ever after his face remained scarred and
+impregnated with black spots. In company he rendered himself
+exceedingly agreeable, spoke seven languages fluently, was jocular,
+possessed wit, and in serious conversation, understanding; had
+learned music, sung with taste, and had a good voice, so that he
+might have been well paid as an actor, had that been his fate. He
+could even, when so disposed, become gentle and complaisant.
+
+His look told the man of observation that he was cunning and
+choleric; and his wrath was terrible. He was ever suspicious,
+because he judged others by himself. Self-interest and avarice
+constituted his ruling passion, and, whenever he had an opportunity
+of increasing his wealth, he disregarded the duties of religion, the
+ties of honour, and human pity. In the thirty-first year of his
+age, when he was possessed of nearly two millions, he did not expend
+a florin per day.
+
+As he and his pandours always led the van, and as he thence had an
+opportunity to ravage the enemy's country, at the head of troops
+addicted to rapine, we must not wonder that Bavaria, Silesia, and
+Alsatia were so plundered. He alone purchased the booty from his
+troops at a low price, and this he sent by water to his own estates.
+If any one of his officers had made a rich capture, Trenck instantly
+became his enemy. He was sent on every dangerous expedition till he
+fell, and the colonel became his universal heir, for Trenck
+appropriated all he could to himself. He was reputed to be a man
+most expert in military science, an excellent engineer, and to
+possess an exact eye in estimating heights and distances. In all
+enterprises he was first; inured to fatigue, his iron body could
+support it without inconvenience. Nothing escaped his vigilance,
+all was turned to account, and what valour could not accomplish,
+cunning supplied. His pride suffered him not to incur an
+obligation, and thus he was unthankful; his actions all centred in
+self, and as he was remarkably fortunate in whatever he undertook,
+he ascribed even that, which accident gave, to foresight and genius.
+
+Yet was he ever, as an officer, a most useful and inestimable man to
+the state. His respect for his sovereign, and his zeal in her
+service, were unbounded; whenever her glory was at stake, he devoted
+himself her victim. This I assert to be truth: I knew him well.
+Of little consequence is it to me, whether the historians of Maria
+Theresa have, or have not, misrepresented his talents and the fame
+he deserved.
+
+The life of Trenck I write for the following reasons. He had the
+honour first to form, and command, regular troops, raised in
+Sclavonia. The soldiers acquired glory under their leader, and
+sustained the tottering power of Austria: they made libations of
+their blood in its defence, as did Trenck, in various battles. He
+served like a brave warrior, with zeal, loyalty, and effect. The
+vile persecutions of his enemies at Vienna, with whom he refused to
+share the plunder he had made, lost him honour, liberty, and not
+only the personal property he had acquired, but likewise the family
+patrimony in Hungary. He died like a malefactor, illegally
+sentenced to imprisonment; and knaves have affirmed, and fools have
+believed, and believe still, he took the King of Prussia prisoner,
+and that he granted him freedom in consequence of a bribe. So have
+the loyal Hungarians been led to suppose that an Hungarian had
+really been a traitor.
+
+By my writings, I wish to prove to this noble nation on the
+contrary, that Trenck, for his loyalty deserved compassion, esteem,
+and honour in his country. This I have already done in the former
+part of my history. The dead Trenck can speak no more; but it is
+the duty of the living ever to speak in defence of right.
+
+Trenck wrote his own history while he was confined in the arsenal at
+Vienna; and, in the last two sheets he openly related the manner in
+which he had been treated by the council of war, of which Count
+Loewenwalde, his greatest enemy, was president. The count, however,
+found supporters too powerful, and these sheets were torn from the
+book and publicly burnt at Vienna. Defence after this became
+impossible: he groaned under the grip of his adversaries.
+
+I have given a literal copy of these sheets in the first part of
+this history; and I again repeat I am able to prove the truth of
+what is there asserted, by the acts, proceedings, and judicial
+registers which are in my possession. He was confined in the
+Spielberg, because much was to be dreaded from an injured man, whom
+they knew capable of the most desperate enterprises. He died
+defenceless, the sacrifice of iniquity and unjust judges. He died,
+and his honour remained unprotected. I am by duty his defender:
+although he expired my personal enemy, the author of nearly all the
+ills I have suffered. I came to the knowledge of his persecutors
+too late for the unfortunate Trenck. And who are those who have
+divided his spoils--who slew him that they might fatten themselves?
+Your titles have been paid for from the coffers of Trenck! Yet
+neither can your cabals, your wealthy protectors, your own riches,
+nor your credit at court, deprive me of the right of vindicating his
+fame.
+
+I have boldly written, have openly shown, that Trenck was pillaged
+by you; that he served the house of Austria as a worthy man, with
+zeal; not in court-martials and committees of inquiry, but fighting
+for his country, sharing the soldier's glory, falling the victim of
+envy and power; falling by the hands of those who are unworthy of
+judging merit. He take the King of Prussia! They might as well say
+he took the Emperor of Morocco.
+
+Yes, he is dead. But should any man dare affirm that the Hungarian
+or the Prussian Trenck were capable of treason, that either of them
+merited punishment for having betrayed their country, he will not
+have long to seek before he will be informed that he has done us
+both injustice. After this preface, I shall continue my narrative
+on the plan I proposed. Trenck, the father, was a miser, yet a
+well-meaning man. Trenck the son, was a youthful soldier, who stood
+in need of money to indulge his pleasures. Many curious pranks he
+played, when an ensign in I know not what regiment of foot. He went
+to one of the collectors of his father's rents, and demanded money;
+the collector refused to give him any, and Trenck clove his skull
+with his sabre. A prosecution was entered against him, but, war
+breaking out in 1756, between the Russians and the Turks, he raised
+a squadron of hussars, and went with it into the Russian service,
+contrary to the will of his father.
+
+In this war he distinguished himself highly, and acquired the
+protection of Field-marshal Munich. He was so successful as a
+leader against the Tartars, that he became very famous in the army,
+and at the end of the campaign, was appointed major.
+
+It happened that flying parties of Turks approached his regiment
+when on march, and Trenck seeing a favourable moment for attacking
+them, went to Colonel Rumin, desiring the regiment might be led to
+the charge, and that they might profit by so fair an opportunity.
+The colonel answered, "I have no such orders." Trenck then demanded
+permission to charge the Turks only with his own squadron; but this
+was refused. He became furious, for he had never been acquainted
+with contradiction or subordination, and cried aloud to the
+soldiers, "If there be one brave man among you, let him follow me."
+About two hundred stepped from the ranks; he put himself at their
+head, routed the enemy, made a horrible carnage, and returned
+intoxicated with joy, accompanied by prisoners, and loaded with
+dissevered heads. Once more arrived in presence of the regiment, he
+attacked the colonel, treated him like the rankest coward, called
+him opprobrious names, without the other daring to make the least
+resistance. The adventure, however, became known; Trenck was
+arrested, and ordered to be tried. His judges condemned him to be
+shot, and the day was appointed, but the evening before execution,
+Field-marshal Munich passed near the tent in which he was confined,
+Trenck saw him, came forward, and said, "Certainly your excellency
+will not suffer a foreign cavalier to die an ignominious death
+because he has chastised a cowardly Russian! If I must die, at
+least give me permission to saddle my horse, and with my sabre in my
+hand, let me fall surrounded by the enemy."
+
+The Tartars happened to be at this time harassing the advanced
+posts; the Field-marshal shrugged his shoulders, and was silent.
+Trenck, not discouraged, added, "I will undertake to bring your
+excellency three heads or lose my own. Will you, if I do, be
+pleased to grant me my pardon?" The Field-marshal replied, "Yes."
+The horse of Trenck was brought: he galloped to the enemy, and
+returned within four heads knotted to the horse's mane, himself only
+slightly wounded in the shoulder. Munich immediately appointed him
+major in another regiment. Various and almost incredible were his
+feats: among others, a Tartar ran him through the belly with his
+lance: Trenck grasped the projecting end with his hands, exerted
+his prodigious strength, broke the lance, set spurs to his horse,
+and happily escaped. Of this wound, dreadful as it was, he was soon
+cured. I myself have seen the two scars, and can affirm the fact; I
+also learned this, and many others in 1746, from officers who had
+served in the same army.
+
+During this campaign he behaved with great honour, was wounded by an
+arrow in the leg, and gained the affection of Field-marshal Munich,
+but excited the envy of all the Russians. Towards the conclusion of
+the war he had a new misfortune; his regiment was incommoded on all
+sides by the enemy: he entreated his colonel, for leave to attack
+them. The colonel was once more a Russian, and he was refused.
+Trenck gave him a blow, and called aloud to the soldiers to follow
+him. They however being Russians, remained motionless, and he was
+put under arrest. The court-martial sentenced him to death, and all
+hope of reprieve seemed over. The general would have granted his
+pardon, but as he was himself a foreigner, he was fearful of
+offending the Russians. The day of execution came, and he was led
+to the place of death, Munich so contrived it that Field-marshal
+Lowenthal should pass by, at this moment, in company within his
+lady. Trenck profited by the opportunity, spoke boldly, and
+prevailed. A reprieve was requested, and the sentence was changed
+into banishment and labour in Siberia.
+
+Trenck protested against this sentence. The Field-marshal wrote to
+Petersburg, and an order came that he should be broken, and
+conducted out of the Russian territories. This order was executed,
+and he returned into Hungary to his father. At this period he
+espoused the daughter of Field-marshal Baron Tillier, one of the
+first families in Switzerland. The two brothers of his wife each
+became lieutenant-general, one of whom died honourably during the
+seven years' war. The other was made commander-general in Croatia,
+where he is still living, and is at the head of a regiment of
+infantry that bears his name. Trenck did not live long with his
+lady. She was pregnant, and he took her to hunt with him in a
+marsh: she returned ill, and died without leaving him an heir.
+
+Having no opportunity to indulge his warlike inclination, because of
+the general peace, he conceived the project of extirpating the
+Sclavonian banditti.
+
+Trenck, to execute this enterprise, employed his own pandours. The
+contest now commenced and activity and courage were necessary to
+ensure success in such a war. Trenck seemed born for this murderous
+trade. Day and night he chased them like wild beasts, killing now
+one, then another, and without distinction, treating them with the
+utmost barbarity.
+
+Two incidents will sufficiently paint the character of this
+unaccountable man. He had impaled alive the father of a Harum-
+Bashaw. One evening he was going on patrol, along the banks of a
+brook, which separated two provinces. On the opposite shore was the
+son of this impaled father, with his Croats. It was moonlight, and
+the latter called aloud--"I heard thy voice, Trenck! Thou hast
+impaled my father! If thou hast a heart in thy body, come hither
+over the bridge, I will send away my followers; leave thy firearms,
+come only with thy sabre, and we will then see who shall remain the
+victor." The agreement was made--and the Harum-Bashaw sent away his
+Croats, and laid down his musket. Trenck passed the wooden bridge,
+both drew their sabres; but Trenck treacherously killed his
+adversary with a pistol, that he had concealed, after which he
+severed his head from his body, took it with him, and stuck it upon
+a pole.
+
+One day, when hunting, he heard music in a lone house which belonged
+to one of his vassals. He was thirsty, entered, and found the
+guests seated at table. He sat down and ate within them, not
+knowing this was a rendezvous for the banditti. As he was seated
+opposite the door, he saw two Harum-Bashaws enter. His musket stood
+in a corner; he was struck with terror, but one of them addressed
+him thus:- "Neither thee, nor thy vassals, Trenck, have we ever
+injured, yet thou dost pursue us with cruelty. Eat thy fill. When
+thou hast satisfied thy hunger, we will then, sabre in thy hand, see
+who has most justice on his side, and whether thou art as courageous
+as men speak thee."
+
+Hereupon they sat down and began to eat and drink and make merry.
+The situation of Trenck could not be very pleasant. He recollected
+that besides these, there might be more of their companions,
+without, ready to fall upon him; he, therefore, privately drew his
+pistols, held them under the table while he cocked them, presented
+each hand to the body of a Harum-Bashaw, fired them both at the same
+instant, overset the table on the guests, and escaped from the
+house. As he went he had time to seize on one of their muskets,
+which was standing at the door. One of the Croats was left
+weltering in his blood; the other disengaged himself from the table,
+and ran after Trenck, who suffered him to approach, killed him
+within his own gun, struck off his head and brought it home in
+triumph. By this action the banditti were deprived of their two
+most valorous chiefs.
+
+War broke out about this time, in 1740, when all the Hungarians took
+up arms in defence of their beloved queen. Trenck offered to raise
+a free corps of pandours, and requested an amnesty for the banditti
+who should join his troops. His request was granted, he published
+the amnesty, and began to raise recruits; he therefore enrolled his
+own vassals, formed a corps of 500 men, went in search of the
+robbers, drove them into a strait between the Save and Sarsaws,
+where they capitulated, and 300 of them enrolled themselves with his
+pandours. Most of these men were six feet in height, determined,
+and experienced soldiers. To indulge them on certain occasions in
+their thirst of pillage were means which he successfully employed to
+lead them where he pleased, and to render them victorious. By means
+like these Trenck became at once the terror of the enemies of
+Austria, and rendered signal services to his Empress.
+
+In 1741, while he was exercising his regiment, a company fired upon
+Trenck, and killed his horse, and his servant that stood by his
+side. He ran to the company, counted one, two, three, and beheaded
+the fourth. He was continuing this, when a Harum-Bashaw left the
+ranks, drew his sword, and called aloud, "It is I who fired upon
+thee, defend thyself." The soldiers stood motionless spectators.
+Trenck attacked him and hewed him down. He was proceeding to
+continue the execution of the fourth man, but the whole regiment
+presented their arms. The revolt became general, and Trenck, still
+holding his drawn sabre, ran amidst them, hacking about him on all
+sides. The excess of his rage was terrific; the soldiers all called
+"Hold!" each fell on their knees, and promised obedience. After
+this he addressed them in language suitable to their character, and
+from that time they became invincible soldiers whenever they were
+headed by himself. Let the situation of Trenck be considered; he
+was the chief of a band of robbers who supposed they were authorised
+to take whatever they pleased in an enemy's country, a banditti that
+had so often defied the gallows, and had never known military
+subordination. Let such men be led to the field and opposed to
+regular troops. That they are never actuated by honour is evident:
+their leader is obliged to excite their avidity by the hope of
+plunder to engage them in action; for if they perceive no personal
+advantage, the interest of the sovereign is insufficient to make
+them act.
+
+Trenck had need of a particular species of officers. They must be
+daring, yet cautious. They are partisans, and must be capable of
+supporting fatigue, desirous of daily seeking the enemy, and
+hazarding their lives. As he was himself never absent at the time
+of action, he soon became acquainted with those whom he called old
+women, and sent them from his regiment. These officers then
+repaired to Vienna, vented their complaints, and were heard. His
+avarice prevented him from making any division of his booty with
+those gentlemen who constituted the military courts, thus neglecting
+what was customary at Vienna: and in this originated the
+prosecution to which he fell a victim. Scarcely had he entered
+Austria with his troops before he found an opportunity of reaping
+laurels. The French army was defeated at Lintz. Trenck pursued
+them, treated his prisoners with barbarity; and, never granting
+quarter in battle, the very appearance of his pandours inspired
+terror.
+
+Trenck was a great warrior, and knew how to profit by the slightest
+advantage. From this time he became renowned, gained the confidence
+of Prince Charles, and the esteem of the Field-marshal Count
+Kevenhuller, who discovered the worth of the man. No partisan had
+ever before obtained so much power as Trenck; he everywhere pursued
+the enemy as far as Bavaria, carrying fire and sword wherever he
+went. As it was known Trenck gave no quarter, the Bavarians and the
+French flew at the sight of a red mantle. Pillage and murder
+attended the pandours wherever they went, and their colonel bought
+up all the booty they acquired. Chamb, in particular, was a scene
+of a dreadful massacre. The city was set on fire and the people
+perished in the flames; women and children who endeavoured to fly,
+were obliged to pass over a bridge, where they were first stripped,
+and afterwards thrown into the water. This action was one of the
+accusations brought against Trenck when he was prosecuted, but he
+alleged his justification.
+
+The banks of the Iser to this day reverberate groans for the
+barbarities of Trenck. Deckendorf and Filtzhofen felt all his fury.
+In the first of these towns 600 French prisoners capitulated,
+although his forces were four miles distant; but he formed a kind of
+straw men, on which he put pandour caps and cloaks, and set them up
+as sentinels; and the garrison, deceived by this stratagem, signed
+the capitulation. The services he rendered the army during the
+Bavarian war are well known in the history of Maria Theresa. The
+good he has done has been passed over in silence, because he died
+under misfortunes, and did not leave his historian a legacy. He was
+informed that either at Deckendorf or Filtzhofen there was a barrel
+containing 20,000 florins, concealed at the house of an apothecary.
+Impelled by the desire of booty, Trenck hastened to the place, with
+a candle in his hand, searching everywhere, and, in his hurry,
+dropped a spark into a quantity of gunpowder, by the explosion of
+which he was dreadfully scorched. They carried him off, but the
+scars and the gunpowder with which his skin was blackened rendered
+his countenance terrific.
+
+The present Field-marshal Laudohn was at that time a lieutenant in
+his regiment, and happened to be at the door when his colonel was
+burnt. Scarcely was Trenck cured before his spies informed him that
+Laudohn had plenty of money. Immediately he suspected that Laudohn
+had found the barrel of florins, and from that moment he persecuted
+him by all imaginable arts. Wherever there was danger he sent him,
+at the head of 30 men, against 300, hoping to have him cut off, and
+to make himself his heir. This was so often repeated that Laudohn
+returned to Vienna, where, joining the crowd of the enemies of
+Trenck, he became instrumental in his destruction. Yet it is
+certain that, in the beginning, Trenck had shown a friendship for
+Laudohn, had given him a commission, and that this great man
+learned, under the command of Trenck, his military principles.
+General Tillier was likewise formed in this nursery of soldiers,
+where officers were taught activity, stratagem, and enterprise. And
+who are more capable of commanding a Hungarian army than Tillier and
+Laudohn? I, one day said to Trenck, when he was in Vienna,
+embarrassed by his prosecution, and when he had published a
+defamatory writing against all his accusers, excepting no man,--"You
+have always told me that Laudohn was one of the most capable of your
+officers, and that he is a worthy man. Wherefore then do you class
+him among such wretches?" He replied, "What! would you have me
+praise a man who labours, at the head of my enemies, to rob me of
+honour, property, and life!" I have related this incident to prove
+by the testimony of so honourable a man, that Trenck was a great
+soldier, and a zealous patriot, and that he never took the King of
+Prussia prisoner, as has been falsely affirmed, and as is still
+believed by the multitude. Had such a thing happened, Laudohn must
+have been present, and would have supported this charge.
+
+Bavaria was plundered by Trenck; barges were loaded with gold,
+silver, and effects, which he sent to his estates in Sclavonia;
+Prince Charles and Count Kevenhuller countenanced his proceedings;
+but when Field-marshal Neuperg was at the head of the army, he had
+other principles. He was connected with Baron Tiebes, a counsellor
+of the Hofkriegsrath who was the enemy of Trenck. Persecution was
+at that time instituted against him, and Trenck was imprisoned; but
+he defended himself so powerfully that in a month he was set at
+liberty. Mentzel, meanwhile, had the command of the pandours; and
+this man appropriated to himself the fame that Trenck had acquired
+by the warriors he himself had formed. Mentzel never was the equal
+of Trenck. Trenck now increased the number of his Croats to 4,000,
+from whom, in 1743, a regiment of Hungarian regulars was formed, but
+who still retained the name of pandours. It was a regiment of
+infantry. Trenck also had 600 hussars and 150 chasseurs, whom he
+equipped at his own expense. Yet, when this corps was reduced, all
+was sold for the profit of the imperial treasury, without bringing a
+shilling to account.
+
+With a corps so numerous, he undertook great enterprises. The enemy
+fled wherever he appeared. He led the van, raised contributions
+which amounted to several millions, delivered unto the Empress, in
+five years, 7,000 prisoners, French and Bavarian, and more than
+3,000 Prussians. He never was defeated. He gained confidence among
+his troops, and will remain in history the first man who rendered
+the savage Croats efficient soldiers. This it was impossible to
+perform among a bloodthirsty people without being guilty himself of
+cruel acts. The necessity of the excesses he committed, when the
+army was in want of forage, was so evident that he received
+permission of Prince Charles, though for this he was afterwards
+prosecuted; while the plunders of Brenklau, Mentzel, and the whole
+army, were never once questioned. That Trenck advanced more than
+100,000 florins to his regiment, I clearly proved, in 1750. This
+proof came too late. He was dead. The evidence I brought
+occasioned a quartermaster, Frederici, to be imprisoned. He
+confessed the embezzlement of this money, yet found so many friends
+among the enemies of Trenck that he refunded nothing, but was
+released in the year 1754, when I was thrown into the dungeon of
+Magdeburg.
+
+My cousin, who had lived like a miser, did not, at his death, leave
+half of the property he had inherited from his father, and which
+legally descended to me; it was torn from me by violence.
+
+In 1744 he obliged the French to retire beyond the Rhine, seized on
+a fort near Phillipsburg, swam across the river with 70 pandours,
+attacked the fortifications, slew the Marquis de Crevecoeur, with
+his own hand manned the post, traversed the other arm of the Rhine,
+surprised two Bavarian regiments of cavalry, and by this daring
+manoeuvre, secured the passage of the Rhine to the whole army,
+which, but for him, would not have been effected. Wherever he came,
+he laid the country under contribution, and, at this moment of
+triumph for the Austrian arms, opened himself a passage to enter the
+territories of France. In September, 1744, war having broken out
+between Austria and Prussia, the imperial army was obliged to
+return, abandon Alsatia, and hasten to the succour of the Austrian
+states. Trenck succeeded in covering its retreat. The history of
+Maria Theresa declares the damages he did the enemy, during this
+campaign. He gave proof of his capacity at Tabor and Budweis. With
+300 men he attacked one of these towns, which was defended by the
+two Prussian regiments of Walrabe and Kreutz. He found the water in
+the moats was deeper than his spies had declared, and the scaling
+ladders too short: most of those led to the attack were killed, or
+drowned in the water, and the small number that crossed the moats
+were made prisoners. The garrison of Tabor, of Budweis, and of the
+castle of Frauenburg, were, nevertheless, induced to capitulate, and
+yield themselves prisoners, although the main body under Trenck was
+more than five miles distant. His corps did not come up till the
+morrow, and it was ridiculous enough to see the pandours dressed in
+the caps of the Prussian fusiliers and pioneers, which they wore
+instead of their own, and which they afterwards continued to wear.
+
+The campaign to him was glorious, and the enemy's want of light
+troops gave free scope to his enterprises, highly to their
+prejudice. He never returned without prisoners. He passed the Elbe
+near Pardubitz, took the magazines, and was the cause of the great
+dearth and desertion among the Prussians, and of that hasty retreat
+to which they were forced. The King was at Cohn with his
+headquarters, where I was with him, when Trenck attacked the town,
+which he must have carried, had he not been wounded by a cannon-
+ball, which shattered his foot. He was taken away, the attack did
+not succeed, and his men, without him, remained but so many ciphers.
+
+In 1745, he went to Vienna, where his entrance resembled a triumph.
+The Empress received him with distinction. He appeared on crutches;
+she, by her condescending speech, inflamed his zeal to extravagance.
+Who would have supposed that the favourite of the people would that
+year be abandoned to the power of his enemies; who had not rendered,
+during their whole lives, so much essential service to the state as
+Trenck had done in a single day? He returned to his estate, raised
+eight hundred recruits that he might aid in the next campaign, and
+gather new laurels. He rejoined the army. At the battle of Sorau
+he fell upon the Prussian camp, and seized upon the tent of the
+King, but he came too late to attack the rear, as had been
+preconcerted. Frederic gave up his camp to be plundered, for the
+Croats could not be drawn off to attack the army, and the King was
+prepared to receive them, even if they should. In the meantime, the
+imperial army was defeated.
+
+Here was a field for the enemies of Trenck to incite the people
+against him. They accused him of having made the King of Prussia a
+prisoner in his tent; that he also pillaged the camp instead of
+attacking the rear of the army. After having ended the campaign, he
+returned to Vienna to defend himself. Here he found twenty-three
+officers, whom he expelled his regiment, most of them for cowardice
+or mean actions. They were ready to bear false testimony.
+Counsellor Weber and Gen. Loewenwalde, had sworn his downfall, which
+they effected. Trenck despised their attacks. While things
+remained thus, they instructed one of the Empress's attendants to
+profit by every opportunity to deprive him of her confidence. It
+was affirmed, Trenck is an atheist! who never prayed to the holy
+Virgin! The officers, whom he had broken, whispered it in coffee-
+houses, that Trenck had taken and set free the King of Prussia!
+This raised the cry among the fanatical mob of Vienna. Teased by
+their complaints, and at the requisition of Trenck himself, the
+Empress commanded that examination should be undertaken of these
+accusations. Field-marshal Cordova was chosen to preside over this
+inquiry. He spoke the truth, and drew up a statement of the case;
+it was presented to the Court, and which I shall here insert.
+
+"The complaints brought against him did not require a court-martial.
+Trenck had broken some officers by his own authority; their demands
+ought to be satisfied by the payment of 12,000 florins. The
+remaining accusations were all the attempts of revenge and calumny,
+and were insufficient to detain at Vienna, entangled in law-suits, a
+man so necessary to the army. Moreover, it would be prudent not to
+inquire into trifles, in consideration of his important services."
+
+Trenck, dissatisfied by this sentence, and animated by avarice and
+pride, refused to pay a single florin, and returned to Sclavonia.
+His presence was necessary at Vienna, to obtain other advantages
+against his enemies. They gave the Empress to understand, that
+being a man excessively dangerous, whenever he supposed himself
+injured, Trenck had spread pernicious views in Sclavonia, where all
+men were dependent on him. He raised six hundred more men, with
+whom he made a campaign in the Netherlands, and in October, 1746,
+returned to Vienna. After the peace of Dresden, his regiment was
+incorporated among the regulars, and served against France.
+
+Scarcely had he arrived at Vienna, before an order came from the
+Empress that he must remain under arrest in his chamber. Here he
+rendered himself guilty by the most imprudent action of his whole
+life. He ordered his carriage and horses, despising the imperial
+mandate, went to the theatre, when the Empress was present. In one
+of the boxes he saw Count Gossau, in company with a comrade of his
+own, whom he had cashiered: these persons were among the foremost
+of his accusers. Inflamed with the desire of revenge, he entered
+the box, seized Count Gossau, and would have thrown him into the pit
+in the presence of the Sovereign herself. Gossau drew his sword,
+and tried to run him through, but the latter seizing it, wounded
+himself in the hand. Everybody ran to save Gossau, who was unable
+to defend himself. After this exploit, the colonel of the pandours
+returned foaming home.
+
+Such an action rendered it impossible for Maria Theresa to declare
+herself the protectress of a man so rash. Sentinels were placed
+over him, and his enemies profiting by his imprudence and passion,
+he was ordered to be tried by a court-martial. General Loewenwalde
+intrigued so successfully, that he procured himself to be named, by
+the Hofkriegsrath, president of the court-martial, and to be charged
+with the sequestration of the property of Trenck. In vain did the
+latter protest against his judge. The very man, whom the year
+before he had kicked out of the ante-chamber of Prince Charles,
+received full power to denounce him guilty. Then was it that public
+notice was given that all those who would prefer complaints against
+Colonel Baron Trenck should receive a ducat per day while the
+council continued to sit. They soon amounted to fifty-four, who, in
+a space of four months, received 15,000 florins from the property of
+Trenck. The judge himself purchased the depositions of false
+witnesses; and Count Loewenwalde offered me one thousand ducats, if
+I would betray the secrets of my cousin, and promised me I should be
+put in possession of my confiscated estates in Prussia, and have a
+company in a regiment.
+
+That the indictment and the examinations of the witnesses were
+falsified, has already been proved in the revision of the cause; but
+as the indictment did not contain one article that could affect his
+life, they invented the following stratagem. A courtesan, a
+mistress of Baron Rippenda, who was a member of the court-martial,
+was bribed, and made oath she was the daughter of Count Schwerin,
+Field-marshal in the Prussian service, and that she was in bed with
+the King of Prussia, when Trenck surprised the camp at Sorau, made
+her and the King prisoners, and restored them their freedom. She
+even ventured to name Baron Hilaire, aide-de-camp to Frederic, whom
+she affirmed was then present. Hilaire, who afterwards married the
+Baroness Tillier, and who consequently was brother-in-law to Trenck,
+fortunately happened to be in Vienna. He was confronted with this
+woman, and through her falsehoods, the gentleman was obliged to
+remain in prison, where they offered him bribes, which be refused to
+accept; and, to prevent his speaking, he continued in prison some
+weeks, and was not released till this shameful proceeding was made
+public.
+
+Count Loewenwalde invented another artifice; he drew up a false
+indictment; and, that he might be prevented all means of
+justification, he chose a day to put it in practice, when the
+Emperor and Prince Charles were hunting at Holitzsch. Loewenwalde's
+court-martial had already signed a sentence of death, and every
+preparation for the erection of a scaffold was made. His intention
+was then to go to the Empress and induce her to sign the sentence,
+under a pretence that there was some imminent peril at hand, if a
+man so dangerous to the state was not immediately put out of the
+way, and that it would be necessary to execute the sentence of death
+before the Emperor could return. He well knew the Emperor was
+better acquainted with Trenck, and had ever been his protector.
+
+Had this succeeded, Trenck would have died like a traitor; Miss
+Schwerin would have espoused the aide-de-camp of Loewenwalde, with
+fifty thousand florins, taken from the funds of Trenck, and his
+property would have been divided between his judges and his
+accusers. As it happened, however, the valet-de-chambre of Count
+Loewenwalde, who was an honest man, and who had an intimacy with a
+former mistress of Trenck, confided the whole secret to her. She
+immediately flew to Colonel Baron Lopresti, who was the sincere
+friend of my kinsman, and, being then powerful at Court, was his
+deliverer. The Emperor and Prince Charles were informed of what was
+in agitation, but they thought proper to keep it secret. The
+hunting at Holitzsch took place on the appointed day. Count
+Loewenwalde made his appearance before the Empress, and solicited
+her to sign the sentence. She, however, had been pre-informed, the
+Emperor having returned on the same day, and their abominable
+project proved abortive. Miss Schwerin was imprisoned; Loewenwalde
+was deprived of his power, as well as of the sequestration of the
+effects of Trenck; a total revision of the proceedings of the court-
+martial, and of the prosecution of my cousin, was ordered, which was
+an event, that, till then, was unexampled at Vienna.
+
+Trenck was freed from his fetters, removed to the arsenal, an
+officer guarded him, and he had every convenience he could wish. He
+was also permitted the use of a counsellor to defend his cause. I
+obtained by the influence of the Emperor leave to visit him and to
+aid him in all things. It was at this epoch that I arrived at
+Vienna, and, at this very instant, when the revision of the
+prosecution was commanded and determined on. Count Loewenwalde,
+supposing me a needy, thoughtless youth, endeavoured to bribe me,
+and prevail on me to betray my kinsman. Prince Charles of Lorraine
+then desired me seriously to represent to Trenck that his avarice
+had been the cause of all these troubles, for he hind refused to pay
+the paltry sum of 12,000 florins, by which he might have silenced
+all his accusers; but that, as at present, affairs had become so
+serious, he ought himself to secure his judges for the revision of
+the suit; to spare no money, and then he might be certain of every
+protection the prince could afford.
+
+The respectable Field-marshal Konigseck, governor of Vienna, was
+appointed president; but, being an old man, he was unable to preside
+at any one sitting of the court. Count S- was the vice-president, a
+subtle, insatiable judge, who never thought he had money enough. I
+took 3,000 ducats, which Baron Lopresti gave me, to this most worthy
+counsellor. The two counsellors, Komerkansquy and Zetto, each
+received 4,000 rix-dollars, with a promise of double the sum if
+Trenck were acquitted; there was a formal contract drawn up, which a
+certain noble lord secretly signed. Trenck was defended by the
+advocate Gerhauer and by Berger. They began with the self-created
+daughter of Marshal Schwerin; and, to conceal the iniquitous
+proceedings of the late court-martial, it was thought proper that
+she should appear insane, and return incoherent answers to the
+questions put by the examiners. Trenck insisted that a more severe
+inquiry should be instituted; but they affirmed that she had been
+conducted out of the Austrian territories.
+
+Trenck was accused of having ordered a certain pandour, named Paul
+Diack, to suffer the bastinado of 1,000 blows, and that he had died
+under the punishment. This was sworn to by two officers, now great
+men in the army, who said they were eye-witnesses of the fact. When
+the revision of the suit began, Trenck sent me into Sclavonia, where
+I found the dead Paul Diack alive, and brought him to Vienna. He
+was examined by the court, where it appeared that the two officers,
+who had sworn they were present when he expired, and had seen him
+buried, were at that time 160 miles from the regiment, and
+recruiting in Sclavonia. Paul Diack had engaged in plots, and had
+mutinied three times. Trenck had pardoned him, but afterwards
+mutinying once more, with forty others, he was condemned to death.
+At the place of execution he called to his colonel: "Father, if I
+receive a thousand blows, will you pardon me?" Trenck replied in
+the affirmative. He received the punishment, was taken to the
+hospital, and cured.
+
+I brought fourteen more witnesses from Sclavonia, who attested the
+falsity of other articles of accusation which were not worthy of
+attention. The cause wore a new aspect; and the wickedness of those
+who were so desirous to have seen Trenck executed became apparent.
+
+One of the chief articles in the prosecution, which for ever
+deprived him of favour from his virtuous and apostolic mistress, and
+for which alone he was condemned to the Spielberg, was, that he had
+ravished the daughter of a miller in Silesia. This was made oath
+of, and he was not entirely cleared of the charge in the revision,
+because his accusers had excluded all means of justification. Two
+years after his death, I discovered the truth of this affair.
+Mainstein accused him of this crime that he might prevent his return
+to the regiment; his motive was, because he, in conjunction with
+Frederici, had appropriated to their own purposes 8,000 florins of
+regimental money.
+
+This miller's daughter was the mistress of Mainstein, before she had
+been seen by Trenck. Maria Theresa, however, would never forgive
+him; and, to satisfy the honour of this damsel, he was condemned to
+pay 8,000 florins to her, and 15,000 to the chest of the invalids,
+and to suffer perpetual imprisonment. Sixty-three civil suits had I
+to defend, and all the appeals of his accusers to terminate after
+his death. I gained them all and his accusers were condemned in
+costs, also to refund the so much per day which had been paid them
+by General Loewenwalde; but they were all poor, and I might seek the
+money where I could. In justice, Loewenwalde ought to have
+reimbursed me. The total of the sum they received was 15,000
+florins.
+
+Most of the other articles of accusation consisted in Trenck's
+having beheaded some mutinous pandours, and broken his officers
+without a court-martial; that he had bought of his soldiers, and
+melted down the holy vessels of the church, chalices, and rosaries;
+had bastinadoed some priests, had not heard mass every Sunday, and
+had dragged malefactors from convents, in which they had taken
+refuge. When the officers were no longer protected by Loewenwalde,
+or Weber, they decamped, but did not cease to labour to gain their
+purpose, which they attained by the aid of the Court-confessor.
+This monk found means to render Maria Theresa insensible of pity
+towards a man who had been so prodigal of his blood in her defence.
+Loewenwalde knew how to profit by the opportunity. Gerhauer
+discovered the secret proceedings; and Loewenwalde, now deeply
+interested in the ruin of Trenck, went to the Empress, related the
+manner in which the judges had been bribed, and threatened that
+should he, through the protection of the Emperor and Prince Charles,
+be declared innocent, he would publicly vindicate the honour of the
+court-martial.
+
+Had my cousin followed my advice and plan of flight he would not
+have died in prison nor should I have lain in the dungeon of
+Magdeburg. With respect to individuals whom he robbed, innocent men
+whom he massacred, and many other worthy people whom he made
+miserable; with respect to his father, aged eighty-four, and his
+virtuous wife, whom he treated with barbarity; with respect to
+myself, to the duties of consanguinity and of man, he merited
+punishment, the pursuit of the avenging arm of justice, and to be
+extirpated from all human society.
+
+
+
+EPILOGUE.
+
+
+
+Thomas Carlyle's opinion of the author of this History is expressed
+in the following passages from his History of Friedrich II. of
+Prussia: "'Frederick Baron Trenck,' loud sounding phantasm, once
+famous in the world, now gone to the nurseries as mythical, was of
+this carnival (1742-3.) . . . A tall actuality in that time,
+swaggering about in sumptuous Life Guard uniform in his mess-rooms
+and assembly-rooms; much in love with himself, the fool! And I
+rather think, in spite of his dog insinuations, neither Princess had
+heard of him till twenty years hence, in a very different phasis of
+his life! The empty, noisy, quasi-tragic fellow; sounds throughout
+quasi-tragical, like an empty barrel; well-built, longing to be
+filled."--Book xiv., ch. 3.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Volume 2
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg eText Life and Adventures of Baron Trenck
+