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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ History of Friedrich II Of Prussia, Volume 15, by Thomas Carlyle
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol.
+XV. (of XXI.), by Thomas Carlyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol. XV. (of XXI.)
+ Frederick The Great--Second Silesian War, Important Episode
+ In The General European One--15th Aug. 1744-25th Dec. 1745
+
+Author: Thomas Carlyle
+
+Release Date: June 13, 2008 [EBook #2115]
+Last Updated: November 30, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by D.R. Thompson and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II OF PRUSSIA, Volume 15
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ FREDERICK THE GREAT
+ </h2>
+ <h2>
+ by Thomas Carlyle
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <div class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <big><b>BOOK XV.&mdash;SECOND SILESIAN WAR,
+ IMPORTANT EPISODE IN THE GENERAL EUROPEAN ONE.&mdash;15th Aug. 1744-25th
+ Dec. 1745.</b></big> </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> <b>Chapter I.&mdash;PRELIMINARY:
+ HOW THE MOMENT ARRIVED.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> PRINCE KARL GETS ACROSS THE RHINE (20 JUNE-2
+ JULY, 1744). </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> FRIEDRICH DECIDES TO
+ INTERVENE. </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> <b>Chapter II.&mdash;FRIEDRICH MARCHES UPON PRAG,
+ CAPTURES PRAG.</b> </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> <b>Chapter III.&mdash;FRIEDRICH,
+ DILIGENT IN HIS BOHEMIAN CONQUESTS, UNEXPECTEDLY COMES UPON PRINCE KARL,
+ WITH NO FRENCH ATTENDING HIM.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> FRIEDRICH, LEAVING SMALL GARRISON IN PRAG,
+ RUSHES SWIFTLY UP THE MOLDAU VALLEY, UPON THE TABOR-BUDWEIS COUNTRY; TO
+ PLEASE HIS FRENCH FRIENDS. </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE
+ FRENCH ARE LITTLE GRATEFUL FOR THE PLEASURE DONE THEM AT SUCH RUINOUS
+ EXPENSE. </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> <b>Chapter IV.&mdash;FRIEDRICH REDUCED TO
+ STRAITS; CANNOT MAINTAIN HIS MOLDAU CONQUESTS AGAINST PRICE KARL.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> FRIEDRICH TRIES TO HAVE BATTLE FROM PRINCE
+ KARL, IN THE MOLDAU COUNTRIES; CANNOT, OWING TO THE SKILL OF PRINCE KARL
+ OR OF OLD FELDMARSCHALL TRAUN;&mdash;HAS TO RETIRE BEHIND THE SAZAWA,
+ AND ULTIMATELY BEHIND THE ELBE, WITH MUCH LABOR IN VAIN. </a><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0011"> FRIEDRICH'S RETREAT; ESPECIALLY EINSIEDEL'S FROM
+ PRAG. </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> <b>Chapter V.&mdash;FRIEDRICH, UNDER
+ DIFFICULTIES, PREPARES FOR A NEW CAMPAIGN.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> OLD DESSAUER REPELS THE SILESIAN INVASION
+ (Winter, 1744-45). </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> THE FRENCH FULLY
+ INTEND TO BEHAVE BETTER NEXT SEASON TO FRIEDRICH AND THEIR GERMAN
+ ALLIES;&mdash;BUT ARE PREVENTED BY VARIOUS ACCIDENTS (November,
+ 1744-April, 1745; April-August, 1745). </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0015">
+ STRANGE ACCIDENT TO MARECHAL DE BELLEISLE IN THE HARZ MOUNTAINS (20th
+ December, 1744). </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> THE KAISER KARL
+ VII. GETS SECURED FROM OPPRESSIONS, IN A TRAGIC WAY. FRIEDRICH PROPOSES
+ PEACE, BUT TO NO PURPOSE. </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> <b>Chapter VI.&mdash;VALORI GOES ON AN
+ ELECTIONEERING MISSION TO DRESDEN.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> 1. FRIEDRICH'S POSITION TOWARDS SAXONY. </a><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> 2. THERE IS A, "UNION OF WARSAW" (8th January,
+ 1745); AND STILL MORE SPECIALLY A "TREATY OF WARSAW" (8th January-18th
+ May, 1745). </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> 3. VALORI'S ACCOUNT OF
+ HIS MISSION (in compressed form). [Valori, i. 211-219.] </a><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0021"> MIDDLE-RHINE ARMY IN A STAGGERING STATE; THE
+ BAVARIAN INTRICACY SETTLES ITSELF, THE WRONG WAY. </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> <b>Chapter VII.&mdash;FRIEDRICH IN SILESIA;
+ UNUSUALLY BUSY.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> KING FRIEDRICH TO PODEWILS, IN BERLIN (under
+ various dates, March-April, 1745). </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0024">
+ FRIEDRICH TO PODEWILS (as before, April-May, 1745). </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> <b>Chapter VIII.&mdash;THE MARTIAL BOY AND HIS
+ ENGLISH versus THE LAWS OF NATURE.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> BATTLE OF FONTENOY (11th May, 1745). </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> <b>Chapter IX.&mdash;THE AUSTRIAN-SAXON ARMY
+ INVADES SILESIA, ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS.</b> </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0010"> <b>Chapter X.&mdash;BATTLE OF HOHENFRIEDBERG.</b>
+ </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011"> <b>Chapter XI.&mdash;CAMP OF
+ CHLUM: FRIEDRICH CANNOT ACHIEVE PEACE.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> CAMP OF DIESKAU: BRITANNIC MAJESTY MAKES
+ PEACE, FOR HIMSELF, WITH FRIEDRICH; BUT CANNOT FOR AUSTRIA OR SAXONY.
+ </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> SCHONBRUNN, 2d AUGUST, 1745,
+ ROBINSON HAS AUDIENCE OF HER HUNGARIAN MAJESTY. </a><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0032"> GRAND-DUKE FRANZ IS ELECTED KAISER (13TH
+ SEPTEMBER, 1745); FRIEDRICH, THE SEASON AND FORAGE BEING DONE, MAKES FOR
+ SILESIA. </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> <b>Chapter XII.&mdash;BATTLE OF SOHR.</b> </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> <b>Chapter XIII.&mdash;SAXONY AND AUSTRIA MAKE A
+ SURPRISING LAST ATTEMPT.</b> </a><br />
+ <div class="toc2">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> FRIEDRICH GOES OUT TO MEET HIS THREE-LEGGED
+ MONSTER; CUTS ONE LEG OF IT IN TWO (Fight of Hennersdorf, 23d November,
+ 1745). </a><br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> PRINCE KARL, CUT IN TWO,
+ TUMBLES HOME AGAIN DOUBLE-QUICK. </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> <b>Chapter XIV.&mdash;BATTLE OF KESSELSDORF.</b>
+ </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0015"> <b>Chapter XV.&mdash;PEACE OF
+ DRESDEN: FRIEDRICH DOES MARCH HOME.</b> </a><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK XV.&mdash;SECOND SILESIAN WAR, IMPORTANT EPISODE IN THE GENERAL
+ EUROPEAN ONE.&mdash;15th Aug. 1744-25th Dec. 1745.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter I.&mdash;PRELIMINARY: HOW THE MOMENT ARRIVED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Battle being once seen to be inevitable, it was Friedrich's plan not to
+ wait for it, but to give it. Thanks to Friedrich Wilhelm and himself,
+ there is no Army, nor ever was any, in such continual preparation.
+ Military people say, "Some Countries take six months, some twelve, to get
+ in motion for war: but in three weeks Prussia can be across the marches,
+ and upon the throat of its enemy." Which is an immense advantage to little
+ Prussia among its big neighbors. "Some Countries have a longer sword than
+ Prussia; but none can unsheathe it so soon:"&mdash;we hope, too, it is
+ moderately sharp, when wielded by a deft hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French, as was intimated, are in great vigor, this Year; thoroughly
+ provoked; and especially since Friedrich sent his Rothenburg among them,
+ have been doing their very utmost. Their main effort is in the
+ Netherlands, at present;&mdash;and indeed, as happened, continues all
+ through this War to be. They by no means intend, or ever did, to neglect
+ Teutschland; yet it turns out, they have pretty much done with their
+ fighting there. And next Year, driven or led by accidents of various
+ kinds, they quit it altogether; and turning their whole strength upon the
+ Netherlands and Italy, chiefly on the Netherlands, leave Friedrich, much
+ to his astonishment, with the German War hanging wholly round HIS neck,
+ and take no charge of it farther! In which, to Friedrich's Biographers,
+ there is this inestimable benefit, if far the reverse to Friedrich's self:
+ That we shall soon have done with the French, then; with them and with so
+ much else; and may, in time coming, for most part, leave their huge
+ Sorcerer's Sabbath of a European War to dance itself out, well in the
+ distance, not encumbering us farther, like a circumambient Bedlam, as it
+ has hitherto done. Courage, reader! Let us give, in a glance or two, some
+ notion of the course things took, and what moment it was when Friedrich
+ struck in;&mdash;whom alone, or almost alone, we hope to follow
+ thenceforth; "Dismal Swamp" (so gracious was Heaven to us) lying now
+ mostly to rearward, little as we hoped it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was mere accident, a series of bad accidents, that led King Louis and
+ his Ministers into gradually forsaking Friedrich. They were the farthest
+ in the world from intending such a thing. Contrariwise, what
+ brain-beating, diplomatic spider-weaving, practical contriving, now and
+ afterwards, for that object; especially now! Rothenburg, Noailles,
+ Belleisle, Cardinal Tencin, have been busy; not less the mistress
+ Chateauroux, who admires Friedrich, being indeed a high-minded unfortunate
+ female, as they say; and has thrown out Amelot, not for stammering alone.
+ They are able, almost high people, this new Chateauroux Ministry, compared
+ with some; and already show results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nay, what is most important of all, France has (unconsciously, or by mere
+ help of Noailles and luck) got a real General to her Armies: Comte de
+ Saxe, now Marechal de Saxe; who will shine very splendent in these
+ Netherland operations,&mdash;counter-shone by mere Wades, D'Ahrembergs,
+ Cumberlands,&mdash;in this and the Four following Years. Noailles had
+ always recognized Comte de Saxe; had long striven for him, in Official
+ quarters; and here gets the light of him unveiled at last, and set on a
+ high place: loyal Noailles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the Year, this 1744, when Louis XV., urged by his Chateauroux,
+ the high-souled unfortunate female, appeared in person at the head of his
+ troops: "Go, Sire, go, MON CHOU (and I will accompany); show yourself
+ where a King should be, at the head of your troops; be a second
+ Louis-le-Grand!" Which he did, his Chateauroux and he; actually went to
+ the Netherlands, with baggage-train immeasurable, including not cooks
+ only, but play-actors with their thunder-barrels (off from Paris, May 3d),
+ to the admiration of the Universe. [Adelung, iv. 113; Barbier, ii. 391,
+ 394; Dulaure, <i>Hist. de Paris;</i> &amp;c.] Took the command,
+ nominal-command, first days of June; and captured in no-time Menin, Ipres,
+ Furnes, and the Fort of Knock, and as much of the Austrian Netherlands as
+ he liked,&mdash;that is to say, saw Noailles and Saxe do it;&mdash;walking
+ rapidly forward from Siege to Siege, with a most thundering artillery; old
+ Marshal Wade and consorts dismally eating their victuals, and looking on
+ from the distance, unable to attempt the least stroke in opposition. So
+ that the Dutch Barrier, if anybody now cared for it, did go all flat; and
+ the Balance of Power gets kicked out of its sacred pivot: to such purpose
+ have the Dutch been hoisted! Terrible to think of;&mdash;had not there,
+ from the opposite quarter, risen a surprising counterpoise; had not there
+ been a Prince Karl, with his 70,000, pressing victoriously over the Rhine;
+ which stayed the French in these sacrilegious procedures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PRINCE KARL GETS ACROSS THE RHINE (20 JUNE-2 JULY, 1744).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl, some weeks ago, at Heilbronn, joined his Rhine Army, which
+ had gathered thither from the Austrian side, through Baiern, and from the
+ Hither-Austrian or Swabian Winter-quarters; with full intent to be across
+ the Rhine, and home upon Elsass and the Compensation Countries, this
+ Summer, under what difficulties soever. Karl, or, as some whisper, old
+ Marshal Traun, who is nominally second in command, do make a glorious
+ campaign of it, this Year;&mdash;and lift the Cause of Liberty, at one
+ time, to the highest pitch it ever reached. Here, in brief terms, is
+ Prince Karl's Operation on the Rhine, much admired by military men:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "STOCKSTADT, JUNE 20th, 1744. Some thirty and odd miles north of Mannheim,
+ the Rhine, before turning westward at Mainz, makes one other of its many
+ Islands (of which there are hundreds since the leap at Schaffhausen): one
+ other, and I think the biggest of them all; perhaps two miles by five;
+ which the Germans call KUHKOPF (Cowhead), from the shape it has,&mdash;a
+ narrow semi-ellipse; River there splitting in two, one split (the western)
+ going straight, the other bending luxuriantly round: so that the HIND-head
+ or straight end of the Island lies towards France, and the round end, or
+ cow-LIPS (so to speak) towards native Teutschland, and the woody Hills of
+ the Berg-Strasse thereabouts. Stockstadt, chief little Town looking over
+ into this Cowhead Island, lies under the CHIN: understand only farther
+ that the German branch carries more than two-thirds of the River; that on
+ the Island itself there is no town, or post of defence; and that
+ Stockstadt is the place for getting over. Coigny and the French, some
+ 40,000, are guarding the River hereabouts, with lines, with batteries,
+ cordons, the best they can; Seckendorf, with 20,000 more ('Imperial' Old
+ Bavarian Troops, revivified, recruited by French pay), is in his garrison
+ of Philipsburg, ready to help when needed:"&mdash;not moulting now, at
+ Wembdingen, in that dismal manner; new-feathered now into "Kaiser's Army;"
+ waiting in his Philipsburg to guard the River there. "Coigny's French have
+ ramparts, ditches, not quite unfurnished, on their own shore, opposite
+ this Cowhead Island (ISLE DE HERON, as they call it); looking over to the
+ hind-head, namely: but they have nothing considerable there; and in the
+ Island itself, nothing whatever. 'If now Stockstadt were suddenly snatched
+ by us,' thinks Karl;&mdash;'if a few pontoons were nimbly swung in?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "JUNE 20th,&mdash;Coigny's people all shooting FEU-DE-JOIE, for that never
+ enough to be celebrated Capture of Menin and the Dutch Barrier a fortnight
+ ago,&mdash;this is managed to be done. The active General Barenklau,
+ active Brigadier Daun under him, pushes rapidly across into Kuhkopf;
+ rapidly throws up intrenchments, ramparts, mounts cannon, digs himself in,&mdash;greatly
+ to Coigny's astonishment; whose people hereabouts, and in all their lines
+ and posts, are busy shooting FEU-DE-JOIE for those immortal Dutch
+ victories, at the moment, and never dreaming of such a thing. Fresh force
+ floods in, Prince Karl himself arrives next day, in support of Barenklau;
+ Coigny (head-quarters at Speyer, forty miles south) need not attempt
+ dislodging him; but must stand upon his guard, and prepare for worse.
+ Which he does with diligence; shifting northward into those
+ Stockstadt-Mainz parts; calling Seckendorf across the River, and otherwise
+ doing his best,&mdash;for about ten days more, when worse, and almost
+ worst, did verily befall him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No attempt was made on Barenklau; nor, beyond the alarming of the
+ Coigny-Seckendorf people, did anything occur in Cowhead Island,&mdash;unless
+ it were the finis of an ugly bully and ruffian, who has more than once
+ afflicted us: which may be worth one word. Colonel Mentzel [copper-faced
+ Colonel, originally Play-actor, "Spy in Persia," and I know not what] had
+ been at the seizure of Kuhkopf; a prominent man. Whom, on the fifth day
+ after ('June 25th'), Prince Karl overwhelmed with joy, by handing him a
+ Patent of Generalcy: 'Just received from Court, my Friend, on account of
+ your merits old and late.'&mdash;'Aha,' said Barenklau, congratulating
+ warmly: 'Dine with me, then, Herr General Mentzel, this very day. The
+ Prince himself is to be there, Highness of Hessen-Darmstadt, and who not;
+ all are impatient to drink your health!' Mentzel had a glorious dinner;
+ still more glorious drink,&mdash;Prince Karl and the others, it is said,
+ egging him into much wild bluster and gasconade, to season their much
+ wine. Eminent swill of drinking, with the loud coarse talk supposable, on
+ the part of Mentzel and consorts did go on, in this manner, all afternoon:
+ in the evening, drunk Mentzel came out for air; went strutting and
+ staggering about; emerging finally on the platform of some rampart, face
+ of him huge and red as that of the foggiest rising Moon;&mdash;and stood,
+ looking over into the Lorraine Country; belching out a storm of oaths, as
+ to his taking it, as to his doing this and that; and was even flourishing
+ his sword by way of accompaniment; when, lo, whistling slightly through
+ the summer air, a rifle-ball from some sentry on the French side (writers
+ say, it was a French drummer, grown impatient, and snatching a sentry's
+ piece) took the brain of him, or the belly of him; and he rushed down at
+ once, a totally collapsed monster, and mere heap of dead ruin, never to
+ trouble mankind more." [<i>Guerre de Boheme,</i> iii. 165.] For which my
+ readers and I are rather thankful. Voltaire, and perhaps other memorable
+ persons, sometimes mention this brute (miraculous to the Plebs and
+ Gazetteers); otherwise eternal oblivion were the best we could do with
+ him. Trenck also, readers will be glad to understand, ends in jail and
+ bedlam by and by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Prince Karl had not the least intention of crossing by this Cowhead
+ Island. Nevertheless he set about two other Bridges in the neighborhood,
+ nearer Mainz (few miles below that City); kept manoeuvring his Force, in
+ huge half-moon, round that quarter, and mysteriously up and down; alarming
+ Coigny wholly into the Mainz region. For the space of ten days; and then,
+ stealing off to Schrock, a little Rhine Village above Philipsburg, many
+ miles away from Coigny and his vigilantes, he&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "NIGHT OF 30th JUNE-1st JULY, Suddenly shot Pandour Trenck, followed by
+ Nadasti and 6,000, across at Schrock who scattered Seckendorf's poor
+ outposts thereabouts to the winds; 'built a bridge before morning, and
+ next day another.' Next day Prince Karl in person appeared; and on the 3d
+ of July, had his whole Army with its luggages across; and had seized the
+ Lines of Lauterburg and Weissenburg (celebrated northern defence of
+ Elsass),&mdash;much to Coigny's amazement; and remained inexpugnable
+ there, with Elsass open to him, and to Coigny shut, for the present!
+ [Adelung, iv. 139-141.] Coigny made bitter wail, accusation, blame of
+ Seckendorf, blame of men and of things; even tried some fighting,
+ Seckendorf too doing feats, to recover those Lines of Weissenburg: but
+ could not do it. And, in fact, blazing to and fro in that excited rather
+ than luminous condition, could not do anything; except retire into the
+ strong posts of the background; and send express on express, swifter than
+ the wind if you can, to a victorious King overturning the Dutch Barrier:
+ 'Help, your Majesty, or we are lost; and France is&mdash;what shall I
+ say!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Admirable feat of Strategy! What a General, this Prince Karl!" exclaimed
+ mankind,&mdash;Cause-of-Liberty mankind with special enthusiasm; and took
+ to writing LIVES of Prince Karl, [For instance, <i>The Life of his
+ Highness Prince Charles of &amp;c., with &amp;c. &amp;c.</i> (London,
+ 1746); one of the most distracted Blotches ever published under the name
+ of Book;&mdash;wakening thoughts of a public dimness very considerable
+ indeed, to which this could offer itself as lamp!] as well as tar-burning
+ and TE-DEUM-ing on an extensive scale. For it had sent the Cause of
+ Liberty bounding up again to the top of things, this of crossing the
+ Rhine, in such fashion. And, in effect, the Cause of Liberty, and Prince
+ Karl himself, had risen hereby to their acme or culminating point in
+ World-History; not to continue long at such height, little as they dreamt
+ of that, among their tar-burnings. The feat itself&mdash;contrived by
+ Nadasti, people say, and executed (what was the real difficulty) by Traun&mdash;brought
+ Prince Karl very great renown, this Year; and is praised by Friedrich
+ himself, now and afterwards, as masterly, as Julius Caesar's method, and
+ the proper way of crossing rivers (when executable) in face of an enemy.
+ And indeed Prince Karl, owing to Traun or not, is highly respectable in
+ the way of Generalship at present; and did in these Five Months, from June
+ onward, really considerable things. At his very acme of Life, as well as
+ of Generalship; which, alas, soon changed, poor man; never to culminate
+ again. He had got, at the beginning of the Year, the high Maria Theresa's
+ one Sister, Archduchess Maria Anna, to Wife; [Age then twenty-five gone:
+ "born 14th September, 1718; married to Prince Karl 7th January, 1744;
+ died, of childbirth, 16th December same year" (Hormayr, <i>OEsterreichischer
+ Plutarch,</i> iv. erstes Baudchen, 54).] the crown of long mutual
+ attachment; she safe now at Brussels, diligent Co-Regent, and in a
+ promising family-way; he here walking on victorious:&mdash;need any man be
+ happier? No man can be supremely happy long; and this General's strategic
+ felicity and his domestic were fatally cut down almost together. The Cause
+ of Liberty, too, now at the top of its orbit, was&mdash;But let us stick
+ by our Excerpting:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DUNKIRK, 19th JULY, 1744 [Princess Ulrique's Wedding, just two days ago].
+ King Louis, on hearing of the Job's-news from Elsass, instantly suspended
+ his Conquests in Flanders; detached Noailles, detached this one and that,
+ double-quick, Division after Division (leaving Saxe, with 45,000, to his
+ own resources, and the fatuities of Marshal Wade); and, 19th July, himself
+ hastens off from Dunkirk (leaving much of the luggage, but not the
+ Chateauroux behind him), to save his Country, poor soul. But could not, in
+ the least, save it; the reverse rather. August 4th, he got to Metz,
+ Belleisle's strong town, about 100 miles from the actual scene; his
+ detached reinforcements, say 50,000 men or so, hanging out ahead like
+ flame-clouds, but uncertain how to act;&mdash;Noailles being always
+ cunctatious in time of crisis, and poor Louis himself nothing of a
+ Cloud-Compeller;&mdash;and then,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "METZ, AUGUST 8th, The Most Christian King fell ill; dangerously,
+ dreadfully, just like to die. Which entirely paralyzed Noailles and
+ Company, or reduced them to mere hysterics, and excitement of the
+ unluminous kind. And filled France in general, Paris in particular, with
+ terror, lamentation, prayers of forty hours; and such a paroxysm of
+ hero-worship as was never seen for such an object before." [Espagnac, ii.
+ 12; Adelung, iv. 180; <i>Fastes de Louis XV.,</i> ii. 423; &amp;c. &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the Cause of Liberty here, we consider, was the culminating moment;
+ Elsass, Lorraine and the Three Bishoprics lying in their quasi-moribund
+ condition; Austrian claims of Compensation ceasing to be visions of the
+ heated brain, and gaining some footing on the Earth as facts. Prince Karl
+ is here actually in Elsass, master of the strong passes; elate in heart,
+ he and his; France, again, as if fallen paralytic, into temporary
+ distraction; offering for resistance nothing hitherto but that universal
+ wailing of mankind, Hero-worship of a thrice-lamentable nature, and the
+ Prayers of Forty-Hours! Most Christian Majesty, now IN EXTREMIS, centre of
+ the basest hubbub that ever was, is dismissing Chateauroux. Noailles,
+ Coigny and Company hang well back upon the Hill regions, and strong posts
+ which are not yet menaced; or fly vaguely, more or less distractedly,
+ hither and thither; not in the least like fighting Karl, much less like
+ beating him. Karl has Germany free at his back (nay it is a German
+ population round him here); neither haversack nor cartridge-box like to
+ fail: before him are only a Noailles and consorts, flying vaguely about;&mdash;and
+ there is in Karl, or under the same cloak with him at present, a talent of
+ manoeuvring men, which even Friedrich finds masterly. If old Marshal Wade,
+ at the other end of the line, should chance to awaken and press home on
+ Saxe, and his remnant of French, with right vigor? In fact, there was not,
+ that I can see, for centuries past, not even at the Siege of Lille in
+ Marlborough's time, a more imminent peril for France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH DECIDES TO INTERVENE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ King Friedrich, on hearing of these Rhenish emergencies and of King
+ Louis's heroic advance to the rescue, perceived that for himself too the
+ moment was come; and hastened to inform heroic Louis, That though the
+ terms of their Bargain were not yet completed, Sweden, Russia and other
+ points being still in a pendent condition, he, Friedrich,&mdash;with an
+ eye to success of their Joint Adventure, and to the indispensability of
+ joint action, energy, and the top of one's speed now or never,&mdash;would,
+ by the middle of this same August, be on the field with 100,000 men. "An
+ invasion of Bohemia, will not that astonish Prince Karl; and bring him to
+ his Rhine-Bridges again? Over which, if your Most Christian Majesty be
+ active, he will not get, except in a half, or wholly ruined state. Follow
+ him close; send the rest of your force to threaten Hanover; sit well on
+ the skirts of Prince Karl. Him as he hurries homeward, ruined or
+ half-ruined, him, or whatever Austrian will fight, I do my best to beat.
+ We may have Bohemia, and a beaten Austria, this very Autumn: see,&mdash;and,
+ in one Campaign, there is Peace ready for us!" This is Friedrich's scheme
+ of action; success certain, thinks he, if only there be energy, activity,
+ on your side, as there shall be on mine;&mdash;and has sent Count
+ Schmettau, filled with fiery speed and determination, to keep the French
+ full of the like, and concert mutual operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Magnanimous!" exclaim Noailles and the paralyzed French Gentlemen (King
+ Louis, I think, now past speech, for Schmettau only came August 9th):
+ "Most sublime behavior, on his Prussian Majesty's part!" own they. And
+ truly it is a fine manful indifference (by no means so common as it should
+ be) to all interests, to all considerations, but that of a Joint
+ Enterprise one has engaged in. And truly, furthermore, it was immediate
+ salvation to the paralyzed French Gentlemen, in that alarming crisis;
+ though they did not much recognize it afterwards as such: and indeed were
+ conspicuously forgetful of all parts of it, when their own danger was
+ over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maria Theresa's feelings may be conceived; George II's feelings; and what
+ the Cause of Liberty in general felt, and furiously said and complained,
+ when&mdash;suddenly as a DEUS EX MACHINA, or Supernal Genie in the Minor
+ Theatres&mdash;Friedrich stept in. Precisely in this supreme crisis, 7th
+ August, 1744, Friedrich's Minister, Graf von Dohna, at Vienna, has given
+ notice of the Frankfurt Union, and solemn Engagement entered into:
+ "Obliged in honor and conscience; will and must now step forth to right an
+ injured Kaiser; cannot stand these high procedures against an Imperial
+ Majesty chosen by all the Princes of the Reich, this unheard-of protest
+ that the Kaiser is no Kaiser, as if all Germany were but Austria and the
+ Queen of Hungary's. Prussian Majesty has not the least quarrel of his own
+ with the Queen of Hungary, stands true, and will stand, by the Treaty of
+ Berlin and Breslau;&mdash;only, with certain other German Princes, has
+ done what all German Princes and peoples not Austrian are bound to do, on
+ behalf of their down-trodden Kaiser, formed a Union of Frankfurt; and
+ will, with armed hand if indispensable, endeavor to see right done in that
+ matter." [In <i>Adelung,</i> iv. 155, 156, the Declaration itself
+ (Audience, "7th August, 1744." Dohna off homeward "on the second day
+ after").]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the astonishing fact for the Cause of Liberty; and no clamor and
+ execration will avail anything. This man is prompt, too; does not linger
+ in getting out his Sword, when he has talked of it. Prince Karl's
+ Operation is likely to be marred amazingly. If this swift King (comparable
+ to the old Serpent for devices) were to burst forth from his Silesian
+ strengths; tread sharply on the TAIL of Prince Karl's Operation, and bring
+ back the formidably fanged head of IT out of Alsace, five hundred miles
+ all at once,&mdash;there would be a business!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will now quit the Rhine Operations, which indeed are not now of moment;
+ Friedrich being suddenly the key of events again. I add only, what readers
+ are vaguely aware of, that King Louis did not die; that he lay at death's
+ door for precisely one week (8th-15th August), symptoms mending on the
+ 15th. In the interim,&mdash;Grand-Almoner Fitz-James (Uncle of our Conte
+ di Spinelli) insisting that a certain Cardinal, who had got the Sacraments
+ in hand, should insist; and endless ministerial intrigue being busy,&mdash;moribund
+ Louis had, when it came to the Sacramental point, been obliged to dismiss
+ his Chateauroux. Poor Chateauroux; an unfortunate female; yet, one almost
+ thinks, the best man among them: dismissed at Metz here, and like to be
+ mobbed! That was the one issue of King Louis's death-sickness. Sublime
+ sickness; during which all Paris wept aloud, in terror and sorrow, like a
+ child that has lost its mother and sees a mastiff coming; wept sublimely,
+ and did the Prayers of Forty-Hours; and called King Louis Le BIEN-AIME
+ (The Well-beloved):&mdash;merely some obstruction in the royal bowels, it
+ turned out;&mdash;a good cathartic, and the Prayers of Forty-Hours, quite
+ reinstated matters. Nay reinstated even Chateauroux, some time after,&mdash;"the
+ Devil being well again," and, as the Proverb says, quitting his monastic
+ view. Reinstated Chateauroux: but this time, poor creature, she continued
+ only about a day:&mdash;"Sudden fever, from excitement," said the Doctors:
+ "Fever? Poison, you mean!" whispered others, and looked for changes in the
+ Ministry. Enough, oh, enough!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Marshal Wade did not awaken, though bawled to by his Ligoniers and
+ others, and much shaken about, poor old gentleman. "No artillery to speak
+ of," murmured he; "want baggage-wagons, too!" and lay still. "Here is
+ artillery!" answered the Official people; "With my own money I will buy
+ you baggage-wagons!" answered the high Maria Anna, in her own name and her
+ Prince Karl's, who are Joint-Governors there. Possibly he would have
+ awakened, had they given him time. But time, in War especially, is the
+ thing that is never given. Once Friedrich HAD struck in, the moment was
+ gone by. Poor old Wade! Of him also enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter II.&mdash;FRIEDRICH MARCHES UPON PRAG, CAPTURES PRAG.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was on Saturday, "early in the morning," 15th August, 1744, that
+ Friedrich set out, attended by his two eldest Brothers, Prince of Prussia
+ and Prince Henri, from Potsdam, towards this new Adventure, which proved
+ so famous since. Sudden, swift, to the world's astonishment;&mdash;actually
+ on march here, in three Columns (two through Saxony by various routes
+ southeastward, one from Silesia through Glatz southwestward), to invade
+ Bohemia: rumor says 100,000 strong, fact itself says upwards of 80,000, on
+ their various routes, converging towards Prag. [&mdash;Helden-Geschichte,&mdash;ii.
+ 1165. Orlich (ii. 25, 27) enumerates the various regiments.] His Columns,
+ especially his Saxon Columns, are already on the road; he joins one
+ Column, this night, at Wittenberg; and is bent, through Saxony, towards
+ the frontiers of Bohemia, at the utmost military speed he has.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through Saxony about 60,000 go: he has got the Kaiser's Order to the
+ Government of Saxony, "Our august Ally, requiring on our Imperial business
+ a transit through you;"&mdash;and Winterfeld, an excellent soldier and
+ negotiator, has gone forward to present said Order. A Document which
+ flurries the Dresden Officials beyond measure. Their King is in Warsaw;
+ their King, if here, could do little; and indeed has been inclining to
+ Maria Theresa this long while. And Winterfeld insists on such despatch;&mdash;and
+ not even the Duke of Weissenfels is in Town, Dresden Officials "send off
+ five couriers and thirteen estafettes" to the poor old Duke; [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii. 1163.] get him at last; and&mdash;The march is already taking effect;
+ they may as well consent to it: what can they do but consent! In the
+ uttermost flurry, they had set to fortifying Dresden; all hands driving
+ palisades, picking, delving, making COUPURES (trenches, or sunk
+ barricades) in the streets;&mdash;fatally aware that it can avail nothing.
+ Is not this the Kaiser's Order? Prussians, to the amount of 60,000, are
+ across our Frontiers, rapidly speeding on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friedrich's Manifesto&mdash;under the modest Title, 'ANZEIGE DER URSACHEN
+ (Advertisement of the Causes which have induced his Prussian Majesty to
+ send the Romish Kaiser's Majesty some Auxiliary Troops)'&mdash;had
+ appeared in the Berlin Newspapers Thursday, 13th, only two days before. An
+ astonishment to all mankind; which gave rise to endless misconceptions of
+ Friedrich: but which, supporting itself on proofs, on punctually excerpted
+ foot-notes, is intrinsically a modest, quiet Piece; and, what is singular
+ in Manifestoes, has nothing, or almost nothing, in it that is not, so far
+ as it goes, a perfect statement of the fact. 'Auxiliary troops, that is
+ our essential character. No war with her Hungarian Majesty, or with any
+ other, on our own score. But her Hungarian Majesty, how has she treated
+ the Romish Kaiser, her and our and the Reich's Sovereign Head, and to what
+ pass reduced him; refusing him Peace on any terms, except those of
+ self-annihilation; denying that he is a Kaiser at all;'&mdash;and
+ enumerates the various Imperial injuries, with proof given, quiet
+ footnotes by way of proof; and concludes in these words: 'For himself his
+ Majesty requires nothing. The question here is not of his Majesty's own
+ interest at all [everything his Majesty required, or requires, is by the
+ Treaty of Berlin solemnly his, if the Reich and its Laws endure]: and he
+ has taken up arms simply and solely in the view of restoring to the Reich
+ its freedom, to the Kaiser his Headship of the Reich, and to all Europe
+ the Peace which is so desirable.' [Given in Seyfarth, <i>Beylage,</i> i.
+ 121-136, with date "August, 1744."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Pretences, subterfuges, lies!' exclaimed the Austrian and Allied Public
+ everywhere, or strove to exclaim; especially the English Public, which had
+ no difficulty in so doing;&mdash;a Public comfortably blank as to German
+ facts or non-facts; and finding with amazement only this a very certain
+ fact, That hereby is their own Pragmatic thunder checked in mid-volley in
+ a most surprising manner, and the triumphant Cause of Liberty brought to
+ jeopardy again. 'Perfidious, ambitious, capricious!' exclaimed they: 'a
+ Prince without honor, without truth, without constancy;'&mdash;and
+ completed, for themselves, in hot rabid humor, that English Theory of
+ Friedrich which has prevailed ever since. Perhaps the most surprising item
+ of which is this latter, very prominent in those old times, That Friedrich
+ has no 'constancy,' but follows his 'caprices,' and accidental whirls of
+ impulse:&mdash;item which has dropped away in our times, though the others
+ stand as stable as ever. A monument of several things! Friedrich's
+ suddenness is an essential part of what fighting talent he has: if the
+ Public, thrown into flurry, cannot judge it well, they must even misjudge
+ it: what help is there?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That the above were actually Friedrich's reasons for venturing into this
+ Big Game again, is not now disputable. And as to the rumor, which rose
+ afterwards (and was denied, and could only be denied diplomatically to the
+ ear, if even to the ear), That Friedrich by Secret Article was 'to have
+ for himself the Three Bohemian Circles, Konigsgratz, Bunzlau, Leitmeritz,
+ which lie between Schlesien and Sachsen,' [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> i.
+ 1081; Scholl, ii. 349.]&mdash;there is not a doubt but Friedrich had so
+ bargained, 'Very well, if we can get said Circles!' and would right
+ cheerfully have kept and held them, had the big game gone in all points
+ completely well (game, to reinstate the Kaiser BOTH in Bohemia and
+ Bavaria) by Friedrich's fine playing. Not a doubt of all this:&mdash;nor
+ of what an extremely hypothetic outlook it then and always was; greatly
+ too weak for enticing such a man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich goes in Three Columns. One, on the south or left shore of the
+ Elbe, coming in various branches under Friedrich himself; this alone will
+ touch on Dresden, pass on the south side of Dresden; gather itself about
+ Pirna (in the Saxon Switzerland so called, a notable locality); thence
+ over the Metal Mountains into Bohmen, by Toplitz, by Lowositz, Leitmeritz,
+ and the Highway called the Pascopol, famous in War. The Second Column,
+ under Leopold the Young Dessauer, goes on the other or north side of the
+ Elbe, at a fair distance; marching through the Lausitz (rendezvous or
+ starting-point was Bautzen in the Lausitz) straight south, to meet the
+ King at Leitmeritz, where the grand Magazine is to be; and thence, still
+ south, straight upon Prag, in conjunction with his Majesty or parallel to
+ him. [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> i. 1081.] These are the Two Saxon Columns.
+ The Third Column, under Schwerin, collects itself in the interior of
+ Silesia; is issuing, by Glatz Country, through the Giant Mountains,
+ BOHMISCHE KAMME (Bohemian COMBS as they are called, which Tourists know),
+ by the Pass of Braunau,&mdash;disturbing the dreams of Rubezahl, if
+ Rubezahl happen to be there. This, say 20,000, will come down upon Prag
+ from the eastern side; and be first on the ground (31st August),&mdash;first
+ by one day. In the home parts of Silesia, well eastward of Glatz, there is
+ left another Force of 20,000, which can go across the Austrian Border
+ there, and hang upon the Hills, threatening Olmutz and the Moravian
+ Countries, should need be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, in its Three Columns, from west, from north, from east, the march,
+ with a steady swiftness, proceeds. Important especially those Two Saxon
+ Columns from west and north: 60,000 of them, "with a frightful
+ (ENTSETZLICH) quantity of big guns coming up the Elbe." Much is coming up
+ the Elbe; indispensable Highway for this Enterprise. Three months'
+ provisions, endless artillery and provender, is on the Elbe; 480 big
+ boats, with immense VORSPANN (of trace-horses, dreadful swearing, too, as
+ I have heard), will pass through the middle of Dresden: not landing by any
+ means. "No, be assured of it, ye Dresdeners, all flurried, palisaded,
+ barricaded; no hair of you shall be harmed." After a day or two, the
+ flurry of Saxony subsided; Prussians, under strict discipline, molest no
+ private person; pay their way; keep well aloof, to south and to north, of
+ Dresden (all but the necessary ammunition-escorts do);&mdash;and require
+ of the Official people nothing but what the Law of the Reich authorizes to
+ "Imperial Auxiliaries" in such case. "The Saxons themselves," Friedrich
+ observes, "had some 40,000, but scattered about; King in Warsaw:&mdash;dreadful
+ terror; making COUPURES and TETES-DE-PONT;&mdash;could have made no
+ defence." Had we diligently spent eight days on them! reflects he
+ afterwards. "To seize Saxony [and hobble it with ropes, so that at any
+ time you could pin it motionless, and even, if need were, milk the
+ substance out of it], would not have detained us eight days." [ <i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> iii. 53.] Which would have been the true plan, had we
+ known what was getting ready there! Certain it is, Friedrich did no
+ mischief, paid for everything; anxious to keep well with Saxony; hoping
+ always they might join him again, in such a Cause. "Cause dear to every
+ Patriot German Prince," urges Friedrich,&mdash;though Bruhl, and the
+ Polish, once "Moravian," Majesty are of a very different opinion:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maria Theresa, her thoughts at hearing of it may be imagined: 'The Evil
+ Genius of my House afoot again! My high projects on Elsass and Lorraine;
+ Husband for Kaiser, Elsass for the Reich and him, Lorraine for myself and
+ him; gone probably to water!' Nevertheless she said (an Official person
+ heard her say), 'My right is known to God; God will protect me, as He has
+ already done.' [ <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 1024.] And rose very
+ strong, and magnanimously defiant again; perhaps, at the bottom of her
+ heart, almost glad withal that she would now have a stroke for her dear
+ Silesia again, unhindered by Paladin George and his Treaties and notions.
+ What measures, against this nefarious Prussian outbreak, hateful to gods
+ and men, are possible, she rapidly takes: in Bohemia, in Bavaria and her
+ other Countries, that are threatened or can help. And abates nothing of
+ heart or hope;&mdash;praying withal, immensely, she and her People,
+ according to the mode they have. Sending for Prince Karl, we need not say,
+ double-quick, as the very first thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of Maria Theresa in Hungary,&mdash;for she ran to Presburg again with her
+ woes (August 16th, Diet just assembling there),&mdash;let us say only that
+ Hungary was again chivalrous; that old Palfy and the general Hungarian
+ Nation answered in the old tone,&mdash;VIVAT MARIA; AD ARMA, AD ARMA! with
+ Tolpatches, Pandours, Warasdins;&mdash;and, in short, that great and
+ small, in infinite 'Insurrection,' have still a stroke of battle in them
+ PRO REGE NOSTRO. Scarcely above a District or two (as the JASZERS and
+ KAUERS, in their over-cautious way) making the least difficulty. Much
+ enthusiasm and unanimity in all the others; here and there a Hungarian
+ gentleman complaining scornfully that their troops, known as among the
+ best fighters in Nature, are called irregular troops,&mdash;irregular,
+ forsooth! In one public consultation [District not important, not very
+ spellable, though doubtless pronounceable by natives to it], a gentleman
+ suggests that 'Winter is near; should not there be some slight provision
+ of tents, of shelter in the frozen sleety Mountains, to our gallant
+ fellows bound thither?' Upon which another starts up, 'When our Ancestors
+ came out of Asia Minor, over the Palus Maeotis bound in winter ice; and,
+ sabre in hand, cut their way into this fine Country which is still ours,
+ what shelter had they? No talk of tents, of barracks or accommodation
+ there; each, wrapt in his sheep skin, found it shelter sufficient. Tents!'
+ [ <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 1030.] And the thing was carried by
+ acclamation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wide wail in Bohemia that War is coming back. Nobility all making off,
+ some to Vienna or the intermediate Towns lying thitherward, some to their
+ Country-seats; all out of Prag. Willing mind on the part of the Common
+ People; which the Government strains every nerve to make the most of. Here
+ are fasts, processions, Prayers of Forty-Hours; here, as in Vienna and
+ elsewhere. In Vienna was a Three Days' solemn Fast: the like in Prag, or
+ better; with procession to the shrine of St. Vitus,&mdash;little likely to
+ help, I should fear. 'Rise, all fencible men,' exclaims the Government,&mdash;'at
+ least we will ballot, and make you rise:'&mdash;Militia people enter Prag
+ to the extent of 10,000; like to avail little, one would fear. General
+ Harsch, with reinforcement of real soldiers, is despatched from Vienna;
+ Harsch, one of our ablest soldiers since Khevenhuller died, gets in still
+ in time; and thus increases the Garrison of regulars to 4,000, with a
+ vigorous Captain to guide it. Old Count Ogilvy, the same whom Saxe
+ surprised two years ago in the moonlight, snatching ladders from the
+ gallows,&mdash;Ogilvy is again Commandant; but this time nominal mainly,
+ and with better outlooks, Harsch being under him. In relays, 3,000 of the
+ Militia men dig and shovel night and day; repairing, perfecting the
+ ramparts of the place. Then, as to provisions, endless corn is introduced,&mdash;farmers
+ forced, the unwilling at the bayonet's point, to deliver in their corn;
+ much of it in sheaf, so that we have to thrash it in the market-place, in
+ the streets that are wide: and thus in Prag is heard the sound of flails,
+ among the Militia-drums and so many other noises. With the great
+ church-organs growling; and the bass and treble MISERERE of the poor
+ superstitious People rising, to St. Vitus and others. In fact, it is a
+ general Dance of St. Vitus,&mdash;except that of the flails, and Militia-men
+ working at the ramparts,&mdash;mostly not leading any-whither." ["LETTER
+ from a Citizen of Prag," date, 21st Sept. (in <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii. 1168), which gives several curious details.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Friedrich's march from west, from north, from east, is flowing
+ on; diligent, swift; punctual to its times, its places; and meets no
+ impediment to speak of. At Tetschen on the Saxon-Bohemian Frontier,&mdash;a
+ pleasant Schloss perched on its crags, as Tourists know, where the Elbe
+ sweeps into Saxon Switzerland and its long stone labyrinths,&mdash;at
+ Tetschen the Austrians had taken post; had tried to block the River,
+ driving piles into it, and tumbling boulders into it, with a view to stop
+ the 480 Prussian Boats. These people needed to be torn out, their piles
+ and they: which was done in two days, the soldier part of it; and occupied
+ the boatmen above a week, before all was clear again. Prosperous, correct
+ to program, all the rest; not needing mention from us;&mdash;here are the
+ few sparks from it that dwell in one's memory:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "AUGUST 15th, 1744, King left Potsdam; joined his First Column that night,
+ at Wittenberg. Through Mieissen, Torgau, Freyberg; is at Peterswalde,
+ eastern slope of the Metal Mountains, August 25th; all the Columns now on
+ Bohemian ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friedrich had crossed Elbe by the Bridge of Meissen: on the southern
+ shore, politely waiting to receive his Majesty, there stood Feldmarschall
+ the Duke of Weissenfels; to whom the King gave his hand," no doubt in
+ friendly style, "and talked for above half an hour,"&mdash;with such
+ success! thinks Friedrich by and by. We have heard of Weissenfels before;
+ the same poor Weissenfels who was Wilhelmina's Wooer in old time, now on
+ the verge of sixty; an extremely polite but weakish old gentleman;
+ accidentally preserved in History. One of those conspicuous "Human
+ Clothes-Horses" (phantasmal all but the digestive part), which abound in
+ that Eighteenth Century and others like it; and distress your Historical
+ studies. Poor old soul; now Feldmarschall and Commander-in-Chief here. Has
+ been in Turk and other Wars; with little profit to himself or others. Used
+ to like his glass, they say; is still very poor, though now Duke in
+ reality as well as title (succeeded two egregious Brothers, some years
+ since, who had been spendthrift): he has still one other beating to get in
+ this world,&mdash;from Friedrich next year. Died altogether, two years
+ hence; and Wilhelmina heard no more of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At Meissen Bridge, say some, was this Half-hour's Interview; at Pirna,
+ the Bridge of Pirna, others say; [See Orlich, ii. 25; and <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii. 1166.]&mdash;quite indifferent to us which. At Pirna, and hither and
+ thither in Saxon Switzerland, Friedrich certainly was. 'Who ever saw such
+ positions, your Majesty?' For Friedrich is always looking out, were it
+ even from the window of his carriage, and putting military problems to
+ himself in all manner of scenery, 'What would a man do, in that kind of
+ ground, if attacking, if attacked? with that hill, that brook, that bit of
+ bog?' and advises every Officer to be continually doing the like.
+ [MILITARY INSTRUCTIONS? RULES FOR A GOOD COMMANDER OF &amp;c.?&mdash;I
+ have, for certain, read this Passage; but the reference is gone again,
+ like a sparrow from the house-top!] That is the value of picturesque or
+ other scenery to Friedrich, and their effect on good Prussian Officers and
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "... At Tetschen, Colonel Kahlbutz," diligent Prussian Colonel, "plucks
+ out those 100 Austrians from their rock nest there; makes them prisoners
+ of war;&mdash;which detained the Leitmeritz branch of us two days. August
+ 28th, junction at Leitmeritz thereupon. Magazine established there. Boats
+ coming on presently. Friedrich himself camped at Lobositz in this part,"&mdash;Lobositz,
+ or Lowositz, which he will remember one day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "AUGUST 29th, March to Budin; that is, southward, across the Eger, arrive
+ within forty miles of Prag. Austrian Bathyani, summoned hastily out of his
+ Bavarian posts, to succor in this pressing emergency, has arrived in these
+ neighborhoods,&mdash;some 12,000 regulars under him, preceded by clouds of
+ hussars, whom Ziethen smites a little, by way of handsel;&mdash;no other
+ Austrian force to speak of hereabouts; and we are now between Bathyani and
+ Prag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "SEPTEMBER 1st, To Mickowitz, near Welwarn, twenty miles from Prag.
+ September 2d, Camp on the Weissenberg there." [ <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ i. 1080.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so they are all assembled about Prag, begirdling the poor City,&mdash;third
+ Siege it has stood within these three years (since that moonlight November
+ night in 1741);&mdash;and are only waiting for their heavy artillery to
+ begin battering. The poor inhabitants, in spite of three sieges; the
+ 10,000 raw militia-men, mostly of Hungarian breed; the 4,000 regulars, and
+ Harsch and old Ogilvy, are all disposed to do their best. Friedrich is
+ naturally in haste to get hold of Prag. But he finds, on taking survey:
+ that the sword-in-hand method is not now, as in 1741, feasible at all;
+ that the place is in good posture of strength; and will need a hot
+ battering to tear it open. Owing to that accident at Tetschen, the
+ siege-cannon are not yet come up: "Build your batteries, your
+ Moldau-bridges, your communications, till the cannon come; and beware of
+ Bathyani meddling with your cannon by the road!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bathyani is within twenty miles of us, at Beraun, a compact little Town
+ to southwest; gathering a Magazine there; and ready for enterprises,&mdash;in
+ more force than Friedrich guesses. 'Drive him out, seize that Magazine of
+ his!' orders Friedrich (September 5th); and despatches General Hacke on
+ it, a right man,"&mdash;at whose wedding we assisted (wedding to an
+ heiress, long since, in Friedrich Wilhelm's time), if anybody now
+ remembered. "And on the morrow there falls out a pretty little 'Action of
+ Beraun,' about which great noise was made in the Gazettes PRO and CONTRA:
+ which did not dislodge Bathyani by airy means; but which might easily have
+ ruined the impetuous Hacke and his 6,000, getting into masked batteries,
+ Pandour whirlwinds, charges of horses 'from front, from rear, and from
+ both flanks,'&mdash;had not he, with masterly promptitude, whirled himself
+ out of it, snatched instantly what best post there was, and defended
+ himself inexpugnably there, for six hours, till relief came." [DIE BEY
+ BERAUN VORGEFALLENE ACTION (in Seyfarth, <i>Beylage,</i> i. 136, 137).]
+ Brilliant little action, well performed on both sides, but leading to
+ nothing; and which shall not concern us farther. Except to say that
+ Bathyani did now, more at his leisure, retire out of harm's way; and begin
+ collecting Magazines at Pilsen far rearward, which may prove useful to
+ Prince Karl, in the route Prince Karl is upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siege-cannon having at last come (September 8th), the batteries are all
+ mounted:&mdash;on Wednesday, 9th, late at night, the Artillery, "in
+ enormous quantity," opens its dread throat; poor Prag is startled from its
+ bed by torrents of shot, solid and shell, from three different quarters;
+ and makes haste to stand to its guns. From three different quarters; from
+ Bubenetsch northward; from the Upland of St. Lawrence (famed WEISSENBERG,
+ or White-Hill) westward; and from the Ziscaberg eastward (Hill of Zisca,
+ where iron Zisca posted himself on a grand occasion once),&mdash;which
+ latter is a broad long Hill, west end of it falling sheer over Prag; and
+ on another point of it, highest point of all, the Praguers have a strong
+ battery and works. The Prag guns otherwise are not too effectual; planted
+ mostly on low ground. By much the best Prag battery is this of the
+ Ziscaberg. And this, after two days' experience had of it, the Prussians
+ determine to take on the morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SEPTEMBER 12th, Schwerin, who commands on that side, assaults accordingly;
+ with the due steadfastness and stormfulness: throwing shells and balls by
+ way of prelude. Friedrich, with some group of staff-officers and
+ dignitaries, steps out on the Bubenetsch post, to see how this affair of
+ the Ziscaberg will prosper: the Praguers thereabouts, seeing so many
+ dignitaries, turn cannon on them. "Disperse, IHR HERREN; have a care!"
+ cried Friedrich; not himself much minding, so intent upon the Ziscaberg.
+ And could have skipt indifferently over your cannon-balls ploughing the
+ ground,&mdash;had not one fateful ball shattered out the life of poor
+ Prince Wilhelm; a good young Cousin of his, shot down here at his hand.
+ Doubtless a sharp moment for the King. Prince Margraf Wilhelm and a poor
+ young page, there they lie dead; indifferent to the Ziscaberg and all
+ coming wars of mankind. Lamentation, naturally, for this young man,&mdash;Brother
+ to the one who fell at Mollwitz, youngest Brother of the Margraf Karl, who
+ commands in this Bubenetsch redoubt:&mdash;But we must lift our eye-glass
+ again; see how Schwerin is prospering. Schwerin, with due steadfastness
+ and stormfulness, after his prelude of bomb-shells, rushes on
+ double-quick; cannot be withstood; hurls out the Praguers, and seizes
+ their battery; a ruinous loss to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their grand Zisca redoubt is gone, then; and two subsidiary small redoubts
+ behind it withal, which the French had built, and named "the magpie-nests
+ (NIDS A PIE);" these also are ours. And we overhang, from our Zisca Hill,
+ the very roofs, as it were; and there is nothing but a long bare curtain
+ now in this quarter, ready to be battered in breach, and soon holed, if
+ needful. It is not needful,&mdash;not quite. In the course of three days
+ more, our Bubenetsch battery, of enormous power, has been so diligent, it
+ has set fire to the Water-mill; burns irretrievably the Water-mill, and
+ still worse, the wooden Sluice of the Moldau; so that the river falls to
+ the everywhere wadable pitch. And Governor Harsch perceives that all this
+ quarter of the Town is open to any comer;&mdash;and, in fact, that he will
+ have to get away, the best he can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ White flag accordingly (Tuesday, 15th): "Free withdrawal, to the
+ Wischerad; won't you?" "By no manner of means!" answers Friedrich. Bids
+ Schwerin from his Ziscaberg make a hole or two in that "curtain" opposite
+ him; and gets ready for storm. Upon which Harsch, next morning, has to
+ beat the chamade, and surrender Prisoner of War. And thus, Wednesday,
+ 16th, it is done: a siege of one week, no more,&mdash;after all that
+ thrashing of grain, drilling of militia, and other spirited preparation.
+ Harsch could not help it; the Prussian cannonading was so furious.
+ [Orlich, ii. 36-39; <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> i. 1082, and ii. 1168; <i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> iii. 56; &amp;c. &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prag has to swear fealty to the Kaiser; and "pay a ransom of 200,000
+ pounds." Drilled militia, regulars, Hungarians, about 16,000,&mdash;only
+ that many of the Tolpatches contrived to whisk loose,&mdash;are marched
+ prisoners to Glatz and other strong places. Prag City, with plenty of
+ provision in it, is ours. A brilliant beginning of a Campaign; the eyes of
+ all Europe turned again, in very various humor, on this young King. If
+ only the French do their duty, and hang well on the skirts of Marshal
+ Traun (or of Prince Karl, the Cloak of Traun), who is hastening hitherward
+ all he can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter III.&mdash;FRIEDRICH, DILIGENT IN HIS BOHEMIAN CONQUESTS,
+ UNEXPECTEDLY COMES UPON PRINCE KARL, WITH NO FRENCH ATTENDING HIM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This electrically sudden operation on Prag was considered by astonished
+ mankind, whatever else they might think about it, a decidedly brilliant
+ feat of War: falling like a bolt out of the blue,&mdash;like three bolts,
+ suddenly coalescing over Prag, and striking it down. Friedrich himself,
+ though there is nothing of boast audible here or anywhere, was evidently
+ very well satisfied; and thought the aspects good. There is Prince Karl
+ whirling instantly back from his Strasburg Prospects; the general St.
+ Vitus Dance of Austrian things rising higher and higher in these home
+ parts:&mdash;reasonable hope that "in the course of one Campaign," proud
+ obstinate Austria might feel itself so wrung and screwed as to be glad of
+ Peace with neighbors not wishing War. That was the young King's
+ calculation at this time. And, had France done at all as it promised,&mdash;or
+ had the young King himself been considerably wiser than he was,&mdash;he
+ had not been disappointed in the way we shall see!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich admits he did not understand War at this period. His own scheme
+ now was: To move towards the southwest, there to abolish Bathyani and his
+ Tolpatches, who are busy gathering Magazines for Prince Karl's advent; to
+ seize the said Magazines, which will be very useful to us; then advance
+ straight towards the Passes of the Bohemian Mountains. Towns of Furth,
+ Waldmunchen, unfortunate Town of Cham (burnt by Trenck, where masons are
+ now busy); these stand successive in the grand Pass, through which the
+ highway runs; some hundred miles or so from where we are: march, at one's
+ swiftest, thitherward, Bathyani's Magazines to help; and there await
+ Prince Karl? It was Friedrich's own notion; not a bad one, though not the
+ best. The best, he admits, would have been: To stay pretty much where he
+ was; abolish Bathyani's Tolpatch people, seizing their Magazines, and
+ collecting others; in general, well rooting and fencing himself in Prag,
+ and in the Circles that lie thereabouts upon the Elbe,&mdash;bounded to
+ southward by the Sazawa (branch of the Moldau), which runs parallel to the
+ Elbe;&mdash;but well refusing to stir much farther at such an advanced
+ season of the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That second plan would have been the wisest:&mdash;then why not, follow
+ it? Too tame a plan for the youthful mind. Besides, we perceive, as indeed
+ is intimated by himself, he dreaded the force of public opinion in France.
+ "Aha, look at your King of Prussia again. Gone to conquer Bohemia; and,
+ except the Three Circles he himself is to have of it, lets Bohemia go to
+ the winds!" This sort of thing, Friedrich admits, he dreaded too much, at
+ that young period; so loud had the criticisms been on him, in the time of
+ the Breslau Treaty: "Out upon your King of Prussia; call you that an
+ honorable Ally!" Undoubtedly a weakness in the young King; inasmuch, says
+ he, as "every General [and every man, add we] should look to the fact, not
+ to the rumor of the fact." Well; but, at least, he will adopt his own
+ other notion; that of making for the Passes of the Bohemian Mountains; to
+ abolish Bathyani at least, and lock the door upon Prince Karl's advent?
+ That was his own plan; and, though second-best, that also would have done
+ well, had there been no third.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was, as we hinted, a third plan, ardently favored by Belleisle,
+ whose war-talent Friedrich much respected at this time: plan built on
+ Belleisle's reminiscences of the old Tabor-Budweis businesses, and totally
+ inapplicable now. Belleisle said, "Go southeast, not southwest; right
+ towards the Austrian Frontier itself; that will frighten Austria into a
+ fine tremor. Shut up the roads from Austria: Budweis, Neuhaus; seize those
+ two Highroad Towns, and keep them, if you would hold Bohemia; the want of
+ them was our ruin there." Your ruin, yes: but your enemy was not coming
+ from Alsace and the southwest then. He was coming from Austria; and your
+ own home lay on the southwest: it is all different now! Friedrich might
+ well think himself bewitched not to have gone for Cham and Furth, and the
+ Passes of the Bohmer-Wald, according to his own notion. But so it was; he
+ yielded to the big reputation of Belleisle, and to fear of what the world
+ would say of him in France; a weakness which he will perhaps be taught not
+ to repeat. In fact, he is now about to be taught several things;&mdash;and
+ will have to pay his school-wages as he goes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH, LEAVING SMALL GARRISON IN PRAG, RUSHES SWIFTLY UP THE MOLDAU
+ VALLEY, UPON THE TABOR-BUDWEIS COUNTRY; TO PLEASE HIS FRENCH FRIENDS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich made no delay in Prag; in haste at this late time of year.
+ September 17th, on the very morrow of the Siege, the Prussians get in
+ motion southward; on the 19th, Friedrich, from his post to north of the
+ City, defiles through Prag, on march to Kunraditz,&mdash;first stage on
+ that questionable Expedition up the Moldau Valley, right bank; towards
+ Tabor, Budweis, Neuhaus; to threaten Austria, and please Belleisle and the
+ French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prag is left under General Einsiedel with a small garrison of 5,000;&mdash;Einsiedel,
+ a steady elderly gentleman, favorite of Friedrich Wilhelm's, has brief
+ order, or outline of order to be filled up by his own good sense.
+ Posadowsky follows the march, with as many meal-wagons as possible,&mdash;draught-cattle
+ in very ineffectual condition. Our main Magazine is at Leitmeritz (should
+ have been brought on to Prag, thinks Friedrich); Commissariat very
+ ill-managed in comparison to what it ought to be,&mdash;to what it shall
+ be, if we ever live to make another Campaign. Heavy artillery is left in
+ Prag (another fault); and from each regiment, one of its baggage-wagons. [
+ <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> i. 1083; Orlich, ii. 41 et seqq.; <i>Frederic,</i>
+ iii. 59; &amp;c.] "We rest a day here at Kunraditz: 21st September, get to
+ the Sazawa River;&mdash;22d, to Bistritz (rest a day);&mdash;26th, to
+ Miltschin; and 27th, to Tabor:"&mdash;But the Diary would be tedious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich goes in two Columns; one along the great road towards Tabor,
+ under Schwerin this, and Friedrich mainly with him; the other to the
+ right, along the River's bank, under Leopold, Young Dessauer, which has to
+ go by wild country roads, or now and then roads of its own making; and
+ much needs the pioneer (a difficult march in the shortening days).
+ Posadowsky follows with the proviant, drawn by cattle of the horse and ox
+ species, daily falling down starved: great swearing there too, I doubt
+ not! General Nassau is vanguard, and stretches forward successfully at a
+ much lighter pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two Rivers, considerable branches of the Moldau, coming from
+ eastward; which, and first of them the Sazawa, concern us here. After
+ mounting the southern Uplands from Prag for a day or two, you then begin
+ to drop again, into the hollow of a River called Sazawa, important in
+ Bohemian Wars. It is of winding course, the first considerable branch of
+ the Moldau, rising in Teutschbrod Country, seventy or eighty miles to east
+ of us: in regard to Sazawa, there is, at present, no difficulty about
+ crossing; the Country being all ours. After the Sazawa, mount again, long
+ miles, day after day, through intricate stony desolation, rocks, bogs,
+ untrimmed woods, you will get to Miltschin, thence to Tabor: Miltschin is
+ the crown of that rough moor country; from Prag to Tabor is some sixty
+ miles. After Miltschin the course of those brown mountain-brooks is all
+ towards the Luschnitz, the next considerable branch of the Moldau; branch
+ still longer and more winding than the Sazawa; Tabor towers up near this
+ branch; Budweis, on the Moldau itself, is forty miles farther; and there
+ at last you are out of the stony moors, and in a rich champaign
+ comfortable to man and horse, were you but once there, after plodding
+ through the desolations. But from that Sazawa by the Luschnitz on to
+ Budweis, mounting and falling in such fashion, there must be ninety miles
+ or thereby. Plod along; and keep a sharp eye on the whirling clouds of
+ Pandours, for those too have got across upon us,&mdash;added to the other
+ tempests of Autumn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the ninth day of their march, the Prussians begin to descry on the
+ horizon ahead the steeples and chimney-tops of Tabor, on its high scarped
+ rock, or "Hill of Zisca,"&mdash;for it was Zisca and his Hussites that
+ built themselves this Bit of Inexpugnability, and named it Tabor from
+ their Bibles,&mdash;in those waste mountain regions. On the tenth day
+ (27th September), the Prussians without difficulty took Tabor; walls being
+ ruined, garrison small. We lie at Tabor till the 30th, last day of
+ September. Thence, 2d October, part of us to Moldau-Tein rightwards; where
+ cross the Moldau by a Bridge,&mdash;"Bridge" one has heard of, in old
+ Broglio times;&mdash;cross there, with intent (easily successful) to
+ snatch that "Castle of Frauenberg," darling of Broglio, for which he
+ fought his Pharsalia of a Sahay to no purpose!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both Columns got united at Tabor; and paused for a day or two, to rest,
+ and gather up their draggled skirts there. The Expedition does not improve
+ in promise, as we advance in it; the march one of the most untowardly; and
+ Posadowsky comes up with only half of his provision-carts,&mdash;half of
+ his cattle having fallen down of bad weather, hill-roads and starvation;
+ what could he do? That is an ominous circumstance, not the less.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three things are against the Prussians on this march; two of them
+ accidental things. FIRST, there is, at this late season too, the intrinsic
+ nature of the Country; which Friedrich with emphasis describes as boggy,
+ stony, precipitous; a waste, hungry and altogether barren Country,&mdash;too
+ emphatically so described. But then SECONDLY, what might have been
+ otherwise, the Population, worked upon by Austrian officials, all fly from
+ the sight of us; nothing but fireless deserted hamlets; and the corn, if
+ they ever had any, all thrashed and hidden. No amount of money can
+ purchase any service from them. Poor dark creatures; not loving Austria
+ much, but loving some others even less, it would appear. Of Bigoted Papist
+ Creed, for one thing; that is a great point. We do not meddle with their
+ worship more or less; but we are Heretics, and they hate us as the Night.
+ Which is a dreadful difficulty you always have in Bohemia: nowhere but in
+ the Circle of Konigsgraz, where there are Hussites (far to the rear of us
+ at this time), will you find it otherwise. This is difficulty second.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, THIRDLY, what much aggravates it,&mdash;we neglected to abolish
+ Bathyani! And here are Bathyani's Pandours come across the Moldau on us.
+ Plenty of Pandours;&mdash;to whom "10,000 fresh Hungarians," of a new
+ Insurrection which has been got up there, are daily speeding forward to
+ add themselves:&mdash;such a swarm of hornets, as darkens the very
+ daylight for you. Vain to scourge them down, to burn them off by blaze of
+ gunpowder: they fly fast; but are straightway back again. They lurk in
+ these bushy wildernesses, scraggy woods: no foraging possible, unless
+ whole regiments are sent out to do it; you cannot get a letter safely
+ carried for them. They are an unspeakable contemptible grief to the
+ earnest leader of men.&mdash;Let us proceed, however; it will serve
+ nothing to complain. Let us hope the French sit well on the skirts of
+ Prince Karl: these sorrowful labors may all turn to good, in that case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich pushes on from Tabor; shoots partly (as we have seen) across the
+ Moldau, to the left bank as well; captures romantic Frauenberg on its high
+ rock, where Broglio got into such a fluster once. We could push to Pisek,
+ too, and make a "Bivouac of Pisek," if we lost our wits! Nassau is in
+ Budweis, in Neuhaus; and proper garrisons are gone thither: nothing
+ wanting on our side of the business. But these Pandours, these 10,000
+ Insurrection Hungarians, with their Trencks spurring them! A continual
+ unblessed swarm of hornets, these; which shut out the very light of day
+ from us. Too literally the light of day: we can get no free messaging from
+ part to part of our own Army even. "As many as six Orderlies have been
+ despatched to an outlying General; and not one of them could get through
+ to him. They have snapt up three Letter-bags destined for the King
+ himself. For four weeks he is absolutely shut out from the rest of
+ Europe;" knows not in the least what the Kaiser, or the Most Christian or
+ any other King, is doing; or whether the French are sitting well on Prince
+ Karl's skirts, or not attempting that at all. This also is a thing to be
+ amended, a thing you had to learn, your Majesty? An Army absolutely shut
+ out from news, from letters, messages to or fro, and groping its way in
+ darkness, owing to these circumambient thunder-clouds of Tolpatches, is
+ not a well-situated Army! And alas, when at last the Letter-bag did get
+ through, and&mdash;But let us not anticipate!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Tabor there arose two opinions; which, in spite of the King's presence,
+ was a new difficulty. South from Tabor a day's march, the Highway splits;
+ direct way for Vienna; left-hand goes to Neuhaus, right-hand, or
+ straightforward rather, goes to Budweis, bearing upon Linz: which of these
+ two? Nassau has already seized Budweis; and it is a habitable champaign
+ country in comparison. Neuhaus, farther from the Moldau and its uses, but
+ more imminent on Austria, would be easy to seize; and would frighten the
+ Enemy more. Leopold the Young Dessauer is for Budweis; rapid Schwerin, a
+ hardy outspoken man, is emphatic for the other place as Head-quarter. So
+ emphatic are both, that the two Generals quarrel there; and Friedrich
+ needs his authority to keep them from outbreaks, from open incompatibility
+ henceforth, which would be destructive to the service. For the rest,
+ Friedrich seizes both places; sends a detachment to Neuhaus as well; but
+ holds by Budweis and the Moldau region with his main Army; which was not
+ quite gratifying to the hardy Schwerin. On the opposite or left bank,
+ holding Frauenberg, the renowned Hill-fortress there, we make inroads at
+ discretion: but the country is woody, favorable to Pandours; and the right
+ bank is our chief scene of action. How we are to maintain ourselves in
+ this country? To winter in these towns between the Sazawa and the
+ Luschnitz? Unless the French sit well on Prince Karl's skirts, it will not
+ be possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE FRENCH ARE LITTLE GRATEFUL FOR THE PLEASURE DONE THEM AT SUCH RUINOUS
+ EXPENSE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ French sitting well on Prince Karl's skirts? They are not molesting Prince
+ Karl in the smallest; never tried such a thing;&mdash;are turned away to
+ the Brisgan, to the Upper Rhine Country; gone to besiege Freyburg there,
+ and seize Towns; about the Lake of Constance, as if there were no
+ Friedrich in the game! It must be owned the French do liberally pay off
+ old scores against Friedrich,&mdash;if, except in their own imagination,
+ they had old scores against him. No man ever delivered them from a more
+ imminent peril; and they, the rope once cut that was strangling them,
+ magnificently forget who cut it; and celebrate only their own
+ distinguished conduct during and after the operation. To a degree truly
+ wonderful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was moonlight, clear as day that night, 23d August, when Prince Karl
+ had to recross the Rhine, close in their neighborhood; [<i>Guerre de
+ Boheme,</i> iii. 196.]&mdash;and instead of harassing Prince Karl "to half
+ or to whole ruin," as the bargain was, their distinguished conduct
+ consisted in going quietly to their beds (old Marechal de Noailles even
+ calling back some of his too forward subalterns), and joyfully leaving
+ Prince Karl, then and afterwards, to cross the Rhine, and march for
+ Bohmen, at his own perfect convenience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seckendorf will sit on Karl's skirts," they said: "too late for US, this
+ season; next season, you shall see!" Such was their theory, after Louis
+ got that cathartic, and rose from bed. Schmettau, with his importunities,
+ which at last irritated everybody, could make nothing more of it. "Let the
+ King of France crown his glories by the Siege of Freyburg, the conquest of
+ Brisgau:&mdash;for behoof of the poor Kaiser, don't you observe? Hither
+ Austria is the Kaiser's;&mdash;and furthermore, were Freyburg gone, there
+ will be no invading of Elsass again" (which is another privately very
+ interesting point)!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there, at Freyburg, the Most Christian King now is, and his Army up to
+ the knees in mud, conquering Hither Austria; besieging Freyburg, with much
+ difficulty owing to the wet,&mdash;besieging there with what energy; a
+ spectacle to the world! And has, for the present, but one wife, no
+ mistress either! With rapturous eyes France looks on; with admiration too
+ big for words. Voltaire, I have heard, made pilgrimage to Freyburg, with
+ rhymed Panegyric in his pocket; saw those miraculous operations of a Most
+ Christian King miraculously awakened; and had the honor to present said
+ Panegyric; and be seen, for the first time, by the royal eyes,&mdash;which
+ did not seem to relish him much. [The Panegyric (EPITRE AU ROI DEVANT
+ FRIBOURG) is in <i>OEuvres de Voltaire,</i> xvii. 184.] Since the first
+ days of October, Freyburg had been under constant assault; "amid rains,
+ amid frosts; a siege long and murderous" (to the besieging party);&mdash;and
+ was not got till November 5th; not quite entirely, the Citadels of it,
+ till November 25th; Majesty gone home to Paris, to illuminations and
+ triumphal arches, in the interim. [Adelung, iv. 266; Barbier, ii. 414
+ (13th November, &amp;c.), for the illuminations, grand in the extreme, in
+ spite of wild rains and winds.] It had been a difficult and bloody
+ conquest to him, this of Freyburg and the Brisgau Country; and I never
+ heard that either the Kaiser or he got sensible advantage by it,&mdash;though
+ Prince Karl, on the present occasion, might be said to get a great deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seckendorf will do your Prince Karl," they had cried always: "Seckendorf
+ and his Prussian Majesty! Are not we conquering Hither Austria here, for
+ the Kaiser's behoof?" Seckendorf they did officially appoint to pursue;
+ appoint or allow;&mdash;and laid all the blame on Seckendorf; who perhaps
+ deserved his share of it. Very certain it is, Seckendorf did little or
+ nothing to Prince Karl; marched "leisurely behind him through the
+ Ober-Pfalz,"&mdash;skirting Baireuth Country, Karl and he, to Wilhelmina's
+ grief; [Her Letters ( <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xxvii. i. 133, &amp;c.).]&mdash;"leisurely
+ behind him at a distance of four days," knew better than meddle with
+ Prince Karl. So that Prince Karl, "in twenty-one marches," disturbed only
+ by the elements and bad roads, reached Waldmunchen 26th September, in the
+ Furth-Cham Country; [Ranke, iii. 187.] and was heard to exclaim: "We are
+ let off for the fright, then (NOUS VOILA QUITTES POUR LA PEUR)!"&mdash;Seckendorf,
+ finding nothing to live upon in Ober-Pfalz, could not attend Prince Karl
+ farther; but turned leftwards home to Bavaria; made a kind of Second
+ "Reconquest of Bavaria" (on exactly the same terms as the First, Austrian
+ occupants being all called off to assist in Bohmen again);&mdash;concerning
+ which, here is an Excerpt:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seckendorf, following at his leisure, and joined by the Hessians and
+ Pfalzers, so as now to exceed 30,000, leaves Prince Karl and the rest of
+ the enterprise to do as it can; and applies himself, for his own share, as
+ the needfulest thing, to getting hold of Bavaria again, that his poor
+ Kaiser may have where to lay his head, and pay old servants their wages.
+ Dreadfully exclaimed against, the old gentleman, especially by the French
+ co-managers: 'Why did not the old traitor stick in the rear of Prince
+ Karl, in the difficult passes, and drive him prone,&mdash;while we went
+ besieging Freyburg, and poaching about, trying for a bit of the Brisgau
+ while chance served!' A traitor beyond doubt; probably bought with money
+ down: thinks Valori. But, after all, what could Seckendorf do? He is now
+ of weight for Barenklau and Bavaria, not for much more. He does sweep
+ Barenklau and his Austrians from Bavaria, clear out (in the course of this
+ October), all but Ingolstadt and two or three strong towns,&mdash;Passau
+ especially, 'which can be blockaded, and afterwards besieged if needful.'
+ For the rest, he is dreadfully ill-off for provisions, incapable of the
+ least, attempt on Passau (as Friedrich urged, on hearing of him again);
+ and will have to canton himself in home-quarters, and live by his shifts
+ till Spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The noise of French censure rises loud, against not themselves, but
+ against Seckendorf:&mdash;Friedrich, before that Tolpatch eclipse of
+ Correspondence [when three of his Letter-bags were seized, and he fell
+ quite dark], had too well foreboded, and contemptuously expressed his
+ astonishment at the blame BOTH were well earning: Passau, said he, cannot
+ you go at least upon Passau; which might alarm the Enemy a little, and
+ drag him homewards? 'Adieu, my dear Seckendorf, your Officer will tell you
+ how we did the Siege of Prag. You and your French are wetted hens (POULES
+ MOUILLEES),'&mdash;cowering about like drenched hens in a day of set rain.
+ 'As I hear nothing of either of you, I must try to get out of this
+ business without your help;'"&mdash;otherwise it will be ill for me
+ indeed! [Excerpted Fragment of a Letter from Friedrich,&mdash;(exact date
+ not given, date of EXCERPT is, Donanworth Country, 23d September, 1744),&mdash;which
+ the French Agent in Seckendorf's Army had a reading of (<i>Campagnes de
+ Coigny,</i> iv. 185-187; ib. 216-219: cited in Adelung, iv. 225).] "Which
+ latter expression alarmed the French, and set them upon writing and
+ bustling, but not upon doing anything."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Prince Karl had crossed the Rhine unmolested, in the clearest moonlight,
+ August 23d-24th; Seckendorf was not wholly got to Heilbronn, September
+ 8th: a pretty way behind Prince Karl! The 6,000 Hessians, formerly in
+ English pay, indignant Landgraf Wilhelm [who never could forgive that
+ Machiavellian conduct of Carteret at Hanau, never till he found out what
+ it really was] has, this year, put into French pay. And they have now
+ joined Seckendorf; [Espagnac, ii. 13; Buchholz, ii. 123.] Prince Friedrich
+ [Britannic Majesty's Son-in-law], not good fat Uncle George, commanding
+ them henceforth:&mdash;with extreme lack of profit to Prince Friedrich, to
+ the Hessians, and to the French, as will appear in time. These 6,000, and
+ certain thousands of Pfalzers likewise in French pay, are now with
+ Seckendorf, and have raised him to above 30,000;&mdash;it is the one fruit
+ King Friedrich has got by that 'Union of Frankfurt,' and by all his long
+ prospective haggling, and struggling for a 'Union of German Princes in
+ general.' Two pears, after that long shaking of the tree; both pears
+ rotten, or indeed falling into Seckendorf, who is a basket of such
+ quality! 'Seckendorf, increased in this munificent manner, can he still do
+ nothing?' cry the French: 'the old traitor!'&mdash;'I have no magazines,'
+ said Seckendorf, 'nothing to live upon, to shoot with; no money!' And it
+ is a mutual crescendo between the 'perfidious Seckendorf' and them;
+ without work done. In the Nurnberg Country, some Hussars of his picked up
+ Lord Holderness, an English Ambassador making for Venice by that bad
+ route. 'Prisoner, are not you?' But they did not use him ill; on
+ consideration, the Heads of Imperial Departments gave him a Pass, and he
+ continued his Venetian Journey (result of it zero) without farther
+ molestation that I heard of. [Adelung, iv. 222.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These French-Seckendorf cunctations, recriminations and drenched-hen
+ procedures are an endless sorrow to poor Kaiser Karl; who at length can
+ stand it no longer; but resolves, since at least Bavaria, though moneyless
+ and in ruins, is his, he will in person go thither; confident that there
+ will be victual and equipment discoverable for self and Army were he
+ there. Remonstrances avail not: 'Ask me to die with honor, ask me not to
+ lie rotting here;' [Ib. iv. 241.]&mdash;and quits Frankfurt, and the
+ Reich's-Diet and its babble, 17th October, 1744 (small sorrow, were it for
+ the last time),&mdash;and enters his Munchen in the course of a week.
+ [17th October, 1744, leaves Frankfurt; arrives in Munchen 23d (Adelung,
+ iv. 241-244).] Munchen is transported with joy to see the Legitimate
+ Sovereign again; and blazes into illuminations,&mdash;forgetful who caused
+ its past wretchednesses, hoping only all wretchedness is now ended. Let
+ ruined huts, and Cham and the burnt Towns, rebuild themselves; the wasted
+ hedges make up their gaps again: here is the King come home! Here, sure
+ enough, is an unfortunate Kaiser of the Holy Romish Reich, who can once
+ more hope to pay his milk-scores, being a loved Kurfurst of Bavaria at
+ least. Very dear to the hearts of these poor people;&mdash;and to their
+ purses, interests and skins, has not he in another sense been dear? What a
+ price the ambitions and cracked phantasms of that weak brain have cost the
+ seemingly innocent population! Population harried, hungered down, dragged
+ off to perish in Italian Wars; a Country burnt, tribulated, torn to ruin,
+ under the harrow of Fate and ruffian Trenck and Company. Britannic George,
+ rather a dear morsel too, has come much cheaper hitherto. England is not
+ yet burnt; nothing burning there,&mdash;except the dull fire of deliriums;
+ Natural Stupidities all set flaming, which (whatever it may BE in the way
+ of loss) is not felt as a loss, but rather as a comfort for the time
+ being;&mdash;and in fact there are only, say, a forty or fifty thousand
+ armed Englishmen rotted down, and scarcely a Hundred Millions of money yet
+ spent. Nothing to speak of, in the cause of Human Liberty. Why Populations
+ suffer for their guilty Kings? My friend, it is the Populations too that
+ are guilty in having such Kings. Reverence, sacred Respect for Human
+ Worth, sacred Abhorrence of Human Unworth, have you considered what it
+ means? These poor Populations have it not, or for long generations have
+ had it less and less. Hence, by degrees, this sort of 'Kings' to them, and
+ enormous consequences following!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Karl VII. got back to Munchen 23d October, 1744; and the tar-barrels being
+ once burnt, and indispensable sortings effected, he went to the field
+ along with Seckendorf, to encourage his men under Seckendorf, and urge the
+ French by all considerations to come on. And really did what he could,
+ poor man. But the cordage of his life had been so strained and torn, he
+ was not now good for much; alas, it had been but little he was ever good
+ for. A couple of dear Kurfursts, his Father and he; have stood these
+ Bavarian Countries very high, since the Battle of Blenheim and downwards!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IV.&mdash;FRIEDRICH REDUCED TO STRAITS; CANNOT MAINTAIN HIS MOLDAU
+ CONQUESTS AGAINST PRICE KARL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One may fancy what were Friedrich's reflections when he heard that Prince
+ Karl had, prosperously and unmolested, got across, by those Passes from
+ the Ober-Pfalz, into Bohmen and the Circle of Pilsen, into junction with
+ Bathyani and his magazines; ["At Mirotitz, October 2d" (Ranke, iii. 194);
+ Orlich, ii. 49.] heard, moreover, that the Saxons, 20,000 strong, under
+ Weissenfels, crossing the Metal Mountains, coming on by Eger and Karlsbad
+ regions, were about uniting with him (bound by Treaty to assist the
+ Hungarian Majesty when invaded);&mdash;and had finally, what confirms
+ everything, that the said Prince Karl in person (making for Budweis, "just
+ seen his advanced guard," said rumor under mistake) was but few miles off.
+ Few miles off, on the other side of the Moldau;&mdash;of unknown strength,
+ hidden in the circumambient clouds of Pandours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suppressing all the rages and natural reflections but those needful for
+ the moment, Friedrich (October 4th, by Moldau-Tein) dashes across the
+ Moldau, to seek Prince Karl, at the place indicated, and at once smite him
+ down if possible;&mdash;that will be a remedy for all things. Prince Karl
+ is not there, nor was; the indication had been false; Friedrich searches
+ about, for four days, to no purpose. Prince Karl, he then learns for
+ certain, has crossed the Moldau farther down, farther northward, between
+ Prag and us. Means to cut us off from Prag, then, which is our fountain of
+ life in these circumstances? That is his intention:&mdash;"Old Traun, who
+ is with him, understands his trade!" thinks Friedrich. Traun, or the
+ Prince, is diligently forming magazines, all the Country carrying to him,
+ in the Town of Beneschau, hither side of the Sazawa, some seventy miles
+ north of us, an important Town where roads meet:&mdash;unless we can get
+ hold of Beneschau, it will be ill with us here! Across the River again, at
+ any rate; and let us hasten thither. That is an affair which must be
+ looked to; and speed is necessary!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OCTOBER 8th, After four days' search ending in this manner, Friedrich
+ swiftly crosses towards Tabor again, to Bechin (over on the Luschnitz, one
+ march), there to collect himself for Beneschau and the other intricacies.
+ Towards Tabor again, by his Bridge of Moldau-Tein;&mdash;clouds of Pandour
+ people, larger clouds than usual, hanging round; hidden by the woods till
+ Friedrich is gone. Friedrich being gone, there occurs the AFFAIR OF
+ MOLDAU-TEIN, much talked of in Prussian Books. Of which, in extreme
+ condensation, this is the essence:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "OCTOBER 9th. Friedrich once off to Bechin, the Pandour clouds gather on
+ his rearguard next day at Tein Bridge here, to the number of about 10,000
+ [rumor counts 14,000]; and with desperate intent, and more regularity than
+ usual, attack the Tein-Bridge Party, which consists of perhaps 2,000
+ grenadiers and hussars, the whole under Ziethen's charge,&mdash;obliged to
+ wait for a cargo of Bread-wagons here. 'Defend your Bridge, with cannon,
+ with case-shot:' that is what the grenadiers do. The Pandour cloud, with
+ horrid lanes cut in it, draws back out of this; then plunges at the River
+ itself, which can be ridden above or below; rides it, furious, by the
+ thousand: 'Off with your infantry; quit the Bridge!' cries Ziethen to his
+ Captain there: 'Retire you, Parthian-like; thrice-steady,' orders Ziethen:
+ 'It is to be hoped our hussars can deal with this mad-doggery!' And they
+ do it; cutting in with iron discipline, with fierceness not undrilled; a
+ wedge of iron hussars, with ditto grenadiers continually wheeling, like so
+ many reapers steady among wind-tossed grain; and gradually give the
+ Pandours enough. Seven hours of it, in all: 'of their sixty cartridges the
+ grenadiers had fired fifty-four,' when it ended, about 7 P.M. The coming
+ Bread-wagons, getting word, had to cast their loaves into the River (sad
+ to think of); and make for Bechin at their swiftest. But the rearguard got
+ off with its guns, in this victorious manner: thanks to Major-General
+ Ziethen, Colonel Reusch and the others concerned. [<i>Feldzuge der
+ Preussen,</i> i. 268; Orlich, ii. 55.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ziethen handsels his Major-Generalcy in this fine way: [Patent given him
+ "3d October, 1744," only a week ago, "and ordered to be dated eight months
+ back" (Rodenbeck, i. 109).] a man who has had promotion, and also has had
+ none, and may again come to have none;&mdash;and is able to do either way.
+ Never mind, my excellent tacit friend! Ziethen is five-and-forty gone; has
+ a face which is beautiful to me, though one of the coarsest. Face
+ thrice-honest, intricately ploughed with thoughts which are well kept
+ silent (the thoughts, indeed, being themselves mostly inarticulate;
+ thoughts of a simple-hearted, much-enduring, hot-tempered son of iron and
+ oatmeal);&mdash;decidedly rather likable, with its lazily hanging
+ under-lip, and respectable bearskin cylinder atop."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH TRIES TO HAVE BATTLE FROM PRINCE KARL, IN THE MOLDAU COUNTRIES;
+ CANNOT, OWING TO THE SKILL OF PRINCE KARL OR OF OLD FELDMARSCHALL TRAUN;&mdash;HAS
+ TO RETIRE BEHIND THE SAZAWA, AND ULTIMATELY BEHIND THE ELBE, WITH MUCH
+ LABOR IN VAIN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ OCTOBER 14th-18th: RETREAT FROM BECHIN-TABOR COUNTRY TO BENESCHAU. ...
+ "These Pandours give us trouble enough; no Magazine here, no living to be
+ had in this Country beside them. Unfortunate Colonel Jahnus went out from
+ Tabor lately, to look after requisitioned grains: infinite Pandours set
+ upon him [Muhlhausen is the memorable place]; Jahnus was obstinate (too
+ obstinate, thinks Friedrich), and perished on the ground, he and 200 of
+ his. [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 61.] Nay, next, a swarm of them
+ came to Tabor itself, Nadasti at their head; to try whether Tabor, with
+ its small garrison, could not be escaladed, and perhaps Prince Henri, who
+ lies sick there, be taken? Tabor taught them another lesson; sent them
+ home with heads broken;&mdash;which Friedrich thinks was an extremely
+ suitable thing. But so it stands: Here by the thousand and the ten
+ thousand they hang round us; and Prince Karl&mdash;It is of all things
+ necessary we get hold of that Beneschau, and the Magazine he is gathering
+ there!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rapidity is indispensable,&mdash;and yet how quit Tabor? We have
+ detachments out at Neuhaus, at Budweis, and in Tabor 300 men in hospital,
+ whom there are no means of carrying. To leave them to the Tolpaches?
+ Friedrich confesses he was weak on this occasion; he could not leave these
+ 300 men, as was his clear duty, in this extremity of War. He ordered in
+ his Neuhaus Detachment; not yet any of the others. He despatched Schmerin
+ towards Beneschau with all his speed; Schwerin was lucky enough to take
+ Beneschau and its provender,&mdash;a most blessed fortune,&mdash;and
+ fences himself there. Hearing which, Friedrich, having now got the Neuhaus
+ Detachment in hand, orders the other Three, the Budweis, the Tabor here,
+ and the Frauenberg across the River, to maintain themselves; and then,
+ leaving those southern regions to their chance, hastens towards Beneschau
+ and Schwerin; encamps (October 18th) near Beneschau,&mdash;'Camp of
+ Konopischt,' unattackable Camp, celebrated in the Prussian Books;&mdash;and
+ there, for eight days, still on the south side of Sazawa, tries every
+ shift to mend the bad posture of affairs in that Luschnitz-Sazawa Country.
+ His Three Garrisons (3,000 men in them, besides the 300 sick) he now sees
+ will not be able to maintain themselves; and he sends in succession 'eight
+ messengers,' not one messenger of whom could get through, to bid them come
+ away. His own hope now is for a Battle with Prince Karl; which might
+ remedy all things. [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 62-64.]"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is Friedrich's wish; but it is by no means Traun's, who sees that
+ hunger and wet weather will of themselves suffice for Friedrich. There
+ ensues accordingly, for three weeks to come, in that confused Country, a
+ series of swift shufflings, checkings and manoeuvrings between these two,
+ which is gratifying and instructive to the strategic mind, but cannot be
+ inflicted upon common readers. Two considerable chess-players, an old and
+ a young; their chess-board a bushy, rocky, marshy parallelogram, running
+ fifty miles straight east from Prag, and twenty or fewer south, of which
+ Prag is the northwest angle, and Beneschau, or the impregnable Konopischt
+ the southwest: the reader must conceive it; and how Traun will not fight
+ Friedrich, yet makes him skip hither and thither, chiefly by threatening
+ his victuals. Friedrich's main magazine is now at Pardubitz, the extreme
+ northeast angle of the parallelogram. Parallelogram has one river in it,
+ with the innumerable rocks and brooks and quagmires, the river Sazawa; and
+ on the north side, where are Kuttenberg, Czaslau, Chotusitz, places again
+ become important in this business, it is bounded by another river, the
+ Elbe. Intricate manoeuvring there is here, for three weeks following: "old
+ Traun an admirable man!" thinks Friedrich, who ever after recognized Traun
+ as his Schoolmaster in the art of War. We mark here and there a date, and
+ leave it to readers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "RADICZ, OCTOBER 21st-22d. At Radicz, a march to southwest of us, and on
+ our side of the Moldau, the Saxons, under Weissenfels, 20,000 effective,
+ join Prince Karl; which raises his force to 69,514 men, some 10,000 more
+ than Friedrich is master of. [Orlich, ii. 66.] Prospect of wintering
+ between the Luschnitz and the Sazawa there is now little; unless they will
+ fight us, and be beaten. Friedrich, from his inaccessible Camp of
+ Konopischt, manoeuvres, reconnoitres, in all directions, to produce this
+ result; but to no purpose. An Austrian Detachment did come, to look after
+ Beneschau and the Magazines there; but rapidly drew back again, finding
+ Konopischt on their road, and how matters were. Friedrich will guard the
+ door of this Sazawa-Elbe tract of Country; hope of the Sazawa-Luschnitz
+ tract has, in few days, fallen extinct. Here is news come to Konopischt:
+ our Three poor Garrisons, Budweis, Tabor, Frauenberg, already all lost;
+ guns and men, after defence to the last cartridge,&mdash;in Frauenberg
+ their water was cut off, it was eight-and-forty hours of thirst at
+ Frauenberg:&mdash;one way or other, they are all Three gone; eight
+ couriers galloping with message, 'Come away,' were all picked up by the
+ Pandours; so they stood, and were lost. 'Three thousand fighting men gone,
+ for the weak chance of saving three hundred who were in hospital!' thinks
+ Friedrich: War is not a school of the weak pities. For the chance of ten,
+ you lose a hundred and the ten too. Sazawa-Elbe tract of country, let us
+ vigilantly keep the door of that!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24th, Friedrich out reconnoitring from Konopischt
+ discovers of a certainty that the whole Austrian-Saxon force is now
+ advaucing towards Beneschau, and will, this night, encamp at Marschowitz,
+ to southwest, only one march from us! On the instant Friedrich hurries
+ back; gets his Army on march thitherward, though the late October sun is
+ now past noon; off instantly; a stroke yonder will perhaps be the cure of
+ all. Such roads we had, says Friedrich, as never Army travelled before:
+ long after nightfall, we arrive near the Austrian camp, bivouac as we can
+ till daylight return. At the first streak of day, Friedrich and his chief
+ generals are on the heights with their spy-glasses: Austrian Army sure
+ enough; and there they have altered their posture overnight (for Traun too
+ has been awake); they lie now opposite our RIGHT flank; 'on a scarped
+ height, at the foot of which, through swamps and quagmires, runs a muddy
+ stream.' Unattackable on this side: their right flank and foot are safe
+ enough. Creep round and see their left:&mdash;Nothing but copses, swampy
+ intricacies! We may shoulder arms again, and go back to Konopischt: no
+ fight here! [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 63, 64; Orlich, ii. 69.]
+ Speaking of defensive Campaigns, says Friedrich didactically, years
+ afterwards, 'If such situations are to answer the purpose intended, the
+ front and flanks must be equally strong, but the rear entirely open. Such,
+ for instance, are those heights which have an extensive front, and whose
+ flanks are covered by morasses:&mdash;as was Prince Karl's Camp at
+ Marschowitz in the year 1744, with its front covered by a stream, and the
+ wings by deep hollows; or that which we ourselves then occupied at
+ Konopischt,&mdash;as you well remember. [<i>Military Instructions</i>
+ (above cited), p. 44.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "OCTOBER 26th-NOVEMBER 1st. The Sazawa-Luschnitz tract of Country is quite
+ lost, then; lost with damages: the question now is, Can we keep the
+ Sazawa-Elbe tract? For about three weeks more, Friedrich struggles for
+ that object; cannot compass that either. Want of horse-provender is very
+ great:&mdash;country entirely eaten, say the peasants, and not a truss
+ remaining. October 26th, Friedrich has to cross the Sazawa; we must quit
+ the door of that tract (hunger driving us), and fight for the interior in
+ detail. Traun gets to Beneschau in that cheap way; and now, in behalf of
+ Traun, the peasants find forage enough, being zealous for Queen and creed.
+ Pandours spread themselves all over this Sazawa-Elbe country; endanger our
+ subsistences, make our lives miserable. It is the old story: Friedrich,
+ famine and mud and misery of Pandours compelling, has to retire northward,
+ Elbe-ward, inch by inch; whither the Austrians follow at a safe distance,
+ and, in spite of all manoeuvring, cannot be got to fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Brave General Nassau, who much distinguishes himself in these businesses,
+ has (though Friedrich does not yet know it) dexterously seized Kolin,
+ westward in those Elbe parts,&mdash;ground that will be notable in years
+ coming. Important little feat of Nassau's; of which anon. On the other
+ hand, our Magazine at Pardubitz, eastward on the Elbe, is not out of
+ danger: Pandours and regulars 2,000 and odd, 'sixty of the Pandour kind
+ disguised as peasants leading hay-carts,' made an attempt there lately;
+ but were detected by the vigilant Colonel, and blown to pieces, in the
+ nick of time, some of them actually within the gate. [ <i>OEuvres de
+ Frederic,</i> iii. 65.] Nay, a body of Austrian regulars were in full
+ march for Kolin lately, intending to get hold of the Elbe itself at that
+ point (midway between Prag and Pardubitz): but the prompt General Nassau,
+ as we remarked, had struck in before them; and now holds Kolin;&mdash;though,
+ for several days, Friedrich could not tell what had become of Nassau,
+ owing to the swarms of Pandours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friedrich, standing with his back to Prag, which is fifty miles from him,
+ and rather in need of his support than able to give him any; and drawing
+ his meal from the uncertain distance, with Pandours hovering round,&mdash;is
+ in difficult case. While old Traun is kept luminous as mid-day; the
+ circumambient atmosphere of Pandours is tenebrific to Friedrich, keeps him
+ in perpetual midnight. He has to read his position as with flashes of
+ lightning, for most part. A heavy-laden, sorely exasperated man; and must
+ keep his haggard miseries strictly secret; which I believe he does. Were
+ Valori here, it is very possible he might find the countenance FAROUCHE
+ again; eyes gloomy, on damp November mornings! Schwerin, in a huff, has
+ gone home: Since your Majesty is pleased to prefer his young Durchlaucht
+ of Anhalt's advice, what can an elderly servant (not without rheumatisms)
+ do other?&mdash;'Well!' answers Friedrich, not with eyes cheered by the
+ phenomenon. The Elbe-Sazawa tract, even this looks as if it would be hard
+ to keep. A world very dark for Friedrich, enveloped so by the ill chances
+ and the Pandours. But what help?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the French Camp far away, there comes, dated 17th October (third
+ week of their Siege of Freyburg), by way of help to Friedrich, magnanimous
+ promise: 'So soon as this Siege is done, which will be speedily, though it
+ is difficult, we propose to send fifty battalions and a hundred
+ squadrons,'"&mdash;say only 60,000 horse and foot (not a hoof or toe of
+ which ever got that length, on actually trying it),&mdash;"towards
+ Westphalia, to bring the Elector of Koln to reason [poor Kaiser's lanky
+ Brother, who cannot stand the French procedures, and has lately sold
+ himself, that is sold his troops, to England], and keep the King of
+ England and the Dutch in check,"&mdash;by way of solacement to your
+ Majesty. Will you indeed, you magnanimous Allies?&mdash;This was picked up
+ by the Pandours; and I know not but Friedrich was spared the useless pain
+ of reading it. [Orlich, ii. 73.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "NOVEMBER 1st-9th: FRIEDRICH LOSES SAZAWA-ELBE COUNTRY TOO. On the first
+ day of November, here is a lightning-flash which reveals strange things to
+ Friedrich. Traun's late manoeuvrings, which have been so enigmatic, to
+ right and to left, upon Prag and other points, issue now in an attempt
+ towards Pardubitz; which reveals to Friedrich the intention Traun has
+ formed, of forcing him to choose one of those two places, and let go the
+ other. Formidable, fatal, thinks Friedrich; and yet admirable on the part
+ of Traun: 'a design beautiful and worthy of admiration.' If we stay near
+ Prag, what becomes of our communication with Silesia; what becomes of
+ Silesia itself? If we go towards Pardubitz, Prag and Bohmen are lost! What
+ to do? 'Despatch reinforcement to Pardubitz; thanks to Nassau, the
+ Kolin-Pardubitz road is ours!' That is done, Pardubitz saved for the
+ moment. Could we now get to Kuttenberg before the old Marshal, his design
+ were overset altogether. Alas, we cannot march at once, have to wait a day
+ for the bread. Forward, nevertheless; and again forward, and again; three
+ heavy marches in November weather: let us make a fourth forced march,
+ start to-morrow before dawn,&mdash;Kuttenberg above all things! In vain;
+ to-morrow, 4th November, there is such a fog, dark as London itself, from
+ six in the morning onwards, no starting till noon: and then impossible,
+ with all our efforts, to reach Kuttenberg. We have to halt an eight miles
+ short of it, in front of Kolin; and pitch tents there. On the morrow, 5th
+ November, Traun is found encamped, unattackable, between us and our
+ object; sits there, at his ease in a friendly Country, with Pandour
+ whirlpools flowing out and in; an irreducible case to Friedrich. November
+ 5th, and for three days more, Friedrich, to no purpose, tries his utmost;&mdash;finds
+ he will have to give up the Elbe-Sazawa region, like the others. Monday,
+ November 9th, Friedrich gathers himself at Kolin; crosses the Elbe by
+ Kolin Bridge, that day. Point after point of the game going against him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kolin was, of course, attacked, that Monday evening, so soon as the main
+ Army crossed: but, so soon as the Army left, General Nassau had taken his
+ measures; and, with his great guns and his small, handled the Pandours in
+ a way that pleased us. [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 68.] Thursday
+ night following, they came back, with regular grenadiers to support; under
+ cloud of night, in great force, ruffian Trenck at the head of them: a
+ frightful phenomenon to weak nerves. But this also Nassau treated in such
+ a fiery fashion that it vanished without return; three hundred dead left
+ on the ground, and ruffian Trenck riding off with his own crown broken,&mdash;beautiful
+ indigo face streaking itself into GINGHAM-pattern, for the moment!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Except Pardubitz, where also the due battalions are left, Friedrich now
+ holds no post south of the Elbe in this quarter; Elbe-Sazawa Tract is gone
+ like the others, to all appearance. And we must now say, Silesia or Prag?
+ Prince Leopold, Council-of-War being held on the matter, is for keeping
+ hold of Prag: "Pity to lose all the excellent siege-artillery we brought
+ thither," says he. True, too true; an ill-managed business that of Prag!
+ thinks Friedrich sadly to himself: but what is Prag and artillery,
+ compared to Silesia? Parthian retreat into Silesia; and let Prag and the
+ artillery go: that, to Friedrich, is clearly the sure course. Or perhaps
+ the fatal alternative will not actually arrive? So long as Pardubitz and
+ Kolin hold; and we have the Elbe for barrier? Truth is, Prince Karl has
+ himself written to Court that, having now pushed his Enemy fairly over the
+ Elbe, and winter being come with its sleets and slushes, ruinous to troops
+ that have been so marched about, the Campaign ought to end;&mdash;nay, his
+ own young Wife is in perilous interesting circumstances, and the poor
+ Prince wishes to be home. To which, however, it is again understood, Maria
+ Theresa has emphatically answered, "No,&mdash;finish first!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOVEMBER 9th-19th: WE DEFEND THE ELBE RIVER. Friedrich has posted himself
+ on the north shore of the Elbe, from Pardubitz to the other side of Kolin;
+ means to defend that side of the River, where go the Silesian roads. At
+ Bohdenetz, short way across from Pardubitz, he himself is; Prince Leopold
+ is near Kolin: thirty miles of river-bank to dispute. The controversy
+ lasts ten days; ends in ELBE-TEINITZ, a celebrated "passage," in Books and
+ otherwise. Friedrich is in shaggy, intricate country; no want of dingles,
+ woods and quagmires; now and then pleasant places too,&mdash;here is
+ Kladrup for example, where our Father came three hundred miles to dine
+ with the Kaiser once. The grooms and colts are all off at present; Father
+ and Kaiser are off; and much is changed since then. Grim tussle of War
+ now; sleety winter, and the Giant Mountains in the distance getting on
+ their white hoods! Friedrich doubtless has his thoughts as he rides up and
+ down, in sight of Kladrup, among other places, settling many things; but
+ what his thoughts were, he is careful not to say except where necessary.
+ Much is to be looked after, in this River controversy of thirty miles.
+ Detachments lie, at intervals, all the way; and mounted sentries, a sentry
+ every five miles, patrol the River-bank; vigilant, we hope, as lynxes.
+ Nothing can cross but alarm will be given, and by degrees the whole
+ Prussian force be upon it. This is the Circle of Konigsgratz, this that
+ now lies to rear; and happily there are a few Hussites in it, not utterly
+ indisposed to do a little spying for us, and bring a glimmering of
+ intelligence, now and then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is now the second week that Frietrich has lain so, with his mounted
+ patrols in motion, with his Hussite spies; guarding Argus-like this thirty
+ miles of River; and the Austrians attempt nothing, or nothing with effect.
+ If the Austrians go home to their winter-quarters, he hopes to issue from
+ Kolin again before Spring, and to sweep the Elbe-Sazawa Tract clear of
+ them, after all. Maria Theresa having answered No, it is likely the
+ Austrians will try to get across: Be vigilant therefore, ye mounted
+ sentries. Or will they perhaps make an attempt on Prag? Einsiedel, who has
+ no garrison of the least adequacy, apprises us That "in all the villages
+ round Prag people are busy making ladders,"&mdash;what can that mean?
+ Friedrich has learned, by intercepted letters, that something great is to
+ be done on Wednesday, 18th: he sends Rothenburg with reinforcement to
+ Einsiedel, lest a scalade of Prag should be on the cards. Rothenburg is
+ right welcome in the lines of Prag, though with reinforcement still
+ ineffectual; but it is not Prag that is meant, nor is Wednesday the day.
+ Through Wednesday, Friedrich, all eye and ear, could observe nothing: much
+ marching to and fro on the Austrian side of the River; but apparently it
+ comes to nothing? The mounted patrols had better be vigilant, however.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morrow, 5 A.M., what is this that is going on? Audible booming of
+ cannon, of musketry and battle, echoing through the woods, penetrates to
+ Friedrich's quarters at Bohdenetz in the Pardubitz region: Attack upon
+ Kolin, Nassau defending himself there? Out swift scouts, and see! Many
+ scouts gallop out; but none comes back. Friedrich, for hours, has to
+ remain uncertain; can only hope Nassau will defend himself. Boom go the
+ distant volleyings; no scout comes back. And it is not Nassau or Kolin; it
+ is something worse: very glorious for Prussian valor, but ruinous to this
+ Campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Austrians, at 2 o'clock this morning, Austrians and Saxons, came in
+ great force, in dead silence, to the south brink of the River, opposite a
+ place called Teinitz (Elbe-Teinitz), ten miles east of Kolin; that was the
+ fruit of their marching yesterday. They sat there forbidden to speak, to
+ smoke tobacco or do anything but breathe, till all was ready; till
+ pontoons, cannons had come up, and some gleam of dawn had broken. At the
+ first gleam of dawn, as they are shoving down their pontoon boats, there
+ comes a "WER-DA, Who goes?" from our Prussian patrol across the River.
+ Receiving no answer, he fires; and is himself shot down. One Wedell,
+ Wedell and Ziethen, who keep watch in this part, start instantly at sound
+ of these shots; and make a dreadful day of it for these invasive Saxon and
+ Austrian multitudes. Naturally, too, they send off scouts, galloping for
+ more help, to the right and to the left. But that avails not. Wild doggery
+ of Pandours, it would seem, have already swum or waded the River, above
+ Teinitz and below:&mdash;"Want of vigilance!" barks Friedrich impatiently:
+ but such a doggery is difficult to watch with effect. At any rate, to the
+ right and to the left, the woods are already beset with Pandours; every
+ scout sent out is killed: and to east or to west there comes no news but
+ an echoing of musketry, a boom of distant cannon. [Orlich, ii. 82-85.]
+ Saxon-Austrian battalions, four or five, with unlimited artillery going,
+ VERSUS Wedell's one battalion, with musketry and Ziethen's hussars: it is
+ fearful odds. The Prussians stand to it like heroes; doggedly, for four
+ hours, continue the dispute,&mdash;till it is fairly desperate; "two
+ bridges of the enemy's now finished;"&mdash;whereupon they manoeuvre off,
+ with Parthian or Prussian countenance, into the woods, safe, towards
+ Kolin; "despatching definite news to Friedrich, which does arrive about 11
+ A.M., and sets him at once on new measures."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a great feat in the Prussian military annals; for which, sad as
+ the news was, Wedell got the name of Leonidas attached to him by Friedrich
+ himself. And indeed it is a gallant passage of war; "Forcing of the Elbe
+ at Teinitz;" of which I could give two Narratives, one from the Prussian,
+ and one from the Saxon side; [Seyfarth, <i>Beylage,</i> i. 595-598; <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii. 1175-1181.] didactic, admonitory to the military mind, nay to the
+ civic reader that has sympathy with heroisms, with work done manfully, and
+ terror and danger and difficulty well trampled under foot. Leonidas Wedell
+ has an admirable silence, too; and Ziethen's lazily hanging under-lip is
+ in its old attitude again, now that the spasm is over. "WAS THUTS? They
+ are across, without a doubt. We would have helped it, and could not.
+ Steady!"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
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+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH'S RETREAT; ESPECIALLY EINSIEDEL'S FROM PRAG.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Seeing, then, that they are fairly over, Friedrich, with a creditable
+ veracity of mind, sees also that the game is done; and that same night he
+ begins manoeuvring towards Silesia, lest far more be lost by continuing
+ the play. One column, under Leopold the Young Dessauer, goes through
+ Glatz, takes the Magazine of Pardubitz along with it: good to go in
+ several columns, the enemy will less know which to chase. Friedrich, with
+ another column, will wait for Nassau about Konigsgratz, then go by the
+ more westerly road, through Nachod and the Pass of Braunau. Nassau, who is
+ to get across from Kolin, and join us northwards, has due rendezvous
+ appointed him in the Konigsgratz region. Einsiedel, in Prag, is to spike
+ his guns, since he cannot carry them; blow up his bastions, and the like;
+ and get away with all discretion and all diligence,&mdash;northwestward
+ first, to Leitmeritz, where our magazines are; there to leave his heavier
+ goods, and make eastward towards Friedland, and across the "Silesian
+ Combs" by what Passes he can. Will have a difficult operation; but must
+ stand to it. And speed; steady, simultaneous, regular, unresting velocity;
+ that is the word for all. And so it is done,&mdash;though with difficulty,
+ on the part of poor Einsiedel for one. It was Thursday, 19th November,
+ when the Austrians got across the Elbe: on Monday, 23d, the Prussian
+ rendezvousings are completed; and Friedrich's column, and the Glatz one
+ under Leopold, are both on march; infinite baggage-wagons groaning orderly
+ along ("sick-wagons well ahead," and the like precautions and
+ arrangements), on both these highways for Silesia: and before the week
+ ends, Thursday, 26th, even Einsiedel is under way. Let us give something
+ of poor Einsiedel, whose disasters made considerable noise in the world,
+ that Winter and afterwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The two main columns were not much molested; that which went by Glatz,
+ under Leopold, was not pursued at all. On the rear of Friedrich's own
+ column, going towards Braunau, all the way to Nachod or beyond, there hung
+ the usual doggery of Pandours, which required whipping off from time to
+ time; but in the defiles and difficult places due precaution was taken,
+ and they did little real damage. Truchsess von Waldburg [our old friend of
+ the Spartan feat near Austerlitz in the MORAVIAN-FORAY time, whom we have
+ known in London society as Prussian Envoy in bygone years] was in one of
+ the divisions of this column; and one day, at a village where there was a
+ little river to cross (river Mietau, Konigsgratz branch of the Elbe), got
+ provoked injudiciously into fighting with a body of these people. Intent
+ not on whipping them merely, but on whipping them to death, Truchsess had
+ already lost some forty men, and the business with such crowds of them was
+ getting hot; when, all at once a loud squeaking of pigs was heard in the
+ village,"&mdash;apprehensive swineherd hastily penning his pigs belike,
+ and some pig refractory;&mdash;"at sound of which, the Pandour multitude
+ suddenly pauses, quits fighting, and, struck by a new enthusiasm, rushes
+ wholly into the village; leaving Truchsess, in a tragi-comic humor,
+ victorious, but half ashamed of himself. [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i>
+ iii. 73.] In the beginning of December, Friedrich's column reached home,
+ by Braunau through the Mountains, the same way part of it had come in
+ August; not quite so brilliant in equipment now as then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was upon Einsiedel's poor Garrison, leaving Prag in such haste, that
+ the real stress of the retreat fell; its difficulties great indeed, and
+ its losses great. Einsiedel did what was possible; but all things are not
+ possible on a week's warning. He spiked great guns, shook endless
+ hundredweights of powder, and 10,000 stand of arms, into the River; he
+ requisitioned horses, oxen, without number; put mines under the bastions,
+ almost none of which went off with effect. He kept Prag accurately shut,
+ the Praguers accurately in the dark; took his measures prudently; and
+ labored night and day. One measure I note of him: stringent Proclamation
+ to the inhabitants of Prag, 'Provision yourselves for three months;
+ nothing but starvation ahead otherwise.' Alas, we are to stand a fourth
+ siege, then? say the Praguers. But where are provisions to be had? At such
+ and such places; from the Royal Magazines only, if you bring a certificate
+ and ready money! Whereby Einsiedel got delivered of his meal-magazine, for
+ one thing. But his difficulties otherwise were immense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the Thursday morning, 26th November, 1744, he marched. His wagons had
+ begun the night before; and went all night, rumbling continuous (Anonymous
+ of Prag [Second "LETTER from a Citizen, &amp;c." (date, 27th November, see
+ supra, p. 348), in <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 1181-1188.] hearing them
+ well), through the Karlthor, northwest gate of Prag, across the Moldau
+ Rridge. All night across that bridge,&mdash;Leitmeritz road, great road to
+ the northwest:&mdash;followed finally by the march of horse and foot. But
+ news had already fled abroad. Five hundred Pandours were in the City,
+ backed by the Butchers' lads and other riotous GESINDEL, before the
+ rear-guard got away. Sad tugging and wriggling in consequence, much firing
+ from windows, and uproarious chaos;&mdash;so that Rothenburg had at last
+ to remount a couple of guns, and blow it off with case-shot. A drilled
+ Prussian rear-guard struggling, with stern composure, through a real bit
+ of burning chaos. With effect, though not without difficulty. Here is the
+ scene on the Noldau Bridge, and past that high Hradschin [Old Palace of
+ the Bohemian Kings (pronounce RADsheen); one of the steepest Royal Sites
+ in the world.] mass of buildings; all Prag, not the Hradschin only,
+ struggling to give us fatal farewell if it durst. River is covered with
+ Pandours firing out of boats; Bridge encumbered to impassability by
+ forsaken wagons, the drivers of which had cut traces and run; shot comes
+ overhead from the Hradschin on our left, much shot, infinite tumult all
+ round; thoroughfare impossible for two-wheeled vehicle, or men in rank.
+ 'Halt!' cries Colonel Brandes, who has charge of the thing; divides them
+ in three: 'First one party, deal with these river-boats, that Pandour
+ doggery; second party, pull these stray wagons to right and left, making
+ the way clear; third party, drag our own wagons forward, shoulder to
+ shaft, and yoke them out of shot-range;&mdash;you, Captain Carlowitz,' and
+ calls twenty volunteers to go with Carlowitz, and drag their own cannon,
+ 'step you forward, keep the gate of that Hradschin till we all pass!' In
+ this manner, rapid, hard of stroke, clear-headed and with stern
+ regularity, drilled talent gets the burning Nessus'-shirt wriggled off;
+ and tramps successfully forth with its baggages. About 11 A.M., this
+ rearguard of Brandes's did; should have been at seven,&mdash;right well
+ that it could be at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Einsiedel, after this, got tolerably well to Leitmeritz; left his heavy
+ baggage there; then turned at an acute angle right eastward, towards the
+ Silesian Combs, as ordered: still a good seventy miles to do, and the
+ weather getting snowy and the days towards their shortest. Worse still;
+ old Weissenfels, now in Prag with his Saxons, is aware that Einsiedel,
+ before ending, will touch on a wild high-lying corner of the Lausitz which
+ is Saxon Country; and thitherward Weissenfels has despatched Chevalier de
+ Saxe (in plenty of time, November 29th), with horse and foot, to waylay
+ Einsiedel, and block the entrance of the Silesian Mountains for him.
+ Whereupon, in the latter end of his long march, and almost within sight of
+ home, ensues the hardest brush of all for Einsiedel. And, in the
+ desolation of that rugged Hill country of the Lausitz, 'HOCHWALD (Upper
+ Weld),' twenty or more miles from Bohemian Friedland, from his entrance on
+ the Mountain Barrier and Silesian Combs, there are scenes&mdash;which gave
+ rise to a Court-Martial before long. For unexpectedly, on the winter
+ afternoon (December 9th), Einsiedel, struggling among the snows and
+ pathless Hills, comes upon Chevalier de Saxe and his Saxon Detachment,&mdash;intrenched
+ with trees, snow-redoubts, and a hollow bog dividing us; plainly
+ unassailable;&mdash;and stands there, without covering, without 'food,
+ fire, or salt,' says one Eye-witness, 'for the space of fourteen hours.'
+ Gazing gloomily into it, exchanging a few shots, uncertain what more to
+ do; the much-dubitating Einsiedel. 'At which the men were so disgusted and
+ enraged, they deserted [the foreign part of them, I fancy] in groups at a
+ time,' says the above Eye-witness. Not to think what became of the
+ equipments, baggage-wagons, sick-wagons:&mdash;too evident Einsiedel's
+ loss, in all kinds, was very considerable. Nassau, despatched by Leopold
+ out of Glatz, from the other side of the Combs, is marching to help
+ Einsiedel;&mdash;who knows, at this moment, where or whitherward? For the
+ peasants are all against us; our very guides desert, and become spies.
+ 'Push to the left, over the Hochwald top, must not we?' thinks Einsiedel:
+ 'that is Lausitz, a Saxon Country; and Saxony, though the Saxons stand
+ intrenched here, with the knife at our throat, are not at war with us, oh
+ no, only allies of her Majesty of Hungary, and neutral otherwise!' And
+ here, it is too clear, the Chevalier de Saxe stands intrenched behind his
+ trees and snow; and it is the fourteenth hour, men deserting by the
+ hundred, without fire and without salt; and Nassau is coming,&mdash;God
+ knows by what road!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Einsiedel pushes to the left, the Hochwald way; finds, in the Hochwald
+ too, a Saxon Commandant waiting him, with arms strictly shouldered. 'And
+ we cannot pass through this moor skirt of Lausitz, say you, then?'
+ 'Unarmed, yes; your muskets can come in wagons after you,' replies the
+ Saxon Commandant of Lausitz. 'Thousand thanks, Herr Commandant; but we
+ will not give you all that trouble,' answer Einsiedel and his Prussians;
+ 'and march on, overwhelming him with politenesses,' says Friedrich;&mdash;the
+ approach of Nassau, above all, being a stringent civility. Of course,
+ despatch is very requisite to Einsiedel; the Chevalier, with his force,
+ being still within hail. The Prussians march all night, with pitch-links
+ flaring,&mdash;nights (I think) of the 13th-15th December, 1744, up among
+ the highlands there, rugged buttresses of the Silesian Combs: a sight
+ enough to astonish Rubezahl, if he happened to be out! As good chance
+ would have it, Nassau and Einsiedel, by preconcert, partly by lucky guess
+ of their own, were hurrying by the same road: three heaven-rending cheers
+ (December 16th) when we get sight of Nassau; and find that here is land!
+ December 16th, we are across,&mdash;by Ruckersdorf, not far from Friedland
+ (Bohmisch Friedland, not the Silesian town of that name, once
+ Wallenstein's);&mdash;and rejoice now to look back on labor done." [ <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii. 1181-1190, 1191-1194;&mdash;Feldzuge,&mdash;i. 278-280.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were intricate strange scenes, much talked of at the time:
+ Rothenburg, ugly Walrave, Hacke, and other known figures, concerned in
+ them. Scenes in which Friedrich is not well informed; who much blames
+ Einsiedel, as he is apt to do the unsuccessful. Accounts exist, both from
+ the Prussian and from the Saxon side, decipherable with industry; not now
+ worth deciphering to English readers. Only that final scene of the
+ pitch-links, the night before meeting with Nassau, dwells voluntarily in
+ one's memory. And is the farewell of Einsiedel withal. Friedrich blames
+ him to the last: though a Court-Martial had sat on his case, some months
+ after, and honorably acquitted him. Good solid, silent Einsiedel;&mdash;and
+ in some months more, he went to a still higher court, got still stricter
+ justice: I do not hear expressly that it was the winter marches, or strain
+ of mind; but he died in 1745; and that flare of pitch-links in Rubezahl's
+ country is the last scene of him to us,&mdash;and the end of Friedrich's
+ unfortunate First Expedition in the Second Silesian War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Foiled, ultimately, then, on every point; a totally ill-ordered game on
+ our part! Evidently we, for our part, have been altogether in the wrong,
+ in various essential particulars. Amendment, that and no other, is the
+ word now. Let us take the scathe and the scorn candidly home to us;&mdash;and
+ try to prepare for doing better. The world will crow over us. Well, the
+ world knows little about it; the world, if it did know, would be partly in
+ the right!"&mdash;Wise is he who, when beaten, learns the reasons of it,
+ and alters these. This wisdom, it must be owned, is Friedrich's; and much
+ distinguishes him among generals and men. Veracity of mind, as I say,
+ loyal eyesight superior to sophistries; noble incapacity of self-delusion,
+ the root of all good qualities in man. His epilogue to this Campaign is
+ remarkable;&mdash;too long for quoting here, except the first word of it
+ and the last:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No General committed more faults than did the King in this Campaign....
+ The conduct of M. de Traun is a model of perfection, which every soldier
+ that loves his business ought to study, and try to imitate, if he have the
+ talent. The king has himself admitted that he regarded this Campaign as
+ his school in the Art of War, and M. de Traun as his teacher." But what
+ shall we say? "Bad is often better for Princes than good;&mdash;and
+ instead of intoxicating them with presumption, renders them circumspect
+ and modest." [<i>OEuvres,</i> iii.76, 77.] Let us still hope!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
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+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter V.&mdash;FRIEDRICH, UNDER DIFFICULTIES, PREPARES FOR A NEW
+ CAMPAIGN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To the Court of Vienna, especially to the Hungarian Majesty, this
+ wonderful reconquest of Bohemia, without battle fought,&mdash;or any cause
+ assignable but Traun's excellent manoeuvring and Friedrich's imprudences
+ and trust in the French,&mdash;was a thing of heavenly miracle; blessed
+ omen that Providence had vouchsafed to her prayers the recovery of Silesia
+ itself. All the world was crowing over Friedrich: but her Majesty of
+ Hungary's views had risen to a clearly higher pitch of exultation and
+ triumphant hope, terrestrial and celestial, than any other living
+ person's. "Silesia back again," that was now the hope and resolution of
+ her Majesty's high heart: "My wicked neighbor shall be driven out, and
+ smart dear for the ill he has done; Heaven so wills it!" "Very little
+ uplifts the Austrians," says Valori; which is true, under such a Queen;
+ "and yet there is nothing that can crush them altogether down," adds he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner is Bohemia cleared of Friedrich, than Maria, winter as it is,
+ orders that there be, through the Giant-Mountains, vigorous assault upon
+ Silesia. Highland snows and ices, what are these to Pandour people, who,
+ at their first entrance on the scene of History, "crossed the
+ Palus-Maeotis itself [Father of Quagmires, so to speak] in a frozen
+ state," and were sufficiently accommodated each in his own dirty
+ sheepskin? "Prosecute the King of Prussia," ordered she; "take your
+ winter-quarters in Silesia!"&mdash;and Traun, in spite of the advanced
+ season, and prior labors and hardships, had to try, from the southwestern
+ Bohemian side, what he could do; while a new Insurrection, coming through
+ the Jablunka, spread itself over the southeast and east. Seriously
+ invasive multitudes; which were an unpleasant surprise to Friedrich; and
+ did, as we shall see, require to be smitten back again, and re-smitten;
+ making a very troublesome winter to the Prussians and themselves; but by
+ no means getting winter-quarters, as they once hoped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a like sense, Maria Theresa had already (December 2d) sent forth her
+ Manifesto or Patent, solemnly apprising her ever-faithful Silesian
+ Populations, "That the Treaty of Breslau, not by her fault, is broken;
+ palpably a Treaty no longer. That they, accordingly, are absolved from all
+ oaths and allegiance to the King of Prussia; and shall hold themselves in
+ readiness to swear anew to her Majesty, which will be a great comfort to
+ such faithful creatures; suffering, as her Majesty explains to them that
+ they have done, under Prussian tyranny for these two years past. Immediate
+ dead-lift effort there shall be; that is certain: and 'the Almighty God
+ assisting, who does not leave such injustices unpunished, We have the
+ fixed Christian hope, Omnipotence blessing our arms, of almost immediately
+ (EHESTENS) delivering you from this temporary Bondage (BISHERIGEN JOCH).'
+ You can pray, in the mean while, for the success of her Majesty's arms;
+ good fighting, aided by prayer, in a Cause clearly Heaven's, will now, to
+ appearance, bring matters swiftly round again, to the astonishment and
+ confusion of bad men." [In <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 1194-1198; Ib.
+ 1201-1206, is Friedrich's Answer, "19th December, 1744."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are her Majesty's views; intensely true, I doubt not, to her devout
+ heart. Robinson and the English seem not to be enthusiastic in that
+ direction; as indeed how can they? They would fain be tender of Silesia,
+ which they have guaranteed; fain, now and afterwards, restrain her Majesty
+ from driving at such a pace down hill: but the declivity is so
+ encouraging, her Majesty is not to be restrained, and goes faster and
+ faster for the time being. And indeed, under less devout forms, the
+ general impression, among Pragmatic people, Saxon, Austrian, British even,
+ was, That Friedrich had pretty much ruined himself, and deserved to do so;
+ that this of his being mere "Auxiliary" to a Kaiser in distress was an
+ untenable pretext, now justly fallen bankrupt upon him. The evident fact,
+ That he had by his "Frankfurt Union," and struggles about "union,"
+ reopened the door for French tribulations and rough-ridings in the Reich,
+ was universally distasteful; all chance of a "general union of German
+ Princes, in aid of their Kaiser," was extinct for the present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's rapidity had served him ill with the Public, in this as in
+ some other instances! Friedrich, contemplating his situation, not
+ self-delusively, but with the candor of real remorse, was by no means yet
+ aware how very bad it was. For six months coming, partly as existing facts
+ better disclosed themselves, as France, Saxony and others showed what
+ spirit they were of; partly as new sinister events and facts arrived one
+ after the other,&mdash;his outlook continued to darken and darken, till it
+ had become very dark indeed. There is perennially the great comfort,
+ immense if you can manage it, of making front against misfortune; of
+ looking it frankly in the face, and doing with a resolution, hour by hour,
+ your own utmost against it. Friedrich never lacked that comfort; and was
+ not heard complaining. But from December 13th, 1744, when he hastened home
+ to Berlin, under such aspects, till June 4th, 1745, when aspects suddenly
+ changed, are probably the worst six months Friedrich had yet had in the
+ world. During which, his affairs all threatening to break down about him,
+ he himself, behooving to stand firm if the worst was not to realize
+ itself, had to draw largely on what silent courage, or private
+ inexpugnability of mind, was in him,&mdash;a larger instalment of that
+ royal quality (as I compute) than the Fates had ever hitherto demanded of
+ him. Ever hitherto; though perhaps nothing like the largest of all, which
+ they had upon their Books for him, at a farther stage! As will be seen.
+ For he was greatly drawn upon in that way, in his time. And he paid
+ always; no man in his Century so well; few men, in any Century, better. As
+ perhaps readers may be led to guess or acknowledge, on surveying and
+ considering. To see, and sympathetically recognize, cannot be expected of
+ modern readers, in the present great distance, and changed conditions of
+ men and things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich, after despatching Nassau to cut out Einsiedel, had delivered
+ the Silesian Army to the Old Dessauer, who is to command in chief during
+ Winter; and had then hastened to Berlin,&mdash;many things there urgently
+ requiring his presence; preparations, reparations, not to speak of
+ diplomacies, and what was the heaviest item of all, new finance for the
+ coming exertions. In Schweidnitz, on Leopold's appearance, there had been
+ an interview, due consultings, orderings; which done, Friedrich at once
+ took the road; and was at Berlin, Monday, December 14th,&mdash;precisely
+ in the time while Nassau and Einsiedel were marching with torchlights in
+ Rubezahl's Country, and near ending their difficult enterprise better or
+ worse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich, fastening eagerly on Home business, is astonished and provoked
+ to learn that the Austrians, not content with pushing him out of Bohmen,
+ are themselves pushing into Schlesien,&mdash;so Old Leopold reports, with
+ increasing emphasis day by day; to whom Friedrich sends impatient order:
+ Hurl them out again; gather what force you need, ten thousand, or were it
+ twenty or thirty thousand, and be immediate about it; "I will as soon be
+ pitched (HERAUSGESCHMISSEN) out of the Mark of Brandenburg as out of
+ Schlesien:" no delay, I tell you! And as the Old Dessauer still explains
+ that the ten or fifteen thousand he needs are actually assembling, and
+ cannot be got on march quite in a moment, Friedrich dashes away his
+ incipient Berlin Operations; will go himself and do it. Haggle no more,
+ you tedious Old Dessauer:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BERLIN, "19th DECEMBER," 1744. "On the 21st [Monday, one week after my
+ arriving], I leave Berlin, and mean to be at Neisse on the 24th at latest.
+ Your Serenity will in the interim make out the Order-of-Battle [which is
+ also Order-of-March] for what regiments are come in. For I will, on the
+ 25th, without delay, cross the Neisse, and attack those people, cost what
+ it may,&mdash;to chase them out of Schlesien and Glatz, and follow them so
+ far as possible. Your Serenity will therefore take your measures, and
+ provide everything, so far as in this short time you can, that the project
+ may be executable the moment I arrive." [Friedrich to the Old Dessauer (<i>Orlich,</i>
+ ii. 356).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And rushed off accordingly, in a somewhat flamy humor; but at Schweidnitz,
+ where the Old Dessauer met him again, became convinced that the matter was
+ weightier than he thought; not one of Tolpatchery alone, but had Traun
+ himself in it. Upon which Friedrich candidly drew bridle; hastened back,
+ and, with a loss of four days, was at his Potsdam Affairs again. To which
+ he stuck henceforth, ardently, and I think rather with increase of gloom,
+ though without spurt of impatience farther, for three months to come.
+ Before his return,&mdash;nay, had he known, it was the night before he
+ went away,&mdash;a strange little thing had happened in the opposite or
+ Western parts: surprising accident to Marechal de Belleisle; which now
+ lies waiting his immediate consideration. But let us finish Silesia first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ OLD DESSAUER REPELS THE SILESIAN INVASION (Winter, 1744-45).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "This Silesian Affair includes due inroad of Pandours; or indeed two
+ inroads, southwest and southeast; and in the southwest, or Traun quarter,
+ regulars are the main element of it. Traun, 20,000 strong, PLUS
+ stormy-enough Pandour ACCOMPANIMENT, is by this time through into Glatz;
+ in three columns;&mdash;is master of all Glatz, except the Rock-Fortress
+ itself; and has spread himself, right and left, along the Neisse River,
+ and from the southwest northwards, in a skilful and dangerous manner. In
+ concert with whom, far to the east, are Pandour whirlwinds on their own
+ footing (brand-new 'Insurrection' of them, got thus far) starting from
+ Olmutz and Brunn; scouring that eastern country, as far as Namslau
+ northward [a place we were at the taking of, in old Brieg times]; much
+ more, infesting the Mountains of the South. A rather serious thing; with
+ Traun for general manager of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With Traun, we say: poor Prince Karl is off, weeks ago; on the saddest of
+ errands. His beautiful young Wife,&mdash;Hungarian Majesty's one Sister,
+ Vice-Regents of the Netherlands he and she, conspicuous among the bright
+ couples of the world,&mdash;she had a bad lying-in (child still-born),
+ while those grand Moldau Operations went on; has been ill, poor lady, ever
+ since; and, at Brussels, on December 16th, she herself lies dead, Prince
+ Karl weeping over her and the days that will not return. Prince Karl's
+ felicities, private and public, had been at their zenith lately, which was
+ very high indeed; but go on declining from this day. Never more the
+ Happiest of Husbands (did not wed again at all); still less the Greatest
+ of Captains, equal or superior to Caesar in the Gazetteer judgment, with
+ distracted EULOGIES, BIOGRAPHIES and such like filling the air: before
+ long, a War-Captain of quite moderate renown; which we shall see sink
+ gradually into no renown at all, and even (unjustly) into MINUS
+ quantities, before all end. A mad world, my masters!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Between Traun on the southwest hand, and his Pandours on the southeast,
+ the small Prussian posts have all been driven in upon Troppau-Jagerndorf
+ region; more and more narrowed there;&mdash;and, in fine (two days before
+ this new Interview of Leopold and the impatient King at Schweidnitz), have
+ had to quit the Troppau-Jagerndorf position; to quit the Hills altogether,
+ and are now in full march towards Brieg. Of which march I should say
+ nothing, were it not that Marwitz, Father of Wilhelmina's giggling
+ Marmitzes, commanded;&mdash;and came by his death in the course of it;
+ though our Wilhelmina is not now there, pen in hand, to tell us what the
+ effects at Baireuth were. Marwitz had been left for dead on the Field of
+ Mollwitz; lay so all night, but was nursed to some kind of strength again
+ by those giggling young women; and came back to Schlesien, to posts of
+ chief trust, for the last year or two,&mdash;was guarding the Mountains,
+ and even invading Mahren, during the late Campaign;&mdash;but saw himself
+ reduced latterly to Jagerndorf and Troppau; and had even to retreat out of
+ these. And in the whirlpool of hurries thereupon,&mdash;how is not very
+ clear; by apoplexy, say some; by accidental pistol from a servant of his
+ own; in actual skirmish with Pandours,&mdash;too certainly, one way or the
+ other, on December 23d (just during that second Interview at Schweidnitz),
+ brave old Marwitz did suddenly sink dead, and is ended. [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ii. 1201.] Even so, ye poor giggling creatures, and your loud weeping will
+ not mend it at all!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friedrich, looking candidly into these phenomena, could not but see that:
+ what with Tolpatcheries, what with Traun's 20,000 regulars, and the whole
+ Army at their back, his Silesian Border is girt in by a very considerable
+ inroad of Austrians,&mdash;huge Chain of them, in horse-shoe form, 300
+ miles long, pressing in; from beyond Glatz and Landshut, round by the
+ southern Mountains, and up eastward again as far as Namslau, nothing but
+ war whirlwinds in regular or irregular form, in the centre of them Traun;&mdash;and
+ that the Old Dessauer really must have time to gird himself for dealing
+ with Traun and them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was not till January 9th that Old Leopold, 25,000 strong, equipped to
+ his mind, which was a difficult matter, crossed the Neisse River; and
+ marched direct upon Traun, with Ziethen charging ahead. Actually marched;
+ after which the main wrestle was done in a week. January 16th, Old Leopold
+ got to Jagerndorf; found the actual Traun concentrated at Jagerndorf; and
+ drew up, to be ready for assault to-morrow morning,&mdash;had not Traun,
+ candidly computing, judged it better to glide wholly away in the
+ night-time, diligently towards Mahren, breaking the bridges behind him.
+ And so, in effect, to give up the Silesian Invasion for this time. After
+ which, though there remained a good deal of rough tussling with Pandour
+ details, and some rugged exploits of fight, there is&mdash;except that of
+ Lehwald in clearing of Glatz&mdash;nothing farther that we can afford to
+ speak of. Lehwald's exploit, Lehwald VERSUS Wallis (same Wallis who
+ defended Glogau long since), which came to be talked of, and got name and
+ date, 'Action of Habelschwert, February 14th,' something almost like a
+ pitched fight on the small scale, is to the following effect:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "PLOMNITZ, NEAR HABELSCHWERT, 14th FEBRUARY, 1745. Old General Lehwald,
+ marching in the hollow ground near Habelschwert (hollow of the young
+ Neisse River, twenty miles south of Glatz), with intent to cut that
+ Country free; the Enemy, whom he is in search of, appears in great force,&mdash;posted
+ on the uphill ground ahead, half-frozen difficult stream in front of them,
+ cannon on flank, Pandour multitude in woods; all things betokening
+ inexpugnability on the part of the Enemy. So that Lehwald has to take his
+ measures; study well where the vital point is, the root of that extensive
+ Austrian junglery, and cut in upon the same. By considerable fire of
+ effort, the uphill ground, half-frozen stream, sylvan Pandours,
+ cannon-batteries, and what inexpugnabilities there may be, are subdued;
+ Austrian wide junglery, the root of it slit asunder rolls homeward
+ simultaneously, not too fast: nay it halted, and re-ranked itself twice
+ over, finding woods and quaggy runlets to its mind; but was always slit
+ out again, disrooted, and finally tumbled home, having had enough. 'Wenzel
+ Wallis,' Friedrich asserts with due scorn, 'was all this while in a
+ Chapel; praying ardently,' to St. Vitus, or one knows not whom; 'without
+ effect; till they shouted to him, "Beaten, Sir! Off, or you are lost!"
+ upon which he sprang to saddle, and spurred with both heels (PIQUA DES
+ DEUX).' [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 79. 80.] That was the feat of
+ Lehwald, clearing the Glatz Country with one good cut: a skilful Captain;
+ now getting decidedly oldish, close on sixty; whom we shall meet again a
+ dozen years hence, still in harness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The old Serene Highness himself, face the color of gun-powder, and bluer
+ in the winter frost, went rushing far and wide in an open vehicle, which
+ he called his 'cart;' pushing out detachments, supervising everything;
+ wheeling hither and thither as needful; sweeping out the Pandour world,
+ and keeping it out: not much of fighting needed, but 'a great deal of
+ marching [murmurs Friedrich], which in winter is as bad, and wears down
+ the force of the battalions.' Of all which we give no detail: sufficient
+ to fancy, in this manner, the Old Dessauer flapping his wide military
+ wings in the faces of the Pandour hordes, with here and there a hard
+ twitch from beak or claws; tolerably keeping down the Pandour interest all
+ Winter. His sons, Leopold and Dietrich, were under him, occasionally
+ beside him; the Junior Leopold so worn down with feverish gout he could
+ hardly sit on horseback at all, while old Papa went tearing about in his
+ cart at that rate." [<i>Unternehmung in Ober-Schlesien, unter dem Fursten
+ Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau, im Januar und Februar,</i> 1745 (Seyfarth, <i>Beylage,</i>
+ i. 141-152); Stenzel, iv. 232; &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, on the 21st of February, TE-DEUM sung in the churches of Berlin
+ "for the Deliverance of Silesia from Invasion." Not that even yet the
+ Pandours would be quite quiet, or allow Old Leopold to quit his cart; far
+ from it. And they returned in such increased and tempestuous state, as
+ will again require mention, with the earliest Spring:&mdash;precursors to
+ a second, far more serious and deadly "Invasion of Silesia;" for which it
+ hangs yet on the balance whether there will be a TE-DEUM or a MISERERE to
+ sing!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hungarian Majesty, disappointed of Silesia,&mdash;which, it seems, is not
+ to be had "all at once (EHESTENS)," in the form of miracle,&mdash;makes
+ amends by a rush upon Seckendorf and Bavaria; attacks Seckendorf furiously
+ ("Bathyani pressing up the Donau Valley, with Browne on one hand, and
+ Barenklau on the other") in midwinter; and makes a terrible hand of him;
+ reducing his "Reconquest of Bavaria" to nothing again, nay to less. Of
+ which in due time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE FRENCH FULLY INTEND TO BEHAVE BETTER NEXT SEASON TO FRIEDRICH AND
+ THEIR GERMAN ALLIES;&mdash;BUT ARE PREVENTED BY VARIOUS ACCIDENTS
+ (November, 1744-April, 1745; April-August, 1745).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is not divine miracle, Friedrich knows well, that has lost him his late
+ Bohemian Conquests without battle fought: it was rash choosing of a plan
+ inexecutable without French co-operation,&mdash;culpable blindness to the
+ chance that France would break its promises, and not co-operate. Had your
+ Majesty forgotten the Joint-Stock Principle, then? His Majesty has
+ sorrowful cause to remember it, from this time, on a still larger scale!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reflections, indignant or exculpatory, on the conduct of the French in
+ this Business are useless to Friedrich, and to us. The performance, on
+ their part, has been nearly the worst;&mdash;though their intentions,
+ while the Austrian Dragon had them by the throat, were doubtless
+ enthusiastically good! But, the big Austrian Dragon being jerked away from
+ Elsass, by Friedrich's treading on his tail, 500 miles off, they were
+ charmed, quite into new enthusiasm, to be rid of said Dragon: and, instead
+ of chasing HIM according to bargain, took to destroying his DEN, that he
+ might be harmless thenceforth. Freyburg is a captured Town, to the joy and
+ glory of admiring France; and Friedrich's Campaign has gone the road we
+ see! The Freyburg Illuminations having burnt out, there might rise, in the
+ triumphant mind, some thought of Friedrich again,&mdash;perhaps almost of
+ a remorseful nature? Certain it is, the French intentions are now again
+ magnanimous, more so than ever; coupled now with some attempts at
+ fulfilment, too; which obliges us to mention them here. They were still a
+ matter of important hope to Friedrich; hope which did not quite go out
+ till August coming. Though, alas, it did then go out, in gusts of
+ indignation on Friedrich's part! And as the whole of these magnanimous
+ French intentions, latter like former, again came to zero, we are
+ interested only in rendering them conceivable to readers for Friedrich's
+ sake,&mdash;with the more brevity, the better for everybody. Two grand
+ French Attempts there were; listen, on the threshold, a little:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ... "It is certain the French intend gloriously; regardless of expense.
+ They are dismantling Freyburg, to render it harmless henceforth. But,
+ withal, in answer to the poor Kaiser's shrieks, they have sent Segur [our
+ old Linz friend], with 12,000, to assist Seckendorf; 'the bravest troops
+ in the world,'"&mdash;who did bravely take one beating (at Pfaffenhofen,
+ as will be seen), and go home again. ("They have Coigny guarding those
+ fine Brisgau Conquests. And are furthermore diplomatizing diligently, not
+ to say truculently, in the Rhine Countries; bullying poor little fat
+ Kur-Trier, lean Kur-Koln and others, 'To join the Frankfurt Union' not one
+ of whom would, under menace),&mdash;though 'it is the clear duty of all
+ Reich's-Princes with a Kaiser under oppression:'&mdash;and have marched
+ Maillebois, directly after Freyburg, into the Middle-Rhine Countries, to
+ Koln Country, to Mainz Country, and to and fro, in support of said
+ compulsory diplomacies;&mdash;but without the least effect."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the "Middle-Rhine Countries," observe, and under Maillebois, then under
+ Conti, little matter under whom: only let readers recollect the name of
+ it;&mdash;for it is the FIRST of the French Attempts to do something of a
+ joint-stock nature; something for self AND Allies, instead of for self
+ only. It caused great alarm in those months, to Britannic George and
+ others; and brought out poor Duc d'Ahremberg with portions (no English
+ included) of the poor Pragmatic Army, to go marching about in the winter
+ slushes, instead of resting in bed, [Adelung, iv. 276, 420 ("December,
+ 1744-June, 1745").]&mdash;and is indeed a very loud business in the old
+ Gazettes and books, till August coming. Business which almost broke poor
+ D'Ahremberg's heart, he says, "till once I got out of it" (was TURNED out,
+ in fact): Business of Pragmatic Army, under D'Ahremberg, VERSUS
+ Middle-Rhine Army under Maillebois, under Conti; Business now wholly of
+ Zero VERSUS Zero to us,&mdash;except for a few dates and reflex
+ glimmerings upon King Friedrich. Result otherwise&mdash;We shall see the
+ Result!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Attempt SECOND was still more important to Friedrich; being directed upon
+ the Kaiser and Bavaria. Belleisle is to go thither and take survey;
+ Belleisle thither first: you may judge if the intention is sincere! Valori
+ is quite eloquent upon it. Directly after Freyburg, says he, Sechelles,
+ that first of Commissaries, was sent to Munchen. Sechelles cleared up the
+ chaos of Accounts; which King Louis then instantly paid. 'Your Imperial
+ Majesty shall have Magazines also,' said Louis, regardless of expense;
+ 'and your Army, with auxiliaries (Segur and 25,000 of them French), shall
+ be raised to 60,000.' Belleisle then came: 'We will have Ingolstadt, the
+ first thing, in Spring.' Alas, Belleisle had his Accident in the Harz; and
+ all went aback, from that time." [Valori, i. 322-329.] Aback, too
+ indisputably, all!&mdash;"And Belleisle's Accident?" Patience, readers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The truth is, Attempt SECOND, and chief, broke down at once [Bathyani
+ beating it to pieces, as will be seen],&mdash;the ruins of it painfully
+ reacting on Attempt FIRST; which had the like fate some months later;&mdash;and
+ there was no THIRD made. And, in fact, from the date of that latter
+ down-break, August, or end of July, 1745 [and quite especially from
+ "September 13th," by which time several irrevocable things had happened,
+ which we shall hear of], the French withdrew altogether out of German
+ entanglements; and concentrated themselves upon the Netherlands, there to
+ demolish his Britannic Majesty, as the likelier enterprise. This was a
+ course to which, ever since the Exit of Broglio and the Oriflamme, they
+ had been more and more tending and inclining, 'Nothing for us but loss on
+ loss, to be had in Germany!' and so they at last frankly gave up that bad
+ Country. They fought well in the Netherlands, with great splendor of
+ success, under Saxe VERSUS Cumberland and Company. They did also some
+ successful work in Italy;&mdash;and left Friedrich to bear the brunt in
+ Germany; too glad if he or another were there to take Germany off their
+ hand! Friedrich's feelings on his arriving at this consummation, and
+ during his gradual advance towards it, which was pretty steady all along
+ from those first 'drenched-hen (POULES MOUILLEES)' procedures, were amply
+ known to Excellency Valori, and may be conceived by readers,"&mdash;who
+ are slightly interested in the dates of them at farthest. And now for the
+ Belleisle Accident, with these faint preliminary lights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ STRANGE ACCIDENT TO MARECHAL DE BELLEISLE IN THE HARZ MOUNTAINS (20th
+ December, 1744).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Siege of Freyburg being completed, and the River and most other things
+ (except always the bastions, which we blow up) being let into their old
+ channels there, Marechal de Belleisle, who is to have a chief management
+ henceforth,&mdash;the Most Christian King recognizing him again as his
+ ablest man in war or peace,&mdash;sets forth on a long tour of
+ supervision, of diplomacy and general arrangement, to prepare matters for
+ the next Campaign. Need enough of a Belleisle: what a business we have
+ made of it, since Friedrich trod on the serpent's tail for us! Nothing but
+ our own Freyburg to show for ourselves; elsewhere, mere down-rush of
+ everything whitherward it liked;&mdash;and King Friedrich got into such a
+ humor! Friedrich must be put in tune again; something real and good to be
+ agreed on at Berlin: let that be the last thing, crown of the whole. The
+ first thing is, look into Bavaria a little; and how the Kaiser, poor
+ gentleman, in want of all requisites but good-will, can be put into
+ something of fighting posture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the end of November, Marechal Duc de Belleisle, with his Brother the
+ Chevalier (now properly the Count, there having been promotions), and a
+ great retinue more, alights at Munchen; holds counsel with the poor Kaiser
+ for certain days:&mdash;Money wanted; many things wanted; and all things,
+ we need not doubt, much fallen out of square. 'Those Seckendorf troops in
+ their winter-quarters,' say our French Inspectors and Segur people, as
+ usual, 'do but look on it, your Excellency! Scattered, along the valleys,
+ into the very edge of Austria; Austria will swallow them, the first thing,
+ next year; they will never rendezvous again except in the Austrian
+ prisons. Surely, Monseigneur, only a man ignorant of war, or with
+ treasonous intention [or ill-off for victuals],&mdash;could post troops in
+ that way? Seckendorf is not ignorant of war!' say they. [Valori, i. 206.]
+ For, in fact, suspicion runs high; and there is no end to the accusations
+ just and unjust; and Seckendorf is as ill treated as any of us could wish.
+ Poor old soul. Probably nobody in all the Earth, but his old Wife in the
+ Schloss of Altenburg, has any pity for him,&mdash;if even she, which I
+ hope. He has fought and diplomatized and intrigued in many countries, very
+ much; and in his old days is hard bested. Monseigueur, whose part is
+ rather that of Jove the Cloud-compeller, is studious to be himself
+ noiseless amid this noise; and makes no alteration in the Seckendorf
+ troops; but it is certain he meant to do it, thinks Valori."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And indeed Seckendorf, tired of the Bavarian bed-of-roses, had privately
+ fixed with himself to quit the same;&mdash;and does so, inexorable to the
+ very Kaiser, on New-Year arriving. [<i>Seckendorfs Leben,</i> p. 365.]
+ Succeeded by Thorring (our old friend DRUM Thorring), if that be an
+ improvement. Marechal de Belleisle has still a long journey ahead, and
+ infinitely harder problems than these,&mdash;assuagement of the King of
+ Prussia, for example. Let us follow his remarkable steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "WEDNESDAY, 9th DECEMBER, 1744, the Marechal leaves Munchen, northwards
+ through OEttingen and the Bamberg-Anspach regions towards Cassel;&mdash;journey
+ of some three hundred and fifty miles: with a great retinue of his own;
+ with an escort of two hundred horse from the Kaiser; these latter to
+ prevent any outfall or insult in the Ingolstadt quarter, where the
+ Austrians have a garrison, not at all very tightly blocked by the
+ Seckendorf people thereabouts. No insult or outfall occurring, the
+ Marechal dismisses his escort at OEttingen; fares forward in his twenty
+ coaches and fourgons, some score or so of vehicles:&mdash;mere neutral
+ Imperial Countries henceforth, where the Kaiser's Agent, as Marechal de
+ Belleisle can style himself, and Titular Prince of the German Empire
+ withal, has only to pay his way. By Donauworth, by OEttingen; over the
+ Donau acclivities, then down the pleasant Valley of the Mayn. [See REVIEW
+ OF THE CASE OF MARSHAL BELLEISLE (or Abstract of it, <i>Gentleman's
+ Magazine,</i> 1745, pp. 366-373); &amp;c. &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "SUNDAY, 13th DECEMBER, Marechal de Belleisle arrives at Hanau [where we
+ have seen Conferences held before now, and Carteret, Prince Karl and great
+ George our King very busy], there to confer with Marshals Coigny,
+ Maillebois and other high men, Commanders in those Rhine parts. Who all
+ come accordingly, except Marechal Maillebois, who is sorry that he
+ absolutely cannot; but will surely do himself the honor as Monseigneur
+ returns." As Monseigneur returns! "And so, on Monday, 14th, Monseigneur
+ starts for Cassel; say a hundred miles right north; where we shall meet
+ Prince Wilhelm of Hessen-Cassel, a zealous Ally; inform him how his
+ Troops, under Seckendorf, are posted [at Vilshofen yonder; hiding how
+ perilous their post is, or promising alterations]; perhaps rest a day or
+ two, consulting as to the common weal: How the King of Prussia takes our
+ treatment of him? How to smooth the King of Prussia, and turn him to
+ harmony again? We are approaching the true nodus of our business,
+ difficulty of difficulties; and Wilhelm, the wise Landgraf, may afford a
+ hint or two. Thus travels magnanimous Belleisle in twenty vehicles, a man
+ loaded with weighty matters, in these deep Winter months; suffering
+ dreadfully from rheumatic neuralgic ailments, a Doctor one of his
+ needfulest equipments; and has the hardest problem yet ahead of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Prince Wilhelm's consultations are happily lost altogether; buried from
+ sight forever, to the last hint,&mdash;all except as to what road to
+ Berlin would be the best from Cassel. By Leipzig, through low-lying
+ country, is the great Highway, advisable in winter; but it runs a hundred
+ and thirty miles to right, before ever starting northward; such a
+ roundabout. Not to say that the Saxons are allies of Austria,&mdash;if
+ there be anything in that. Enemies, they, to the Most Christian King:
+ though surely, again, we are on Kaiser's business, nay we are titular
+ 'Prince of the Reich,' for that matter, such the Kaiser's grace to us?
+ Well; it is better perhaps to AVOID the Saxon Territory. And, of course,
+ the Hanoverian much more; through which lies the other Great Road! 'Go by
+ the Harz,' advises Landgraf Wilhelm: 'a rugged Hill Country; but it is
+ your hypotenuse towards Berlin; passes at once, or nearly so, from Cassel
+ Territory into Prussian: a rugged road, but a shorter and safer.' That is
+ the road Belleisle resolves upon. Twenty carriages; his Brother the
+ Chevalier and himself occupy one; and always the courier rides before,
+ ordering forty post-horses to be ready harnessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "SUNDAY, 20th DECEMBER, 1744. In this way they have climbed the eastern
+ shin of the Harz Range, where the Harz is capable of wheel-carriages; and
+ hope now to descend, this night, to Halberstadt; and thence rapidly by
+ level roads to Berlin. It is sinking towards dark; the courier is forward
+ to Elbingerode, ordering forty horses to be out. Roughish uphill road;
+ winter in the sky and earth, winter vapors and tumbling wind-gusts:
+ westward, in torn storm-cloak, the Bracken, with its witch-dances;
+ highland Goslar, and ghost of Henry the Fowler, on the other side of it. A
+ multifarious wizard Country, much overhung by goblin reminiscences,
+ witch-dances, sorcerers'-sabbaths and the like,&mdash;if a rheumatic
+ gentleman cared to look on it, in the cold twilight. Brrh! Waste chasmy
+ uplands, snow-choked torrents; wild people, gloomy firs! Here at last, by
+ one's watch 5 P.M., is Elbingerode, uncomfortable little Town; and it is
+ to be hoped the forty post-horses are ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Behold, while the forty post-horses are getting ready, a thing takes
+ place, most unexpected;&mdash;which made the name of Elbingerode famous
+ for eight months to come. Of which let us hastily give the bare facts,
+ Fancy making of them what she can. Was Monseigneur aware that this
+ Elbingerode, with a patch of territory round it, is Hanoverian ground; one
+ of those distracted patches or ragged outskirts frequent in the German
+ map? Prussia is not yet, and Hessen-Cassel has ceased to be. Undoubtedly
+ Hanoverian! Apparently the Landgraf and Monseigneur had not thought of
+ that. But Munchhausen of Hanover, spies informing him, had. The Bailiff
+ (Vogt, AdVOCATus) has gathered twenty JAGER [official Game-keepers] with
+ their guns, and a select idle Sunday population of the place with or
+ without guns: the Vogt steps forward, and inquires for Monseigneur's
+ passport. 'No passport, no need of any!'&mdash;'Pardon!' and signifies to
+ Monseigneur, on the part of George Elector of Hanover, King of Great
+ Britain, France and Ireland, that Monseigneur is arrested!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monseigneur, with compressed or incompressible feelings, indignantly
+ complies,&mdash;what could he else, unfortunate rheumatic gentleman?&mdash;and
+ is plucked away in such sudden manner, he for one, out of that big German
+ game of his raising. The twenty vehicles are dragged different roads;
+ towards Scharzfels, Osterode, or I know not where,&mdash;handiest roads to
+ Hanover;&mdash;and Monseigneur himself has travelling treatment which
+ might be complained of, did not one disdain complaint: 'my Brother parted
+ from me, nay my Doctor, and my Interpreter;'"&mdash;not even speech
+ possible to me. [Letter of Belleisle next morning, "Neuhof, 21st December,
+ 9 A.M." (in <i>Valori,</i> i. 204), to Munchhausen at Hanover,&mdash;by no
+ possibility "to Valori," as the distracted French Editor has given it!]
+ That was the Belleisle Accident in the Harz, Sunday Evening, 20th
+ December, 1744.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Afflicted indignant Valori, soon enough apprised, runs to Friedrich with
+ the news,&mdash;greets Friedrich with it just alighting from that Silesian
+ run of his own. Friedrich, not without several other things to think of,
+ is naturally sorry at such news; sorry for his own sake even; but not
+ overmuch. Friedrich refuses 'to despatch a party of horse,' and cut out
+ Marechal de Belleisle. "That will never do, MON CHER!'&mdash;and even gets
+ into FROIDES PLAISANTERIES: 'Perhaps the Marechal did it himself? Tallard,
+ prisoner after Blenheim, made PEACE, you know, in England?'&mdash;and the
+ like; which grieved the soul of Valori, and convinced him of Friedrich's
+ inhumanity, in a crying case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Belleisle is lugged on to Hanover; his case not doubtful to Munchhausen,
+ or the English Ministry,&mdash;though it raised great argument, (was the
+ capture fair, was it unfair? Is he entitled to exchange by cartel, or not
+ entitled?' and produced, in the next eight months, much angry animated
+ pamphleteering and negotiation. For we hear by and by, he is to be
+ forwarded to Stade, on the Hamburg sea-coast, where English Seventy-fours
+ are waiting for him; his case still undecided;&mdash;and, in effect, it
+ was not till after eight months that he got dismissal. 'Lodged handsomely
+ in Windsor Palace,' in the interim; free on his parole, people of rank
+ very civil to him, though the Gazetteers were sometimes ill-tongued,&mdash;had
+ he understood their PATOIS, or concerned himself about such things
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ["TUESDAY, 18th FEBRUARY [1st March, 1745], Marshal Belleisle landed at
+ Harwich; lay at Greenwich Palace, having crossed Thames at the Isle of
+ Dogs: next morning, about 10, set out, in a coach-and-six, Colonel Douglas
+ and two troops of horse escorting; arrived 3 P.M.,&mdash;by Camberwell,
+ Clapham, Wandsworth, over Kingston and Staines Bridges,&mdash;at Windsor
+ Castle, and the apartments ready for him." (<i>Gentleman's Magazine,</i>
+ 1745, p 107.) Was let go 13th (24th) August, again with great pomp and
+ civilities (ib. p. 442). See Adelung, iv. 299, 346; v. 83, 84.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a current notion among contemporary mankind, this of Friedrich,
+ that Belleisle's capture might be a mere collusion, meant to bring about a
+ Peace in that Tallard fashion,&mdash;wide of the truth as such a notion
+ is, far as any Peace was from following. To Britannic George and his
+ Hanoverians it had merely seemed, Here was a chief War-Captain and
+ Diplomatist among the French; the pivot of all these world-wide movements,
+ as Valori defines him; which pivot, a chance offering, it were well to
+ twitch from its socket, and see what would follow. Perhaps nothing will
+ follow; next to nothing? A world, all waltzing in mad war, is not to be
+ stopped by acting on any pivot; your waltzing world will find new pivots,
+ or do without any, and perhaps only waltz the more madly for wanting the
+ principal one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This withdrawal of Belleisle, the one Frenchman respected by Friedrich, or
+ much interested for his own sake in things German, is reckoned a main
+ cause why the French Alliance turned out so ill for Friedrich; and why
+ French effort took more and more a Netherlands direction thenceforth, and
+ these new French magnanimities on Friedrich's behalf issued in futility
+ again. Probably they never could have issued in very much: but it is
+ certain that, from this point, they also do become zero; and that
+ Friedrich, from his French alliance, reaped from first to last nothing at
+ all, except a great deal of obloquy from German neighbors, and from the
+ French side endless trouble, anger and disappointment in every particular.
+ Which 'might be a joy (though not unmixed) to Britannic Majesty and the
+ subtle followers who had ginned this fine Belleisle bird in its flight
+ over the Harz Range? Though again, had they passively let him wing his
+ way, and he had GOT "to be Commander and Manager," as was in agitation,&mdash;he,
+ Belleisle and in Germany, instead of Marechal de Saxe with the Netherlands
+ as chief scene,&mdash;what an advantage might that have been to them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE KAISER KARL VII. GETS SECURED FROM OPPRESSIONS, IN A TRAGIC WAY.
+ FRIEDRICH PROPOSES PEACE, BUT TO NO PURPOSE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A still sadder cross for Friedrich, in the current of foreign Accidents
+ and Diplomacies, was the next that befell; exactly a month later,&mdash;at
+ Munchen, 20th January, 1745. Hardly was Belleisle's back turned, when her
+ Hungarian Majesty, by her Bathyani and Company, broke furiously in upon
+ the poor Kaiser and his Seckendorf-Segur defences. Belleisle had not
+ reached the Harz, when all was going topsy-turvy there again, and the
+ Donau-Valley fast falling back into Austrian hands. Nor is that the worst,
+ or nearly so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MUNCHEN, 20th JANUARY, 1745. This day poor Kaiser Karl laid down his
+ earthly burden here, and at length gave all his enemies the slip. He had
+ been ill of gout for some time; a man of much malady always, with no want
+ of vexations and apprehensions. Too likely the Austrians will drive him
+ out of Munchen again; then nothing but furnished lodgings, and the French
+ to depend upon. He had been much chagrined by some Election, just done, in
+ the Chapter of Salzburg. [Adelung, iv. 249, 276, 313.] The Archbishop
+ there&mdash;it was Firmian, he of the SALZBURG EMIGRATION, memorable to
+ readers&mdash;had died, some while ago. And now, in flat contradiction to
+ Imperial customs, prerogatives, these people had admitted an Austrian
+ Garrison; and then, in the teeth of our express precept, had elected an
+ Austrian to their benefice: what can one account it but an insult as well
+ as an injury? And the neuralgic maladies press sore, and the gouty
+ twinges; and Belleisle is seized, perhaps with important papers of ours;
+ and the Seckendorf-Segur detachments were ill placed; nay here are the
+ Austrians already on the throat of them, in midwinter! It is said, a
+ babbling valet, or lord-in-waiting, happened to talk of some skirmish that
+ had fallen out (called a battle, in the valet rumor), and how ill the
+ French and Bavarians had fared in it, owing to their ill behavior. And
+ this, add they, proved to be the ounce-weight too much for the so
+ heavy-laden back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Kaiser took to bed, not much complaining; patient, mild, though the
+ saddest of all mortals; and, in a day or two, died. Adieu, adieu, ye loved
+ faithful ones; pity me, and pray for me! He gave his Wife, poor little fat
+ devout creature, and his poor Children (eldest lad, his Heir, only
+ seventeen), a tender blessing; solemnly exhorted them, To eschew ambition,
+ and be warned by his example;&mdash;to make their peace with Austria; and
+ never, like him, try COM' E DURO CALLE, and what the charity of Christian
+ Kings amounts to. This counsel, it is thought, the Empress Dowager
+ zealously accedes to, and will impress upon her Son. That is the Austrian
+ and Cause-of-Liberty account: King Friedrich, from the other side, has
+ heard a directly opposite one. How the Kaiser, at the point of death,
+ exhorted his son, 'Never forget the services which the King of France and
+ the King of Prussia have done us, and do not repay them with ingratitude.'
+ [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 92;&mdash;and see (PER CONTRA) in
+ Adelung, iv. 314 A; in Coxe, &amp;c.] The reader can choose which he will,
+ or reject both into the region of the uncertain. 'Karl Albert's pious and
+ affectionate demeanor drew tears from all eyes,' say the by-standers: 'the
+ manner in which he took leave of his Empress would have melted a heart of
+ stone.' He was in his forty-eighth year; he had been, of all men in his
+ generation, the most conspicuously unhappy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a down-rush of confusion there ensued on this event, not to Bavaria
+ alone, but to all the world, and to King Friedrich more than another, no
+ reader can now take the pains of conceiving. The "Frankfurt Union," then,
+ has gone to air! Here is now no "Kaiser to be delivered from oppression:"
+ here is a new Kaiser to be elected,&mdash;"Grand-Duke Franz the man," cry
+ the Pragmatic Potentates with exultation, "no Belleisle to disturb!"&mdash;and
+ questions arise innumerable thereupon, Will France go into electioneering
+ again? The new Kur-Baiern, only seventeen, poor child, cannot be set up as
+ candidate. What will France do with HIM; what he with France? Whom can the
+ French try as Candidate against the Grand-Duke? Kur-Sachsen, the Polish
+ Majesty again? Belleisle himself must have paused uncertain over such a
+ welter,&mdash;and probably have done, like the others, little or nothing
+ in it, but left it to collapse by natural gravitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hungarian Majesty checked her Bavarian Armaments a little: "If perhaps
+ this young Kur-Baiern will detach himself from France, and on submissive
+ terms come over to us?" Whereupon, at Munchen, and in the cognate
+ quarters, such wriggling, dubitating and diplomatizing, as seldom was,&mdash;French,
+ Anti-French (Seckendorf busiest of all), straining every nerve in that
+ way, and for almost three months, nothing coming of it,&mdash;till
+ Hungarian Majesty sent her Barenklaus and Bathyanis upon them again; and
+ these rapidly solved the question, in what way we shall see!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich has still his hopes of Bavaria, so grandiloquent are the French
+ in regard to it; who but would hope? The French diplomatize to all lengths
+ in Munchen, promising seas and mountains; but they perform little; in an
+ effectual manner, nothing. Bavarian "Army raised to 60,000;" counts in
+ fact little above half that number; with no General to it but an imaginary
+ one; Segur's actual French contingent, instead of 25,000, is perhaps
+ 12,000;&mdash;and so of other things. Add to all which, Seckendorf is
+ there, not now as War-General, but as extra-official "Adviser;" busier
+ than ever,&mdash;"scandalous old traitor!" say the French;&mdash;and
+ Friedrich may justly fear that Bavaria will go, by collapse, a bad road
+ for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich, a week or two after the Kaiser's death, seeing Bavarian and
+ French things in such a hypothetic state, instructs his Ambassador at
+ London to declare his, Friedrich's, perfect readiness and wish for Peace:
+ "Old Treaty of Breslau and Berlin made indubitable to me; the rest of the
+ quarrel has, by decease of the Kaiser, gone to air." To which the
+ Britannic Majesty, rather elated at this time, as all Pragmatic people
+ are, answers somewhat in a careless way, "Well, if the others like it!"
+ and promises that he will propose it in the proper quarter. So that
+ henceforth there is always a hope of Peace through England; as well as
+ contrariwise, especially till Bavaria settle itself (in April next), a
+ hope of great assistance from the French. Here are potentialities and
+ counter-potentialities, which make the Bavarian Intricacy very agitating
+ to the young King, while it lasts. And indeed his world is one huge
+ imbroglio of Potentialities and Diplomatic Intricacies, agitating to
+ behold. Concerning which we have again to remark how these huge Spectres
+ of Diplomacy, now filling Friedrich's world, came mostly in result to
+ Nothing;&mdash;shaping themselves wholly, for or against, in exact
+ proportion, direct or inverse, to the actual Quantity of Battle and
+ effective Performance that happened to be found in Friedrich himself.
+ Diplomatic Spectralities, wide Fatamorganas of hope, and hideous big
+ Bugbears blotting out the sun: of these, few men ever had more than
+ Friedrich at this time. And he is careful, none carefuler, not to neglect
+ his Diplomacies at any time;&mdash;though he knows, better than most, that
+ good fighting of his own is what alone can determine the value of these
+ contingent and aerial quantities,&mdash;mere Lapland witchcraft the
+ greater part of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second grand Intricacy and difficulty, still more enigmatic, and
+ pressing the tighter by its close neighborhood, was that with the Saxons.
+ "Are the Saxons enemies; are they friends? Neutrals at lowest; bound by
+ Treaty to lend Austria troops; but to lend for defence merely, not for
+ offence! Could not one, by good methods, make friends with his Polish
+ Majesty?" Friedrich was far from suspecting the rages that lurked in the
+ Polish Majesty, and least of all owing to what. Owing to that old
+ MORAVIAN-FORAY business; and to his, Friedrich's, behavior to the Saxons
+ in it; excellent Saxons, who had behaved so beautifully to Friedrich! That
+ is the sad fact, however. Stupid Polish Majesty has his natural envies,
+ jealousies, of a Brandenburg waxing over his head at this rate. But it
+ appears, the Moravian Foray entered for a great deal into the account, and
+ was the final overwhelming item. Bruhl, by much descanting on that famous
+ Expedition,&mdash;with such candid Eye-witnesses to appeal to, such
+ corroborative Staff-officers and appliances, powerful on the idle heart
+ and weak brain of a Polish Majesty,&mdash;has brought it so far. Fixed
+ indignation, for intolerable usage, especially in that Moravian-Foray
+ time: fixed; not very malignant, but altogether obstinate (as, I am told,
+ that of the pacific sheep species usually is); which carried Bruhl and his
+ Polish Majesty to extraordinary heights and depths in years coming! But
+ that will deserve a section to itself by and by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third difficulty, privately more stringent than any, is that of Finance.
+ The expenses of the late Bohemian Expedition, "Friedrich's Army costing
+ 75,000 pounds a month," have been excessive. For our next Campaign, if it
+ is to be done in the way essential, there are, by rigorous arithmetic,
+ "900,000 pounds" needed. A frugal Prussia raises no new taxes; pays its
+ Wars from "the Treasure," from the Fund saved beforehand for emergencies
+ of that kind; Fund which is running low, threatening to be at the lees if
+ such drain on it continue. To fight with effect being the one sure hope,
+ and salve for all sores, it is not in the Army, in the Fortresses, the
+ Fighting Equipments, that there shall be any flaw left! Friedrich's budget
+ is a sore problem upon him; needing endless shift and ingenuity, now and
+ onwards, through this war:&mdash;already, during these months, in the
+ Berlin Schloss, a great deal of those massive Friedrich-Wilhelm plate
+ Sumptuosities, especially that unparalleled Music-Balcony up stairs, all
+ silver, has been, under Fredersdorf's management, quietly taken away;
+ "carried over, in the night-time, to the Mint." [Orlich, ii. 126-128.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, in fact, no modern reader, not deeper in that distressing story of
+ the Austrian-Succession War than readers are again like to be, can imagine
+ to himself the difficulties of Friedrich at this time, as they already lay
+ disclosed, and kept gradually disclosing themselves, for months coming;
+ nor will ever know what perspicacity, patience of scanning, sharpness of
+ discernment, dexterity of management, were required at Friedrich's hands;&mdash;and
+ under what imminency of peril, too; victorious deliverance, or ruin and
+ annihilation, wavering fearfully in the balance for him, more than once,
+ or rather all along. But it is certain the deeper one goes into that
+ hideous Medea's Caldron of stupidities, once so flamy, now fallen extinct,
+ the more is one sensible of Friedrich's difficulties; and of the talent
+ for all kinds of Captaincy,&mdash;by no means in the Field only, or
+ perhaps even chiefly,&mdash;that was now required of him. Candid readers
+ shall accept these hints, and do their best:&mdash;Friedrich himself made
+ not the least complaint of men's then misunderstanding him; still less
+ will he now! We, keeping henceforth the Diplomacies, the vaporous
+ Foreshadows, and general Dance of Unclean Spirits with their intrigues and
+ spectralities, well underground, so far as possible, will stick to what
+ comes up as practical Performance on Friedrich's part, and try to give
+ intelligible account of that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Valori says, he is greatly changed, and for the better, by these late
+ reverses of fortune. All the world notices it, says Valori. No longer that
+ brief infallibility of manner; that lofty light air, that politely
+ disdainful view of Valori and mankind: he has now need of men. Complains
+ of nothing, is cheerful, quizzical;&mdash;ardently busy to "grind out the
+ notches," as our proverb is; has a mild humane aspect, something of
+ modesty, almost of piety in him. Help me, thou Supreme Power, Maker of
+ men, if my purposes are manlike! Though one does not go upon the Prayers
+ of Forty-Hours, or apply through St. Vitus and such channels, there may be
+ something of authentic petition to Heaven in the thoughts of that young
+ man. He is grown very amiable; the handsomest young bit of Royalty now
+ going. He must fight well next Summer, or it will go hard with him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VI.&mdash;VALORI GOES ON AN ELECTIONEERING MISSION TO DRESDEN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Some time in January, a new Frenchman, a "Chevalier de Courten," if the
+ name is known to anybody, was here at Berlin; consulting, settling about
+ mutual interests and operations. Since Belleisle is snatched from us, it
+ is necessary some Courten should come; and produce what he has got: little
+ of settlement, I should fear, of definite program that will hold water; in
+ regard to War operations chiefly a magazine of clouds. [Specimens of it,
+ in Ranke, iii. 219.] For the rest, the Bavarian question; and very
+ specially, Who the new Emperor is to be?"King of Poland, thinks your
+ Majesty?"&mdash;"By all means," answers Friedrich, "if you can! Detach him
+ from Austria; that will be well!" Which was reckoned magnanimous, at least
+ public-spirited, in Friedrich; considering what Saxony's behavior to him
+ had already been. "By all means, his Polish Majesty for Kaiser; do our
+ utmost, Excellencies Valori, Courten and Company!" answers Friedrich,&mdash;and
+ for his own part, I observe, is intensely busy upon Army matters, looking
+ after the main chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so Valori is to go to Dresden, and manage this cloud or cobwebbery
+ department of the thing; namely, persuade his Polish Majesty to stand for
+ the Kaisership: "Baiern, Pfalz, Koln, Brandenburg, there are four votes,
+ Sire; your own is five: sure of carrying it, your Polish Majesty; backed
+ by the Most Christian King, and his Allies and resources!" And Polish
+ Majesty does, for his own share, very much desire to be Kaiser. But none
+ of us yet knows how he is tied up by Austria, Anti-Friedrich, Anti-French
+ considerations; and can only "accept if it is offered me:" thrice-willing
+ to accept, if it will fall into my mouth; which, on those terms, it has so
+ little chance of doing!&mdash;Saxony and its mysterious affairs and
+ intentions having been, to Friedrich, a riddle and trouble and
+ astonishment, during all this Campaign, readers ought to know the fact
+ well;&mdash;and no reader could stand the details of such a fact. Here, in
+ condensed form, are some scraps of Excerpt; which enable us to go with
+ Valori on this Dresden Mission, and look for ourselves:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 1. FRIEDRICH'S POSITION TOWARDS SAXONY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "... By known Treaty, the Polish Majesty is bound to assist the Hungarian
+ with 12,000 men, 'whenever invaded in her own dominions.' Polish Majesty
+ had 20,000 in the field for that object lately,&mdash;part of them, 8,000
+ of them, hired by Britannic subsidy, as he alleges. The question now is,
+ Will Saxony assist Austria in invading Silesia, with or without Britannic
+ subsidy? Friedrich hopes that this is impossible! Friedrich is deeply
+ unaware of the humor he has raised against himself in the Saxon
+ Court-circles; how the Polish Majesty regards that Moravian Foray; with
+ what a perfect hatred little Bruhl regards him, Friedrich; and to what
+ pitch of humor, owing to those Moravian-Foray starvings, marchings about
+ and inhuman treatment of the poor Saxon Army, not to mention other
+ offences and afflictive considerations, Bruhl has raised the simple Polish
+ Majesty against Friedrich. These things, as they gradually unfolded
+ themselves to Friedrich, were very surprising. And proved very
+ disadvantageous at the present juncture and for a long time afterwards. To
+ Friedrich disadvantageous and surprising; and to Saxony, in the end,
+ ruinous; poor Saxony having got its back broken by them, and never stood
+ up in the world since! Ruined by this wretched little Bruhl; and reduced,
+ from the first place in Northern Teutschland, to a second or third, or no
+ real place at all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 2. THERE IS A, "UNION OF WARSAW" (8th January, 1745); AND STILL MORE
+ SPECIALLY A "TREATY OF WARSAW" (8th January-18th May, 1745).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "January 8th, 1745, before the Old Dessauer got ranked in Schlesien
+ against Traun, there had concluded itself at Warsaw, by way of
+ counterpoise to the 'Frankfurt Union,' a 'Union of Warsaw,' called also
+ 'Quadruple Alliance of Warsaw;' the Parties to which were Polish Majesty,
+ Hungarian ditto, Prime-Movers, and the two Sea-Powers as Purseholders;
+ stipulating, to the effect: 'We Four will hold together in affairs of the
+ Reich VERSUS that dangerous Frankfurt Union; we will'&mdash;do a variety
+ of salutary things; and as one practical thing, 'There shall be, this
+ Season, 30,000 Saxons conjoined to the Austrian Force, for which we
+ Sea-Powers will furnish subsidy.'&mdash;This was the one practical point
+ stipulated, January 8th; and farther than this the Sea-Powers did not go,
+ now or afterwards, in that affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But there was then proposed by the Polish and Hungarian Majesties, in the
+ form of Secret Articles, an ulterior Project; with which the Sea-Powers,
+ expressing mere disbelief and even abhorrence of it, refused to have any
+ concern now or henceforth. Polish Majesty, in hopes it would have been
+ better taken, had given his 30,000 soldiers at a rate of subsidy
+ miraculously low, only 150,000 pounds for the whole: but the Sea-Powers
+ were inexorable, perhaps almost repented of their 150,000 pounds; and
+ would hear nothing farther of secret Articles and delirious Projects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So that the 'Union of Warsaw' had to retire to its pigeon-hole, content
+ with producing those 30,000 Saxons for the immediate occasion; and there
+ had to be concocted between the Polish and Hungarian Majesties themselves
+ what is now, in the modern Pamphlets, called a 'TREATY of Warsaw,'&mdash;much
+ different from the innocent, 'UNION of Warsaw;' though it is merely the
+ specifying and fixing down of what had been shadowed out as secret
+ codicils in said 'Union,' when the Sea-Power parties obstinately recoiled.
+ Treaty of Warsaw let us continue to call it; though its actual birth-place
+ was Leipzig (in the profoundest secrecy, 18th May, 1745), above four
+ months after it had tried to be born at Warsaw, and failed as aforesaid.
+ Warsaw Union is not worth speaking of; but this other is a Treaty highly
+ remarkable to the reader,&mdash;and to Friedrich was almost infinitely so,
+ when he came to get wind of it long after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Treaty which, though it proved abortional, and never came to fulfilment
+ in any part of it, is at this day one of the remarkablest bits of
+ sheepskin extant in the world. It was signed 18th May, 1745; [Scholl, ii.
+ 350.] and had cost a great deal of painful contriving, capable still of
+ new altering and retouching, to hit mutual views: Treaty not only for
+ reconquering Silesia (which to the Two Majesties, though it did not to the
+ Sea-Powers, seems infallible, in Friedrich's now ruined circumstances),
+ but for cutting down that bad Neighbor to something like the dimensions
+ proper for a Brandenburg Vassal;&mdash;in fact, quite the old 'Detestable
+ Project' of Spring, 1741, only more elaborated into detail (in which
+ Britannic George knows better than to meddle!)&mdash;Saxony to have share
+ of the parings, when we get them. 'What share?' asked Saxony, and long
+ keeps asking. 'A road to Warsaw; Strip of Country carrying us from the end
+ of the Lausitz, which is ours, into Poland, which we trust will continue
+ ours, would be very handy! Duchy of Glogau; some small paring of Silesia,
+ won't your Majesty?' 'Of my Silesia not one hand-breadth,' answered the
+ Queen impatiently (though she did at last concede some outlying
+ hand-breadths, famed old 'Circle of Schwiebus,' if I recollect); and they
+ have had to think of other equivalent parings for Saxony's behoof
+ (Magdeburg, Halberstadt, Saale-Circle, or one knows not what); and have
+ had, and will have, their adoes to get it fixed. Excellent bearskin to be
+ slit into straps; only the bear is still on his feet!&mdash;Polish Majesty
+ and Hungarian, Polish with especial vigor, Bruhl quite restless upon it,
+ are&mdash;little as Valori or any mortal could dream of it&mdash;engaged
+ in this partition of the bearskin, when Valori arrives. Of their innocent
+ Union of Warsaw, there was, from the first, no secret made; but the
+ Document now called 'TREATY of Warsaw' needs to lie secret and
+ thrice-secret; and it was not till 1756 that Friedrich, having unearthed
+ it by industries of his own, and studied it with great intensity for some
+ years, made it known to the world." [Adelung, v. 308. 397; Ranke, iii. 231
+ (who, for some reason of his own, dates "3d May" instead of 18th].
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Treaties, vaporous Foreshadows of Events, have oftenest something of the
+ ghost in them; and are importune to human nature, longing for the Events
+ themselves; all the more if they have proved abortional Treaties, and
+ become doubly ghost-like or ghastly. Nevertheless the reader is to note
+ well this Treaty of Warsaw, as important to Friedrich and him; and indeed
+ it is perhaps the remarkablest Treaty, abortional or realized, which got
+ to parchment in that Century. For though it proved abortional, and no part
+ of it, now or afterwards, could be executed, and even the subsidy and
+ 30,000 Saxons (stipulated in the "UNION of Warsaw") became crow's-meat in
+ a manner,&mdash;this preternatural "Treaty of Warsaw," trodden down never
+ so much by the heel of Destiny, and by the weight of new Treaties,
+ superseding it or presupposing its impossibility or inconceivability,
+ would by no means die (such the humor of Bruhl, of the Two Majesties and
+ others); but lay alive under the ashes, carefully tended, for Ten or
+ Twenty Years to come;&mdash;and had got all Europe kindled again, for
+ destruction of that bad Neighbor, before it would itself consent to go
+ out! And did succeed in getting Saxony's back broken, if not the bad
+ Neighbor's,&mdash;in answer to the humor of little Bruhl; unfortunate
+ Saxony to possess such a Bruhl!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In those beautiful Saxon-Austrian developments of the Treaty of Warsaw,
+ Czarina Elizabeth, bobbing about in that unlovely whirlpool of intrigues,
+ amours, devotions and strong liquor, which her History is, took (ask not
+ for what reason) a lively part:&mdash;and already in this Spring of 1745,
+ they hope she could, by "a gift of two millions for her pleasures" (gift
+ so easy to you Sea-Powers), be stirred up to anger against Friedrich. And
+ she did, in effect, from this time, hover about in a manner questionable
+ to Friedrich; though not yet in anger, but only with the wish to be
+ important, and to make herself felt in Foreign affairs. Whether the
+ Sea-Powers gave her that trifle of pocket-money ("for her pleasures"), I
+ never knew; but it is certain they spent, first and last, very large
+ amounts that way, upon her and hers; especially the English did, with what
+ result may be considered questionable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Graf von Bruhl, most rising man of Saxony, once a page; now by
+ industry King August III.'s first favorite and factotum; the fact that he
+ cordially hates Friedrich is too evident; but the why is not known to me.
+ Except indeed, That no man&mdash;especially no man with three hundred and
+ sixty-five fashionable suits of clothes usually about him, different suit
+ each day of the year&mdash;can be comfortable in the evident contempt of
+ another man. Other man of sarcastic bantering turn, too; tongue sharp as
+ needles; whose sayings many birds of the air are busy to carry about. Year
+ after year, Bruhl (doubtless with help enough that way, if there had
+ needed such) hates him more and more; as the too jovial Czarina herself
+ comes to do, wounded by things that birds have carried. And now we will go
+ with Valori,&mdash;seeing better into some things than Valori yet can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ 3. VALORI'S ACCOUNT OF HIS MISSION (in compressed form). [Valori, i.
+ 211-219.]
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Valori [I could guess about the 10th of February, but there is no date at
+ all] was despatched to Dresden with that fine project, Polish Majesty for
+ Kaiser: is authorized to offer 60,000 men, with money corresponding, and
+ no end of brilliant outlooks;&mdash;must keep back his offers, however, if
+ he find the people indisposed. Which he did, to an extreme degree; nothing
+ but vague talk, procrastination, hesitation on the part of Bruhl. This
+ wretched little Bruhl has twelve tailors always sewing for him, and three
+ hundred and sixty-five suits of clothes: so many suits, all pictured in a
+ Book; a valet enters every morning, proposes a suit, which, after
+ deliberation, with perhaps amendments, is acceded to, and worn at dinner.
+ Vainest of human clothes-horses; foolishest coxcomb Valori has seen: it is
+ visibly his notion that it was he, Bruhl, by his Saxon auxiliaries, by his
+ masterly strokes of policy, that checkmated Friedrich, and drove him from
+ Bohemia last Year; and, for the rest, that Friedrich is ruined, and will
+ either shirk out of Silesia, or be cut to ribbons there by the Austrian
+ force this Summer. To which Valori hints dissent; but it is ill received.
+ Valori sees the King; finds him, as expected, the fac-simile of Bruhl in
+ this matter; Jesuit Guarini the like: how otherwise? They have his Majesty
+ in their leash, and lead him as they please.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At four every morning, this Guarini, Jesuit Confessor to the King and
+ Queen, comes to Bruhl; Bruhl settles with him what his Majesty shall
+ think, in reference to current business, this day; Guarini then goes,
+ confesses both Majesties; confesses, absolves, turns in the due way to
+ secular matters. At nine, Bruhl himself arrives, for Privy Council: 'What
+ is your Majesty pleased to think on these points of current business?'
+ Majesty serenely issues his thoughts, in the form of orders; which are
+ found correct to pattern. This is the process with his Majesty. A poor
+ Majesty, taking deeply into tobacco; this is the way they have him
+ benetted, as in a dark cocoon of cobwebs, rendering the whole world
+ invisible to him. Which cunning arrangement is more and more perfected
+ every year; so that on all roads he travels, be it to mass, to hunt, to
+ dinner, any-whither in his Palace or out of it, there are faithful
+ creatures keeping eye, who admit no unsafe man to the least glimpse of him
+ by night or by day. In this manner he goes on; and before the end of him,
+ twenty years hence, has carried it far. Nothing but disgust to be had out
+ of business;&mdash;mutinous Polish Diets too, some forty of them, in his
+ time, not one of which did any business at all, but ended in LIBERUM VETO,
+ and Billingsgate conflagration, perhaps with swords drawn: [See Buchholz,
+ 154; &amp;c.]&mdash;business more and more disagreeable to him. What can
+ Valori expect, on this heroic occasion, from such a King?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Queen herself, Maria Theresa's Cousin, an ambitious hard-favored
+ Majesty,&mdash;who had sense once to dislike Bruhl, but has been quite
+ reconciled to him by her Jesuit Messenger of Heaven (which latter is an
+ oily, rather stupid creature, who really wishes well to her, and loves a
+ peaceable life at any price),&mdash;even she will not take the bait.
+ Valori was in Dresden nine days (middle part of February, it is likely);
+ never produced his big bait, his 60,000 men and other brilliancies, at
+ all. He saw old Feldmarschall Konigseck passing from Vienna towards the
+ Netherlands Camp; where he is to dry-nurse (so they irreverently call it,
+ in time coming) his Royal Highness of Cumberland, that magnificent English
+ Babe of War, and do feats with him this Summer." Konigseck, though Valori
+ did not know it, has endless diplomacies to do withal; inspections of
+ troops, advisings, in Hanover, in Holland, in Dresden here; [Anonymous,&mdash;Duke
+ of Cumberland,&mdash;p. 186.]&mdash;and secures the Saxon Electoral-Vote
+ for his Grand-Duke in passing. "The welcome given to Konigseck disgusted
+ Valori; on the ninth day he left; said adieu, seeing them blind to their
+ interest; and took post for Berlin,"&mdash;where he finds Friedrich much
+ out of humor at the Saxon reception of his magnanimities. [Valori, i.
+ 211-219; <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 81-85. For details on Bruhl, see
+ <i>Graf von Bruhl, Leben und Charakter</i> (1760, No Place): Anonymous, by
+ one Justi, a noted Pamphleteer of the time: exists in English too, or
+ partly exists; but is unreadable, except on compulsion; and totally
+ unintelligible till after very much inquiry elsewhere.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Saxon intricacy, indecipherable, formidable, contemptible, was the
+ plague of Friedrich's life, one considerable plague, all through this
+ Campaign. Perhaps nothing in the Diplomatic sphere of things caused him
+ such perplexity, vexation, indignation. An insoluble riddle to him;
+ extremely contemptible, yet,&mdash;with a huge Russia tacked to it, and
+ looming minatory in the distance,&mdash;from time to time, formidable
+ enough. Let readers keep it in mind, and try to imagine it. It cost
+ Friedrich such guessing, computing, arranging, rearranging, as would weary
+ the toughest reader to hear of in detail. How Friedrich did at last solve
+ it (in December coming), all readers will see with eyes!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MIDDLE-RHINE ARMY IN A STAGGERING STATE; THE BAVARIAN INTRICACY SETTLES
+ ITSELF, THE WRONG WAY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Early in March it becomes surmisable that Maillebois's Middle-Rhine Army
+ will not go a good road. Maillebois has been busy in those countries,
+ working extensive discontent; bullying mankind "to join the Frankfurt
+ Union," to join France at any rate, which nobody would consent to; and
+ exacting merciless contributions, which everybody had to consent to and
+ pay.&mdash;And now, on D'Ahremberg's mere advance, with that poor Fraction
+ of Pragmatic Army, roused from its winter sleep, Maillebois, without
+ waiting for D'Ahremberg's attack, rapidly calls in his truculent
+ detachments, and rolls confusedly back into the Frankfurt regions.
+ [Adelung, iv. 276-352 (December, 1744-March, 1745).] Upon which
+ D'Ahremberg&mdash;if by no means going upon Maillebois's throat&mdash;sets,
+ at least, to coercing Wilhelm of Hessen, our only friend in those parts;
+ who is already a good deal disgusted with the Maillebois procedures, and
+ at a loss what to do on the Kaiser's death, which has killed the Frankfurt
+ Union too. Wise Wilhelm consents, under D'Ahremberg's menaces, to become
+ Neutral; and recall his 6,000 out of Baiern,&mdash;wishes he had them home
+ beside him even now!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an Election in the wind, it is doubly necessary for the French, who
+ have not even a Candidate as yet, to stand supreme and minatory in the
+ Frankfurt Country; and to King Friedrich it is painfully questionable,
+ whether Maillebois can do it. "Do it we will; doubt not that, your
+ Majesty!" answer Valori and the French;&mdash;and study to make
+ improvements, reinforcements, in their Rhine Army. And they do, at least,
+ change the General of their Middle-Rhine Army,&mdash;that is to say,
+ recall Prince Conti out of Italy, where he has distinguished himself, and
+ send Maillebois thither in his stead,&mdash;who likewise distinguishes
+ himself THERE, if that could be a comfort to us! Whether the distinguished
+ Conti will maintain that Frankfurt Country in spite of the Austrians and
+ their Election movements, is still a question with Friedrich, though
+ Valori continued assuring him (always till July came) that, it was beyond
+ question. "Siege of Tournay, vigorous Campaign in the Netherlands (for
+ behoof of Britannic George)!" this is the grand French program for the
+ Year. This good intention was achieved, on the French part; but this, like
+ Aaron's rod among the serpents, proved to have EATEN the others as it
+ wriggled along!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those Maillebois-D'Ahremberg affairs throw a damp on the Bavarian Question
+ withal;&mdash;in fact, settle the Bavarian Question; her Hungarian
+ Majesty, tired of the delays, having ordered Bathyani to shoulder arms
+ again, and bring a decision. Bathyani, with Barenklau to right of him, and
+ Browne (our old Silesian friend) to left, goes sweeping across those
+ Seckendorf-Segur posts, and without difficulty tumbles everything to ruin,
+ at a grand rate. The traitor Seckendorf had made such a choice of posts,&mdash;left
+ unaltered by Drum Thorring;&mdash;what could French valor do? Nothing;
+ neither French valor, nor Bavarian want of valor, could do anything but
+ whirl to the right-about, at sight of the Austrian Sweeping-Apparatus; and
+ go off explosively, as in former instances, at a rate almost unique in
+ military annals. Finished within three weeks or so!&mdash;We glance only
+ at two points of it. March 21st, Bathyani stood to arms (to BESOMS we
+ might call it), Browne on the left, Barenklau on the right: it was March
+ 21st when Bathyani started from Passau, up the Donau Countries;&mdash;and
+ within the week coming, see:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "VILSHOFEN, 28th MARCH, 1745. Here, at the mouth of the Vils River
+ (between Inn and Iser), is the first considerable Post; garrison some
+ 4,000; Hessians and Prince Friedrich the main part,&mdash;who have their
+ share of valor, I dare say; but with such news out of Hessen, not to speak
+ of the prospects in this Country, are probably in poorish spirits for
+ acting. General Browne summons them in Vilshofen, this day; and, on their
+ negative, storms in upon them, bursts them to pieces; upon which they beat
+ chamade. But the Croats, who are foremost, care nothing for chamade: go
+ plundering, slaughtering; burn the poor Town; butcher [in round numbers]
+ 3,000 of the poor Hessians; and wound General Browne himself, while he too
+ vehemently interferes." [Adelung, iv. 356, and the half-intelligible
+ Foot-note in Ranke, iii. 220.] This was the finale of those 6,000
+ Hessians, and indeed their principal function, while in French pay;&mdash;and
+ must have been, we can Judge how surprising to Prince Friedrich, and to
+ his Papa on hearing of it! Note another point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Precisely about this time twelvemonth, "March 16th, 1746," the same Prince
+ Friedrich, with remainder of those Hessians, now again completed to 6,000,
+ and come back with emphasis to the Britannic side of things, was&mdash;marching
+ out of Edinburgh, in much state, with streamers, kettle-drums, Highness's
+ coaches, horses, led-horses, on an unexpected errand. [Henderson (Whig
+ Eye-witness). <i>History of the Rebellion,</i> 1745 and 1746 (London,
+ 1748, reprint from the Edinburgh edition), pp. 104, 106, 107.] Toward
+ Stirling, Perth; towards Killiecrankie, and raising of what is called "the
+ Siege of Blair in Athol" (most minute of "sieges," but subtending a great
+ angle there and then);&mdash;much of unexpected, and nearer home than
+ "Tournay and the Netherlands Campaign," having happened to Britannic
+ George in the course of this year, 1746! "Really very fine troops, those
+ Hessians [observes my orthodox Whig friend]: they carry swords as well as
+ guns and bayonets; their uniform is blue turned up with white: the Hussar
+ part of them, about 500, have scimitars of a great length; small horses,
+ mostly black, of Swedish breed; swift durable little creatures, with long
+ tails." Honors, dinners, to his Serene Highness had been numerous, during
+ the three weeks we had him in Edinburgh; "especially that Ball, February
+ 21st (o.s.), eve of his Consort the Princess Mary's Birthday [EVE of
+ birthday, "let us dance the auspicious morning IN] was, for affluence of
+ Nobility and Gentry of both sexes," a sublime thing...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PFAFFENHOFEN, APRIL 15th. "Unfortunate Segur, the Segur of Linz three
+ years ago,&mdash;whose conduct was great, according to Valori, but
+ powerless against traitors and fate!&mdash;was again, once more,
+ unfortunate in those parts. Unfortunate Segur drew up at Pfaffenhofen
+ (centre of the Country, many miles from Vilshofen) to defend himself, when
+ fallen upon by Barenklau, in that manner; but could not, though with
+ masterly demeanor; and had to retreat three days, with his face to the
+ enemy, so to speak, fighting and manoeuvring all the way: no shelter for
+ him either but Munchen, and that, a most temporary one. Instead of taking
+ Straubingen, taking Passau, perhaps of pushing on to Vienna itself, this
+ is what we have already come to. No Rhine Army, Middle-Rhine Army, Coigny,
+ Maillebois, Conti, whoever it was, should send us the least reinforcement,
+ when shrieked to. No outlook whatever but rapid withdrawal, retreat to the
+ Rhine Army, since it will not stir to help us." [Adelung, iv. 360.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The young Kur-Baiern is still polite, grateful [to us French], overwhelms
+ us with politeness; but flies to Augsburg, as his Father used to do.
+ Notable, however, his poor fat little Mother won't, this time: 'No, I will
+ stay here, I for one, and have done with flying and running; we have had
+ enough of that!' Seckendorf, quite gone from Court in this crisis,
+ reappears, about the middle of April, in questionable capacity; at a place
+ called Fussen, not far off, at the foot of the Tyrol Hills;&mdash;where
+ certain Austrian Dignitaries seem also to be enjoying a picturesque
+ Easter! Yes indeed: and, on APRIL 22d, there is signed a 'PEACE OF FUSSEN'
+ there; general amicable AS-YOU-WERE, between Austria and Bavaria
+ ('Renounce your Anti-Pragmatic moonshine forevermore, vote for our
+ Grand-Duke; there is your Bavaria back, poor wretches!')&mdash;and
+ Seckendorf, it is presumable, will get his Turkish arrears liquidated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Bavarian Intricacy, which once excelled human power, is settled,
+ then. Carteret and Haslang tried it in vain [dreadful heterodox intentions
+ of secularizing Salzburg, secularizing Passau, Regensburg, and loud
+ tremulous denial of such];&mdash;Carteret and Wilhelm of Hesseu
+ [Conferences of Hanau, which ruined Carteret], in vain; King Friedrich,
+ and many Kings, in vain: a thing nobody could settle;&mdash;and it has at
+ last settled itself, as the generality of ill-guided and unlucky things
+ do, by collapse. Delirium once out, the law of gravity acts; and there the
+ mad matter lies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bought by Austria, that old villain!" cry the French. Friedrich does not
+ think the Austrians bought Seckendorf, having no money at present; but
+ guesses they may have given him to understand that a certain large arrear
+ of payment due ever since those Turkish Wars,&mdash;when Seckendorf,
+ instead of payment, was lodged in the Fortress of Gratz, and almost got
+ his head cut off,&mdash;should now be paid down in cash, or authentic
+ Paper-money, if matters become amicable. [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i>
+ iii. 22; <i>Seckendorfs Leben,</i> pp. 367-376.] As they have done, in
+ Friedrich's despite;&mdash;who seems angrier at the old stager for this
+ particular ill-turn than for all the other many; and long remembers it, as
+ will appear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VII.&mdash;FRIEDRICH IN SILESIA; UNUSUALLY BUSY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Here, sure enough, are sad new intricacies in the Diplomatic, hypothetic
+ sphere of things; and clouds piling themselves ahead, in a very minatory
+ manner to King Friedrich. Let King Friedrich, all the more, get his
+ Fighting Arrangements made perfect. Diplomacy is clouds; beating of your
+ enemies is sea and land. Austria and the Gazetteer world consider
+ Friedrich to be as good as finished: but that is privately far from being
+ Friedrich's own opinion;&mdash;though these occurrences are heavy and
+ dismal to him, as none of us can now fancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herr Ranke has got access, in the Archives, to a series of private
+ utterances by Friedrich,&mdash;Letters from him, of a franker nature than
+ usual, and letting us far deeper into his mind;&mdash;which must have been
+ well worth reading in the original, in their fully dated and developed
+ condition. From Herr Ranke's Fragmentary Excerpts, let us, thankful for
+ what we have got, select one or two. The Letters are to Minister Podewils
+ at Berlin; written from Silesia (Neisse and neighborhood), where, since
+ the middle of March, Friedrich has been, personally pushing on his Army
+ Preparations, while the above sinister things befell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ KING FRIEDRICH TO PODEWILS, IN BERLIN (under various dates, March-April,
+ 1745).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NEISSE, 29th MARCH.... "We find ourselves in a great crisis. If we don't,
+ by mediation of England, get Peace, our enemies from different sides
+ [Saxony, Austria, who knows if not Russia withal!] will come plunging in
+ against me. Peace I cannot force them to. But if they must have War, we
+ will either beat them, or none of us will see Berlin again." [Ranke, iii.
+ 236 et seqq.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ APRIL (no day given).... "In any case, I have my troops well together. The
+ sicknesses are ceasing; the recruitments are coming in: shortly all will
+ be complete. That does not hinder us from making Peace, if it will only
+ come; but, in the contrary case, nobody can accuse me of neglecting what
+ was necessary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ APRIL 17th (still from Neisse).... "I toil day and night to improve our
+ situation. The soldiers will do their duty. There is none among us who
+ will not rather have his backbone broken than give up one foot-breadth of
+ ground. They must either grant us a good Peace, or we will surpass
+ ourselves by miracles of daring; and force the enemy to accept it from
+ us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ APRIL 20th. "Our situation is disagreeable; constrained, a kind of spasm:
+ but my determination is taken. If we needs must fight, we will do it like
+ men driven desperate. Never was there a greater peril than that I am now
+ in. Time, at its own pleasure, will untie this knot; or Destiny, if there
+ is one, determine the event. The game I play is so high, one cannot
+ contemplate the issue with cold blood. Pray for the return of my good
+ luck."&mdash;Two days hence, the poor young Kur-Baiern, deaf to the French
+ seductions and exertions, which were intense, had signed his "Peace of
+ Fussen" (22d April 1745),&mdash;a finale to France on the German Field, as
+ may be feared! The other Fragments we will give a little farther on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich had left Berlin for Silesia March 15th; rather sooner than he
+ counted on,&mdash;Old Leopold pleading to be let home. At Glogau, at
+ Breslau, there had been the due inspecting: Friedrich got to Neisse on the
+ 23d (Bathyani just stirring in that Bavarian Business, Vilshofen and the
+ Hessians close ahead); and on the 27th, had dismissed Old Leopold, with
+ thanks and sympathies,&mdash;sent him home, "to recover his health."
+ Leopold's health is probably suffering; but his heart and spirits still
+ more. Poor old man, he has just lost&mdash;the other week, "5th February"
+ last&mdash;his poor old Wife, at Dessau; and is broken down with grief.
+ The soft silk lining of his hard Existence, in all parts of it, is torn
+ away. Apothecary Fos's Daughter, Reich's Princess, Princess of Dessau,
+ called by whatever name, she had been the truest of Wives; "used to attend
+ him in all his Campaigns, for above fifty years back." "Gone, now, forever
+ gone!"&mdash;Old Leopold had wells of strange sorrow in the rugged heart
+ of him,&mdash;sorrow, and still better things,&mdash;which he does not
+ wear on his sleeve. Here is an incident I never can forget;&mdash;dating
+ twelve or thirteen years ago (as is computable), middle of July, 1732.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Louisa, Leopold's eldest Daughter, Wife of Victor Leopold, reigning
+ Prince of Anhalt-Bernburg, lay dying of a decline." Still only
+ twenty-three, poor Lady, though married seven years ago;&mdash;the end now
+ evidently drawing nigh. "A few days before her death,&mdash;perhaps some
+ attendant sorrowfully asking, 'Can we do nothing, then?'&mdash;she was
+ heard to say, 'If I could see my Father at the head of his Regiment, yet
+ once!'"&mdash;Halle, where the Regiment lies, is some thirty or more miles
+ off; and King Friedrioh Wilhelm, I suppose, would have to be written to:&mdash;Leopold
+ was ready the soonest possible; and, "at a set hour, marched, in all pomp,
+ with banner flying, music playing, into the SCHLOSS-HOF (Palace Court) of
+ Bernburg; and did the due salutations and manoeuvrings,&mdash;his poor
+ Daughter sitting at her window, till they ended;"&mdash;figure them, the
+ last glitter of those muskets, the last wail of that band-music!&mdash;"The
+ Regiment was then marched to the Waisenhaus (ORPHAN-HOUSE), where the
+ common men were treated with bread and beer; all the Officers dining at
+ the Prince's Table. All the Officers, except Leopold alone, who stole away
+ out of the crowd; sat himself upon the balustrade of the Saale Bridge, and
+ wept into the river." [LEBEN (12mo; not Rannft's, but Anonymous like his),
+ p. 234 n.]&mdash;Leopold is now on the edge of seventy; ready to think all
+ is finished with him. Perhaps not quite, my tough old friend; recover
+ yourself a little, and we shall see!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Leopold is hardly home at Dessau, when new Pandour Tempests, tides of
+ ravaging War, again come beating against the Giant Mountains, pouring
+ through all passes; from utmost Jablunka, westward by Jagerndorf to Glatz,
+ huge influx of wild riding hordes, each with some support of Austrian
+ grenadiers, cannoniers; threatening to submerge Silesia. Precursors,
+ Friedrich need not doubt, of a strenuous regular attempt that way,
+ Hungarian Majesty's fixed intention, hope and determination is, To expel
+ him straightway from Silesia. Her Patent circulates, these three months;
+ calling on all men to take note of that fixed fact, especially on all
+ Silesian men to note it well, and shift their allegiance accordingly.
+ Silesian men, in great majority,&mdash;our friend the Mayor of Landshut,
+ for example?&mdash;are believed to have no inclination towards change: and
+ whoever has, had clearly better not show any till he see! [In Ranke (iii.
+ 234), there is vestige of some intended "voluntary subscription by the
+ common people of Glatz," for Friedrich's behoof;&mdash;contrariwise, in
+ Orlich (ii. 380, "6th February, 1745," from the Dessau Archives), notice
+ of one individual, suspected of stirring for Austria, whom "you are to put
+ under lock and key;"&mdash;but he runs off, and has no successor, that I
+ hear of.]&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's thousand-fold preliminary orderings, movements, rearrangings
+ in his Army matters, must not detain us here;&mdash;still less his
+ dealings with the Pandour element, which is troublesome, rather than
+ dangerous. Vigilance, wise swift determination, valor drilled to its work,
+ can deal with phenomena of that nature, though never so furious and
+ innumerable. Not a cheering service for drilled valor, but a very needful
+ one. Continual bickerings and skirmishings fell out, sometimes rising to
+ sharp fight on the small scale:&mdash;Austrian grenadiers with cannon are
+ on that Height to left, and also on this to right, meaning to cut off our
+ march; the difficult landscape furnished out, far and wide, with Pandour
+ companies in position: you must clash in, my Burschen; seize me that
+ cannon-battery yonder; master such and such a post,&mdash;there is the
+ heart of all that network of armed doggery; slit asunder that, the network
+ wholly will tumble over the Hills again. Which is always done, on the part
+ of the Prussian Burschen; though sometimes not, without difficulty.&mdash;His
+ Majesty is forming Magazines at Neisse, Brieg, and the principal
+ Fortresses in those parts; driving on all manner of preparations at the
+ rapidest rate of speed, and looking with his own eyes into everything. The
+ regiments are about what we may call complete, arithmetically and
+ otherwise; the cavalry show good perfection in their new mode of
+ manoeuvring;&mdash;it is to be hoped the Fighting Apparatus generally will
+ give fair account of itself when the time comes. Our one anchor of hope,
+ as now more and more appears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Pandour element he first tried (under General Hautcharmoi, with
+ Winterfeld as chief active hand) a direct outburst or two, with a view to
+ slash them home at once. But finding that it was of no use, as they always
+ reappeared in new multitudes, he renounced that; took to calling in his
+ remoter outposts; and, except where Magazines or the like remained to be
+ cared for, let the Pandours baffle about, checked only by the fortified
+ Towns, and more and more submerge the Hill Country. Prince Karl, to be
+ expected in the form of lion, mysteriously uncertain on which side coming
+ to invade us,&mdash;he, and not the innumerable weasel kind, is our
+ important matter! By the end of April (news of the PEACE OF FUSSEN coming
+ withal), Friedrich had quitted Neisse; lay cantoned, in Neisse Valley
+ (between Frankenstein and Patschkau, "able to assemble in forty-eight
+ hours"); studying, with his whole strength, to be ready for the mysterious
+ Prince Karl, on whatever side he might arrive;&mdash;and disregarding the
+ Pandours in comparison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The points of inrush, the tideways of these Pandour Deluges seem to be
+ mainly three. Direct through the Jablunka, upon Ratibor Country, is the
+ first and chief; less direct (partly supplied by REFLUENCES from Ratibor,
+ when Ratibor is found not to answer), a second disembogues by Jagerndorf;
+ a third, the westernmost, by Landshut. Three main ingresses: at each of
+ which there fall out little Fights; which are still celebrated in the
+ Prussian Books, and indeed well deserve reading by soldiers that would
+ know their trade. In the Ratibor parts, the invasive leader is a General
+ Karoly, with 12,000 under him, who are the wildest horde of all: "Karoly
+ lodges in a wood: for himself there is a tent; his companions sleep under
+ trees, or under the open sky, by the edge of morasses." [Ranke, iii. 244.]
+ It was against this Karoly and his horde that Hautcharmoi's little
+ expedition, or express attacking party to drive them home again, was shot
+ out (8th-2lst April). Which did its work very prettily; Winterfeld, chief
+ hand in it, crowning the matter by a "Fight of Wurbitz," [Orlich, ii. 136
+ (21st April).]&mdash;where Winterfeld, cutting the taproot, in his usual
+ electric way, tumbles Karoly quite INTO the morasses, and clears the
+ country of him for a time. For a time; though for a time only;&mdash;Karoly
+ or others returning in a week or two, to a still higher extent of
+ thousands; mischievous as ever in those Ratibor-Namslau countries. Upon
+ which, Friedrich, finding this an endless business, and nothing like the
+ most important, gives it up for the present; calls in his remoter
+ detachments; has his Magazines carted home to the Fortress Towns,&mdash;Karoly
+ trying, once or so, to hinder in that operation, but only again getting
+ his crown broken. ["Fight of Mocker," May 4th (Orlich, ii. 141).] Or if
+ carting be too difficult, still do not waste your Magazine:&mdash;Margraf
+ Karl, for instance, is ordered to Jagerndorf with his Detachment, "to eat
+ the Magazine;" hungry Pandours looking on, till he finish. On which
+ occasion a renowned little Fight took place (Fight of Neustadt, or of
+ Jagerndorf-Neustadt), as shall be mentioned farther on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that, for certain weeks to come, the Tolpatcheries had free course, in
+ those Frontier parts; and were left to rove about, under check only of the
+ Garrison Towns; Friedrich being obliged to look elsewhere after higher
+ perils, which were now coming in view. In which favorable circumstances,
+ Karoly and Consorts did, at last, make one stroke in those Ratibor
+ countries; that of Kosel, which was greatly consolatory. [26th May, 1743
+ (Orlich, ii. 156-158).] "By treachery of an Ensign who had deserted to
+ them [provoked by rigor of discipline, or some intolerable thing], they
+ glided stealthily, one night, across the ditches, into Kosel" (a
+ half-fortified place, Prussian works only half finished): which, being the
+ Key of the Oder in those parts, they reckoned a glorious conquest; of good
+ omen and worthy of TE-DEUMS at Vienna. And they did eagerly, without the
+ least molestation, labor to complete the Prussian works at Kosel: "One
+ garrison already ours!"&mdash;which was not had from them without
+ battering (and I believe, burning), when General von Nassau came to
+ inquire after it; in Autumn next.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich had always hoped that the Saxons, who are not yet in declared
+ War with him, though bound by Treaty to assist the Queen of Hungary under
+ certain conditions, would not venture on actual Invasion of his
+ Territories; but in this, as readers anticipate, Friedrich finds himself
+ mistaken. Weissenfels is hastening from the Leitmeritz northwestern
+ quarter, where he has wintered, to join Prince Karl, who is gathering
+ himself from Olmutz and his southeastern home region; their full intention
+ is to invade Silesia together, and they hope now at length to make an end
+ of Friedrich and it. These Pandour hordes, supported by the necessary
+ grenadiers and cannoniers, are sent as vanguard; these cannot themselves
+ beat him; but they may induce him (which they do not) to divide his Force;
+ they may, in part, burn him away as by slow fire, after which he will be
+ the easier to beat. Instead of which, Friedrich, leaving the Pandours to
+ their luck, lies concentrated in Neisse Valley; watching, with all his
+ faculties, Prince Karl's own advent (coming on like Fate, indubitable, yet
+ involved in mysteries hitherto); and is perilously sensible that only in
+ giving that a good reception is there any hope left him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl "who arrived in Olmutz April 30th," commands in chief again,&mdash;saddened,
+ poor man, by the loss of his young Wife, in December last; willing to
+ still his grief in action for the cause SHE loved;&mdash;but old Traun is
+ not with him this year: which is a still more material circumstance. Traun
+ is to go this year, under cloak not of Prince Karl, but of Grand-Duke
+ Franz, to clear those Frankfurt Countries for the KAISERWAHL and him.
+ Prince Conti lies there, with his famous "Middle-Rhine Army" (D'Ahremberg,
+ from the western parts, not nearly so diligent upon him as one could
+ wish); and must, at all rates, be cleared away. Traun, taking command of
+ Bathyani's Army (now that it has finished the Bavarian job), is preparing
+ to push down upon Conti, while Bathyani (who is to supersede the laggard
+ D'Ahremberg) shall push vigorously up;&mdash;and before summer is over, we
+ shall hear of Traun again, and Conti will have heard!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's indignation, on learning that the Saxons were actually on
+ march, and gradually that they intended to invade him, was great; and the
+ whole matter is portentously enigmatic to him, as he lies vigilant in
+ Neisse Valley, waiting on the When and the How. Indignation;&mdash;and yet
+ there is need of caution withal. To be ready for events, the Old Dessauer
+ has, as one sure measure, been requested to take charge, once more, of a
+ "Camp of Observation" on the Saxon Frontier (as of old, in 1741); and has
+ given his consent: ["April 25th" consents (Orlich, ii. 130).] "Camp of
+ Magdeburg," "Camp of Dieskau;" for it had various names and figures;
+ checkings of your hand, then layings of it on, heavier, lighter and again
+ heavier, according to one's various READINGS of the Saxon Mystery; and we
+ shall hear enough about it, intermittently, till December coming: when it
+ ended in a way we shall not forget!&mdash;On which take this Note:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Camp of Observation was to have begun May 1st; did begin somewhat
+ later, 'near Magdeburg,' not too close on the Frontier, nor in too
+ alarming strength; was reinforced to about 30,000; in which state [middle
+ of August] it stept forward to Wieskau, then to Dieskau, close on the
+ Saxon Border; and became,&mdash;with a Saxon Camp lying close opposite,
+ and War formally threatened, or almost declared, on Saxony by Friedrich,&mdash;an
+ alarmingly serious matter. Friedrich, however, again checked his hand; and
+ did not consummate till November-December. But did then consummate;
+ greatly against his will; and in a way flamingly visible to all men!"
+ [Orlich, ii. 130, 209, 210: <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i> ii. 1224-1226; i.
+ 1117.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's own incidental utterances (what more we have of Fractions from
+ the Podewils Letters), in such portentous aspect of affairs, may now be
+ worth giving. It is not now to Jordan that he writes, gayly unbosoming
+ himself, as in the First War,&mdash;poor Jordan lies languishing, these
+ many months; consumptive, too evidently dying:&mdash;Not to Jordan, this
+ time; nor is the theme "GLOIRE" now, but a far different!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH TO PODEWILS (as before, April-May, 1745).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ April 20th or so, Orders are come to Berlin (orders, to Podewils's horror
+ at such a thought), Whitherward, should Berlin be assaulted, the Official
+ Boards, the Preciosities and household gods are to betake themselves:&mdash;to
+ Magdeburg, all these, which is an impregnable place; to Stettin, the Two
+ Queens and Royal Family, if they like it better. Podewils in horror, "hair
+ standing on end," writes thereupon to Eichel, That he hopes the
+ management, "in a certain contingency," will be given to Minister Boden;
+ he Podewils, with his hair in that posture, being quite unequal to it.
+ Friedrich answers:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "APRIL 26th.... 'I can understand how you are getting uneasy, you
+ Berliners. I have the most to lose of you all; but I am quiet, and
+ prepared for events. If the Saxons take part,' as they surely will, 'in
+ the Invasion of Silesia, and we beat them, I am determined to plunge into
+ Saxony. For great maladies, there need great remedies. Either I will
+ maintain my all, or else lose my all. [Hear it, friend; and understand it,&mdash;with
+ hair lying flat!] It is true, the disaffection of the Russian Court, on
+ such trifling grounds, was not to be expected; and great misfortune can
+ befall us. Well; a year or two sooner, a year or two later,&mdash;it is
+ not worth one's while to bother about the very worst. If things take the
+ better turn, our condition will be surer and firmer than it was before. If
+ we have nothing to reproach ourselves with, neither need we fret and
+ plague ourselves about bad events, which can happen to any man.'&mdash;'I
+ am causing despatch a secret Order for Boden [on YOU know what], which you
+ will not deliver him till I give sign.'"&mdash;On hearing of the Peace of
+ Fussen, perhaps a day or so later, Friedrich again writes:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "APRIL [no distinct date; Neisse still? QUITS Neisse, April 28th]. ...
+ Peace of Fussen, Bavaria turned against me? 'I can say nothing to it,&mdash;except,
+ There has come what had to come. To me remains only to possess myself in
+ patience. If all alliances, resources, and negotiations fail, and all
+ conjunctures go against me, I prefer to perish with honor, rather than
+ lead an inglorious life deprived of all dignity. My ambition whispers me
+ that I have done more than another to the building up of my House, and
+ have played a distinguished part among the crowned heads of Europe. To
+ maintain myself there, has become as it were a personal duty; which I will
+ fulfil at the expense of my happiness and my life. I have no choice left:
+ I will maintain my power, or it may go to ruin, and the Prussian name be
+ buried under it. If the enemy attempt anything upon us, we will either
+ beat him, or we will all be hewed to pieces, for the sake of our Country,
+ and the renown of Brandenburg. No other counsel can I listen to.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SAME LETTER, OR ANOTHER? (Herr Ranke having his caprices!)... "You are a
+ good man, my Podewils, and do what can be expected of you" (Podewils has
+ been apologizing for his terrors; and referring hopefully "to
+ Providence"): "Perform faithfully the given work on your side, as I on
+ mine; for the rest, let what you call 'Providence' decide as it likes [UNE
+ PROVIDENCE AVEUGLE? Ranke, who alone knows, gives "BLINDE VORSEHUNG." What
+ an utterance, on the part of this little Titan! Consider it as exceptional
+ with him, unusual, accidental to the hard moment, and perhaps not so
+ impious as it looks!]&mdash;Neither our prudence nor our courage shall be
+ liable to blame; but only circumstances that would not favor us....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I prepare myself for every event. Fortune may be kind or be unkind, it
+ shall neither dishearten me nor uplift me. If I am to perish, let it be
+ with honor, and sword in hand. What the issue is to be&mdash;Well, what
+ pleases Heaven, or the Other Party (J'AI JETE LE BONNET PAR DESSUS LES
+ MOULINS)! Adieu, my dear Podewils; become as good a philosopher as you are
+ a politician; and learn from a man who does not go to Elsner's Preaching
+ [fashionable at the time], that one must oppose to ill fortune a brow of
+ iron; and, during this life, renounce all happiness, all acquisitions,
+ possessions and lying shows, none of which will follow us beyond the
+ grave." [Ranke, iii. pp. 238-241.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By what points the Austrian-Saxon Armament will come through upon us?
+ Together will it be, or separately? Saxons from the Lausitz, Austrians
+ from Bohmen, enclosing us between two fires?"&mdash;were enigmatic
+ questions with Friedrich; and the Saxons especially are an enigma. But
+ that come they will, that these Pandours are their preliminary
+ veiling-apparatus as usual, is evident to him; and that he must not spend
+ himself upon Pandours; but coalesce, and lie ready for the main wrestle.
+ So that from April 28th, as above noticed, Friedrich has gone into
+ cantonments, some way up the Neisse Valley, westward of Neisse Town; and
+ is calling in his outposts, his detachments; emptying his Frontier
+ Magazines;&mdash;abandoning his Upper-Silesian Frontier more and more, and
+ in the end altogether, to the Pandour hordes; a small matter they,
+ compared to the grand Invasion which is coming on. Here, with shiftings up
+ the Neisse Valley, he lies till the end of May; watching Argus-like, and
+ scanning with every faculty the Austrian-Saxon motions and intentions,
+ until at length they become clear to him, and we shall see how he deals
+ with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His own lodging, or head-quarter, most of this time (4th May-27th May), is
+ in the pleasant Abbey of Camenz (mythic scene of that BAUMGARTEN-SKIRMISH
+ business, in the First Silesian War). He has excellent Tobias Stusche for
+ company in leisure hours; and the outlook of bright Spring all round him,
+ flowering into gorgeous Summer, as he hurries about on his many occasions,
+ not of an idyllic nature. [Orlich, ii. 139; Ranke, iii. 242-249.] But his
+ Army is getting into excellent completeness of number, health, equipment,
+ and altogether such a spirit as he could wish. May 22d, here is another
+ snatch from some Note to Podewils, from this balmy Locality, potential
+ with such explosions of another kind. CAMENZ, MAY 22d.... "The Enemies are
+ making movements; but nothing like enough as yet for our guessing their
+ designs. Till we see, therefore, the thunder lies quiet in us (LA FOUDRE
+ REPOSE EN MES MAINS). Ah, could we but have a Day like that May Eleventh!"
+ [Ranke, iii. 248 n.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What "that May Eleventh" is or was? Readers are curious to know;
+ especially English readers, who guess FONTENOY. And Historic Art, if she
+ were strict, would decline to inform them at any length; for really the
+ thing is no better than a "Victory on the Scamander, and a Siege of Pekin"
+ (as a certain observer did afterwards define it), in reference to the
+ matter now on hand! Well, Pharsalia, Arbela, the Scamander, Armageddon,
+ and so many Battles and Victories being luminous, by study, to cultivated
+ Englishmen, and one's own Fontenoy such a mystery and riddle,&mdash;Art,
+ after consideration, reluctantly consents to be indulgent; will produce
+ from her Paper Imbroglios a slight Piece on the subject, and print instead
+ of burning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VIII.&mdash;THE MARTIAL BOY AND HIS ENGLISH versus THE LAWS OF
+ NATURE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Glorious Campaign in the Netherlands, Siege of Tournay, final ruin of the
+ Dutch Barrier!" this is the French program for Season 1745,&mdash;no
+ Belleisle to contradict it; Belleisle secure at Windsor, who might have
+ leant more towards German enterprises. And to this his Britannic Majesty
+ (small gain to him from that adroitness in the Harz, last winter!) has to
+ make front. And is strenuously doing so, by all methods; especially by
+ heroic expenditure of money, and ditto exposure of his Martial Boy. Poor
+ old Wade, last year,&mdash;perhaps Wade did suffer, as he alleged, from
+ "want of sufficient authority in that mixed Army"? Well, here is a Prince
+ of the Blood, Royal Highness of Cumberland, to command in chief. With a
+ Konigseck to dry-nurse him, may not Royal Highness, luck favoring, do very
+ well? Luck did not favor; Britannic Majesty, neither in the Netherlands
+ over seas, nor at home (strange new domestic wool, of a tarry HIGHLAND
+ nature, being thrown him to card, on the sudden!), made a good Campaign,
+ but a bad. And again a bad (1746) and again (1747), ever again, till he
+ pleased to cease altogether. Of which distressing objects we propose that
+ the following one glimpse be our last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BATTLE OF FONTENOY (11th May, 1745).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ... "In the end of April, Marechal de Saxe, now become very famous for his
+ sieges in the Netherlands, opened trenches before Tournay; King Louis,
+ with his Dauphin, not to speak of mistresses, play-actors and cookery
+ apparatus (in wagons innumerable), hastens to be there. A fighting Army,
+ say of 70,000, besides the garrisons; and great things, it is expected,
+ will be done; Tournay, in spite of strong works and Dutch garrison of
+ 9,000, to be taken in the first place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of the Siege, which was difficult and ardent, we will remember nothing,
+ except the mischance that befell a certain 'Marquis de Talleyrand' and his
+ men, in the trenches, one night. Night of the 8th-9th May, by carelessness
+ of somebody, a spark got into the Marquis's powder, two powder-barrels
+ that there were; and, with horrible crash, sent eighty men, Marquis
+ Talleyrand and Engineer Du Mazis among them, aloft into the other world;
+ raining down their limbs into the covered way, where the Dutch were very
+ inhuman to them, and provoked us to retaliate. [Espagnac, ii. 27.] Du
+ Mazis I do not know; but Marquis de Talleyrand turns out, on study of the
+ French Peerages, to be Uncle of a lame little Boy, who became Right
+ Reverend Tallyrand under singular conditions, and has made the name very
+ current in after-times!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hearing of this Siege, the Duke of Cumberland hastened over from England,
+ with intent to raise the same. Mustered his 'Allied Army' (once called
+ 'Pragmatic'),&mdash;self at the head of it; old Count Konigseck, who was
+ NOT burnt at Chotusitz, commanding the small Austrian quota [Austrians
+ mainly are gone laggarding with D'Ahremberg up the Rhine]; and a Prince of
+ Waldeck the Dutch,&mdash;on the plain of Anderlecht near Brussels, May
+ 4th; [Anonymous, <i>Life of Cumberland,</i> p. 180; Espagnac, ii. 26.] and
+ found all things tolerably complete. Upon which, straightway, his Royal
+ Highness, 60,000 strong let us say, set forth; by slowish marches, and a
+ route somewhat leftward of the great Tournay Road [no place on it, except
+ perhaps STEENKERKE, ever heard of by an English reader]; and on Sunday,
+ 9th May, [Espagnac, ii. 27.] precisely on the morrow after poor Talleyrand
+ had gone aloft, reached certain final Villages: Vezon, Maubray, where he
+ encamps, Briffoeil to rear; Camp looking towards Tournay and the setting
+ sun,&mdash;with Fontenoy short way ahead, and Antoine to left of it, and
+ Barry with its Woods to right:&mdash;small peaceable Villages, which
+ become famous in the Newspapers shortly after. [Patch of Map at p. 440.]
+ Royal Highness, resting here at Vezon, is but some six or seven miles from
+ Tournay; in low undulating Country, woody here and there, not without
+ threads of running water, and with frequent Villages and their adjuncts:
+ the part of it now interesting to us lies all between the Brussels-Tournay
+ Road and the Scheld River,&mdash;all in immediate front of his Royal
+ Highness,&mdash;to southeastward from beleaguered Tournay, where said Road
+ and River intersect. How shall he make some impression on the Siege of
+ Tournay? That is now the question; and his Royal Highness struggles to
+ manoeuvre accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Marechal de Saxe, whose habit is much that of vigilance, forethought,
+ sagacious precaution, singular in so dissolute a man, has neglected
+ nothing on this occasion. He knows every foot of the ground, having sieged
+ here, in his boyhood, once before. Leaving the siege-trenches at Tournay,
+ under charge of a ten or fifteen thousand, he has taken camp here; still
+ with superior force (56,000 as they count, Royal Highness being only
+ 50,000 ranked), barring Royal Highness's way. Tournay, or at least the
+ Marechal's trenches there, are on the right bank of the Scheld; which
+ flows from southeast, securing all on that hand. The broad Brussels
+ Highway comes in to him from the east;&mdash;north of that he has nothing
+ to fear, the ground being cut with bogs; no getting through upon him, that
+ way, to Tournay and what he calls the 'Under Scheld.' The 'Upper Scheld'
+ too, avail them nothing. There is only that triangle to the southeast,
+ between Road and River, where the Enemy is now manoeuvring in front of
+ him, from which damage can well come; and he has done his best to be
+ secure there. Four villages or hamlets, close to the Scheld and onwards to
+ the Great Road,&mdash;Antoine, Fontenoy, Barry, Ramecroix, with their
+ lanes and boscages,&mdash;make a kind of circular base to his triangle;
+ base of some six or eight miles; with hollows in it, brooks, and northward
+ a considerable Wood [BOIS DE BARRY, enveloping Barry and Ramecroix, which
+ do not prove of much interest to us, though the BOIS does of a good deal].
+ In and before each of those villages are posts and defences; in Antoine
+ and Fontenoy elaborate redoubts, batteries, redans connecting: in the Wood
+ (BOIS DE BARRY), an abattis, or wall of felled trees, as well as cannon;
+ and at the point of the Wood, well within double range of Fontenoy, is a
+ Redoubt, called of Eu (REDOUTE D'EU, from the regiment occupying it),
+ which will much concern his Royal Highness and us. Saxe has a hundred
+ pieces of cannon [say the English, which is correct], consummately
+ disposed along this space; no ingress possible anywhere, except through
+ the cannon's throat; torrents of fire and cross-fire playing on you. He is
+ armed to the teeth, as they say; and has his 56,000 arranged according to
+ the best rules of tactics, behind this murderous line of works. If his
+ Royal Highness think of breaking in, he may count on a very warm reception
+ indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Saxe is only afraid his Royal Highness will not. Outside of these lines,
+ with a 50,000 dashing fiercely round us, under any kind of leading;
+ pouncing on our convoys; harassing and sieging US,&mdash;our siege of
+ Toumay were a sad outlook. And this is old Austrian Konigseck's opinion,
+ too; though, they say, Waldeck and the Dutch (impetuous in theory at
+ least) opined otherwise, and strengthened Royal Highness's view. Two young
+ men against one old: 'Be it so, then!' His Royal Highness, resolute for
+ getting in, manoeuvres and investigates, all Monday 10th; his cannon is
+ not to arrive completely till night; otherwise he would be for breaking in
+ at once: a fearless young man, fearless as ever his poor Father was;
+ certainly a man SANS PEUY, this one too; whether of much AVIS, we shall
+ see anon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tuesday morning early, 11th May, 1745, cannon being up, and dispositions
+ made, his Royal Highness sallies out; sees his men taking their ground:
+ Dutch and Austrians to the left, chiefly opposite Antoine; English, with
+ some Hanoverians, in the centre and to the right; infantry in front,
+ facing Fontenoy, cavalry to rear flanking the Wood of Barry,&mdash;Konigseck,
+ Ligonier and others able, assisting to plant them advantageously; cannon
+ going, on both sides, the while; radiant enthusiasm, SANS PEUR ET SANS
+ AVIS, looking from his Royal Highness's face. He has been on horseback
+ since two in the morning; cannon started thundering between five and six,&mdash;has
+ killed chivalrous Grammont over yonder (the Grammont of Dettingen), almost
+ at the first volley. And now about the time when ploughers breakfast
+ (eight A.M., no ploughing hereabouts to-day!), begins the attack,
+ simultaneously or in swift succession, on the various batteries which it
+ will be necessary to attack and storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The attacks took place; but none of them succeeded. Dutch and Austrians,
+ on the extreme left, were to have stormed Antoine by the edge of the
+ River; that was their main task; right skirt of them to help US meanwhile
+ with Fontenoy. And they advanced, accordingly; but found the shot from
+ Antoine too fierce: especially when a subsidiary battery opened from
+ across the River, and took them in flank, the Dutch and Austrians felt
+ astonished; and hastily drew aside, under some sheltering mound or
+ earthwork they had found for themselves, or prudently thrown up the night
+ before. There, under their earthwork, stood the Dutch and Austrians;
+ patiently expecting a fitter time,&mdash;which indeed never occurred; for
+ always, the instant they drew out, the batteries from Antoine, and from
+ across the River, instantly opened upon them, and they had to draw in
+ again. So that they stood there, in a manner, all day; and so to speak did
+ nothing but patiently expect when it should be time to run. For which they
+ were loudly censured, and deservedly. Antoine is and remains a total
+ failure on the part of the Dutch and Austrians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Royal Highness in person, with his English, was to attack Fontenoy;&mdash;and
+ is doing so, by battery and storm, at various points; with emphasis,
+ though without result. As preliminary, at an early stage he had sent
+ forward on the right, by the Wood of Barry, a Brigadier Ingoldsby 'with
+ Semple's Highlanders' and other force, to silence 'that redoubt yonder at
+ the point of the Wood,'&mdash;redoubt, fort, or whatever it be (famous
+ REDOUTE D'EU, as it turned out!),&mdash;which guards Fontenoy to north,
+ and will take us in flank, nay in rear, as we storm the cannon of the
+ Village. Ingoldsby, speed imperative on him, pushed into the Wood; found
+ French light-troops ('God knows how many of them!') prowling about there;
+ found the Redoubt a terribly strong thing, with ditch, drawbridge, what
+ not; spent thirty or forty of his Highlanders, in some frantic attempt on
+ it by rule of thumb;&mdash;and found 'He would need artillery' and other
+ things. In short, Ingoldsby, hasten what he might, could not perfect the
+ preparations to his mind, had to wait for this and for that; and did not
+ storm the Redoubt d'Eu at all; but hung fire, in an unaccountable manner.
+ For which he had to answer (to Court-Martial, still more to the
+ Newspapers) afterwards; and prove that it was misfortune merely, or
+ misfortune and stupidity combined. Too evident, the REDOUTE D'EU was not
+ taken, then or thenceforth; which might have proved the saving of the
+ whole affair, could Ingoldsby have managed it. Royal Highness attacked
+ Fontenoy, and re-attacked, furiously, thrice over; and had to desist, and
+ find Fontenoy impossible on those terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is a piece of work. Repulsed at all those points; and on the left
+ and on the right, no spirit visible but what deserves repulse! His Royal
+ Highness blazes into resplendent PLATT-DEUTSCH rage, what we may call
+ spiritual white-heat, a man SANS PEUR at any rate, and pretty much SANS
+ AVIS; decides that he must and will be through those lines, if it please
+ God; that he will not be repulsed at his part of the attack, not he for
+ one; but will plunge through, by what gap there is [900 yards Voltaire
+ measures it (<i>OEuvres,</i> xxviii. 150 (SIECLE DE LOUIS QUINZE, c. xv.
+ "BATAILLE DE FONTENOI,"&mdash;elaborately exact on all such points).)]
+ between Fontenoy and that Redoubt with its laggard Ingoldsby; and see what
+ the French interior is like! He rallies rapidly, rearranges; forms himself
+ in thin column or columns [three of them, I think,&mdash;which gradually
+ got crushed into one, as they advanced, under cannon-shot on both hands),&mdash;wheeling
+ his left round, to be rear, his right to be head of said column or
+ columns. In column, the cannon-shot from Fontenoy on the left, and Redoubt
+ d'Eu on our right, will tell less on us; and between these two
+ death-dealing localities, by the hollowest, least shelterless way
+ discoverable, we mean to penetrate: (Forward, my men, steady and swift,
+ till we are through the shot-range, and find men to grapple with, instead
+ of case-shot and projectile iron!' Marechal de Saxe owned afterwards, 'He
+ should have put an additional redoubt in that place, but he did not think
+ any Army would try such a thing' (cannon batteries playing on each hand at
+ 400 yards distance);&mdash;nor has any Army since or before!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These columns advance, however; through bushy hollows, water-courses,
+ through what defiles or hollowest grounds there are; endure the
+ cannon-shot, while they must; trailing their own heavy guns by hand, and
+ occasionally blasting out of them where the ground favors;&mdash;and do,
+ with indignant patience, wind themselves through, pretty much beyond
+ direct shot-range of either d'Eu or Fontenoy. And have actually got into
+ the interior mystery of the French Line of Battle,&mdash;which is not a
+ little astonished to see them there! It is over a kind of blunt ridge, or
+ rising ground, that they are coming: on the crown of this rising ground,
+ the French regiment fronting it (GARDES FRANCAISES as it chanced to be)
+ notices, with surprise, field-cannon pointed the wrong way; actual British
+ artillery unaccountably showing itself there. Regiment of GARDES rushes up
+ to seize said field-pieces: but, on the summit, perceives with amazement
+ that it cannot; that a heavy volley of musketry blazes into it (killing
+ sixty men); that it will have to rush back again, and report progress:
+ Huge British force, of unknown extent, is readjusting itself into column
+ there, and will be upon us on the instant. Here is news!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "News true enough. The head of the English column comes to sight, over the
+ rising ground, close by: their officers doff their hats, politely saluting
+ ours, who return the civility: was ever such politeness seen before? It is
+ a fact; and among the memorablest of this Battle. Nay a certain English
+ Officer of mark&mdash;Lord Charles Hay the name of him, valued surely in
+ the annals of the Hay and Tweeddale House&mdash;steps forward from the
+ ranks, as if wishing something. Towards whom [says the accurate Espagnac]
+ Marquis d'Auteroche, grenadier-lieutenant, with air of polite
+ interrogation, not knowing what he meant, made a step or two: 'Monsieur,'
+ said Lord Charles (LORD CHARLES-HAY), 'bid your people fire (FAITES TIRER
+ VOS GENS)!' 'NON, MONSIEUR, NOUS NE TIRONS JAMAIS LES PREMIERS (We never
+ fire first).' [Espagnac, ii. 60 (of the ORIGINAL, Toulouse, 1789); ii. 48
+ of the German Translation (Leipzig, 1774), our usual reference. Voltaire,
+ endlessly informed upon details this time, is equally express: "MILORD
+ CHARLES HAY, CAPITAINE AUX GARDES ANGLAISES, CRIA: 'MESSIEURS DES GARDES
+ FRANCAISES, TIREZ!' To which Count d'Auteroche with a loud voice answered"
+ &amp;c. (<i>OEuvres,</i> vol. xxviii. p. 155.) See also <i>Souvenirs du
+ Marquis de Valfons</i> (edited by a Grand-Nephew, Paris, 1860), p. 151;&mdash;a
+ poor, considerably noisy and unclean little Book; which proves
+ unexpectedly worth looking at, in regard to some of those poor Battles and
+ personages and occurrences: the Bohemian Belleisle-Broglio part, to my
+ regret, if to no other person's, has been omitted, as extinct, or
+ undecipherable by the Grand-Nephew.] After YOU, Sirs! Is not this a bit of
+ modern chivalry? A supreme politeness in that sniffing pococurante kind;
+ probably the highest point (or lowest) it ever went to. Which I have often
+ thought of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is almost pity to disturb an elegant Historical Passage of this kind,
+ circulating round the world, in some glory, for a century past: but there
+ has a small irrefragable Document come to me, which modifies it a good
+ deal, and reduces matters to the business form. Lord Charles Hay,
+ "Lieutenant-Colonel," practical Head, "of the First Regiment of
+ Foot-guards," wrote, about three weeks after (or dictated in sad spelling,
+ not himself able to write for wounds), a Letter to his Brother, of which
+ here is an Excerpt at first hand, with only the spelling altered:... "It
+ was our Regiment that attacked the French Guards: and when we came within
+ twenty or thirty paces of them, I advanced before our Regiment; drank to
+ them [to the French, from the pocket-pistol one carries on such
+ occasions], and told them that we were the English Guards, and hoped that
+ they would stand till we came quite up to them, and not swim the Scheld as
+ they did the Mayn at Dettingen [shameful THIRD-BRIDGE, not of wood, though
+ carpeted with blue cloth there]! Upon which I immediately turned about to
+ our own Regiment; speeched them, and made them huzza,"&mdash;I hope with a
+ will. "An Officer [d'Auteroche] came out of the ranks, and tried to make
+ his men huzza; however, there were not above three or four in their
+ Brigade that did." ["Ath, May ye 20th, o.s." (to John, Fourth Marquis of
+ Tweeddale, last "Secretary of State for Scotland," and a man of figure in
+ his day): Letter is at Yester House, East Lothian; Excerpt PENES ME.]...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very poor counter-huzza. And not the least whisper of that sublime "After
+ you, Sirs!" but rather, in confused form, of quite the reverse; Hay having
+ been himself fired into ("fire had begun on my left;" Hay totally ignorant
+ on which side first),&mdash;fired into, rather feebly, and wounded by
+ those D'Auteroche people, while he was still advancing with shouldered
+ arms;&mdash;upon which, and not till which, he did give it them: in
+ liberal dose; and quite blew them off the ground, for that day. From all
+ which, one has to infer, That the mutual salutation by hat was probably a
+ fact; that, for certain, there was some slight preliminary talk and
+ gesticulation, but in the Homeric style, by no means in the
+ Espagnac-French,&mdash;not chivalrous epigram at all, mere rough banter,
+ and what is called "chaffing;"&mdash;and in short, that the French
+ Mess-rooms (with their eloquent talent that way) had rounded off the thing
+ into the current epigrammatic redaction; the authentic business-form of it
+ being ruggedly what is now given. Let our Manuscript proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "D'Auteroche declining the first fire,"&mdash;or accepting it, if ever
+ offered, nobody can say,&mdash;"the three Guards Regiments, Lord Charles's
+ on the right, give it him hot and heavy, 'tremendous rolling fire;' so
+ that D'Auteroche, responding more or less, cannot stand it; but has at
+ once to rustle into discontinuity, he and his, and roll rapidly out of the
+ way. And the British Column advances, steadily, terribly, hurling back all
+ opposition from it; deeper and deeper into the interior mysteries of the
+ French Host; blasting its way with gunpowder;&mdash;in a magnificent
+ manner. A compact Column, slowly advancing,&mdash;apparently of some
+ 16,000 foot. Pauses, readjusts itself a little, when not meddled with;
+ when meddled with, has cannon, has rolling fire,&mdash;delivers from it,
+ in fact, on both hands such a torrent of deadly continuous fire as was
+ rarely seen before or since. 'FEU INFERNAL,' the French call it. The
+ French make vehement resistance. Battalions, squadrons, regiment after
+ regiment, charge madly on this terrible Column; but rush only on
+ destruction thereby. Regiment This storms in from the right, regiment That
+ from the left; have their colonels shot, 'lose the half of their people;'
+ and hastily draw back again, in a wrecked condition. The cavalry-horses
+ cannot stand such smoke and blazing; nor indeed, I think, can the
+ cavaliers. REGIMENT DU ROI rushing on, full gallop, to charge this Column,
+ got one volley from it [says Espagnac] which brought to the ground 460
+ men. Natural enough that horses take the bit between their teeth; likewise
+ that men take it, and career very madly in such circumstances!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAP Chap. VIII, Book 15, PAGE 440 GOES ABOUT HERE&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The terrible Column with slow inflexibility advances; cannon (now in
+ reversed position) from that Redoubt d'Eu ('Shame on you, Ingoldsby!'),
+ and irregular musketry from Fontenoy side, playing upon it; defeated
+ regiments making barriers of their dead men and firing there; Column
+ always closing its gapped ranks, and girdled with insupportable fire. It
+ ought to have taken Fontenoy and Redoubt d'Eu, say military men; it ought
+ to have done several things! It has now cut the French fairly in two;&mdash;and
+ Saxe, who is earnestly surveying it a hundred paces ahead, sends word,
+ conjuring the King to retire instantly,&mdash;across the Scheld, by
+ Calonne Bridge and the strong rear-guard there,&mdash;who, however, will
+ not. King and Dauphin, on horseback both, have stood 'at the Justice
+ (GALLOWS, in fact) of our Lady of the Woods,' not stirring much,
+ occasionally shifting to a windmill which is still higher,&mdash;ye
+ Heavens, with what intrepidity, all day!&mdash;'a good many country-folk
+ in trees close behind them.' Country-folk, I suppose, have by this time
+ seen enough, and are copiously making off: but the King will not, though
+ things do look dubious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In fact, the Battle hangs now upon a hair; the Battle is as good as lost,
+ thinks Marechal de Saxe. His battle-lines torn in two in that manner,
+ hovering in ragged clouds over the field, what hope is there in the
+ Battle? Fontenoy is firing blank, this some time; its cannon-balls done.
+ Officers, in Antoine, are about withdrawing the artillery,&mdash;then
+ again (on new order) replacing it awhile. All are looking towards the
+ Scheld Bridge; earnestly entreating his Majesty to withdraw. Had the
+ Dutch, at this point of time, broken heartily in, as Waldeck was urging
+ them to do, upon the redoubts of Antoine; or had his Royal Highness the
+ Duke, for his own behoof, possessed due cavalry or artillery to act upon
+ these ragged clouds, which hang broken there, very fit for being swept,
+ were there an artillery-and-horse besom to do it,&mdash;in either of these
+ cases the Battle was the Duke's. And a right fiery victory it would have
+ been; to make his name famous; and confirm the English in their mad method
+ of fighting, like Baresarks or Janizaries rather than strategic human
+ creatures. [See, in Busching's <i>Magazin,</i> xvi. 169 ("Your illustrious
+ 'Column,' at Fontenoy? It was fortuitous, I say; done like janizaries;"
+ and so forth), a Criticism worth reading by soldiers.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But neither of these contingencies had befallen. The Dutch-Austrian wing
+ did evince some wish to get possession of Antoine; and drew out a little;
+ but the guns also awoke upon them; whereupon the Dutch-Austrians drew in
+ again, thinking the time not come. As for the Duke, he had taken with him
+ of cannon a good few; but of horse none at all (impossible for horse,
+ unless Fontenoy and the Redoubt d'Eu were ours!)&mdash;and his horse have
+ been hanging about, in the Wood of Barry all this while, uncertain what to
+ do; their old Commander being killed withal, and their new a dubitative
+ person, and no orders left. The Duke had left no orders; having indeed
+ broken in here, in what we called a spiritual white-heat, without asking
+ himself much what he would do when in: 'Beat the French, knock them to
+ powder if I can!'&mdash;Meanwhile the French clouds are reassembling a
+ little: Royal Highness too is readjusting himself, now got '300 yards
+ ahead of Fontenoy,'&mdash;pauses there about half an hour, not seeing his
+ way farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During which pause, Duc de Richelieu, famous blackguard man, gallops up
+ to the Marechal, gallops rapidly from Marechal to King; suggesting, 'were
+ cannon brought AHEAD of this close deep Column, might not they shear it
+ into beautiful destruction; and then a general charge be made?' So
+ counselled Richelieu: it is said, the Jacobite Irishman, Count Lally of
+ the Irish Brigade, was prime author of this notion,&mdash;a man of tragic
+ notoriety in time coming. ["Thomas Arthur Lally Comte de Tollendal,"
+ patronymically "O'MULALLY of TULLINDALLY" (a place somewhere in Connaught,
+ undiscoverable where, not material where): see our dropsical friend (in
+ one of his wheeziest states), <i>King James's Irish Army-List</i> (Dublin,
+ 1855), pp. 594-600.] Whoever was author of it, Marechal de Saxe adopts it
+ eagerly, King Louis eagerly: swift it becomes a fact. Universal rally,
+ universal simultaneous charge on both flanks of the terrible Column: this
+ it might resist, as it has done these two hours past; but cannon ahead,
+ shearing gaps through it from end to end, this is what no column can
+ resist;&mdash;and only perhaps one of Friedrich's columns (if even that)
+ with Friedrich's eye upon it, could make its half-right-about (QUART DE
+ CONVERSION), turn its side to it, and manoeuvre out of it, in such
+ circumstances. The wrathful English column, slit into ribbons, can do
+ nothing at manoeuvring; blazes and rages,&mdash;more and more clearly in
+ vain; collapses by degrees, rolls into ribbon-coils, and winds itself out
+ of the field. Not much chased,&mdash;its cavalry now seeing a job, and
+ issuing from the Wood of Barry to cover the retreat. Not much chased;&mdash;yet
+ with a loss, they say, in all, of 7,000 killed and wounded, and about
+ 2,000 prisoners; French loss being under 5,000.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Dutch and Austrians had found that the fit time was now come, or
+ taken time by the forelock,&mdash;their part of the loss, they said, was a
+ thousand and odd hundreds. The Battle ended about two o'clock of the day;
+ had begun about eight. Tuesday, 11th May, 1745: one of the hottest
+ half-day's works I have known. A thing much to be meditated by the English
+ mind.&mdash;King Louis stept down from the Gallows-Hill of Our Lady; and
+ KISSED Marechal de Saxe. Saxe was nearly dead of dropsy; could not sit on
+ horseback, except for minutes; was carried about in a wicker bed; has had
+ a lead bullet in his mouth, all day, to mitigate the intolerable thirst.
+ Tournay was soon taken; the Dutch garrison, though strong, and in a strong
+ place, making no due debate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Royal Highness retired upon Ath and Brussels; hovered about, nothing
+ daunted, he or his: 'Dastard fellows, they would not come out into the
+ open ground, and try us fairly!' snort indignantly the Gazetteers and
+ enlightened Public. [Old Newspapers.] Nothing daunted;&mdash;but, as it
+ were, did not do anything farther, this Campaign; except lose Gand, by
+ negligence VERSUS vigilance, and eat his victuals,&mdash;till called home
+ by the Rebellion Business, in an unexpected manner! Fontenoy was the
+ nearest approach he ever made to getting victory in a battle; but a miss
+ too, as they all were. He was nothing like so rash, on subsequent
+ occasions; but had no better luck; and was beaten in all his battles&mdash;except
+ the immortal Victory of Culloden alone. Which latter indeed, was it not
+ itself (in the Gazetteer mind) a kind of apotheosis, or lifting of a man
+ to the immortal gods,&mdash;by endless tar-barrels and beer, for the time
+ being?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Old Marechal de Noailles was in this Battle; busy about the redans, and
+ proud to see his Saxe do well. Chivalrous Grammont, too, as we saw, was
+ there,&mdash;-killed at the first discharge. Prince de Soubise too (not
+ killed); a certain Lord George Sackville (hurt slightly,&mdash;perhaps had
+ BETTER have been killed!)&mdash;and others known to us, or that will be
+ known. Army-Surgeon La Mettrie, of busy brain, expert with his tourniquets
+ and scalpels, but of wildly blusterous heterodox tongue and ways, is
+ thrice-busy in Hospital this night,&mdash;'English and French all one to
+ you, nay, if anything, the English better!' those are the Royal orders:&mdash;La
+ Mettrie will turn up, in new capacity, still blusterous, at Berlin, by and
+ by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The French made immense explosions of rejoicing over this Victory of
+ Fontenoy; Voltaire (now a man well at Court) celebrating it in prose and
+ verse, to an amazing degree (21,000 copies sold in one day); the whole
+ Nation blazing out over it into illuminations, arcs of triumph and
+ universal three-times-three:&mdash;in short, I think, nearly the heartiest
+ National Huzza, loud, deep, long-drawn, that the Nation ever gave in like
+ case. Now rather curious to consider, at this distance of time. Miraculous
+ Anecdotes, true and not true, are many. Not to mention again that
+ surprising offer of the first fire to us, what shall we say of the 'two
+ camp-sutlers whom I noticed,' English females of the lowest degree; 'one
+ of whom was busy slitting the gold-lace from a dead Officer, when a
+ cannon-ball came whistling, and shore her head away. Upon which, without
+ sound uttered, her neighbor snatched the scissors, and deliberately
+ proceeded.' [De Hordt, <i>Memoires,</i> i. 108. A FRENCH OFFICER'S ACCOUNT
+ (translated in <i>Gentleman's Magazine,</i> 1745; where, pp. 246, 250,
+ 291, 313, &amp;c., are many confused details and speculations on this
+ subject).] A deliberate gloomy people;&mdash;unconquerable except by
+ French prowess, glory to that same!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Britannic Majesty is not successful this season; Highland Rebellions
+ rising on him, and much going awry. He is founding his National Debt, poor
+ Majesty; nothing else to speak of. His poor Army, fighting never so well
+ in Foreign quarrels,&mdash;and generally itself standing the brunt, with
+ the co-partners looking on till it is time to run (as at Roucoux again
+ next season, and at Lauffeld next),&mdash;can win nothing but hard knocks
+ and losses. And is defined by mankind,&mdash;in phraseology which we have
+ heard again since then!&mdash;as having "the heart of a Lion and the head
+ of an Ass." [Old Pamphlets, SOEPIUS.] Portentous to contemplate!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cape Breton was besieged this Summer, in a creditable manner; and taken.
+ The one real stroke done upon France this Year, or indeed (except at sea)
+ throughout the War. "Ruin to their Fisheries, and a clear loss of
+ 1,400,000 pounds a year." Compared with which all these fine "Victories in
+ Flanders" are a bottle of moonshine. This was actually a kind of stroke;&mdash;and
+ this, one finds, was accomplished, under presidency of a small squadron of
+ King's ships, by ('New-England Volunteers," on funds raised by
+ subscription, in the way of joint-stock. A shining Colonial feat; said to
+ be very perfectly done, both scrip part of it, and fighting part;)
+ [Adelung, v. 32-35 ("27th June, 1745, after a siege of forty-nine days"):
+ see "Gibson, <i>Journal of the Siege;"</i> "Mr. Prince (of the South
+ Church, Boston), THANKSGIVING SERMON (price fourpence);" &amp;c. &amp;c.:
+ in the Old Newspapers, 1745, 1748, multifarious Notices about it, and then
+ about the "repayment" of those excellent "joint-stock" people.]&mdash;and
+ might have yielded, what incalculable dividends in the Fishery way! But
+ had to be given up again, in exchange for the Netherlands, when Peace
+ came. Alas, your Majesty! Would it be quite impossible, then, to go direct
+ upon your own sole errand, the JENKINS'S-EAR one, instead of stumbling
+ about among the Foreign chimney-pots, far and wide, under nightmares, in
+ this terrible manner?&mdash;Let us to Silesia again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IX.&mdash;THE AUSTRIAN-SAXON ARMY INVADES SILESIA, ACROSS THE
+ MOUNTAINS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Valori, who is to be of Friedrich's Campaign this Year, came posting off
+ directly in rear of the glorious news of Fontenoy; found Friedrich at
+ Camenz, rather in spirits than otherwise; and lodged pleasantly with Abbot
+ Tobias and him, till the Campaign should begin. Two things surprise
+ Valori: first, the great strength, impregnable as it were, to which Neisse
+ has been brought since he saw it last,&mdash;superlative condition of that
+ Fortress, and of the Army itself, as it gathers daily more and more about
+ Frankenstein here:&mdash;and then secondly, and contrariwise, the
+ strangely neglected posture of mountainous or Upper Silesia, given up to
+ Pandours. Quite submerged, in a manner: Margraf Karl lies quiet among them
+ at Jagerndorf, "eating his magazine;" General Hautcharmoi (Winterfeld's
+ late chief in that Wurben affair), with his small Detachment, still hovers
+ about in those Ratibor parts, "with the Strong Towns to fall-back upon,"
+ or has in effect fallen back accordingly; and nothing done to coerce the
+ Pandours at all. While Prince Karl and Weissenfels are daily coming on, in
+ force 100,000, their intention certain; force, say, about 100,000 regular!
+ Very singular to Valori.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sire, will not you dispute the Passes, then?" asks Valori, amazed: "Not
+ defend your Mountain rampart, then?" "MON CHER; the Mountain rampart is
+ three or four hundred miles long; there are twelve or twenty practicable
+ roads through it. One is kept in darkness, too; endless Pandour doggery
+ shutting out your daylight:&mdash;ill defending such a rampart," answers
+ Friedrich. "But how, then," persists Valori; "but&mdash;?" "One day the
+ King answered me," says Valori, "'MON AMI, if you want to get the mouse,
+ don't shut, the trap; leave the trap open (ON LAISSE LA SOURICIERE
+ OUVERTE)!'" Which was a beam of light to the inquiring thought of Valori,
+ a military man of some intelligence. [See VALORI, i. 222, 224, 228.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That, in fact, is Friedrich's purpose privately formed. He means that the
+ Austrians shall consider him cowed into nothing, as he understands they
+ already do; that they shall enter Silesia in the notion of chasing him;
+ and shall, if need be, have the pleasure of chasing him,&mdash;till
+ perhaps a right moment arrive. For he is full of silent finesse, this
+ young King; soon sees into his man, and can lead him strange dances on
+ occasion. In no man is there a plentifuler vein of cunning, nor of a finer
+ kind. Lynx-eyed perspicacity, inexhaustible contrivance, prompt ingenuity,&mdash;a
+ man very dangerous to play with at games of skill. And it is cunning
+ regulated always by a noble sense of honor, too; instinctively abhorrent
+ of attorneyism and the swindler element: a cunning, sharp as the vulpine,
+ yet always strictly human, which is rather beautiful to see. This is one
+ of Friedrich's marked endowments. Intellect sun-clear, wholly practical
+ (need not be specially deep), and entirely loyal to the fact before it;
+ this&mdash;if you add rapidity and energy, prompt weight of stroke, such
+ as was seldom met with&mdash;will render a man very dangerous to his
+ adversary in the game of war.&mdash;Here is the last of our Pandour
+ Adventures for the present:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From May 12th, Friedrich had been gathering closer and closer about
+ Frankenstein; by the end of the month (28th, as it proved) he intends that
+ all Detachments shall be home, and the Army take Camp there. The most are
+ home; Margraf Karl, at Jagerndorf, has not yet done eating his magazine;
+ but he too must come home. Summon the Margraf home:&mdash;it is not
+ doubted he will cut himself through, he and his 12,000; but such is the
+ swarm of Pandours hovering between him and us, no estafette, or cleverest
+ letter-bearer, can hope to get across to him. Ziethen with 500 Hussars, he
+ must take the Letter; there is no other way. Ziethen mounts; fares swiftly
+ forth, towards Neustadt, with his Letter; lodges in woods; dodges the
+ thick-crowding Tolpatcheries (passes himself off for a Tolpatchery, say
+ some, and captures Hungarian Staff-Officers who come to give him orders
+ [Frau van Blumenthal, <i>Life of De Ziethen,</i> pp. 171-181 (extremely
+ romantic; now given up as mythical, for most part): see Orlich (ii. 150);
+ but also Ranke (iii. 245), Preuss, &amp;c.]); is at length found out, and
+ furiously set upon, 'Ziethen, Hah!'&mdash;but gets to Jagerndorf, Margraf
+ Karl coming out to the rescue, and delivers his Letter. 'Home, then, all
+ of us to-morrow!' And so, Saturday, 22d May, before we get to Neustadt on
+ the way home, there is an authentic passage of arms, done very brilliantly
+ by Margraf Karl against Pandours and others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To right of us, to left, barring our road, the enemy, 20,000 of them,
+ stand ranked on heights, in chosen positions; cannon-batteries,
+ grenadiers, dragoons of Gotha and infinite Pandours: military jungle
+ bristling far and wide. And you must push it heartily, and likewise cut
+ the tap-root of it (seize its big guns), or it will not roll away. Margraf
+ Karl shoots forth his steady infantry ('Silent till you see the whites of
+ their eyes!'),&mdash;his cavalry with new manoeuvres; whose behavior is
+ worthy of Ziethen himself:&mdash;in brief, the jungle is struck as by a
+ whirlwind, the tap-root of it cut, and rolls simultaneously out of range,
+ leaving only the Regiment of Gotha, Regiment of Ogilvy and some Regulars,
+ who also get torn to shreds, and utterly ruined. Seeing which, the Pandour
+ jungle plunges wholly into the woods, uttering horrible cries (EN POUSSANT
+ DES CRIS TERRIBLES), says Friedrich. [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii.
+ 106. More specially BERICHTE VON DER AM 22 MAI, 1745 BEY NEUSTADT IN
+ OBER-SCHLESIEN VORGEFALLENER ACTION (Seyfarth, <i>Beylage,</i> i.
+ 159-166).] Our new cavalry-manoeuvres deserve praise. Margraf Karl had the
+ honor to gain his Cousin's approbation this day; and to prove himself,
+ says the Cousin, (worthy of the grandfather he came from,'&mdash;my own
+ great-grandfather; Great Elector, Friedrich-Wilhelm; whose style of motion
+ at Fehrbellin, or on the ice of the Frische Haf (soldiers all in sledges,
+ tearing along to be at the Swedes), was probably somewhat of this
+ kind."...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some days ago, Winterfeld had been pushed out to Landshut, with
+ Detachment of 2,000, to judge a little for himself which way the Austrians
+ were coming, and to scare off certain Uhlans (the SAXON species of
+ Tolpatchery), who were threatening to be mischievous thereabouts. The
+ Uhlans, at sound of Winterfeld, jingled away at once: but, in a day or
+ two, there came upon him, on the sudden, Pandour outburst in quite other
+ force;&mdash;and in the very hours while Ziethen was struggling into
+ Jagerndorf, and still more emphatically next day, while Margraf Karl was
+ handling his Pandours,&mdash;Colonel Winterfeld, a hundred miles to
+ westward lapped among the Mountains, chanced to be dealing again with the
+ same article. Very busy with it, from 4 o'clock this morning; likely to
+ give a good account of the job. Steadily defending Landshut and himself,
+ against the grenadier battalions, cannon and furious overplus of Pandours
+ (8,000 or 9,000, it is said, six to one or so in the article of cavalry),
+ which General Nadasti, a scientific leader of men or Pandours, skilfully
+ and furiously hurls upon Landshut and him, in an unexpected manner.
+ Colonel Winterfeld had need of all his heart and energy, in the intricate
+ ground; against the furious overplus well manoeuvred: but in him too there
+ are manoeuvres; if he fall back here, it is to rush on double strong
+ there; hour after hour he inexpugnably defends himself,&mdash;till General
+ Stille, Friedrich's old Tutor, our worthy writing friend, whom we
+ occasionally quote, comes up with help; and Nadasti is at once brushed
+ home again, with sore smart of failure, and 'the loss of 600 killed,'
+ among other items. [<i>Bericht von der am 21 Mai, 1745 bey Landshut
+ rorgefallener Action, in Feldzuge,</i> i. 302-305 (or in Seyfarth, <i>Beylage,</i>
+ i. 155-158); <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 105; Stille, pp. 120-124
+ (who misdates, "23d May" for 22d).] Colonel Winterfeld was made
+ Major-General next day, for this action. Colonel Winterfeld is cutting out
+ a high course for himself, by his conduct in these employments; solidity,
+ brilliant effectuality, shining through all he does; his valor and value,
+ his rapid just insight, fiery energy and nobleness of mind more and more
+ disclosing themselves,&mdash;to one who is a judge of men, and greatly
+ needs for his own use the first-rate quality in that article."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich has left the mouse-trap open;&mdash;and latterly has been
+ baiting it with a pleasant spicing of toasted cheese. One of his Spies,
+ reporting from Prince Karl's quarters, Friedrich has at this time
+ discovered to be a Double-Spy, reporting thither as well. Double-Spy,
+ there is an ugly fact;&mdash;perhaps not quite convenient to abolish it by
+ hemp and gibbet; perhaps it could be turned to use, as most facts can?
+ "Very good, my expert Herr von Schonfeld [that was the knave's name]; and
+ now of all things, whenever the Prince does get across,&mdash;instant word
+ to us of that! Nothing so important to us. If he should get BETWEEN us and
+ Breslau, for example, what would the consequence be!" To this purport
+ Friedrich instructs his Double-Spy; sends him off, unhanged, to Prince
+ Karl's Camp, to blab this fresh bit of knowledge. "We likewise," says
+ Friedrich, "ordered some repairs on the roads leading to Breslau;"&mdash;last
+ turn of the hand to our bit of toasted fragrancy. And Prince Karl is
+ actually striding forward, at an eager pace:&mdash;and Nadasti VERSUS
+ Winterfeld, the other day, could Winterfeld have guessed it, was the
+ actual vanguard of the march; and will be up again straightway! Whereupon
+ Winterfeld too is called home; and all eyes are bent on the Landshut side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl, under these fine omens, had been urgent on the Saxons to be
+ swift; Saxons under Weissenfels did at last "get their cannon up," and we
+ hear of them for certain, in junction with the Austrians, at Schatzlar, on
+ the Bohemian side of the Giant-Mountains; climbing with diligence those
+ wizard solitudes and highland wastes. In a word, they roll across into
+ Silesia, to Landshut (29th May); nothing doubting but Friedrich has
+ cowered into what retreats he has, as good as desperate of Silesia, and
+ will probably be first heard of in Breslau, when they get thither with
+ their sieging guns. No cautious sagacious old Feldmarschall Traun is in
+ that Host at present; nothing but a Prince Karl, and a poor Duke of
+ Weissenfels; who are too certain of several things;&mdash;very capable of
+ certainty, and also of doubt, the wrong way of the facts. Their force is,
+ by strict count, 75,000; and they march from Landshut, detained a little
+ by provender concerns, on the last day of May. [Orlich, ii. 146; Ranke,
+ iii. 247; Stenzel, iv. 245.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 28th, Friedrich had encamped at Frankenstein; May 30th, he sets forth
+ northwestward, to be nearer the new scene; encamps at Reichenbach, that
+ night; pushes forward again, next day, for Schweidnitz, for Striegau (in
+ all, a shift northwest of some forty miles);&mdash;and from June 1st, lies
+ stretched out between Schweidnitz and Striegau, nine miles long; well
+ hidden in the hollows of the little Rivers thereabouts (Schweidnitz Water,
+ Striegau Water), with their little knolls and hills; watching Prince
+ Karl's probable place of egress from the Mountain Country opposite. His
+ main Camp is from Schweidnitz to Jauernik, some five miles long; but he
+ has his vanguard up as far as Striegau, Dumoulin and Winterfeld as
+ vanguard, in good strength, a little way behind or westward of that Town
+ and Stream; Nassau and his Division are screened in the Wood called
+ Nonnenbusch (NUN'S BUSH), and there are outposts sprinkled all about, and
+ vedettes watching from the hill-tops, from the Stanowitz Foxhill; the
+ Zedlitz "Cowhill," "Winchill:" an Army not courting observation, but
+ intent very much to observe. Nadasti has appeared again; at Freyburg, few
+ miles off, on this side of the Mountains; goes out scouting,
+ reconnoitring; but is "fired at from the growing corn," and otherwise
+ hoodwinked by false symptoms, and makes little of that business.
+ Friedrich's Army we will compute at 70,000. [General-Lieutenant Freiherr
+ Leo von Lutzow, <i>Die Schlacht von Hohenfriedbeg</i> (Potsdam, 1845), pp.
+ 18, 21.] Not quite equal in number to Prince Karl's; and, in other
+ particulars, willing and longing that Prince Karl would arrive, and try
+ its quality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's head-quarter is at Jauernik: he goes daily riding hither,
+ thither; to the top of the Fuchsberg (FOXHILL at Stanowitz) with eager
+ spy-glass; daily many times looks with his spy-glass to the ragged peaks
+ about Bolkenhayn, Kauder, Rohnstock; expecting the throw of the dice from
+ that part. On Thursday, 3d June: Do you notice that cloud of dust rising
+ among the peaks over yonder? Dust-cloud mounting higher and higher. There
+ comes the big crisis, then! There are the combined Weissenfels and Karl
+ with their Austrian Saxons, issuing proudly from their stone labyrinth;
+ guns, equipments, baggages, all perfectly brought through; rich Silesian
+ plain country now fairly at their feet, Breslau itself but a few marches
+ off:&mdash;at sight of all which, the Austrian big host bursts forth into
+ universal field-music, and shakes out its banners to the wind. Thursday,
+ 3d June, 1745; a dramatic Entry of something quite considerable on the
+ Stage of History.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich, with Nassau and generals round, stands upon the Fuchsberg,&mdash;his
+ remarks not given, his looks or emotions not described to us, his thought
+ well known,&mdash;and looks at it through his TUBUS (or spy-glass): There
+ they are, then, and the big moment is come! Friedrich had seen the dust
+ and the manoeuvring of them, deeper in the Hills, from this same Fuchsberg
+ yesterday, and inferred what was coming; calculated by what roads or
+ hill-tracks they could issue: and how he, in each case, was to deal with
+ them; his march-routes are all settled, plank-bridges repaired, all
+ privately is ready for these proud Austrian musical gentlemen, here in the
+ hollow. Friedrich has been upon this Fuchsberg with his TUBUS daily, many
+ times since Monday last: it is our general observatorium, says Stille, and
+ commands a fine view into the interior of these Hills. A Fuchsberg which
+ has become notable in the Prussian maps: "the Stanowitz Fuchsberg," east
+ side of Striegau Water,&mdash;let no tourist mistake himself; for there
+ are two or even three other Fuchsbergs, a mile or so northward on the
+ western side of that Stream, which need to be distinguished by epithets,
+ as the Striegau Fuchsberg, the Graben Fuchsberg, and perhaps still others:
+ comparable to the FOUR Neisse rivers, three besides the one we know, which
+ occur in this piece of Country! Our German cousins, I have often sorrowed
+ to find, have practically a most poor talent for GIVING NAMES; and indeed
+ much, for ages back, is lying in a sad state of confusion among them. Many
+ confused things, rotting far and wide, in contradiction to the plainest
+ laws of Nature; things as well as names! All the welcomer this Prussian
+ Army, this young Friedrich leading it; they, beyond all earthly entities
+ of their epoch, are not in a state of confusion, but of most strict
+ conformity to the laws of Arithmetic and facts of Nature: perhaps a very
+ blessed phenomenon for Germany in the long-run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl with Weissenfels, General Berlichingen and many plumed
+ dignitaries, are dining on the Hill-top near Hohenfriedberg: after having
+ given order about everything, they witness there, over their wine, the
+ issue of their Columns from the Mountains; which goes on all afternoon,
+ with field-music, spread banners; and the oldest General admits he never
+ saw a finer review-manoeuvre, or one better done, if so well. Thus sit
+ they on the Hill-top (GALGENBERG, not far from the gallows of the place,
+ says Friedrich), in the beautiful June afternoon. Silesia lying
+ beautifully azure at their feet; the Zobtenberg, enchanted Mountain, blue
+ and high on one's eastern horizon; Prussians noticeable only in weak
+ hussar parties four or five miles off, which vanish in the hollow grounds
+ again. All intending for Breslau, they, it is like;&mdash;and here, red
+ wine and the excellent manoeuvre going on. "The Austrian-and-Saxon Army
+ streamed out all afternoon," says a Country Schoolmaster of those parts,
+ whose Day-book has been preserved, [In Lutzow, pp. 123-132.] "each
+ regiment or division taking the place appointed it; all afternoon, till
+ late in the night, submerging the Country as in a deluge," five miles long
+ of them; taking post at the foot of the Hills there, from Hohenfriedberg
+ round upon Striegau, looking towards the morrow's sunrise. To us poor
+ country-folk not a beautiful sight; their light troops flying ahead, and
+ doing theft and other mischief at a sad rate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the Austrian and Saxon gentlemen, from their
+ Gallows-Hill at Hohenfriedberg, notice, four or five miles in the
+ distance, opposite them, or a little to the left of opposite, a Body of
+ Prussian horse and foot, visibly wending northward; like a long glittering
+ serpent, the glitter of their muskets flashing back yonder on the
+ afternoon sun and us, as they mount from hollow to height. Ten or twelve
+ thousand of them; making for Striegau, to appearance. Intending to bivouac
+ or billet there, and keep some kind of watch over us; belike with an eye
+ to being rear-guard, on the retreat towards Breslau to-morrow? Or will
+ they retreat without attempting mischief? Serenity of Weissenfels engages
+ to seize the heights and proper posts, over yonder, this night yet; and
+ will take Striegau itself, the first thing, to-morrow morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, your Serenities, those are Prussians in movement: Vanguard Corps of
+ Dumoulin, Winterfeld;&mdash;Rittmeister Seydlitz rides yonder:&mdash;and
+ it is not their notion to retreat without mischief. For there stands, not
+ so far off, on the Stanowitz Fuchsberg, a brisk little Gentleman, if you
+ could notice him; with his eyes fixed on you, and plans in the head of him
+ now getting nearly mature. For certain, he is pushing out that column of
+ men; and all manner of other columns are getting order to push out, and
+ take their ground; and to-morrow morning&mdash;you will not find him in
+ retreat! Such are the phenomena in that Striegau-Hohenfriedberg region,
+ while the sun is bending westward, on Thursday, 3d June, 1745.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From Hohenfriedberg, which leans against the higher Mountains, there may
+ be, across to Striegau northeast, which stands well apart from them, among
+ lower Hills of its own, a distance of about five English miles. The
+ intervening country is of flat, though upland nature: the first broad
+ stage, or STAIR-STEP, so to speak, leading down into the general interior
+ levels of Silesia in those parts. A tract which is now tolerably dried by
+ draining, but was then marshy as well as bushy:&mdash;flat to the eye, yet
+ must be imperceptibly convexed a little, for the line of watershed is
+ hereabouts: walk from Hohenfriedberg to Striegau, the water on your left
+ hand flows, though mainly in ditches or imperceptible oozings, to the
+ north and west,&mdash;there to fall into an eastern fork of the Roaring
+ Neisse [one of our three new Neisses, which is a very quiet stream here;
+ runs close by the Mountain base, fed by many torrents, and must get its
+ name, WUTHENDE or Roaring, from the suddenness of its floods]: into this,
+ bound northward and westward, run or ooze all waters on your left hand, as
+ you go to Striegau. Right hand, again, or to eastward, you will find all
+ sauntering, or running in visible brooks into Striegau Water [little River
+ notable to us], which comes circling from the Mountains, past
+ Hohenfriedberg, farther south; and has got to some force as a stream
+ before it reaches Striegau, and turns abruptly eastward;&mdash;eastward,
+ to join Schweidnitz Water, and form with it the SECOND stair-step
+ downwards to the Plain Country. Has its Fuchsbergs, Kuhbergs and little
+ knolls and heights interspersed, on both sides of it, in the conceivable
+ way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So that, looking eastward from the heights of Hohenfriedberg, our broad
+ stage or stair-step has nothing of the nature of a valley, but rather is a
+ kind of insensibly swelling plain between two valleys, or hollows, of
+ small depth; and slopes both ways. Both ways; but MORE towards the
+ Striegau-Water valley or hollow; and thence, in a lazily undulating
+ manner, to other hollows and waters farther down. Friedrich's Camp lies in
+ the next, the Schweidnitz-Water hollow; and is five, or even nine miles
+ long, from Schweidnitz northward;&mdash;much hidden from the
+ Austrian-Saxon gentlemen at present. No hills farther, mere flat country,
+ to eastward of that. But to the north, again, about Striegau, the hollow
+ deepens, narrows; and certain Hills," much notable at present, "rise to
+ west of Striegau, definite peaked Hills, with granite quarries in them and
+ basalt blocks atop:&mdash;Striegau, it appears, is, in old Czech dialect,
+ TRZIZA, which means TRIPLE HILL, the 'Town of the Three Hills.' [Lutzow,
+ p. 28.] An ancient quaint little Town, of perhaps 2,000 souls: brown-gray,
+ the stones of it venerably weathered; has its wide big market-place,
+ piazza, plain-stones, silent enough except on market-days: nestles itself
+ compactly in the shelter of its Three Hills, which screen it from the
+ northwest; and has a picturesque appearance, its Hills and it, projected
+ against the big Mountain range beyond, as you approach it from the Plain
+ Country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hohenfriedberg, at the other corner of our battle-stage, on the road to
+ Landshut, is a Village of no great compass; but sticks pleasantly
+ together, does not straggle in the usual way; climbs steep against its
+ Gallows-Hill (now called 'SIEGESBERG, Victory Hill,' with some tower or
+ steeple-monument on it, built by subscription); and would look better, if
+ trimmed a little and habitually well swept. The higher Mountain summits,
+ Landshut way, or still more if you look southeastward, Glatz-ward, rise
+ blue and huge, remote on your right; to left, the Roaring Neisse range
+ close at hand, is also picturesque, though less Alpine in type."
+ [Tourist's Note (1858).]... And of all Hills, the notablest, just now to
+ us, are those "Three" at Striegau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those Three Hills of Striegau his Serenity of Weissenfels is to lay hold
+ of, this night, with his extreme left, were it once got deployed and
+ bivouacked. Those Hills, if he can: but Prussian Dumoulin is already on
+ march thither; and privately has his eye upon them, on Friedrich's part!&mdash;For
+ the rest, this upland platform, insensibly sloping two ways, and as yet
+ undrained, is of scraggy boggy nature in many places; much of it damp
+ ground, or sheer morass; better parts of it covered, at this season, with
+ rank June grass, or greener luxuriance of oats and barley. A humble
+ peaceable scene; peaceable till this afternoon; dotted, too, with six or
+ seven poor Hamlets, with scraggy woods, where they have their fuel; most
+ sleepy littery ploughman Hamlets, sometimes with a SCHLOSS or Mansion for
+ the owner of the soil (who has absconded in the present crisis of things),
+ their evening smoke rising rather fainter than usual; much cookery is not
+ advisable with Uhlans and Tolpatchcs flying about. Northward between
+ Striegau and the higher Mountains there is an extensive TEICHWIRTHSCHAFT,
+ or "Pond-Husbandry" (gleaming visible from Hohenfriedberg Gallows-Hill
+ just now); a combination of stagnant pools and carp-ponds, the ground much
+ occupied hereabouts with what they name Carp-Husbandry. Which is all
+ drained away in our time, yet traceable by the studious:&mdash;quaggy
+ congeries of sluices and fish-ponds, no road through them except on
+ intricate dams; have scrubby thickets about the border;&mdash;this also is
+ very strong ground, if Weissenfels thought of defence there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which Weissenfels does not, but only of attack. He occupies the ground
+ nevertheless, rearward of this Carp-Husbandry, as becomes a strategic man;
+ gradually bivouacking all round there, to end on the Three Hills, were his
+ last regiments got up. The Carp-Husbandry is mainly about Eisdorf Hamlet:&mdash;in
+ Pilgramshayn, where Weissenfels once thought of lodging, lives our Writing
+ Schoolmaster. The Mountains lie to westward; flinging longer shadows, as
+ the invasive troops continually deploy, in that beautiful manner; and coil
+ themselves strategically on the ground, a bent rope, cordon, or line
+ (THREE lines in depth), reaching from the front skirts of Hohenfriedberg
+ to the Hills at Striegau again,&mdash;terrible to behold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of Hohenfriedberg, we say, is the extremity or right wing of the
+ Austrian-Saxon bivouac, or will be when the process is complete; five
+ miles to northeast, sweeping round upon Striegau region, will be their
+ left, where mainly are the Saxons,&mdash;to nestle upon those Three Hills
+ of Striegau: whitherward however, Dumoulin, on Friedrich's behalf, is
+ already on march. Austrian-Saxon bivouac, as is the way in regulated
+ hosts, can at once become Austrian-Saxon order-of-battle: and then,
+ probably, on the Chord of that Arc of five miles, the big Fight will roll
+ to-morrow; Striegau one end of it, Hohenfriedbcrg the other. Flattish,
+ somewhat elliptic upland, stair-step from the Mountains, as we called it;
+ tract considerably cut with ditches, carp-husbandries, and their tufts of
+ wood; line from Striegau to Hohenfriedberg being axis or main diameter of
+ it, and in general the line of watershed: there, probably, will the tug of
+ war be. Friedrich, on his Fuchsberg, knows this; the Austrian-Saxon
+ gentlemen, over their wine on the Gallows-Hill, do not yet know it, but
+ will know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about four in the afternoon, when Valori, with a companion, waiting
+ a good while in the King's Tent at Jauernik, at last saw his Majesty
+ return from the Fuchsberg observatory. Valori and friend have great news:
+ "Tournay fallen; siege done, your Majesty!" Valori's friend is one De
+ Latour; who had brought word of Fontenoy ("important victory on the
+ Scamander," as Friedrich indignantly defined it to himself); and was bid
+ wait here till this Siege-of-Tournay consummation ("as helpful to me as
+ the Siege of Pekin!") should supervene. They hasten to salute his Majesty
+ with the glorious tidings, Hmph! thinks Friedrich: and we are at
+ death-grips here, little to be helped by your taking Pekin! However, he
+ lets wit of nothing. "I make my compliments; mean to fight to-morrow."
+ [Valori, i. 228.] Valori, as old soldier and friend, volunteers to be
+ there and assist:&mdash;Good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich, I presume, at this late hour of four, may bc snatching a morsel
+ of dinner; his orderlies are silently speeding, plans taken, orders given:
+ To start all, at eight in the evening, for the Bridge of Striegau; there
+ to cross, and spread to the right and to the left. Silent, not a word
+ spoken, not a pipe lighted: silently across the Striegau Water there. A
+ march of three miles for the nearest, who are here at Jauernik; of nine
+ miles for the farthest about Schweidnitz; at Schweidnitz leave all your
+ baggage, safe under the guns there. To the Bridge of Striegau, diligently,
+ silently march along; Bridge of Striegau, there cross Striegau Water, and
+ deploy to right and to left, in the way each of you knows. These are
+ Friedrich's orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late in the dusk, Dumoulin and Winterfeld, whom we saw silently on march
+ some hours ago, have silently glided past Striegau, and got into the
+ Three-Hill region, which is some furlong or so farther north:&mdash;to his
+ surprise, Dumoulin finds Saxon parties posting themselves thereabouts. He
+ attacks said Saxon parties; and after some slight tussle, drives them
+ mostly from their Three Hills; mostly, not altogether; one Saxon Hill is
+ precipitous on our hither side of it, and we must leave that till the dawn
+ break. Of the other Heights Dumoulin takes good possession, with cannon
+ too, to be ready against dawn;&mdash;and ranks himself out to leftward
+ withal, along the plain ground; for he is to be right wing, had the other
+ troops come up. These are now all under way; astir from Jauernik and
+ Schweidnitz, silently streaming along; and Dumoulin bivouacs here,&mdash;very
+ silent he: not so silent the Saxons; who are still marching in, over
+ yonder, to westward of Dumoulin, their rear-guard groping out its posts as
+ it best can in the dark. Elsewhere, miles and miles along the foot of the
+ Mountains, Austrian-Saxon watch-fires flame through the ambrosial night;
+ and it is an impressive sight for Dumoulin,&mdash;still more for the poor
+ Schoolmaster at Pilgramshayn and others, less concerned than Dumoulin. "It
+ was beautiful," says Stille, who was there, "to see how the plain about
+ Rohnstock, and all over that way, was ablaze with thousands of watch-fires
+ (TAUSEND UND ABER TAUSEND); by the light of these, we could clearly
+ perceive the enemy's troops continually defile from the Hills the whole
+ night through." [Cited in Seyfarth, i. 630.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Serenity of Weissenfels, after all, does not lodge at Pilgramshayn; far in
+ the night, he goes to sleep at Rohnstock, a Schloss and Hamlet on that
+ fork of Roaring Neisse, by the foot of the Mountains; three or four miles
+ off, yet handy enough for picking up Striegau the first thing to-morrow.
+ His Highness Prince Karl lies in Hausdorf, tolerable quarters, pretty much
+ in the centre of his long bivouac; day's business well done, and bottle
+ (as one's wont rather is) well enjoyed. Nadasti has been out scouting; but
+ was pricked into by hussar parties, fired into from the growing corn; and
+ could make out little, but the image of his own ideas. Nadasti's ultimate
+ report is, That the Prussians are perfectly quiet in their camp; from
+ Jauernik to Schweidnitz, watch-fires all alight, sentries going their
+ rounds. And so they are, in fact; sentries and watch-fires,&mdash;but now
+ nothing else there, a mere shell of a camp; the men of it streaming
+ steadily along, without speech, without tobacco; and many of them are
+ across Striegau Bridge by this time!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was past eleven, so close and continuous went this march, before Valori
+ and his Latour, with their carriages and furnitures, could find an
+ interval, and get well into it. Never will Valori forget the discipline of
+ these Prussians, and how they marched. Difficult ways; the hard road is
+ for their artillery; the men march on each side, sometimes to mid-leg in
+ water,&mdash;never mind. Wholly in order, wholly silent; Valori followed
+ them three leagues close, and there was not one straggler. Every private
+ man, much more every officer, knows well what grim errand they are on; and
+ they make no remarks. Steady as Time; and, except that their shoes are not
+ of felt, silent as he. The Austrian watch-fires glow silent manifold to
+ leftward yonder; silent overhead are the stars:&mdash;the path of all
+ duty, too, is silent (not about Striegau alone) for every well-drilled
+ man. To-morrow;&mdash;well, to-morrow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A grimmish feeling against the Saxons is understood to be prevalent among
+ these men. Bruhl, Weissenfels himself, have been reported talking high,&mdash;"Reduce
+ our King to the size of an Elector again," and other foolish things;&mdash;indeed,
+ grudges have been accumulating for some time. "KEIN PARDON (No quarter)!"
+ we hear has been a word among the Saxons, as they came along; the
+ Prussians growl to one another, "Very well then, None!" Nay Friedrich's
+ general order is, "No prisoners, you cavalry, in the heat of fight;
+ cavalry, strike at the faces of them: you infantry, keep your fire till
+ within fifty steps; bayonet withal is to be relied on." These were
+ Friedrich's last general orders, given in the hollow of the night, near
+ the foot of that Fuchsberg where he had been so busy all day; a widish
+ plain space hereabouts, Striegau Bridge now near: he had lain snme time in
+ his cloak, waiting till the chief generals, with the heads of their
+ columns, could rendezvous here. He then sprang on horseback; spoke briefly
+ the essential things (one of them the above);&mdash;"Had meant to be more
+ minute, in regard to positions and the like; but all is so in darkness,
+ embroiled by the flare of the Austrian watch-fires, we can make nothing
+ farther of localities at present: Striegau for right wing, left wing
+ opposite to Hohenfriedberg,&mdash;so, and Striegau Water well to rear of
+ us. Be diligent, exact, all faculties awake: your own sense, and the Order
+ of Battle which you know, must do the rest. Forward; steady: can I doubt
+ but you will acquit yourselves like Prussian men?" And so they march,
+ across the Bridge at Striegau, south outskirt of the Town,&mdash;plank
+ Bridge, I am afraid;&mdash;and pour themselves, to right and to left,
+ continually the livelong night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To describe the Battle which ensued, Battle named of Striegau or
+ Hohenfriedberg, excels the power of human talent,&mdash;if human talent
+ had leisure for such employment. It is the huge shock and clash of 70,000
+ against 70,000, placed in the way we said. An enormous furious SIMALTAS
+ (or "both-at-once," as the Latins phrase it), spreading over ten square
+ miles. Rather say, a wide congeries of electric simultaneities; all
+ ELECTRIC, playing madly into one another; most loud, most mad: the aspect
+ of which is smoky, thunderous, abstruse; the true SEQUENCES of which, who
+ shall unravel? There are five accounts of it, all modestly written, each
+ true-looking from its own place: and a thrice-diligent Prussian Officer,
+ stationed on the spot in late years, has striven well to harmonize them
+ all. [Five Accounts: 1. The Prussian Official Account, in <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ i. 1098-1102. 2. The Saxon, ib. 1103-1108. 3. The Austrian, ib. 1109-1115.
+ 4. Stille's (ii. 125-133, of English Translation). 5. Friedrich's own, <i>OEuvres,</i>
+ iii. 108-118. Lutzow, above cited, is the harmonizer. Besides which, two
+ of value, in <i>Feldzuge,</i> i. 310-323, 328-336; not to mention
+ Cogniazzo, <i>Confessions of an Austrian Veeran</i> (Breslau, 1788-1791:
+ strictly Anonymous at that time, and candid, or almost more, to Prussian
+ merit;&mdash;still worth reading, here and throughout), ii. 123-135; &amp;c.
+ &amp;c.] Well worth the study of military men;&mdash;who might make tours
+ towards this and the other great battle-field, and read such things, were
+ they wise. For us, a feature or two, in the huge general explosion, to
+ assist the reader's fancy in conceiving it a little, is all that can be
+ pretended to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter X.&mdash;BATTLE OF HOHENFRIEDBERG.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ With the first streak of dawn, the dispute renewed itself between those
+ Prussians and Saxons who are on the Heights of Striegau. The two Armies
+ are in contact here; they lie wide apart as yet at the other end.
+ Cannonading rises here, on both sides, in the dim gray of the morning, for
+ the possession of these Heights. The Saxons are out-cannonaded and
+ dislodged, other Saxons start to arms in support: the cry "To arms!"
+ spreads everywhere, rouses Weissenfels to horseback; and by sunrise a
+ furious storm of battle has begun, in this part. Hot and fierce on both
+ sides; charges of horse, shock after shock, bayonet-charges of foot; the
+ great guns going like Jove's thunder, and the continuous tearing storm of
+ small guns, very loud indeed: such a noise, as our poor Schoolmaster, who
+ lives on this spot, thinks he will hear only once again, when the Last
+ Trumpet sounds! It did indeed, he informs us, resemble the dissolution of
+ Nature: "For all fell dark too;" a general element of sulphurous
+ powder-smoke, streaked with dull blazes; and death and destruction very
+ nigh. What will become of poor pacific mortals hereabouts? Rittmeister
+ Seydlitz, Winterfeld his patron ride, with knit brows, in these
+ horse-charges; fiery Rothenburg too; Truchsess von Waldburg, at the head
+ of his Division,&mdash;poor Truchsess known in London society, a
+ cannon-ball smites the life out of him, and he ended here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first clash of horse and foot, the Saxons fancied they rather had
+ it; at the second, their horse became distressed; at the third, they
+ rolled into disorderly heaps. The foot also, stubborn as they were, could
+ not stand that swift firing, followed by the bayonet and the sabre; and
+ were forced to give ground. The morning sun shone into their eyes, too,
+ they say; and there had risen a breath of easterly wind, which hurled the
+ smoke upon them, so that they could not see. Decidedly staggering
+ backwards; getting to be taken in flank and ruined, though poor
+ Weissenfels does his best. About five in the morning, Friedrich came
+ galloping hitherward; Valori with him: "MON AMI, this is looking well!
+ This will do, won't it?" The Saxons are fast sinking in the scale; and did
+ nothing thenceforth but sink ever faster; though they made a stiff
+ defence, fierce exasperation on both sides; and disputed every inch. Their
+ position, in these scraggy Woods and Villages, in these Morasses and
+ Carp-Husbandries, is very strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had proved to be farther north, too, than was expected; so that the
+ Prussians had to wheel round a little (right wing as a centre, fighting
+ army as radius) before they could come parallel, and get to work: a
+ delicate manoeuvre, which they executed to Valori's admiration, here in
+ the storm of battle; tramp, tramp, velocity increasing from your centre
+ outwards, till at the end of the radius, the troops are at treble-quick,
+ fairly running forward, and the line straight all the while. Admirable to
+ Valori, in the hot whirlwind of battle here. For the great guns go, in
+ horrid salvos, unabated, and the crackling thunder of the small guns;
+ "terrible tussling about those Carp-ponds, that quaggy Carp-husbandry,"
+ says the Schoolmaster, "and the Heavens blotted out in sulphurous
+ fire-streaked smoke. What had become of us pacific? Some had run in time,
+ and they were the wisest; others had squatted, who could find a nook
+ suitable. Most of us had gathered into the Nursery-garden at the foot of
+ our Village; we sat quaking there,&mdash;our prayers grown tremulously
+ vocal;&mdash;in tears and wail, at least the women part. Enemies made
+ reconcilement with each other," says he, "and dear friends took farewell."
+ [His Narrative, in Lutzow, UBI SUPRA.] One general Alleleu; the Last Day,
+ to all appearance, having come. Friedrich, seeing things in this good
+ posture, gallops to the left again, where much urgently requires attention
+ from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Austrian side, Prince Karl, through his morning sleep at Hausdorf,
+ had heard the cannonading: "Saxons taking Striegau!" thinks he; a pleasant
+ lullaby enough; and continues to sleep and dream. Agitated messengers rush
+ in, at last; draw his curtains: "Prussians all in rank, this side Striegau
+ Water; Saxons beaten, or nearly so, at Striegau: we must stand to arms,
+ your Highness!"&mdash;"To arms, of course," answers Karl; and hurries now,
+ what he can, to get everything in motion. The bivouac itself had been in
+ order of battle; but naturally there is much to adjust, to put in trim;
+ and the Austrians are not distinguished for celerity of movement. All the
+ worse for them just now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Friedrich's side, so far as I can gather, there have happened two cross
+ accidents. First, by that wheeling movement, done to Valori's admiration
+ in the Striegau quarter, the Prussian line has hitched itself up towards
+ Striegau, has got curved inward, and covers less ground than was counted
+ on; so that there is like to be some gap in the central part of;&mdash;as
+ in fact there was, in spite of Friedrich's efforts, and hitchings of
+ battalions and squadrons: an indisputable gap, though it turned to rich
+ profit for Friedrich; Prince Karl paying no attention to it. Upon such
+ indisputable gap a wakeful enemy might have done Friedrich some perilous
+ freak; but Karl was in his bed, as we say;&mdash;in a terrible flurry,
+ too, when out of bed. Nothing was done upon the gap; and Friedrich had his
+ unexpected profit by it before long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second accident is almost worse. Striegau Bridge (of planks, as I
+ feared), creaking under such a heavy stream of feet and wheels all night,
+ did at last break, in some degree, and needed to be mended; so that the
+ rearward regiments, who are to form Friedrich's left wing, are in painful
+ retard;&mdash;and are becoming frightfully necessary, the Austrians as yet
+ far outflanking us, capable of taking us in flank with that right wing of
+ theirs! The moment was agitating to a General-in-chief: Valori will own
+ this young King's bearing was perfect; not the least flurry, though under
+ such a strain. He has aides-de-camp, dashing out every-whither with
+ orders, with expedients; Prince Henri, his younger Brother: galloping the
+ fastest; nay, at last, he begs Valori himself to gallop, with orders to a
+ certain General Gessler, in whose Brigade are Dragoons. Which Valori does,&mdash;happily
+ without effect on Gessler; who knows no Valori for an aide-de-camp, and
+ keeps the ground appointed him; rearward of that gap we talked of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Happily the Austrian right wing is in no haste to charge. Happily Ziethen,
+ blocked by that incumbrance of the Bridge mending, "finds a ford higher
+ up," the assiduous Ziethen; splashes across, other regiments following;
+ forms in line well leftward; and instead of waiting for the Austrian
+ charge, charges home upon them, fiercely through the difficult grounds, No
+ danger of the Austrians outflanking us now; they are themselves likely to
+ get hard measure on their flank. By the ford and by the Bridge, all
+ regiments, some of them at treble-quick, get to their posts still in time.
+ Accident second has passed without damage. Forward, then; rapid, steady;
+ and reserve your fire till within fifty paces!&mdash;Prinoe Ferdinand of
+ Brunswick (Friedrich's Brother-in-law, a bright-eyed steady young man, of
+ great heart for fight) tramps forth with his Division:&mdash;steady!&mdash;all
+ manner of Divisions tramp forth; and the hot storm, Ziethen and cavalry
+ dashing upon that right wing of theirs, kindles here also far and wide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Austrian cavalry on this wing and elsewhere, it is clear, were ill
+ off. "We could not charge the Prussian left wing, say they, partly because
+ of the morasses that lay between us; and partly [which is remarkable]
+ because they rushed across and charged us." [Austrian report, <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ i. 1113.] Prince Karl is sorry to report such things of his cavalry; but
+ their behavior was bad and not good. The first shock threw them wavering;
+ the second,&mdash;nothing would persuade them to dash forth and meet it.
+ High officers commanded, obtested, drew out pistols, Prince Karl himself
+ shot a fugitive or two,&mdash;it was to no purpose; they wavered worse at
+ every new shock; and at length a shock came (sixth it was, as the reporter
+ counts) which shook them all into the wind. Decidedly shy of the Prussians
+ with their new manoeuvres, and terrible way of coming on, as if sure of
+ beating. In the Saxon quarter, certain Austrian regiments of horse would
+ not charge at all; merely kept firing from their carbines, and when the
+ time came ran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the Saxons, they have been beaten these two hours; that is to say,
+ hopeless these two hours, and getting beaten worse and worse. The Saxons
+ cannot stand, but neither generally will they run; they dispute every
+ ditch, morass and tuft of wood, especially every village. Wrecks of the
+ muddy desperate business last, hour after hour. "I gave my men a little
+ rest under the garden walls," says one Saxon Gentleman, "or they would
+ have died, in the heat and thirst and extreme fatigue: I would have given
+ 100 gulden [10 pounds Sterling] for a glass of water." [ <i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ ubi supra.] The Prussians push them on, bayonet in back; inexorable, not
+ to be resisted; slit off whole battalions of them (prisoners now, and
+ quarter given); take all their guns, or all that are not sunk in the
+ quagmires;&mdash;in fine, drive them, part into the Mountains direct, part
+ by circuit thither, down upon the rear of the Austrian fight: through
+ Hausdorf, Seifersdorf and other Mountain gorges, where we hear no more of
+ them, and shall say no more of them. A sore stroke for poor old
+ Weissenfels; the last public one he has to take, in this world, for the
+ poor man died before long. Nobody's blame, he says; every Saxon man did
+ well; only some Austrian horse-regiments, that we had among us, were too
+ shy. Adieu to poor old Weissenfels. Luck of war, what else,&mdash;thereby
+ is he in this pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now new Prussian force, its Saxons being well abolished, is pressing
+ down upon Prince Karl's naked left flank. Yes;&mdash;Prince Karl too will
+ have to go. His cavalry is, for most part, shaken into ragged clouds;
+ infantry, steady enough men, cannot stand everything. "I have observed,"
+ says Friedrich, "if you step sharply up to an Austrian battalion [within
+ fifty paces or so], and pour in your fire well, in about a quarter of an
+ hour you see the ranks beginning to shake, and jumble towards
+ indistinctness;" [<i>Military Instructions.</i> ] a very hopeful symptom
+ to you!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this moment that Lieutenant-General Gessler, under whom is the
+ Dragoon regiment Baireuth, who had kept his place in spite of Valori's
+ message, determined on a thing,&mdash;advised to it by General Schmettau
+ (younger Schmettau), who was near. Gessler, as we saw, stood in the rear
+ line, behind that gap (most likely one of several gaps, or wide spaces,
+ left too wide, as we explained); Gessler, noticing the jumbly condition of
+ those Austrian battalions, heaped now one upon another in this part,&mdash;motions
+ to the Prussian Infantry to make what farther room is needful; then dashes
+ through, in two columns (self and the Dragoon-Colonel heading the one,
+ French Chasot, who is Lieutenant-Colonel, heading the other), sabre in
+ hand, with extraordinary impetus and fire, into the belly of these jumbly
+ Austrians; and slashes them to rags, "twenty battalions of them," in an
+ altogether unexampled manner. Takes "several thousand prisoners," and such
+ a haul of standards, kettle-drums and insignia of honor, as was never got
+ before at one charge. Sixty-seven standards by the tale, for the regiment
+ (by most All-Gracious Permission) wears, ever after, "67" upon its
+ cartridge-box, and is allowed to beat the grenadier march; [Orlich, ii.
+ 179 (173 n., 179 n., slightly wrong); <i>Militair-Lexikon,</i> ii. 9, iv.
+ 465, 468. See Preuss, i. 212; <i>OEuvres de Frederic;</i> &amp;c. &amp;c.]&mdash;how
+ many kettle-drums memory does not say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl beats retreat, about 8 in the morning; is through
+ Hohenfriedberg about 10 (cannon covering there, and Nadasti as
+ rear-guard): back into the Mountains; a thoroughly well-beaten man.
+ Towards Bolkenhayn, the Saxons and he; their heavy artillery and baggage
+ had been left safe there. Not much pursued, and gradually rearranging
+ himself; with thoughts,&mdash;no want of thoughts! Came pouring down,
+ triumphantly invasive, yesterday; returns, on these terms, in about
+ fifteen hours. Not marching with displayed banners and field-music, this
+ time; this is a far other march. The mouse-trap had been left open, and we
+ rashly went in!&mdash;Prince Karl's loss, including that of the Saxons
+ (which is almost equal, though their number in the field was but HALF), is
+ 9,000 dead and wounded, 7,000 prisoners, 66 cannon, 73 flags and
+ standards; the Prussian is about 5,000 dead and wounded. [In Orlich (ii.
+ 182) all the details.] Friedrich, at sight of Valori, embraces his GROS
+ VALORI; says, with a pious emotion in voice and look, "My friend, God has
+ helped me wonderfully this day!" Actually there was a kind of devout
+ feeling visible in him, thinks Valori: "A singular mixture, this Prince,
+ of good qualities and of bad; I never know which preponderates." [Valori,
+ SOEPIUS.] As is the way with fat Valoris, when they come into such
+ company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich is blamed by some military men, and perhaps himself thought it
+ questionable, that he did not pursue Prince Karl more sharply. He says his
+ troops could not; they were worn out with the night's marching and the
+ day's fighting. He himself may well be worn out. I suppose, for the last
+ four-and-twenty hours he, of all the contemporary sons of Adam, has
+ probably been the busiest. Let us rest this day; rest till to-morrow
+ morning, and be thankful. "So decisive a defeat," writes he to his Mother
+ (hastily, misdating "6th" June for 4th), "has not been since Blenheim"
+ [Letter in <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> xxvi. 71.] (which is tolerably
+ true); and "I have made the Princes sign their names," to give the good
+ Mother assurance of her children in these perils of war. Seldom has such a
+ deliverance come to a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XI.&mdash;CAMP OF CHLUM: FRIEDRICH CANNOT ACHIEVE PEACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich marched, on the morrow, likewise to Bolkenhayn; which the enemy
+ have just left; our hussars hanging on their rear, and bickering with
+ Nadasti. Then again on the morrow, Sunday,&mdash;"twelve hours of
+ continuous rain," writes Valori; but there is no down-pour, or distress,
+ or disturbance that will shake these men from their ranks, writes Valori.
+ And so it goes on, march after march, the Austrians ahead, Dumoulin and
+ our hussars infesting their rear, which skilfully defended itself: through
+ Landshut down into Bohemia; where are new successive marches, the Prussian
+ quarterstaff stuck into the back of defeated Austria, "Home with you;
+ farther home!"&mdash;and shogging it on,&mdash;without pause, for about a
+ fortnight to come. And then only with temporary pause; that is to say,
+ with intricate manoeuvrings of a month long, which shove it to
+ Konigsgratz, its ultimatum, beyond which there is no getting it. The
+ stages and successive campings, to be found punctually in the old Books
+ and new, can interest only military readers. Here is a small theological
+ thing at Landshut, from first hand:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JUNE 8th, 1745. "The Army followed Dumoulin's Corps, and marched upon
+ Landshut. On arriving in that neighborhood, the King was surrounded by a
+ troop of 2,000 Peasants,"&mdash;of Protestant persuasion very evidently!
+ (which is much the prevailing thereabouts),&mdash;"who begged permission
+ of him 'to massacre the Catholics of these parts, and clear the country of
+ them altogether.' This animosity arose from the persecutions which the
+ Protestants had suffered during the Austrian domination, when their
+ churches used to be taken from them and given to the Popish priests,"&mdash;churches
+ and almost their children, such was the anxiety to make them orthodox. The
+ patience of these peasants had run over; and now, in the hour of hope,
+ they proposed the above sweeping measure. "The King was very far from
+ granting them so barbarous a permission. He told them, 'They ought rather
+ to conform to the Scripture precept, to bless those that cursed them, and
+ pray for those that despitefully used them; such was the way to gain the
+ Kingdom of Heaven.' The peasants," rolling dubious eyes for a moment,
+ "answered, His Majesty was right; and desisted from their cruel
+ pretension." [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> ii.218.]...&mdash;"On
+ Hohenfriedberg Day," says another Witness, "as far as the sound of the
+ cannon was heard, all round, the Protestants fell on their knees, praying
+ for victory to the Prussians;" [In Ranke, iii. 259.] and at Breslau that
+ evening, when the "Thirteen trumpeting Postilions" came tearing in with
+ the news, what an enthusiasm without limit!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl has skill in choosing camps and positions: his Austrians are
+ much cowed; that is the grievous loss in his late fight. So, from June
+ 8th, when they quit Silesia,&mdash;by two roads to go more readily,&mdash;all
+ through that month and the next, Friedrich spread to the due width, duly
+ pricking into the rear of them, drives the beaten hosts onward and onward.
+ They do not think of fighting; their one thought is to get into positions
+ where they can have living conveyed to them, and cannot be attacked; for
+ the former of which objects, the farther homewards they go, it is the
+ better. The main pursuit, as I gather, goes leftward from Landshut, by
+ Friedland,&mdash;the Silesian Friedland, once Wallenstein's. Through rough
+ wild country, the southern slope of the Giant Mountains, goes that slow
+ pursuit, or the main stream of it, where Friedrich in person is; intricate
+ savage regions, cut by precipitous rocks and soaking quagmires, shaggy
+ with woods: watershed between the Upper Elbe and Middle Oder; Glatz on our
+ left,&mdash;with the rain of its mountains gathering to a Neisse River,
+ eastward, which we know; and on their west or hither side, to a Mietau,
+ Adler, Aupa and other many-branched feeders of the Elbe. Most complex
+ military ground, the manoeuvrings on it endless,&mdash;which must be left
+ to the reader's fancy here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the end of June, Karl and his Austrians find a place suitable to
+ their objects: Konigsgratz, a compact little Town, in the nook between the
+ Elbe and Adler; covered to west and to south by these two streams; strong
+ enough to east withal; and sure and convenient to the southern roads and
+ victual. Against which Friedrich's manoeuvres avail nothing; so that he at
+ last (20th July) crosses Elbe River; takes, he likewise, an inexpugnable
+ Camp on the opposite shore, at a Village called Chlum; and lies there,
+ making a mutual dead-lock of it, for six weeks or more. Of the prior
+ Camps, with their abundance of strategic shufflings, wheelings, pushings,
+ all issuing in this of Chlum, we say nothing: none of them,&mdash;except
+ the immediately preceding one, called of Nahorzan, called also of Drewitz
+ (for it was in parts a shifting entity, and flung the LIMBS of it about,
+ strategically clutching at Konigsgratz),&mdash;had any permanency: let us
+ take Chlum (the longest, and essentially the last in those parts) as the
+ general summary of them, and alone rememberable by us. ["Camp of
+ Gross-Parzitz [across the Mietau, to dislodge Prince Karl from his shelter
+ behind that stream], June 14th:" "Camp of Nahorzan, June 18th [and
+ abstruse manoeuvrings, of a month, for Konigsgratz]: 20th July," cross
+ Elbe for Chlum; and lie, yourself also inexpugnable, there. See <i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> (iii. 120 et seq.); especially see Orlich (ii. pp. 193,
+ 194, 203, &amp;c. &amp;c.),&mdash;with an amplitude of inorganic details,
+ sufficient to astonish the robustest memory!]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's purposes, at Chlum or previously, are not towards conquests in
+ Bohemia, nor of fighting farther, if he can help it. But, in the mean
+ while, he is eating out these Bohemian vicinages; no invasion of Silesia
+ possible from that quarter soon again. That is one benefit: and he hopes
+ always his enemies, under screw of military pressure with the one hand,
+ and offer of the olive-branch with the other, will be induced to grant him
+ Peace. Britannic Majesty, after Fontenoy and Hohenfriedberg, not to
+ mention the first rumors of a Jacobite Rebellion, with France to rear of
+ it, is getting eager to have Friedrich settled with, and withdrawn from
+ the game again;&mdash;the rather, as Friedrich, knowing his man, has
+ ceased latterly to urge him on the subject. Peace with George the
+ Purseholder, does not that mean Peace with all the others? Friedrich knows
+ the high Queen's indignation; but he little guesses, at this time, the
+ humor of Bruhl and the Polish Majesty. He has never yet sent the Old
+ Dessauer in upon them; always only keeps him on the slip, at Magdeburg;
+ still hoping actualities may not be needed. He hopes too, in spite of her
+ indignation, the Hungarian Majesty, with an Election on hand, with the
+ Netherlands at such a pass, not to speak of Italy and the Middle Rhine,
+ will come to moderate views again. On which latter points, his reckoning
+ was far from correct! Within three months, Britannic Majesty and he did
+ get to explicit Agreement (CONVENTION OF HANOVER, 26th August): but in
+ regard to the Polish Majesty and the Hungarian there proved to be no such
+ result attainable, and quite other methods necessary first!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of military transactions in this Camp of Chlum, or in all these
+ Bohemian-Silesian Camps, for near four months, there is nothing, or as
+ good as nothing: Chlum has no events; Chlum vigilantly guards itself; and
+ expects, as the really decisive to it, events that will happen far away.
+ We are to conceive this military business as a dead-lock; attended with
+ hussar skirmishes; attacks, defences, of outposts, of provision-wagons
+ from Moravia or Silesia:&mdash;Friedrich has his food from Silesia
+ chiefly, by several routes, 'convoys come once in the five days.' His
+ horse-provender he forages; with Tolpatches watching him, and continual
+ scufflings of fight: 'for hay and glory,' writes one Prussian Officer, 'I
+ assure you we fight well!' Endless enterprising, manoeuvring,
+ counter-manoeuvring there at first was; and still is, if either party
+ stir: but here, in their mutually fixed camps, tacit mutual observances
+ establish themselves; and amid the rigorous armed vigilantes, there are
+ traits of human neighborship. As usual in such cases. The guard-parties do
+ not fire on one another, within certain limits: a signal that there are
+ dead to bury, or the like, is strictly respected. On one such occasion it
+ was (June 30th, Camp-of-Nahorzan time) that Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick&mdash;Prince
+ Ferdinand, with a young Brother Albert volunteering and learning his
+ business here, who are both Prussian&mdash;had a snatch of interview with
+ a third much-loved Brother, Ludwig, who is in the Austrian service. A
+ Prussian officer, venturing beyond the limits, had been shot; Ferdinand's
+ message, 'Grant us burial of him!' found, by chance, Brother Ludwig in
+ command of that Austrian outpost; who answers: 'Surely;&mdash;and beg that
+ I may embrace my Brothers!' And they rode out, those three, to the space
+ intermediate; talked there for half an hour, till the burial was done.
+ [Mauvillon, <i>Geschichte Ferdinands von Braunschweig-Luneburg,</i> i.
+ 118.] Fancy such an interview between the poor young fellows, the soul of
+ honor each, and tied in that manner!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Trenck of the Life-guard was not quite the soul of honor. It was in the
+ Nahorzan time too that Trenck, who had, in spite of express order to the
+ contrary, been writing to his Cousin the indigo Pandour, was put under
+ arrest when found out. 'Wrote merely about horses: purchase of horses, so
+ help me God!' protests the blusterous Life-guardsman, loud as lungs will,&mdash;whether
+ with truth in them, nobody can say. 'Arrest for breaking orders!' answers
+ Friedrich, doubting or disbelieving the horses; and loud Trenck is packed
+ over the Hills to Glatz; to Governor Fouquet, or Substitute;&mdash;where,
+ by not submitting and repenting, by resisting and rebelling, and ever
+ again doing it, he makes out for himself, with Fouquet and his other
+ Governors, what kind of life we know! 'GARDEZ E'TROITEMENT CE DROLE-LA, IL
+ A VOULU DEVENIR PANDOUR AUPRES DE SON ONCLE (Keep a tight hold of this
+ fine fellow; he wanted to become Pandour beside his Uncle)!' writes
+ Friedrich:&mdash;'Uncle' instead of 'Cousin,' all one to Friedrich. This
+ he writes with his own hand, on the margin: 28th June, 1745; the
+ inexorable Records fix that date. [Rodenbeck. iii. 381. Copy of the
+ Warrant, once PENES ME.] Which I should not mention, except for another
+ inexorable date (30th September), that is coming; and the perceptible
+ slight comfort there will be in fixing down a loud-blustering, extensively
+ fabulous blockhead, still fit for the Nurseries, to one undeniable
+ premeditated lie, and tar-marking him therewith, for benefit of more
+ serious readers." As shall be done, were the 30th of September come!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is still something,&mdash;if it be not rather nothing, by a great
+ hand! Date uncertain; Camp-of-Chlum time, pretty far on:... "There are
+ continual foragings, on both sides; with parties mutually dashing out to
+ hinder the same. The Prussians have a detached post at Smirzitz; which is
+ much harassed by Hungarians lurking about, shooting our sentry and the
+ like. An inventive head contrives this expedient. Stuff a Prussian uniform
+ with straw; fix it up, by aid of ropes and check-strings, to stand with
+ musket shouldered, and even to glide about to right and left, on judicious
+ pulling. So it is done: straw man is made; set upon his ropes, when the
+ Tolpatches approach; and pensively saunters to and fro,&mdash;his living
+ comrades crouching in the bushes near by. Tolpatches fire on the walking
+ straw sentry; straw sentry falls flat; Tolpatches rush in, esurient,
+ triumphant; are exploded in a sharp blast of musketry from the bushes all
+ round, every wounded man made prisoner;&mdash;and come no more back to
+ that post." Friedrich himself records this little fact: "slight pleasantry
+ to relieve the reader's mind," says he, in narrating it. [<i>OEuvres,</i>
+ iii. 123.]&mdash;Enough of those small matters, while so many large are
+ waiting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ June 26th, a month before Chlum, General Nassau had been detached, with
+ some 8 or 10,000, across Glatz Country, into Upper Silesia, to sweep that
+ clear again. Hautcharmoi, quitting the Frontier Towns, has joined, raising
+ him to 15,000; and Nassau is giving excellent account of the multitudinous
+ Pandour doggeries there; and will retake Kosel, and have Upper Silesia
+ swept before very long. [Kosel, "September 5th:" Excellent, lucid and even
+ entertaining Account of Nassau's Expedition, in the form of DIARY (a
+ model, of its kind), in <i>Feldzuge,</i> iv. 257, 371, 532.] On the other
+ hand, the Election matter (KAISERWAHL, a most important point) is
+ obviously in threatening, or even in desperate state! That famed
+ Middle-Rhine Army has gone to the&mdash;what shall we say?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JULY 5th-19th, MIDDLE-RHINE COUNTRY. "The first Election-news that reaches
+ Friedrich is from the Middle-Rhine Country, and of very bad complexion.
+ Readers remember Traun, and his Bathyanis, and his intentions upon Conti
+ there. In the end of May, old Traun, things being all completed in
+ Bavaria, had got on march with his Bavarian Army, say 40,000, to look into
+ Prince Conti down in those parts; a fact very interesting to the Prince.
+ Traun held leftward, westward, as if for the Neckar Valley,&mdash;'Perhaps
+ intending to be through upon Elsass, in those southern undefended portions
+ of the Rhine?' Conti, and his Segur, and Middle-Rhine Army stood
+ diligently on their guard; got their forces, defences, apparatuses,
+ hurried southward, from Frankfurt quarter where they lay on watch, into
+ those Neckar regions. Which seen to be done, Traun whirled rapidly to
+ rightward, to northward; crossed the Mayn at Wertheim, wholly leaving the
+ Neckar and its Conti; having weighty business quite in the other
+ direction,&mdash;on the north side of the Mayn, namely; on the Kinzig
+ River, where Bathyani (who has taken D'Ahremberg's command below
+ Frankfurt, and means to bestir himself in another than the D'Ahremberg
+ fashion) is to meet him on a set day. Traun having thus, by strategic
+ suction, pulled the Middle-Rhine Army out of his and Bathyani's way, hopes
+ they two will manage a junction on the Kinzig; after junction they will be
+ a little stronger than Conti, though decidedly weaker taken one by one.
+ Traun, in the long June days, had such a march, through the Spessart
+ Forest (Mayn River to his left, with our old friends Dettingen,
+ Aschaffenburg, far down in the plain), as was hardly ever known before:
+ pathless wildernesses, rocky steeps and chasms; the sweltering June sun
+ sending down the upper snows upon him in the form of muddy slush; so that
+ 'the infantry had to wade haunch-deep in many of the hollow parts, and
+ nearly all the cavalry lost its horse-shoes.' A strenuous march; and a
+ well-schemed. For at the Kinzig River (Conti still far off in the Neckar
+ country), Bathyani punctually appeared, on the opposite shore; and Traun
+ and he took camp together; July 5th, at Langen-Selbord (few miles north of
+ Hanau, which we know);&mdash;and rest there; calculating that Conti is now
+ a manageable quantity;&mdash;and comfortably wait till the Grand-Duke
+ arrives. [Adelung, iv. 421; v. 36.] For this is, theoretically, HIS Army;
+ Grand-Duke Franz being the Commander's Cloak, this season; as Karl was
+ last,&mdash;a right lucky Cloak he, while Traun lurked under him, not so
+ lucky since! July 13th, Franz arrived; and Traun, under Franz, instantly
+ went into Conti (now again in those Frankfurt parts); clutched at Conti,
+ Briareus-like, in a multiform alarming manner: so that Conti lost head;
+ took to mere retreating, rushing about, burning bridges;&mdash;and in
+ fine, July 19th, had flung himself bodily across the Rhine (clouds of
+ Tolpatches sticking to him), and left old Traun and his Grand-Duke supreme
+ lord in those parts. Who did NOT invade Elsass, as was now expected; but
+ lay at Heidelberg, intending to play pacifically a surer card. All French
+ are out of Teutschland again; and the game given up. In what a premature
+ and shameful manner! thinks Friedrich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nominally it was the Grand-Duke that flung Conti over the Rhine; and
+ delivered Teutschland from its plagues. After which fine feat, salvatory
+ to the Cause of Liberty, and destructive to French influence, what is to
+ prevent his election to the Kaisership? Friedrich complains aloud: 'Conti
+ has given it up; you drafted 15,000 from him (for imaginary uses in the
+ Netherlands),&mdash;you have given it up, then! Was that our bargain?' 'We
+ have given it up,' answers D'Argenson the War-minister, writing to Valori;
+ 'but,'&mdash;And supplies, instead of performance according to the laws of
+ fact, eloquent logic; very superfluous to Friedrich and the said laws!&mdash;Valori,
+ and the French Minister at Dresden, had again been trying to stir up the
+ Polish Majesty to stand for Kaiser; but of course that enterprise, eager
+ as the Polish Majesty might be for such a dignity, had now to collapse,
+ and become totally hopeless. A new offer of Friedrich's to co-operate had
+ been refused by Bruhl, with a brevity, a decisiveness&mdash;'Thinks me
+ finished (AUX ABOIS),' says Friedrich; 'and not worth giving terms to, on
+ surrendering!' The foolish little creature; insolent in the wrong
+ quarter!" [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 128.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The German Burden, then,&mdash;which surely was mutual, at lowest, and
+ lately was French altogether,&mdash;the French have thrown it off; the
+ French have dropped their end of the BEARING-POLES (so to speak), and left
+ Friedrich by himself, to stand or stagger, under the beweltered broken
+ harness-gear and intolerable weight! That is one's payment for cutting the
+ rope from their neck last year!&mdash;Long since, while the present
+ Campaign was being prepared for, under such financial pressures, Friedrich
+ had bethought him, "The French might, at least give me money, if they can
+ nothing else?"&mdash;and he had one day penned a Letter with that object;
+ but had thrown it into his desk again, "No; not till the very last
+ extremity, that!" Friedrich did at last despatch the unpleasant missive:
+ "Service done you in Elsass, let us say little of it; but the repayment
+ has been zero hitherto: your Bavarian expenses (poor Kaiser gone, and
+ Peace of Fussen come!) are now ended:&mdash;A round sum, say of 600,000
+ pounds, is becoming indispensable here, if we are to keep on our feet at
+ all!" Herr Ranke, who has seen the Most Christian King's response (though
+ in a capricious way), finds "three or four successive redactions" of the
+ difficult passage; all painfully meaning, "Impossible, alas!"&mdash;painfully
+ adding, "We will try, however!" And, after due cunctations, Friedrich
+ waiting silent the while,&mdash;Louis, Most Christian King, who had failed
+ in so many things towards Friedrich, does empower Valori To offer him a
+ subsidy of 600,000 livres a month, till we see farther. Twenty thousand
+ pounds a month; he hopes this will suffice, being himself run terribly
+ low. Friedrich's feeling is to be guessed: "Such a dole might answer to a
+ Landgraf of Hessen-Darmstadt; but to me is not in the least suitable;"&mdash;and
+ flatly refuses it; FIEREMENT, says Valori. [Ranke, iii. 235, 299 n. (not
+ the least of DATE allowed us in either case); Valori. i. 240.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MON GROS VALORI, who could not himself help all this, poor soul, "falls
+ now into complete disgrace;" waits daily upon Friedrich at the giving out
+ of the parole, "but frequently his Majesty does not speak to me at all."
+ Hardly looks at me, or only looks as if I had suddenly become Zero
+ Incarnate. It is now in these days, I suppose, that Friedrich writes about
+ the "Scamander Battle" (of Fontenoy), and "Capture of Pekin," by way of
+ helping one to fight the Austrians according to Treaty. And has a touch of
+ bitter sarcasm in uttering his complaints against, such treatment,&mdash;the
+ heart of him, I suppose, bitter enough. Most Christian King has felt this
+ of the Scamander, Friedrich perceives; Louis's next letter testifies
+ pique;&mdash;and of course we are farther from help, on that side, than
+ ever. "From the STANDE of the Kur-Mark [Brandenburg] Friedrich was offered
+ a considerable subsidy instead; and joyfully accepted the same, 'as a
+ loan:'"&mdash;paid it punctually back, too; and never, all his days,
+ forgot it of those STANDE. [Stenzel, iv. 255; Ranke, &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMP OF DIESKAU: BRITANNIC MAJESTY MAKES PEACE, FOR HIMSELF, WITH
+ FRIEDRICH; BUT CANNOT FOR AUSTRIA OR SAXONY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ About the middle of August, there are certain Saxon phenomena which awaken
+ dread expectation in the world. Friedrich, watching, Argus-like, near and
+ far, in his Chlum observatory, has noticed that Prince Karl is getting
+ reinforced in Konigsgratz; 10,000 lately, 7,000 more coming;&mdash;and
+ contrariwise that the Saxons seem to be straggling off from him; ebbing
+ away, corps after corps,&mdash;towards Saxony, can it be? There are
+ whispers of "Bavarian auxiliaries" being hired for them, too. And little
+ Bruhl's late insolence; Bruhl's evident belief that "we are finished (AUX
+ ABOIS)"? Putting all this together, Friedrich judges&mdash;with an
+ indignation very natural&mdash;that there is again some insidious Saxon
+ mischief, most likely an attack on Brandenburg, in the wind. Friedrich
+ orders the Old Dessauer, "March into them, delay no longer!" and publishes
+ a clangorously indignant Manifesto (evidently his own writing, and coming
+ from the heart): [In Adelung, v. 64-71 (no date; "middle of August," say
+ the Books).] "How they have, not bound by their Austrian Treaty, wantonly
+ invaded our Silesia; have, since and before, in spite of our forbearance,
+ done so many things:&mdash;and, in fact, have finally exhausted our
+ patience; and are forcing us to seek redress and safety by the natural
+ methods," which they will see how they like!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Leopold advances straightway, as bidden, direct for the Saxon
+ frontier. To whom Friedrich shoots off detachments,&mdash;Prince Dietrich,
+ with so many thousands, to reinforce Papa; then General Gessler with so
+ many,&mdash;till Papa is 30,000 odd; and could eat Saxony at a mouthful;
+ nothing whatever being yet ready there on Bruhl's part, though he has such
+ immense things in the wind!&mdash;Nevertheless Friedrich again paused; did
+ not yet strike. The Saxon question has Russian bug-bears, no end of
+ complications. His Britannic Majesty, now at Hanover, and his prudent
+ Harrington with him, are in the act of laboring, with all earnestness, for
+ a general Agreement with Friedrich. Without farther bitterness,
+ embroilment and bloodshed: how much preferable for Friedrich! Old
+ Dessauer, therefore, pauses: "Camp of Dieskau," which we have often heard
+ of, close on the Saxon Border; stands there, looking over, as with sword
+ drawn, 30,000 good swords,&mdash;but no stroke, not for almost three
+ months more. In three months, wretched Bruhl had not repented; but, on the
+ contrary, had completed his preparations, and gone to work;&mdash;and the
+ stroke did fall, as will be seen. That is Bruhl's posture in the matter.
+ [Ranke, iii. 231, 314.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Britannic George, for a good while past, it has been manifest that the
+ Pragmatic Sanction, in its original form, is an extinct object; that
+ reconquest of Silesia, and such like, is melancholy moonshine; and that,
+ in fact, towards fighting the French with effect, it is highly necessary
+ to make peace with Friedrich of Prussia again. This once more is George's
+ and his Harrington's fixed view. Friedrich's own wishes are known, or used
+ to be, ever since the late Kaiser's death,&mdash;though latterly he has
+ fallen silent, and even avoids the topic when offered (knowing his man)!
+ Herrington has to apply formally to Friedrich's Minister at Hanover. "Very
+ well, if they are in earnest this time," so Friedrich instructs his
+ Minister: "My terms are known to you; no change admissible in the terms;&mdash;do
+ not speak with me on it farther: and, observe, within four weeks, the
+ thing finished, or else broken off!" [Ranke, iii. 277-281.] And in this
+ sense they are laboring incessantly, with Austria, with Saxony,&mdash;without
+ the least success;&mdash;and Excellency Robinson has again a panting
+ uncomfortable time. Here is a scene Robinson transacts at Vienna, which
+ gives us a curious face-to-face glimpse of her Hungarian Majesty, while
+ Friedrich is in his Camp at Chlum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SCHONBRUNN, 2d AUGUST, 1745, ROBINSON HAS AUDIENCE OF HER HUNGARIAN
+ MAJESTY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Robinson, in a copious sonorous speech (rather apt to be copious, and to
+ fall into the Parliamentary CANTO-FERMO), sets forth how extremely ill we
+ Allies are faring on the French hand; nothing done upon Silesia either; a
+ hopeless matter that,&mdash;is it not, your Majesty? And your Majesty's
+ forces all lying there, in mere dead-lock; and we in such need of them!
+ "Peace with Prussia is indispensable."&mdash;To which her Majesty
+ listened, in statuesque silence mostly; "never saw her so reserved before,
+ my Lord."...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBINSON.... "'Madam, the Dutch will be obliged to accept Neutrality' [and
+ plump down again, after such hoisting]!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ QUEEN. "'Well, and if they did, they? It would be easier to accommodate
+ with France itself, and so finish the whole matter, than with Prussia." My
+ Army could not get to the Netherlands this season. No General of mine
+ would undertake conducting it at this day of the year. Peace with Prussia,
+ what good could it do at present?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBINSON. "'England has already found, for subsidies, this year, 1,178,753
+ pounds. Cannot go on at that rate. Peace with Prussia is one of the
+ returns the English Nation expects for all it has done.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ QUEEN. "'I must have Silesia again: without Silesia the Kaiserhood were an
+ empty title. "Or would you have us administer it under the guardiancy of
+ Prussia!"'...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBINSON. "'In Bohemia itself things don't look well; nothing done on
+ Friedrich: your Saxons seem to be qnarrelling with you, and going home.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ QUEEN. "'Prince Karl is himself capable of fighting the Prussians again.
+ Till that, do not speak to me of Peace! Grant me only till October!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBINSON. "'Prussia will help the Grand-Duke to Kaisership.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ QUEEN. "'The Grand-Duke is not so ambitions of an empty honor as to engage
+ in it under the tutelage of Prussia. Consider farther: the Imperial
+ dignity, is it compatible with the fatal deprivation of Silesia? "One
+ other battle, I say! Good God, give me only till the month of October!"'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBINSON. "'A battle, Madam, if won, won't reconquer Silesia; if lost,
+ your Majesty is ruined at home.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ QUEEN. "'DUSSE'JE CONCLURE AVEC LUI LE LENDEMAIN, JE LUI LIVRERAIS
+ BATAILLE CE SOIR (Had I to agree with him to-morrow, I would try him in a
+ battle this evening)!'" [Robinson's Despatch, 4th August, 1745. Ranke,
+ iii. 287; Raumer, pp. 161, 162.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Majesty is not to be hindered; deaf to Robinson, to her Britannic
+ George who pays the money. "Cruel man, is that what you call keeping the
+ Pragmatic Sanction; dismembering me of Province after Province, now in
+ Germany, then in Italy, on pretext of necessity? Has not England money,
+ then? Does not England love the Cause of Liberty? Give me till October!"
+ Her Majesty did take till October, and later, as we shall see; poor George
+ not able to hinder, by power of the purse or otherwise: who can hinder
+ high females, or low, when they get into their humors? Much of this
+ Austrian obstinacy, think impartial persons, was of female nature. We
+ shall see what profit her Majesty made by taking till October.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for George, the time being run, and her Majesty and Saxony
+ unpersuadable, he determined to accept Friedrich's terms himself, in hope
+ of gradually bringing the others to do it. August 26th, at Hanover, there
+ is signed a CONVENTION OF HANOVER between Friedrich and him: "Peace on the
+ old Breslau-Berlin terms,&mdash;precisely the same terms, but Britannic
+ Majesty to have them guaranteed by All the Powers, on the General Peace
+ coming,&mdash;so that there be no snake-procedure henceforth." Silesia
+ Friedrich's without fail, dear Hanover unmolested even by a thought of
+ Friedrich's;&mdash;and her Hungarian Majesty to be invited, nay urged by
+ every feasible method, to accede. [Adelung, v. 75; is "in Rousset, xix.
+ 441;" in &amp;c. &amp;c.] Which done, Britannic Majesty&mdash;for there
+ has hung itself out, in the Scotch Highlands, the other day ("Glenfinlas,
+ August 12th"), a certain Standard "TANDEM TRIUMPHANS," and unpleasant
+ things are imminent!&mdash;hurries home at his best pace, and has his
+ hands full there, for some time. On Austria, on Saxony, he could not
+ prevail: "By no manner of means!" answered they; and went their own road,&mdash;jingling
+ his Britannic subsidies in their pocket; regardless of the once Supreme
+ Jove, who is sunk now to a very different figure on the German boards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's outlook is very bad: such a War to go on, and not even finance
+ to do it with. His intimates, his Rothenburg one time, have "found him
+ sunk in gloomy thought." But he wears a bright face usually. No wavering
+ or doubting in him, his mind made up; which is a great help that way.
+ Friedrich indicates, and has indicated everywhere, for many months, that
+ Peace, precisely on the old footing, is all he wants: "The Kaiser being
+ dead, whom I took up arms to defend, what farther object is there?" says
+ he. "Renounce Silesia, more honestly than last time; engage to have it
+ guaranteed by everybody at the General Peace (or perhaps Hohenfriedberg
+ will help to guarantee it),&mdash;and I march home!" My money is running
+ down, privately thinks he; guarantee Silesia, and I shall be glad to go.
+ If not, I must raise money somehow; melt the big silver balustrades at
+ Berlin, borrow from the STANDE, or do something; and, in fact, must stand
+ here, unless Silesia is guaranteed, and struggle till I die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That latter withal is still privately Friedrich's thought. Under his light
+ air, he carries unspoken that grimly clear determination, at all times,
+ now and henceforth; and it is an immense help to the guidance of him. An
+ indispensable, indeed. No king or man, attempting anything considerable in
+ this world, need expect to achieve it except, tacitly, on those same
+ terms, "I will achieve it or die!" For the world, in spite of rumors to
+ the contrary, is always much of a bedlam to the sanity (so far as he may
+ have any) of every individual man. A strict place, moreover; its very
+ bedlamisms flowing by law, as do alike the sudden mud-deluges, and the
+ steady Atlantic tides, and all things whatsoever: a world inexorable,
+ truly, as gravitation itself;&mdash;and it will behoove you to front it in
+ a similar humor, as the tacit basis for whatever wise plans you lay. In
+ Friedrich, from the first entrance of him on the stage of things, we have
+ had to recognize this prime quality, in a fine tacit form, to a complete
+ degree; and till his last exit, we shall never find it wanting. Tacit
+ enough, unconscious almost, not given to articulate itself at all;&mdash;and
+ if there be less of piety than we could wish in the silence of it, there
+ is at least no play-actor mendacity, or cant of devoutness, to poison the
+ high worth of it. No braver little figure stands on the Earth at that
+ epoch. Ready, at the due season, with his mind silently made up;&mdash;able
+ to answer diplomatic Robinsons, Bartensteins and the very Destinies when
+ they apply. If you will withdraw your snakish notions, will guarantee
+ Silesia, will give him back his old Treaty of Berlin in an irrefragable
+ shape, he will march home; if not, he will never march home, but be
+ carried thither dead rather. That is his intention, if the gods permit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ GRAND-DUKE FRANZ IS ELECTED KAISER (13TH SEPTEMBER, 1745); FRIEDRICH, THE
+ SEASON AND FORAGE BEING DONE, MAKES FOR SILESIA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There occurred at Frankfurt&mdash;the clear majority, seven of the nine
+ Electors, Bavaria itself (nay Bohemia this time, "distaff" or not), and
+ all the others but Friedrich and Kur-Pfalz, being so disposed or so
+ disposable, Traun being master of the ground&mdash;no difficulty about
+ electing Grand-Duke Franz Stephan of Tuscany? Joint-King of Bohemia, to be
+ Kaiser of the Holy Romish Reich. Friedrich's envoy protested;&mdash;as did
+ Kur-Pfalz's, with still more vehemence, and then withdrew to Hanau: the
+ other Seven voted September 13th 1745: and it was done. A new Kaiser,
+ Franz Stephan, or Franz I.,&mdash;with our blessing on him, if that can
+ avail much. But I fear it cannot. Upon such mendacious Empty-Case of
+ Kaiserhood, without even money to feed itself, not to speak of governing,
+ of defending and coercing; upon such entities the blessings of man avail
+ little; the gods, having warned them to go, do not bless them for staying!&mdash;However,
+ tar-barrels burn, the fountains play (wine in some of them, I hope); Franz
+ is to be crowned in a fortnight hence, with extraordinary magnificence. At
+ this last part of it Maria Theresa will, in her own high person, attend;
+ and proceeds accordingly towards Frankfurt, in the end of September (say
+ the old Books), so soon as the Election is over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hungarian Majesty's bearing was not popular there, according to Friedrich,&mdash;who
+ always admires her after a sort, and always speaks of her like a king and
+ gentleman:&mdash;but the High Lady, it is intimated, felt somewhat too
+ well that she was high. Not sorry to have it known, under the due veils,
+ that her Kaiser-Husband is but of a mimetic nature; that it is she who has
+ the real power; and that indeed she is in a victorious posture at present.
+ Very high in her carriage towards the Princes of the Reich, and their
+ privileges:&mdash;poor Kur-Pfalz's notary, or herald, coming to protest (I
+ think, it was the second time) about something, she quite disregarded his
+ tabards, pasteboards, or whatever they were, and clapt him in prison. The
+ thing was commented upon; but Kur-Pfalz got no redress. Need we repeat,&mdash;lazy
+ readers having so often met him, and forgotten him again,&mdash;this is a
+ new younger Kur-Pfalz: Karl Theodor, this one; not Friedrich Wilhelm's old
+ Friend, but his Successor, of the Sulzbach line; of whom, after thirty
+ years or so, we may again hear. He can complain about his violated tabard;
+ will get his notary out of jail again, but no redress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Highish even towards her friends, this "Empress-Queen" (KAISERIN-KONIGIN,
+ such her new title), and has a kind of "Thank-you-for-Nothing" air towards
+ them. Prussian Majesty, she said, had unquestionable talents; but, oh,
+ what a character! Too much levity, she said, by far; heterodox too, in the
+ extreme; a BOSER MANN;&mdash;and what a neighbor has he been! As to
+ Silesia, she was heard to say, she would as soon part with her petticoat
+ as part with it. [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 126, 128.]&mdash;So
+ that there is not the least prospect of peace here? "None," answer
+ Friedrich's emissaries, whom he had empowered to hint the thing. Which is
+ heavy news to Friedrich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in August, not long after that Audience of Robinson's, her Majesty,
+ after repeated written messages to Prince Karl, urging him to go into
+ fight again or attempt something, had sent two high messengers: Prince
+ Lobkowitz, Duke d'Ahremberg, high dignitaries from Court, have come to
+ Konigsgratz with the latest urgencies, the newest ideas; and would fain
+ help Prince Karl to attempt something. Daily they used to come out upon a
+ little height, in view of Friedrich's tent, and gaze in upon him, and
+ round all Nature, "with big tubes," he says, "as if they had been
+ astronomers;" but never attempted anything. We remember D'Ahremberg, and
+ what part he has played, from the Dettingen times and onward. "A debauched
+ old fellow," says Friedrich; "gone all to hebetude by his labors in that
+ line; agrees always with the last speaker." Prince Karl seems to have
+ little stomach himself; and does not see his way into (or across) another
+ Battle. Lobkowitz, again, is always saying: "Try something! We are now
+ stronger than they, by their detachings, by our reinforcings" (indeed,
+ about twice their number, regular and irregular), though most of the
+ Saxons are gone home. After much gazing through their tubes, the Austrians
+ (August 23d) do make a small shift of place, insignificant otherwise; the
+ Prussians, next day, do the like, in consequence; quit Chlum, burning
+ their huts; post themselves a little farther up the Elbe,&mdash;their left
+ at a place called Jaromirz, embouchure of the Aupa into Elbe, [ <i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> iii. 129.]&mdash;and are again unattackable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worst fact is the multitude of Pandours, more and more infesting our
+ provision-roads; and that horse-forage itself is, at last, running low.
+ Detachments lie all duly round to right and left, to secure our
+ communications with Silesia, especially to left, out of Glatz, where runs
+ one of the chief roads we have. But the service is becoming daily more
+ difficult. For example:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "NEUSTADT, 8th SEPTEMBER. In that left-hand quarter, coming out of Glatz
+ at a little Bohemian Town called Neustadt, the Prussian Commander,
+ Tauenzien by name, was repeatedly assaulted; and from September 8th, had
+ to stand actual siege, gallantly repulsing a full 10,000 with their big
+ artillery, though his walls were all breached, for about a week, till
+ Friedrich sent him relief. Prince Lobkowitz, our old anti-Belleisle
+ friend, who is always of forward fiery humor, had set them on this
+ enterprise; which has turned out fruitless. The King is much satisfied
+ with Tauenzien; [Ib. 132.] of whom we shall hear again. Who indeed becomes
+ notable to us, were it only for getting one Lessing as secretary, by and
+ by: Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, whose fame has since gone into all
+ countries; the man having been appointed a 'Secretary' to the very
+ Destinies, in some sort; that is to say, a Writer of Books which have
+ turned out to have truth in them! Tauenzien, a grimmish aquiline kind of
+ man, of no superfluous words, has distinguished himself for the present by
+ defending Neustadt, which the Austrians fully counted to get hold of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us give another little scene; preparatory to quitting this Country, as
+ it is evident the King and we will soon have to do; Country being quite
+ eaten out, Pandours getting ever rifer, and the Season done:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JAROMIRZ, "EARLY IN SEPTEMBER," 1745. "Jaromirz is a little Bohemian Town
+ on the Aupa, or between the Aupa and Metau branches of the Upper Elbe;
+ four or five miles north of Semonitz, where Friedrich's quarter now is.
+ Valori, so seldom spoken to, is lodged in a suburb there: 'Had not you
+ better go into the town itself?' his Majesty did once say; but Valori,
+ dreading nothing, lodged on,&mdash;'Landlord a Burgher whom I thought
+ respectable.' Respectable, yes he; but his son had been dealing with
+ Franquini the Pandour, and had sold Valori,&mdash;night appointed,
+ measures all taken; a miracle if Valori escape. Franquini, chief of 30,000
+ Pandours, has come in person to superintend this important capture; and
+ lies hidden, with a strong party, in the woods to rearward. Prussians
+ about 200, scattered in posts, occupy the hedges in front, for guard of
+ the ovens; to rear, Jaromirz being wholly ours, there is no suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the dead of the night, Franquini emerges from the woods; sends forward
+ a party of sixty, under the young Judas; who, by methods suitable, gets
+ them stealthily conducted into Papa's Barn, which looks across a courtyard
+ into Valori's very windows. From the Barn it is easy, on paws of velvet,
+ to get into the House, if you have a Judas to open it. Which you have:&mdash;bolts
+ all drawn for you, and even beams ready for barricading if you be meddled
+ with. 'Upstairs is his Excellency asleep; Excellency's room is&mdash;to
+ right, do you remember; or to left'&mdash;'Pshaw, we shall find it!' The
+ Pandours mount; find a bedroom, break it open,&mdash;some fifteen or
+ sixteen of them, and one who knows a little French;&mdash;come crowding
+ forward: to the horror and terror of the poor inhabitant.' 'QUE
+ VOULEZ-VOUS DONC?' 'His Excellency Valori!' 'Well, no violence; I am your
+ prisoner: let me dress!' answers the supposed Excellency,&mdash;and
+ contrives to secrete portfolios, and tear or make away with papers. And is
+ marched off, under a select guard, who leave the rest to do the pillage.
+ And was not Valori at all; was Valori's Secretary, one D'Arget, who had
+ called himself Valori on this dangerous occasion! Valori sat quaking
+ behind his partition; not till the Pandours began plundering the stables
+ did the Prussian sentry catch sound of them, and plunge in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich had his amusement out of this adventure; liked D'Arget, the
+ clever Secretary; got D'Arget to himself before long, as will be seen;&mdash;and,
+ in quieter times, dashed off a considerable Explosion of Rhyme, called LE
+ PALLADION (Valori as Prussia's "Palladium," with Devils attempting to
+ steal him, and the like), which was once thought an exquisite Burlesque,&mdash;Kings
+ coveting a sight of it, in vain,&mdash;but is now wearisome enough to
+ every reader. [Valori, i. 242; <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 130: for
+ the Fact. Exquisite Burlesque, PALLADION itself, is in <i>OEuvres,</i> xi.
+ 192-271 (see IB. 139): a bad copy of that very bad Original, JEANNE D'ARC,&mdash;the
+ only thing now good in it, Friedrich's polite yet positive refusal to
+ gratify King Louis and his Pompdour with a sight of it (see IB. PREFACE,
+ x-xiv, Friedrich's Letter to Louis; date of request and of refusal, March,
+ 1750).]&mdash;Let us attend his Majesty's exit from Bohemia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XII.&mdash;BATTLE OF SOHR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The famed beautiful Elbe River rises in romantic chasms, terrible to the
+ picturesque beholder, at the roots of the Riesengebirge; overlooked by the
+ Hohe-Kamms, and highest summits of that chain. "Out of eleven wells," says
+ gentle Dulness, "EILF or ELF QUELLEN, whence its name, Elbe for ELF." Sure
+ enough, it starts out of various wells; [Description, in Zollner, <i>Briefe
+ uber Schlesien,</i> ii. 305; in &amp;c. &amp;c.] rushes out, like a great
+ peacock's or pasha's tail, from the roots of the Giant Mountains
+ thereabouts; and hurries southward,&mdash;or even rather eastward, at
+ first; for (except the Iser to westward, which does not fall in for a
+ great while) its chief branches come from the eastern side: Aupa, Metau,
+ Adler, the drainings of Glatz, and of that rugged Country where Friedrich
+ has been camping and manoeuvring all summer. On the whole, its course is
+ southward for the first seventy or eighty miles, washing Jaromirz,
+ Konigshof, Konigsgratz, down to Pardubitz: at Pardubitz it turns abruptly
+ westward, and holds on so, bending even northward, by hill and plain,
+ through the rest of its five or six hundred miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its first considerable branch, on that eastern or left bank, is the Aupa,
+ which rises in the Pass of Schatzlar (great struggling there, for convoys,
+ just now); goes next by Trautenau, which has lately been burnt; and joins
+ the Elbe at Jaromirz, where Valori was stolen, or nearly so, from under
+ the Prussian left wing. The Aupa runs nearly straight south; the Elbe,
+ till meeting it, has run rather southeast; but after joining they go south
+ together, augmented by the Metau, by the Adler, down to Pardubitz, where
+ the final turn to west occurs. Jaromirz, which lies in the very angle of
+ Elbe and Aupa, is the left wing of Friedrich's Camp; main body of the Camp
+ lies on the other side of the Elbe, but of course has bridges (as at
+ Smirzitz, where that straw sentry did his pranks lately); bridges are
+ indispensable, part of our provision coming always by that BOHEMIAN
+ Neustadt, from the northeast quarter out of Silesia; though the main
+ course of our meal (and much fighting for it) is direct from the north, by
+ the Pass of Schatzlar,&mdash;"Chaslard," as poor Valori calls it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Friedrich lay, when Valori escaped being stolen; when Tauenzien was
+ assailed by the 10,000 Pandours with siege artillery, and stood
+ inexpugnable in the breach till Friedrich relieved him. Those Pandours
+ "had cut away his water, for the last two days;" so that, except for
+ speedy relief, all valor had been in vain. Water being gone, not
+ recoverable without difficulties, Neustadt was abandoned (September 16th,
+ as I guess);&mdash;one of our main Silesian roads for meal has ceased. We
+ have now only Schatzlar to depend on; where Franquini&mdash;lying westward
+ among the glens of the Upper Elbe, and possessed of abundant talent in the
+ Tolpatch way (witness Valori's narrow miss lately)&mdash;gives us trouble
+ enough. Friedrich determines to move towards Schatzlar. Homewards, in
+ fact; eating the Country well as he goes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saturday, 18th September, Friedrich crosses the Elbe at Jaromirz. Entirely
+ unopposed; the Austrians were all busy firing FEU-DE-JOIE for the Election
+ of their Grand-Duke: Election done five days ago at Frankfurt, and the
+ news just come. So they crackle about, and deliver rolling fire, at a
+ great rate; proud to be "IMPERIAL Army" henceforth, as if that could do
+ much for them. There was also vast dining, for three days, among the high
+ heads, and a great deal of wine spent. That probably would have been the
+ chance to undertake something upon them, better than crossing the Elbe,
+ says Friedrich looking back. But he did not think of it in time; took
+ second-best in place of best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is now, therefore, over into that Triangular piece of Country between
+ Elbe and Aupa (if readers will consult their Map); in that triangle, his
+ subsequent notable operations all lie. He here proposes to move northward,
+ by degrees,&mdash;through Trautenau, Schatzlar, and home; well eating this
+ bit of Country too, the last uneaten bit, as he goes. This well eaten,
+ there will be no harbor anywhere for Invasion, through the Winter coming.
+ One of my old Notes says of it, in the topographic point of view:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a triangular patch of Country, which has lain asleep since the
+ Creation of the World; traversed only by Boii (BOI-HEIM-ERS, Bohemians),
+ Czechs and other such populations, in Human History; but which Friedrich
+ has been fated to make rather notable to the Moderns henceforth. Let me
+ recommend it to the picturesque tourist, especially to the military one.
+ Lovers of rocky precipices, quagmires, brawling torrents and the
+ unadulterated ruggedness of Nature, will find scope there; and it was the
+ scene of a distinguished passage of arms, with notable display of human
+ dexterity and swift presence of mind. For the rest, one of the wildest,
+ and perhaps (except to the picturesque tourist) most unpleasant regions in
+ the world. Wild stony upland; topmost Upland, we may say, of Europe in
+ general, or portion of such Upland; for the rainstorms hereabouts run
+ several roads,&mdash;into the German Ocean and Atlantic by the Elbe, into
+ the Baltic by the Oder, into the Black Sea by the Donau;&mdash;and it is
+ the waste Outfield whither you rise, by long weeks-journeys, from many
+ sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Much of it, towards the angle of Elbe and Aupa, is occupied by a huge
+ waste Wood, called 'Kingdom Forest' (KONIGREICH SYLVA or WALD, peculium of
+ Old Czech Majesties, I fancy); may be sixty square miles in area, the
+ longer side of which lies along the Elbe. A Country of rocky defiles;
+ lowish hills chaotically shoved together, not wanting their brooks and
+ quagmires, straight labyrinthic passages; shaggy with wild wood. Some poor
+ Hamlets here and there, probably the sleepiest in Nature, are scattered
+ about; there may be patches ploughable for rye [modern Tourist says
+ snappishly, There are many such; whole region now drained; reminded me of
+ Yorkshire Highlands, with the Western Sun gilding it, that fine afternoon!]&mdash;ploughable
+ for rye, buckwheat; boggy grass to be gathered in summer; charcoaling to
+ do; pigs at least are presumable, among these straggling outposts of
+ humanity in their obscure Hamlets: poor ploughing, moiling creatures, they
+ little thought of becoming notable so soon! None of the Books (all intent
+ on mere soldiering) take the least notice of them; not at the pains to
+ spell their Hamlets right: no more notice than if they also had been
+ stocks and moss-grown stones. Nevertheless, there they did evidently live,
+ for thousands of years past, in a dim manner;&mdash;and are much terrified
+ to have become the seat of war, all on a sudden. Their poor Hamlets, Sohr,
+ Staudentz, Prausnitz, Burgersdorf and others still send up a faint smoke;
+ and have in them, languidly, the live-coal of mysterious human existence,
+ in those woods,&mdash;to judge by the last maps that have come out. A
+ thing worth considering by the passing tourist, military or other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is in this Kingdom Forest (which he calls ROYAUME DE SILVA, instead of
+ SYLVA DE ROYAUME) that Friedrich now marches; keeping the body of the
+ Forest well on his left, and skirting the southern and eastern sides of
+ it. Rough marching for his Majesty; painfully infested by Nadastian
+ Tolpatches; who run out on him from ambushes, and need to be scourged; one
+ ambush in particular, at a place called Liebenthal (second day's march,
+ and near the end of it),&mdash;where our Prussian Hussars, winding like
+ fiery dragons on the dangerous precipices, gave them better than they
+ brought, and completely quenched their appetite for that day. After
+ Liebenthal, the march soon ends; three miles farther on, at the dim
+ wold-hamlet of Staudentz: here a camp is pitched; here, till the Country
+ is well eaten out, or till something else occur, we propose to tarry for a
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Horse-forage abounds here; but there is no getting of it without
+ disturbance from those dogs; you must fight for every truss of grass: if a
+ meal-train is coming, as there does every five days, you have to detach
+ 8,000 foot and 3,000 horse to help it safe in. A fretting fatiguing time
+ for regular troops. Our bakery is at Trautenau,&mdash;where Valori is now
+ lodging. The Tolpatchery, unable to take Trautenau, set fire to it, though
+ it is their own town, their own Queen's town; thatchy Trautenau, wooden
+ too in the upper stories of it, takes greedily to the fire; goes all aloft
+ in flame, and then lies black. A scandalous transaction, thinks Friedrich.
+ The Prussian corn lay nearly all in cellars; little got, even of the
+ Prussians, by such an atrocity: and your own poor fellow-subjects, where
+ are they? Valori was burnt out here; again exploded from his quarters,
+ poor man;&mdash;seems to have thought it a mere fire in his own lodging,
+ and that he was an unfortunate diplomatist. Happily he got notice
+ (PRIVATISSIME, for no officer dare whisper in such cases) that there is an
+ armed party setting out for Silesia, to guard meal that is coming: Valori
+ yokes himself to this armed party, and gets safe over the Hills with it,&mdash;then
+ swift, by extra post, to Breslau and to civilized (partially civilized)
+ accommodation, for a little rest after these hustlings and tossings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich had lain at Staudentz, in this manner, bickering continually for
+ his forage, and eating the Country, for about ten days: and now, as the
+ latter process is well on, and the season drawing to a close: he
+ determines on a shift northward. Thursday, 30th September next, let there
+ be one other grand forage, the final one in this eaten tract, then
+ northward to fresh grounds. That, it appears, was the design. But, on
+ Wednesday, there came in an Austrian deserter; who informs us that Prince
+ Karl is not now in Konigsgratz, but in motion up the Elbe; already some
+ fifty miles up; past Jaromirz: his rear at Konigshof, his van at Arnau,&mdash;on
+ a level with burnt Trautenau, and farther north than we ourselves are.
+ This is important news. "Intending to block us out from Schatzlar? Hmh!"
+ Single scouts, or small parties, cannot live in this Kingdom Wood,
+ swarming with Pandours: Friedrich sends out a Colonel Katzler, with 500
+ light horse, to investigate a little. Katzler pushes forward, on such lane
+ or forest road-track as there is, towards Konigshof; beats back small
+ hussar parties;&mdash;comes, in about an hour's space, not upon hussars
+ merely, but upon dense masses of heavy horse winding through the forest
+ lanes; and, with that imperfect intelligence, is obliged to return. The
+ deserter spake truth, apparently; and that is all we can know. Forage
+ scheme is given up; the order is, "Baggage packed, and MARCH to-morrow
+ morning at ten." Long before ten, there had great things befallen on the
+ morrow!&mdash;Try to understand this Note a little:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Camp of Staudentz-which two persons (the King, and General Stille, a
+ more careful reporter, who also was an eye-witness) have done their best
+ to describe&mdash;will, after all efforts, and an Ordnance Map to help,
+ remain considerably unintelligible to the reader; as is too usual in such
+ cases. A block of high-lying ground; Friedrich's Camp on it, perhaps two
+ miles long, looks to the south; small Village of Staudentz in front;
+ hollow beyond that, and second small Village, Deutsch Prausnitz, hanging
+ on the opposite slope, with shaggy heights beyond, and the Kingdom Forest
+ there beginning: on the left, defiles, brooks and strait country, leading
+ towards the small town of Eypel: that is our left and front aspect, a
+ hollow well isolating us on those sides. Hollow continues all along the
+ front; hollow definite on our side of it, and forming a tolerable defence:&mdash;though
+ again, I perceive, to rightward at no great distance, there rise High
+ Grounds which considerably overhang us." A thing to be marked! "These we
+ could not occupy, for want of men; but only maintain vedettes upon them.
+ Over these Heights, a mile or two westward of this hollow of ours, runs
+ the big winding hollow called Georgengrund (GEORGE'S BOTTOM), which winds
+ up and down in that Kingdom Forest, and offers a road from Konigshof to
+ Trautenau, among other courses it takes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the crown of those Heights on our right flank here, looking to the
+ west, you might discern (perhaps three miles off, from one of the
+ sheltering nooks in the hither side of that Georgengrund), rising faintly
+ visible over knolls and dingles, the smoke of a little Forest Village.
+ That Village is Sohr; notable ever since, beyond others, in the Kingdom
+ Wood. Sohr, like the other Villages, has its lane-roads; its road to
+ Trautenau, to Konigshof, no doubt; but much nearer you, on our eastern
+ slope of the Heights, and far hitherward of Sohr, which is on the western,
+ goes the great road [what is now the great road], from Konigshof to
+ Trautenau, well visible from Friedrich's Camp, though still at some
+ distance from it. Could these Heights between us and Sohr, which lie
+ beyond the great road, be occupied, we were well secured; isolated on the
+ right too, as on the other sides, from Kingdom Forest and its ambushes.
+ 'Should have been done,' admits Friedrich; 'but then, as it is, there are
+ not troops enough:' with 18,000 men you cannot do everything!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, however, is the important point. In Sohr, this night, 29th
+ September, in a most private manner, the Austrians, 30,000 of them and
+ more, have come gliding through the woods, without even their pipe lit,
+ and with thick veil of hussars ahead! Outposts of theirs lie squatted in
+ the bushes behind Deutsch Prausnitz, hardly 500 yards from Friedrich's
+ Camp. And eastward, leftward of him, in the defiles about Eypel, lie
+ Nadasti and Ruffian Trenck, with ten or twelve thousand, who are to take
+ him in rear. His "Camp of Staudentz" will be at a fine pass to-morrow
+ morning. The Austrian Gentlemen had found, last week, a certain bare
+ Height in the Forest (Height still known), from which they could use their
+ astronomer tubes day after day; [Orlich, ii. 225.] and now they are about
+ attempting something!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thursday morning, very early, 30th September, 1745, Friedrich was in his
+ tent, busy with generals and march-routes,&mdash;when a rapid orderly
+ comes in, from that Vedette, or strong Piquet, on the Heights to our
+ right: "Austrians visibly moving, in quantity, near by!" and before he has
+ done answering, the officer himself arrives: "Regular Cavalry in great
+ force; long dust-cloud in Kingdom Forest, in the gray dawn; and, so far as
+ we can judge, it is their Army coming on." Here is news for a poor man, in
+ the raw of a September morning, by way of breakfast to him! "To arms!" is,
+ of course, Friedrich's instant order; and he himself gallops to the Piquet
+ on the Heights, glass in hand. "Austrian Army sure enough, thirty to
+ thirty-five thousand of them, we only eighteen. [<i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i>
+ iii. 139.] Coming to take us on the right flank here; to attack our Camp
+ by surprise: will crush us northward through the defiles, and trample us
+ down in detail? Hmh! To run for it, will never do. We must fight for it,
+ and even attack THEM, as our way is, though on such terms. Quick, a plan!"
+ The head of Friedrich is a bank you cannot easily break by coming on it
+ for plans: such a creature for impromptu plans, and unexpected dashes
+ swift as the panther's, I have hardly known,&mdash;especially when you
+ squeeze him into a corner, and fancy he is over with it! Friedrich gallops
+ down, with his plan clear enough; and already the Austrians, horse and
+ foot, are deploying upon those Heights he has quitted; Fifty Squadrons of
+ Horse for left wing to them, and a battery of Twenty-eight big Guns is
+ establishing itself where Friedrich's Piquet lately stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich's right flank has to become his front, and face those formidable
+ Austrian Heights and Batteries; and this with more than Prussian velocity,
+ and under the play of those twenty-eight big guns, throwing case-shot
+ (GRENADES ROYALES) and so forth, all the while. To Valori, when he heard
+ of the thing, it is inconceivable how mortal troops could accomplish such
+ a movement; Friedrich himself praises it, as a thing honorably well done.
+ Took about half an hour; case-shot raining all the while; soldier
+ honorably never-minding: no flurry, though a speed like that of
+ spinning-tops. And here we at length are, Staudentz now to rear of us,
+ behind our centre a good space; Burgersdorf in front of us to right, our
+ left reaching to Prausnitz: Austrian lines, three deep of them, on the
+ opposite Height; we one line only, which matches them in length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They, that left wing of horse, should have thundered down on us, attacking
+ us, not waiting our attack, thinks Friedrich; but they have not done it.
+ They stand on their height there, will perhaps fire carbines, as their
+ wont is. "You, Buddenbrock, go into them with your Cuirassiers!"
+ Buddenbrock and the Cuirassiers, though it is uphill, go into them at a
+ furious rate; meet no countercharge, mere sputter of carbines;&mdash;tumble
+ them to mad wreck, back upon their second line, back upon their third:
+ absurdly crowded there on their narrow height, no room to manoeuvre; so
+ that they plunge, fifty squadrons of them, wholly into the Georgengrund
+ rearward, into the Kingdom Wood, and never come on again at all.
+ Buddenbrock has done his job right well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing which, our Infantry of the right wing, which stood next to
+ Buddenbrock, made impetuous charge uphill, emulous to capture that Battery
+ of Twenty-eight; but found it, for some time, a terrible attempt. These
+ Heights are not to be called "hills," still less "mountains" (as in some
+ careless Books); but it is a stiff climb at double-quick, with
+ twenty-eight big guns playing in the face of you. Storms of case-shot
+ shear away this Infantry, are quenching its noble fury in despair;
+ Infantry visibly recoiling, when our sole Three Regiments of Reserve hurry
+ up to support. Round these all rallies; rushes desperately on, and takes
+ the Battery,&mdash;of course, sending the Austrian left wing rapidly
+ adrift, on loss of the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, I consider, is the crisis of the Fight; the back of the Austrian
+ enterprise is already broken, by this sad winging of it on the left. But
+ it resists still; comes down again,&mdash;the reserve of their left wing
+ seen rapidly making for Burgersdorf, intending an attack there; which we
+ oppose with vigor, setting Burgersdorf on fire for temporary screen; and
+ drive the Austrian reserve rapidly to rearward again. But there is rally
+ after rally of them. They rank again on every new height, and dispute
+ there; loath to be driven into Kingdom Wood, after such a flourish of
+ arms. One height, "bushy steep height," the light-limbed valiant Prince,
+ little Ferdinand of Brunswick, had the charge of attacking; and he did it
+ with his usual impetus and irresistibility:&mdash;and, strangely enough,
+ the defender of it chanced to be that Brother of his, Prince Ludwig, with
+ whom he had the little Interview lately. Prince Ludwig got a wound, as
+ well as lost his height. The third Brother, poor Prince Albrecht, who is
+ also here, as volunteer apprentice, on the Prussian side, gets killed.
+ There will never be another Interview, for all three, between the Camps!
+ Strange times for those poor Princes, who have to seek soldiering for
+ their existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the Cavalry of Buddenbrock, that is to say of the right wing,
+ having now no work in that quarter, is despatched to reinforce the left
+ wing, which has stood hitherto apart on its own ground; not attacked or
+ attacking,&mdash;a left wing REFUSED, as the soldiers style it. Reinforced
+ by Buddenbrock, this left wing of horse does now also storm forward;&mdash;"near
+ the Village of Prausnitz" (Prausnitz a little way to rear of it),
+ thereabouts, is the scene of its feat. Feat done in such fashion that the
+ Austrians opposite will not stand the charge at all; but gurgle about in a
+ chaotic manner; then gallop fairly into Kingdom Wood, without stroke
+ struck; and disappear, as their fellows had done. Whereupon the Prussian
+ horse breaks in upon the adjoining Infantry of that flank (Austrian right
+ flank, left bare in this manner); champs it also into chaotic whirlpools;
+ cuts away an outskirt of near 2,000 prisoners, and sets the rest running.
+ This seems to have been pretty much the COUP-DE-GRACE of the Fight; and to
+ have brought the Austrian dispute to finis. From the first, they had
+ rallied on the heights; had struggled and disputed. Two general rallies
+ they made, and various partial, but none had any success. They were driven
+ on, bayonet in back, as the phrase is: with this sad slap on their right,
+ added to that old one on their left, what can they now do but ebb rapidly;
+ pour in cataracts into Kingdom Wood, and disappear there? [ <i>OEuvres de
+ Frederic,</i> iii. 135-143; Stille, pp. 144-163; Orlich, ii. 227-243; <i>Feldzuge,</i>
+ i. 357, 363, 374.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl's scheme was good, says Friedrich; but it was ill executed. He
+ never should have let us form; his first grand fault was that he waited to
+ be attacked, instead of attacking. Parts of his scheme were never executed
+ at all. Duke d'Ahremberg, for instance, it is said, had so dim a notion of
+ the ground, that he drew up some miles off, with his back to the
+ Prussians. Such is the rumor,&mdash;perhaps only a rumor, in mockery of
+ the hebetated old gentleman fallen unlucky? On the other hand, that
+ Nadasti made a failure which proved important, is indubitable. Nadasti,
+ with some thousands of Tolpatchery, was at Liebenthal, four miles to
+ southeast of the action; Ruffian Trenck lay behind Eypel, perhaps as far
+ to east, of it: Trenck and Nadasti were to rendezvous, to unite, and
+ attack the Prussian Camp on its rear,&mdash;"Camp," so ran the order, for
+ it was understood the Prussians would all be there, we others attacking it
+ in front and both flanks;&mdash;which turned out otherwise, not for
+ Nadasti alone!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nadasti came to his rendezvous in time; Ruffian Trenck did not: Nadasti
+ grew tired of waiting for Trenck, and attacked the Camp by himself:&mdash;Camp,
+ but not any men; Camp being now empty, and the men all fighting, ranked at
+ right angles to it, furlongs and miles away. Nadasti made a rare hand of
+ the Camp; plundered everything, took all the King's Camp-furniture, ready
+ money, favorite dog Biche,&mdash;likewise poor Eichel his Secretary, who,
+ however, tore the papers first. Tolpatchery exultingly gutted the Camp;
+ and at last set fire to it,&mdash;burnt even some eight or ten poor
+ Prussian sick, and also "some women whom they caught. We found the limbs
+ of these poor men and women lying about," reports old General Lehwald; who
+ knew about it. A doggery well worthy of the gallows, think Lehwald and I.
+ "Could n't help it; ferocity of wild men," says Nadasti. "Well; but why
+ not attack, then, with your ferocity?" Confused Court-martial put these
+ questions, at Vienna subsequently; and Ruffian Trenck, some say, got
+ injustice, Nadasti shuffling things upon him; for which one cares almost
+ nothing. Lehwald, lying at Trautenau, had heard the firing at sunrise; and
+ instantly marched to help: he only arrived to give Nadasti a slash or two,
+ and was too late for the Fight. One Schlichtling, on guard with a weak
+ party, saved what was in the right wing of the Camp,&mdash;small thanks to
+ him, the Main Fight being so near: Friedrich's opinion is, an Officer, in
+ Schlichtling's place, ought to have done more, and not have been so
+ helpless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the Battle of Sohr; so called because the Austrians had begun
+ there, and the Prussians ended there. The Prussian pursuit drew bridle at
+ that Village; unsafe to prosecute Austrians farther, now in the deeps of
+ Kingdom Forest. The Battle has lasted five hours. It must be now getting
+ towards noon; and time for breakfast, if indeed any were to be had; but
+ that is next to impossible, Nadasti having been so busy. Not without
+ extreme difficulty is a manchet of bread, with or without a drop of wine,
+ procured for the King's Majesty this day. Many a tired hero will have
+ nothing but tobacco, with spring-water, to fall back upon. Never mind!
+ says the King, says everybody. After all, it is a cheap price to pay for
+ missing an attack from Pandours in the rear, while such crisis went on
+ ahead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lying COUSIN Trenck, of the Life-guard, who is now in Glatz, gives vivid
+ eye-witness particulars of these things, time of the morning and so on;
+ says expressly he was there, and what he did there, [Frederic Baron de
+ Trenck, <i>Memoires, traduits par lui-meme</i> (Strasburg and Paris,
+ 1789), i. 74-78, 79.]&mdash;though in Glatz under lock and key, three good
+ months before. "How could I help mistakes," said he afterwards, when
+ people objected to this and that in his blusterous mendacity of a Book: "I
+ had nothing but my poor agitated memory to trust to!" A man's memory, when
+ it gets the length of remembering that he was in the Battle of Sohr while
+ bodily absent, ought it not to&mdash;in fact, to strike work; to still its
+ agitations altogether, and call halt? Trenck, some months after, got
+ clambered out of Glatz, by sewers, or I forget how; and leaped, or
+ dropped, from some parapet into the River Neisse,&mdash;sinking to the
+ loins in tough mud, so that he could not stir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAP TO GO HERE&mdash;&mdash;BOOK 15&mdash;page 499&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fouquet let me stand there half a day, before he would pick me out
+ again." Rigorous Bouquet, human mercy forbidding, could not let him stand
+ there in permanence,&mdash;as we, better circumstanced, may with advantage
+ try to do, in time coming!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich lay at Sohr five days; partly for the honor of the thing, partly
+ to eat out the Country to perfection. Prince Karl, from Konigshof, soon
+ fell back to Konigsgratz; and lay motionless there, nothing but his
+ Tolpatcheries astir, Sohr Country all eaten, Friedrich, in the due
+ Divisions, marched northward. Through Trautenau, Schatzlar, his own
+ Division, which was the main one;&mdash;and, fencing off the Tolpatches
+ successfully with trouble, brings all his men into Silesia again. A good
+ job of work behind them, surely! Cantons them to right and left of
+ Landshut, about Rohnstock and Hohenfriedberg, hamlets known so well; and
+ leaving the Young Dessauer to command, drives for Berlin (30th October),&mdash;rapidly,
+ as his wont is. Prince Karl has split up his force at Konigsgratz; means,
+ one cannot doubt, to go into winter-quarters. If he think of invading,
+ across that eaten Country and those bad Mountains,&mdash;well, our troops
+ can all be got together in six hours' time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Trautenau, a week after Sohr, Friedrich had at last received the
+ English ratification of that Convention of Hanover, signed 26th August,
+ almost a month ago; not ratified till September 22d. About which there had
+ latterly been some anxiety, lest his Britannic Majesty himself might have
+ broken off from it. With Austria, with Saxony, Britannic Majesty has been
+ entirely unsuccessful:&mdash;"May not Sohr, perhaps, be a fresh
+ persuasive?" hopes Friedrich;&mdash;but as to Britannic Majesty's breaking
+ off, his thoughts are far from that, if we knew! Poor Majesty: not long
+ since, Supreme Jove of Germany; and now&mdash;is like to be swallowed in
+ ragamuffin street-riots; not a thunder-bolt within clutch of him
+ (thunder-bolts all sticking in the mud of the Netherlands, far off), and
+ not a constable's staff of the least efficacy! Consider these dates in
+ combination. Battle of Sohr was on THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "SUNDAY preceding, SEPTEMBER 26th, was such a Lord's-Day in the City of
+ Edinburgh, as had not been seen there,&mdash;not since Jenny Geddes's
+ stool went flying at the Bishop's head, above a hundred years before. Big
+ alarm-bell bursting out in the middle of divine service; emptying all the
+ Churches ('Highland rebels just at hand!')&mdash;into General Meeting of
+ the Inhabitants, into Chaos come again, for the next forty hours. Till, in
+ the gaunt midnight, Tuesday, 2 A.M., Lochiel with about 1,000 Camerons,
+ waiting slight opportunity, crushed in through the Netherbow Port; and"&mdash;And,
+ about noon of that day, a poor friend of ours, loitering expectant in the
+ road that leads by St. Anthony's Well, saw making entry into paternal
+ Holyrood,&mdash;the Young Pretender, in person, who is just being
+ proclaimed Prince of Wales, up in the High-street yonder! "A tall slender
+ young man, about five feet ten inches high; of a ruddy complexion,
+ high-nosed, large rolling brown eyes; long-visaged, red-haired, but at
+ that time wore a pale periwig. He was in a Highland habit [coat]; over the
+ shoulder a blue sash wrought with gold; red velvet breeches; a green
+ velvet bonnet, with white cockade on it and a gold lace. His speech seemed
+ very like that of an Irishman; very sly [how did you know, my poor
+ friend?];&mdash;spoke often to O'Sullivan [thought to be a person of some
+ counsel; had been Tutor to Maillebois's Boys, had even tried some
+ irregular fighting under Maillebois]&mdash;to O'Sullivan and" [Henderson,
+ <i>Highland Rebellion,</i> p. 14.]... And on Saturday, in short, came
+ PRESTONPANS. Enough of such a Supreme Jove; good for us here as a
+ timetable chiefly, or marker of dates!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sunday, 3d October, King's Adjutant, Captain Mollendorf, a young Officer
+ deservedly in favor, arrives at Berlin with the joyful tidings of this
+ Sohr business ("Prausnitz" we then called it): to the joy of all
+ Prussians, especially of a Queen Mother, for whom there is a Letter in
+ pencil. After brief congratulation, Mollendorf rushes on; having next to
+ give the Old Dessauer notice of it in his Camp at Dieskau, in the Halle
+ neighborhood. Mollendorf appears in Halle suddenly next morning, Monday,
+ about ten o'clock, sixteen postilions trumpeting, and at their swiftest
+ trot, in front of him;&mdash;shooting, like a melodious morning-star,
+ across the rusty old city, in this manner,&mdash;to Dieskau Camp, where he
+ gives the Old Dessauer his good news. Excellent Victory indeed; sharp
+ striking, swift self-help on our part. Halle and the Camp have enough to
+ think of, for this day and the next. Whither Mollendorf went next, we will
+ not ask: perhaps to Brunswick and other consanguineous places?&mdash;Certain
+ it is,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On Wednesday, the 6th, about two in the afternoon, the Old Dessauer has
+ his whole Army drawn out there, with green sprigs in their hats, at
+ Dieskau, close upon the Saxon Frontier; and, after swashing and
+ manoeuvring about in the highest military style of art, ranks them all in
+ line, or two suitable lines, 30,000 of them; and then, with clangorous
+ outburst of trumpet, kettle-drum and all manner of field-music, fires off
+ his united artillery a first time; almost shaking the very hills by such a
+ thunderous peal, in the still afternoon. And mark, close fitted into the
+ artillery peal, commences a rolling fire, like a peal spread out in
+ threads, sparkling strangely to eye and ear; from right to left, long
+ spears of fire and sharp strokes of sound, darting aloft, successive
+ simultaneous, winding for the space of miles, then back by the rear line,
+ and home to the starting-point: very grand indeed. Again, and also again,
+ the artillery peal, and rolling small-arms fitted into it, is repeated; a
+ second and a third time, kettle-drums and trumpets doing what they can.
+ That was the Old Dessauer's bonfiring (what is called FEU-DE-JOIE), for
+ the Victory of Sohr; audible almost at Leipzig, if the wind were westerly.
+ Overpowering to the human mind; at least, to the old Newspaper reporter of
+ that day. But what was strangest in the business," continues he "(DAS
+ CURIEUSESTE DABEY), was that the Saxon Uhlans, lying about in the villages
+ across the Border, were out in the fields, watching the sight, hardly 300
+ yards off, from beginning to end; and little dreamed that his High
+ Princely Serenity," blue of face and dreadful in war, "was quite close to
+ them, on the Height called Bornhock; condescending to 'take all this into
+ High-Serene Eye-shine there; and, by having a white flag waved, deigning
+ to give signal for the discharges of the artillery.'" [<i>Helden-Geschichte,</i>
+ i. 1124.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this the reader may know that the Old Dessauer is alive, ready for
+ action if called on; and Bruhl ought to comprehend better how riskish his
+ game with edge-tools is. Bruhl is not now in an unprepared state:&mdash;here
+ are Uhlans at one's elbow looking on. Rutowski's Uhlans; who lies
+ encamped, not far off, in good force, posted among morasses; strongly
+ entrenched, and with schemes in his head, and in Bruhl's, of an
+ aggressive, thrice-secret and very surprising nature! I remark only that,
+ in Heidelberg Country, victorious old Traun is putting his people into
+ winter-quarters; himself about to vanish from this History, [Went to
+ SIEBENBURGEN (Transylvania) as Governor; died there February, 1748, age
+ seventy-one (<i>Maria Theresiens Leben,</i> p. 56 n.).]&mdash;and has
+ detached General Grune with 10,000 men; who left Heidelberg October 9th,
+ on a mysterious errand, heeded by nobody; and will turn up in the next
+ Chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIII.&mdash;SAXONY AND AUSTRIA MAKE A SURPRISING LAST ATTEMPT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After this strenuous and victorious Campaign, which has astonished all
+ public men, especially all Pragmatic Gazetteers, and with which all Europe
+ is disharmoniously ringing, Friedrich is hopeful there will be Peace,
+ through England;&mdash;cannot doubt, at least, but the Austrians have had
+ enough for one year;&mdash;and looks forward to certain months, if not of
+ rest, yet of another kind of activity. Negotiation, Peace through England,
+ if possible; that is the high prize: and in the other case, or in any
+ case, readiness for next Campaign;&mdash;which with the treasury
+ exhausted, and no honorable subsidy from France, is a difficult problem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was Friedrich's, and everybody's, program of affairs for the months
+ coming: but in that Friedrich and everybody found themselves greatly
+ mistaken. Bruhl and the Austrians had decided otherwise. "Open
+ mouse-trap," at Striegau; claws of the sleeping cat, at Sohr: these were
+ sad experiences; ill to bear, with the Sea-Powers grumbling on you, and
+ the world sniffing its pity on you;&mdash;but are not conclusive, are only
+ provoking and even maddening, to the sanguine mind. Two sad failures; but
+ let us try another time. "A tricky man; cunning enough, your King of
+ Prussia!" thinks Bruhl, with a fellness of humor against Friedrich which
+ is little conceivable to us now: "Cunning enough. But it is possible
+ cunning may be surpassed by deeper cunning!"&mdash;and decides,
+ Bartenstein and an indignant Empress-Queen assenting eagerly, That there
+ shall, in the profoundest secrecy till it break out, be a third, and much
+ fiercer trial, this Winter yet. The Bruhl-Bartenstein plan (owing mainly
+ to the Russian Bugbear which hung over it, protective, but with whims of
+ its own) underwent changes, successive redactions or editions; which the
+ reader would grudge to hear explained to him. [Account of them in Orlich,
+ ii. 273-278 (from various RUTOWSKI Papers; and from the contemporary
+ satirical Pamphlet, "MONDSCHEINWURFE, Mirror-castings of Moonshine, by
+ ZEBEDAUS Cuckoo,) beaten Captain of a beaten Army."] Of the final or acted
+ edition, some loose notion, sufficient for our purpose, may be collected
+ from the following fractions of Notes:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOVEMBER 17th (INTERIOR OF GERMANY).... "Feldmarschall-Lieutenant von
+ Grune, a General of mark, detached by Traun not long since, from the Rhine
+ Country, with a force of 10,000 men, why is he marching about: first to
+ Baireuth Country, 'at Hof, November 9th,' as if for Bohemia; then north,
+ to Gera ('lies at Gera till the 17th'), as if for Saxony Proper? Prince
+ Karl, you would certainly say, has gone into winter-quarters; about
+ Konigsgratz, and farther on? Gone or going, sure enough, is Prince Karl,
+ into the convenient Bohemian districts,&mdash;uncertain which particular
+ districts; at least the Young Dessauer, watching him from the Silesian
+ side, is uncertain which. Better be vigilant, Prince Leopold!&mdash;Grune,
+ lying at Gera yonder, is not intending for Prince Karl, then? No, not
+ thither. Then perhaps towards Saxony, to reinforce the Saxons? Or
+ some-whither to find fat winter-quarters: who knows? Indeed, who cares
+ particularly, for such inconsiderable Grune and his 10,000!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Saxons quitted their inexpugnable Camp towards Halle, some time ago;
+ went into cantonments farther inland;&mdash;the Old Dessauer (middle of
+ October) having done the like, and gone home: his force lies rather
+ scattered, for convenience of food and forage. From the Silesian side,
+ again, Prince Leopold, whose head-quarters are about Striegau, intimates,
+ That he cannot yet say, with certainty, what districts Prince Karl will
+ occupy for winter-quarters in Bohemia. Prince Karl is vaguely roving
+ about; detaching Pandours to the Silesian Mountains, as if for checking
+ our victorious Nassau there;&mdash;always rather creeping northward;
+ skirting Western Silesia with his main force; 30,000 or better, with
+ Lobkowitz and Nadasti ahead. Meaning what? Be vigilant, my young friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The private fact is, Prince Karl does not mean to go into winter-quarters
+ at all. In private fact, Prince Karl is one of Three mysterious Elements
+ or Currents, sent on a far errand: Grune is another: Rutowski's Saxon Camp
+ (now become Cantonment) is a third. Three Currents instinct with fire and
+ destruction, but as yet quite opaque; which have been launched,&mdash;whitherward
+ thinks the reader? On Berlin itself, and the Mark of Brandenburg; there to
+ collide, and ignite in a marvellous manner. There is their meeting-point:
+ there shall they, on a sudden, smite one another into flame; and the
+ destruction blaze, fiery enough, round Friedrich and his own Brandenburg
+ homesteads there!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a grand scheme; scheme at least on a grand scale. For the LEGS of
+ it, Grune's march and Prince Karl's, are about 600 miles long! Plan due
+ chiefly, they say, to the yellow rage of Bruhl; aided by the contrivance
+ of Rutowski, and the counsel of Austrian military men. For there is much
+ consulting about it, and redacting of it; Polish Majesty himself very
+ busy. To Bruhl's yellow rage it is highly solacing and hopeful. 'Rutowski,
+ lying close in his Cantonments, and then suddenly springing out, will
+ overwhelm the Old Dessauer, who lies wide;&mdash;can do it, surely; and
+ Grune is there to help if necessary. Dessauer blown to pieces, Grune, with
+ Rutowski combined, push in upon Brandenburg,&mdash;Grune himself upon
+ Berlin,&mdash;from the west and south, nobody expecting him. Prince Karl,
+ not taking into winter-quarters in Bohemia, as they idly think; but
+ falling down the Valley of the Bober, or Bober and Queiss, into the
+ Lausitz (to Gorlitz, Guben, where we have Magazines for him), comes upon
+ it from the southeast,&mdash;nobody expecting any of them. Three
+ simultaneous Armies hurled on the head of your Friedrich; combustible
+ deluges flowing towards him, as from the ends of Germany; so opaque,
+ silent, yet of fire wholly: will not that surprise him!' thinks Bruhl.
+ These are the schemes of the little man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruhl, having constituted himself rival to Friedrich, and fallen into pale
+ or yellow rage by the course things took, this Plan is naturally his chief
+ joy, or crown of joys; a bubbling well of solace to him in his parched
+ condition. He should, obviously, have kept it secret; thrice-secret, the
+ little fool;&mdash;but a poor parched man is not always master of his
+ private bubbling wells in that kind! Wolfstierna is Swedish Envoy at
+ Dresden; Rudenskjold, Swedish Envoy at Berlin, has run over to see him in
+ the dim November days. Swedes, since Ulrique's marriage, are friendly to
+ Prussia. Bruhl has these two men to dinner; talks with them, over his
+ wine, about Friedrich's insulting usage of him, among other topics.
+ "Insulting; how, your Excellency?" asks Rudenskjold, privately a friend of
+ Friedrich. Bruhl explains, with voice quivering, those cuts in the
+ Friedrich manifesto of August last, and other griefs suffered; the two
+ Swedes soothing him with what oil they have ready. "No matter!" hints
+ Bruhl; and proceeds from hint to hint, till the two Swedes are fully aware
+ of the grand scheme: Grune, Prince Karl; and how Destruction, with legs
+ 500 miles long, is steadily advancing to assuage one with just revenge.
+ "Right, your Excellency!"&mdash;only that Rudenskjold proceeds to Berlin;
+ and there straightway ("8th November") punctually makes Friedrich also
+ aware. [Stenzel, iv. 262; Ranke, iii. 317-323; Friedrich's own narrative
+ of it, <i>OEuvres,</i> iii. 148.] Foolish Bruhl: a man that has a secret
+ should not only hide it, but hide that he has it to hide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FRIEDRICH GOES OUT TO MEET HIS THREE-LEGGED MONSTER; CUTS ONE LEG OF IT IN
+ TWO (Fight of Hennersdorf, 23d November, 1745).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich, having heard the secret, gazes into it with horror and
+ astonishment: "What a time I have! This is not living; this is being
+ killed a thousand times a day!" [Ranke (iii. 321 n.): TO whom said, we are
+ not told.]&mdash;with horror and astonishment; but also with what most
+ luminous flash of eyesight is in him; compares it with Prince Karl's
+ enigmatic motions, Grune's open ones and the other phenomena;&mdash;perceives
+ that it is an indisputable fact, and a thrice-formidable; requiring to be
+ instantly dealt with by the party interested! Whereupon, after hearty
+ thanks to Rudenskjold, there occur these rapidly successive phases of
+ activity, which we study to take up in a curt form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FIRST (probably 9th or 10th November), there is Council held with Minister
+ Podewils and the Old Dessauer; Council from which comes little benefit, or
+ none. Podewils and Old Leopold stare incredulous; cannot be made to
+ believe such a thing. "Impossible any Saxon minister or man would
+ voluntarily bring the theatre of war into his own Country, in this
+ manner!" thinks the Old Dessauer, and persists to think,&mdash;on what
+ obstinate ground Friedrich never knew. To which Podewils, "who has
+ properties in the Lausitz, and would so fain think them safe,"
+ obstinately, though more covertly, adheres. "Impossible!" urge both these
+ Councillors; and Friedrich cannot even make them believe it. Believe it;
+ and, alas, believing it is not the whole problem!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Happily Friedrich has the privilege of ordering, with or without their
+ belief. "You, Podewils, announce the matter to foreign Courts. You, Serene
+ Highness of Anhalt, at your swiftest, collect yonder, and encamp again.
+ Your eye well on Grune and Rutowski; and the instant I give you signal&mdash;!
+ I am for Silesia, to look after Prince Karl, the other long leg of this
+ Business." Old Leopold, according to Friedrich's account, is visibly glad
+ of such opportunity to fight again before he die: and yet, for no reason
+ except some senile jealousy, is not content with these arrangements;
+ perversely objects to this and that. At length the King says,&mdash;think
+ of this hard word, and of the eyes that accompany it!&mdash;"When your
+ Highness gets Armies of your own, you will order them according to your
+ mind; at present, it must be according to mine." On, then; and not a
+ moment lost: for of all things we must be swift!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Leopold goes accordingly. Friedrich himself goes in a week hence.
+ Orders, correspondences from Podewils and the rest, are flying right and
+ left;&mdash;to Young Leopold in Silesia, first of all. Young Leopold draws
+ out his forces towards the Silesian-Lausitz border, where Prince Karl's
+ intentions are now becoming visible. And,&mdash;here is the second phase
+ notable,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On Monday, 15th, ["18th," <i>Feldzuge,</i> i. 402 (see Rodenbeck, i.
+ 122).] at 7 A.M.," Friedrich rushes off, by Crossen, full speed for
+ Liegnitz; "with Rothenburg, with the Prince of Prussia and Ferdinand of
+ Brunswick accompanying." With what thoughts,&mdash;though, in his face,
+ you can read nothing; all Berlin being already in such tremor! Friedrich
+ is in Liegnitz next day; and after needful preliminaries there, does, on
+ the Thursday following, "at Nieder-Adelsdorf," not far off, take actual
+ command of Prince Leopold's Army, which had lain encamped for some days,
+ waiting him. And now with such force in hand,&mdash;35,000, soldiers every
+ man of them, and freshened by a month's rest,&mdash;one will endeavor to
+ do some good upon Prince Karl. Probably sooner than Prince Karl supposes.
+ For there is great velocity in this young King; a panther-like suddenness
+ of spring in him: cunning, too, as any Felis of them; and with claws like
+ the Felis Leo on occasion. Here follows the brief Campaign that ensued,
+ which I strive greatly to abridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl's intentions towards Frankfurt-on-Oder Country, through the
+ Lausitz, are now becoming practically manifest. There is a Magazine for
+ him at Guben, within thirty miles of Frankfurt; arrangements getting ready
+ all the way. A winter march of 150 miles;&mdash;but what, say the spies,
+ is to hinder? Prince Karl dreams not that Friedrich is on the ground, or
+ that anybody is aware. Which notion Friedrich finds that it will be
+ extremely suitable to maintain in Prince Karl. Friedrich is now at
+ Adelsdorf, some thirty miles eastward of the Lausitz Border, perhaps forty
+ or more from the route Prince Karl will follow through that Province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a high-lying irregularly hilly Country; hilly, not mountainous.
+ Various streams rise out of it that have a long course,&mdash;among
+ others, the Spree, which washes Berlin;&mdash;especially three Valleys
+ cross it, three Rivers with their Valleys: Bober, Queiss, Neisse (the
+ THIRD Neisse we have come upon); all running northward, pretty much
+ parallel, though all are branches of the Oder. This is Neisse THIRD, we
+ say; not the Neisse of Neisse City, which we used to know at the north
+ base of the Giant Mountains, nor the Roaring Neisse, which we have seen at
+ Hohenfriedberg; but a third [and the FOURTH and last, "Black Neisse,"
+ thank Heaven, is an upper branch of this, and we have, and shall have,
+ nothing to do with it!]&mdash;third Neisse, which we may call the Lausitz
+ Neisse. On which, near the head of it, there is a fine old spinning,
+ linen-weaving Town called Zittau,&mdash;where, to make it memorable, one
+ Tourist has read, on the Town-house, an Inscription worth repeating: 'BENE
+ FACERE ET MALE AUDIRE REGIUM EST, To do good and have evil said of you, is
+ a kingly thing.' Other Towns, as Gorlitz, and seventy miles farther the
+ above-said Guben, lie on this same Neisse,&mdash;shall we add that
+ Herrnhuth stands near the head of it? The wondrous Town of Herrnhuth
+ (LORD'S-KEEPING), founded by Count Zinzendorf, twenty years before those
+ dates; ["In 1722, the first tree felled" (LIVES of Zinzendorf).] where are
+ a kind of German Methodist-Quakers to this day, who have become very
+ celebrated in the interim. An opulent enough, most silent, strictly
+ regular, strange little Town. The women are in uniform; wives, maids,
+ widows, each their form of dress. Missionaries, speaking flabby English,
+ who have been in the West Indies or are going thither, seem to abound in
+ the place; male population otherwise, I should think, must be mainly doing
+ trade elsewhere; nothing but prayers, preachings, charitable
+ boarding-schooling and the like, appeared to be going on. Herrnhuth is 'a
+ Sabbath Petrified; Calvinistic Sabbath done into Stone,' as one of my
+ companions called it." [Tourist's Note (Autumn, 1852).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herrnhuth, of which all Englishmen have heard, stands near the head of
+ this our third Neisse; as does Zittau, a few miles higher up. I can do
+ nothing more to give it mark for them. Bober Valley, then Queiss Valley,
+ which run parallel though they join at last, and become Bober wholly
+ before getting into the Oder,&mdash;these two Valleys and Rivers lie in
+ Friedrich's own Territory; and are between him and the Lausitz, Queiss
+ River being the boundary of Silesia and the Lausitz here. It is down the
+ Neisse that Prince Karl means to march. There are Saxons already gathering
+ about Zittau; and down as far as Guben they are making Magazines and
+ arrangements,&mdash;for it is all their own Country in those years, though
+ most of it is Prussia's now. Prince Karl's march will go parallel to the
+ Bober and the Queiss; separated from the Queiss in this part by an
+ undulating Hill-tract of twenty miles or more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich has had somewhat to settle for the Southern Frontier of Silesia
+ withal, which new doggeries of Pandours are invading,&mdash;to lie ready
+ for Prince Karl on his return thither, whose grand meaning all this while
+ (as Friedrich well knows), is "Silesia in the lump" again, had he once cut
+ us off from Brandenburg and our supplies! General Nassau, far eastward,
+ who is doing exploits in Moravia itself,&mdash;him Friedrich has ordered
+ homeward, westward to his own side of the Mountains, to attend these new
+ Pandour gentlemen; Winterfeld he has called home, out of those Southern
+ mountains, as likely to be usefuler here on this Western frontier.
+ Winterfeld arrived in Camp the same day with Friedrich; and is sent
+ forward with a body of 3,000 light troops, to keep watch about the Lausitz
+ Frontier and the River Queiss; "careful not to quit our own side of that
+ stream,"&mdash;as we mean to hoodwink Prince Karl, if we can!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich lies strictly within his own borders, for a day or two; till
+ Prince Karl march, till his own arrangements are complete. Friedrich
+ himself keeps the Bober, Winterfeld the Queiss; "all pass freely out of
+ the Lausitz; none are allowed to cross into it: thereby we hear notice of
+ Prince Karl, he none of us." Perfectly quiescent, we, poor creatures, and
+ aware of nothing! Thus, too, Friedrich&mdash;in spite of his warlike
+ Manifesto, which the Saxons are on the eve of answering with a formal
+ Declaration of War&mdash;affects great rigor in considering the Saxons as
+ not yet at war with him: respects their frontier, Winterfeld even punishes
+ hussars "for trespassing on Lausitz ground." Friedrich also affects to
+ have roads repaired, which he by no means intends to travel:&mdash;the
+ whole with a view of lulling Prince Karl; of keeping the mouse-trap open,
+ as he had done in the Striegau case. It succeeded again, quite as
+ conspicuously, and at less expense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl&mdash;whose Tolpatch doggery Winterfeld will not allow to pass
+ the Queiss, and to whom no traveller or tidings can come from beyond that
+ River&mdash;discerns only, on the farther shore of it, Winterfeld with his
+ 3,000 light troops. Behind these, he discerns either nothing, or nothing
+ immediately momentous; but contentedly supposes that this, the superficies
+ of things, is all the solid-content they have. Prince Karl gets under way,
+ therefore, nothing doubting; with his Saxons as vanguard. Down the Neisse
+ Valley, on the right or Queiss-ward side of it: Saturday, 20th November,
+ is his first march in Lusatian territory. He lies that night spread out in
+ three Villages, Schonberg, Schonbrunn, Kieslingswalde; [<i>Feldzuge,</i>
+ i. 407 (Bericht von der Action bey Katholisch-Hennersdorf, &amp;c.).] some
+ ten miles long; parallel to the Neisse River, and about four miles from
+ it, east or Queiss-ward of it. Karl himself is rear, at Schonberg; fierce
+ Lobkowitz is centre; the Saxons are vanguard, 6,000 in all, posted in
+ Villages, which again are some ten or twelve miles ahead of Prince Karl's
+ forces; the Queiss on their right hand, and the Naumburg Bridge of Queiss,
+ where Winterfeld now is, about fifteen miles to east. Their Uhlans
+ circulate through the intervening space (were much patrolling needed, in
+ such quiet circumstances), and maintain the due communication. There lies
+ Prince Karl, on Saturday night, 20th November, 1745; an Army of perhaps
+ 40,000, dnngerously straggling out above twenty miles long; and appears to
+ see no difficulty ahead. The Saxons, I think, are to continue where they
+ are; guarding the flank, while the Prince and Lobkowitz push forward,
+ closer by Neisse River. In four marches more, they can be in Brandenburg,
+ with Guben and their Magazines at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing which state of matters, Winterfeld gives Friedrich notice of it;
+ and that he, Winterfeld, thinks the moment is come. "Pontoons to Naumburg,
+ then!" orders Friedrich. Winterfeld, at the proper moment, is to form a
+ Bridge there. One permanent Bridge there already is; and two fords, one
+ above it, one below: with a second Bridge, there will be roadway for four
+ columns, and a swift transit when needful. Sunday, 21st, Friedrich quits
+ the Bober, diligently towards Naumburg; marches Sunday, Monday; Tuesday,
+ 23d, about eleven A.M., begins to arrive there; Winterfeld and passages
+ all ready. Forward, then, and let us drive in upon Prince Karl; and either
+ cut him in two, or force him to fight us; he little thinks where or on
+ what terms. Sure enough, in the worst place we can choose for him!
+ Friedrich begins crossing in four columns at one P.M.; crosses
+ continuously for four hours; unopposed, except some skirmishing of Uhlans,
+ while his Cavalry is riding the Fords to right and left; Uhlans were
+ driven back swiftly, so soon as the Cavalry got over. At five in the
+ evening, he has got entirely across, 35,000 horse and foot: Ziethen is
+ chasing the Uhlans at full speed; who at least will show us the way,&mdash;for
+ by this time a mist has begun falling, and the brief daylight is done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich himself, without waiting for the rear of his force, and some
+ while before this mist fell (as I judge), is pushing forward, "a miller
+ lad for his guide," across to Hennersdorf,&mdash;Katholisch-Hennersdorf, a
+ long straggling Village, eight or ten miles off, and itself two miles
+ long,&mdash;where he understands the Saxons are. Miller lad guides us,
+ over height and hollow, with his best skill, at a brisk pace;&mdash;through
+ one hollow, where he has known the cattle pasture in summer time; but
+ which proves impassable, and mere quagmire, at this season. No getting
+ through it, you unfortunate miller lad (GARCON DE MEUNIER). Nevertheless,
+ we did find passage through the skirts of it: nay this quagmire proved the
+ luck of us; for the enemy, trusting to it, had no outguard there, never
+ expecting us on that side. So that the vanguard, Ziethen and rapid
+ Hussars, made an excellent thing of it. Ziethen sends us word, That he has
+ got into the body of Hennersdorf,&mdash;"found the Saxon Quartermaster
+ quietly paying his men;"&mdash;that he, Ziethen, is tolerably master of
+ Hennersdorf, and will amuse the enemy till the other force come up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course Friedrich now pushes on, double speed; detaches other force,
+ horse and foot: which was lucky, says my informant; for the Ziethen
+ Hussars, getting good plunder, had by no means demolished the Saxons; but
+ had left them time to draw up in firm order, with a hedge in front, a
+ little west of the Village;&mdash;from which post, unassailable by
+ Ziethen, they would have got safe off to the main body, with little but an
+ affront and some loss of goods. The new force&mdash;a rapid Katzler with
+ light horse in the van, cuirassiers and foot rapidly following him&mdash;sweeps
+ past the long Village, "through a thin wood and a defile;" finds the enemy
+ firmly ranked as above said; cavalry their left, infantry on right,
+ flanked by an impenetrable hedge; and at once strikes in. At once, Katzler
+ does, on order given; but is far too weak. Charges, he; but is
+ counter-charged, tumbled back; the Saxons, horse and foot, showing
+ excellent fight. At length, more Prussian force coming up, cuirassiers
+ charge them in front, dragoons in flank, hussars in rear; all attacking at
+ once, and with a will; and the poor Saxon Cavalry is entirely cut to
+ shreds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now there remains only the Infantry, perhaps about 1,000 men (if one
+ must guess); who form a square; ply vigorously their field-pieces and
+ their fire-arms; and cannot be broken by horse-charges. In fact, these
+ Saxons made a fierce resistance;&mdash;till, before long, Prussian
+ Infantry came up; and, with counter field-pieces and musketries, blasted
+ gaps in them; upon which the Cavalry got admittance, and reduced the
+ gallant fellows nearly wholly to annihilation either by death or capture.
+ There are 914 Prisoners in this Action, 4 big guns, and I know not how
+ many kettle-drums, standards and the like,&mdash;all that were there, I
+ suppose. The number of dead not given. [Orlich, ii. 291; <i>Feldzuge,</i>i.
+ 400-413.] But, in brief, this Saxon Force is utterly cut to pieces; and
+ only scattered twos and threes of it rush through the dark mist;
+ scattering terror to this hand and that. The Prussians take their post at
+ and round Hennersdorf that night;&mdash;bivouacking, though only in sack
+ trousers, a blanket each man:&mdash;"We work hard, my men, and suffer all
+ things for a day or two, that it may save much work afterwards," said the
+ King to them; and they cheerfully bivouacked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the Action of Katholisch-Hennersdorf, fought on Tuesday, 23d
+ November, 1745; and still celebrated in the Prussian Annals, and reckoned
+ a brilliant passage of war. KATHOLISCH-Hennersdorf, some ten miles
+ southwest of Naumburg ON THE QUEISS (for there are, to my knowledge,
+ Twenty-five other Villages called Hennersdorf, and Three several Towns of
+ Naumburg, and many Castles and Hamlets so named in dear Germany of the
+ Nomenclatures):&mdash;Katholisch-Hennersdorf is the place, and Tuesday
+ about dusk the time. A sharp brush of fighting; not great in quantity, but
+ laid in at the right moment, in the right place. Like the prick of a
+ needle, duly sharp, into the spinal marrow of a gigantic object; totally
+ ruinous to such object. Never, or rarely, in the Annals of War, was as
+ much good got of so little fighting. You may, with labor and peril, plunge
+ a hundred dirks into your boaconstrictor; hack him with axes, bray him
+ with sledge-hammers; that is not uncommon: but the one true prick in the
+ spinal marrow, and the Artist that can guide you well to that, he and it
+ are the notable and beneficent phenomena.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PRINCE KARL, CUT IN TWO, TUMBLES HOME AGAIN DOUBLE-QUICK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Next morning, Wednesday, 24th, the Prussians are early astir again;
+ groping, on all manner of roads, to find what Prince Karl is doing, in a
+ world all covered in thick mist. They can find nothing of him, but broken
+ tumbrils, left baggage-wagons, rumor of universal marching hither and
+ marching thither;&mdash;evidences of an Army fallen into universal St.
+ Vitus's-Dance; distractedly hurrying to and fro, not knowing whitherward
+ for the moment, except that it must be homewards, homewards with velocity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl's farther movements are not worth particularizing. Ordering
+ and cross-ordering; march this way; no, back again: such a scene in that
+ mist. Prince Karl is flowing homeward; confusedly deluging and gurgling
+ southward, the best he can. Next afternoon, near Gorlitz, and again one
+ other time, he appears drawn up, as if for fighting; but has himself no
+ such thought; flies again, without a shot; leaves Gorlitz to capitulate,
+ that afternoon; all places to capitulate, or be evacuated. We hear he is
+ for Zittau; Winterfeld with light horse hastens after him, gets sight of
+ him on the Heights at Zittau yonder, [ <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii.
+ 157; Orlich, ii. 296.] "about two in the morning:" but the Prince has not
+ the least notion to fight. Prince leaves Zittau to capitulate,&mdash;quits
+ silently the Heights of Zittau at two A.M. (Winterfeld, very lively in the
+ rear of him, cutting off his baggage);&mdash;and so tumbles, pell-mell,
+ through the Passes of Gabel, home to Bohemia again. Let us save this poor
+ Note from the fire:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On Saturday night, November 27th, the Prussians, pursuing Prince Karl,
+ were cantoned in the Herrnhuth neighborhood,&mdash;my informant's regiment
+ in the Town of Herrnhuth itself. [<i>Feldzuge,</i> i. ubi supra.] Yes,
+ there lay the Prussians over Sunday; and might hear some weighty
+ expounder, if they liked. Considerably theological, many of these poor
+ Prussian soldiers; carrying a Bible in their knapsack, and devout Psalms
+ in the heart of them. Two-thirds of every regiment are LANDESKINDER,
+ native Prussians; each regiment from a special canton,&mdash;generally
+ rather religious men. The other third are recruits, gathered in the Free
+ Towns of the Reich, or where they can be got; not distinguished by
+ devotion these, we may fancy, only trained to the uttermost by Spartan
+ drill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the week is done, that "first leg" of the grand Enterprise (the
+ Prince-Karl leg) is such a leg as we see. "Silesia in the lump,"&mdash;fond
+ dream again, what a dream! Old Dessauer getting signal, where now, too
+ probably, is Saxony itself?&mdash;Ranking again at Aussig in Bohemia,
+ Prince Karl&mdash;5,000 of his men lost, and all impetus and fire gone&mdash;falls
+ gently down the Elbe, to join Rutowski at least; and will reappear within
+ four weeks, out of Saxon Switzerland, still rather in dismal humor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prussian Troops, in four great Divisions, are cantoned in that Lausitz
+ Country, now so quiet; in and about Bautzen and three other Towns of the
+ neighborhood; to rest and be ready for the old Dessauer, when we hear of
+ him. The "Magazine at Guben in 138 wagons," the Gorlitz and other
+ Magazines of Prince Karl in the due number of wagons, supply them with
+ comfortable unexpected provender. Thus they lie cantoned; and have with
+ despatch effectually settled their part of the problem. Question now is,
+ How will it stand with the Old Dessauer and his part? Or, better still,
+ Would not perhaps the Saxons, in this humiliated state, accept Peace, and
+ finish the matter?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIV.&mdash;BATTLE OF KESSELSDORF.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A "Correspondence" of a certain Excellency Villiers, English Minister at
+ Dresden,&mdash;Sir Thomas Villiers, Grandfather of the present Earl of
+ Clarendon,&mdash;was very famous in those weeks; and is still worth
+ mention, as a trait of Friedrich's procedure in this crisis. Friedrich,
+ not intoxicated with his swift triumph over Prince Karl, but calculating
+ the perils and the chances still ahead,&mdash;miserably off for money too,&mdash;admits
+ to himself that not revenge or triumph, that Peace is the one thing
+ needful to him. November 29th, Old Leopold is entering Saxony; and in the
+ same hours, Podewils at Berlin, by order of Friedrich, writes to Villiers
+ who is in Dresden, about Peace, about mediating for Peace: "My King ready
+ and desirous, now as at all times, for Peace; the terms of it known; terms
+ not altered, not alterable, no bargaining or higgling needed or allowable.
+ CONVENTION OF HANOVER, let his Polish Majesty accede honestly to that, and
+ all these miseries are ended." ["CORRESPONDANCE DU ROI AVEC SIR THOMAS
+ VILLIERS;" commences, on Podewils's part, 28th November; on Friedrich's,
+ 4th December; ends, on Villier's, 18th December; fourteen Pieces in all,
+ four of them Friedrich's: Given in <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii.
+ 183-216 (see IB, 158), and in many other Books.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Villiers starts instantly on this beneficent business; "goes to Court, on
+ it, that very night;" Villiers shows himself really diligent, reasonable,
+ loyal; doing his very best now and afterwards; but has no success at all.
+ Polish Majesty is obstinate,&mdash;I always think, in the way sheep are,
+ when they feel themselves too much put upon;&mdash;and is deaf to
+ everybody but Bruhl. Bruhl answers: "Let his Prussian Majesty retire from
+ our Territory;&mdash;what is he doing in the Lausitz just now! Retire from
+ our Territory; THEN we will treat!" Bruhl still refuses to be desperate of
+ his bad game;&mdash;at any rate, Bruhl's rage is yellower than ever. That,
+ very evening, while talking to Villiers, he has had preparations going on;&mdash;and
+ next morning takes his Master, Polish Majesty August III., with some
+ comfortable minimum of apparatus (cigar-boxes not forgotten), off to Prag,
+ where they can be out of danger till the thing decide itself. Villiers
+ follows to Prag; desists not from his eloquent Letters, and earnest
+ persuasions at Prag; but begins to perceive that the means of persuading
+ Bruhl will be a much heavier kind of artillery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, negotiations have yet done little. Britannic George, though
+ Purseholder, what is his success here? As little is the Russian Bugbear
+ persuasive on Friedrich himself. The Czarina of the Russias, a luxurious
+ lady, of far more weight than insight, has just notified to him, with more
+ emphasis than ever, That he shall not attack Saxony; that if he do, she
+ with considerable vigor will attack him! That has always been a formidable
+ puzzle for Friedrich: however, he reflects that the Russians never could
+ draw sword, or be ready with their Army, in less than six months, probably
+ not in twelve; and has answered, translating it into polite official
+ terms: "Fee-faw-fum, your Czarish Majesty! Question is not now of
+ attacking, but of being myself attacked!"&mdash;and so is now running his
+ risks with the Czarina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still worse was the result he got from Louis XV. Lately, "for form's
+ sake," as he tells us, "and not expecting anything," he had (November
+ 15th) made a new appeal to France: "Ruin menacing your Most Christian
+ Majesty's Ally, in this huge sudden crisis of invasive Austrian-Saxons;
+ and for your Majesty's sake, may I not in some measure say?" To which
+ Louis's Answer is also given. A very sickly, unpleasant Document;
+ testifying to considerable pique against Friedrich;&mdash;Ranke says, it
+ was a joint production, all the Ministers gradually contributing each his
+ little pinch of irony to make it spicier, and Louis signing when it was
+ enough;&mdash;very considerable pique against Friedrich; and something of
+ the stupid sulkiness as of a fat bad boy, almost glad that the house is on
+ fire, because it will burn his nimble younger brother, whom everybody
+ calls so clever: "Sorry indeed, Sir my Brother, most sorry:&mdash;and so
+ you have actually signed that HANOVER CONVENTION with our worst Enemy?
+ France is far from having done so; France has done, and will do, great
+ things. Our Royal heart grieves much at your situation; but is not
+ alarmed; no, Your Majesty has such invention, vigor and ability, superior
+ to any crisis, our clever younger Brother! And herewith we pray God to
+ have you in his holy keeping." This is the purport of King Louis's Letter;&mdash;which
+ Friedrich folds together again, looking up from perusal of it, we may
+ fancy with what a glance of those eyes. [Louis's Original, in <i>OEuvres
+ de Frederic,</i> iii. 173, 174 (with a much more satirical paraphrase than
+ the above), and Friedrich's Answer adjoined,&mdash;after the events had
+ come.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is getting instructed, this young King, as to alliances, grand
+ combinations, French and other. His third Note to Villiers intimates, "It
+ being evident that his Polish Majesty will have nothing from us but
+ fighting, we must try to give it him of the best kind we have." ["Bautzen,
+ 11th December, 1745" (UBI SUPRA).] Yes truly; it is the ULTIMATE
+ persuasive, that. Here, in condensed form, are the essential details of
+ the course it went, in this instance:&mdash;General Grune, on the road to
+ Berlin, hearing of the rout at Hennersdorf, halted instantly,&mdash;hastened
+ back to Saxony, to join Rutowski there, and stand on the defensive. Not
+ now in that Halle-Frontier region (Rutowski has quitted that, and all the
+ intrenchments and marshy impregnabilities there); not on that
+ Halle-Frontier, but hovering about in the interior, Rutowski and Grune are
+ in junction; gravitating towards Dresden;&mdash;expecting Prince Karl's
+ advent; who ought to emerge from the Saxon Switzerland in few days, were
+ he sharp; and again enable us to make a formidable figure. Be speedy, Old
+ Dessauer: you must settle the Grune-Rutowski account before that junction,
+ not after it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Old Dessauer has been tolerably successful, and by no means thinks he
+ has been losing time. November 29th, "at three in the morning," he stept
+ over into Saxony with its impregnable camps; drove Rutowski's rear-guard,
+ or remnant, out of the quagmires, canals and intrenchments, before
+ daylight; drove it, that same evening, or before dawn of the morrow, out
+ of Leipzig: has seized that Town,&mdash;lays heavy contribution on it,
+ nearly 50,000 pounds (such our strait for finance), "and be sure you take
+ only substantial men as sureties!" [Orlich, ii. 308.]&mdash;and will, and
+ does after a two days' rest, advance with decent celerity inwards; though
+ "One must first know exactly whither; one must have bread, and
+ preparations and precautions; do all things solidly and in order," thinks
+ the Old Dessauer. Friedrich well knows the whither; and that Dresden
+ itself is, or may be made, the place for falling in with Rutowski.
+ Friedrich is now himself ready to join, from the Bautzen region; the days
+ and hours precious to him; and spurs the Old Dessauer with the sharpest
+ remonstrances. "All solidly and in order, your Majesty!" answers the Old
+ Dessauer: solid strong-boned old coach-horse, who has his own modes of
+ trotting, having done many a heavy mile of it in his time; and whose skin,
+ one hopes, is of the due thickness against undue spurring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Dessauer wishes two things: bread to live upon; and a sure Bridge over
+ the Elbe whereby Friedrich may join him. Old Dessauer makes for Torgau,
+ far north, where is both an Elbe Bridge and a Magazine; which he takes;
+ Torgau and pertinents now his. But it is far down the Elbe, far off from
+ Bautzen and Friedrich: "A nearer Bridge and rendezvous, your Highness!
+ Meissen [where they make the china, only fifty miles from me, and twenty
+ from Dresden], let that be the Bridge, now that you have got victual. And
+ speedy; for Heaven's sake, speedy!" Friedrich pushes out General Lehwald
+ from Bautzen, with 4,000 men, towards Meissen Bridge; Lehwald does not
+ himself meddle with the Bridge, only fires shot across upon the Saxon
+ party, till the Old Dessauer, on the other bank, come up;&mdash;and the
+ Old Dessauer, impatience thinks, will never come. "Three days in Torgau,
+ yes, Your Majesty: I had bread to bake, and the very ovens had to be
+ built." A solid old roadster, with his own modes of trotting; needs
+ thickness of skin. [Friedrich's Letters to Leopold, in Orlich, ii. 431,
+ 435 (6th-10th December, 1745).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At long last, on Sunday, 12th December, about two P.M., the Old Dessauer
+ does appear; or General Gessler, his vanguard, does appear,&mdash;Gessler
+ of the sixty-seven standards,&mdash;"always about an hour ahead." Gessler
+ has summoned Meissen; has not got it, is haggling with it about terms,
+ when, towards sunset of the short day, Old Dessauer himself arrives.
+ Whereupon the Saxon Commandant quits the Bridge (not much breaking it);
+ and glides off in the dark, clear out of Meissen, towards Dresden,&mdash;chased,
+ but successfully defending himself. [See Plan, p. 10.] "Had he but stood
+ out for two days!" say the Saxons,&mdash;"Prince Karl had then been up,
+ and much might have been different." Well, Friedrich too would have been
+ up, and it had most likely been the same on a larger scale. But the Saxon
+ Commandant did not stand out; he glided off, safe; joined Rutowski and
+ Grune, who are lying about Wilsdruf, six or seven miles on the hither side
+ of Dresden, and eagerly waiting for Prince Karl. "Bridge and Town of
+ Meissen are your Majesty's," reports the Old Dessauer that night: upon
+ which Friedrich instantly rises, hastening thitherward. Lehwald comes
+ across Meissen Bridge, effects the desired junction; and all Monday the
+ Old Dessauer defiles through Meissen town and territory; continually
+ advances towards Dresden, the Saxons harassing the flanks of him a little,&mdash;nay
+ in one defile, being sharp strenuous fellows, they threw his rear into
+ some confusion; cut off certain carts and prisoners, and the life of one
+ brave General, Lieutenant-General Roel, who had charge there. "Spurring
+ one's trot into a gallop! This comes of your fast marching, of your
+ spurring beyond the rules of war!" thinks Old Leopold; and Friedrich, who
+ knows otherwise, is very angry for a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But indeed the crisis is pressing. Prince Karl is across the Metal
+ Mountains, nearing Dresden from the east; Friedrich strikes into march for
+ the same point by Meissen, so soon as the Bridge is his. Old Leopold is
+ advancing thither from the westward,&mdash;steadily hour by hour; Dresden
+ City the fateful goal. There,&mdash;in these middle days of December, 1745
+ (Highland Rebellion just whirling back from Derby again, "the London shops
+ shut for one day"),&mdash;it is clear there will be a big and bloody game
+ played before we are much older. Very sad indeed: but Count Bruhl is not
+ persuadable otherwise. By slumbering and sluggarding, over their
+ money-tills and flesh-pots; trying to take evil for good, and to say, "It
+ will do," when it will not do, respectable Nations come at last to be
+ governed by Bruhls; cannot help themselves;&mdash;and get their backs
+ broken in consequence. Why not? Would you have a Nation live forever that
+ is content to be governed by Bruhls? The gods are wiser!&mdash;It is now
+ the 13th; Old Dessauer tramping forward, hour by hour, towards Dresden and
+ some field of Fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Tuesday, 14th, by break of day, Old Dessauer gets on march again; in
+ four columns, in battle order; steady all day,&mdash;hard winter weather,
+ ground crisp, and flecked with snow. The Pass at Neustadt, "his cavalry
+ went into it at full gallop;" but found nobody there. That night he
+ encamps at a place called Rohrsdorf; which may be eight miles
+ west-by-north from Dresden, as the crow flies; and ten or more, if you
+ follow the highway round by Wilsdruf on your right. The real direct
+ Highway from Meissen to Dresden is on the other side of the Elbe, and
+ keeps by the River-bank, a fine level road; but on this western side,
+ where Leopold now is, the road is inland, and goes with a bend. Leopold,
+ of course, keeps command of this road; his columns are on both sides of
+ it, River on their left at some miles distance; and incessantly expect to
+ find Rutowski, drawn out on favorable ground somewhere. The country is of
+ fertile, but very broken character; intersected by many brooks, making
+ obliquely towards the Elbe (obliquely, with a leaning Meissen-wards);
+ country always mounting, till here about Rohrsdorf we seem to have almost
+ reached the watershed, and the brooks make for the Elbe, leaning Dresden
+ way. Good posts abound in such broken country, with its villages and
+ brooks, with its thickets, hedges and patches of swamp. But Rutowski has
+ not appeared anywhere, during this Tuesday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our four columns, therefore, lie all night, under arms, about Rohrsdorf:
+ and again by morrow's dawn are astir in the old order, crunching far and
+ wide the frozen ground; and advance, charged to the muzzle with potential
+ battle. Slightly upwards always, to the actual watershed of the country;
+ leaving Wilsdruf a little to their right. Wilsdruf is hardly past, when
+ see, from this broad table-land, top of the country: "Yonder is Rutowski,
+ at last;&mdash;and this new Wednesday will be a day!" Yonder, sure enough:
+ drawn out three or four miles long; with his right to the Elbe, his left
+ to that intricate Village of Kesselsdorf; bristling with cannon; deep
+ gullet and swampy brook in front of him: the strongest post a man could
+ have chosen in those parts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Village of Kesselsdorf itself lies rather in a hollow; in the slight
+ beginning, or uppermost extremity, of a little Valley or Dell, called the
+ Tschonengrund,&mdash;which, with its quaggy brook of a Tschone, wends
+ northeastward into the Elbe, a course of four or five miles: a little
+ Valley very deep for its length, and getting altogether chasmy and
+ precipitous towards the Elbe-ward or lower end. Kesselsdorf itself, as we
+ said, is mainly in a kind of hollow: between Old Leopold and Kesselsdorf
+ the ground rather mounts; and there is perceptibly a flat knoll or rise at
+ the head of it, where the Village begins. Some trees there, and abundance
+ of cannon and grenadiers at this moment. It is the southwestern or
+ left-most point of Rutowski's line; impregnable with its cannon-batteries
+ and grenadiers. Rightward Rutowski extends in long lines, with the
+ quaggy-dell of Tschonengrund in front of him, parallel to him; Dell ever
+ deepening as it goes. Northeastward, at the extreme right, or Elbe point
+ of it, where Grune and the Austrians stand, it has grown so chasmy, we
+ judge that Grune can neither advance nor be
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MAP/PLAN GOES HERE&mdash;book 15 continuation &mdash;page 10&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ advanced upon:e,&mdash;which he did all day, in a purely meditative
+ posture. Rutowski numbers 35,000, now on this ground, with immensity of
+ cannon; 32,000 we, with only the usual field-artillery, and such a
+ Tschonengrund, with its half-frozen quagmires ahead. A ticklish case for
+ the old man, as he grimly reconnoitres it, in the winter morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grim Old Dessauer having reconnoitred, and rapidly considered, decides to
+ try it,&mdash;what else?&mdash;will range himself on the west side of that
+ Tschonengrund, horse and foot; two lines, wide as Rutowski opposite him;
+ but means to direct his main and prime effort against Kesselsdorf, which
+ is clearly the key of the position, if it can be taken. For which end the
+ Old Dessauer lengthens himself out to rightward, so as to outflank
+ Kesselsdorf;&mdash;neglecting Grune (refusing Grune, as the soldiers say):&mdash;"our
+ horse of the right wing reached from the Wood called Lerchenbusoh
+ (LARCH-BUSH) rightward as far as Freyberg road; foot all between that
+ Lerchenbusch and the big Birch-tree on the road to Wilsdruf; horse of the
+ left wing, from there to Roitsch." [Stille (p. 181), who was present. See
+ Plan.] It was about two P.M. before the old man got all his deployments
+ completed; what corps of his, deploying this way or that, came within wind
+ of Kesselsdorf, were saluted with cannon, thirty pieces or more, which are
+ in battery, in three batteries, on the knoll there; but otherwise no
+ fighting as yet. At two, the Old Dessauer is complete; he reverently doffs
+ his hat, as had always been his wont, in prayer to God, before going in. A
+ grim fervor of prayer is in his heart, doubtless; though the words as
+ reported are not very regular or orthodox: "O HERR GOTT, help me yet this
+ once; let me not be disgraced in my old days! Or if thou wilt not help me,
+ don't help those HUNDSVOGTE [damned Scoundrels, so to speak], but leave us
+ to try it ourselves!" That is the Old Scandinavian of a Dessauer's prayer;
+ a kind of GODUR he too, Priest as well as Captain: Prayer mythically true
+ as given; mythically, not otherwise. [Ranke, iii. 334 n.] Which done, he
+ waves his hat once, "On, in God's name!" and the storm is loose. Prussian
+ right wing pushing grandly forward, bent in that manner, to take
+ Kesselsdorf and its fire-throats in flank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prussians tramp on with the usual grim-browed resolution, foot in
+ front, horse in rear; but they have a terrible problem at that
+ Kesselsdorf, with its retrenched batteries, and numerous grenadiers
+ fighting under cover. The very ground is sore against them; uphill, and
+ the trampled snow wearing into a slide, so that you sprawl and stagger
+ sadly. Thirty-one big guns, and about 9,000 small, pouring out mere death
+ on you, from that knoll-head. The Prussians stagger; cannot stand it; bend
+ to rightwards, and get out of shot-range; cannot manage it this bout.
+ Rally, reinforce; try it again. Again, with a will; but again there is not
+ a way. The Prussians are again repulsed; fall back, down this slippery
+ course, in more disorder than the first time. Had the Saxons stood still,
+ steadily handling arms, how, on such terms, could the Prussians ever have
+ managed it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at sight of this second repulse, the Saxon grenadiers, and especially
+ one battalion of Austrians who were there (the only Austrians who fought
+ this day), gave a shout "Victory!"&mdash;and in the height of their
+ enthusiasm, rushed out, this Austrian battalion first and the Saxons after
+ them, to charge these Prussians, and sweep the world clear of them. It was
+ the ruin of their battle; a fatal hollaing before you are out of the
+ woods. Old Leopold, quick as thought, noticing the thing, hurls cavalry on
+ these victorious down-plunging grenadiers; slashes them asunder, into mere
+ recoiling whirlpools of ruin; so that "few of them got back unwounded;"
+ and the Prussians storming in along with them,&mdash;aided by ever new
+ Prussians, from beyond the Tschonengrund even,&mdash;the place was at
+ length carried; and the Saxon battle became hopeless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, their right being in such hurricane, the Prussians from the centre,
+ as we hint, storm forward withal; will not be held back by the
+ Tschonengrund. They find the Tschonengrund quaggy in the extreme, "brook
+ frozen at the sides, but waist-deep of liquid mud in the centre;" cross
+ it, nevertheless, towards the upper part of it,&mdash;young Moritz of
+ Dessau leading the way, to help his old Father in extremity. They climb
+ the opposite side,&mdash;quite slippery in places, but "helping one
+ another up;"&mdash;no Saxons there till you get fairly atop, which was an
+ oversight on the Saxon part. Fairly atop, Moritz is saluted by the Saxons
+ with diligent musket-volleys; but Moritz also has musket-volleys in him,
+ bayonet-charges in him; eager to help his old Papa at this hard pinch. Old
+ Papa has the Saxons in flank; sends more and ever more other cavalry in on
+ them; and in fact, the right wing altogether storms violently through
+ Kesselsdorf, and sweeps it clean. Whole regiments of the Saxons are made
+ prisoners; Roel's Light Horse we see there, taking standards; cutting
+ violently in to avenge Roel's death, and the affront they had at Meissen
+ lately. Furious Moritz on their front, from across the Tschonengrund;
+ furious Roel (GHOST of Roel) and others in their flank, through
+ Kesselsdorf: no standing for the Saxons longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About nightfall,&mdash;their horse having made poorish fight, though the
+ foot had stood to it like men,&mdash;they roll universally away. The
+ Prussian left wing of horse are summoned through the Tschonengrund to
+ chase: had there remained another hour of daylight, the Saxon Army had
+ been one wide ruin. Hidden in darkness, the Saxon Army ebbed confusedly
+ towards Dresden: with the loss of 6,000 prisoners and 3,000 killed and
+ wounded: a completely beaten Army. It is the last battle the Saxons fought
+ as a Nation,&mdash;or probably will fight. Battle called of Kesselsdorf:
+ Wednesday, 15th December, 1745.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Karl had arrived at Dresden the night before; heard all this
+ volleying and cannonading, from the distance; but did not see good to
+ interfere at all. Too wide apart, some say; quartered at unreasonably
+ distant villages, by some irrefragable ignorant War-clerk of Bruhl's
+ appointing,&mdash;fatal Bruhl. Others say, his Highness had himself no
+ mind; and made excuses that his troops were tired, disheartened by the two
+ beatings lately,&mdash;what will become of us in case of a third or
+ fourth! It is certain, Prince Karl did nothing. Nor has Grime's corps, the
+ right wing, done anything except meditate:&mdash;it stood there
+ unattacked, unattacking; till deep in the dark night, when Rutowski
+ remembered it, and sent it order to come home. One Austrian battalion,
+ that of grenadiers on the knoll at Kesselsdorf, did actually fight;&mdash;and
+ did begin that fatal outbreak, and quitting of the post there; "which lost
+ the Battle to us!" say the Saxons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had those grenadiers stood in their place, there is no Prussian but admits
+ that it would have been a terrible business to take Kesselsdorf and its
+ batteries. But they did not stand; they rushed out, shouting "Victory;"
+ and lost us the battle. And that is the good we have got of the sublime
+ Austrian Alliance; and that is the pass our grand scheme of Partitioning
+ Prussia has come to? Fatal little Bruhl of the three hundred and
+ sixty-five clothes-suits; Valet fatally become divine in Valet-hood,&mdash;are
+ not you costing your Country dear!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Dessauer, glorious in the last of his fields, lay on his arms all
+ night in the posts about; three bullets through his roquelaure, no scratch
+ of wound upon the old man. Young Moritz too "had a bullet through his
+ coat-skirt, and three horses shot under him; but no hurt, the Almighty's
+ grace preserving him." [<i>Feldzuge,</i>i. 434.] This Moritz is the Third
+ of the Brothers, age now thirty-three; and we shall hear considerably
+ about him in times coming. A lean, tall, austere man; and, "of all the
+ Brothers, most resembled his Father in his ways." Prince Dietrich is in
+ Leipzig at present; looking to that contribution of 50,000 pounds; to
+ that, and to other contributions and necessary matters;&mdash;and has done
+ all his fighting (as it chanced), though he survived his Brothers many
+ years. Old Papa will now get his discharge before long (quite suddenly,
+ one morning, by paralytic stroke, 7th April, 1747); and rest honorably
+ with the Sons of Thor. [Young Leopold, the successor, died 16th December,
+ 1751, age fifty-two; Dietrich (who had thereupon quitted soldiering, to
+ take charge of his Nephew left minor, and did not resume it), died 2d
+ December, 1769; Moritz (soldier to the last), 11th April, 1760. See <i>Militair-Lexikon,</i>i.
+ 43, 34, 38,47.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XV.&mdash;PEACE OF DRESDEN: FRIEDRICH DOES MARCH HOME.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich himself had got to Meissen, Tuesday, 14th; no enemy on his road,
+ or none to speak of: Friedrich was there, or not yet far across, all
+ Wednesday; collecting himself, waiting, on the slip, for a signal from Old
+ Leopold. Sound of cannon, up the Elbe Dresden-ward, is reported there to
+ Friedrich, that afternoon: cannon, sure enough, notes Friedrich; and deep
+ dim-rolling peals, as of volleying small-arms; "the sky all on fire over
+ there," as the hoar-frosty evening fell. Old Leopold busy at it,
+ seemingly. That is the glare of the Old Dessauer's countenance; who is
+ giving voice, in that manner, to the earthly and the heavenly powers;
+ conquering Peace for us, let us hope!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich, as may be supposed, made his best speed next morning: "All
+ well!" say the messengers; all well, says Old Leopold, whom he meets at
+ Wilsdruf, and welcomes with a joyful embrace; "dismounting from his horse,
+ at sight of Leopold, and advancing to meet him with doffed hat and open
+ arms,"&mdash;and such words and treatments, that day, as made the old
+ man's face visibly shine. "Your Highness shall conduct me!" And the two
+ made survey together of the actual Field of Kesselsdorf; strewn with the
+ ghastly wrecks of battle,&mdash;many citizens of Dresden strolling about,
+ or sorrowfully seeking for their lost ones among the wounded and dead. No
+ hurt to these poor citizens, who dread none; help to them rather: such is
+ Friedrich's mind,&mdash;concerning which, in the Anecdote-Books, there are
+ Narratives (not worth giving) of a vapidly romantic character, credible
+ though inexact. [For the indisputable pa so we leave him standing therrt,
+ see Orlich, ii. 343, 344; and <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i> iii. 170.]
+ Friedrich, who may well be profuse of thanks and praises, charms the Old
+ Dessauer while they walk together; brave old man with his holed
+ roquelaure. For certain, he has done the work there,&mdash;a great deal of
+ work in his time! Joy looks through his old rough face, of gunpowder
+ color: the Herr Gott has not delivered him to those damned Scoundrels in
+ the end of his days.&mdash;On the morrow, Friday, Leopold rolled grandly
+ forward upon Dresden; Rutowski and Prince Karl vanishing into the Metal
+ Mountains, by Pirna, for Bohemia, at sound of him,&mdash;as he had
+ scarcely hoped they would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Saturday evening, Dresden, capable of not the least defence, has
+ opened all its gates, and Friedrich and the Prussians are in Dresden;
+ Austrians and wrecked Saxons falling back diligently towards the Metal
+ Mountains for Bohemia, diligent to clear the road for him. Queen and
+ Junior Princes are here; to whom, as to all men, Friedrich is courtesy
+ itself; making personal visit to the Royalties, appointing guards of
+ honor, sacred respect to the Royal Houses; himself will lodge at the
+ Princess Lubomirski's, a private mansion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That ferocious, false, ambitious King of Prussia"&mdash;Well, he is not
+ to be ruined in open fight, on the contrary is ruinous there; nor by the
+ cunningest ambuscades, and secret combinations, in field or cabinet: our
+ overwhelming Winter Invasion of him&mdash;see where it has ended! Bruhl
+ and Polish Majesty&mdash;the nocturnal sky all on fire in those parts, and
+ loud general doomsday come&mdash;are a much-illuminated pair of gentlemen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the time Meissen Bridge was lost, Prince Karl too showing himself so
+ languid, even Bruhl had discerned that the case was desperate. On the very
+ day of Kesselsdorf,&mdash;not the day BEFORE, which would have been such a
+ thrift to Bruhl and others!&mdash;Friedrich had a Note from Villiers,
+ signifying joyfully that his Polish Majesty would accept Peace. Thanks to
+ his Polish Majesty:&mdash;and after Kesselsdorf, perhaps the Empress-Queen
+ too will! Friedrich's offers are precisely what they were, what they have
+ always been: "Convention of Hanover; that, in all its parts; old treaty of
+ Breslau, to be guaranteed, to be actually kept. To me Silesia sure;&mdash;from
+ you, Polish Majesty, one million crowns as damages for the trouble and
+ cost this Triple Ambuscade of yours has given me; one million crowns,
+ 150,000 pounds we will say; and all other requisitions to cease on the day
+ of signature. These are my terms: accept these; then wholly, As you were,
+ Empress-Queen and you, and all surviving creatures: and I march home
+ within a week." Villiers speeds rapidly from Prag, with the due
+ olive-branch; with Count Harrach, experienced Austrian, and full powers.
+ Harrach cannot believe his senses: "Such the terms to be still granted,
+ after all these beatings and rebeatings!"&mdash;then at last does believe,
+ with stiff thankfulness and Austrian bows. The Negotiation need not occupy
+ many hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty of Prussia was far too hasty with this Peace," says Valori:
+ "he had taken a threap that he would have it finished before the Year was
+ done:"&mdash;in fact, he knows his own mind, MON GROS VALORI, and that is
+ what few do. You shear through no end of cobwebs with that fine implement,
+ a wisely fixed resolution of your own. A Peace slow enough for Valori and
+ the French: where could that be looked for?&mdash;Valori is at Berlin, in
+ complete disgrace; his Most Christian King having behaved so like a Turk
+ of late. Valori, horror-struck at such Peace, what shall he do to prevent
+ it, to retard it? One effort at least. D'Arget his Secretary, stolen at
+ Jaromirz, is safe back to him; ingenious, ingenuous D'Arget was always a
+ favorite with Friedrich: despatch D'Arget to him. D'Arget is despatched;
+ with reasons, with remonstrances, with considerations. D'Arget's Narrative
+ is given: an ingenuous off-hand Piece;&mdash;poor little crevice, through
+ which there is still to be had, singularly clear, and credible in every
+ point, a direct glimpse of Friedrich's own thoughts, in that many-sounding
+ Dresden,&mdash;so loud, that week, with dinner-parties, with operas,
+ balls, Prussian war-drums, grand-parades and Peace-negotiations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE SIEUR D'ARGET TO EXCELLENCY VALORI (at Berlin).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "DRESDEN, 1745" (dateless otherwise, must be December, between 18th and
+ 25th).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MONSEIGNEUR,&mdash;I arrived yesterday at 7 P.M.; as I had the honor of
+ forewarning you, by the word I wrote to the Abbe [never mind what Abbe;
+ another Valori-Clerk] from Sonnenwalde [my half-way house between Berlin
+ and this City]. I went, first of all, to M. de Vaugrenand," our Envoy
+ here; "who had the goodness to open himself to me on the Business now on
+ hand. In my opinion, nothing can be added to the excellent considerations
+ he has been urging on the King of Prussia and the Count de Podewils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At half-past 8, I went to his Prussian Majesty's; I found he was engaged
+ with his Concert,"&mdash;lodges in the Lubomirski Palace, has his snatch
+ of melody in the evening of such discordant days,&mdash;"and I could not
+ see him till after half-past 9. I announced myself to M. Eichel; he was
+ too overwhelmed with affairs to give me audience. I asked for Count
+ Rothenburg; he was at cards with the Princess Lubomirski. At last, I did
+ get to the King: who received me in the most agreeable way; but was just
+ going to Supper; said he must put off answering till to-morrow morning,
+ morning of this day. M. de Vaugrenand had been so good as prepare me on
+ the rumors of a Peace with Saxony and the Queen of Hungary. I went to M.
+ Podewils; who said a great many kind things to me for you. I could only
+ sketch out the matter, at that time; and represented to Podewils the
+ brilliant position of his Master, who had become Arbiter of the Peace of
+ Europe; that the moment was come for making this Peace a General One, and
+ that perhaps there would be room for repentance afterwards, if the
+ opportunity were slighted. He said, his Master's object was that same; and
+ thus closed the conversation by general questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This morning, I again presented myself at the King of Prussia's. I had to
+ wait, and wait; in fine, it was not till half-past 5 in the evening that
+ he returned, or gave me admittance; and I stayed with him till after 7,"&mdash;when
+ Concert-time was at hand again. Listen to a remarkable Dialogue, of the
+ Conquering Hero with a humble Friend whom he likes. "His Majesty
+ condescended (A DAIGNE) to enter with me into all manner of details; and
+ began by telling me,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That M. de Valori had done admirably not to come, himself, with that
+ Letter from the King [Most Christian, OUR King; Letter, the sickly
+ Document above spoken of]; that there could not have been an Answer
+ expected,&mdash;the Letter being almost of ironical strain; his Majesty
+ [Most Christian] not giving him the least hope, but merely talking of his
+ fine genius, and how that would extricate him from the perilous
+ entanglement, and inspire him with a wise resolution in the matter! That
+ he had, in effect, taken a resolution the wisest he could; and was making
+ his Peace with Saxony and the Queen of Hungary. That he had felt all the
+ dangers of the difficult situations he had been in,"&mdash;sheer
+ destruction yawning all round him, in huge imminency, more than once, and
+ no friend heeding;&mdash;"that, weary of playing always double-or-quits,
+ he had determined to end it, and get into a state of tranquillity, which
+ both himself and his People had such need of. That France could not,
+ without difficulty, have remedied his mishaps; and that he saw by the
+ King's Letter, there was not even the wish to do it. That his,
+ Friedrich's, military career was completed,"&mdash;so far as HE could
+ foresee or decide! "That he would not again expose his Country to the
+ Caprices of Fortune, whose past constancy to him was sufficiently
+ astonishing to raise fears of a reverse (HEAR!). That his ambitions were
+ fulfilled, in having compelled his Enemies to ask Peace from him in their
+ own Capital, with the Chancellor of Bohemia [Harrach, typifying fallen
+ Austrian pride] obliged to co-operate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That he would always be attached to our King's interests, and set all the
+ value in the world on his friendship; but that he had not been
+ sufficiently assisted to be content. That, observing henceforth an exact
+ neutrality, he might be enabled to do offices of mediation; and to carry,
+ to the one side and to the other, words of peace. That he offered himself
+ for that object, and would be charmed to help in it; but that he was fixed
+ to stop there. That in regard to the basis of General Peace, he had Two
+ Ideas [which the reader can attend to, and see where they differed from
+ the Event, and where not]:&mdash;One was, That France should keep Ypres,
+ Furnes, Tournay [which France did not], giving up the Netherlands
+ otherwise, with Ostend, to the English [to the English!] in exchange for
+ Cape Breton. The other was, To give up more of our Conquests [we gave them
+ all up, and got only the glory, and our Cod-fishery, Cape Breton, back,
+ the English being equally generous], and bargain for liberty to
+ re-establish Dunkirk in its old condition [not a word of your Dunkirk;
+ there is your Cape Breton, and we also will go home with what glory there
+ is,&mdash;not difficult to carry!]. But that it was by England we must
+ make the overtures, without addressing ourselves to the Court of Vienna;
+ and put it in his, Friedrich's, power to propose a receivable Project of
+ Peace. That he well conceived the great point was the Queen of Spain
+ [Termagant and Jenkins's Ear; Termagant's Husband, still living, is a
+ lappet of Termagant's self]: but that she must content herself with Parma
+ and Piacenza for the Infant, Don Philip [which the Termagant did]; and
+ give back her hold of Savoy [partial hold, of no use to her without the
+ Passes] to the King of Sardinia." And of the JENKINS'S-EAR question,
+ generous England will say nothing? Next to nothing; hopes a modicum of
+ putty and diplomatic varnish may close that troublesome question,&mdash;which
+ springs, meanwhile, in the centre of the world!&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These kind condescensions of his Majesty emboldened me to represent to
+ him the brilliant position he now held; and how noble it would be, after
+ having been the Hero of Germany, to become, instead of one's own
+ pacificator, the Pacificator of Europe. 'I grant you,' said he, (MON CHER
+ D'Arget; but it is too dangerous a part for playing. A reverse brings me
+ to the edge of ruin: I know too well the mood of mind I was in, last time
+ I left Berlin with that Three-legged Immensity of Atropos, NOT yet mown
+ down at Hennersdorf by a lucky cut), ever to expose myself to it again! If
+ luck had been against me there, I saw myself a Monarch without throne; and
+ my subjects in the cruelest oppression. A bad game that: always, mere
+ CHECK TO YOUR KING; no other move;&mdash;I refer it to you, friend
+ D'Arget:&mdash;in fine, I wish to be at peace.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I represented to him that the House of Austria would never, with a
+ tranquil eye, see his House in possession of Silesia. 'Those that come
+ after me,' said he, 'will do as they like; the Future is beyond man's
+ reach. Those that come after will do as they can. I have acquired; it is
+ theirs to preserve. I am not in alarm about the Austrians;&mdash;and this
+ is my answer to what you have been saying about the weakness of my
+ guarantees. They dread my Army; the luck that I have. I am sure of their
+ sitting quiet for the dozen years or so which may remain to me of life;&mdash;quiet
+ till I have, most likely, done with it. What! Are we never to have any
+ good of our life, then (NE DOIS-JE DONC JAMAIS JOUIR)? There is more for
+ me in the true greatness of laboring for the happiness of my subjects,
+ than in the repose of Europe. I have put Saxony out of a condition to do
+ hurt. She owes 14,775,000 crowns of debt [two millions and a quarter
+ sterling]; and by the Defensive Alliance which I form with her, I provide
+ myself [but ask Bruhl withal!] a help against Austria. I would not
+ henceforth attack a cat, except to defend myself.' ["These are his very
+ words," adds D'Arget;&mdash;and well worth noting.] (Ambition (GLOIRE) and
+ my interests were the occasion of my first Campaigns. The late Kaiser's
+ situation, and my zeal for France [not to mention interests again], gave
+ rise to these second: and I have been fighting always since for my own
+ hearths,&mdash;for my very existence, I might say! Once more, I know the
+ state I had got into:&mdash;if I saw Prince Karl at the gates of Paris, I
+ would not stir.'&mdash;'And us at the gates of Vienna,' answered I
+ promptly, 'with the same indifference?'&mdash;'Yes; and I swear it to you,
+ D'Arget. In a word, I want to have some good of my life (VEUX JOUIR). What
+ are we, poor human atoms, to get up projects that cost so much blood? Let
+ us live, and help to live.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The rest of the conversation passed in general talk, about Literature,
+ Theatres and such objects. My reasonings and objectings, on the great
+ matter, I need not farther detail: by the frank discourse his Prussian
+ Majesty was kind enough to go into, you may gather perhaps that my
+ arguments were various, and not ill-chosen;&mdash;and it is too evident
+ they have all been in vain."&mdash;Your Excellency's (really in a very
+ faithful way)&mdash; D'ARGET. [Valori, i. 290-294 (no date, except
+ "Dresden, 1745,"&mdash;sleepy Editor feeling no want of any).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ D'Arget, about a month after this, was taken into Friedrich's service;
+ Valori consenting, whose occupation was now gone;&mdash;and we shall hear
+ of D'Arget again. Take this small Note, as summary of him: "D'Arget (18th
+ January, 1746) had some title, 'Secretary at Orders (SECRETAIRE DES
+ COMMANDEMENTS),' bit of pension; and continued in the character of reader,
+ or miscellaneous literary attendant and agent, very much liked by his
+ Master, for six years coming. A man much heard of, during those years of
+ office. March, 1752, having lost his dear little Prussian Wife, and got
+ into ill health and spirits, he retired on leave to Paris; and next year
+ had to give up the thought of returning;&mdash;though he still, and to the
+ end, continued loyally attached to his old Master, and more or less in
+ correspondence with him. Had got, before long, not through Friedrich's
+ influence at Paris, some small Appointment in the ECOLE MILITAIRE there.
+ He is, of all the Frenchmen Friedrich had about him, with the exception of
+ D'Argens alone, the most honest-hearted. The above Letter, lucid,
+ innocent, modest, altogether rational and practical, is a fair specimen of
+ D'Arget: add to it the prompt self-sacrifice (and in that fine silent way)
+ at Jaromirz for Valori, and readers may conceive the man. He lived at
+ Paris, in meagre but contented fashion, RUE DE L'ECOLE MILITAIRE, till
+ 1778; and seems, of all the Ex-Prussian Frenchmen, to have known most
+ about Friedrich; and to have never spoken any falsity against him.
+ Duvernet, the 'M&mdash;&mdash;' Biographer of VOLTAIRE, frequented him a
+ good deal; and any true notions, or glimmerings of such, that he has about
+ Prussia, are probably ascribable to D'Arget." [See <i>OEuvres de Frederic,</i>
+ xx. (p. xii of PREFACE to the D'ARGET CORRESPONDENCE there).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Treaty of Dresden can be read in Scholl, Flassan, Rousset, Adelung;
+ but, except on compulsion, no creature will now read it,&mdash;nor did
+ this Editor, even he, find it pay. Peace is made. Peace of Dresden is
+ signed, Christmas Day, 1745: "To me Silesia, without farther treachery or
+ trick; you, wholly as you were." Europe at large, as Friedrich had done,
+ sees "the sky all on fire about Dresden." The fierce big battles done
+ against this man have, one and all of them, become big defeats. The
+ strenuous machinations, high-built plans cunningly devised,&mdash;the
+ utmost sum-total of what the Imperial and Royal Potencies can, for the
+ life of them, do: behold, it has all tumbled down here, in loud crash; the
+ final peal of it at Kesselsdorf; and the consummation is flame and smoke,
+ conspicuous over all the Nations. You will let him keep his own
+ henceforth, then, will you? Silesia, which was NOT yours nor ever shall
+ be? Silesia and no afterthought? The Saxons sign, the high
+ Plenipotentiaries all; in the eyes of Villiers, I am told, were seen
+ sublimely pious tears. Harrach, bowing with stiff, almost incredulous,
+ gratitude, swears and signs;&mdash;hurries home to his Sovereign Lady,
+ with Peace, and such a smile on his face; and on her Imperial Majesty's
+ such a smile!&mdash;readers shall conceive it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are but Two new points in the Treaty of Dresden,&mdash;nay properly
+ there is but One point, about which posterity can have the least care or
+ interest; for that other, concerning "The Toll of Schidlo," and settlement
+ of haggles on the Navigation of the Elbe there, was not kept by the
+ Saxons, but continued a haggle still: this One point is the Eleventh
+ Article. Inconceivably small; but liable to turn up on us again, in a
+ memorable manner. That let us translate,&mdash;for M. de Voltaire's sake,
+ and time coming! STEUER means Land-Tax; OBER-STEUER-EINNAHME will be
+ something like Royal Exchequer, therefore; and STEUER-SCHEIN will be
+ approximately equivalent to Exchequer Bill. Article Eleventh stipulates:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All subjects and servants of his Majesty the King of Prussia who hold
+ bonds of the Saxon OBER-STEUER-EINNAHME shall be paid in full, capital and
+ interest, at the times, and to the amount, specified in said
+ STEUER-SCHEINE or Bonds." That is Article Eleventh.&mdash;"The Saxon
+ Exchequer," says an old Note on it, "thanks to Bruhl's extravagance, has
+ been as good as bankrupt, paying with inconvertible paper, with SCHEINE
+ (Things to be SHOWN), for some time past; which paper has accordingly
+ sunk, let us say, 25 per cent below its nominal amount in gold. All
+ Prussian subjects, who hold these Bonds, are to be paid in gold; Saxons,
+ and others, will have to be content with paper till things come round
+ again, if things ever do." Yes;&mdash;and, by ill chance, the matter will
+ attract M. de Voltaire's keen eye in the interim!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friedrich stayed eight days in Dresden, the loud theme of Gazetteers and
+ rumors; the admired of two classes, in all Countries: of the many who
+ admire success, and also of the few who can understand what it is to
+ deserve success. Among his own Countrymen, this last Winter has kindled
+ all their admirations to the flaming pitch. Saved by him from imminent
+ destruction; their enemies swept home as if by one invincible; nay, sent
+ home in a kind of noble shame, conquered by generosity. These feelings,
+ though not encouraged to speak, run very high. The Dresdeners in private
+ society found him delightful; the high ladies especially: "Could you have
+ thought it; terrific Mars to become radiant Apollo in this manner!" From
+ considerable Collections of Anecdotes illustrating this fact, in a way now
+ fallen vapid to us,&mdash;I select only the Introduction:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do readers recollect Friedrich's first visit to Dresden [in 1728],
+ seventeen years ago; and a certain charming young Countess Flemming, at
+ that time only fourteen; who, like a Hebe as she was, contrived beautiful
+ surprises for him, and among other things presented him, so gracefully, on
+ the part of August the Strong, with his first flute?"&mdash;No reader of
+ this History can recollect it; nor indeed, except in a mythic sense,
+ believe it! A young Countess Flemming (daughter of old Feldmarschall
+ Flemming) doubtless there might be, who presented him a flute; but as to
+ HIS FIRST flute&mdash;? "That same charming young Countess Flemming is
+ still here, age now thirty-one; charming, more than ever, though now under
+ a changed name; having wedded a Von Racknitz (Supreme Gentleman-Usher, or
+ some such thing) a few years ago, and brought him children and the usual
+ felicities. How much is changed! August the Strong, where is he; and his
+ famous Three Hundred and Fifty-four, Enchantress Orzelska and the others,
+ where are they? Enchantress Orzelska wedded, quarrelled, and is in a
+ convent: her charming destiny concluded. Rutowski is not now in the
+ Prussian Army: he got beaten, Wednesday last, at Kesselsdorf, fighting
+ against that Army. And the Chevalier de Saxe, he too was beaten there;&mdash;clambering
+ now across the Metal Mountains, ask not of him. And the Marechal de Saxe,
+ he takes Cities, fights Battles of Fontenoy, 'mumbling a lead bullet all
+ day;' being dropsical, nearly dead of debaucheries; the most dissolute (or
+ probably so) of all the Sons of Adam in his day. August the Physically
+ Strong is dead. August the Spiritually Weak is fled to Prag with his
+ Bruhl. And we do not come, this time, to get a flute; but to settle the
+ account of Victories, and give Peace to Nations. Strange, here as always,
+ to look back,&mdash;to look round or forward,&mdash;in the mad huge whirl
+ of that loud-roaring Loom of Time!&mdash;One of Countess Racknitz's Sons
+ happened to leave MANUSCRIPT DIARIES [rather feeble, not too
+ exact-looking], and gives us, from Mamma's reminiscences"... Not a word
+ more. [Rodenbeck, <i>Beitrage,</i> i. 440, et seq.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Peace, we said, was signed on Christmas-day. Next day, Sunday,
+ Friedrich attended Sermon in the Kreuzkirche (Protestant High-Church of
+ Dresden), attended Opera withal; and on Monday morning had vanished out of
+ Dresden, as all his people had done, or were diligently doing. Tuesday, he
+ dined briefly at Wusterhausen (a place we once knew well), with the Prince
+ of Prussia, whose it now is; got into his open carriage again, with the
+ said Prince and his other Brother Ferdinand; and drove swiftly homeward.
+ Berlin, drunk with joy, was all out on the streets, waiting. On the Heath
+ of Britz, four or five miles hitherward of Berlin, a body of young
+ gentlemen ("Merchants mostly, who had ridden out so far") saluted him with
+ "VIVAT FRIEDRICH DER GROSSE (Long live Friedrich THE GREAT)!" thrice over;&mdash;as
+ did, in a less articulate manner, Berlin with one voice, on his arrival
+ there; Burgher Companies lining the streets; Population vigorously
+ shouting; Pupils of the Koln Gymnasium, with Clerical and School
+ Functionaries in mass, breaking out into Latin Song:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "VIVAT, VIVAT FRIDERICUS REX;
+ VIVAT AUGUSTUS, MAGNUS, FELIX, PATER, PATRI-AE&mdash;!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;and what not. [Preuss, i. 220; who cites <i>Beschreibung</i>
+ ("Description of his Majesty's Triumphant Entry, on the" &amp;c.) and
+ other Contemporary Pamphlets. Rodenbeck, i. 124.] On reaching the Portal
+ of the Palace, his Majesty stept down; and, glancing round the
+ Schloss-Platz and the crowded windows and simmering multitudes, saluted,
+ taking off his hat; which produced such a shout,&mdash;naturally the
+ loudest of all. And so EXIT King, into his interior. Tuesday, 2-3 P.M.,
+ 28th December, 1745: a King new-christened in the above manner, so far as
+ people could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Illuminated Berlin shone like noon, all that night (the beginning of a
+ GAUDEAMUS which lasted miscellaneously for weeks):&mdash;but the King
+ stole away to see a friend who was dying; that poor Duhan de Jaudun, his
+ early Schoolmaster, who had suffered much for him, and whom he always much
+ loved. Duhan died, in a day or two. Poor Jordan, poor Keyserling (the
+ "Cesarion" of young days): them also he has lost; and often laments, in
+ this otherwise bright time. (In <i>OEuvres,</i> xvii. 288; xviii. 141; IB.
+ 142&mdash;painfully tender Letters to Frau von Camas and others, on these
+ events).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Friedrich II. of Prussia,
+Vol. XV. (of XXI.), by Thomas Carlyle
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol.
+XV. (of XXI.), by Thomas Carlyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol. XV. (of XXI.)
+ Frederick The Great--Second Silesian War, Important Episode
+ In The General European One--15th Aug. 1744-25th Dec. 1745
+
+Author: Thomas Carlyle
+
+Posting Date: June 13, 2008 [EBook #2115]
+Release Date: March 2000
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by D.R. Thompson
+
+
+
+
+
+HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II. OF PRUSSIA
+
+FREDERICK THE GREAT
+
+By Thomas Carlyle
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK XV.--SECOND SILESIAN WAR, IMPORTANT EPISODE IN THE GENERAL EUROPEAN
+ONE.--15th Aug. 1744-25th Dec. 1745.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I.--PRELIMINARY: HOW THE MOMENT ARRIVED.
+
+Battle being once seen to be inevitable, it was Friedrich's plan not to
+wait for it, but to give it. Thanks to Friedrich Wilhelm and himself,
+there is no Army, nor ever was any, in such continual preparation.
+Military people say, "Some Countries take six months, some twelve, to
+get in motion for war: but in three weeks Prussia can be across
+the marches, and upon the throat of its enemy." Which is an immense
+advantage to little Prussia among its big neighbors. "Some Countries
+have a longer sword than Prussia; but none can unsheathe it so
+soon:"--we hope, too, it is moderately sharp, when wielded by a deft
+hand.
+
+The French, as was intimated, are in great vigor, this Year; thoroughly
+provoked; and especially since Friedrich sent his Rothenburg among
+them, have been doing their very utmost. Their main effort is in the
+Netherlands, at present;--and indeed, as happened, continues all
+through this War to be. They by no means intend, or ever did, to neglect
+Teutschland; yet it turns out, they have pretty much done with their
+fighting there. And next Year, driven or led by accidents of various
+kinds, they quit it altogether; and turning their whole strength upon
+the Netherlands and Italy, chiefly on the Netherlands, leave Friedrich,
+much to his astonishment, with the German War hanging wholly round
+HIS neck, and take no charge of it farther! In which, to Friedrich's
+Biographers, there is this inestimable benefit, if far the reverse to
+Friedrich's self: That we shall soon have done with the French, then;
+with them and with so much else; and may, in time coming, for most part,
+leave their huge Sorcerer's Sabbath of a European War to dance
+itself out, well in the distance, not encumbering us farther, like a
+circumambient Bedlam, as it has hitherto done. Courage, reader! Let us
+give, in a glance or two, some notion of the course things took, and
+what moment it was when Friedrich struck in;--whom alone, or almost
+alone, we hope to follow thenceforth; "Dismal Swamp" (so gracious was
+Heaven to us) lying now mostly to rearward, little as we hoped it!
+
+It was mere accident, a series of bad accidents, that led King Louis and
+his Ministers into gradually forsaking Friedrich. They were the
+farthest in the world from intending such a thing. Contrariwise, what
+brain-beating, diplomatic spider-weaving, practical contriving, now
+and afterwards, for that object; especially now! Rothenburg, Noailles,
+Belleisle, Cardinal Tencin, have been busy; not less the mistress
+Chateauroux, who admires Friedrich, being indeed a high-minded
+unfortunate female, as they say; and has thrown out Amelot, not
+for stammering alone. They are able, almost high people, this new
+Chateauroux Ministry, compared with some; and already show results.
+
+Nay, what is most important of all, France has (unconsciously, or by
+mere help of Noailles and luck) got a real General to her Armies: Comte
+de Saxe, now Marechal de Saxe; who will shine very splendent in these
+Netherland operations,--counter-shone by mere Wades, D'Ahrembergs,
+Cumberlands,--in this and the Four following Years. Noailles had
+always recognized Comte de Saxe; had long striven for him, in Official
+quarters; and here gets the light of him unveiled at last, and set on a
+high place: loyal Noailles.
+
+This was the Year, this 1744, when Louis XV., urged by his Chateauroux,
+the high-souled unfortunate female, appeared in person at the head
+of his troops: "Go, Sire, go, MON CHOU (and I will accompany); show
+yourself where a King should be, at the head of your troops; be a second
+Louis-le-Grand!" Which he did, his Chateauroux and he; actually went to
+the Netherlands, with baggage-train immeasurable, including not cooks
+only, but play-actors with their thunder-barrels (off from Paris, May
+3d), to the admiration of the Universe. [Adelung, iv. 113; Barbier,
+ii. 391, 394; Dulaure, _Hist. de Paris;_ &c.] Took the command,
+nominal-command, first days of June; and captured in no-time Menin,
+Ipres, Furnes, and the Fort of Knock, and as much of the Austrian
+Netherlands as he liked,--that is to say, saw Noailles and Saxe do
+it;--walking rapidly forward from Siege to Siege, with a most thundering
+artillery; old Marshal Wade and consorts dismally eating their victuals,
+and looking on from the distance, unable to attempt the least stroke in
+opposition. So that the Dutch Barrier, if anybody now cared for it,
+did go all flat; and the Balance of Power gets kicked out of its sacred
+pivot: to such purpose have the Dutch been hoisted! Terrible to think
+of;--had not there, from the opposite quarter, risen a surprising
+counterpoise; had not there been a Prince Karl, with his 70,000,
+pressing victoriously over the Rhine; which stayed the French in these
+sacrilegious procedures.
+
+
+
+
+PRINCE KARL GETS ACROSS THE RHINE (20 JUNE-2 JULY, 1744).
+
+Prince Karl, some weeks ago, at Heilbronn, joined his Rhine Army, which
+had gathered thither from the Austrian side, through Baiern, and from
+the Hither-Austrian or Swabian Winter-quarters; with full intent to be
+across the Rhine, and home upon Elsass and the Compensation Countries,
+this Summer, under what difficulties soever. Karl, or, as some whisper,
+old Marshal Traun, who is nominally second in command, do make a
+glorious campaign of it, this Year;--and lift the Cause of Liberty, at
+one time, to the highest pitch it ever reached. Here, in brief terms, is
+Prince Karl's Operation on the Rhine, much admired by military men:--
+
+"STOCKSTADT, JUNE 20th, 1744. Some thirty and odd miles north of
+Mannheim, the Rhine, before turning westward at Mainz, makes one other
+of its many Islands (of which there are hundreds since the leap at
+Schaffhausen): one other, and I think the biggest of them all; perhaps
+two miles by five; which the Germans call KUHKOPF (Cowhead), from the
+shape it has,--a narrow semi-ellipse; River there splitting in two, one
+split (the western) going straight, the other bending luxuriantly round:
+so that the HIND-head or straight end of the Island lies towards France,
+and the round end, or cow-LIPS (so to speak) towards native Teutschland,
+and the woody Hills of the Berg-Strasse thereabouts. Stockstadt, chief
+little Town looking over into this Cowhead Island, lies under the
+CHIN: understand only farther that the German branch carries more than
+two-thirds of the River; that on the Island itself there is no town,
+or post of defence; and that Stockstadt is the place for getting over.
+Coigny and the French, some 40,000, are guarding the River hereabouts,
+with lines, with batteries, cordons, the best they can; Seckendorf, with
+20,000 more ('Imperial' Old Bavarian Troops, revivified, recruited
+by French pay), is in his garrison of Philipsburg, ready to help when
+needed:"--not moulting now, at Wembdingen, in that dismal manner;
+new-feathered now into "Kaiser's Army;" waiting in his Philipsburg to
+guard the River there. "Coigny's French have ramparts, ditches, not
+quite unfurnished, on their own shore, opposite this Cowhead Island
+(ISLE DE HERON, as they call it); looking over to the hind-head, namely:
+but they have nothing considerable there; and in the Island itself,
+nothing whatever. 'If now Stockstadt were suddenly snatched by us,'
+thinks Karl;--'if a few pontoons were nimbly swung in?'
+
+"JUNE 20th,--Coigny's people all shooting FEU-DE-JOIE, for that never
+enough to be celebrated Capture of Menin and the Dutch Barrier
+a fortnight ago,--this is managed to be done. The active General
+Barenklau, active Brigadier Daun under him, pushes rapidly across into
+Kuhkopf; rapidly throws up intrenchments, ramparts, mounts cannon, digs
+himself in,--greatly to Coigny's astonishment; whose people hereabouts,
+and in all their lines and posts, are busy shooting FEU-DE-JOIE for
+those immortal Dutch victories, at the moment, and never dreaming of
+such a thing. Fresh force floods in, Prince Karl himself arrives next
+day, in support of Barenklau; Coigny (head-quarters at Speyer, forty
+miles south) need not attempt dislodging him; but must stand upon his
+guard, and prepare for worse. Which he does with diligence; shifting
+northward into those Stockstadt-Mainz parts; calling Seckendorf across
+the River, and otherwise doing his best,--for about ten days more, when
+worse, and almost worst, did verily befall him.
+
+"No attempt was made on Barenklau; nor, beyond the alarming of the
+Coigny-Seckendorf people, did anything occur in Cowhead Island,--unless
+it were the finis of an ugly bully and ruffian, who has more than once
+afflicted us: which may be worth one word. Colonel Mentzel [copper-faced
+Colonel, originally Play-actor, "Spy in Persia," and I know not what]
+had been at the seizure of Kuhkopf; a prominent man. Whom, on the fifth
+day after ('June 25th'), Prince Karl overwhelmed with joy, by handing
+him a Patent of Generalcy: 'Just received from Court, my Friend,
+on account of your merits old and late.'--'Aha,' said Barenklau,
+congratulating warmly: 'Dine with me, then, Herr General Mentzel,
+this very day. The Prince himself is to be there, Highness of
+Hessen-Darmstadt, and who not; all are impatient to drink your health!'
+Mentzel had a glorious dinner; still more glorious drink,--Prince
+Karl and the others, it is said, egging him into much wild bluster and
+gasconade, to season their much wine. Eminent swill of drinking, with
+the loud coarse talk supposable, on the part of Mentzel and consorts did
+go on, in this manner, all afternoon: in the evening, drunk Mentzel came
+out for air; went strutting and staggering about; emerging finally on
+the platform of some rampart, face of him huge and red as that of
+the foggiest rising Moon;--and stood, looking over into the Lorraine
+Country; belching out a storm of oaths, as to his taking it, as to
+his doing this and that; and was even flourishing his sword by way of
+accompaniment; when, lo, whistling slightly through the summer air, a
+rifle-ball from some sentry on the French side (writers say, it was a
+French drummer, grown impatient, and snatching a sentry's piece) took
+the brain of him, or the belly of him; and he rushed down at once, a
+totally collapsed monster, and mere heap of dead ruin, never to trouble
+mankind more." [_Guerre de Boheme,_ iii. 165.] For which my readers and
+I are rather thankful. Voltaire, and perhaps other memorable persons,
+sometimes mention this brute (miraculous to the Plebs and Gazetteers);
+otherwise eternal oblivion were the best we could do with him. Trenck
+also, readers will be glad to understand, ends in jail and bedlam by and
+by.
+
+"Prince Karl had not the least intention of crossing by this Cowhead
+Island. Nevertheless he set about two other Bridges in the neighborhood,
+nearer Mainz (few miles below that City); kept manoeuvring his Force,
+in huge half-moon, round that quarter, and mysteriously up and down;
+alarming Coigny wholly into the Mainz region. For the space of ten
+days; and then, stealing off to Schrock, a little Rhine Village above
+Philipsburg, many miles away from Coigny and his vigilantes, he--
+
+"NIGHT OF 30th JUNE-1st JULY, Suddenly shot Pandour Trenck, followed
+by Nadasti and 6,000, across at Schrock who scattered Seckendorf's poor
+outposts thereabouts to the winds; 'built a bridge before morning, and
+next day another.' Next day Prince Karl in person appeared; and on the
+3d of July, had his whole Army with its luggages across; and had seized
+the Lines of Lauterburg and Weissenburg (celebrated northern defence of
+Elsass),--much to Coigny's amazement; and remained inexpugnable there,
+with Elsass open to him, and to Coigny shut, for the present! [Adelung,
+iv. 139-141.] Coigny made bitter wail, accusation, blame of Seckendorf,
+blame of men and of things; even tried some fighting, Seckendorf too
+doing feats, to recover those Lines of Weissenburg: but could not do it.
+And, in fact, blazing to and fro in that excited rather than luminous
+condition, could not do anything; except retire into the strong posts
+of the background; and send express on express, swifter than the wind if
+you can, to a victorious King overturning the Dutch Barrier: 'Help, your
+Majesty, or we are lost; and France is--what shall I say!'"
+
+"Admirable feat of Strategy! What a General, this Prince Karl!"
+exclaimed mankind,--Cause-of-Liberty mankind with special enthusiasm;
+and took to writing LIVES of Prince Karl, [For instance, _The Life of
+his Highness Prince Charles of &c., with &c. &c._ (London, 1746); one
+of the most distracted Blotches ever published under the name of
+Book;--wakening thoughts of a public dimness very considerable indeed,
+to which this could offer itself as lamp!] as well as tar-burning and
+TE-DEUM-ing on an extensive scale. For it had sent the Cause of Liberty
+bounding up again to the top of things, this of crossing the Rhine,
+in such fashion. And, in effect, the Cause of Liberty, and Prince
+Karl himself, had risen hereby to their acme or culminating point in
+World-History; not to continue long at such height, little as they
+dreamt of that, among their tar-burnings. The feat itself--contrived
+by Nadasti, people say, and executed (what was the real difficulty) by
+Traun--brought Prince Karl very great renown, this Year; and is praised
+by Friedrich himself, now and afterwards, as masterly, as Julius
+Caesar's method, and the proper way of crossing rivers (when executable)
+in face of an enemy. And indeed Prince Karl, owing to Traun or not,
+is highly respectable in the way of Generalship at present; and did in
+these Five Months, from June onward, really considerable things. At his
+very acme of Life, as well as of Generalship; which, alas, soon changed,
+poor man; never to culminate again. He had got, at the beginning of the
+Year, the high Maria Theresa's one Sister, Archduchess Maria Anna, to
+Wife; [Age then twenty-five gone: "born 14th September, 1718; married to
+Prince Karl 7th January, 1744; died, of childbirth, 16th December same
+year" (Hormayr, _OEsterreichischer Plutarch,_ iv. erstes Baudchen, 54).]
+the crown of long mutual attachment; she safe now at Brussels,
+diligent Co-Regent, and in a promising family-way; he here walking on
+victorious:--need any man be happier? No man can be supremely happy
+long; and this General's strategic felicity and his domestic were
+fatally cut down almost together. The Cause of Liberty, too, now at the
+top of its orbit, was--But let us stick by our Excerpting:
+
+"DUNKIRK, 19th JULY, 1744 [Princess Ulrique's Wedding, just two days
+ago]. King Louis, on hearing of the Job's-news from Elsass, instantly
+suspended his Conquests in Flanders; detached Noailles, detached this
+one and that, double-quick, Division after Division (leaving Saxe, with
+45,000, to his own resources, and the fatuities of Marshal Wade);
+and, 19th July, himself hastens off from Dunkirk (leaving much of the
+luggage, but not the Chateauroux behind him), to save his Country, poor
+soul. But could not, in the least, save it; the reverse rather. August
+4th, he got to Metz, Belleisle's strong town, about 100 miles from the
+actual scene; his detached reinforcements, say 50,000 men or so, hanging
+out ahead like flame-clouds, but uncertain how to act;--Noailles being
+always cunctatious in time of crisis, and poor Louis himself nothing of
+a Cloud-Compeller;--and then,
+
+"METZ, AUGUST 8th, The Most Christian King fell ill; dangerously,
+dreadfully, just like to die. Which entirely paralyzed Noailles and
+Company, or reduced them to mere hysterics, and excitement of the
+unluminous kind. And filled France in general, Paris in particular,
+with terror, lamentation, prayers of forty hours; and such a paroxysm
+of hero-worship as was never seen for such an object before." [Espagnac,
+ii. 12; Adelung, iv. 180; _Fastes de Louis XV.,_ ii. 423; &c. &c.]
+
+For the Cause of Liberty here, we consider, was the culminating moment;
+Elsass, Lorraine and the Three Bishoprics lying in their quasi-moribund
+condition; Austrian claims of Compensation ceasing to be visions of the
+heated brain, and gaining some footing on the Earth as facts. Prince
+Karl is here actually in Elsass, master of the strong passes; elate in
+heart, he and his; France, again, as if fallen paralytic, into temporary
+distraction; offering for resistance nothing hitherto but that universal
+wailing of mankind, Hero-worship of a thrice-lamentable nature, and the
+Prayers of Forty-Hours! Most Christian Majesty, now IN EXTREMIS, centre
+of the basest hubbub that ever was, is dismissing Chateauroux. Noailles,
+Coigny and Company hang well back upon the Hill regions, and strong
+posts which are not yet menaced; or fly vaguely, more or less
+distractedly, hither and thither; not in the least like fighting Karl,
+much less like beating him. Karl has Germany free at his back (nay it is
+a German population round him here); neither haversack nor cartridge-box
+like to fail: before him are only a Noailles and consorts, flying
+vaguely about;--and there is in Karl, or under the same cloak with him
+at present, a talent of manoeuvring men, which even Friedrich finds
+masterly. If old Marshal Wade, at the other end of the line, should
+chance to awaken and press home on Saxe, and his remnant of French, with
+right vigor? In fact, there was not, that I can see, for centuries past,
+not even at the Siege of Lille in Marlborough's time, a more imminent
+peril for France.
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH DECIDES TO INTERVENE.
+
+King Friedrich, on hearing of these Rhenish emergencies and of King
+Louis's heroic advance to the rescue, perceived that for himself too the
+moment was come; and hastened to inform heroic Louis, That though the
+terms of their Bargain were not yet completed, Sweden, Russia and other
+points being still in a pendent condition, he, Friedrich,--with an eye
+to success of their Joint Adventure, and to the indispensability of
+joint action, energy, and the top of one's speed now or never,--would,
+by the middle of this same August, be on the field with 100,000 men. "An
+invasion of Bohemia, will not that astonish Prince Karl; and bring him
+to his Rhine-Bridges again? Over which, if your Most Christian Majesty
+be active, he will not get, except in a half, or wholly ruined state.
+Follow him close; send the rest of your force to threaten Hanover; sit
+well on the skirts of Prince Karl. Him as he hurries homeward, ruined or
+half-ruined, him, or whatever Austrian will fight, I do my best to beat.
+We may have Bohemia, and a beaten Austria, this very Autumn: see,--and,
+in one Campaign, there is Peace ready for us!" This is Friedrich's
+scheme of action; success certain, thinks he, if only there be energy,
+activity, on your side, as there shall be on mine;--and has sent Count
+Schmettau, filled with fiery speed and determination, to keep the French
+full of the like, and concert mutual operations.
+
+"Magnanimous!" exclaim Noailles and the paralyzed French Gentlemen (King
+Louis, I think, now past speech, for Schmettau only came August 9th):
+"Most sublime behavior, on his Prussian Majesty's part!" own they. And
+truly it is a fine manful indifference (by no means so common as it
+should be) to all interests, to all considerations, but that of a Joint
+Enterprise one has engaged in. And truly, furthermore, it was immediate
+salvation to the paralyzed French Gentlemen, in that alarming crisis;
+though they did not much recognize it afterwards as such: and indeed
+were conspicuously forgetful of all parts of it, when their own danger
+was over.
+
+Maria Theresa's feelings may be conceived; George II's feelings; and
+what the Cause of Liberty in general felt, and furiously said and
+complained, when--suddenly as a DEUS EX MACHINA, or Supernal Genie
+in the Minor Theatres--Friedrich stept in. Precisely in this supreme
+crisis, 7th August, 1744, Friedrich's Minister, Graf von Dohna, at
+Vienna, has given notice of the Frankfurt Union, and solemn Engagement
+entered into: "Obliged in honor and conscience; will and must now step
+forth to right an injured Kaiser; cannot stand these high procedures
+against an Imperial Majesty chosen by all the Princes of the Reich, this
+unheard-of protest that the Kaiser is no Kaiser, as if all Germany were
+but Austria and the Queen of Hungary's. Prussian Majesty has not the
+least quarrel of his own with the Queen of Hungary, stands true, and
+will stand, by the Treaty of Berlin and Breslau;--only, with certain
+other German Princes, has done what all German Princes and peoples not
+Austrian are bound to do, on behalf of their down-trodden Kaiser,
+formed a Union of Frankfurt; and will, with armed hand if indispensable,
+endeavor to see right done in that matter." [In _Adelung,_ iv. 155, 156,
+the Declaration itself (Audience, "7th August, 1744." Dohna off homeward
+"on the second day after").]
+
+This is the astonishing fact for the Cause of Liberty; and no clamor and
+execration will avail anything. This man is prompt, too; does not
+linger in getting out his Sword, when he has talked of it. Prince
+Karl's Operation is likely to be marred amazingly. If this swift King
+(comparable to the old Serpent for devices) were to burst forth from
+his Silesian strengths; tread sharply on the TAIL of Prince Karl's
+Operation, and bring back the formidably fanged head of IT out of
+Alsace, five hundred miles all at once,--there would be a business!
+
+We will now quit the Rhine Operations, which indeed are not now of
+moment; Friedrich being suddenly the key of events again. I add only,
+what readers are vaguely aware of, that King Louis did not die; that he
+lay at death's door for precisely one week (8th-15th August), symptoms
+mending on the 15th. In the interim,--Grand-Almoner Fitz-James (Uncle
+of our Conte di Spinelli) insisting that a certain Cardinal, who had got
+the Sacraments in hand, should insist; and endless ministerial intrigue
+being busy,--moribund Louis had, when it came to the Sacramental
+point, been obliged to dismiss his Chateauroux. Poor Chateauroux; an
+unfortunate female; yet, one almost thinks, the best man among them:
+dismissed at Metz here, and like to be mobbed! That was the one issue
+of King Louis's death-sickness. Sublime sickness; during which all Paris
+wept aloud, in terror and sorrow, like a child that has lost its mother
+and sees a mastiff coming; wept sublimely, and did the Prayers
+of Forty-Hours; and called King Louis Le BIEN-AIME (The
+Well-beloved):--merely some obstruction in the royal bowels, it turned
+out;--a good cathartic, and the Prayers of Forty-Hours, quite reinstated
+matters. Nay reinstated even Chateauroux, some time after,--"the Devil
+being well again," and, as the Proverb says, quitting his monastic view.
+Reinstated Chateauroux: but this time, poor creature, she continued only
+about a day:--"Sudden fever, from excitement," said the Doctors: "Fever?
+Poison, you mean!" whispered others, and looked for changes in the
+Ministry. Enough, oh, enough!--
+
+Old Marshal Wade did not awaken, though bawled to by his Ligoniers and
+others, and much shaken about, poor old gentleman. "No artillery to
+speak of," murmured he; "want baggage-wagons, too!" and lay still. "Here
+is artillery!" answered the Official people; "With my own money I will
+buy you baggage-wagons!" answered the high Maria Anna, in her own name
+and her Prince Karl's, who are Joint-Governors there. Possibly he would
+have awakened, had they given him time. But time, in War especially, is
+the thing that is never given. Once Friedrich HAD struck in, the moment
+was gone by. Poor old Wade! Of him also enough.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II.--FRIEDRICH MARCHES UPON PRAG, CAPTURES PRAG.
+
+It was on Saturday, "early in the morning," 15th August, 1744, that
+Friedrich set out, attended by his two eldest Brothers, Prince of
+Prussia and Prince Henri, from Potsdam, towards this new Adventure,
+which proved so famous since. Sudden, swift, to the world's
+astonishment;--actually on march here, in three Columns (two through
+Saxony by various routes southeastward, one from Silesia through Glatz
+southwestward), to invade Bohemia: rumor says 100,000 strong, fact
+itself says upwards of 80,000, on their various routes, converging
+towards Prag. [--Helden-Geschichte,--ii. 1165. Orlich (ii. 25, 27)
+enumerates the various regiments.] His Columns, especially his Saxon
+Columns, are already on the road; he joins one Column, this night,
+at Wittenberg; and is bent, through Saxony, towards the frontiers of
+Bohemia, at the utmost military speed he has.
+
+Through Saxony about 60,000 go: he has got the Kaiser's Order to the
+Government of Saxony, "Our august Ally, requiring on our Imperial
+business a transit through you;"--and Winterfeld, an excellent soldier
+and negotiator, has gone forward to present said Order. A Document which
+flurries the Dresden Officials beyond measure. Their King is in Warsaw;
+their King, if here, could do little; and indeed has been inclining
+to Maria Theresa this long while. And Winterfeld insists on such
+despatch;--and not even the Duke of Weissenfels is in Town, Dresden
+Officials "send off five couriers and thirteen estafettes" to the poor
+old Duke; [_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1163.] get him at last; and--The
+march is already taking effect; they may as well consent to it: what can
+they do but consent! In the uttermost flurry, they had set to fortifying
+Dresden; all hands driving palisades, picking, delving, making COUPURES
+(trenches, or sunk barricades) in the streets;--fatally aware that it
+can avail nothing. Is not this the Kaiser's Order? Prussians, to the
+amount of 60,000, are across our Frontiers, rapidly speeding on.
+
+"Friedrich's Manifesto--under the modest Title, 'ANZEIGE DER URSACHEN
+(Advertisement of the Causes which have induced his Prussian Majesty to
+send the Romish Kaiser's Majesty some Auxiliary Troops)'--had appeared
+in the Berlin Newspapers Thursday, 13th, only two days before. An
+astonishment to all mankind; which gave rise to endless misconceptions
+of Friedrich: but which, supporting itself on proofs, on punctually
+excerpted foot-notes, is intrinsically a modest, quiet Piece; and, what
+is singular in Manifestoes, has nothing, or almost nothing, in it that
+is not, so far as it goes, a perfect statement of the fact. 'Auxiliary
+troops, that is our essential character. No war with her Hungarian
+Majesty, or with any other, on our own score. But her Hungarian Majesty,
+how has she treated the Romish Kaiser, her and our and the Reich's
+Sovereign Head, and to what pass reduced him; refusing him Peace on any
+terms, except those of self-annihilation; denying that he is a Kaiser at
+all;'--and enumerates the various Imperial injuries, with proof given,
+quiet footnotes by way of proof; and concludes in these words: 'For
+himself his Majesty requires nothing. The question here is not of his
+Majesty's own interest at all [everything his Majesty required, or
+requires, is by the Treaty of Berlin solemnly his, if the Reich and its
+Laws endure]: and he has taken up arms simply and solely in the view of
+restoring to the Reich its freedom, to the Kaiser his Headship of the
+Reich, and to all Europe the Peace which is so desirable.' [Given in
+Seyfarth, _Beylage,_ i. 121-136, with date "August, 1744."]
+
+"'Pretences, subterfuges, lies!' exclaimed the Austrian and Allied
+Public everywhere, or strove to exclaim; especially the English Public,
+which had no difficulty in so doing;--a Public comfortably blank as to
+German facts or non-facts; and finding with amazement only this a very
+certain fact, That hereby is their own Pragmatic thunder checked in
+mid-volley in a most surprising manner, and the triumphant Cause of
+Liberty brought to jeopardy again. 'Perfidious, ambitious, capricious!'
+exclaimed they: 'a Prince without honor, without truth, without
+constancy;'--and completed, for themselves, in hot rabid humor, that
+English Theory of Friedrich which has prevailed ever since. Perhaps the
+most surprising item of which is this latter, very prominent in
+those old times, That Friedrich has no 'constancy,' but follows his
+'caprices,' and accidental whirls of impulse:--item which has dropped
+away in our times, though the others stand as stable as ever. A monument
+of several things! Friedrich's suddenness is an essential part of what
+fighting talent he has: if the Public, thrown into flurry, cannot judge
+it well, they must even misjudge it: what help is there?
+
+"That the above were actually Friedrich's reasons for venturing into
+this Big Game again, is not now disputable. And as to the rumor, which
+rose afterwards (and was denied, and could only be denied diplomatically
+to the ear, if even to the ear), That Friedrich by Secret Article was
+'to have for himself the Three Bohemian Circles, Konigsgratz,
+Bunzlau, Leitmeritz, which lie between Schlesien and Sachsen,'
+[_Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 1081; Scholl, ii. 349.]--there is not a doubt
+but Friedrich had so bargained, 'Very well, if we can get said Circles!'
+and would right cheerfully have kept and held them, had the big game
+gone in all points completely well (game, to reinstate the Kaiser BOTH
+in Bohemia and Bavaria) by Friedrich's fine playing. Not a doubt of all
+this:--nor of what an extremely hypothetic outlook it then and always
+was; greatly too weak for enticing such a man."
+
+Friedrich goes in Three Columns. One, on the south or left shore of the
+Elbe, coming in various branches under Friedrich himself; this alone
+will touch on Dresden, pass on the south side of Dresden; gather itself
+about Pirna (in the Saxon Switzerland so called, a notable locality);
+thence over the Metal Mountains into Bohmen, by Toplitz, by Lowositz,
+Leitmeritz, and the Highway called the Pascopol, famous in War. The
+Second Column, under Leopold the Young Dessauer, goes on the other or
+north side of the Elbe, at a fair distance; marching through the Lausitz
+(rendezvous or starting-point was Bautzen in the Lausitz) straight
+south, to meet the King at Leitmeritz, where the grand Magazine is to
+be; and thence, still south, straight upon Prag, in conjunction with his
+Majesty or parallel to him. [_Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 1081.] These are
+the Two Saxon Columns. The Third Column, under Schwerin, collects itself
+in the interior of Silesia; is issuing, by Glatz Country, through the
+Giant Mountains, BOHMISCHE KAMME (Bohemian COMBS as they are called,
+which Tourists know), by the Pass of Braunau,--disturbing the dreams of
+Rubezahl, if Rubezahl happen to be there. This, say 20,000, will come
+down upon Prag from the eastern side; and be first on the ground (31st
+August),--first by one day. In the home parts of Silesia, well eastward
+of Glatz, there is left another Force of 20,000, which can go across the
+Austrian Border there, and hang upon the Hills, threatening Olmutz and
+the Moravian Countries, should need be.
+
+And so, in its Three Columns, from west, from north, from east, the
+march, with a steady swiftness, proceeds. Important especially those
+Two Saxon Columns from west and north: 60,000 of them, "with a frightful
+(ENTSETZLICH) quantity of big guns coming up the Elbe." Much is coming
+up the Elbe; indispensable Highway for this Enterprise. Three months'
+provisions, endless artillery and provender, is on the Elbe; 480 big
+boats, with immense VORSPANN (of trace-horses, dreadful swearing, too,
+as I have heard), will pass through the middle of Dresden: not landing
+by any means. "No, be assured of it, ye Dresdeners, all flurried,
+palisaded, barricaded; no hair of you shall be harmed." After a day or
+two, the flurry of Saxony subsided; Prussians, under strict discipline,
+molest no private person; pay their way; keep well aloof, to south and
+to north, of Dresden (all but the necessary ammunition-escorts do);--and
+require of the Official people nothing but what the Law of the
+Reich authorizes to "Imperial Auxiliaries" in such case. "The Saxons
+themselves," Friedrich observes, "had some 40,000, but scattered
+about; King in Warsaw:--dreadful terror; making COUPURES and
+TETES-DE-PONT;--could have made no defence." Had we diligently spent
+eight days on them! reflects he afterwards. "To seize Saxony [and hobble
+it with ropes, so that at any time you could pin it motionless, and
+even, if need were, milk the substance out of it], would not have
+detained us eight days." [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 53.] Which would
+have been the true plan, had we known what was getting ready there!
+Certain it is, Friedrich did no mischief, paid for everything; anxious
+to keep well with Saxony; hoping always they might join him again,
+in such a Cause. "Cause dear to every Patriot German Prince," urges
+Friedrich,--though Bruhl, and the Polish, once "Moravian," Majesty are
+of a very different opinion:--
+
+"Maria Theresa, her thoughts at hearing of it may be imagined: 'The Evil
+Genius of my House afoot again! My high projects on Elsass and Lorraine;
+Husband for Kaiser, Elsass for the Reich and him, Lorraine for myself
+and him; gone probably to water!' Nevertheless she said (an Official
+person heard her say), 'My right is known to God; God will protect me,
+as He has already done.' [ _Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1024.] And rose very
+strong, and magnanimously defiant again; perhaps, at the bottom of her
+heart, almost glad withal that she would now have a stroke for her
+dear Silesia again, unhindered by Paladin George and his Treaties
+and notions. What measures, against this nefarious Prussian outbreak,
+hateful to gods and men, are possible, she rapidly takes: in Bohemia,
+in Bavaria and her other Countries, that are threatened or can help. And
+abates nothing of heart or hope;--praying withal, immensely, she and
+her People, according to the mode they have. Sending for Prince Karl, we
+need not say, double-quick, as the very first thing.
+
+"Of Maria Theresa in Hungary,--for she ran to Presburg again with her
+woes (August 16th, Diet just assembling there),--let us say only that
+Hungary was again chivalrous; that old Palfy and the general Hungarian
+Nation answered in the old tone,--VIVAT MARIA; AD ARMA, AD ARMA! with
+Tolpatches, Pandours, Warasdins;--and, in short, that great and small,
+in infinite 'Insurrection,' have still a stroke of battle in them
+PRO REGE NOSTRO. Scarcely above a District or two (as the JASZERS and
+KAUERS, in their over-cautious way) making the least difficulty. Much
+enthusiasm and unanimity in all the others; here and there a Hungarian
+gentleman complaining scornfully that their troops, known as among
+the best fighters in Nature, are called irregular troops,--irregular,
+forsooth! In one public consultation [District not important, not very
+spellable, though doubtless pronounceable by natives to it], a gentleman
+suggests that 'Winter is near; should not there be some slight provision
+of tents, of shelter in the frozen sleety Mountains, to our gallant
+fellows bound thither?' Upon which another starts up, 'When our
+Ancestors came out of Asia Minor, over the Palus Maeotis bound in winter
+ice; and, sabre in hand, cut their way into this fine Country which
+is still ours, what shelter had they? No talk of tents, of barracks or
+accommodation there; each, wrapt in his sheep skin, found it shelter
+sufficient. Tents!' [ _Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1030.] And the thing was
+carried by acclamation.
+
+"Wide wail in Bohemia that War is coming back. Nobility all making off,
+some to Vienna or the intermediate Towns lying thitherward, some to
+their Country-seats; all out of Prag. Willing mind on the part of the
+Common People; which the Government strains every nerve to make the most
+of. Here are fasts, processions, Prayers of Forty-Hours; here, as in
+Vienna and elsewhere. In Vienna was a Three Days' solemn Fast: the like
+in Prag, or better; with procession to the shrine of St. Vitus,--little
+likely to help, I should fear. 'Rise, all fencible men,' exclaims the
+Government,--'at least we will ballot, and make you rise:'--Militia
+people enter Prag to the extent of 10,000; like to avail little, one
+would fear. General Harsch, with reinforcement of real soldiers,
+is despatched from Vienna; Harsch, one of our ablest soldiers since
+Khevenhuller died, gets in still in time; and thus increases the
+Garrison of regulars to 4,000, with a vigorous Captain to guide it.
+Old Count Ogilvy, the same whom Saxe surprised two years ago in
+the moonlight, snatching ladders from the gallows,--Ogilvy is again
+Commandant; but this time nominal mainly, and with better outlooks,
+Harsch being under him. In relays, 3,000 of the Militia men dig and
+shovel night and day; repairing, perfecting the ramparts of the place.
+Then, as to provisions, endless corn is introduced,--farmers forced, the
+unwilling at the bayonet's point, to deliver in their corn; much of
+it in sheaf, so that we have to thrash it in the market-place, in the
+streets that are wide: and thus in Prag is heard the sound of flails,
+among the Militia-drums and so many other noises. With the great
+church-organs growling; and the bass and treble MISERERE of the poor
+superstitious People rising, to St. Vitus and others. In fact, it is a
+general Dance of St. Vitus,--except that of the flails, and Militia-men
+working at the ramparts,--mostly not leading any-whither." ["LETTER from
+a Citizen of Prag," date, 21st Sept. (in _Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1168),
+which gives several curious details.]
+
+Meanwhile Friedrich's march from west, from north, from east, is flowing
+on; diligent, swift; punctual to its times, its places; and meets no
+impediment to speak of. At Tetschen on the Saxon-Bohemian Frontier,--a
+pleasant Schloss perched on its crags, as Tourists know, where the
+Elbe sweeps into Saxon Switzerland and its long stone labyrinths,--at
+Tetschen the Austrians had taken post; had tried to block the River,
+driving piles into it, and tumbling boulders into it, with a view to
+stop the 480 Prussian Boats. These people needed to be torn out, their
+piles and they: which was done in two days, the soldier part of it;
+and occupied the boatmen above a week, before all was clear again.
+Prosperous, correct to program, all the rest; not needing mention from
+us;--here are the few sparks from it that dwell in one's memory:--
+
+"AUGUST 15th, 1744, King left Potsdam; joined his First Column that
+night, at Wittenberg. Through Mieissen, Torgau, Freyberg; is at
+Peterswalde, eastern slope of the Metal Mountains, August 25th; all the
+Columns now on Bohemian ground.
+
+"Friedrich had crossed Elbe by the Bridge of Meissen: on the
+southern shore, politely waiting to receive his Majesty, there stood
+Feldmarschall the Duke of Weissenfels; to whom the King gave his hand,"
+no doubt in friendly style, "and talked for above half an hour,"--with
+such success! thinks Friedrich by and by. We have heard of Weissenfels
+before; the same poor Weissenfels who was Wilhelmina's Wooer in old
+time, now on the verge of sixty; an extremely polite but weakish old
+gentleman; accidentally preserved in History. One of those conspicuous
+"Human Clothes-Horses" (phantasmal all but the digestive part), which
+abound in that Eighteenth Century and others like it; and distress
+your Historical studies. Poor old soul; now Feldmarschall and
+Commander-in-Chief here. Has been in Turk and other Wars; with little
+profit to himself or others. Used to like his glass, they say; is still
+very poor, though now Duke in reality as well as title (succeeded two
+egregious Brothers, some years since, who had been spendthrift): he has
+still one other beating to get in this world,--from Friedrich next year.
+Died altogether, two years hence; and Wilhelmina heard no more of him.
+
+"At Meissen Bridge, say some, was this Half-hour's Interview; at
+Pirna, the Bridge of Pirna, others say; [See Orlich, ii. 25;
+and _Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1166.]--quite indifferent to us which. At
+Pirna, and hither and thither in Saxon Switzerland, Friedrich certainly
+was. 'Who ever saw such positions, your Majesty?' For Friedrich is
+always looking out, were it even from the window of his carriage, and
+putting military problems to himself in all manner of scenery, 'What
+would a man do, in that kind of ground, if attacking, if attacked? with
+that hill, that brook, that bit of bog?' and advises every Officer to
+be continually doing the like. [MILITARY INSTRUCTIONS? RULES FOR A
+GOOD COMMANDER OF &c.?--I have, for certain, read this Passage; but the
+reference is gone again, like a sparrow from the house-top!] That is the
+value of picturesque or other scenery to Friedrich, and their effect on
+good Prussian Officers and him.
+
+"... At Tetschen, Colonel Kahlbutz," diligent Prussian Colonel, "plucks
+out those 100 Austrians from their rock nest there; makes them prisoners
+of war;--which detained the Leitmeritz branch of us two days. August
+28th, junction at Leitmeritz thereupon. Magazine established there.
+Boats coming on presently. Friedrich himself camped at Lobositz in this
+part,"--Lobositz, or Lowositz, which he will remember one day.
+
+"AUGUST 29th, March to Budin; that is, southward, across the Eger,
+arrive within forty miles of Prag. Austrian Bathyani, summoned hastily
+out of his Bavarian posts, to succor in this pressing emergency,
+has arrived in these neighborhoods,--some 12,000 regulars under him,
+preceded by clouds of hussars, whom Ziethen smites a little, by way of
+handsel;--no other Austrian force to speak of hereabouts; and we are now
+between Bathyani and Prag.
+
+"SEPTEMBER 1st, To Mickowitz, near Welwarn, twenty miles from Prag.
+September 2d, Camp on the Weissenberg there." [ _Helden-Geschichte,_ i.
+1080.]
+
+And so they are all assembled about Prag, begirdling the poor
+City,--third Siege it has stood within these three years (since that
+moonlight November night in 1741);--and are only waiting for their heavy
+artillery to begin battering. The poor inhabitants, in spite of three
+sieges; the 10,000 raw militia-men, mostly of Hungarian breed; the 4,000
+regulars, and Harsch and old Ogilvy, are all disposed to do their best.
+Friedrich is naturally in haste to get hold of Prag. But he finds, on
+taking survey: that the sword-in-hand method is not now, as in 1741,
+feasible at all; that the place is in good posture of strength; and
+will need a hot battering to tear it open. Owing to that accident at
+Tetschen, the siege-cannon are not yet come up: "Build your batteries,
+your Moldau-bridges, your communications, till the cannon come; and
+beware of Bathyani meddling with your cannon by the road!"
+
+"Bathyani is within twenty miles of us, at Beraun, a compact little Town
+to southwest; gathering a Magazine there; and ready for enterprises,--in
+more force than Friedrich guesses. 'Drive him out, seize that Magazine
+of his!' orders Friedrich (September 5th); and despatches General
+Hacke on it, a right man,"--at whose wedding we assisted (wedding to
+an heiress, long since, in Friedrich Wilhelm's time), if anybody now
+remembered. "And on the morrow there falls out a pretty little 'Action
+of Beraun,' about which great noise was made in the Gazettes PRO and
+CONTRA: which did not dislodge Bathyani by airy means; but which might
+easily have ruined the impetuous Hacke and his 6,000, getting into
+masked batteries, Pandour whirlwinds, charges of horses 'from
+front, from rear, and from both flanks,'--had not he, with masterly
+promptitude, whirled himself out of it, snatched instantly what best
+post there was, and defended himself inexpugnably there, for six
+hours, till relief came." [DIE BEY BERAUN VORGEFALLENE ACTION (in
+Seyfarth, _Beylage,_ i. 136, 137).] Brilliant little action, well
+performed on both sides, but leading to nothing; and which shall not
+concern us farther. Except to say that Bathyani did now, more at his
+leisure, retire out of harm's way; and begin collecting Magazines at
+Pilsen far rearward, which may prove useful to Prince Karl, in the route
+Prince Karl is upon.
+
+Siege-cannon having at last come (September 8th), the batteries are all
+mounted:--on Wednesday, 9th, late at night, the Artillery, "in enormous
+quantity," opens its dread throat; poor Prag is startled from its bed
+by torrents of shot, solid and shell, from three different quarters; and
+makes haste to stand to its guns. From three different quarters;
+from Bubenetsch northward; from the Upland of St. Lawrence (famed
+WEISSENBERG, or White-Hill) westward; and from the Ziscaberg eastward
+(Hill of Zisca, where iron Zisca posted himself on a grand occasion
+once),--which latter is a broad long Hill, west end of it falling
+sheer over Prag; and on another point of it, highest point of all, the
+Praguers have a strong battery and works. The Prag guns otherwise are
+not too effectual; planted mostly on low ground. By much the best Prag
+battery is this of the Ziscaberg. And this, after two days' experience
+had of it, the Prussians determine to take on the morrow.
+
+SEPTEMBER 12th, Schwerin, who commands on that side, assaults
+accordingly; with the due steadfastness and stormfulness: throwing
+shells and balls by way of prelude. Friedrich, with some group of
+staff-officers and dignitaries, steps out on the Bubenetsch post, to see
+how this affair of the Ziscaberg will prosper: the Praguers thereabouts,
+seeing so many dignitaries, turn cannon on them. "Disperse, IHR HERREN;
+have a care!" cried Friedrich; not himself much minding, so intent upon
+the Ziscaberg. And could have skipt indifferently over your cannon-balls
+ploughing the ground,--had not one fateful ball shattered out the life
+of poor Prince Wilhelm; a good young Cousin of his, shot down here at
+his hand. Doubtless a sharp moment for the King. Prince Margraf Wilhelm
+and a poor young page, there they lie dead; indifferent to the Ziscaberg
+and all coming wars of mankind. Lamentation, naturally, for this young
+man,--Brother to the one who fell at Mollwitz, youngest Brother of the
+Margraf Karl, who commands in this Bubenetsch redoubt:--But we must lift
+our eye-glass again; see how Schwerin is prospering. Schwerin, with due
+steadfastness and stormfulness, after his prelude of bomb-shells, rushes
+on double-quick; cannot be withstood; hurls out the Praguers, and seizes
+their battery; a ruinous loss to them.
+
+Their grand Zisca redoubt is gone, then; and two subsidiary small
+redoubts behind it withal, which the French had built, and named "the
+magpie-nests (NIDS A PIE);" these also are ours. And we overhang, from
+our Zisca Hill, the very roofs, as it were; and there is nothing but a
+long bare curtain now in this quarter, ready to be battered in breach,
+and soon holed, if needful. It is not needful,--not quite. In the course
+of three days more, our Bubenetsch battery, of enormous power, has been
+so diligent, it has set fire to the Water-mill; burns irretrievably the
+Water-mill, and still worse, the wooden Sluice of the Moldau; so that
+the river falls to the everywhere wadable pitch. And Governor Harsch
+perceives that all this quarter of the Town is open to any comer;--and,
+in fact, that he will have to get away, the best he can.
+
+White flag accordingly (Tuesday, 15th): "Free withdrawal, to the
+Wischerad; won't you?" "By no manner of means!" answers Friedrich.
+Bids Schwerin from his Ziscaberg make a hole or two in that "curtain"
+opposite him; and gets ready for storm. Upon which Harsch, next morning,
+has to beat the chamade, and surrender Prisoner of War. And thus,
+Wednesday, 16th, it is done: a siege of one week, no more,--after
+all that thrashing of grain, drilling of militia, and other spirited
+preparation. Harsch could not help it; the Prussian cannonading was
+so furious. [Orlich, ii. 36-39; _Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 1082, and ii.
+1168; _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 56; &c. &c.]
+
+Prag has to swear fealty to the Kaiser; and "pay a ransom of 200,000
+pounds." Drilled militia, regulars, Hungarians, about 16,000,--only that
+many of the Tolpatches contrived to whisk loose,--are marched prisoners
+to Glatz and other strong places. Prag City, with plenty of provision in
+it, is ours. A brilliant beginning of a Campaign; the eyes of all Europe
+turned again, in very various humor, on this young King. If only the
+French do their duty, and hang well on the skirts of Marshal Traun (or
+of Prince Karl, the Cloak of Traun), who is hastening hitherward all he
+can.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III.--FRIEDRICH, DILIGENT IN HIS BOHEMIAN CONQUESTS,
+UNEXPECTEDLY COMES UPON PRINCE KARL, WITH NO FRENCH ATTENDING HIM.
+
+This electrically sudden operation on Prag was considered by astonished
+mankind, whatever else they might think about it, a decidedly brilliant
+feat of War: falling like a bolt out of the blue,--like three bolts,
+suddenly coalescing over Prag, and striking it down. Friedrich himself,
+though there is nothing of boast audible here or anywhere, was evidently
+very well satisfied; and thought the aspects good. There is Prince Karl
+whirling instantly back from his Strasburg Prospects; the general St.
+Vitus Dance of Austrian things rising higher and higher in these home
+parts:--reasonable hope that "in the course of one Campaign," proud
+obstinate Austria might feel itself so wrung and screwed as to be glad
+of Peace with neighbors not wishing War. That was the young
+King's calculation at this time. And, had France done at all as it
+promised,--or had the young King himself been considerably wiser than he
+was,--he had not been disappointed in the way we shall see!
+
+Friedrich admits he did not understand War at this period. His own
+scheme now was: To move towards the southwest, there to abolish Bathyani
+and his Tolpatches, who are busy gathering Magazines for Prince Karl's
+advent; to seize the said Magazines, which will be very useful to us;
+then advance straight towards the Passes of the Bohemian Mountains.
+Towns of Furth, Waldmunchen, unfortunate Town of Cham (burnt by Trenck,
+where masons are now busy); these stand successive in the grand Pass,
+through which the highway runs; some hundred miles or so from where
+we are: march, at one's swiftest, thitherward, Bathyani's Magazines to
+help; and there await Prince Karl? It was Friedrich's own notion; not a
+bad one, though not the best. The best, he admits, would have been:
+To stay pretty much where he was; abolish Bathyani's Tolpatch people,
+seizing their Magazines, and collecting others; in general, well rooting
+and fencing himself in Prag, and in the Circles that lie thereabouts
+upon the Elbe,--bounded to southward by the Sazawa (branch of the
+Moldau), which runs parallel to the Elbe;--but well refusing to stir
+much farther at such an advanced season of the year.
+
+That second plan would have been the wisest:--then why not, follow it?
+Too tame a plan for the youthful mind. Besides, we perceive, as indeed
+is intimated by himself, he dreaded the force of public opinion in
+France. "Aha, look at your King of Prussia again. Gone to conquer
+Bohemia; and, except the Three Circles he himself is to have of it,
+lets Bohemia go to the winds!" This sort of thing, Friedrich admits, he
+dreaded too much, at that young period; so loud had the criticisms
+been on him, in the time of the Breslau Treaty: "Out upon your King of
+Prussia; call you that an honorable Ally!" Undoubtedly a weakness in the
+young King; inasmuch, says he, as "every General [and every man, add we]
+should look to the fact, not to the rumor of the fact." Well; but, at
+least, he will adopt his own other notion; that of making for the Passes
+of the Bohemian Mountains; to abolish Bathyani at least, and lock the
+door upon Prince Karl's advent? That was his own plan; and, though
+second-best, that also would have done well, had there been no third.
+
+But there was, as we hinted, a third plan, ardently favored by
+Belleisle, whose war-talent Friedrich much respected at this time: plan
+built on Belleisle's reminiscences of the old Tabor-Budweis businesses,
+and totally inapplicable now. Belleisle said, "Go southeast, not
+southwest; right towards the Austrian Frontier itself; that will
+frighten Austria into a fine tremor. Shut up the roads from Austria:
+Budweis, Neuhaus; seize those two Highroad Towns, and keep them, if you
+would hold Bohemia; the want of them was our ruin there." Your ruin,
+yes: but your enemy was not coming from Alsace and the southwest then.
+He was coming from Austria; and your own home lay on the southwest: it
+is all different now! Friedrich might well think himself bewitched not
+to have gone for Cham and Furth, and the Passes of the Bohmer-Wald,
+according to his own notion. But so it was; he yielded to the big
+reputation of Belleisle, and to fear of what the world would say of him
+in France; a weakness which he will perhaps be taught not to repeat. In
+fact, he is now about to be taught several things;--and will have to pay
+his school-wages as he goes.
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH, LEAVING SMALL GARRISON IN PRAG, RUSHES SWIFTLY UP THE MOLDAU
+VALLEY, UPON THE TABOR-BUDWEIS COUNTRY; TO PLEASE HIS FRENCH FRIENDS.
+
+Friedrich made no delay in Prag; in haste at this late time of year.
+September 17th, on the very morrow of the Siege, the Prussians get in
+motion southward; on the 19th, Friedrich, from his post to north of the
+City, defiles through Prag, on march to Kunraditz,--first stage on that
+questionable Expedition up the Moldau Valley, right bank; towards Tabor,
+Budweis, Neuhaus; to threaten Austria, and please Belleisle and the
+French.
+
+Prag is left under General Einsiedel with a small garrison of
+5,000;--Einsiedel, a steady elderly gentleman, favorite of Friedrich
+Wilhelm's, has brief order, or outline of order to be filled up by his
+own good sense. Posadowsky follows the march, with as many meal-wagons
+as possible,--draught-cattle in very ineffectual condition. Our main
+Magazine is at Leitmeritz (should have been brought on to Prag, thinks
+Friedrich); Commissariat very ill-managed in comparison to what it ought
+to be,--to what it shall be, if we ever live to make another Campaign.
+Heavy artillery is left in Prag (another fault); and from each regiment,
+one of its baggage-wagons. [ _Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 1083; Orlich, ii.
+41 et seqq.; _Frederic,_ iii. 59; &c.] "We rest a day here at Kunraditz:
+21st September, get to the Sazawa River;--22d, to Bistritz (rest a
+day);--26th, to Miltschin; and 27th, to Tabor:"--But the Diary would be
+tedious.
+
+Friedrich goes in two Columns; one along the great road towards Tabor,
+under Schwerin this, and Friedrich mainly with him; the other to the
+right, along the River's bank, under Leopold, Young Dessauer, which has
+to go by wild country roads, or now and then roads of its own making;
+and much needs the pioneer (a difficult march in the shortening days).
+Posadowsky follows with the proviant, drawn by cattle of the horse and
+ox species, daily falling down starved: great swearing there too,
+I doubt not! General Nassau is vanguard, and stretches forward
+successfully at a much lighter pace.
+
+There are two Rivers, considerable branches of the Moldau, coming from
+eastward; which, and first of them the Sazawa, concern us here. After
+mounting the southern Uplands from Prag for a day or two, you then begin
+to drop again, into the hollow of a River called Sazawa, important in
+Bohemian Wars. It is of winding course, the first considerable branch
+of the Moldau, rising in Teutschbrod Country, seventy or eighty miles
+to east of us: in regard to Sazawa, there is, at present, no difficulty
+about crossing; the Country being all ours. After the Sazawa, mount
+again, long miles, day after day, through intricate stony desolation,
+rocks, bogs, untrimmed woods, you will get to Miltschin, thence to
+Tabor: Miltschin is the crown of that rough moor country; from Prag to
+Tabor is some sixty miles. After Miltschin the course of those brown
+mountain-brooks is all towards the Luschnitz, the next considerable
+branch of the Moldau; branch still longer and more winding than the
+Sazawa; Tabor towers up near this branch; Budweis, on the Moldau itself,
+is forty miles farther; and there at last you are out of the stony
+moors, and in a rich champaign comfortable to man and horse, were you
+but once there, after plodding through the desolations. But from that
+Sazawa by the Luschnitz on to Budweis, mounting and falling in such
+fashion, there must be ninety miles or thereby. Plod along; and keep
+a sharp eye on the whirling clouds of Pandours, for those too have got
+across upon us,--added to the other tempests of Autumn.
+
+On the ninth day of their march, the Prussians begin to descry on
+the horizon ahead the steeples and chimney-tops of Tabor, on its high
+scarped rock, or "Hill of Zisca,"--for it was Zisca and his Hussites
+that built themselves this Bit of Inexpugnability, and named it Tabor
+from their Bibles,--in those waste mountain regions. On the tenth day
+(27th September), the Prussians without difficulty took Tabor; walls
+being ruined, garrison small. We lie at Tabor till the 30th, last day
+of September. Thence, 2d October, part of us to Moldau-Tein rightwards;
+where cross the Moldau by a Bridge,--"Bridge" one has heard of, in old
+Broglio times;--cross there, with intent (easily successful) to snatch
+that "Castle of Frauenberg," darling of Broglio, for which he fought his
+Pharsalia of a Sahay to no purpose!
+
+Both Columns got united at Tabor; and paused for a day or two, to rest,
+and gather up their draggled skirts there. The Expedition does not
+improve in promise, as we advance in it; the march one of the
+most untowardly; and Posadowsky comes up with only half of his
+provision-carts,--half of his cattle having fallen down of bad weather,
+hill-roads and starvation; what could he do? That is an ominous
+circumstance, not the less.
+
+Three things are against the Prussians on this march; two of them
+accidental things. FIRST, there is, at this late season too, the
+intrinsic nature of the Country; which Friedrich with emphasis describes
+as boggy, stony, precipitous; a waste, hungry and altogether barren
+Country,--too emphatically so described. But then SECONDLY, what might
+have been otherwise, the Population, worked upon by Austrian officials,
+all fly from the sight of us; nothing but fireless deserted hamlets; and
+the corn, if they ever had any, all thrashed and hidden. No amount
+of money can purchase any service from them. Poor dark creatures; not
+loving Austria much, but loving some others even less, it would appear.
+Of Bigoted Papist Creed, for one thing; that is a great point. We do not
+meddle with their worship more or less; but we are Heretics, and they
+hate us as the Night. Which is a dreadful difficulty you always have
+in Bohemia: nowhere but in the Circle of Konigsgraz, where there
+are Hussites (far to the rear of us at this time), will you find it
+otherwise. This is difficulty second.
+
+Then, THIRDLY, what much aggravates it,--we neglected to abolish
+Bathyani! And here are Bathyani's Pandours come across the Moldau on
+us. Plenty of Pandours;--to whom "10,000 fresh Hungarians," of a new
+Insurrection which has been got up there, are daily speeding forward to
+add themselves:--such a swarm of hornets, as darkens the very daylight
+for you. Vain to scourge them down, to burn them off by blaze of
+gunpowder: they fly fast; but are straightway back again. They lurk in
+these bushy wildernesses, scraggy woods: no foraging possible, unless
+whole regiments are sent out to do it; you cannot get a letter safely
+carried for them. They are an unspeakable contemptible grief to the
+earnest leader of men.--Let us proceed, however; it will serve nothing
+to complain. Let us hope the French sit well on the skirts of Prince
+Karl: these sorrowful labors may all turn to good, in that case.
+
+Friedrich pushes on from Tabor; shoots partly (as we have seen) across
+the Moldau, to the left bank as well; captures romantic Frauenberg on
+its high rock, where Broglio got into such a fluster once. We could
+push to Pisek, too, and make a "Bivouac of Pisek," if we lost our wits!
+Nassau is in Budweis, in Neuhaus; and proper garrisons are gone thither:
+nothing wanting on our side of the business. But these Pandours, these
+10,000 Insurrection Hungarians, with their Trencks spurring them! A
+continual unblessed swarm of hornets, these; which shut out the very
+light of day from us. Too literally the light of day: we can get no
+free messaging from part to part of our own Army even. "As many as six
+Orderlies have been despatched to an outlying General; and not one of
+them could get through to him. They have snapt up three Letter-bags
+destined for the King himself. For four weeks he is absolutely shut out
+from the rest of Europe;" knows not in the least what the Kaiser, or the
+Most Christian or any other King, is doing; or whether the French are
+sitting well on Prince Karl's skirts, or not attempting that at all.
+This also is a thing to be amended, a thing you had to learn, your
+Majesty? An Army absolutely shut out from news, from letters, messages
+to or fro, and groping its way in darkness, owing to these circumambient
+thunder-clouds of Tolpatches, is not a well-situated Army! And alas,
+when at last the Letter-bag did get through, and--But let us not
+anticipate!
+
+At Tabor there arose two opinions; which, in spite of the King's
+presence, was a new difficulty. South from Tabor a day's march, the
+Highway splits; direct way for Vienna; left-hand goes to Neuhaus,
+right-hand, or straightforward rather, goes to Budweis, bearing upon
+Linz: which of these two? Nassau has already seized Budweis; and it is
+a habitable champaign country in comparison. Neuhaus, farther from the
+Moldau and its uses, but more imminent on Austria, would be easy to
+seize; and would frighten the Enemy more. Leopold the Young Dessauer is
+for Budweis; rapid Schwerin, a hardy outspoken man, is emphatic for the
+other place as Head-quarter. So emphatic are both, that the two Generals
+quarrel there; and Friedrich needs his authority to keep them from
+outbreaks, from open incompatibility henceforth, which would be
+destructive to the service. For the rest, Friedrich seizes both places;
+sends a detachment to Neuhaus as well; but holds by Budweis and the
+Moldau region with his main Army; which was not quite gratifying to the
+hardy Schwerin. On the opposite or left bank, holding Frauenberg, the
+renowned Hill-fortress there, we make inroads at discretion: but the
+country is woody, favorable to Pandours; and the right bank is our chief
+scene of action. How we are to maintain ourselves in this country? To
+winter in these towns between the Sazawa and the Luschnitz? Unless the
+French sit well on Prince Karl's skirts, it will not be possible.
+
+
+
+
+THE FRENCH ARE LITTLE GRATEFUL FOR THE PLEASURE DONE THEM AT SUCH
+RUINOUS EXPENSE.
+
+French sitting well on Prince Karl's skirts? They are not molesting
+Prince Karl in the smallest; never tried such a thing;--are turned away
+to the Brisgan, to the Upper Rhine Country; gone to besiege Freyburg
+there, and seize Towns; about the Lake of Constance, as if there were no
+Friedrich in the game! It must be owned the French do liberally pay off
+old scores against Friedrich,--if, except in their own imagination,
+they had old scores against him. No man ever delivered them from a more
+imminent peril; and they, the rope once cut that was strangling
+them, magnificently forget who cut it; and celebrate only their own
+distinguished conduct during and after the operation. To a degree truly
+wonderful.
+
+It was moonlight, clear as day that night, 23d August, when Prince Karl
+had to recross the Rhine, close in their neighborhood; [_Guerre de
+Boheme,_ iii. 196.]--and instead of harassing Prince Karl "to half or to
+whole ruin," as the bargain was, their distinguished conduct consisted
+in going quietly to their beds (old Marechal de Noailles even calling
+back some of his too forward subalterns), and joyfully leaving Prince
+Karl, then and afterwards, to cross the Rhine, and march for Bohmen, at
+his own perfect convenience.
+
+"Seckendorf will sit on Karl's skirts," they said: "too late for US,
+this season; next season, you shall see!" Such was their theory,
+after Louis got that cathartic, and rose from bed. Schmettau, with his
+importunities, which at last irritated everybody, could make nothing
+more of it. "Let the King of France crown his glories by the Siege of
+Freyburg, the conquest of Brisgau:--for behoof of the poor Kaiser, don't
+you observe? Hither Austria is the Kaiser's;--and furthermore, were
+Freyburg gone, there will be no invading of Elsass again" (which is
+another privately very interesting point)!
+
+And there, at Freyburg, the Most Christian King now is, and his Army up
+to the knees in mud, conquering Hither Austria; besieging Freyburg, with
+much difficulty owing to the wet,--besieging there with what energy;
+a spectacle to the world! And has, for the present, but one wife, no
+mistress either! With rapturous eyes France looks on; with admiration
+too big for words. Voltaire, I have heard, made pilgrimage to Freyburg,
+with rhymed Panegyric in his pocket; saw those miraculous operations
+of a Most Christian King miraculously awakened; and had the honor to
+present said Panegyric; and be seen, for the first time, by the royal
+eyes,--which did not seem to relish him much. [The Panegyric (EPITRE AU
+ROI DEVANT FRIBOURG) is in _OEuvres de Voltaire,_ xvii. 184.] Since the
+first days of October, Freyburg had been under constant assault; "amid
+rains, amid frosts; a siege long and murderous" (to the besieging
+party);--and was not got till November 5th; not quite entirely, the
+Citadels of it, till November 25th; Majesty gone home to Paris, to
+illuminations and triumphal arches, in the interim. [Adelung, iv. 266;
+Barbier, ii. 414 (13th November, &c.), for the illuminations, grand in
+the extreme, in spite of wild rains and winds.] It had been a difficult
+and bloody conquest to him, this of Freyburg and the Brisgau Country;
+and I never heard that either the Kaiser or he got sensible advantage by
+it,--though Prince Karl, on the present occasion, might be said to get a
+great deal.
+
+"Seckendorf will do your Prince Karl," they had cried always:
+"Seckendorf and his Prussian Majesty! Are not we conquering Hither
+Austria here, for the Kaiser's behoof?" Seckendorf they did officially
+appoint to pursue; appoint or allow;--and laid all the blame on
+Seckendorf; who perhaps deserved his share of it. Very certain it is,
+Seckendorf did little or nothing to Prince Karl; marched "leisurely
+behind him through the Ober-Pfalz,"--skirting Baireuth Country, Karl and
+he, to Wilhelmina's grief; [Her Letters ( _OEuvres de Frederic,_ xxvii.
+i. 133, &c.).]--"leisurely behind him at a distance of four days," knew
+better than meddle with Prince Karl. So that Prince Karl, "in twenty-one
+marches," disturbed only by the elements and bad roads, reached
+Waldmunchen 26th September, in the Furth-Cham Country; [Ranke, iii.
+187.] and was heard to exclaim: "We are let off for the fright, then
+(NOUS VOILA QUITTES POUR LA PEUR)!"--Seckendorf, finding nothing to live
+upon in Ober-Pfalz, could not attend Prince Karl farther; but turned
+leftwards home to Bavaria; made a kind of Second "Reconquest of Bavaria"
+(on exactly the same terms as the First, Austrian occupants being all
+called off to assist in Bohmen again);--concerning which, here is an
+Excerpt:--
+
+"Seckendorf, following at his leisure, and joined by the Hessians and
+Pfalzers, so as now to exceed 30,000, leaves Prince Karl and the rest of
+the enterprise to do as it can; and applies himself, for his own share,
+as the needfulest thing, to getting hold of Bavaria again, that his poor
+Kaiser may have where to lay his head, and pay old servants their wages.
+Dreadfully exclaimed against, the old gentleman, especially by the
+French co-managers: 'Why did not the old traitor stick in the rear of
+Prince Karl, in the difficult passes, and drive him prone,--while we
+went besieging Freyburg, and poaching about, trying for a bit of the
+Brisgau while chance served!' A traitor beyond doubt; probably bought
+with money down: thinks Valori. But, after all, what could Seckendorf
+do? He is now of weight for Barenklau and Bavaria, not for much more. He
+does sweep Barenklau and his Austrians from Bavaria, clear out (in the
+course of this October), all but Ingolstadt and two or three strong
+towns,--Passau especially, 'which can be blockaded, and afterwards
+besieged if needful.' For the rest, he is dreadfully ill-off for
+provisions, incapable of the least, attempt on Passau (as Friedrich
+urged, on hearing of him again); and will have to canton himself in
+home-quarters, and live by his shifts till Spring.
+
+"The noise of French censure rises loud, against not themselves,
+but against Seckendorf:--Friedrich, before that Tolpatch eclipse of
+Correspondence [when three of his Letter-bags were seized, and he fell
+quite dark], had too well foreboded, and contemptuously expressed his
+astonishment at the blame BOTH were well earning: Passau, said he,
+cannot you go at least upon Passau; which might alarm the Enemy a
+little, and drag him homewards? 'Adieu, my dear Seckendorf, your Officer
+will tell you how we did the Siege of Prag. You and your French are
+wetted hens (POULES MOUILLEES),'--cowering about like drenched hens in a
+day of set rain. 'As I hear nothing of either of you, I must try to get
+out of this business without your help;'"--otherwise it will be ill for
+me indeed! [Excerpted Fragment of a Letter from Friedrich,--(exact
+date not given, date of EXCERPT is, Donanworth Country, 23d September,
+1744),--which the French Agent in Seckendorf's Army had a reading of
+(_Campagnes de Coigny,_ iv. 185-187; ib. 216-219: cited in Adelung, iv.
+225).] "Which latter expression alarmed the French, and set them upon
+writing and bustling, but not upon doing anything."
+
+"Prince Karl had crossed the Rhine unmolested, in the clearest
+moonlight, August 23d-24th; Seckendorf was not wholly got to Heilbronn,
+September 8th: a pretty way behind Prince Karl! The 6,000 Hessians,
+formerly in English pay, indignant Landgraf Wilhelm [who never could
+forgive that Machiavellian conduct of Carteret at Hanau, never till he
+found out what it really was] has, this year, put into French pay. And
+they have now joined Seckendorf; [Espagnac, ii. 13; Buchholz, ii. 123.]
+Prince Friedrich [Britannic Majesty's Son-in-law], not good fat Uncle
+George, commanding them henceforth:--with extreme lack of profit to
+Prince Friedrich, to the Hessians, and to the French, as will appear in
+time. These 6,000, and certain thousands of Pfalzers likewise in French
+pay, are now with Seckendorf, and have raised him to above 30,000;--it
+is the one fruit King Friedrich has got by that 'Union of Frankfurt,'
+and by all his long prospective haggling, and struggling for a 'Union
+of German Princes in general.' Two pears, after that long shaking of
+the tree; both pears rotten, or indeed falling into Seckendorf, who is
+a basket of such quality! 'Seckendorf, increased in this munificent
+manner, can he still do nothing?' cry the French: 'the old traitor!'--'I
+have no magazines,' said Seckendorf, 'nothing to live upon, to shoot
+with; no money!' And it is a mutual crescendo between the 'perfidious
+Seckendorf' and them; without work done. In the Nurnberg Country, some
+Hussars of his picked up Lord Holderness, an English Ambassador making
+for Venice by that bad route. 'Prisoner, are not you?' But they did not
+use him ill; on consideration, the Heads of Imperial Departments gave
+him a Pass, and he continued his Venetian Journey (result of it zero)
+without farther molestation that I heard of. [Adelung, iv. 222.]
+
+"These French-Seckendorf cunctations, recriminations and drenched-hen
+procedures are an endless sorrow to poor Kaiser Karl; who at length
+can stand it no longer; but resolves, since at least Bavaria, though
+moneyless and in ruins, is his, he will in person go thither; confident
+that there will be victual and equipment discoverable for self and Army
+were he there. Remonstrances avail not: 'Ask me to die with honor, ask
+me not to lie rotting here;' [Ib. iv. 241.]--and quits Frankfurt, and
+the Reich's-Diet and its babble, 17th October, 1744 (small sorrow, were
+it for the last time),--and enters his Munchen in the course of a week.
+[17th October, 1744, leaves Frankfurt; arrives in Munchen 23d (Adelung,
+iv. 241-244).] Munchen is transported with joy to see the Legitimate
+Sovereign again; and blazes into illuminations,--forgetful who caused
+its past wretchednesses, hoping only all wretchedness is now ended.
+Let ruined huts, and Cham and the burnt Towns, rebuild themselves; the
+wasted hedges make up their gaps again: here is the King come home!
+Here, sure enough, is an unfortunate Kaiser of the Holy Romish Reich,
+who can once more hope to pay his milk-scores, being a loved Kurfurst of
+Bavaria at least. Very dear to the hearts of these poor people;--and
+to their purses, interests and skins, has not he in another sense been
+dear? What a price the ambitions and cracked phantasms of that weak
+brain have cost the seemingly innocent population! Population harried,
+hungered down, dragged off to perish in Italian Wars; a Country burnt,
+tribulated, torn to ruin, under the harrow of Fate and ruffian Trenck
+and Company. Britannic George, rather a dear morsel too, has come
+much cheaper hitherto. England is not yet burnt; nothing burning
+there,--except the dull fire of deliriums; Natural Stupidities all set
+flaming, which (whatever it may BE in the way of loss) is not felt as a
+loss, but rather as a comfort for the time being;--and in fact there are
+only, say, a forty or fifty thousand armed Englishmen rotted down, and
+scarcely a Hundred Millions of money yet spent. Nothing to speak of,
+in the cause of Human Liberty. Why Populations suffer for their guilty
+Kings? My friend, it is the Populations too that are guilty in having
+such Kings. Reverence, sacred Respect for Human Worth, sacred Abhorrence
+of Human Unworth, have you considered what it means? These poor
+Populations have it not, or for long generations have had it less and
+less. Hence, by degrees, this sort of 'Kings' to them, and enormous
+consequences following!"--
+
+Karl VII. got back to Munchen 23d October, 1744; and the tar-barrels
+being once burnt, and indispensable sortings effected, he went to the
+field along with Seckendorf, to encourage his men under Seckendorf, and
+urge the French by all considerations to come on. And really did what
+he could, poor man. But the cordage of his life had been so strained and
+torn, he was not now good for much; alas, it had been but little he was
+ever good for. A couple of dear Kurfursts, his Father and he; have stood
+these Bavarian Countries very high, since the Battle of Blenheim and
+downwards!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV.--FRIEDRICH REDUCED TO STRAITS; CANNOT MAINTAIN HIS MOLDAU
+CONQUESTS AGAINST PRICE KARL.
+
+One may fancy what were Friedrich's reflections when he heard that
+Prince Karl had, prosperously and unmolested, got across, by those
+Passes from the Ober-Pfalz, into Bohmen and the Circle of Pilsen, into
+junction with Bathyani and his magazines; ["At Mirotitz, October 2d"
+(Ranke, iii. 194); Orlich, ii. 49.] heard, moreover, that the Saxons,
+20,000 strong, under Weissenfels, crossing the Metal Mountains, coming
+on by Eger and Karlsbad regions, were about uniting with him (bound by
+Treaty to assist the Hungarian Majesty when invaded);--and had finally,
+what confirms everything, that the said Prince Karl in person (making
+for Budweis, "just seen his advanced guard," said rumor under mistake)
+was but few miles off. Few miles off, on the other side of the
+Moldau;--of unknown strength, hidden in the circumambient clouds of
+Pandours.
+
+Suppressing all the rages and natural reflections but those needful for
+the moment, Friedrich (October 4th, by Moldau-Tein) dashes across the
+Moldau, to seek Prince Karl, at the place indicated, and at once smite
+him down if possible;--that will be a remedy for all things. Prince Karl
+is not there, nor was; the indication had been false; Friedrich searches
+about, for four days, to no purpose. Prince Karl, he then learns for
+certain, has crossed the Moldau farther down, farther northward, between
+Prag and us. Means to cut us off from Prag, then, which is our fountain
+of life in these circumstances? That is his intention:--"Old Traun, who
+is with him, understands his trade!" thinks Friedrich. Traun, or the
+Prince, is diligently forming magazines, all the Country carrying to
+him, in the Town of Beneschau, hither side of the Sazawa, some seventy
+miles north of us, an important Town where roads meet:--unless we can
+get hold of Beneschau, it will be ill with us here! Across the River
+again, at any rate; and let us hasten thither. That is an affair which
+must be looked to; and speed is necessary!
+
+OCTOBER 8th, After four days' search ending in this manner, Friedrich
+swiftly crosses towards Tabor again, to Bechin (over on the Luschnitz,
+one march), there to collect himself for Beneschau and the other
+intricacies. Towards Tabor again, by his Bridge of Moldau-Tein;--clouds
+of Pandour people, larger clouds than usual, hanging round; hidden by
+the woods till Friedrich is gone. Friedrich being gone, there occurs the
+AFFAIR OF MOLDAU-TEIN, much talked of in Prussian Books. Of which, in
+extreme condensation, this is the essence:--
+
+"OCTOBER 9th. Friedrich once off to Bechin, the Pandour clouds gather
+on his rearguard next day at Tein Bridge here, to the number of about
+10,000 [rumor counts 14,000]; and with desperate intent, and more
+regularity than usual, attack the Tein-Bridge Party, which consists
+of perhaps 2,000 grenadiers and hussars, the whole under Ziethen's
+charge,--obliged to wait for a cargo of Bread-wagons here. 'Defend your
+Bridge, with cannon, with case-shot:' that is what the grenadiers do.
+The Pandour cloud, with horrid lanes cut in it, draws back out of this;
+then plunges at the River itself, which can be ridden above or below;
+rides it, furious, by the thousand: 'Off with your infantry; quit the
+Bridge!' cries Ziethen to his Captain there: 'Retire you, Parthian-like;
+thrice-steady,' orders Ziethen: 'It is to be hoped our hussars can deal
+with this mad-doggery!' And they do it; cutting in with iron discipline,
+with fierceness not undrilled; a wedge of iron hussars, with ditto
+grenadiers continually wheeling, like so many reapers steady among
+wind-tossed grain; and gradually give the Pandours enough. Seven hours
+of it, in all: 'of their sixty cartridges the grenadiers had fired
+fifty-four,' when it ended, about 7 P.M. The coming Bread-wagons,
+getting word, had to cast their loaves into the River (sad to think of);
+and make for Bechin at their swiftest. But the rearguard got off with
+its guns, in this victorious manner: thanks to Major-General Ziethen,
+Colonel Reusch and the others concerned. [_Feldzuge der Preussen,_ i.
+268; Orlich, ii. 55.]
+
+"Ziethen handsels his Major-Generalcy in this fine way: [Patent given
+him "3d October, 1744," only a week ago, "and ordered to be dated eight
+months back" (Rodenbeck, i. 109).] a man who has had promotion, and also
+has had none, and may again come to have none;--and is able to do either
+way. Never mind, my excellent tacit friend! Ziethen is five-and-forty
+gone; has a face which is beautiful to me, though one of the coarsest.
+Face thrice-honest, intricately ploughed with thoughts which are well
+kept silent (the thoughts, indeed, being themselves mostly inarticulate;
+thoughts of a simple-hearted, much-enduring, hot-tempered son of
+iron and oatmeal);--decidedly rather likable, with its lazily hanging
+under-lip, and respectable bearskin cylinder atop."
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH TRIES TO HAVE BATTLE FROM PRINCE KARL, IN THE MOLDAU
+COUNTRIES; CANNOT, OWING TO THE SKILL OF PRINCE KARL OR OF OLD
+FELDMARSCHALL TRAUN;--HAS TO RETIRE BEHIND THE SAZAWA, AND ULTIMATELY
+BEHIND THE ELBE, WITH MUCH LABOR IN VAIN.
+
+OCTOBER 14th-18th: RETREAT FROM BECHIN-TABOR COUNTRY TO BENESCHAU. ...
+"These Pandours give us trouble enough; no Magazine here, no living to
+be had in this Country beside them. Unfortunate Colonel Jahnus went out
+from Tabor lately, to look after requisitioned grains: infinite Pandours
+set upon him [Muhlhausen is the memorable place]; Jahnus was obstinate
+(too obstinate, thinks Friedrich), and perished on the ground, he and
+200 of his. [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 61.] Nay, next, a swarm of
+them came to Tabor itself, Nadasti at their head; to try whether Tabor,
+with its small garrison, could not be escaladed, and perhaps Prince
+Henri, who lies sick there, be taken? Tabor taught them another lesson;
+sent them home with heads broken;--which Friedrich thinks was an
+extremely suitable thing. But so it stands: Here by the thousand and the
+ten thousand they hang round us; and Prince Karl--It is of all things
+necessary we get hold of that Beneschau, and the Magazine he is
+gathering there!
+
+"Rapidity is indispensable,--and yet how quit Tabor? We have detachments
+out at Neuhaus, at Budweis, and in Tabor 300 men in hospital, whom there
+are no means of carrying. To leave them to the Tolpaches? Friedrich
+confesses he was weak on this occasion; he could not leave these 300
+men, as was his clear duty, in this extremity of War. He ordered in his
+Neuhaus Detachment; not yet any of the others. He despatched Schmerin
+towards Beneschau with all his speed; Schwerin was lucky enough to
+take Beneschau and its provender,--a most blessed fortune,--and fences
+himself there. Hearing which, Friedrich, having now got the Neuhaus
+Detachment in hand, orders the other Three, the Budweis, the Tabor here,
+and the Frauenberg across the River, to maintain themselves; and
+then, leaving those southern regions to their chance, hastens towards
+Beneschau and Schwerin; encamps (October 18th) near Beneschau,--'Camp of
+Konopischt,' unattackable Camp, celebrated in the Prussian Books;--and
+there, for eight days, still on the south side of Sazawa, tries every
+shift to mend the bad posture of affairs in that Luschnitz-Sazawa
+Country. His Three Garrisons (3,000 men in them, besides the 300 sick)
+he now sees will not be able to maintain themselves; and he sends in
+succession 'eight messengers,' not one messenger of whom could get
+through, to bid them come away. His own hope now is for a Battle
+with Prince Karl; which might remedy all things. [_OEuvres de
+Frederic,_ iii. 62-64.]"
+
+That is Friedrich's wish; but it is by no means Traun's, who sees that
+hunger and wet weather will of themselves suffice for Friedrich. There
+ensues accordingly, for three weeks to come, in that confused Country,
+a series of swift shufflings, checkings and manoeuvrings between these
+two, which is gratifying and instructive to the strategic mind, but
+cannot be inflicted upon common readers. Two considerable chess-players,
+an old and a young; their chess-board a bushy, rocky, marshy
+parallelogram, running fifty miles straight east from Prag, and twenty
+or fewer south, of which Prag is the northwest angle, and Beneschau, or
+the impregnable Konopischt the southwest: the reader must conceive it;
+and how Traun will not fight Friedrich, yet makes him skip hither and
+thither, chiefly by threatening his victuals. Friedrich's main magazine
+is now at Pardubitz, the extreme northeast angle of the parallelogram.
+Parallelogram has one river in it, with the innumerable rocks and
+brooks and quagmires, the river Sazawa; and on the north side, where are
+Kuttenberg, Czaslau, Chotusitz, places again become important in
+this business, it is bounded by another river, the Elbe. Intricate
+manoeuvring there is here, for three weeks following: "old Traun an
+admirable man!" thinks Friedrich, who ever after recognized Traun as his
+Schoolmaster in the art of War. We mark here and there a date, and leave
+it to readers.
+
+"RADICZ, OCTOBER 21st-22d. At Radicz, a march to southwest of us, and on
+our side of the Moldau, the Saxons, under Weissenfels, 20,000 effective,
+join Prince Karl; which raises his force to 69,514 men, some 10,000 more
+than Friedrich is master of. [Orlich, ii. 66.] Prospect of wintering
+between the Luschnitz and the Sazawa there is now little; unless they
+will fight us, and be beaten. Friedrich, from his inaccessible Camp of
+Konopischt, manoeuvres, reconnoitres, in all directions, to produce
+this result; but to no purpose. An Austrian Detachment did come, to look
+after Beneschau and the Magazines there; but rapidly drew back again,
+finding Konopischt on their road, and how matters were. Friedrich
+will guard the door of this Sazawa-Elbe tract of Country; hope of the
+Sazawa-Luschnitz tract has, in few days, fallen extinct. Here is
+news come to Konopischt: our Three poor Garrisons, Budweis, Tabor,
+Frauenberg, already all lost; guns and men, after defence to the
+last cartridge,--in Frauenberg their water was cut off, it was
+eight-and-forty hours of thirst at Frauenberg:--one way or other, they
+are all Three gone; eight couriers galloping with message, 'Come away,'
+were all picked up by the Pandours; so they stood, and were lost. 'Three
+thousand fighting men gone, for the weak chance of saving three hundred
+who were in hospital!' thinks Friedrich: War is not a school of the
+weak pities. For the chance of ten, you lose a hundred and the ten too.
+Sazawa-Elbe tract of country, let us vigilantly keep the door of that!
+
+"SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24th, Friedrich out reconnoitring from Konopischt
+discovers of a certainty that the whole Austrian-Saxon force is
+now advaucing towards Beneschau, and will, this night, encamp at
+Marschowitz, to southwest, only one march from us! On the instant
+Friedrich hurries back; gets his Army on march thitherward, though the
+late October sun is now past noon; off instantly; a stroke yonder will
+perhaps be the cure of all. Such roads we had, says Friedrich, as never
+Army travelled before: long after nightfall, we arrive near the Austrian
+camp, bivouac as we can till daylight return. At the first streak of
+day, Friedrich and his chief generals are on the heights with their
+spy-glasses: Austrian Army sure enough; and there they have altered
+their posture overnight (for Traun too has been awake); they lie now
+opposite our RIGHT flank; 'on a scarped height, at the foot of which,
+through swamps and quagmires, runs a muddy stream.' Unattackable on this
+side: their right flank and foot are safe enough. Creep round and see
+their left:--Nothing but copses, swampy intricacies! We may shoulder
+arms again, and go back to Konopischt: no fight here! [_OEuvres
+de Frederic,_ iii. 63, 64; Orlich, ii. 69.] Speaking of defensive
+Campaigns, says Friedrich didactically, years afterwards, 'If such
+situations are to answer the purpose intended, the front and flanks must
+be equally strong, but the rear entirely open. Such, for instance,
+are those heights which have an extensive front, and whose flanks are
+covered by morasses:--as was Prince Karl's Camp at Marschowitz in the
+year 1744, with its front covered by a stream, and the wings by deep
+hollows; or that which we ourselves then occupied at Konopischt,--as you
+well remember. [_Military Instructions_ (above cited), p. 44.]
+
+"OCTOBER 26th-NOVEMBER 1st. The Sazawa-Luschnitz tract of Country is
+quite lost, then; lost with damages: the question now is, Can we keep
+the Sazawa-Elbe tract? For about three weeks more, Friedrich struggles
+for that object; cannot compass that either. Want of horse-provender is
+very great:--country entirely eaten, say the peasants, and not a truss
+remaining. October 26th, Friedrich has to cross the Sazawa; we must quit
+the door of that tract (hunger driving us), and fight for the interior
+in detail. Traun gets to Beneschau in that cheap way; and now, in behalf
+of Traun, the peasants find forage enough, being zealous for Queen and
+creed. Pandours spread themselves all over this Sazawa-Elbe country;
+endanger our subsistences, make our lives miserable. It is the old
+story: Friedrich, famine and mud and misery of Pandours compelling,
+has to retire northward, Elbe-ward, inch by inch; whither the Austrians
+follow at a safe distance, and, in spite of all manoeuvring, cannot be
+got to fight.
+
+"Brave General Nassau, who much distinguishes himself in these
+businesses, has (though Friedrich does not yet know it) dexterously
+seized Kolin, westward in those Elbe parts,--ground that will be notable
+in years coming. Important little feat of Nassau's; of which anon. On
+the other hand, our Magazine at Pardubitz, eastward on the Elbe, is
+not out of danger: Pandours and regulars 2,000 and odd, 'sixty of the
+Pandour kind disguised as peasants leading hay-carts,' made an attempt
+there lately; but were detected by the vigilant Colonel, and blown to
+pieces, in the nick of time, some of them actually within the gate.
+[ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 65.] Nay, a body of Austrian regulars were
+in full march for Kolin lately, intending to get hold of the Elbe
+itself at that point (midway between Prag and Pardubitz): but the prompt
+General Nassau, as we remarked, had struck in before them; and now holds
+Kolin;--though, for several days, Friedrich could not tell what had
+become of Nassau, owing to the swarms of Pandours.
+
+"Friedrich, standing with his back to Prag, which is fifty miles from
+him, and rather in need of his support than able to give him any; and
+drawing his meal from the uncertain distance, with Pandours hovering
+round,--is in difficult case. While old Traun is kept luminous as
+mid-day; the circumambient atmosphere of Pandours is tenebrific to
+Friedrich, keeps him in perpetual midnight. He has to read his position
+as with flashes of lightning, for most part. A heavy-laden, sorely
+exasperated man; and must keep his haggard miseries strictly secret;
+which I believe he does. Were Valori here, it is very possible he might
+find the countenance FAROUCHE again; eyes gloomy, on damp November
+mornings! Schwerin, in a huff, has gone home: Since your Majesty is
+pleased to prefer his young Durchlaucht of Anhalt's advice, what can
+an elderly servant (not without rheumatisms) do other?--'Well!' answers
+Friedrich, not with eyes cheered by the phenomenon. The Elbe-Sazawa
+tract, even this looks as if it would be hard to keep. A world very dark
+for Friedrich, enveloped so by the ill chances and the Pandours. But
+what help?
+
+"From the French Camp far away, there comes, dated 17th October
+(third week of their Siege of Freyburg), by way of help to Friedrich,
+magnanimous promise: 'So soon as this Siege is done, which will be
+speedily, though it is difficult, we propose to send fifty battalions
+and a hundred squadrons,'"--say only 60,000 horse and foot (not a hoof
+or toe of which ever got that length, on actually trying it),--"towards
+Westphalia, to bring the Elector of Koln to reason [poor Kaiser's lanky
+Brother, who cannot stand the French procedures, and has lately sold
+himself, that is sold his troops, to England], and keep the King of
+England and the Dutch in check,"--by way of solacement to your Majesty.
+Will you indeed, you magnanimous Allies?--This was picked up by the
+Pandours; and I know not but Friedrich was spared the useless pain of
+reading it. [Orlich, ii. 73.]
+
+"NOVEMBER 1st-9th: FRIEDRICH LOSES SAZAWA-ELBE COUNTRY TOO. On the first
+day of November, here is a lightning-flash which reveals strange things
+to Friedrich. Traun's late manoeuvrings, which have been so enigmatic,
+to right and to left, upon Prag and other points, issue now in an
+attempt towards Pardubitz; which reveals to Friedrich the intention
+Traun has formed, of forcing him to choose one of those two places, and
+let go the other. Formidable, fatal, thinks Friedrich; and yet admirable
+on the part of Traun: 'a design beautiful and worthy of admiration.' If
+we stay near Prag, what becomes of our communication with Silesia; what
+becomes of Silesia itself? If we go towards Pardubitz, Prag and Bohmen
+are lost! What to do? 'Despatch reinforcement to Pardubitz; thanks to
+Nassau, the Kolin-Pardubitz road is ours!' That is done, Pardubitz saved
+for the moment. Could we now get to Kuttenberg before the old Marshal,
+his design were overset altogether. Alas, we cannot march at once, have
+to wait a day for the bread. Forward, nevertheless; and again forward,
+and again; three heavy marches in November weather: let us make a fourth
+forced march, start to-morrow before dawn,--Kuttenberg above all things!
+In vain; to-morrow, 4th November, there is such a fog, dark as London
+itself, from six in the morning onwards, no starting till noon: and then
+impossible, with all our efforts, to reach Kuttenberg. We have to halt
+an eight miles short of it, in front of Kolin; and pitch tents there. On
+the morrow, 5th November, Traun is found encamped, unattackable, between
+us and our object; sits there, at his ease in a friendly Country, with
+Pandour whirlpools flowing out and in; an irreducible case to Friedrich.
+November 5th, and for three days more, Friedrich, to no purpose, tries
+his utmost;--finds he will have to give up the Elbe-Sazawa region, like
+the others. Monday, November 9th, Friedrich gathers himself at Kolin;
+crosses the Elbe by Kolin Bridge, that day. Point after point of the
+game going against him."
+
+Kolin was, of course, attacked, that Monday evening, so soon as the main
+Army crossed: but, so soon as the Army left, General Nassau had taken
+his measures; and, with his great guns and his small, handled the
+Pandours in a way that pleased us. [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 68.]
+Thursday night following, they came back, with regular grenadiers to
+support; under cloud of night, in great force, ruffian Trenck at the
+head of them: a frightful phenomenon to weak nerves. But this also
+Nassau treated in such a fiery fashion that it vanished without return;
+three hundred dead left on the ground, and ruffian Trenck riding off
+with his own crown broken,--beautiful indigo face streaking itself into
+GINGHAM-pattern, for the moment!
+
+Except Pardubitz, where also the due battalions are left, Friedrich now
+holds no post south of the Elbe in this quarter; Elbe-Sazawa Tract is
+gone like the others, to all appearance. And we must now say, Silesia
+or Prag? Prince Leopold, Council-of-War being held on the matter, is for
+keeping hold of Prag: "Pity to lose all the excellent siege-artillery we
+brought thither," says he. True, too true; an ill-managed business
+that of Prag! thinks Friedrich sadly to himself: but what is Prag and
+artillery, compared to Silesia? Parthian retreat into Silesia; and
+let Prag and the artillery go: that, to Friedrich, is clearly the sure
+course. Or perhaps the fatal alternative will not actually arrive? So
+long as Pardubitz and Kolin hold; and we have the Elbe for barrier?
+Truth is, Prince Karl has himself written to Court that, having now
+pushed his Enemy fairly over the Elbe, and winter being come with its
+sleets and slushes, ruinous to troops that have been so marched about,
+the Campaign ought to end;--nay, his own young Wife is in perilous
+interesting circumstances, and the poor Prince wishes to be home. To
+which, however, it is again understood, Maria Theresa has emphatically
+answered, "No,--finish first!"
+
+NOVEMBER 9th-19th: WE DEFEND THE ELBE RIVER. Friedrich has posted
+himself on the north shore of the Elbe, from Pardubitz to the other side
+of Kolin; means to defend that side of the River, where go the Silesian
+roads. At Bohdenetz, short way across from Pardubitz, he himself is;
+Prince Leopold is near Kolin: thirty miles of river-bank to dispute.
+The controversy lasts ten days; ends in ELBE-TEINITZ, a celebrated
+"passage," in Books and otherwise. Friedrich is in shaggy, intricate
+country; no want of dingles, woods and quagmires; now and then pleasant
+places too,--here is Kladrup for example, where our Father came three
+hundred miles to dine with the Kaiser once. The grooms and colts are
+all off at present; Father and Kaiser are off; and much is changed since
+then. Grim tussle of War now; sleety winter, and the Giant Mountains in
+the distance getting on their white hoods! Friedrich doubtless has
+his thoughts as he rides up and down, in sight of Kladrup, among other
+places, settling many things; but what his thoughts were, he is careful
+not to say except where necessary. Much is to be looked after, in this
+River controversy of thirty miles. Detachments lie, at intervals, all
+the way; and mounted sentries, a sentry every five miles, patrol the
+River-bank; vigilant, we hope, as lynxes. Nothing can cross but alarm
+will be given, and by degrees the whole Prussian force be upon it. This
+is the Circle of Konigsgratz, this that now lies to rear; and happily
+there are a few Hussites in it, not utterly indisposed to do a little
+spying for us, and bring a glimmering of intelligence, now and then.
+
+It is now the second week that Frietrich has lain so, with his mounted
+patrols in motion, with his Hussite spies; guarding Argus-like this
+thirty miles of River; and the Austrians attempt nothing, or nothing
+with effect. If the Austrians go home to their winter-quarters, he hopes
+to issue from Kolin again before Spring, and to sweep the Elbe-Sazawa
+Tract clear of them, after all. Maria Theresa having answered No, it is
+likely the Austrians will try to get across: Be vigilant therefore,
+ye mounted sentries. Or will they perhaps make an attempt on Prag?
+Einsiedel, who has no garrison of the least adequacy, apprises us That
+"in all the villages round Prag people are busy making ladders,"--what
+can that mean? Friedrich has learned, by intercepted letters, that
+something great is to be done on Wednesday, 18th: he sends Rothenburg
+with reinforcement to Einsiedel, lest a scalade of Prag should be on
+the cards. Rothenburg is right welcome in the lines of Prag, though with
+reinforcement still ineffectual; but it is not Prag that is meant, nor
+is Wednesday the day. Through Wednesday, Friedrich, all eye and ear,
+could observe nothing: much marching to and fro on the Austrian side of
+the River; but apparently it comes to nothing? The mounted patrols had
+better be vigilant, however.
+
+On the morrow, 5 A.M., what is this that is going on? Audible booming of
+cannon, of musketry and battle, echoing through the woods, penetrates to
+Friedrich's quarters at Bohdenetz in the Pardubitz region: Attack upon
+Kolin, Nassau defending himself there? Out swift scouts, and see! Many
+scouts gallop out; but none comes back. Friedrich, for hours, has to
+remain uncertain; can only hope Nassau will defend himself. Boom go the
+distant volleyings; no scout comes back. And it is not Nassau or Kolin;
+it is something worse: very glorious for Prussian valor, but ruinous to
+this Campaign.
+
+The Austrians, at 2 o'clock this morning, Austrians and Saxons, came in
+great force, in dead silence, to the south brink of the River, opposite
+a place called Teinitz (Elbe-Teinitz), ten miles east of Kolin; that
+was the fruit of their marching yesterday. They sat there forbidden to
+speak, to smoke tobacco or do anything but breathe, till all was ready;
+till pontoons, cannons had come up, and some gleam of dawn had broken.
+At the first gleam of dawn, as they are shoving down their pontoon
+boats, there comes a "WER-DA, Who goes?" from our Prussian patrol across
+the River. Receiving no answer, he fires; and is himself shot down. One
+Wedell, Wedell and Ziethen, who keep watch in this part, start instantly
+at sound of these shots; and make a dreadful day of it for these
+invasive Saxon and Austrian multitudes. Naturally, too, they send off
+scouts, galloping for more help, to the right and to the left. But that
+avails not. Wild doggery of Pandours, it would seem, have already swum
+or waded the River, above Teinitz and below:--"Want of vigilance!" barks
+Friedrich impatiently: but such a doggery is difficult to watch with
+effect. At any rate, to the right and to the left, the woods are already
+beset with Pandours; every scout sent out is killed: and to east or to
+west there comes no news but an echoing of musketry, a boom of distant
+cannon. [Orlich, ii. 82-85.] Saxon-Austrian battalions, four or five,
+with unlimited artillery going, VERSUS Wedell's one battalion, with
+musketry and Ziethen's hussars: it is fearful odds. The Prussians stand
+to it like heroes; doggedly, for four hours, continue the
+dispute,--till it is fairly desperate; "two bridges of the enemy's now
+finished;"--whereupon they manoeuvre off, with Parthian or Prussian
+countenance, into the woods, safe, towards Kolin; "despatching definite
+news to Friedrich, which does arrive about 11 A.M., and sets him at once
+on new measures."
+
+This is a great feat in the Prussian military annals; for which, sad
+as the news was, Wedell got the name of Leonidas attached to him by
+Friedrich himself. And indeed it is a gallant passage of war; "Forcing
+of the Elbe at Teinitz;" of which I could give two Narratives, one from
+the Prussian, and one from the Saxon side; [Seyfarth, _Beylage,_ i.
+595-598; _Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1175-1181.] didactic, admonitory
+to the military mind, nay to the civic reader that has sympathy with
+heroisms, with work done manfully, and terror and danger and difficulty
+well trampled under foot. Leonidas Wedell has an admirable silence, too;
+and Ziethen's lazily hanging under-lip is in its old attitude again, now
+that the spasm is over. "WAS THUTS? They are across, without a doubt. We
+would have helped it, and could not. Steady!"--
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH'S RETREAT; ESPECIALLY EINSIEDEL'S FROM PRAG.
+
+Seeing, then, that they are fairly over, Friedrich, with a creditable
+veracity of mind, sees also that the game is done; and that same
+night he begins manoeuvring towards Silesia, lest far more be lost by
+continuing the play. One column, under Leopold the Young Dessauer, goes
+through Glatz, takes the Magazine of Pardubitz along with it: good to go
+in several columns, the enemy will less know which to chase. Friedrich,
+with another column, will wait for Nassau about Konigsgratz, then go by
+the more westerly road, through Nachod and the Pass of Braunau. Nassau,
+who is to get across from Kolin, and join us northwards, has due
+rendezvous appointed him in the Konigsgratz region. Einsiedel, in Prag,
+is to spike his guns, since he cannot carry them; blow up his
+bastions, and the like; and get away with all discretion and all
+diligence,--northwestward first, to Leitmeritz, where our magazines are;
+there to leave his heavier goods, and make eastward towards Friedland,
+and across the "Silesian Combs" by what Passes he can. Will have
+a difficult operation; but must stand to it. And speed; steady,
+simultaneous, regular, unresting velocity; that is the word for all. And
+so it is done,--though with difficulty, on the part of poor Einsiedel
+for one. It was Thursday, 19th November, when the Austrians got across
+the Elbe: on Monday, 23d, the Prussian rendezvousings are completed; and
+Friedrich's column, and the Glatz one under Leopold, are both on march;
+infinite baggage-wagons groaning orderly along ("sick-wagons well
+ahead," and the like precautions and arrangements), on both these
+highways for Silesia: and before the week ends, Thursday, 26th, even
+Einsiedel is under way. Let us give something of poor Einsiedel,
+whose disasters made considerable noise in the world, that Winter and
+afterwards.
+
+"The two main columns were not much molested; that which went by Glatz,
+under Leopold, was not pursued at all. On the rear of Friedrich's own
+column, going towards Braunau, all the way to Nachod or beyond, there
+hung the usual doggery of Pandours, which required whipping off from
+time to time; but in the defiles and difficult places due precaution was
+taken, and they did little real damage. Truchsess von Waldburg [our old
+friend of the Spartan feat near Austerlitz in the MORAVIAN-FORAY time,
+whom we have known in London society as Prussian Envoy in bygone years]
+was in one of the divisions of this column; and one day, at a village
+where there was a little river to cross (river Mietau, Konigsgratz
+branch of the Elbe), got provoked injudiciously into fighting with
+a body of these people. Intent not on whipping them merely, but on
+whipping them to death, Truchsess had already lost some forty men, and
+the business with such crowds of them was getting hot; when, all at
+once a loud squeaking of pigs was heard in the village,"--apprehensive
+swineherd hastily penning his pigs belike, and some pig refractory;--"at
+sound of which, the Pandour multitude suddenly pauses, quits fighting,
+and, struck by a new enthusiasm, rushes wholly into the village; leaving
+Truchsess, in a tragi-comic humor, victorious, but half ashamed
+of himself. [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 73.] In the beginning of
+December, Friedrich's column reached home, by Braunau through the
+Mountains, the same way part of it had come in August; not quite so
+brilliant in equipment now as then.
+
+"It was upon Einsiedel's poor Garrison, leaving Prag in such haste, that
+the real stress of the retreat fell; its difficulties great indeed, and
+its losses great. Einsiedel did what was possible; but all things are
+not possible on a week's warning. He spiked great guns, shook endless
+hundredweights of powder, and 10,000 stand of arms, into the River;
+he requisitioned horses, oxen, without number; put mines under the
+bastions, almost none of which went off with effect. He kept Prag
+accurately shut, the Praguers accurately in the dark; took his measures
+prudently; and labored night and day. One measure I note of him:
+stringent Proclamation to the inhabitants of Prag, 'Provision yourselves
+for three months; nothing but starvation ahead otherwise.' Alas, we
+are to stand a fourth siege, then? say the Praguers. But where are
+provisions to be had? At such and such places; from the Royal Magazines
+only, if you bring a certificate and ready money! Whereby Einsiedel
+got delivered of his meal-magazine, for one thing. But his difficulties
+otherwise were immense.
+
+"On the Thursday morning, 26th November, 1744, he marched. His wagons
+had begun the night before; and went all night, rumbling continuous
+(Anonymous of Prag [Second "LETTER from a Citizen, &c." (date, 27th
+November, see supra, p. 348), in _Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1181-1188.]
+hearing them well), through the Karlthor, northwest gate of Prag, across
+the Moldau Rridge. All night across that bridge,--Leitmeritz road, great
+road to the northwest:--followed finally by the march of horse and foot.
+But news had already fled abroad. Five hundred Pandours were in the
+City, backed by the Butchers' lads and other riotous GESINDEL, before
+the rear-guard got away. Sad tugging and wriggling in consequence, much
+firing from windows, and uproarious chaos;--so that Rothenburg had at
+last to remount a couple of guns, and blow it off with case-shot. A
+drilled Prussian rear-guard struggling, with stern composure, through a
+real bit of burning chaos. With effect, though not without difficulty.
+Here is the scene on the Noldau Bridge, and past that high Hradschin
+[Old Palace of the Bohemian Kings (pronounce RADsheen); one of the
+steepest Royal Sites in the world.] mass of buildings; all Prag, not the
+Hradschin only, struggling to give us fatal farewell if it durst. River
+is covered with Pandours firing out of boats; Bridge encumbered to
+impassability by forsaken wagons, the drivers of which had cut traces
+and run; shot comes overhead from the Hradschin on our left, much shot,
+infinite tumult all round; thoroughfare impossible for two-wheeled
+vehicle, or men in rank. 'Halt!' cries Colonel Brandes, who has charge
+of the thing; divides them in three: 'First one party, deal with these
+river-boats, that Pandour doggery; second party, pull these stray wagons
+to right and left, making the way clear; third party, drag our
+own wagons forward, shoulder to shaft, and yoke them out of
+shot-range;--you, Captain Carlowitz,' and calls twenty volunteers to go
+with Carlowitz, and drag their own cannon, 'step you forward, keep the
+gate of that Hradschin till we all pass!' In this manner, rapid, hard of
+stroke, clear-headed and with stern regularity, drilled talent gets the
+burning Nessus'-shirt wriggled off; and tramps successfully forth with
+its baggages. About 11 A.M., this rearguard of Brandes's did; should
+have been at seven,--right well that it could be at all.
+
+"Einsiedel, after this, got tolerably well to Leitmeritz; left his heavy
+baggage there; then turned at an acute angle right eastward, towards the
+Silesian Combs, as ordered: still a good seventy miles to do, and the
+weather getting snowy and the days towards their shortest. Worse still;
+old Weissenfels, now in Prag with his Saxons, is aware that Einsiedel,
+before ending, will touch on a wild high-lying corner of the Lausitz
+which is Saxon Country; and thitherward Weissenfels has despatched
+Chevalier de Saxe (in plenty of time, November 29th), with horse and
+foot, to waylay Einsiedel, and block the entrance of the Silesian
+Mountains for him. Whereupon, in the latter end of his long march,
+and almost within sight of home, ensues the hardest brush of all for
+Einsiedel. And, in the desolation of that rugged Hill country of the
+Lausitz, 'HOCHWALD (Upper Weld),' twenty or more miles from Bohemian
+Friedland, from his entrance on the Mountain Barrier and Silesian Combs,
+there are scenes--which gave rise to a Court-Martial before long.
+For unexpectedly, on the winter afternoon (December 9th), Einsiedel,
+struggling among the snows and pathless Hills, comes upon Chevalier de
+Saxe and his Saxon Detachment,--intrenched with trees, snow-redoubts,
+and a hollow bog dividing us; plainly unassailable;--and stands there,
+without covering, without 'food, fire, or salt,' says one Eye-witness,
+'for the space of fourteen hours.' Gazing gloomily into it, exchanging a
+few shots, uncertain what more to do; the much-dubitating Einsiedel. 'At
+which the men were so disgusted and enraged, they deserted [the foreign
+part of them, I fancy] in groups at a time,' says the above
+Eye-witness. Not to think what became of the equipments, baggage-wagons,
+sick-wagons:--too evident Einsiedel's loss, in all kinds, was very
+considerable. Nassau, despatched by Leopold out of Glatz, from the other
+side of the Combs, is marching to help Einsiedel;--who knows, at this
+moment, where or whitherward? For the peasants are all against us;
+our very guides desert, and become spies. 'Push to the left, over the
+Hochwald top, must not we?' thinks Einsiedel: 'that is Lausitz, a Saxon
+Country; and Saxony, though the Saxons stand intrenched here, with the
+knife at our throat, are not at war with us, oh no, only allies of her
+Majesty of Hungary, and neutral otherwise!' And here, it is too clear,
+the Chevalier de Saxe stands intrenched behind his trees and snow; and
+it is the fourteenth hour, men deserting by the hundred, without fire
+and without salt; and Nassau is coming,--God knows by what road!
+
+"Einsiedel pushes to the left, the Hochwald way; finds, in the Hochwald
+too, a Saxon Commandant waiting him, with arms strictly shouldered.
+'And we cannot pass through this moor skirt of Lausitz, say you, then?'
+'Unarmed, yes; your muskets can come in wagons after you,' replies the
+Saxon Commandant of Lausitz. 'Thousand thanks, Herr Commandant; but we
+will not give you all that trouble,' answer Einsiedel and his Prussians;
+'and march on, overwhelming him with politenesses,' says Friedrich;--the
+approach of Nassau, above all, being a stringent civility. Of course,
+despatch is very requisite to Einsiedel; the Chevalier, with his force,
+being still within hail. The Prussians march all night, with pitch-links
+flaring,--nights (I think) of the 13th-15th December, 1744, up among the
+highlands there, rugged buttresses of the Silesian Combs: a sight enough
+to astonish Rubezahl, if he happened to be out! As good chance would
+have it, Nassau and Einsiedel, by preconcert, partly by lucky guess of
+their own, were hurrying by the same road: three heaven-rending cheers
+(December 16th) when we get sight of Nassau; and find that here is land!
+December 16th, we are across,--by Ruckersdorf, not far from Friedland
+(Bohmisch Friedland, not the Silesian town of that name, once
+Wallenstein's);--and rejoice now to look back on labor done."
+[ _Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1181-1190, 1191-1194;--Feldzuge,--i.
+278-280.]
+
+These were intricate strange scenes, much talked of at the time:
+Rothenburg, ugly Walrave, Hacke, and other known figures, concerned in
+them. Scenes in which Friedrich is not well informed; who much blames
+Einsiedel, as he is apt to do the unsuccessful. Accounts exist, both
+from the Prussian and from the Saxon side, decipherable with industry;
+not now worth deciphering to English readers. Only that final scene
+of the pitch-links, the night before meeting with Nassau, dwells
+voluntarily in one's memory. And is the farewell of Einsiedel withal.
+Friedrich blames him to the last: though a Court-Martial had sat on his
+case, some months after, and honorably acquitted him. Good solid, silent
+Einsiedel;--and in some months more, he went to a still higher court,
+got still stricter justice: I do not hear expressly that it was the
+winter marches, or strain of mind; but he died in 1745; and that
+flare of pitch-links in Rubezahl's country is the last scene of him
+to us,--and the end of Friedrich's unfortunate First Expedition in the
+Second Silesian War.
+
+"Foiled, ultimately, then, on every point; a totally ill-ordered game on
+our part! Evidently we, for our part, have been altogether in the wrong,
+in various essential particulars. Amendment, that and no other, is the
+word now. Let us take the scathe and the scorn candidly home to us;--and
+try to prepare for doing better. The world will crow over us. Well, the
+world knows little about it; the world, if it did know, would be partly
+in the right!"--Wise is he who, when beaten, learns the reasons of it,
+and alters these. This wisdom, it must be owned, is Friedrich's; and
+much distinguishes him among generals and men. Veracity of mind, as
+I say, loyal eyesight superior to sophistries; noble incapacity of
+self-delusion, the root of all good qualities in man. His epilogue to
+this Campaign is remarkable;--too long for quoting here, except the
+first word of it and the last:--
+
+"No General committed more faults than did the King in this Campaign....
+The conduct of M. de Traun is a model of perfection, which every soldier
+that loves his business ought to study, and try to imitate, if he have
+the talent. The king has himself admitted that he regarded this Campaign
+as his school in the Art of War, and M. de Traun as his teacher." But
+what shall we say? "Bad is often better for Princes than good;--and
+instead of intoxicating them with presumption, renders them circumspect
+and modest." [_OEuvres,_ iii.76, 77.] Let us still hope!--
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V.--FRIEDRICH, UNDER DIFFICULTIES, PREPARES FOR A NEW CAMPAIGN.
+
+To the Court of Vienna, especially to the Hungarian Majesty, this
+wonderful reconquest of Bohemia, without battle fought,--or any cause
+assignable but Traun's excellent manoeuvring and Friedrich's imprudences
+and trust in the French,--was a thing of heavenly miracle; blessed omen
+that Providence had vouchsafed to her prayers the recovery of Silesia
+itself. All the world was crowing over Friedrich: but her Majesty of
+Hungary's views had risen to a clearly higher pitch of exultation
+and triumphant hope, terrestrial and celestial, than any other living
+person's. "Silesia back again," that was now the hope and resolution of
+her Majesty's high heart: "My wicked neighbor shall be driven out, and
+smart dear for the ill he has done; Heaven so wills it!" "Very little
+uplifts the Austrians," says Valori; which is true, under such a Queen;
+"and yet there is nothing that can crush them altogether down," adds he.
+
+No sooner is Bohemia cleared of Friedrich, than Maria, winter as it is,
+orders that there be, through the Giant-Mountains, vigorous assault upon
+Silesia. Highland snows and ices, what are these to Pandour people,
+who, at their first entrance on the scene of History, "crossed the
+Palus-Maeotis itself [Father of Quagmires, so to speak] in a frozen
+state," and were sufficiently accommodated each in his own dirty
+sheepskin? "Prosecute the King of Prussia," ordered she; "take your
+winter-quarters in Silesia!"--and Traun, in spite of the advanced
+season, and prior labors and hardships, had to try, from the
+southwestern Bohemian side, what he could do; while a new Insurrection,
+coming through the Jablunka, spread itself over the southeast and east.
+Seriously invasive multitudes; which were an unpleasant surprise to
+Friedrich; and did, as we shall see, require to be smitten back again,
+and re-smitten; making a very troublesome winter to the Prussians and
+themselves; but by no means getting winter-quarters, as they once hoped.
+
+In a like sense, Maria Theresa had already (December 2d) sent forth
+her Manifesto or Patent, solemnly apprising her ever-faithful Silesian
+Populations, "That the Treaty of Breslau, not by her fault, is broken;
+palpably a Treaty no longer. That they, accordingly, are absolved
+from all oaths and allegiance to the King of Prussia; and shall hold
+themselves in readiness to swear anew to her Majesty, which will be
+a great comfort to such faithful creatures; suffering, as her Majesty
+explains to them that they have done, under Prussian tyranny for these
+two years past. Immediate dead-lift effort there shall be; that is
+certain: and 'the Almighty God assisting, who does not leave such
+injustices unpunished, We have the fixed Christian hope, Omnipotence
+blessing our arms, of almost immediately (EHESTENS) delivering you from
+this temporary Bondage (BISHERIGEN JOCH).' You can pray, in the mean
+while, for the success of her Majesty's arms; good fighting, aided by
+prayer, in a Cause clearly Heaven's, will now, to appearance, bring
+matters swiftly round again, to the astonishment and confusion of
+bad men." [In _Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1194-1198; Ib. 1201-1206, is
+Friedrich's Answer, "19th December, 1744."]
+
+These are her Majesty's views; intensely true, I doubt not, to her
+devout heart. Robinson and the English seem not to be enthusiastic in
+that direction; as indeed how can they? They would fain be tender of
+Silesia, which they have guaranteed; fain, now and afterwards, restrain
+her Majesty from driving at such a pace down hill: but the declivity is
+so encouraging, her Majesty is not to be restrained, and goes faster
+and faster for the time being. And indeed, under less devout forms, the
+general impression, among Pragmatic people, Saxon, Austrian, British
+even, was, That Friedrich had pretty much ruined himself, and deserved
+to do so; that this of his being mere "Auxiliary" to a Kaiser in
+distress was an untenable pretext, now justly fallen bankrupt upon him.
+The evident fact, That he had by his "Frankfurt Union," and struggles
+about "union," reopened the door for French tribulations and
+rough-ridings in the Reich, was universally distasteful; all chance of
+a "general union of German Princes, in aid of their Kaiser," was extinct
+for the present.
+
+Friedrich's rapidity had served him ill with the Public, in this as
+in some other instances! Friedrich, contemplating his situation, not
+self-delusively, but with the candor of real remorse, was by no means
+yet aware how very bad it was. For six months coming, partly as existing
+facts better disclosed themselves, as France, Saxony and others showed
+what spirit they were of; partly as new sinister events and facts
+arrived one after the other,--his outlook continued to darken and
+darken, till it had become very dark indeed. There is perennially the
+great comfort, immense if you can manage it, of making front against
+misfortune; of looking it frankly in the face, and doing with a
+resolution, hour by hour, your own utmost against it. Friedrich never
+lacked that comfort; and was not heard complaining. But from December
+13th, 1744, when he hastened home to Berlin, under such aspects, till
+June 4th, 1745, when aspects suddenly changed, are probably the worst
+six months Friedrich had yet had in the world. During which, his affairs
+all threatening to break down about him, he himself, behooving to stand
+firm if the worst was not to realize itself, had to draw largely on
+what silent courage, or private inexpugnability of mind, was in him,--a
+larger instalment of that royal quality (as I compute) than the Fates
+had ever hitherto demanded of him. Ever hitherto; though perhaps nothing
+like the largest of all, which they had upon their Books for him, at a
+farther stage! As will be seen. For he was greatly drawn upon in that
+way, in his time. And he paid always; no man in his Century so well; few
+men, in any Century, better. As perhaps readers may be led to guess or
+acknowledge, on surveying and considering. To see, and sympathetically
+recognize, cannot be expected of modern readers, in the present great
+distance, and changed conditions of men and things.
+
+Friedrich, after despatching Nassau to cut out Einsiedel, had delivered
+the Silesian Army to the Old Dessauer, who is to command in chief during
+Winter; and had then hastened to Berlin,--many things there urgently
+requiring his presence; preparations, reparations, not to speak of
+diplomacies, and what was the heaviest item of all, new finance for the
+coming exertions. In Schweidnitz, on Leopold's appearance, there had
+been an interview, due consultings, orderings; which done, Friedrich at
+once took the road; and was at Berlin, Monday, December 14th,--precisely
+in the time while Nassau and Einsiedel were marching with torchlights in
+Rubezahl's Country, and near ending their difficult enterprise better or
+worse.
+
+Friedrich, fastening eagerly on Home business, is astonished and
+provoked to learn that the Austrians, not content with pushing him
+out of Bohmen, are themselves pushing into Schlesien,--so Old Leopold
+reports, with increasing emphasis day by day; to whom Friedrich sends
+impatient order: Hurl them out again; gather what force you need, ten
+thousand, or were it twenty or thirty thousand, and be immediate about
+it; "I will as soon be pitched (HERAUSGESCHMISSEN) out of the Mark of
+Brandenburg as out of Schlesien:" no delay, I tell you! And as the Old
+Dessauer still explains that the ten or fifteen thousand he needs are
+actually assembling, and cannot be got on march quite in a moment,
+Friedrich dashes away his incipient Berlin Operations; will go himself
+and do it. Haggle no more, you tedious Old Dessauer:--
+
+BERLIN, "19th DECEMBER," 1744. "On the 21st [Monday, one week after
+my arriving], I leave Berlin, and mean to be at Neisse on the 24th at
+latest. Your Serenity will in the interim make out the Order-of-Battle
+[which is also Order-of-March] for what regiments are come in. For I
+will, on the 25th, without delay, cross the Neisse, and attack those
+people, cost what it may,--to chase them out of Schlesien and Glatz, and
+follow them so far as possible. Your Serenity will therefore take your
+measures, and provide everything, so far as in this short time you can,
+that the project may be executable the moment I arrive." [Friedrich to
+the Old Dessauer (_Orlich,_ ii. 356).]
+
+And rushed off accordingly, in a somewhat flamy humor; but at
+Schweidnitz, where the Old Dessauer met him again, became convinced that
+the matter was weightier than he thought; not one of Tolpatchery alone,
+but had Traun himself in it. Upon which Friedrich candidly drew bridle;
+hastened back, and, with a loss of four days, was at his Potsdam Affairs
+again. To which he stuck henceforth, ardently, and I think rather with
+increase of gloom, though without spurt of impatience farther, for three
+months to come. Before his return,--nay, had he known, it was the
+night before he went away,--a strange little thing had happened in the
+opposite or Western parts: surprising accident to Marechal de Belleisle;
+which now lies waiting his immediate consideration. But let us finish
+Silesia first.
+
+
+
+
+OLD DESSAUER REPELS THE SILESIAN INVASION (Winter, 1744-45).
+
+"This Silesian Affair includes due inroad of Pandours; or indeed
+two inroads, southwest and southeast; and in the southwest, or Traun
+quarter, regulars are the main element of it. Traun, 20,000 strong, PLUS
+stormy-enough Pandour ACCOMPANIMENT, is by this time through into Glatz;
+in three columns;--is master of all Glatz, except the Rock-Fortress
+itself; and has spread himself, right and left, along the Neisse River,
+and from the southwest northwards, in a skilful and dangerous manner. In
+concert with whom, far to the east, are Pandour whirlwinds on their own
+footing (brand-new 'Insurrection' of them, got thus far) starting from
+Olmutz and Brunn; scouring that eastern country, as far as Namslau
+northward [a place we were at the taking of, in old Brieg times]; much
+more, infesting the Mountains of the South. A rather serious thing; with
+Traun for general manager of it."
+
+With Traun, we say: poor Prince Karl is off, weeks ago; on the saddest
+of errands. His beautiful young Wife,--Hungarian Majesty's one Sister,
+Vice-Regents of the Netherlands he and she, conspicuous among the bright
+couples of the world,--she had a bad lying-in (child still-born), while
+those grand Moldau Operations went on; has been ill, poor lady, ever
+since; and, at Brussels, on December 16th, she herself lies dead, Prince
+Karl weeping over her and the days that will not return. Prince Karl's
+felicities, private and public, had been at their zenith lately, which
+was very high indeed; but go on declining from this day. Never more the
+Happiest of Husbands (did not wed again at all); still less the Greatest
+of Captains, equal or superior to Caesar in the Gazetteer judgment, with
+distracted EULOGIES, BIOGRAPHIES and such like filling the air: before
+long, a War-Captain of quite moderate renown; which we shall see
+sink gradually into no renown at all, and even (unjustly) into MINUS
+quantities, before all end. A mad world, my masters!
+
+"Between Traun on the southwest hand, and his Pandours on the southeast,
+the small Prussian posts have all been driven in upon Troppau-Jagerndorf
+region; more and more narrowed there;--and, in fine (two days before
+this new Interview of Leopold and the impatient King at Schweidnitz),
+have had to quit the Troppau-Jagerndorf position; to quit the Hills
+altogether, and are now in full march towards Brieg. Of which march I
+should say nothing, were it not that Marwitz, Father of Wilhelmina's
+giggling Marmitzes, commanded;--and came by his death in the course of
+it; though our Wilhelmina is not now there, pen in hand, to tell us
+what the effects at Baireuth were. Marwitz had been left for dead on
+the Field of Mollwitz; lay so all night, but was nursed to some kind
+of strength again by those giggling young women; and came back to
+Schlesien, to posts of chief trust, for the last year or two,--was
+guarding the Mountains, and even invading Mahren, during the late
+Campaign;--but saw himself reduced latterly to Jagerndorf and Troppau;
+and had even to retreat out of these. And in the whirlpool of hurries
+thereupon,--how is not very clear; by apoplexy, say some; by accidental
+pistol from a servant of his own; in actual skirmish with Pandours,--too
+certainly, one way or the other, on December 23d (just during that
+second Interview at Schweidnitz), brave old Marwitz did suddenly sink
+dead, and is ended. [_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1201.] Even so, ye poor
+giggling creatures, and your loud weeping will not mend it at all!
+
+"Friedrich, looking candidly into these phenomena, could not but see
+that: what with Tolpatcheries, what with Traun's 20,000 regulars, and
+the whole Army at their back, his Silesian Border is girt in by a very
+considerable inroad of Austrians,--huge Chain of them, in horse-shoe
+form, 300 miles long, pressing in; from beyond Glatz and Landshut, round
+by the southern Mountains, and up eastward again as far as Namslau,
+nothing but war whirlwinds in regular or irregular form, in the centre
+of them Traun;--and that the Old Dessauer really must have time to gird
+himself for dealing with Traun and them.
+
+"It was not till January 9th that Old Leopold, 25,000 strong, equipped
+to his mind, which was a difficult matter, crossed the Neisse River;
+and marched direct upon Traun, with Ziethen charging ahead. Actually
+marched; after which the main wrestle was done in a week. January 16th,
+Old Leopold got to Jagerndorf; found the actual Traun concentrated at
+Jagerndorf; and drew up, to be ready for assault to-morrow morning,--had
+not Traun, candidly computing, judged it better to glide wholly away in
+the night-time, diligently towards Mahren, breaking the bridges behind
+him. And so, in effect, to give up the Silesian Invasion for this time.
+After which, though there remained a good deal of rough tussling with
+Pandour details, and some rugged exploits of fight, there is--except
+that of Lehwald in clearing of Glatz--nothing farther that we can afford
+to speak of. Lehwald's exploit, Lehwald VERSUS Wallis (same Wallis who
+defended Glogau long since), which came to be talked of, and got name
+and date, 'Action of Habelschwert, February 14th,' something almost like
+a pitched fight on the small scale, is to the following effect:--
+
+"PLOMNITZ, NEAR HABELSCHWERT, 14th FEBRUARY, 1745. Old General Lehwald,
+marching in the hollow ground near Habelschwert (hollow of the young
+Neisse River, twenty miles south of Glatz), with intent to cut that
+Country free; the Enemy, whom he is in search of, appears in great
+force,--posted on the uphill ground ahead, half-frozen difficult stream
+in front of them, cannon on flank, Pandour multitude in woods; all
+things betokening inexpugnability on the part of the Enemy. So that
+Lehwald has to take his measures; study well where the vital point is,
+the root of that extensive Austrian junglery, and cut in upon the same.
+By considerable fire of effort, the uphill ground, half-frozen stream,
+sylvan Pandours, cannon-batteries, and what inexpugnabilities there may
+be, are subdued; Austrian wide junglery, the root of it slit asunder
+rolls homeward simultaneously, not too fast: nay it halted, and
+re-ranked itself twice over, finding woods and quaggy runlets to its
+mind; but was always slit out again, disrooted, and finally tumbled
+home, having had enough. 'Wenzel Wallis,' Friedrich asserts with due
+scorn, 'was all this while in a Chapel; praying ardently,' to St.
+Vitus, or one knows not whom; 'without effect; till they shouted to him,
+"Beaten, Sir! Off, or you are lost!" upon which he sprang to saddle, and
+spurred with both heels (PIQUA DES DEUX).' [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii.
+79. 80.] That was the feat of Lehwald, clearing the Glatz Country with
+one good cut: a skilful Captain; now getting decidedly oldish, close on
+sixty; whom we shall meet again a dozen years hence, still in harness.
+
+"The old Serene Highness himself, face the color of gun-powder, and
+bluer in the winter frost, went rushing far and wide in an open vehicle,
+which he called his 'cart;' pushing out detachments, supervising
+everything; wheeling hither and thither as needful; sweeping out the
+Pandour world, and keeping it out: not much of fighting needed, but 'a
+great deal of marching [murmurs Friedrich], which in winter is as bad,
+and wears down the force of the battalions.' Of all which we give no
+detail: sufficient to fancy, in this manner, the Old Dessauer flapping
+his wide military wings in the faces of the Pandour hordes, with here
+and there a hard twitch from beak or claws; tolerably keeping down the
+Pandour interest all Winter. His sons, Leopold and Dietrich, were under
+him, occasionally beside him; the Junior Leopold so worn down with
+feverish gout he could hardly sit on horseback at all, while old
+Papa went tearing about in his cart at that rate." [_Unternehmung in
+Ober-Schlesien, unter dem Fursten Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau, im Januar
+und Februar,_ 1745 (Seyfarth, _Beylage,_ i. 141-152); Stenzel, iv. 232;
+&c.]
+
+There was, on the 21st of February, TE-DEUM sung in the churches of
+Berlin "for the Deliverance of Silesia from Invasion." Not that even
+yet the Pandours would be quite quiet, or allow Old Leopold to quit his
+cart; far from it. And they returned in such increased and
+tempestuous state, as will again require mention, with the earliest
+Spring:--precursors to a second, far more serious and deadly "Invasion
+of Silesia;" for which it hangs yet on the balance whether there will be
+a TE-DEUM or a MISERERE to sing!
+
+Hungarian Majesty, disappointed of Silesia,--which, it seems, is not to
+be had "all at once (EHESTENS)," in the form of miracle,--makes amends
+by a rush upon Seckendorf and Bavaria; attacks Seckendorf furiously
+("Bathyani pressing up the Donau Valley, with Browne on one hand, and
+Barenklau on the other") in midwinter; and makes a terrible hand of him;
+reducing his "Reconquest of Bavaria" to nothing again, nay to less. Of
+which in due time.
+
+
+
+
+THE FRENCH FULLY INTEND TO BEHAVE BETTER NEXT SEASON TO FRIEDRICH AND
+THEIR GERMAN ALLIES;--BUT ARE PREVENTED BY VARIOUS ACCIDENTS (November,
+1744-April, 1745; April-August, 1745).
+
+It is not divine miracle, Friedrich knows well, that has lost him his
+late Bohemian Conquests without battle fought: it was rash choosing of
+a plan inexecutable without French co-operation,--culpable blindness to
+the chance that France would break its promises, and not co-operate. Had
+your Majesty forgotten the Joint-Stock Principle, then? His Majesty has
+sorrowful cause to remember it, from this time, on a still larger scale!
+
+Reflections, indignant or exculpatory, on the conduct of the French in
+this Business are useless to Friedrich, and to us. The performance, on
+their part, has been nearly the worst;--though their intentions,
+while the Austrian Dragon had them by the throat, were doubtless
+enthusiastically good! But, the big Austrian Dragon being jerked away
+from Elsass, by Friedrich's treading on his tail, 500 miles off, they
+were charmed, quite into new enthusiasm, to be rid of said Dragon: and,
+instead of chasing HIM according to bargain, took to destroying his DEN,
+that he might be harmless thenceforth. Freyburg is a captured Town, to
+the joy and glory of admiring France; and Friedrich's Campaign has gone
+the road we see! The Freyburg Illuminations having burnt out,
+there might rise, in the triumphant mind, some thought of Friedrich
+again,--perhaps almost of a remorseful nature? Certain it is, the French
+intentions are now again magnanimous, more so than ever; coupled now
+with some attempts at fulfilment, too; which obliges us to mention them
+here. They were still a matter of important hope to Friedrich; hope
+which did not quite go out till August coming. Though, alas, it did then
+go out, in gusts of indignation on Friedrich's part! And as the whole of
+these magnanimous French intentions, latter like former, again came to
+zero, we are interested only in rendering them conceivable to readers
+for Friedrich's sake,--with the more brevity, the better for everybody.
+Two grand French Attempts there were; listen, on the threshold, a
+little:--
+
+... "It is certain the French intend gloriously; regardless of expense.
+They are dismantling Freyburg, to render it harmless henceforth. But,
+withal, in answer to the poor Kaiser's shrieks, they have sent Segur
+[our old Linz friend], with 12,000, to assist Seckendorf; 'the
+bravest troops in the world,'"--who did bravely take one beating (at
+Pfaffenhofen, as will be seen), and go home again. ("They have Coigny
+guarding those fine Brisgau Conquests. And are furthermore diplomatizing
+diligently, not to say truculently, in the Rhine Countries; bullying
+poor little fat Kur-Trier, lean Kur-Koln and others, 'To join the
+Frankfurt Union' not one of whom would, under menace),--though 'it
+is the clear duty of all Reich's-Princes with a Kaiser under
+oppression:'--and have marched Maillebois, directly after Freyburg, into
+the Middle-Rhine Countries, to Koln Country, to Mainz Country, and to
+and fro, in support of said compulsory diplomacies;--but without the
+least effect."
+
+To the "Middle-Rhine Countries," observe, and under Maillebois, then
+under Conti, little matter under whom: only let readers recollect the
+name of it;--for it is the FIRST of the French Attempts to do something
+of a joint-stock nature; something for self AND Allies, instead of for
+self only. It caused great alarm in those months, to Britannic George
+and others; and brought out poor Duc d'Ahremberg with portions (no
+English included) of the poor Pragmatic Army, to go marching about in
+the winter slushes, instead of resting in bed, [Adelung, iv. 276, 420
+("December, 1744-June, 1745").]--and is indeed a very loud business in
+the old Gazettes and books, till August coming. Business which almost
+broke poor D'Ahremberg's heart, he says, "till once I got out of
+it" (was TURNED out, in fact): Business of Pragmatic Army, under
+D'Ahremberg, VERSUS Middle-Rhine Army under Maillebois, under Conti;
+Business now wholly of Zero VERSUS Zero to us,--except for a few dates
+and reflex glimmerings upon King Friedrich. Result otherwise--We shall
+see the Result!
+
+"Attempt SECOND was still more important to Friedrich; being directed
+upon the Kaiser and Bavaria. Belleisle is to go thither and take survey;
+Belleisle thither first: you may judge if the intention is sincere!
+Valori is quite eloquent upon it. Directly after Freyburg, says he,
+Sechelles, that first of Commissaries, was sent to Munchen. Sechelles
+cleared up the chaos of Accounts; which King Louis then instantly
+paid. 'Your Imperial Majesty shall have Magazines also,' said Louis,
+regardless of expense; 'and your Army, with auxiliaries (Segur and
+25,000 of them French), shall be raised to 60,000.' Belleisle then came:
+'We will have Ingolstadt, the first thing, in Spring.' Alas, Belleisle
+had his Accident in the Harz; and all went aback, from that time."
+[Valori, i. 322-329.] Aback, too indisputably, all!--"And Belleisle's
+Accident?" Patience, readers.
+
+"The truth is, Attempt SECOND, and chief, broke down at once [Bathyani
+beating it to pieces, as will be seen],--the ruins of it painfully
+reacting on Attempt FIRST; which had the like fate some months
+later;--and there was no THIRD made. And, in fact, from the date of that
+latter down-break, August, or end of July, 1745 [and quite especially
+from "September 13th," by which time several irrevocable things had
+happened, which we shall hear of], the French withdrew altogether out of
+German entanglements; and concentrated themselves upon the Netherlands,
+there to demolish his Britannic Majesty, as the likelier enterprise.
+This was a course to which, ever since the Exit of Broglio and the
+Oriflamme, they had been more and more tending and inclining, 'Nothing
+for us but loss on loss, to be had in Germany!' and so they at last
+frankly gave up that bad Country. They fought well in the Netherlands,
+with great splendor of success, under Saxe VERSUS Cumberland and
+Company. They did also some successful work in Italy;--and left
+Friedrich to bear the brunt in Germany; too glad if he or another
+were there to take Germany off their hand! Friedrich's feelings on his
+arriving at this consummation, and during his gradual advance towards
+it, which was pretty steady all along from those first 'drenched-hen
+(POULES MOUILLEES)' procedures, were amply known to Excellency Valori,
+and may be conceived by readers,"--who are slightly interested in the
+dates of them at farthest. And now for the Belleisle Accident, with
+these faint preliminary lights.
+
+
+
+
+STRANGE ACCIDENT TO MARECHAL DE BELLEISLE IN THE HARZ MOUNTAINS (20th
+December, 1744).
+
+Siege of Freyburg being completed, and the River and most other things
+(except always the bastions, which we blow up) being let into their old
+channels there, Marechal de Belleisle, who is to have a chief management
+henceforth,--the Most Christian King recognizing him again as his ablest
+man in war or peace,--sets forth on a long tour of supervision, of
+diplomacy and general arrangement, to prepare matters for the next
+Campaign. Need enough of a Belleisle: what a business we have made of
+it, since Friedrich trod on the serpent's tail for us.! Nothing but
+our own Freyburg to show for ourselves; elsewhere, mere down-rush of
+everything whitherward it liked;--and King Friedrich got into such a
+humor! Friedrich must be put in tune again; something real and good to
+be agreed on at Berlin: let that be the last thing, crown of the whole.
+The first thing is, look into Bavaria a little; and how the Kaiser,
+poor gentleman, in want of all requisites but good-will, can be put into
+something of fighting posture.
+
+"In the end of November, Marechal Duc de Belleisle, with his Brother the
+Chevalier (now properly the Count, there having been promotions), and
+a great retinue more, alights at Munchen; holds counsel with the poor
+Kaiser for certain days:--Money wanted; many things wanted; and all
+things, we need not doubt, much fallen out of square. 'Those Seckendorf
+troops in their winter-quarters,' say our French Inspectors and Segur
+people, as usual, 'do but look on it, your Excellency! Scattered, along
+the valleys, into the very edge of Austria; Austria will swallow them,
+the first thing, next year; they will never rendezvous again except in
+the Austrian prisons. Surely, Monseigneur, only a man ignorant of war,
+or with treasonous intention [or ill-off for victuals],--could post
+troops in that way? Seckendorf is not ignorant of war!' say they.
+[Valori, i. 206.] For, in fact, suspicion runs high; and there is no end
+to the accusations just and unjust; and Seckendorf is as ill treated as
+any of us could wish. Poor old soul. Probably nobody in all the Earth,
+but his old Wife in the Schloss of Altenburg, has any pity for him,--if
+even she, which I hope. He has fought and diplomatized and intrigued
+in many countries, very much; and in his old days is hard bested.
+Monseigueur, whose part is rather that of Jove the Cloud-compeller,
+is studious to be himself noiseless amid this noise; and makes no
+alteration in the Seckendorf troops; but it is certain he meant to do
+it, thinks Valori."
+
+And indeed Seckendorf, tired of the Bavarian bed-of-roses, had privately
+fixed with himself to quit the same;--and does so, inexorable to the
+very Kaiser, on New-Year arriving. [_Seckendorfs Leben,_ p. 365.]
+Succeeded by Thorring (our old friend DRUM Thorring), if that be an
+improvement. Marechal de Belleisle has still a long journey ahead,
+and infinitely harder problems than these,--assuagement of the King of
+Prussia, for example. Let us follow his remarkable steps.
+
+"WEDNESDAY, 9th DECEMBER, 1744, the Marechal leaves Munchen,
+northwards through OEttingen and the Bamberg-Anspach regions towards
+Cassel;--journey of some three hundred and fifty miles: with a great
+retinue of his own; with an escort of two hundred horse from the Kaiser;
+these latter to prevent any outfall or insult in the Ingolstadt quarter,
+where the Austrians have a garrison, not at all very tightly blocked by
+the Seckendorf people thereabouts. No insult or outfall occurring, the
+Marechal dismisses his escort at OEttingen; fares forward in his twenty
+coaches and fourgons, some score or so of vehicles:--mere neutral
+Imperial Countries henceforth, where the Kaiser's Agent, as Marechal
+de Belleisle can style himself, and Titular Prince of the German Empire
+withal, has only to pay his way. By Donauworth, by OEttingen; over
+the Donau acclivities, then down the pleasant Valley of the Mayn. [See
+REVIEW OF THE CASE OF MARSHAL BELLEISLE (or Abstract of it, _Gentleman's
+Magazine,_ 1745, pp. 366-373); &c. &c.]
+
+"SUNDAY, 13th DECEMBER, Marechal de Belleisle arrives at Hanau [where
+we have seen Conferences held before now, and Carteret, Prince Karl and
+great George our King very busy], there to confer with Marshals Coigny,
+Maillebois and other high men, Commanders in those Rhine parts. Who
+all come accordingly, except Marechal Maillebois, who is sorry that he
+absolutely cannot; but will surely do himself the honor as Monseigneur
+returns." As Monseigneur returns! "And so, on Monday, 14th, Monseigneur
+starts for Cassel; say a hundred miles right north; where we shall meet
+Prince Wilhelm of Hessen-Cassel, a zealous Ally; inform him how his
+Troops, under Seckendorf, are posted [at Vilshofen yonder; hiding how
+perilous their post is, or promising alterations]; perhaps rest a day or
+two, consulting as to the common weal: How the King of Prussia takes
+our treatment of him? How to smooth the King of Prussia, and turn him
+to harmony again? We are approaching the true nodus of our business,
+difficulty of difficulties; and Wilhelm, the wise Landgraf, may afford
+a hint or two. Thus travels magnanimous Belleisle in twenty vehicles, a
+man loaded with weighty matters, in these deep Winter months; suffering
+dreadfully from rheumatic neuralgic ailments, a Doctor one of his
+needfulest equipments; and has the hardest problem yet ahead of him.
+
+"Prince Wilhelm's consultations are happily lost altogether; buried from
+sight forever, to the last hint,--all except as to what road to Berlin
+would be the best from Cassel. By Leipzig, through low-lying country, is
+the great Highway, advisable in winter; but it runs a hundred and thirty
+miles to right, before ever starting northward; such a roundabout. Not
+to say that the Saxons are allies of Austria,--if there be anything in
+that. Enemies, they, to the Most Christian King: though surely, again,
+we are on Kaiser's business, nay we are titular 'Prince of the Reich,'
+for that matter, such the Kaiser's grace to us? Well; it is better
+perhaps to AVOID the Saxon Territory. And, of course, the Hanoverian
+much more; through which lies the other Great Road! 'Go by the Harz,'
+advises Landgraf Wilhelm: 'a rugged Hill Country; but it is your
+hypotenuse towards Berlin; passes at once, or nearly so, from Cassel
+Territory into Prussian: a rugged road, but a shorter and safer.' That
+is the road Belleisle resolves upon. Twenty carriages; his Brother the
+Chevalier and himself occupy one; and always the courier rides before,
+ordering forty post-horses to be ready harnessed.
+
+"SUNDAY, 20th DECEMBER, 1744. In this way they have climbed the eastern
+shin of the Harz Range, where the Harz is capable of wheel-carriages;
+and hope now to descend, this night, to Halberstadt; and thence rapidly
+by level roads to Berlin. It is sinking towards dark; the courier is
+forward to Elbingerode, ordering forty horses to be out. Roughish
+uphill road; winter in the sky and earth, winter vapors and tumbling
+wind-gusts: westward, in torn storm-cloak, the Bracken, with its
+witch-dances; highland Goslar, and ghost of Henry the Fowler, on the
+other side of it. A multifarious wizard Country, much overhung by goblin
+reminiscences, witch-dances, sorcerers'-sabbaths and the like,--if a
+rheumatic gentleman cared to look on it, in the cold twilight. Brrh!
+Waste chasmy uplands, snow-choked torrents; wild people, gloomy firs!
+Here at last, by one's watch 5 P.M., is Elbingerode, uncomfortable
+little Town; and it is to be hoped the forty post-horses are ready.
+
+"Behold, while the forty post-horses are getting ready, a thing takes
+place, most unexpected;--which made the name of Elbingerode famous for
+eight months to come. Of which let us hastily give the bare facts,
+Fancy making of them what she can. Was Monseigneur aware that this
+Elbingerode, with a patch of territory round it, is Hanoverian ground;
+one of those distracted patches or ragged outskirts frequent in the
+German map? Prussia is not yet, and Hessen-Cassel has ceased to be.
+Undoubtedly Hanoverian! Apparently the Landgraf and Monseigneur had not
+thought of that. But Munchhausen of Hanover, spies informing him,
+had. The Bailiff (Vogt, AdVOCATus) has gathered twenty JAGER [official
+Game-keepers] with their guns, and a select idle Sunday population of
+the place with or without guns: the Vogt steps forward, and inquires for
+Monseigneur's passport. 'No passport, no need of any!'--'Pardon!' and
+signifies to Monseigneur, on the part of George Elector of Hanover, King
+of Great Britain, France and Ireland, that Monseigneur is arrested!
+
+"Monseigneur, with compressed or incompressible feelings, indignantly
+complies,--what could he else, unfortunate rheumatic gentleman?--and is
+plucked away in such sudden manner, he for one, out of that big German
+game of his raising. The twenty vehicles are dragged different roads;
+towards Scharzfels, Osterode, or I know not where,--handiest roads to
+Hanover;--and Monseigneur himself has travelling treatment which might
+be complained of, did not one disdain complaint: 'my Brother parted from
+me, nay my Doctor, and my Interpreter;'"--not even speech possible to
+me. [Letter of Belleisle next morning, "Neuhof, 21st December, 9 A.M."
+(in _Valori,_ i. 204), to Munchhausen at Hanover,--by no possibility
+"to Valori," as the distracted French Editor has given it!] That was the
+Belleisle Accident in the Harz, Sunday Evening, 20th December, 1744.
+
+"Afflicted indignant Valori, soon enough apprised, runs to Friedrich
+with the news,--greets Friedrich with it just alighting from that
+Silesian run of his own. Friedrich, not without several other things to
+think of, is naturally sorry at such news; sorry for his own sake even;
+but not overmuch. Friedrich refuses 'to despatch a party of horse,' and
+cut out Marechal de Belleisle. "That will never do, MON CHER!'--and even
+gets into FROIDES PLAISANTERIES: 'Perhaps the Marechal did it
+himself? Tallard, prisoner after Blenheim, made PEACE, you know, in
+England?'--and the like; which grieved the soul of Valori, and convinced
+him of Friedrich's inhumanity, in a crying case.
+
+"Belleisle is lugged on to Hanover; his case not doubtful to
+Munchhausen, or the English Ministry,--though it raised great argument,
+(was the capture fair, was it unfair? Is he entitled to exchange by
+cartel, or not entitled?' and produced, in the next eight months, much
+angry animated pamphleteering and negotiation. For we hear by and by,
+he is to be forwarded to Stade, on the Hamburg sea-coast, where English
+Seventy-fours are waiting for him; his case still undecided;--and,
+in effect, it was not till after eight months that he got dismissal.
+'Lodged handsomely in Windsor Palace,' in the interim; free on his
+parole, people of rank very civil to him, though the Gazetteers were
+sometimes ill-tongued,--had he understood their PATOIS, or concerned
+himself about such things
+
+["TUESDAY, 18th FEBRUARY [1st March, 1745], Marshal Belleisle landed at
+Harwich; lay at Greenwich Palace, having crossed Thames at the Isle of
+Dogs: next morning, about 10, set out, in a coach-and-six, Colonel
+Douglas and two troops of horse escorting; arrived 3 P.M.,--by
+Camberwell, Clapham, Wandsworth, over Kingston and Staines Bridges,--at
+Windsor Castle, and the apartments ready for him." (_Gentleman's
+Magazine,_ 1745, p 107.) Was let go 13th (24th) August, again with great
+pomp and civilities (ib. p. 442). See Adelung, iv. 299, 346; v. 83, 84.]
+
+"It was a current notion among contemporary mankind, this of Friedrich,
+that Belleisle's capture might be a mere collusion, meant to bring about
+a Peace in that Tallard fashion,--wide of the truth as such a notion
+is, far as any Peace was from following. To Britannic George and his
+Hanoverians it had merely seemed, Here was a chief War-Captain and
+Diplomatist among the French; the pivot of all these world-wide
+movements, as Valori defines him; which pivot, a chance offering, it
+were well to twitch from its socket, and see what would follow. Perhaps
+nothing will follow; next to nothing? A world, all waltzing in mad war,
+is not to be stopped by acting on any pivot; your waltzing world will
+find new pivots, or do without any, and perhaps only waltz the more
+madly for wanting the principal one."
+
+This withdrawal of Belleisle, the one Frenchman respected by Friedrich,
+or much interested for his own sake in things German, is reckoned a main
+cause why the French Alliance turned out so ill for Friedrich; and why
+French effort took more and more a Netherlands direction thenceforth,
+and these new French magnanimities on Friedrich's behalf issued in
+futility again. Probably they never could have issued in very much: but
+it is certain that, from this point, they also do become zero; and that
+Friedrich, from his French alliance, reaped from first to last nothing
+at all, except a great deal of obloquy from German neighbors, and from
+the French side endless trouble, anger and disappointment in every
+particular. Which 'might be a joy (though not unmixed) to Britannic
+Majesty and the subtle followers who had ginned this fine Belleisle bird
+in its flight over the Harz Range? Though again, had they passively let
+him wing his way, and he had GOT "to be Commander and Manager," as was
+in agitation,--he, Belleisle and in Germany, instead of Marechal de Saxe
+with the Netherlands as chief scene,--what an advantage might that have
+been to them!
+
+
+
+
+THE KAISER KARL VII. GETS SECURED FROM OPPRESSIONS, IN A TRAGIC WAY.
+FRIEDRICH PROPOSES PEACE, BUT TO NO PURPOSE.
+
+A still sadder cross for Friedrich, in the current of foreign Accidents
+and Diplomacies, was the next that befell; exactly a month later,--at
+Munchen, 20th January, 1745. Hardly was Belleisle's back turned, when
+her Hungarian Majesty, by her Bathyani and Company, broke furiously in
+upon the poor Kaiser and his Seckendorf-Segur defences. Belleisle had
+not reached the Harz, when all was going topsy-turvy there again, and
+the Donau-Valley fast falling back into Austrian hands. Nor is that the
+worst, or nearly so.
+
+"MUNCHEN, 20th JANUARY, 1745. This day poor Kaiser Karl laid down his
+earthly burden here, and at length gave all his enemies the slip. He
+had been ill of gout for some time; a man of much malady always, with no
+want of vexations and apprehensions. Too likely the Austrians will drive
+him out of Munchen again; then nothing but furnished lodgings, and the
+French to depend upon. He had been much chagrined by some Election,
+just done, in the Chapter of Salzburg. [Adelung, iv. 249, 276, 313.]
+The Archbishop there--it was Firmian, he of the SALZBURG EMIGRATION,
+memorable to readers--had died, some while ago. And now, in flat
+contradiction to Imperial customs, prerogatives, these people had
+admitted an Austrian Garrison; and then, in the teeth of our express
+precept, had elected an Austrian to their benefice: what can one account
+it but an insult as well as an injury? And the neuralgic maladies press
+sore, and the gouty twinges; and Belleisle is seized, perhaps with
+important papers of ours; and the Seckendorf-Segur detachments were ill
+placed; nay here are the Austrians already on the throat of them, in
+midwinter! It is said, a babbling valet, or lord-in-waiting, happened to
+talk of some skirmish that had fallen out (called a battle, in the valet
+rumor), and how ill the French and Bavarians had fared in it, owing to
+their ill behavior. And this, add they, proved to be the ounce-weight
+too much for the so heavy-laden back.
+
+"The Kaiser took to bed, not much complaining; patient, mild, though
+the saddest of all mortals; and, in a day or two, died. Adieu, adieu,
+ye loved faithful ones; pity me, and pray for me! He gave his Wife, poor
+little fat devout creature, and his poor Children (eldest lad, his Heir,
+only seventeen), a tender blessing; solemnly exhorted them, To eschew
+ambition, and be warned by his example;--to make their peace with
+Austria; and never, like him, try COM' E DURO CALLE, and what the
+charity of Christian Kings amounts to. This counsel, it is thought, the
+Empress Dowager zealously accedes to, and will impress upon her Son.
+That is the Austrian and Cause-of-Liberty account: King Friedrich, from
+the other side, has heard a directly opposite one. How the Kaiser, at
+the point of death, exhorted his son, 'Never forget the services which
+the King of France and the King of Prussia have done us, and do not
+repay them with ingratitude.' [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 92;--and see
+(PER CONTRA) in Adelung, iv. 314 A; in Coxe, &c.] The reader can choose
+which he will, or reject both into the region of the uncertain. 'Karl
+Albert's pious and affectionate demeanor drew tears from all eyes,' say
+the by-standers: 'the manner in which he took leave of his Empress would
+have melted a heart of stone.' He was in his forty-eighth year; he had
+been, of all men in his generation, the most conspicuously unhappy."
+
+What a down-rush of confusion there ensued on this event, not to Bavaria
+alone, but to all the world, and to King Friedrich more than another,
+no reader can now take the pains of conceiving. The "Frankfurt Union,"
+then, has gone to air! Here is now no "Kaiser to be delivered from
+oppression:" here is a new Kaiser to be elected,--"Grand-Duke Franz the
+man," cry the Pragmatic Potentates with exultation, "no Belleisle to
+disturb!"--and questions arise innumerable thereupon, Will France go
+into electioneering again? The new Kur-Baiern, only seventeen, poor
+child, cannot be set up as candidate. What will France do with HIM;
+what he with France? Whom can the French try as Candidate against the
+Grand-Duke? Kur-Sachsen, the Polish Majesty again? Belleisle himself
+must have paused uncertain over such a welter,--and probably have done,
+like the others, little or nothing in it, but left it to collapse by
+natural gravitation.
+
+Hungarian Majesty checked her Bavarian Armaments a little: "If perhaps
+this young Kur-Baiern will detach himself from France, and on submissive
+terms come over to us?" Whereupon, at Munchen, and in the cognate
+quarters, such wriggling, dubitating and diplomatizing, as seldom
+was,--French, Anti-French (Seckendorf busiest of all), straining every
+nerve in that way, and for almost three months, nothing coming of
+it,--till Hungarian Majesty sent her Barenklaus and Bathyanis upon them
+again; and these rapidly solved the question, in what way we shall see!
+
+Friedrich has still his hopes of Bavaria, so grandiloquent are the
+French in regard to it; who but would hope? The French diplomatize to
+all lengths in Munchen, promising seas and mountains; but they perform
+little; in an effectual manner, nothing. Bavarian "Army raised to
+60,000;" counts in fact little above half that number; with no General
+to it but an imaginary one; Segur's actual French contingent, instead
+of 25,000, is perhaps 12,000;--and so of other things. Add to all which,
+Seckendorf is there, not now as War-General, but as extra-official
+"Adviser;" busier than ever,--"scandalous old traitor!" say the
+French;--and Friedrich may justly fear that Bavaria will go, by
+collapse, a bad road for him.
+
+Friedrich, a week or two after the Kaiser's death, seeing Bavarian and
+French things in such a hypothetic state, instructs his Ambassador
+at London to declare his, Friedrich's, perfect readiness and wish for
+Peace: "Old Treaty of Breslau and Berlin made indubitable to me; the
+rest of the quarrel has, by decease of the Kaiser, gone to air."
+To which the Britannic Majesty, rather elated at this time, as all
+Pragmatic people are, answers somewhat in a careless way, "Well, if
+the others like it!" and promises that he will propose it in the proper
+quarter. So that henceforth there is always a hope of Peace through
+England; as well as contrariwise, especially till Bavaria settle itself
+(in April next), a hope of great assistance from the French. Here are
+potentialities and counter-potentialities, which make the Bavarian
+Intricacy very agitating to the young King, while it lasts. And indeed
+his world is one huge imbroglio of Potentialities and Diplomatic
+Intricacies, agitating to behold. Concerning which we have again to
+remark how these huge Spectres of Diplomacy, now filling Friedrich's
+world, came mostly in result to Nothing;--shaping themselves wholly,
+for or against, in exact proportion, direct or inverse, to the actual
+Quantity of Battle and effective Performance that happened to be found
+in Friedrich himself. Diplomatic Spectralities, wide Fatamorganas of
+hope, and hideous big Bugbears blotting out the sun: of these, few
+men ever had more than Friedrich at this time. And he is careful, none
+carefuler, not to neglect his Diplomacies at any time;--though he
+knows, better than most, that good fighting of his own is what alone
+can determine the value of these contingent and aerial quantities,--mere
+Lapland witchcraft the greater part of them.
+
+A second grand Intricacy and difficulty, still more enigmatic, and
+pressing the tighter by its close neighborhood, was that with the
+Saxons. "Are the Saxons enemies; are they friends? Neutrals at lowest;
+bound by Treaty to lend Austria troops; but to lend for defence merely,
+not for offence! Could not one, by good methods, make friends with his
+Polish Majesty?" Friedrich was far from suspecting the rages that lurked
+in the Polish Majesty, and least of all owing to what. Owing to that old
+MORAVIAN-FORAY business; and to his, Friedrich's, behavior to the Saxons
+in it; excellent Saxons, who had behaved so beautifully to Friedrich!
+That is the sad fact, however. Stupid Polish Majesty has his natural
+envies, jealousies, of a Brandenburg waxing over his head at this rate.
+But it appears, the Moravian Foray entered for a great deal into the
+account, and was the final overwhelming item. Bruhl, by much descanting
+on that famous Expedition,--with such candid Eye-witnesses to appeal to,
+such corroborative Staff-officers and appliances, powerful on the idle
+heart and weak brain of a Polish Majesty,--has brought it so far. Fixed
+indignation, for intolerable usage, especially in that Moravian-Foray
+time: fixed; not very malignant, but altogether obstinate (as, I am
+told, that of the pacific sheep species usually is); which carried Bruhl
+and his Polish Majesty to extraordinary heights and depths in years
+coming! But that will deserve a section to itself by and by.
+
+A third difficulty, privately more stringent than any, is that of
+Finance. The expenses of the late Bohemian Expedition, "Friedrich's
+Army costing 75,000 pounds a month," have been excessive. For our
+next Campaign, if it is to be done in the way essential, there are, by
+rigorous arithmetic, "900,000 pounds" needed. A frugal Prussia raises
+no new taxes; pays its Wars from "the Treasure," from the Fund saved
+beforehand for emergencies of that kind; Fund which is running low,
+threatening to be at the lees if such drain on it continue. To fight
+with effect being the one sure hope, and salve for all sores, it is
+not in the Army, in the Fortresses, the Fighting Equipments, that there
+shall be any flaw left! Friedrich's budget is a sore problem upon him;
+needing endless shift and ingenuity, now and onwards, through this
+war:--already, during these months, in the Berlin Schloss, a great deal
+of those massive Friedrich-Wilhelm plate Sumptuosities, especially
+that unparalleled Music-Balcony up stairs, all silver, has been, under
+Fredersdorf's management, quietly taken away; "carried over, in the
+night-time, to the Mint." [Orlich, ii. 126-128.]
+
+And, in fact, no modern reader, not deeper in that distressing story
+of the Austrian-Succession War than readers are again like to be, can
+imagine to himself the difficulties of Friedrich at this time, as they
+already lay disclosed, and kept gradually disclosing themselves,
+for months coming; nor will ever know what perspicacity, patience
+of scanning, sharpness of discernment, dexterity of management, were
+required at Friedrich's hands;--and under what imminency of peril, too;
+victorious deliverance, or ruin and annihilation, wavering fearfully
+in the balance for him, more than once, or rather all along. But it
+is certain the deeper one goes into that hideous Medea's Caldron of
+stupidities, once so flamy, now fallen extinct, the more is one
+sensible of Friedrich's difficulties; and of the talent for all kinds
+of Captaincy,--by no means in the Field only, or perhaps even
+chiefly,--that was now required of him. Candid readers shall accept
+these hints, and do their best:--Friedrich himself made not the least
+complaint of men's then misunderstanding him; still less will he now!
+We, keeping henceforth the Diplomacies, the vaporous Foreshadows, and
+general Dance of Unclean Spirits with their intrigues and spectralities,
+well underground, so far as possible, will stick to what comes up as
+practical Performance on Friedrich's part, and try to give intelligible
+account of that.
+
+Valori says, he is greatly changed, and for the better, by these late
+reverses of fortune. All the world notices it, says Valori. No longer
+that brief infallibility of manner; that lofty light air, that politely
+disdainful view of Valori and mankind: he has now need of men. Complains
+of nothing, is cheerful, quizzical;--ardently busy to "grind out the
+notches," as our proverb is; has a mild humane aspect, something of
+modesty, almost of piety in him. Help me, thou Supreme Power, Maker of
+men, if my purposes are manlike! Though one does not go upon the Prayers
+of Forty-Hours, or apply through St. Vitus and such channels, there may
+be something of authentic petition to Heaven in the thoughts of that
+young man. He is grown very amiable; the handsomest young bit of Royalty
+now going. He must fight well next Summer, or it will go hard with him!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI.--VALORI GOES ON AN ELECTIONEERING MISSION TO DRESDEN.
+
+Some time in January, a new Frenchman, a "Chevalier de Courten," if the
+name is known to anybody, was here at Berlin; consulting, settling about
+mutual interests and operations. Since Belleisle is snatched from us,
+it is necessary some Courten should come; and produce what he has got:
+little of settlement, I should fear, of definite program that will
+hold water; in regard to War operations chiefly a magazine of clouds.
+[Specimens of it, in Ranke, iii. 219.] For the rest, the Bavarian
+question; and very specially, Who the new Emperor is to be?"King of
+Poland, thinks your Majesty?"--"By all means," answers Friedrich, "if
+you can! Detach him from Austria; that will be well!" Which was reckoned
+magnanimous, at least public-spirited, in Friedrich; considering what
+Saxony's behavior to him had already been. "By all means, his Polish
+Majesty for Kaiser; do our utmost, Excellencies Valori, Courten and
+Company!" answers Friedrich,--and for his own part, I observe, is
+intensely busy upon Army matters, looking after the main chance.
+
+And so Valori is to go to Dresden, and manage this cloud or cobwebbery
+department of the thing; namely, persuade his Polish Majesty to stand
+for the Kaisership: "Baiern, Pfalz, Koln, Brandenburg, there are four
+votes, Sire; your own is five: sure of carrying it, your Polish Majesty;
+backed by the Most Christian King, and his Allies and resources!" And
+Polish Majesty does, for his own share, very much desire to be Kaiser.
+But none of us yet knows how he is tied up by Austria, Anti-Friedrich,
+Anti-French considerations; and can only "accept if it is offered me:"
+thrice-willing to accept, if it will fall into my mouth; which, on those
+terms, it has so little chance of doing!--Saxony and its mysterious
+affairs and intentions having been, to Friedrich, a riddle and trouble
+and astonishment, during all this Campaign, readers ought to know the
+fact well;--and no reader could stand the details of such a fact. Here,
+in condensed form, are some scraps of Excerpt; which enable us to go
+with Valori on this Dresden Mission, and look for ourselves:--
+
+
+
+
+1. FRIEDRICH'S POSITION TOWARDS SAXONY.
+
+"... By known Treaty, the Polish Majesty is bound to assist the
+Hungarian with 12,000 men, 'whenever invaded in her own dominions.'
+Polish Majesty had 20,000 in the field for that object lately,--part
+of them, 8,000 of them, hired by Britannic subsidy, as he alleges. The
+question now is, Will Saxony assist Austria in invading Silesia, with
+or without Britannic subsidy? Friedrich hopes that this is impossible!
+Friedrich is deeply unaware of the humor he has raised against himself
+in the Saxon Court-circles; how the Polish Majesty regards that Moravian
+Foray; with what a perfect hatred little Bruhl regards him, Friedrich;
+and to what pitch of humor, owing to those Moravian-Foray starvings,
+marchings about and inhuman treatment of the poor Saxon Army, not to
+mention other offences and afflictive considerations, Bruhl has raised
+the simple Polish Majesty against Friedrich. These things, as they
+gradually unfolded themselves to Friedrich, were very surprising. And
+proved very disadvantageous at the present juncture and for a long time
+afterwards. To Friedrich disadvantageous and surprising; and to Saxony,
+in the end, ruinous; poor Saxony having got its back broken by them, and
+never stood up in the world since! Ruined by this wretched little Bruhl;
+and reduced, from the first place in Northern Teutschland, to a second
+or third, or no real place at all."
+
+
+
+
+2. THERE IS A, "UNION OF WARSAW" (8th January, 1745); AND STILL MORE
+SPECIALLY A "TREATY OF WARSAW" (8th January-18th May, 1745).
+
+"January 8th, 1745, before the Old Dessauer got ranked in Schlesien
+against Traun, there had concluded itself at Warsaw, by way of
+counterpoise to the 'Frankfurt Union,' a 'Union of Warsaw,' called
+also 'Quadruple Alliance of Warsaw;' the Parties to which were Polish
+Majesty, Hungarian ditto, Prime-Movers, and the two Sea-Powers as
+Purseholders; stipulating, to the effect: 'We Four will hold together in
+affairs of the Reich VERSUS that dangerous Frankfurt Union; we will'--do
+a variety of salutary things; and as one practical thing, 'There shall
+be, this Season, 30,000 Saxons conjoined to the Austrian Force, for
+which we Sea-Powers will furnish subsidy.'--This was the one practical
+point stipulated, January 8th; and farther than this the Sea-Powers did
+not go, now or afterwards, in that affair.
+
+"But there was then proposed by the Polish and Hungarian Majesties,
+in the form of Secret Articles, an ulterior Project; with which the
+Sea-Powers, expressing mere disbelief and even abhorrence of it, refused
+to have any concern now or henceforth. Polish Majesty, in hopes it
+would have been better taken, had given his 30,000 soldiers at a rate
+of subsidy miraculously low, only 150,000 pounds for the whole: but the
+Sea-Powers were inexorable, perhaps almost repented of their 150,000
+pounds; and would hear nothing farther of secret Articles and delirious
+Projects.
+
+"So that the 'Union of Warsaw' had to retire to its pigeon-hole, content
+with producing those 30,000 Saxons for the immediate occasion; and
+there had to be concocted between the Polish and Hungarian Majesties
+themselves what is now, in the modern Pamphlets, called a 'TREATY of
+Warsaw,'--much different from the innocent, 'UNION of Warsaw;' though it
+is merely the specifying and fixing down of what had been shadowed
+out as secret codicils in said 'Union,' when the Sea-Power parties
+obstinately recoiled. Treaty of Warsaw let us continue to call it;
+though its actual birth-place was Leipzig (in the profoundest secrecy,
+18th May, 1745), above four months after it had tried to be born at
+Warsaw, and failed as aforesaid. Warsaw Union is not worth speaking
+of; but this other is a Treaty highly remarkable to the reader,--and to
+Friedrich was almost infinitely so, when he came to get wind of it long
+after.
+
+"Treaty which, though it proved abortional, and never came to fulfilment
+in any part of it, is at this day one of the remarkablest bits of
+sheepskin extant in the world. It was signed 18th May, 1745; [Scholl,
+ii. 350.] and had cost a great deal of painful contriving, capable still
+of new altering and retouching, to hit mutual views: Treaty not only for
+reconquering Silesia (which to the Two Majesties, though it did not
+to the Sea-Powers, seems infallible, in Friedrich's now ruined
+circumstances), but for cutting down that bad Neighbor to something like
+the dimensions proper for a Brandenburg Vassal;--in fact, quite the old
+'Detestable Project' of Spring, 1741, only more elaborated into detail
+(in which Britannic George knows better than to meddle!)--Saxony to have
+share of the parings, when we get them. 'What share?' asked Saxony, and
+long keeps asking. 'A road to Warsaw; Strip of Country carrying us from
+the end of the Lausitz, which is ours, into Poland, which we trust will
+continue ours, would be very handy! Duchy of Glogau; some small paring
+of Silesia, won't your Majesty?' 'Of my Silesia not one hand-breadth,'
+answered the Queen impatiently (though she did at last concede
+some outlying hand-breadths, famed old 'Circle of Schwiebus,' if I
+recollect); and they have had to think of other equivalent parings for
+Saxony's behoof (Magdeburg, Halberstadt, Saale-Circle, or one knows
+not what); and have had, and will have, their adoes to get it fixed.
+Excellent bearskin to be slit into straps; only the bear is still on his
+feet!--Polish Majesty and Hungarian, Polish with especial vigor, Bruhl
+quite restless upon it, are--little as Valori or any mortal could dream
+of it--engaged in this partition of the bearskin, when Valori arrives.
+Of their innocent Union of Warsaw, there was, from the first, no secret
+made; but the Document now called 'TREATY of Warsaw' needs to lie secret
+and thrice-secret; and it was not till 1756 that Friedrich, having
+unearthed it by industries of his own, and studied it with great
+intensity for some years, made it known to the world." [Adelung, v. 308.
+397; Ranke, iii. 231 (who, for some reason of his own, dates "3d May"
+instead of 18th].
+
+Treaties, vaporous Foreshadows of Events, have oftenest something of the
+ghost in them; and are importune to human nature, longing for the Events
+themselves; all the more if they have proved abortional Treaties, and
+become doubly ghost-like or ghastly. Nevertheless the reader is to
+note well this Treaty of Warsaw, as important to Friedrich and him; and
+indeed it is perhaps the remarkablest Treaty, abortional or realized,
+which got to parchment in that Century. For though it proved abortional,
+and no part of it, now or afterwards, could be executed, and even the
+subsidy and 30,000 Saxons (stipulated in the "UNION of Warsaw") became
+crow's-meat in a manner,--this preternatural "Treaty of Warsaw," trodden
+down never so much by the heel of Destiny, and by the weight of
+new Treaties, superseding it or presupposing its impossibility or
+inconceivability, would by no means die (such the humor of Bruhl, of
+the Two Majesties and others); but lay alive under the ashes, carefully
+tended, for Ten or Twenty Years to come;--and had got all Europe kindled
+again, for destruction of that bad Neighbor, before it would itself
+consent to go out! And did succeed in getting Saxony's back broken,
+if not the bad Neighbor's,--in answer to the humor of little Bruhl;
+unfortunate Saxony to possess such a Bruhl!
+
+In those beautiful Saxon-Austrian developments of the Treaty of
+Warsaw, Czarina Elizabeth, bobbing about in that unlovely whirlpool of
+intrigues, amours, devotions and strong liquor, which her History is,
+took (ask not for what reason) a lively part:--and already in this
+Spring of 1745, they hope she could, by "a gift of two millions for
+her pleasures" (gift so easy to you Sea-Powers), be stirred up to anger
+against Friedrich. And she did, in effect, from this time, hover about
+in a manner questionable to Friedrich; though not yet in anger, but
+only with the wish to be important, and to make herself felt in Foreign
+affairs. Whether the Sea-Powers gave her that trifle of pocket-money
+("for her pleasures"), I never knew; but it is certain they spent, first
+and last, very large amounts that way, upon her and hers; especially the
+English did, with what result may be considered questionable.
+
+As for Graf von Bruhl, most rising man of Saxony, once a page; now by
+industry King August III.'s first favorite and factotum; the fact that
+he cordially hates Friedrich is too evident; but the why is not known to
+me. Except indeed, That no man--especially no man with three hundred
+and sixty-five fashionable suits of clothes usually about him, different
+suit each day of the year--can be comfortable in the evident contempt of
+another man. Other man of sarcastic bantering turn, too; tongue sharp
+as needles; whose sayings many birds of the air are busy to carry about.
+Year after year, Bruhl (doubtless with help enough that way, if there
+had needed such) hates him more and more; as the too jovial Czarina
+herself comes to do, wounded by things that birds have carried. And now
+we will go with Valori,--seeing better into some things than Valori yet
+can.
+
+
+
+
+3. VALORI'S ACCOUNT OF HIS MISSION (in compressed form). [Valori, i.
+211-219.]
+
+"Valori [I could guess about the 10th of February, but there is no date
+at all] was despatched to Dresden with that fine project, Polish Majesty
+for Kaiser: is authorized to offer 60,000 men, with money corresponding,
+and no end of brilliant outlooks;--must keep back his offers, however,
+if he find the people indisposed. Which he did, to an extreme degree;
+nothing but vague talk, procrastination, hesitation on the part of
+Bruhl. This wretched little Bruhl has twelve tailors always sewing for
+him, and three hundred and sixty-five suits of clothes: so many suits,
+all pictured in a Book; a valet enters every morning, proposes a suit,
+which, after deliberation, with perhaps amendments, is acceded to, and
+worn at dinner. Vainest of human clothes-horses; foolishest coxcomb
+Valori has seen: it is visibly his notion that it was he, Bruhl, by his
+Saxon auxiliaries, by his masterly strokes of policy, that checkmated
+Friedrich, and drove him from Bohemia last Year; and, for the rest, that
+Friedrich is ruined, and will either shirk out of Silesia, or be cut to
+ribbons there by the Austrian force this Summer. To which Valori hints
+dissent; but it is ill received. Valori sees the King; finds him, as
+expected, the fac-simile of Bruhl in this matter; Jesuit Guarini the
+like: how otherwise? They have his Majesty in their leash, and lead him
+as they please.
+
+"At four every morning, this Guarini, Jesuit Confessor to the King and
+Queen, comes to Bruhl; Bruhl settles with him what his Majesty shall
+think, in reference to current business, this day; Guarini then goes,
+confesses both Majesties; confesses, absolves, turns in the due way
+to secular matters. At nine, Bruhl himself arrives, for Privy Council:
+'What is your Majesty pleased to think on these points of current
+business?' Majesty serenely issues his thoughts, in the form of orders;
+which are found correct to pattern. This is the process with his
+Majesty. A poor Majesty, taking deeply into tobacco; this is the way
+they have him benetted, as in a dark cocoon of cobwebs, rendering the
+whole world invisible to him. Which cunning arrangement is more and more
+perfected every year; so that on all roads he travels, be it to mass,
+to hunt, to dinner, any-whither in his Palace or out of it, there are
+faithful creatures keeping eye, who admit no unsafe man to the least
+glimpse of him by night or by day. In this manner he goes on; and before
+the end of him, twenty years hence, has carried it far. Nothing but
+disgust to be had out of business;--mutinous Polish Diets too, some
+forty of them, in his time, not one of which did any business at all,
+but ended in LIBERUM VETO, and Billingsgate conflagration, perhaps
+with swords drawn: [See Buchholz, 154; &c.]--business more and more
+disagreeable to him. What can Valori expect, on this heroic occasion,
+from such a King?
+
+"The Queen herself, Maria Theresa's Cousin, an ambitious hard-favored
+Majesty,--who had sense once to dislike Bruhl, but has been quite
+reconciled to him by her Jesuit Messenger of Heaven (which latter is an
+oily, rather stupid creature, who really wishes well to her, and loves
+a peaceable life at any price),--even she will not take the bait. Valori
+was in Dresden nine days (middle part of February, it is likely); never
+produced his big bait, his 60,000 men and other brilliancies, at all.
+He saw old Feldmarschall Konigseck passing from Vienna towards the
+Netherlands Camp; where he is to dry-nurse (so they irreverently call
+it, in time coming) his Royal Highness of Cumberland, that magnificent
+English Babe of War, and do feats with him this Summer." Konigseck,
+though Valori did not know it, has endless diplomacies to do withal;
+inspections of troops, advisings, in Hanover, in Holland, in Dresden
+here; [Anonymous,--Duke of Cumberland,--p. 186.]--and secures the Saxon
+Electoral-Vote for his Grand-Duke in passing. "The welcome given to
+Konigseck disgusted Valori; on the ninth day he left; said adieu, seeing
+them blind to their interest; and took post for Berlin,"--where he finds
+Friedrich much out of humor at the Saxon reception of his magnanimities.
+[Valori, i. 211-219; _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 81-85. For details
+on Bruhl, see _Graf von Bruhl, Leben und Charakter_ (1760, No Place):
+Anonymous, by one Justi, a noted Pamphleteer of the time: exists in
+English too, or partly exists; but is unreadable, except on compulsion;
+and totally unintelligible till after very much inquiry elsewhere.]
+
+This Saxon intricacy, indecipherable, formidable, contemptible, was the
+plague of Friedrich's life, one considerable plague, all through this
+Campaign. Perhaps nothing in the Diplomatic sphere of things caused
+him such perplexity, vexation, indignation. An insoluble riddle to
+him; extremely contemptible, yet,--with a huge Russia tacked to it, and
+looming minatory in the distance,--from time to time, formidable enough.
+Let readers keep it in mind, and try to imagine it. It cost Friedrich
+such guessing, computing, arranging, rearranging, as would weary the
+toughest reader to hear of in detail. How Friedrich did at last solve it
+(in December coming), all readers will see with eyes!--
+
+
+
+
+MIDDLE-RHINE ARMY IN A STAGGERING STATE; THE BAVARIAN INTRICACY SETTLES
+ITSELF, THE WRONG WAY.
+
+Early in March it becomes surmisable that Maillebois's Middle-Rhine Army
+will not go a good road. Maillebois has been busy in those countries,
+working extensive discontent; bullying mankind "to join the Frankfurt
+Union," to join France at any rate, which nobody would consent to; and
+exacting merciless contributions, which everybody had to consent to and
+pay.--And now, on D'Ahremberg's mere advance, with that poor Fraction
+of Pragmatic Army, roused from its winter sleep, Maillebois, without
+waiting for D'Ahremberg's attack, rapidly calls in his truculent
+detachments, and rolls confusedly back into the Frankfurt regions.
+[Adelung, iv. 276-352 (December, 1744-March, 1745).] Upon which
+D'Ahremberg--if by no means going upon Maillebois's throat--sets, at
+least, to coercing Wilhelm of Hessen, our only friend in those parts;
+who is already a good deal disgusted with the Maillebois procedures,
+and at a loss what to do on the Kaiser's death, which has killed the
+Frankfurt Union too. Wise Wilhelm consents, under D'Ahremberg's menaces,
+to become Neutral; and recall his 6,000 out of Baiern,--wishes he had
+them home beside him even now!
+
+With an Election in the wind, it is doubly necessary for the French, who
+have not even a Candidate as yet, to stand supreme and minatory in the
+Frankfurt Country; and to King Friedrich it is painfully questionable,
+whether Maillebois can do it. "Do it we will; doubt not that, your
+Majesty!" answer Valori and the French;--and study to make improvements,
+reinforcements, in their Rhine Army. And they do, at least, change the
+General of their Middle-Rhine Army,--that is to say, recall Prince Conti
+out of Italy, where he has distinguished himself, and send Maillebois
+thither in his stead,--who likewise distinguishes himself THERE, if that
+could be a comfort to us! Whether the distinguished Conti will maintain
+that Frankfurt Country in spite of the Austrians and their Election
+movements, is still a question with Friedrich, though Valori continued
+assuring him (always till July came) that, it was beyond question.
+"Siege of Tournay, vigorous Campaign in the Netherlands (for behoof of
+Britannic George)!" this is the grand French program for the Year. This
+good intention was achieved, on the French part; but this, like Aaron's
+rod among the serpents, proved to have EATEN the others as it wriggled
+along!--
+
+Those Maillebois-D'Ahremberg affairs throw a damp on the Bavarian
+Question withal;--in fact, settle the Bavarian Question; her Hungarian
+Majesty, tired of the delays, having ordered Bathyani to shoulder arms
+again, and bring a decision. Bathyani, with Barenklau to right of him,
+and Browne (our old Silesian friend) to left, goes sweeping across those
+Seckendorf-Segur posts, and without difficulty tumbles everything to
+ruin, at a grand rate. The traitor Seckendorf had made such a choice of
+posts,--left unaltered by Drum Thorring;--what could French valor do?
+Nothing; neither French valor, nor Bavarian want of valor, could
+do anything but whirl to the right-about, at sight of the Austrian
+Sweeping-Apparatus; and go off explosively, as in former instances, at
+a rate almost unique in military annals. Finished within three weeks or
+so!--We glance only at two points of it. March 21st, Bathyani stood to
+arms (to BESOMS we might call it), Browne on the left, Barenklau on the
+right: it was March 21st when Bathyani started from Passau, up the Donau
+Countries;--and within the week coming, see:--
+
+"VILSHOFEN, 28th MARCH, 1745. Here, at the mouth of the Vils River
+(between Inn and Iser), is the first considerable Post; garrison some
+4,000; Hessians and Prince Friedrich the main part,--who have their
+share of valor, I dare say; but with such news out of Hessen, not to
+speak of the prospects in this Country, are probably in poorish spirits
+for acting. General Browne summons them in Vilshofen, this day; and, on
+their negative, storms in upon them, bursts them to pieces; upon which
+they beat chamade. But the Croats, who are foremost, care nothing for
+chamade: go plundering, slaughtering; burn the poor Town; butcher [in
+round numbers] 3,000 of the poor Hessians; and wound General Browne
+himself, while he too vehemently interferes." [Adelung, iv. 356, and the
+half-intelligible Foot-note in Ranke, iii. 220.] This was the finale
+of those 6,000 Hessians, and indeed their principal function, while in
+French pay;--and must have been, we can Judge how surprising to Prince
+Friedrich, and to his Papa on hearing of it! Note another point.
+
+Precisely about this time twelvemonth, "March 16th, 1746," the same
+Prince Friedrich, with remainder of those Hessians, now again completed
+to 6,000, and come back with emphasis to the Britannic side of
+things, was--marching out of Edinburgh, in much state, with streamers,
+kettle-drums, Highness's coaches, horses, led-horses, on an unexpected
+errand. [Henderson (Whig Eye-witness). _History of the Rebellion,_ 1745
+and 1746 (London, 1748, reprint from the Edinburgh edition), pp. 104,
+106, 107.] Toward Stirling, Perth; towards Killiecrankie, and raising of
+what is called "the Siege of Blair in Athol" (most minute of "sieges,"
+but subtending a great angle there and then);--much of unexpected, and
+nearer home than "Tournay and the Netherlands Campaign," having happened
+to Britannic George in the course of this year, 1746! "Really very fine
+troops, those Hessians [observes my orthodox Whig friend]: they carry
+swords as well as guns and bayonets; their uniform is blue turned up
+with white: the Hussar part of them, about 500, have scimitars of
+a great length; small horses, mostly black, of Swedish breed; swift
+durable little creatures, with long tails." Honors, dinners, to his
+Serene Highness had been numerous, during the three weeks we had him
+in Edinburgh; "especially that Ball, February 21st (o.s.), eve of his
+Consort the Princess Mary's Birthday [EVE of birthday, "let us dance the
+auspicious morning IN] was, for affluence of Nobility and Gentry of both
+sexes," a sublime thing...."
+
+PFAFFENHOFEN, APRIL 15th. "Unfortunate Segur, the Segur of Linz three
+years ago,--whose conduct was great, according to Valori, but powerless
+against traitors and fate!--was again, once more, unfortunate in those
+parts. Unfortunate Segur drew up at Pfaffenhofen (centre of the Country,
+many miles from Vilshofen) to defend himself, when fallen upon by
+Barenklau, in that manner; but could not, though with masterly demeanor;
+and had to retreat three days, with his face to the enemy, so to speak,
+fighting and manoeuvring all the way: no shelter for him either but
+Munchen, and that, a most temporary one. Instead of taking Straubingen,
+taking Passau, perhaps of pushing on to Vienna itself, this is what
+we have already come to. No Rhine Army, Middle-Rhine Army, Coigny,
+Maillebois, Conti, whoever it was, should send us the least
+reinforcement, when shrieked to. No outlook whatever but rapid
+withdrawal, retreat to the Rhine Army, since it will not stir to help
+us." [Adelung, iv. 360.]
+
+"The young Kur-Baiern is still polite, grateful [to us French],
+overwhelms us with politeness; but flies to Augsburg, as his Father used
+to do. Notable, however, his poor fat little Mother won't, this time:
+'No, I will stay here, I for one, and have done with flying and running;
+we have had enough of that!' Seckendorf, quite gone from Court in this
+crisis, reappears, about the middle of April, in questionable capacity;
+at a place called Fussen, not far off, at the foot of the Tyrol
+Hills;--where certain Austrian Dignitaries seem also to be enjoying a
+picturesque Easter! Yes indeed: and, on APRIL 22d, there is signed a
+'PEACE OF FUSSEN' there; general amicable AS-YOU-WERE, between Austria
+and Bavaria ('Renounce your Anti-Pragmatic moonshine forevermore, vote
+for our Grand-Duke; there is your Bavaria back, poor wretches!')--and
+Seckendorf, it is presumable, will get his Turkish arrears liquidated.
+
+"The Bavarian Intricacy, which once excelled human power, is settled,
+then. Carteret and Haslang tried it in vain [dreadful heterodox
+intentions of secularizing Salzburg, secularizing Passau, Regensburg,
+and loud tremulous denial of such];--Carteret and Wilhelm of Hesseu
+[Conferences of Hanau, which ruined Carteret], in vain; King Friedrich,
+and many Kings, in vain: a thing nobody could settle;--and it has at
+last settled itself, as the generality of ill-guided and unlucky things
+do, by collapse. Delirium once out, the law of gravity acts; and there
+the mad matter lies."
+
+"Bought by Austria, that old villain!" cry the French. Friedrich does
+not think the Austrians bought Seckendorf, having no money at present;
+but guesses they may have given him to understand that a certain large
+arrear of payment due ever since those Turkish Wars,--when Seckendorf,
+instead of payment, was lodged in the Fortress of Gratz, and almost
+got his head cut off,--should now be paid down in cash, or authentic
+Paper-money, if matters become amicable. [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii.
+22; _Seckendorfs Leben,_ pp. 367-376.] As they have done, in Friedrich's
+despite;--who seems angrier at the old stager for this particular
+ill-turn than for all the other many; and long remembers it, as will
+appear.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII.--FRIEDRICH IN SILESIA; UNUSUALLY BUSY.
+
+Here, sure enough, are sad new intricacies in the Diplomatic, hypothetic
+sphere of things; and clouds piling themselves ahead, in a very minatory
+manner to King Friedrich. Let King Friedrich, all the more, get his
+Fighting Arrangements made perfect. Diplomacy is clouds; beating of
+your enemies is sea and land. Austria and the Gazetteer world consider
+Friedrich to be as good as finished: but that is privately far from
+being Friedrich's own opinion;--though these occurrences are heavy and
+dismal to him, as none of us can now fancy.
+
+Herr Ranke has got access, in the Archives, to a series of private
+utterances by Friedrich,--Letters from him, of a franker nature than
+usual, and letting us far deeper into his mind;--which must have been
+well worth reading in the original, in their fully dated and developed
+condition. From Herr Ranke's Fragmentary Excerpts, let us, thankful
+for what we have got, select one or two. The Letters are to Minister
+Podewils at Berlin; written from Silesia (Neisse and neighborhood),
+where, since the middle of March, Friedrich has been, personally pushing
+on his Army Preparations, while the above sinister things befell.
+
+
+
+
+KING FRIEDRICH TO PODEWILS, IN BERLIN (under various dates, March-April,
+1745).
+
+NEISSE, 29th MARCH.... "We find ourselves in a great crisis. If we
+don't, by mediation of England, get Peace, our enemies from different
+sides [Saxony, Austria, who knows if not Russia withal!] will come
+plunging in against me. Peace I cannot force them to. But if they
+must have War, we will either beat them, or none of us will see Berlin
+again." [Ranke, iii. 236 et seqq.]
+
+APRIL (no day given).... "In any case, I have my troops well together.
+The sicknesses are ceasing; the recruitments are coming in: shortly all
+will be complete. That does not hinder us from making Peace, if it will
+only come; but, in the contrary case, nobody can accuse me of neglecting
+what was necessary."
+
+APRIL 17th (still from Neisse).... "I toil day and night to improve our
+situation. The soldiers will do their duty. There is none among us who
+will not rather have his backbone broken than give up one foot-breadth
+of ground. They must either grant us a good Peace, or we will surpass
+ourselves by miracles of daring; and force the enemy to accept it from
+us."
+
+APRIL 20th. "Our situation is disagreeable; constrained, a kind of
+spasm: but my determination is taken. If we needs must fight, we will do
+it like men driven desperate. Never was there a greater peril than
+that I am now in. Time, at its own pleasure, will untie this knot; or
+Destiny, if there is one, determine the event. The game I play is so
+high, one cannot contemplate the issue with cold blood. Pray for the
+return of my good luck."--Two days hence, the poor young Kur-Baiern,
+deaf to the French seductions and exertions, which were intense, had
+signed his "Peace of Fussen" (22d April 1745),--a finale to France on
+the German Field, as may be feared! The other Fragments we will give a
+little farther on.
+
+Friedrich had left Berlin for Silesia March 15th; rather sooner than he
+counted on,--Old Leopold pleading to be let home. At Glogau, at Breslau,
+there had been the due inspecting: Friedrich got to Neisse on the 23d
+(Bathyani just stirring in that Bavarian Business, Vilshofen and the
+Hessians close ahead); and on the 27th, had dismissed Old Leopold,
+with thanks and sympathies,--sent him home, "to recover his health."
+Leopold's health is probably suffering; but his heart and spirits still
+more. Poor old man, he has just lost--the other week, "5th February"
+last--his poor old Wife, at Dessau; and is broken down with grief. The
+soft silk lining of his hard Existence, in all parts of it, is torn
+away. Apothecary Fos's Daughter, Reich's Princess, Princess of Dessau,
+called by whatever name, she had been the truest of Wives; "used to
+attend him in all his Campaigns, for above fifty years back." "Gone,
+now, forever gone!"--Old Leopold had wells of strange sorrow in the
+rugged heart of him,--sorrow, and still better things,--which he does
+not wear on his sleeve. Here is an incident I never can forget;--dating
+twelve or thirteen years ago (as is computable), middle of July, 1732.
+
+"Louisa, Leopold's eldest Daughter, Wife of Victor Leopold, reigning
+Prince of Anhalt-Bernburg, lay dying of a decline." Still only
+twenty-three, poor Lady, though married seven years ago;--the end now
+evidently drawing nigh. "A few days before her death,--perhaps some
+attendant sorrowfully asking, 'Can we do nothing, then?'--she was heard
+to say, 'If I could see my Father at the head of his Regiment, yet
+once!'"--Halle, where the Regiment lies, is some thirty or more miles
+off; and King Friedrioh Wilhelm, I suppose, would have to be written
+to:--Leopold was ready the soonest possible; and, "at a set hour,
+marched, in all pomp, with banner flying, music playing, into the
+SCHLOSS-HOF (Palace Court) of Bernburg; and did the due salutations
+and manoeuvrings,--his poor Daughter sitting at her window, till they
+ended;"--figure them, the last glitter of those muskets, the last wail
+of that band-music!--"The Regiment was then marched to the Waisenhaus
+(ORPHAN-HOUSE), where the common men were treated with bread and beer;
+all the Officers dining at the Prince's Table. All the Officers, except
+Leopold alone, who stole away out of the crowd; sat himself upon the
+balustrade of the Saale Bridge, and wept into the river." [LEBEN (12mo;
+not Rannft's, but Anonymous like his), p. 234 n.]--Leopold is now on the
+edge of seventy; ready to think all is finished with him. Perhaps not
+quite, my tough old friend; recover yourself a little, and we shall see!
+
+Old Leopold is hardly home at Dessau, when new Pandour Tempests, tides
+of ravaging War, again come beating against the Giant Mountains, pouring
+through all passes; from utmost Jablunka, westward by Jagerndorf to
+Glatz, huge influx of wild riding hordes, each with some support of
+Austrian grenadiers, cannoniers; threatening to submerge Silesia.
+Precursors, Friedrich need not doubt, of a strenuous regular attempt
+that way, Hungarian Majesty's fixed intention, hope and determination
+is, To expel him straightway from Silesia. Her Patent circulates,
+these three months; calling on all men to take note of that fixed
+fact, especially on all Silesian men to note it well, and shift their
+allegiance accordingly. Silesian men, in great majority,--our friend
+the Mayor of Landshut, for example?--are believed to have no inclination
+towards change: and whoever has, had clearly better not show any till he
+see! [In Ranke (iii. 234), there is vestige of some intended
+"voluntary subscription by the common people of Glatz," for Friedrich's
+behoof;--contrariwise, in Orlich (ii. 380, "6th February, 1745," from
+the Dessau Archives), notice of one individual, suspected of stirring
+for Austria, whom "you are to put under lock and key;"--but he runs off,
+and has no successor, that I hear of.]--
+
+Friedrich's thousand-fold preliminary orderings, movements, rearrangings
+in his Army matters, must not detain us here;--still less his dealings
+with the Pandour element, which is troublesome, rather than dangerous.
+Vigilance, wise swift determination, valor drilled to its work, can deal
+with phenomena of that nature, though never so furious and innumerable.
+Not a cheering service for drilled valor, but a very needful one.
+Continual bickerings and skirmishings fell out, sometimes rising to
+sharp fight on the small scale:--Austrian grenadiers with cannon are on
+that Height to left, and also on this to right, meaning to cut off our
+march; the difficult landscape furnished out, far and wide, with Pandour
+companies in position: you must clash in, my Burschen; seize me that
+cannon-battery yonder; master such and such a post,--there is the heart
+of all that network of armed doggery; slit asunder that, the network
+wholly will tumble over the Hills again. Which is always done, on
+the part of the Prussian Burschen; though sometimes not, without
+difficulty.--His Majesty is forming Magazines at Neisse, Brieg, and
+the principal Fortresses in those parts; driving on all manner of
+preparations at the rapidest rate of speed, and looking with his own
+eyes into everything. The regiments are about what we may call complete,
+arithmetically and otherwise; the cavalry show good perfection in their
+new mode of manoeuvring;--it is to be hoped the Fighting Apparatus
+generally will give fair account of itself when the time comes. Our one
+anchor of hope, as now more and more appears.
+
+On the Pandour element he first tried (under General Hautcharmoi, with
+Winterfeld as chief active hand) a direct outburst or two, with a view
+to slash them home at once. But finding that it was of no use, as they
+always reappeared in new multitudes, he renounced that; took to calling
+in his remoter outposts; and, except where Magazines or the like
+remained to be cared for, let the Pandours baffle about, checked only by
+the fortified Towns, and more and more submerge the Hill Country. Prince
+Karl, to be expected in the form of lion, mysteriously uncertain on
+which side coming to invade us,--he, and not the innumerable weasel
+kind, is our important matter! By the end of April (news of the PEACE
+OF FUSSEN coming withal), Friedrich had quitted Neisse; lay cantoned, in
+Neisse Valley (between Frankenstein and Patschkau, "able to assemble in
+forty-eight hours"); studying, with his whole strength, to be ready
+for the mysterious Prince Karl, on whatever side he might arrive;--and
+disregarding the Pandours in comparison.
+
+The points of inrush, the tideways of these Pandour Deluges seem to be
+mainly three. Direct through the Jablunka, upon Ratibor Country, is
+the first and chief; less direct (partly supplied by REFLUENCES from
+Ratibor, when Ratibor is found not to answer), a second disembogues by
+Jagerndorf; a third, the westernmost, by Landshut. Three main ingresses:
+at each of which there fall out little Fights; which are still
+celebrated in the Prussian Books, and indeed well deserve reading by
+soldiers that would know their trade. In the Ratibor parts, the invasive
+leader is a General Karoly, with 12,000 under him, who are the wildest
+horde of all: "Karoly lodges in a wood: for himself there is a tent;
+his companions sleep under trees, or under the open sky, by the edge of
+morasses." [Ranke, iii. 244.] It was against this Karoly and his horde
+that Hautcharmoi's little expedition, or express attacking party to
+drive them home again, was shot out (8th-2lst April). Which did its work
+very prettily; Winterfeld, chief hand in it, crowning the matter by a
+"Fight of Wurbitz," [Orlich, ii. 136 (21st April).]--where Winterfeld,
+cutting the taproot, in his usual electric way, tumbles Karoly quite
+INTO the morasses, and clears the country of him for a time. For a time;
+though for a time only;--Karoly or others returning in a week or two,
+to a still higher extent of thousands; mischievous as ever in those
+Ratibor-Namslau countries. Upon which, Friedrich, finding this an
+endless business, and nothing like the most important, gives it up for
+the present; calls in his remoter detachments; has his Magazines carted
+home to the Fortress Towns,--Karoly trying, once or so, to hinder in
+that operation, but only again getting his crown broken. ["Fight of
+Mocker," May 4th (Orlich, ii. 141).] Or if carting be too difficult,
+still do not waste your Magazine:--Margraf Karl, for instance, is
+ordered to Jagerndorf with his Detachment, "to eat the Magazine;" hungry
+Pandours looking on, till he finish. On which occasion a renowned little
+Fight took place (Fight of Neustadt, or of Jagerndorf-Neustadt), as
+shall be mentioned farther on.
+
+So that, for certain weeks to come, the Tolpatcheries had free course,
+in those Frontier parts; and were left to rove about, under check only
+of the Garrison Towns; Friedrich being obliged to look elsewhere
+after higher perils, which were now coming in view. In which favorable
+circumstances, Karoly and Consorts did, at last, make one stroke in
+those Ratibor countries; that of Kosel, which was greatly consolatory.
+[26th May, 1743 (Orlich, ii. 156-158).] "By treachery of an Ensign
+who had deserted to them [provoked by rigor of discipline, or some
+intolerable thing], they glided stealthily, one night, across the
+ditches, into Kosel" (a half-fortified place, Prussian works only
+half finished): which, being the Key of the Oder in those parts, they
+reckoned a glorious conquest; of good omen and worthy of TE-DEUMS at
+Vienna. And they did eagerly, without the least molestation, labor
+to complete the Prussian works at Kosel: "One garrison already
+ours!"--which was not had from them without battering (and I believe,
+burning), when General von Nassau came to inquire after it; in Autumn
+next.
+
+Friedrich had always hoped that the Saxons, who are not yet in declared
+War with him, though bound by Treaty to assist the Queen of Hungary
+under certain conditions, would not venture on actual Invasion of his
+Territories; but in this, as readers anticipate, Friedrich finds himself
+mistaken. Weissenfels is hastening from the Leitmeritz northwestern
+quarter, where he has wintered, to join Prince Karl, who is gathering
+himself from Olmutz and his southeastern home region; their full
+intention is to invade Silesia together, and they hope now at length to
+make an end of Friedrich and it. These Pandour hordes, supported by the
+necessary grenadiers and cannoniers, are sent as vanguard; these cannot
+themselves beat him; but they may induce him (which they do not) to
+divide his Force; they may, in part, burn him away as by slow fire,
+after which he will be the easier to beat. Instead of which, Friedrich,
+leaving the Pandours to their luck, lies concentrated in Neisse Valley;
+watching, with all his faculties, Prince Karl's own advent (coming on
+like Fate, indubitable, yet involved in mysteries hitherto); and is
+perilously sensible that only in giving that a good reception is there
+any hope left him.
+
+Prince Karl "who arrived in Olmutz April 30th," commands in chief
+again,--saddened, poor man, by the loss of his young Wife, in December
+last; willing to still his grief in action for the cause SHE loved;--but
+old Traun is not with him this year: which is a still more material
+circumstance. Traun is to go this year, under cloak not of Prince Karl,
+but of Grand-Duke Franz, to clear those Frankfurt Countries for
+the KAISERWAHL and him. Prince Conti lies there, with his famous
+"Middle-Rhine Army" (D'Ahremberg, from the western parts, not nearly so
+diligent upon him as one could wish); and must, at all rates, be cleared
+away. Traun, taking command of Bathyani's Army (now that it has finished
+the Bavarian job), is preparing to push down upon Conti, while Bathyani
+(who is to supersede the laggard D'Ahremberg) shall push vigorously
+up;--and before summer is over, we shall hear of Traun again, and Conti
+will have heard!--
+
+Friedrich's indignation, on learning that the Saxons were actually on
+march, and gradually that they intended to invade him, was great; and
+the whole matter is portentously enigmatic to him, as he lies vigilant
+in Neisse Valley, waiting on the When and the How. Indignation;--and
+yet there is need of caution withal. To be ready for events, the Old
+Dessauer has, as one sure measure, been requested to take charge, once
+more, of a "Camp of Observation" on the Saxon Frontier (as of old, in
+1741); and has given his consent: ["April 25th" consents (Orlich, ii.
+130).] "Camp of Magdeburg," "Camp of Dieskau;" for it had various names
+and figures; checkings of your hand, then layings of it on, heavier,
+lighter and again heavier, according to one's various READINGS of the
+Saxon Mystery; and we shall hear enough about it, intermittently, till
+December coming: when it ended in a way we shall not forget!--On which
+take this Note:--
+
+"The Camp of Observation was to have begun May 1st; did begin somewhat
+later, 'near Magdeburg,' not too close on the Frontier, nor in too
+alarming strength; was reinforced to about 30,000; in which state
+[middle of August] it stept forward to Wieskau, then to Dieskau,
+close on the Saxon Border; and became,--with a Saxon Camp lying close
+opposite, and War formally threatened, or almost declared, on Saxony
+by Friedrich,--an alarmingly serious matter. Friedrich, however, again
+checked his hand; and did not consummate till November-December. But
+did then consummate; greatly against his will; and in a way
+flamingly visible to all men!" [Orlich, ii. 130, 209, 210:
+_Helden-Geschichte,_ ii. 1224-1226; i. 1117.]
+
+Friedrich's own incidental utterances (what more we have of Fractions
+from the Podewils Letters), in such portentous aspect of affairs, may
+now be worth giving. It is not now to Jordan that he writes, gayly
+unbosoming himself, as in the First War,--poor Jordan lies languishing,
+these many months; consumptive, too evidently dying:--Not to Jordan,
+this time; nor is the theme "GLOIRE" now, but a far different!
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH TO PODEWILS (as before, April-May, 1745).
+
+April 20th or so, Orders are come to Berlin (orders, to Podewils's
+horror at such a thought), Whitherward, should Berlin be assaulted,
+the Official Boards, the Preciosities and household gods are to betake
+themselves:--to Magdeburg, all these, which is an impregnable place;
+to Stettin, the Two Queens and Royal Family, if they like it better.
+Podewils in horror, "hair standing on end," writes thereupon to Eichel,
+That he hopes the management, "in a certain contingency," will be given
+to Minister Boden; he Podewils, with his hair in that posture, being
+quite unequal to it. Friedrich answers:--
+
+"APRIL 26th.... 'I can understand how you are getting uneasy, you
+Berliners. I have the most to lose of you all; but I am quiet, and
+prepared for events. If the Saxons take part,' as they surely will, 'in
+the Invasion of Silesia, and we beat them, I am determined to plunge
+into Saxony. For great maladies, there need great remedies. Either
+I will maintain my all, or else lose my all. [Hear it, friend; and
+understand it,--with hair lying flat!] It is true, the disaffection of
+the Russian Court, on such trifling grounds, was not to be expected; and
+great misfortune can befall us. Well; a year or two sooner, a year or
+two later,--it is not worth one's while to bother about the very worst.
+If things take the better turn, our condition will be surer and firmer
+than it was before. If we have nothing to reproach ourselves with,
+neither need we fret and plague ourselves about bad events, which can
+happen to any man.'--'I am causing despatch a secret Order for Boden [on
+YOU know what], which you will not deliver him till I give sign.'"--On
+hearing of the Peace of Fussen, perhaps a day or so later, Friedrich
+again writes:--
+
+"APRIL [no distinct date; Neisse still? QUITS Neisse, April 28th].
+... Peace of Fussen, Bavaria turned against me? 'I can say nothing to
+it,--except, There has come what had to come. To me remains only
+to possess myself in patience. If all alliances, resources, and
+negotiations fail, and all conjunctures go against me, I prefer to
+perish with honor, rather than lead an inglorious life deprived of all
+dignity. My ambition whispers me that I have done more than another to
+the building up of my House, and have played a distinguished part among
+the crowned heads of Europe. To maintain myself there, has become as it
+were a personal duty; which I will fulfil at the expense of my happiness
+and my life. I have no choice left: I will maintain my power, or it
+may go to ruin, and the Prussian name be buried under it. If the enemy
+attempt anything upon us, we will either beat him, or we will all
+be hewed to pieces, for the sake of our Country, and the renown of
+Brandenburg. No other counsel can I listen to.'"
+
+SAME LETTER, OR ANOTHER? (Herr Ranke having his caprices!)... "You are a
+good man, my Podewils, and do what can be expected of you" (Podewils
+has been apologizing for his terrors; and referring hopefully "to
+Providence"): "Perform faithfully the given work on your side, as I on
+mine; for the rest, let what you call 'Providence' decide as it
+likes [UNE PROVIDENCE AVEUGLE? Ranke, who alone knows, gives "BLINDE
+VORSEHUNG." What an utterance, on the part of this little Titan!
+Consider it as exceptional with him, unusual, accidental to the hard
+moment, and perhaps not so impious as it looks!]--Neither our prudence
+nor our courage shall be liable to blame; but only circumstances that
+would not favor us....
+
+"I prepare myself for every event. Fortune may be kind or be unkind, it
+shall neither dishearten me nor uplift me. If I am to perish, let it
+be with honor, and sword in hand. What the issue is to be--Well, what
+pleases Heaven, or the Other Party (J'AI JETE LE BONNET PAR DESSUS LES
+MOULINS)! Adieu, my dear Podewils; become as good a philosopher as
+you are a politician; and learn from a man who does not go to Elsner's
+Preaching [fashionable at the time], that one must oppose to ill fortune
+a brow of iron; and, during this life, renounce all happiness, all
+acquisitions, possessions and lying shows, none of which will follow us
+beyond the grave." [Ranke, iii. pp. 238-241.]
+
+"By what points the Austrian-Saxon Armament will come through upon us?
+Together will it be, or separately? Saxons from the Lausitz, Austrians
+from Bohmen, enclosing us between two fires?"--were enigmatic questions
+with Friedrich; and the Saxons especially are an enigma. But that come
+they will, that these Pandours are their preliminary veiling-apparatus
+as usual, is evident to him; and that he must not spend himself upon
+Pandours; but coalesce, and lie ready for the main wrestle. So that from
+April 28th, as above noticed, Friedrich has gone into cantonments, some
+way up the Neisse Valley, westward of Neisse Town; and is calling in his
+outposts, his detachments; emptying his Frontier Magazines;--abandoning
+his Upper-Silesian Frontier more and more, and in the end altogether, to
+the Pandour hordes; a small matter they, compared to the grand Invasion
+which is coming on. Here, with shiftings up the Neisse Valley, he
+lies till the end of May; watching Argus-like, and scanning with every
+faculty the Austrian-Saxon motions and intentions, until at length they
+become clear to him, and we shall see how he deals with them.
+
+His own lodging, or head-quarter, most of this time (4th May-27th
+May), is in the pleasant Abbey of Camenz (mythic scene of that
+BAUMGARTEN-SKIRMISH business, in the First Silesian War). He has
+excellent Tobias Stusche for company in leisure hours; and the outlook
+of bright Spring all round him, flowering into gorgeous Summer, as he
+hurries about on his many occasions, not of an idyllic nature. [Orlich,
+ii. 139; Ranke, iii. 242-249.] But his Army is getting into excellent
+completeness of number, health, equipment, and altogether such a spirit
+as he could wish. May 22d, here is another snatch from some Note to
+Podewils, from this balmy Locality, potential with such explosions of
+another kind. CAMENZ, MAY 22d.... "The Enemies are making movements; but
+nothing like enough as yet for our guessing their designs. Till we see,
+therefore, the thunder lies quiet in us (LA FOUDRE REPOSE EN MES MAINS).
+Ah, could we but have a Day like that May Eleventh!" [Ranke, iii. 248
+n.]
+
+What "that May Eleventh" is or was? Readers are curious to know;
+especially English readers, who guess FONTENOY. And Historic Art, if she
+were strict, would decline to inform them at any length; for really
+the thing is no better than a "Victory on the Scamander, and a Siege of
+Pekin" (as a certain observer did afterwards define it), in reference
+to the matter now on hand! Well, Pharsalia, Arbela, the Scamander,
+Armageddon, and so many Battles and Victories being luminous, by study,
+to cultivated Englishmen, and one's own Fontenoy such a mystery and
+riddle,--Art, after consideration, reluctantly consents to be indulgent;
+will produce from her Paper Imbroglios a slight Piece on the subject,
+and print instead of burning.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII.--THE MARTIAL BOY AND HIS ENGLISH versus THE LAWS OF
+NATURE.
+
+"Glorious Campaign in the Netherlands, Siege of Tournay, final ruin
+of the Dutch Barrier!" this is the French program for Season 1745,--no
+Belleisle to contradict it; Belleisle secure at Windsor, who might have
+leant more towards German enterprises. And to this his Britannic Majesty
+(small gain to him from that adroitness in the Harz, last winter!) has
+to make front. And is strenuously doing so, by all methods; especially
+by heroic expenditure of money, and ditto exposure of his Martial Boy.
+Poor old Wade, last year,--perhaps Wade did suffer, as he alleged,
+from "want of sufficient authority in that mixed Army"? Well, here is a
+Prince of the Blood, Royal Highness of Cumberland, to command in
+chief. With a Konigseck to dry-nurse him, may not Royal Highness, luck
+favoring, do very well? Luck did not favor; Britannic Majesty, neither
+in the Netherlands over seas, nor at home (strange new domestic wool, of
+a tarry HIGHLAND nature, being thrown him to card, on the sudden!), made
+a good Campaign, but a bad. And again a bad (1746) and again (1747),
+ever again, till he pleased to cease altogether. Of which distressing
+objects we propose that the following one glimpse be our last.
+
+
+
+
+BATTLE OF FONTENOY (11th May, 1745).
+
+... "In the end of April, Marechal de Saxe, now become very famous for
+his sieges in the Netherlands, opened trenches before Tournay; King
+Louis, with his Dauphin, not to speak of mistresses, play-actors and
+cookery apparatus (in wagons innumerable), hastens to be there. A
+fighting Army, say of 70,000, besides the garrisons; and great things,
+it is expected, will be done; Tournay, in spite of strong works and
+Dutch garrison of 9,000, to be taken in the first place.
+
+"Of the Siege, which was difficult and ardent, we will remember nothing,
+except the mischance that befell a certain 'Marquis de Talleyrand'
+and his men, in the trenches, one night. Night of the 8th-9th May, by
+carelessness of somebody, a spark got into the Marquis's powder, two
+powder-barrels that there were; and, with horrible crash, sent eighty
+men, Marquis Talleyrand and Engineer Du Mazis among them, aloft into the
+other world; raining down their limbs into the covered way, where
+the Dutch were very inhuman to them, and provoked us to retaliate.
+[Espagnac, ii. 27.] Du Mazis I do not know; but Marquis de Talleyrand
+turns out, on study of the French Peerages, to be Uncle of a lame little
+Boy, who became Right Reverend Tallyrand under singular conditions, and
+has made the name very current in after-times!--
+
+"Hearing of this Siege, the Duke of Cumberland hastened over from
+England, with intent to raise the same. Mustered his 'Allied Army' (once
+called 'Pragmatic'),--self at the head of it; old Count Konigseck,
+who was NOT burnt at Chotusitz, commanding the small Austrian quota
+[Austrians mainly are gone laggarding with D'Ahremberg up the Rhine];
+and a Prince of Waldeck the Dutch,--on the plain of Anderlecht near
+Brussels, May 4th; [Anonymous, _Life of Cumberland,_ p. 180; Espagnac,
+ii. 26.] and found all things tolerably complete. Upon which,
+straightway, his Royal Highness, 60,000 strong let us say, set forth; by
+slowish marches, and a route somewhat leftward of the great Tournay Road
+[no place on it, except perhaps STEENKERKE, ever heard of by an English
+reader]; and on Sunday, 9th May, [Espagnac, ii. 27.] precisely on the
+morrow after poor Talleyrand had gone aloft, reached certain final
+Villages: Vezon, Maubray, where he encamps, Briffoeil to rear; Camp
+looking towards Tournay and the setting sun,--with Fontenoy short
+way ahead, and Antoine to left of it, and Barry with its Woods to
+right:--small peaceable Villages, which become famous in the Newspapers
+shortly after. [Patch of Map at p. 440.] Royal Highness, resting here
+at Vezon, is but some six or seven miles from Tournay; in low undulating
+Country, woody here and there, not without threads of running water,
+and with frequent Villages and their adjuncts: the part of it now
+interesting to us lies all between the Brussels-Tournay Road and
+the Scheld River,--all in immediate front of his Royal Highness,--to
+southeastward from beleaguered Tournay, where said Road and River
+intersect. How shall he make some impression on the Siege of Tournay?
+That is now the question; and his Royal Highness struggles to manoeuvre
+accordingly.
+
+"Marechal de Saxe, whose habit is much that of vigilance, forethought,
+sagacious precaution, singular in so dissolute a man, has neglected
+nothing on this occasion. He knows every foot of the ground, having
+sieged here, in his boyhood, once before. Leaving the siege-trenches at
+Tournay, under charge of a ten or fifteen thousand, he has taken camp
+here; still with superior force (56,000 as they count, Royal Highness
+being only 50,000 ranked), barring Royal Highness's way. Tournay, or
+at least the Marechal's trenches there, are on the right bank of the
+Scheld; which flows from southeast, securing all on that hand. The broad
+Brussels Highway comes in to him from the east;--north of that he has
+nothing to fear, the ground being cut with bogs; no getting through
+upon him, that way, to Tournay and what he calls the 'Under Scheld.' The
+'Upper Scheld' too, avail them nothing. There is only that triangle
+to the southeast, between Road and River, where the Enemy is now
+manoeuvring in front of him, from which damage can well come; and he has
+done his best to be secure there. Four villages or hamlets, close to
+the Scheld and onwards to the Great Road,--Antoine, Fontenoy, Barry,
+Ramecroix, with their lanes and boscages,--make a kind of circular base
+to his triangle; base of some six or eight miles; with hollows in it,
+brooks, and northward a considerable Wood [BOIS DE BARRY, enveloping
+Barry and Ramecroix, which do not prove of much interest to us, though
+the BOIS does of a good deal]. In and before each of those villages
+are posts and defences; in Antoine and Fontenoy elaborate redoubts,
+batteries, redans connecting: in the Wood (BOIS DE BARRY), an abattis,
+or wall of felled trees, as well as cannon; and at the point of the
+Wood, well within double range of Fontenoy, is a Redoubt, called of Eu
+(REDOUTE D'EU, from the regiment occupying it), which will much concern
+his Royal Highness and us. Saxe has a hundred pieces of cannon [say the
+English, which is correct], consummately disposed along this space; no
+ingress possible anywhere, except through the cannon's throat; torrents
+of fire and cross-fire playing on you. He is armed to the teeth, as they
+say; and has his 56,000 arranged according to the best rules of tactics,
+behind this murderous line of works. If his Royal Highness think of
+breaking in, he may count on a very warm reception indeed.
+
+"Saxe is only afraid his Royal Highness will not. Outside of these
+lines, with a 50,000 dashing fiercely round us, under any kind of
+leading; pouncing on our convoys; harassing and sieging US,--our siege
+of Toumay were a sad outlook. And this is old Austrian Konigseck's
+opinion, too; though, they say, Waldeck and the Dutch (impetuous in
+theory at least) opined otherwise, and strengthened Royal Highness's
+view. Two young men against one old: 'Be it so, then!' His Royal
+Highness, resolute for getting in, manoeuvres and investigates,
+all Monday 10th; his cannon is not to arrive completely till night;
+otherwise he would be for breaking in at once: a fearless young man,
+fearless as ever his poor Father was; certainly a man SANS PEUY, this
+one too; whether of much AVIS, we shall see anon.
+
+"Tuesday morning early, 11th May, 1745, cannon being up, and
+dispositions made, his Royal Highness sallies out; sees his men taking
+their ground: Dutch and Austrians to the left, chiefly opposite Antoine;
+English, with some Hanoverians, in the centre and to the right;
+infantry in front, facing Fontenoy, cavalry to rear flanking the Wood
+of Barry,--Konigseck, Ligonier and others able, assisting to plant
+them advantageously; cannon going, on both sides, the while; radiant
+enthusiasm, SANS PEUR ET SANS AVIS, looking from his Royal Highness's
+face. He has been on horseback since two in the morning; cannon started
+thundering between five and six,--has killed chivalrous Grammont over
+yonder (the Grammont of Dettingen), almost at the first volley. And
+now about the time when ploughers breakfast (eight A.M., no ploughing
+hereabouts to-day!), begins the attack, simultaneously or in swift
+succession, on the various batteries which it will be necessary to
+attack and storm.
+
+"The attacks took place; but none of them succeeded. Dutch and
+Austrians, on the extreme left, were to have stormed Antoine by the edge
+of the River; that was their main task; right skirt of them to help US
+meanwhile with Fontenoy. And they advanced, accordingly; but found
+the shot from Antoine too fierce: especially when a subsidiary battery
+opened from across the River, and took them in flank, the Dutch and
+Austrians felt astonished; and hastily drew aside, under some sheltering
+mound or earthwork they had found for themselves, or prudently thrown
+up the night before. There, under their earthwork, stood the Dutch
+and Austrians; patiently expecting a fitter time,--which indeed never
+occurred; for always, the instant they drew out, the batteries from
+Antoine, and from across the River, instantly opened upon them, and they
+had to draw in again. So that they stood there, in a manner, all day;
+and so to speak did nothing but patiently expect when it should be time
+to run. For which they were loudly censured, and deservedly. Antoine is
+and remains a total failure on the part of the Dutch and Austrians.
+
+"Royal Highness in person, with his English, was to attack
+Fontenoy;--and is doing so, by battery and storm, at various points;
+with emphasis, though without result. As preliminary, at an early stage
+he had sent forward on the right, by the Wood of Barry, a Brigadier
+Ingoldsby 'with Semple's Highlanders' and other force, to silence 'that
+redoubt yonder at the point of the Wood,'--redoubt, fort, or whatever it
+be (famous REDOUTE D'EU, as it turned out!),--which guards Fontenoy to
+north, and will take us in flank, nay in rear, as we storm the cannon of
+the Village. Ingoldsby, speed imperative on him, pushed into the Wood;
+found French light-troops ('God knows how many of them!') prowling
+about there; found the Redoubt a terribly strong thing, with ditch,
+drawbridge, what not; spent thirty or forty of his Highlanders, in
+some frantic attempt on it by rule of thumb;--and found 'He would need
+artillery' and other things. In short, Ingoldsby, hasten what he might,
+could not perfect the preparations to his mind, had to wait for this and
+for that; and did not storm the Redoubt d'Eu at all; but hung fire, in
+an unaccountable manner. For which he had to answer (to Court-Martial,
+still more to the Newspapers) afterwards; and prove that it was
+misfortune merely, or misfortune and stupidity combined. Too evident,
+the REDOUTE D'EU was not taken, then or thenceforth; which might have
+proved the saving of the whole affair, could Ingoldsby have managed it.
+Royal Highness attacked Fontenoy, and re-attacked, furiously, thrice
+over; and had to desist, and find Fontenoy impossible on those terms.
+
+"Here is a piece of work. Repulsed at all those points; and on the left
+and on the right, no spirit visible but what deserves repulse! His Royal
+Highness blazes into resplendent PLATT-DEUTSCH rage, what we may call
+spiritual white-heat, a man SANS PEUR at any rate, and pretty much SANS
+AVIS; decides that he must and will be through those lines, if it please
+God; that he will not be repulsed at his part of the attack, not he for
+one; but will plunge through, by what gap there is [900 yards Voltaire
+measures it (_OEuvres,_ xxviii. 150 (SIECLE DE LOUIS QUINZE, c. xv.
+"BATAILLE DE FONTENOI,"--elaborately exact on all such points).)]
+between Fontenoy and that Redoubt with its laggard Ingoldsby; and see
+what the French interior is like! He rallies rapidly, rearranges;
+forms himself in thin column or columns [three of them, I think,--which
+gradually got crushed into one, as they advanced, under cannon-shot on
+both hands),--wheeling his left round, to be rear, his right to be head
+of said column or columns. In column, the cannon-shot from Fontenoy
+on the left, and Redoubt d'Eu on our right, will tell less on us; and
+between these two death-dealing localities, by the hollowest, least
+shelterless way discoverable, we mean to penetrate: (Forward, my men,
+steady and swift, till we are through the shot-range, and find men to
+grapple with, instead of case-shot and projectile iron!' Marechal de
+Saxe owned afterwards, 'He should have put an additional redoubt in that
+place, but he did not think any Army would try such a thing' (cannon
+batteries playing on each hand at 400 yards distance);--nor has any Army
+since or before!
+
+"These columns advance, however; through bushy hollows, water-courses,
+through what defiles or hollowest grounds there are; endure the
+cannon-shot, while they must; trailing their own heavy guns by hand, and
+occasionally blasting out of them where the ground favors;--and do, with
+indignant patience, wind themselves through, pretty much beyond direct
+shot-range of either d'Eu or Fontenoy. And have actually got into the
+interior mystery of the French Line of Battle,--which is not a little
+astonished to see them there! It is over a kind of blunt ridge, or
+rising ground, that they are coming: on the crown of this rising ground,
+the French regiment fronting it (GARDES FRANCAISES as it chanced to
+be) notices, with surprise, field-cannon pointed the wrong way; actual
+British artillery unaccountably showing itself there. Regiment of GARDES
+rushes up to seize said field-pieces: but, on the summit, perceives with
+amazement that it cannot; that a heavy volley of musketry blazes into
+it (killing sixty men); that it will have to rush back again, and report
+progress: Huge British force, of unknown extent, is readjusting itself
+into column there, and will be upon us on the instant. Here is news!
+
+"News true enough. The head of the English column comes to sight, over
+the rising ground, close by: their officers doff their hats, politely
+saluting ours, who return the civility: was ever such politeness seen
+before? It is a fact; and among the memorablest of this Battle. Nay
+a certain English Officer of mark--Lord Charles Hay the name of him,
+valued surely in the annals of the Hay and Tweeddale House--steps
+forward from the ranks, as if wishing something. Towards whom [says the
+accurate Espagnac] Marquis d'Auteroche, grenadier-lieutenant, with air
+of polite interrogation, not knowing what he meant, made a step or two:
+'Monsieur,' said Lord Charles (LORD CHARLES-HAY), 'bid your people fire
+(FAITES TIRER VOS GENS)!' 'NON, MONSIEUR, NOUS NE TIRONS JAMAIS LES
+PREMIERS (We never fire first).' [Espagnac, ii. 60 (of the ORIGINAL,
+Toulouse, 1789); ii. 48 of the German Translation (Leipzig, 1774), our
+usual reference. Voltaire, endlessly informed upon details this time,
+is equally express: "MILORD CHARLES HAY, CAPITAINE AUX GARDES ANGLAISES,
+CRIA: 'MESSIEURS DES GARDES FRANCAISES, TIREZ!' To which Count
+d'Auteroche with a loud voice answered" &c. (_OEuvres,_ vol. xxviii.
+p. 155.) See also _Souvenirs du Marquis de Valfons_ (edited by a
+Grand-Nephew, Paris, 1860), p. 151;--a poor, considerably noisy and
+unclean little Book; which proves unexpectedly worth looking at, in
+regard to some of those poor Battles and personages and occurrences: the
+Bohemian Belleisle-Broglio part, to my regret, if to no other person's,
+has been omitted, as extinct, or undecipherable by the Grand-Nephew.]
+After YOU, Sirs! Is not this a bit of modern chivalry? A supreme
+politeness in that sniffing pococurante kind; probably the highest point
+(or lowest) it ever went to. Which I have often thought of."
+
+It is almost pity to disturb an elegant Historical Passage of this kind,
+circulating round the world, in some glory, for a century past: but
+there has a small irrefragable Document come to me, which modifies it a
+good deal, and reduces matters to the business form. Lord Charles
+Hay, "Lieutenant-Colonel," practical Head, "of the First Regiment
+of Foot-guards," wrote, about three weeks after (or dictated in sad
+spelling, not himself able to write for wounds), a Letter to his
+Brother, of which here is an Excerpt at first hand, with only the
+spelling altered:... "It was our Regiment that attacked the French
+Guards: and when we came within twenty or thirty paces of them, I
+advanced before our Regiment; drank to them [to the French, from the
+pocket-pistol one carries on such occasions], and told them that we were
+the English Guards, and hoped that they would stand till we came quite
+up to them, and not swim the Scheld as they did the Mayn at Dettingen
+[shameful THIRD-BRIDGE, not of wood, though carpeted with blue cloth
+there]! Upon which I immediately turned about to our own Regiment;
+speeched them, and made them huzza,"--I hope with a will. "An Officer
+[d'Auteroche] came out of the ranks, and tried to make his men huzza;
+however, there were not above three or four in their Brigade that did."
+["Ath, May ye 20th, o.s." (to John, Fourth Marquis of Tweeddale, last
+"Secretary of State for Scotland," and a man of figure in his day):
+Letter is at Yester House, East Lothian; Excerpt PENES ME.]...
+
+Very poor counter-huzza. And not the least whisper of that sublime
+"After you, Sirs!" but rather, in confused form, of quite the reverse;
+Hay having been himself fired into ("fire had begun on my left;" Hay
+totally ignorant on which side first),--fired into, rather feebly, and
+wounded by those D'Auteroche people, while he was still advancing with
+shouldered arms;--upon which, and not till which, he did give it them:
+in liberal dose; and quite blew them off the ground, for that day.
+From all which, one has to infer, That the mutual salutation by hat was
+probably a fact; that, for certain, there was some slight preliminary
+talk and gesticulation, but in the Homeric style, by no means in the
+Espagnac-French,--not chivalrous epigram at all, mere rough banter, and
+what is called "chaffing;"--and in short, that the French Mess-rooms
+(with their eloquent talent that way) had rounded off the thing into the
+current epigrammatic redaction; the authentic business-form of it being
+ruggedly what is now given. Let our Manuscript proceed.
+
+"D'Auteroche declining the first fire,"--or accepting it, if ever
+offered, nobody can say,--"the three Guards Regiments, Lord Charles's on
+the right, give it him hot and heavy, 'tremendous rolling fire;' so that
+D'Auteroche, responding more or less, cannot stand it; but has at once
+to rustle into discontinuity, he and his, and roll rapidly out of the
+way. And the British Column advances, steadily, terribly, hurling back
+all opposition from it; deeper and deeper into the interior mysteries
+of the French Host; blasting its way with gunpowder;--in a magnificent
+manner. A compact Column, slowly advancing,--apparently of some 16,000
+foot. Pauses, readjusts itself a little, when not meddled with; when
+meddled with, has cannon, has rolling fire,--delivers from it, in fact,
+on both hands such a torrent of deadly continuous fire as was rarely
+seen before or since. 'FEU INFERNAL,' the French call it. The French
+make vehement resistance. Battalions, squadrons, regiment after
+regiment, charge madly on this terrible Column; but rush only on
+destruction thereby. Regiment This storms in from the right, regiment
+That from the left; have their colonels shot, 'lose the half of their
+people;' and hastily draw back again, in a wrecked condition. The
+cavalry-horses cannot stand such smoke and blazing; nor indeed, I think,
+can the cavaliers. REGIMENT DU ROI rushing on, full gallop, to charge
+this Column, got one volley from it [says Espagnac] which brought to the
+ground 460 men. Natural enough that horses take the bit between
+their teeth; likewise that men take it, and career very madly in such
+circumstances!
+
+MAP Chap. VIII, Book 15, PAGE 440 GOES ABOUT HERE--------
+
+"The terrible Column with slow inflexibility advances; cannon (now in
+reversed position) from that Redoubt d'Eu ('Shame on you, Ingoldsby!'),
+and irregular musketry from Fontenoy side, playing upon it; defeated
+regiments making barriers of their dead men and firing there; Column
+always closing its gapped ranks, and girdled with insupportable fire.
+It ought to have taken Fontenoy and Redoubt d'Eu, say military men; it
+ought to have done several things! It has now cut the French fairly in
+two;--and Saxe, who is earnestly surveying it a hundred paces ahead,
+sends word, conjuring the King to retire instantly,--across the Scheld,
+by Calonne Bridge and the strong rear-guard there,--who, however, will
+not. King and Dauphin, on horseback both, have stood 'at the Justice
+(GALLOWS, in fact) of our Lady of the Woods,' not stirring much,
+occasionally shifting to a windmill which is still higher,--ye Heavens,
+with what intrepidity, all day!--'a good many country-folk in trees
+close behind them.' Country-folk, I suppose, have by this time seen
+enough, and are copiously making off: but the King will not, though
+things do look dubious.
+
+"In fact, the Battle hangs now upon a hair; the Battle is as good as
+lost, thinks Marechal de Saxe. His battle-lines torn in two in that
+manner, hovering in ragged clouds over the field, what hope is there in
+the Battle? Fontenoy is firing blank, this some time; its cannon-balls
+done. Officers, in Antoine, are about withdrawing the artillery,--then
+again (on new order) replacing it awhile. All are looking towards the
+Scheld Bridge; earnestly entreating his Majesty to withdraw. Had the
+Dutch, at this point of time, broken heartily in, as Waldeck was urging
+them to do, upon the redoubts of Antoine; or had his Royal Highness the
+Duke, for his own behoof, possessed due cavalry or artillery to act upon
+these ragged clouds, which hang broken there, very fit for being swept,
+were there an artillery-and-horse besom to do it,--in either of these
+cases the Battle was the Duke's. And a right fiery victory it would
+have been; to make his name famous; and confirm the English in their mad
+method of fighting, like Baresarks or Janizaries rather than strategic
+human creatures. [See, in Busching's _Magazin,_ xvi. 169 ("Your
+illustrious 'Column,' at Fontenoy? It was fortuitous, I say; done like
+janizaries;" and so forth), a Criticism worth reading by soldiers.]
+
+"But neither of these contingencies had befallen. The Dutch-Austrian
+wing did evince some wish to get possession of Antoine; and drew out a
+little; but the guns also awoke upon them; whereupon the Dutch-Austrians
+drew in again, thinking the time not come. As for the Duke, he had taken
+with him of cannon a good few; but of horse none at all (impossible for
+horse, unless Fontenoy and the Redoubt d'Eu were ours!)--and his horse
+have been hanging about, in the Wood of Barry all this while, uncertain
+what to do; their old Commander being killed withal, and their new a
+dubitative person, and no orders left. The Duke had left no orders;
+having indeed broken in here, in what we called a spiritual white-heat,
+without asking himself much what he would do when in: 'Beat the French,
+knock them to powder if I can!'--Meanwhile the French clouds are
+reassembling a little: Royal Highness too is readjusting himself, now
+got '300 yards ahead of Fontenoy,'--pauses there about half an hour, not
+seeing his way farther.
+
+"During which pause, Duc de Richelieu, famous blackguard man, gallops
+up to the Marechal, gallops rapidly from Marechal to King; suggesting,
+'were cannon brought AHEAD of this close deep Column, might not they
+shear it into beautiful destruction; and then a general charge be made?'
+So counselled Richelieu: it is said, the Jacobite Irishman, Count Lally
+of the Irish Brigade, was prime author of this notion,--a man of tragic
+notoriety in time coming. ["Thomas Arthur Lally Comte de Tollendal,"
+patronymically "O'MULALLY of TULLINDALLY" (a place somewhere in
+Connaught, undiscoverable where, not material where): see our
+dropsical friend (in one of his wheeziest states), _King James's Irish
+Army-List_ (Dublin, 1855), pp. 594-600.] Whoever was author of it,
+Marechal de Saxe adopts it eagerly, King Louis eagerly: swift it becomes
+a fact. Universal rally, universal simultaneous charge on both flanks
+of the terrible Column: this it might resist, as it has done these two
+hours past; but cannon ahead, shearing gaps through it from end to end,
+this is what no column can resist;--and only perhaps one of Friedrich's
+columns (if even that) with Friedrich's eye upon it, could make its
+half-right-about (QUART DE CONVERSION), turn its side to it, and
+manoeuvre out of it, in such circumstances. The wrathful English
+column, slit into ribbons, can do nothing at manoeuvring; blazes and
+rages,--more and more clearly in vain; collapses by degrees, rolls into
+ribbon-coils, and winds itself out of the field. Not much chased,--its
+cavalry now seeing a job, and issuing from the Wood of Barry to cover
+the retreat. Not much chased;--yet with a loss, they say, in all, of
+7,000 killed and wounded, and about 2,000 prisoners; French loss being
+under 5,000.
+
+"The Dutch and Austrians had found that the fit time was now come, or
+taken time by the forelock,--their part of the loss, they said, was a
+thousand and odd hundreds. The Battle ended about two o'clock of the
+day; had begun about eight. Tuesday, 11th May, 1745: one of the hottest
+half-day's works I have known. A thing much to be meditated by the
+English mind.--King Louis stept down from the Gallows-Hill of Our Lady;
+and KISSED Marechal de Saxe. Saxe was nearly dead of dropsy; could not
+sit on horseback, except for minutes; was carried about in a wicker bed;
+has had a lead bullet in his mouth, all day, to mitigate the intolerable
+thirst. Tournay was soon taken; the Dutch garrison, though strong, and
+in a strong place, making no due debate.
+
+"Royal Highness retired upon Ath and Brussels; hovered about, nothing
+daunted, he or his: 'Dastard fellows, they would not come out into the
+open ground, and try us fairly!' snort indignantly the Gazetteers and
+enlightened Public. [Old Newspapers.] Nothing daunted;--but, as it
+were, did not do anything farther, this Campaign; except lose Gand, by
+negligence VERSUS vigilance, and eat his victuals,--till called home
+by the Rebellion Business, in an unexpected manner! Fontenoy was the
+nearest approach he ever made to getting victory in a battle; but a
+miss too, as they all were. He was nothing like so rash, on subsequent
+occasions; but had no better luck; and was beaten in all his
+battles--except the immortal Victory of Culloden alone. Which latter
+indeed, was it not itself (in the Gazetteer mind) a kind of apotheosis,
+or lifting of a man to the immortal gods,--by endless tar-barrels and
+beer, for the time being?
+
+"Old Marechal de Noailles was in this Battle; busy about the redans, and
+proud to see his Saxe do well. Chivalrous Grammont, too, as we saw,
+was there,---killed at the first discharge. Prince de Soubise too (not
+killed); a certain Lord George Sackville (hurt slightly,--perhaps had
+BETTER have been killed!)--and others known to us, or that will
+be known. Army-Surgeon La Mettrie, of busy brain, expert with his
+tourniquets and scalpels, but of wildly blusterous heterodox tongue and
+ways, is thrice-busy in Hospital this night,--'English and French all
+one to you, nay, if anything, the English better!' those are the Royal
+orders:--La Mettrie will turn up, in new capacity, still blusterous, at
+Berlin, by and by.
+
+"The French made immense explosions of rejoicing over this Victory of
+Fontenoy; Voltaire (now a man well at Court) celebrating it in prose and
+verse, to an amazing degree (21,000 copies sold in one day); the whole
+Nation blazing out over it into illuminations, arcs of triumph and
+universal three-times-three:--in short, I think, nearly the heartiest
+National Huzza, loud, deep, long-drawn, that the Nation ever gave in
+like case. Now rather curious to consider, at this distance of time.
+Miraculous Anecdotes, true and not true, are many. Not to mention again
+that surprising offer of the first fire to us, what shall we say of the
+'two camp-sutlers whom I noticed,' English females of the lowest degree;
+'one of whom was busy slitting the gold-lace from a dead Officer, when a
+cannon-ball came whistling, and shore her head away. Upon which, without
+sound uttered, her neighbor snatched the scissors, and deliberately
+proceeded.' [De Hordt, _Memoires,_ i. 108. A FRENCH OFFICER'S ACCOUNT
+(translated in _Gentleman's Magazine,_ 1745; where, pp. 246, 250, 291,
+313, &c., are many confused details and speculations on this subject).]
+A deliberate gloomy people;--unconquerable except by French prowess,
+glory to that same!"
+
+Britannic Majesty is not successful this season; Highland Rebellions
+rising on him, and much going awry. He is founding his National Debt,
+poor Majesty; nothing else to speak of. His poor Army, fighting never so
+well in Foreign quarrels,--and generally itself standing the brunt, with
+the co-partners looking on till it is time to run (as at Roucoux again
+next season, and at Lauffeld next),--can win nothing but hard knocks and
+losses. And is defined by mankind,--in phraseology which we have heard
+again since then!--as having "the heart of a Lion and the head of an
+Ass." [Old Pamphlets, SOEPIUS.] Portentous to contemplate!--
+
+Cape Breton was besieged this Summer, in a creditable manner; and taken.
+The one real stroke done upon France this Year, or indeed (except at
+sea) throughout the War. "Ruin to their Fisheries, and a clear loss of
+1,400,000 pounds a year." Compared with which all these fine "Victories
+in Flanders" are a bottle of moonshine. This was actually a kind of
+stroke;--and this, one finds, was accomplished, under presidency of a
+small squadron of King's ships, by ('New-England Volunteers," on funds
+raised by subscription, in the way of joint-stock. A shining Colonial
+feat; said to be very perfectly done, both scrip part of it, and
+fighting part;) [Adelung, v. 32-35 ("27th June, 1745, after a siege of
+forty-nine days"): see "Gibson, _Journal of the Siege;"_ "Mr. Prince
+(of the South Church, Boston), THANKSGIVING SERMON (price fourpence);"
+&c. &c.: in the Old Newspapers, 1745, 1748, multifarious Notices about
+it, and then about the "repayment" of those excellent "joint-stock"
+people.]--and might have yielded, what incalculable dividends in
+the Fishery way! But had to be given up again, in exchange for the
+Netherlands, when Peace came. Alas, your Majesty! Would it be
+quite impossible, then, to go direct upon your own sole errand,
+the JENKINS'S-EAR one, instead of stumbling about among the Foreign
+chimney-pots, far and wide, under nightmares, in this terrible
+manner?--Let us to Silesia again.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX.--THE AUSTRIAN-SAXON ARMY INVADES SILESIA, ACROSS THE
+MOUNTAINS.
+
+Valori, who is to be of Friedrich's Campaign this Year, came posting off
+directly in rear of the glorious news of Fontenoy; found Friedrich at
+Camenz, rather in spirits than otherwise; and lodged pleasantly with
+Abbot Tobias and him, till the Campaign should begin. Two things
+surprise Valori: first, the great strength, impregnable as it were,
+to which Neisse has been brought since he saw it last,--superlative
+condition of that Fortress, and of the Army itself, as it gathers
+daily more and more about Frankenstein here:--and then secondly, and
+contrariwise, the strangely neglected posture of mountainous or Upper
+Silesia, given up to Pandours. Quite submerged, in a manner: Margraf
+Karl lies quiet among them at Jagerndorf, "eating his magazine;" General
+Hautcharmoi (Winterfeld's late chief in that Wurben affair), with his
+small Detachment, still hovers about in those Ratibor parts, "with
+the Strong Towns to fall-back upon," or has in effect fallen back
+accordingly; and nothing done to coerce the Pandours at all. While
+Prince Karl and Weissenfels are daily coming on, in force 100,000, their
+intention certain; force, say, about 100,000 regular! Very singular to
+Valori.
+
+"Sire, will not you dispute the Passes, then?" asks Valori, amazed: "Not
+defend your Mountain rampart, then?" "MON CHER; the Mountain rampart is
+three or four hundred miles long; there are twelve or twenty practicable
+roads through it. One is kept in darkness, too; endless Pandour doggery
+shutting out your daylight:--ill defending such a rampart," answers
+Friedrich. "But how, then," persists Valori; "but--?" "One day the King
+answered me," says Valori, "'MON AMI, if you want to get the mouse,
+don't shut, the trap; leave the trap open (ON LAISSE LA SOURICIERE
+OUVERTE)!'" Which was a beam of light to the inquiring thought of
+Valori, a military man of some intelligence. [See VALORI, i. 222, 224,
+228.]
+
+That, in fact, is Friedrich's purpose privately formed. He means that
+the Austrians shall consider him cowed into nothing, as he understands
+they already do; that they shall enter Silesia in the notion of chasing
+him; and shall, if need be, have the pleasure of chasing him,--till
+perhaps a right moment arrive. For he is full of silent finesse, this
+young King; soon sees into his man, and can lead him strange dances on
+occasion. In no man is there a plentifuler vein of cunning, nor of a
+finer kind. Lynx-eyed perspicacity, inexhaustible contrivance, prompt
+ingenuity,--a man very dangerous to play with at games of skill. And
+it is cunning regulated always by a noble sense of honor, too;
+instinctively abhorrent of attorneyism and the swindler element: a
+cunning, sharp as the vulpine, yet always strictly human, which is
+rather beautiful to see. This is one of Friedrich's marked endowments.
+Intellect sun-clear, wholly practical (need not be specially deep),
+and entirely loyal to the fact before it; this--if you add rapidity
+and energy, prompt weight of stroke, such as was seldom met with--will
+render a man very dangerous to his adversary in the game of war.--Here
+is the last of our Pandour Adventures for the present:--
+
+"From May 12th, Friedrich had been gathering closer and closer about
+Frankenstein; by the end of the month (28th, as it proved) he intends
+that all Detachments shall be home, and the Army take Camp there. The
+most are home; Margraf Karl, at Jagerndorf, has not yet done eating his
+magazine; but he too must come home. Summon the Margraf home:--it is not
+doubted he will cut himself through, he and his 12,000; but such is
+the swarm of Pandours hovering between him and us, no estafette, or
+cleverest letter-bearer, can hope to get across to him. Ziethen with 500
+Hussars, he must take the Letter; there is no other way. Ziethen mounts;
+fares swiftly forth, towards Neustadt, with his Letter; lodges in
+woods; dodges the thick-crowding Tolpatcheries (passes himself off for a
+Tolpatchery, say some, and captures Hungarian Staff-Officers who come to
+give him orders [Frau van Blumenthal, _Life of De Ziethen,_ pp. 171-181
+(extremely romantic; now given up as mythical, for most part): see
+Orlich (ii. 150); but also Ranke (iii. 245), Preuss, &c.]); is at
+length found out, and furiously set upon, 'Ziethen, Hah!'--but gets
+to Jagerndorf, Margraf Karl coming out to the rescue, and delivers his
+Letter. 'Home, then, all of us to-morrow!' And so, Saturday, 22d May,
+before we get to Neustadt on the way home, there is an authentic passage
+of arms, done very brilliantly by Margraf Karl against Pandours and
+others.
+
+"To right of us, to left, barring our road, the enemy, 20,000 of
+them, stand ranked on heights, in chosen positions; cannon-batteries,
+grenadiers, dragoons of Gotha and infinite Pandours: military jungle
+bristling far and wide. And you must push it heartily, and likewise
+cut the tap-root of it (seize its big guns), or it will not roll away.
+Margraf Karl shoots forth his steady infantry ('Silent till you see
+the whites of their eyes!'),--his cavalry with new manoeuvres; whose
+behavior is worthy of Ziethen himself:--in brief, the jungle is struck
+as by a whirlwind, the tap-root of it cut, and rolls simultaneously out
+of range, leaving only the Regiment of Gotha, Regiment of Ogilvy and
+some Regulars, who also get torn to shreds, and utterly ruined. Seeing
+which, the Pandour jungle plunges wholly into the woods, uttering
+horrible cries (EN POUSSANT DES CRIS TERRIBLES), says Friedrich.
+[ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 106. More specially BERICHTE VON DER AM
+22 MAI, 1745 BEY NEUSTADT IN OBER-SCHLESIEN VORGEFALLENER ACTION
+(Seyfarth, _Beylage,_ i. 159-166).] Our new cavalry-manoeuvres deserve
+praise. Margraf Karl had the honor to gain his Cousin's approbation this
+day; and to prove himself, says the Cousin, (worthy of the
+grandfather he came from,'--my own great-grandfather; Great Elector,
+Friedrich-Wilhelm; whose style of motion at Fehrbellin, or on the ice
+of the Frische Haf (soldiers all in sledges, tearing along to be at the
+Swedes), was probably somewhat of this kind."...
+
+"Some days ago, Winterfeld had been pushed out to Landshut, with
+Detachment of 2,000, to judge a little for himself which way the
+Austrians were coming, and to scare off certain Uhlans (the SAXON
+species of Tolpatchery), who were threatening to be mischievous
+thereabouts. The Uhlans, at sound of Winterfeld, jingled away at once:
+but, in a day or two, there came upon him, on the sudden, Pandour
+outburst in quite other force;--and in the very hours while Ziethen was
+struggling into Jagerndorf, and still more emphatically next day, while
+Margraf Karl was handling his Pandours,--Colonel Winterfeld, a hundred
+miles to westward lapped among the Mountains, chanced to be dealing
+again with the same article. Very busy with it, from 4 o'clock this
+morning; likely to give a good account of the job. Steadily defending
+Landshut and himself, against the grenadier battalions, cannon and
+furious overplus of Pandours (8,000 or 9,000, it is said, six to one
+or so in the article of cavalry), which General Nadasti, a scientific
+leader of men or Pandours, skilfully and furiously hurls upon Landshut
+and him, in an unexpected manner. Colonel Winterfeld had need of all his
+heart and energy, in the intricate ground; against the furious overplus
+well manoeuvred: but in him too there are manoeuvres; if he fall
+back here, it is to rush on double strong there; hour after hour he
+inexpugnably defends himself,--till General Stille, Friedrich's old
+Tutor, our worthy writing friend, whom we occasionally quote, comes up
+with help; and Nadasti is at once brushed home again, with sore smart of
+failure, and 'the loss of 600 killed,' among other items. [_Bericht von
+der am 21 Mai, 1745 bey Landshut rorgefallener Action, in Feldzuge,_ i.
+302-305 (or in Seyfarth, _Beylage,_ i. 155-158); _OEuvres de
+Frederic,_ iii. 105; Stille, pp. 120-124 (who misdates, "23d May" for
+22d).] Colonel Winterfeld was made Major-General next day, for this
+action. Colonel Winterfeld is cutting out a high course for himself,
+by his conduct in these employments; solidity, brilliant effectuality,
+shining through all he does; his valor and value, his rapid just
+insight, fiery energy and nobleness of mind more and more disclosing
+themselves,--to one who is a judge of men, and greatly needs for his own
+use the first-rate quality in that article."
+
+Friedrich has left the mouse-trap open;--and latterly has been baiting
+it with a pleasant spicing of toasted cheese. One of his Spies,
+reporting from Prince Karl's quarters, Friedrich has at this time
+discovered to be a Double-Spy, reporting thither as well. Double-Spy,
+there is an ugly fact;--perhaps not quite convenient to abolish it
+by hemp and gibbet; perhaps it could be turned to use, as most facts
+can? "Very good, my expert Herr von Schonfeld [that was the
+knave's name]; and now of all things, whenever the Prince does get
+across,--instant word to us of that! Nothing so important to us. If
+he should get BETWEEN us and Breslau, for example, what would the
+consequence be!" To this purport Friedrich instructs his Double-Spy;
+sends him off, unhanged, to Prince Karl's Camp, to blab this fresh bit
+of knowledge. "We likewise," says Friedrich, "ordered some repairs on
+the roads leading to Breslau;"--last turn of the hand to our bit of
+toasted fragrancy. And Prince Karl is actually striding forward, at
+an eager pace:--and Nadasti VERSUS Winterfeld, the other day, could
+Winterfeld have guessed it, was the actual vanguard of the march; and
+will be up again straightway! Whereupon Winterfeld too is called home;
+and all eyes are bent on the Landshut side.
+
+Prince Karl, under these fine omens, had been urgent on the Saxons to be
+swift; Saxons under Weissenfels did at last "get their cannon up,"
+and we hear of them for certain, in junction with the Austrians, at
+Schatzlar, on the Bohemian side of the Giant-Mountains; climbing with
+diligence those wizard solitudes and highland wastes. In a word, they
+roll across into Silesia, to Landshut (29th May); nothing doubting but
+Friedrich has cowered into what retreats he has, as good as desperate of
+Silesia, and will probably be first heard of in Breslau, when they get
+thither with their sieging guns. No cautious sagacious old Feldmarschall
+Traun is in that Host at present; nothing but a Prince Karl, and a
+poor Duke of Weissenfels; who are too certain of several things;--very
+capable of certainty, and also of doubt, the wrong way of the facts.
+Their force is, by strict count, 75,000; and they march from Landshut,
+detained a little by provender concerns, on the last day of May.
+[Orlich, ii. 146; Ranke, iii. 247; Stenzel, iv. 245.]
+
+May 28th, Friedrich had encamped at Frankenstein; May 30th, he sets
+forth northwestward, to be nearer the new scene; encamps at Reichenbach,
+that night; pushes forward again, next day, for Schweidnitz, for
+Striegau (in all, a shift northwest of some forty miles);--and from June
+1st, lies stretched out between Schweidnitz and Striegau, nine miles
+long; well hidden in the hollows of the little Rivers thereabouts
+(Schweidnitz Water, Striegau Water), with their little knolls and
+hills; watching Prince Karl's probable place of egress from the Mountain
+Country opposite. His main Camp is from Schweidnitz to Jauernik, some
+five miles long; but he has his vanguard up as far as Striegau, Dumoulin
+and Winterfeld as vanguard, in good strength, a little way behind or
+westward of that Town and Stream; Nassau and his Division are screened
+in the Wood called Nonnenbusch (NUN'S BUSH), and there are outposts
+sprinkled all about, and vedettes watching from the hill-tops, from
+the Stanowitz Foxhill; the Zedlitz "Cowhill," "Winchill:" an Army not
+courting observation, but intent very much to observe. Nadasti has
+appeared again; at Freyburg, few miles off, on this side of the
+Mountains; goes out scouting, reconnoitring; but is "fired at from the
+growing corn," and otherwise hoodwinked by false symptoms, and makes
+little of that business. Friedrich's Army we will compute at 70,000.
+[General-Lieutenant Freiherr Leo von Lutzow, _Die Schlacht von
+Hohenfriedbeg_ (Potsdam, 1845), pp. 18, 21.] Not quite equal in number
+to Prince Karl's; and, in other particulars, willing and longing that
+Prince Karl would arrive, and try its quality.
+
+Friedrich's head-quarter is at Jauernik: he goes daily riding hither,
+thither; to the top of the Fuchsberg (FOXHILL at Stanowitz) with eager
+spy-glass; daily many times looks with his spy-glass to the ragged peaks
+about Bolkenhayn, Kauder, Rohnstock; expecting the throw of the dice
+from that part. On Thursday, 3d June: Do you notice that cloud of dust
+rising among the peaks over yonder? Dust-cloud mounting higher and
+higher. There comes the big crisis, then! There are the combined
+Weissenfels and Karl with their Austrian Saxons, issuing proudly from
+their stone labyrinth; guns, equipments, baggages, all perfectly brought
+through; rich Silesian plain country now fairly at their feet, Breslau
+itself but a few marches off:--at sight of all which, the Austrian big
+host bursts forth into universal field-music, and shakes out its banners
+to the wind. Thursday, 3d June, 1745; a dramatic Entry of something
+quite considerable on the Stage of History.
+
+Friedrich, with Nassau and generals round, stands upon the
+Fuchsberg,--his remarks not given, his looks or emotions not described
+to us, his thought well known,--and looks at it through his TUBUS (or
+spy-glass): There they are, then, and the big moment is come! Friedrich
+had seen the dust and the manoeuvring of them, deeper in the Hills, from
+this same Fuchsberg yesterday, and inferred what was coming; calculated
+by what roads or hill-tracks they could issue: and how he, in each case,
+was to deal with them; his march-routes are all settled, plank-bridges
+repaired, all privately is ready for these proud Austrian musical
+gentlemen, here in the hollow. Friedrich has been upon this Fuchsberg
+with his TUBUS daily, many times since Monday last: it is our general
+observatorium, says Stille, and commands a fine view into the interior
+of these Hills. A Fuchsberg which has become notable in the Prussian
+maps: "the Stanowitz Fuchsberg," east side of Striegau Water,--let
+no tourist mistake himself; for there are two or even three other
+Fuchsbergs, a mile or so northward on the western side of that Stream,
+which need to be distinguished by epithets, as the Striegau Fuchsberg,
+the Graben Fuchsberg, and perhaps still others: comparable to the FOUR
+Neisse rivers, three besides the one we know, which occur in this piece
+of Country! Our German cousins, I have often sorrowed to find, have
+practically a most poor talent for GIVING NAMES; and indeed much,
+for ages back, is lying in a sad state of confusion among them. Many
+confused things, rotting far and wide, in contradiction to the plainest
+laws of Nature; things as well as names! All the welcomer this Prussian
+Army, this young Friedrich leading it; they, beyond all earthly entities
+of their epoch, are not in a state of confusion, but of most strict
+conformity to the laws of Arithmetic and facts of Nature: perhaps a very
+blessed phenomenon for Germany in the long-run.
+
+Prince Karl with Weissenfels, General Berlichingen and many plumed
+dignitaries, are dining on the Hill-top near Hohenfriedberg: after
+having given order about everything, they witness there, over their
+wine, the issue of their Columns from the Mountains; which goes on all
+afternoon, with field-music, spread banners; and the oldest General
+admits he never saw a finer review-manoeuvre, or one better done, if
+so well. Thus sit they on the Hill-top (GALGENBERG, not far from the
+gallows of the place, says Friedrich), in the beautiful June afternoon.
+Silesia lying beautifully azure at their feet; the Zobtenberg, enchanted
+Mountain, blue and high on one's eastern horizon; Prussians noticeable
+only in weak hussar parties four or five miles off, which vanish in the
+hollow grounds again. All intending for Breslau, they, it is
+like;--and here, red wine and the excellent manoeuvre going on. "The
+Austrian-and-Saxon Army streamed out all afternoon," says a Country
+Schoolmaster of those parts, whose Day-book has been preserved, [In
+Lutzow, pp. 123-132.] "each regiment or division taking the place
+appointed it; all afternoon, till late in the night, submerging the
+Country as in a deluge," five miles long of them; taking post at the
+foot of the Hills there, from Hohenfriedberg round upon Striegau,
+looking towards the morrow's sunrise. To us poor country-folk not a
+beautiful sight; their light troops flying ahead, and doing theft and
+other mischief at a sad rate.
+
+On the other hand, the Austrian and Saxon gentlemen, from their
+Gallows-Hill at Hohenfriedberg, notice, four or five miles in the
+distance, opposite them, or a little to the left of opposite, a Body
+of Prussian horse and foot, visibly wending northward; like a long
+glittering serpent, the glitter of their muskets flashing back yonder
+on the afternoon sun and us, as they mount from hollow to height. Ten or
+twelve thousand of them; making for Striegau, to appearance. Intending
+to bivouac or billet there, and keep some kind of watch over us;
+belike with an eye to being rear-guard, on the retreat towards Breslau
+to-morrow? Or will they retreat without attempting mischief? Serenity of
+Weissenfels engages to seize the heights and proper posts, over
+yonder, this night yet; and will take Striegau itself, the first thing,
+to-morrow morning.
+
+Yes, your Serenities, those are Prussians in movement: Vanguard Corps of
+Dumoulin, Winterfeld;--Rittmeister Seydlitz rides yonder:--and it is not
+their notion to retreat without mischief. For there stands, not so far
+off, on the Stanowitz Fuchsberg, a brisk little Gentleman, if you could
+notice him; with his eyes fixed on you, and plans in the head of him
+now getting nearly mature. For certain, he is pushing out that column of
+men; and all manner of other columns are getting order to push out,
+and take their ground; and to-morrow morning--you will not find him in
+retreat! Such are the phenomena in that Striegau-Hohenfriedberg region,
+while the sun is bending westward, on Thursday, 3d June, 1745.
+
+"From Hohenfriedberg, which leans against the higher Mountains, there
+may be, across to Striegau northeast, which stands well apart from them,
+among lower Hills of its own, a distance of about five English miles.
+The intervening country is of flat, though upland nature: the first
+broad stage, or STAIR-STEP, so to speak, leading down into the general
+interior levels of Silesia in those parts. A tract which is now
+tolerably dried by draining, but was then marshy as well as bushy:--flat
+to the eye, yet must be imperceptibly convexed a little, for the line of
+watershed is hereabouts: walk from Hohenfriedberg to Striegau, the
+water on your left hand flows, though mainly in ditches or imperceptible
+oozings, to the north and west,--there to fall into an eastern fork of
+the Roaring Neisse [one of our three new Neisses, which is a very quiet
+stream here; runs close by the Mountain base, fed by many torrents,
+and must get its name, WUTHENDE or Roaring, from the suddenness of its
+floods]: into this, bound northward and westward, run or ooze all waters
+on your left hand, as you go to Striegau. Right hand, again, or to
+eastward, you will find all sauntering, or running in visible brooks
+into Striegau Water [little River notable to us], which comes circling
+from the Mountains, past Hohenfriedberg, farther south; and has got to
+some force as a stream before it reaches Striegau, and turns abruptly
+eastward;--eastward, to join Schweidnitz Water, and form with it the
+SECOND stair-step downwards to the Plain Country. Has its Fuchsbergs,
+Kuhbergs and little knolls and heights interspersed, on both sides of
+it, in the conceivable way.
+
+"So that, looking eastward from the heights of Hohenfriedberg, our broad
+stage or stair-step has nothing of the nature of a valley, but rather is
+a kind of insensibly swelling plain between two valleys, or hollows,
+of small depth; and slopes both ways. Both ways; but MORE towards the
+Striegau-Water valley or hollow; and thence, in a lazily undulating
+manner, to other hollows and waters farther down. Friedrich's Camp lies
+in the next, the Schweidnitz-Water hollow; and is five, or even
+nine miles long, from Schweidnitz northward;--much hidden from the
+Austrian-Saxon gentlemen at present. No hills farther, mere flat
+country, to eastward of that. But to the north, again, about Striegau,
+the hollow deepens, narrows; and certain Hills," much notable at
+present, "rise to west of Striegau, definite peaked Hills, with granite
+quarries in them and basalt blocks atop:--Striegau, it appears, is, in
+old Czech dialect, TRZIZA, which means TRIPLE HILL, the 'Town of the
+Three Hills.' [Lutzow, p. 28.] An ancient quaint little Town, of perhaps
+2,000 souls: brown-gray, the stones of it venerably weathered; has its
+wide big market-place, piazza, plain-stones, silent enough except on
+market-days: nestles itself compactly in the shelter of its Three Hills,
+which screen it from the northwest; and has a picturesque appearance,
+its Hills and it, projected against the big Mountain range beyond, as
+you approach it from the Plain Country.
+
+"Hohenfriedberg, at the other corner of our battle-stage, on the road
+to Landshut, is a Village of no great compass; but sticks pleasantly
+together, does not straggle in the usual way; climbs steep against its
+Gallows-Hill (now called 'SIEGESBERG, Victory Hill,' with some tower or
+steeple-monument on it, built by subscription); and would look better,
+if trimmed a little and habitually well swept. The higher Mountain
+summits, Landshut way, or still more if you look southeastward,
+Glatz-ward, rise blue and huge, remote on your right; to left, the
+Roaring Neisse range close at hand, is also picturesque, though less
+Alpine in type." [Tourist's Note (1858).]... And of all Hills, the
+notablest, just now to us, are those "Three" at Striegau.
+
+Those Three Hills of Striegau his Serenity of Weissenfels is to lay hold
+of, this night, with his extreme left, were it once got deployed and
+bivouacked. Those Hills, if he can: but Prussian Dumoulin is already
+on march thither; and privately has his eye upon them, on Friedrich's
+part!--For the rest, this upland platform, insensibly sloping two ways,
+and as yet undrained, is of scraggy boggy nature in many places; much
+of it damp ground, or sheer morass; better parts of it covered, at this
+season, with rank June grass, or greener luxuriance of oats and barley.
+A humble peaceable scene; peaceable till this afternoon; dotted, too,
+with six or seven poor Hamlets, with scraggy woods, where they have
+their fuel; most sleepy littery ploughman Hamlets, sometimes with a
+SCHLOSS or Mansion for the owner of the soil (who has absconded in the
+present crisis of things), their evening smoke rising rather fainter
+than usual; much cookery is not advisable with Uhlans and Tolpatchcs
+flying about. Northward between Striegau and the higher Mountains there
+is an extensive TEICHWIRTHSCHAFT, or "Pond-Husbandry" (gleaming visible
+from Hohenfriedberg Gallows-Hill just now); a combination of stagnant
+pools and carp-ponds, the ground much occupied hereabouts with what
+they name Carp-Husbandry. Which is all drained away in our time, yet
+traceable by the studious:--quaggy congeries of sluices and fish-ponds,
+no road through them except on intricate dams; have scrubby thickets
+about the border;--this also is very strong ground, if Weissenfels
+thought of defence there.
+
+Which Weissenfels does not, but only of attack. He occupies the ground
+nevertheless, rearward of this Carp-Husbandry, as becomes a strategic
+man; gradually bivouacking all round there, to end on the Three Hills,
+were his last regiments got up. The Carp-Husbandry is mainly about
+Eisdorf Hamlet:--in Pilgramshayn, where Weissenfels once thought of
+lodging, lives our Writing Schoolmaster. The Mountains lie to westward;
+flinging longer shadows, as the invasive troops continually deploy, in
+that beautiful manner; and coil themselves strategically on the ground,
+a bent rope, cordon, or line (THREE lines in depth), reaching from the
+front skirts of Hohenfriedberg to the Hills at Striegau again,--terrible
+to behold.
+
+In front of Hohenfriedberg, we say, is the extremity or right wing of
+the Austrian-Saxon bivouac, or will be when the process is complete;
+five miles to northeast, sweeping round upon Striegau region, will be
+their left, where mainly are the Saxons,--to nestle upon those Three
+Hills of Striegau: whitherward however, Dumoulin, on Friedrich's behalf,
+is already on march. Austrian-Saxon bivouac, as is the way in regulated
+hosts, can at once become Austrian-Saxon order-of-battle: and then,
+probably, on the Chord of that Arc of five miles, the big Fight will
+roll to-morrow; Striegau one end of it, Hohenfriedbcrg the other.
+Flattish, somewhat elliptic upland, stair-step from the Mountains, as
+we called it; tract considerably cut with ditches, carp-husbandries, and
+their tufts of wood; line from Striegau to Hohenfriedberg being axis
+or main diameter of it, and in general the line of watershed: there,
+probably, will the tug of war be. Friedrich, on his Fuchsberg, knows
+this; the Austrian-Saxon gentlemen, over their wine on the Gallows-Hill,
+do not yet know it, but will know.
+
+It was about four in the afternoon, when Valori, with a companion,
+waiting a good while in the King's Tent at Jauernik, at last saw his
+Majesty return from the Fuchsberg observatory. Valori and friend have
+great news: "Tournay fallen; siege done, your Majesty!" Valori's friend
+is one De Latour; who had brought word of Fontenoy ("important victory
+on the Scamander," as Friedrich indignantly defined it to himself); and
+was bid wait here till this Siege-of-Tournay consummation ("as helpful
+to me as the Siege of Pekin!") should supervene. They hasten to salute
+his Majesty with the glorious tidings, Hmph! thinks Friedrich: and
+we are at death-grips here, little to be helped by your taking Pekin!
+However, he lets wit of nothing. "I make my compliments; mean to
+fight to-morrow." [Valori, i. 228.] Valori, as old soldier and friend,
+volunteers to be there and assist:--Good.
+
+Friedrich, I presume, at this late hour of four, may bc snatching a
+morsel of dinner; his orderlies are silently speeding, plans taken,
+orders given: To start all, at eight in the evening, for the Bridge
+of Striegau; there to cross, and spread to the right and to the left.
+Silent, not a word spoken, not a pipe lighted: silently across the
+Striegau Water there. A march of three miles for the nearest, who are
+here at Jauernik; of nine miles for the farthest about Schweidnitz; at
+Schweidnitz leave all your baggage, safe under the guns there. To
+the Bridge of Striegau, diligently, silently march along; Bridge of
+Striegau, there cross Striegau Water, and deploy to right and to left,
+in the way each of you knows. These are Friedrich's orders.
+
+Late in the dusk, Dumoulin and Winterfeld, whom we saw silently on march
+some hours ago, have silently glided past Striegau, and got into the
+Three-Hill region, which is some furlong or so farther north:--to his
+surprise, Dumoulin finds Saxon parties posting themselves thereabouts.
+He attacks said Saxon parties; and after some slight tussle, drives them
+mostly from their Three Hills; mostly, not altogether; one Saxon Hill
+is precipitous on our hither side of it, and we must leave that till the
+dawn break. Of the other Heights Dumoulin takes good possession, with
+cannon too, to be ready against dawn;--and ranks himself out to leftward
+withal, along the plain ground; for he is to be right wing, had the
+other troops come up. These are now all under way; astir from Jauernik
+and Schweidnitz, silently streaming along; and Dumoulin bivouacs
+here,--very silent he: not so silent the Saxons; who are still marching
+in, over yonder, to westward of Dumoulin, their rear-guard groping out
+its posts as it best can in the dark. Elsewhere, miles and miles along
+the foot of the Mountains, Austrian-Saxon watch-fires flame through the
+ambrosial night; and it is an impressive sight for Dumoulin,--still more
+for the poor Schoolmaster at Pilgramshayn and others, less concerned
+than Dumoulin. "It was beautiful," says Stille, who was there, "to see
+how the plain about Rohnstock, and all over that way, was ablaze with
+thousands of watch-fires (TAUSEND UND ABER TAUSEND); by the light of
+these, we could clearly perceive the enemy's troops continually defile
+from the Hills the whole night through." [Cited in Seyfarth, i. 630.]
+
+Serenity of Weissenfels, after all, does not lodge at Pilgramshayn; far
+in the night, he goes to sleep at Rohnstock, a Schloss and Hamlet on
+that fork of Roaring Neisse, by the foot of the Mountains; three or
+four miles off, yet handy enough for picking up Striegau the first
+thing to-morrow. His Highness Prince Karl lies in Hausdorf, tolerable
+quarters, pretty much in the centre of his long bivouac; day's business
+well done, and bottle (as one's wont rather is) well enjoyed. Nadasti
+has been out scouting; but was pricked into by hussar parties, fired
+into from the growing corn; and could make out little, but the image
+of his own ideas. Nadasti's ultimate report is, That the Prussians are
+perfectly quiet in their camp; from Jauernik to Schweidnitz, watch-fires
+all alight, sentries going their rounds. And so they are, in fact;
+sentries and watch-fires,--but now nothing else there, a mere shell of
+a camp; the men of it streaming steadily along, without speech, without
+tobacco; and many of them are across Striegau Bridge by this time!--
+
+It was past eleven, so close and continuous went this march, before
+Valori and his Latour, with their carriages and furnitures, could
+find an interval, and get well into it. Never will Valori forget the
+discipline of these Prussians, and how they marched. Difficult ways; the
+hard road is for their artillery; the men march on each side, sometimes
+to mid-leg in water,--never mind. Wholly in order, wholly silent; Valori
+followed them three leagues close, and there was not one straggler.
+Every private man, much more every officer, knows well what grim errand
+they are on; and they make no remarks. Steady as Time; and, except that
+their shoes are not of felt, silent as he. The Austrian watch-fires glow
+silent manifold to leftward yonder; silent overhead are the stars:--the
+path of all duty, too, is silent (not about Striegau alone) for every
+well-drilled man. To-morrow;--well, to-morrow?
+
+A grimmish feeling against the Saxons is understood to be prevalent
+among these men. Bruhl, Weissenfels himself, have been reported talking
+high,--"Reduce our King to the size of an Elector again," and other
+foolish things;--indeed, grudges have been accumulating for some time.
+"KEIN PARDON (No quarter)!" we hear has been a word among the Saxons,
+as they came along; the Prussians growl to one another, "Very well then,
+None!" Nay Friedrich's general order is, "No prisoners, you cavalry, in
+the heat of fight; cavalry, strike at the faces of them: you infantry,
+keep your fire till within fifty steps; bayonet withal is to be relied
+on." These were Friedrich's last general orders, given in the hollow of
+the night, near the foot of that Fuchsberg where he had been so busy all
+day; a widish plain space hereabouts, Striegau Bridge now near: he had
+lain snme time in his cloak, waiting till the chief generals, with
+the heads of their columns, could rendezvous here. He then sprang
+on horseback; spoke briefly the essential things (one of them the
+above);--"Had meant to be more minute, in regard to positions and the
+like; but all is so in darkness, embroiled by the flare of the Austrian
+watch-fires, we can make nothing farther of localities at present:
+Striegau for right wing, left wing opposite to Hohenfriedberg,--so, and
+Striegau Water well to rear of us. Be diligent, exact, all faculties
+awake: your own sense, and the Order of Battle which you know, must do
+the rest. Forward; steady: can I doubt but you will acquit yourselves
+like Prussian men?" And so they march, across the Bridge at Striegau,
+south outskirt of the Town,--plank Bridge, I am afraid;--and pour
+themselves, to right and to left, continually the livelong night.
+
+To describe the Battle which ensued, Battle named of Striegau or
+Hohenfriedberg, excels the power of human talent,--if human talent had
+leisure for such employment. It is the huge shock and clash of 70,000
+against 70,000, placed in the way we said. An enormous furious SIMALTAS
+(or "both-at-once," as the Latins phrase it), spreading over ten square
+miles. Rather say, a wide congeries of electric simultaneities; all
+ELECTRIC, playing madly into one another; most loud, most mad: the
+aspect of which is smoky, thunderous, abstruse; the true SEQUENCES of
+which, who shall unravel? There are five accounts of it, all modestly
+written, each true-looking from its own place: and a thrice-diligent
+Prussian Officer, stationed on the spot in late years, has striven well
+to harmonize them all. [Five Accounts: 1. The Prussian Official Account,
+in _Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 1098-1102. 2. The Saxon, ib. 1103-1108.
+3. The Austrian, ib. 1109-1115. 4. Stille's (ii. 125-133, of English
+Translation). 5. Friedrich's own, _OEuvres,_ iii. 108-118. Lutzow, above
+cited, is the harmonizer. Besides which, two of value, in _Feldzuge,_ i.
+310-323, 328-336; not to mention Cogniazzo, _Confessions of an Austrian
+Veeran_ (Breslau, 1788-1791: strictly Anonymous at that time, and
+candid, or almost more, to Prussian merit;--still worth reading, here
+and throughout), ii. 123-135; &c. &c.] Well worth the study of
+military men;--who might make tours towards this and the other great
+battle-field, and read such things, were they wise. For us, a feature
+or two, in the huge general explosion, to assist the reader's fancy in
+conceiving it a little, is all that can be pretended to.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter X.--BATTLE OF HOHENFRIEDBERG.
+
+With the first streak of dawn, the dispute renewed itself between those
+Prussians and Saxons who are on the Heights of Striegau. The two Armies
+are in contact here; they lie wide apart as yet at the other end.
+Cannonading rises here, on both sides, in the dim gray of the morning,
+for the possession of these Heights. The Saxons are out-cannonaded and
+dislodged, other Saxons start to arms in support: the cry "To arms!"
+spreads everywhere, rouses Weissenfels to horseback; and by sunrise a
+furious storm of battle has begun, in this part. Hot and fierce on both
+sides; charges of horse, shock after shock, bayonet-charges of foot; the
+great guns going like Jove's thunder, and the continuous tearing storm
+of small guns, very loud indeed: such a noise, as our poor Schoolmaster,
+who lives on this spot, thinks he will hear only once again, when
+the Last Trumpet sounds! It did indeed, he informs us, resemble the
+dissolution of Nature: "For all fell dark too;" a general element
+of sulphurous powder-smoke, streaked with dull blazes; and death
+and destruction very nigh. What will become of poor pacific mortals
+hereabouts? Rittmeister Seydlitz, Winterfeld his patron ride, with
+knit brows, in these horse-charges; fiery Rothenburg too; Truchsess von
+Waldburg, at the head of his Division,--poor Truchsess known in London
+society, a cannon-ball smites the life out of him, and he ended here.
+
+At the first clash of horse and foot, the Saxons fancied they rather
+had it; at the second, their horse became distressed; at the third,
+they rolled into disorderly heaps. The foot also, stubborn as they
+were, could not stand that swift firing, followed by the bayonet and the
+sabre; and were forced to give ground. The morning sun shone into their
+eyes, too, they say; and there had risen a breath of easterly wind,
+which hurled the smoke upon them, so that they could not see. Decidedly
+staggering backwards; getting to be taken in flank and ruined, though
+poor Weissenfels does his best. About five in the morning, Friedrich
+came galloping hitherward; Valori with him: "MON AMI, this is looking
+well! This will do, won't it?" The Saxons are fast sinking in the scale;
+and did nothing thenceforth but sink ever faster; though they made a
+stiff defence, fierce exasperation on both sides; and disputed every
+inch. Their position, in these scraggy Woods and Villages, in these
+Morasses and Carp-Husbandries, is very strong.
+
+It had proved to be farther north, too, than was expected; so that the
+Prussians had to wheel round a little (right wing as a centre, fighting
+army as radius) before they could come parallel, and get to work: a
+delicate manoeuvre, which they executed to Valori's admiration, here in
+the storm of battle; tramp, tramp, velocity increasing from your centre
+outwards, till at the end of the radius, the troops are at treble-quick,
+fairly running forward, and the line straight all the while. Admirable
+to Valori, in the hot whirlwind of battle here. For the great guns go,
+in horrid salvos, unabated, and the crackling thunder of the small guns;
+"terrible tussling about those Carp-ponds, that quaggy Carp-husbandry,"
+says the Schoolmaster, "and the Heavens blotted out in sulphurous
+fire-streaked smoke. What had become of us pacific? Some had run in
+time, and they were the wisest; others had squatted, who could find a
+nook suitable. Most of us had gathered into the Nursery-garden at
+the foot of our Village; we sat quaking there,--our prayers grown
+tremulously vocal;--in tears and wail, at least the women part. Enemies
+made reconcilement with each other," says he, "and dear friends took
+farewell." [His Narrative, in Lutzow, UBI SUPRA.] One general Alleleu;
+the Last Day, to all appearance, having come. Friedrich, seeing things
+in this good posture, gallops to the left again, where much urgently
+requires attention from him.
+
+On the Austrian side, Prince Karl, through his morning sleep at
+Hausdorf, had heard the cannonading: "Saxons taking Striegau!" thinks
+he; a pleasant lullaby enough; and continues to sleep and dream.
+Agitated messengers rush in, at last; draw his curtains: "Prussians
+all in rank, this side Striegau Water; Saxons beaten, or nearly so, at
+Striegau: we must stand to arms, your Highness!"--"To arms, of course,"
+answers Karl; and hurries now, what he can, to get everything in motion.
+The bivouac itself had been in order of battle; but naturally there is
+much to adjust, to put in trim; and the Austrians are not distinguished
+for celerity of movement. All the worse for them just now.
+
+On Friedrich's side, so far as I can gather, there have happened two
+cross accidents. First, by that wheeling movement, done to Valori's
+admiration in the Striegau quarter, the Prussian line has hitched itself
+up towards Striegau, has got curved inward, and covers less ground than
+was counted on; so that there is like to be some gap in the central
+part of;--as in fact there was, in spite of Friedrich's efforts, and
+hitchings of battalions and squadrons: an indisputable gap, though it
+turned to rich profit for Friedrich; Prince Karl paying no attention to
+it. Upon such indisputable gap a wakeful enemy might have done Friedrich
+some perilous freak; but Karl was in his bed, as we say;--in a terrible
+flurry, too, when out of bed. Nothing was done upon the gap; and
+Friedrich had his unexpected profit by it before long.
+
+The second accident is almost worse. Striegau Bridge (of planks, as
+I feared), creaking under such a heavy stream of feet and wheels all
+night, did at last break, in some degree, and needed to be mended; so
+that the rearward regiments, who are to form Friedrich's left wing,
+are in painful retard;--and are becoming frightfully necessary, the
+Austrians as yet far outflanking us, capable of taking us in flank
+with that right wing of theirs! The moment was agitating to a
+General-in-chief: Valori will own this young King's bearing was perfect;
+not the least flurry, though under such a strain. He has aides-de-camp,
+dashing out every-whither with orders, with expedients; Prince Henri,
+his younger Brother: galloping the fastest; nay, at last, he begs Valori
+himself to gallop, with orders to a certain General Gessler, in whose
+Brigade are Dragoons. Which Valori does,--happily without effect on
+Gessler; who knows no Valori for an aide-de-camp, and keeps the ground
+appointed him; rearward of that gap we talked of.
+
+Happily the Austrian right wing is in no haste to charge. Happily
+Ziethen, blocked by that incumbrance of the Bridge mending, "finds a
+ford higher up," the assiduous Ziethen; splashes across, other regiments
+following; forms in line well leftward; and instead of waiting for the
+Austrian charge, charges home upon them, fiercely through the difficult
+grounds, No danger of the Austrians outflanking us now; they are
+themselves likely to get hard measure on their flank. By the ford and
+by the Bridge, all regiments, some of them at treble-quick, get to their
+posts still in time. Accident second has passed without damage.
+Forward, then; rapid, steady; and reserve your fire till within fifty
+paces!--Prinoe Ferdinand of Brunswick (Friedrich's Brother-in-law, a
+bright-eyed steady young man, of great heart for fight) tramps forth
+with his Division:--steady!--all manner of Divisions tramp forth; and
+the hot storm, Ziethen and cavalry dashing upon that right wing of
+theirs, kindles here also far and wide.
+
+The Austrian cavalry on this wing and elsewhere, it is clear, were
+ill off. "We could not charge the Prussian left wing, say they, partly
+because of the morasses that lay between us; and partly [which is
+remarkable] because they rushed across and charged us." [Austrian
+report, _Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 1113.] Prince Karl is sorry to report
+such things of his cavalry; but their behavior was bad and not good.
+The first shock threw them wavering; the second,--nothing would persuade
+them to dash forth and meet it. High officers commanded, obtested, drew
+out pistols, Prince Karl himself shot a fugitive or two,--it was to no
+purpose; they wavered worse at every new shock; and at length a shock
+came (sixth it was, as the reporter counts) which shook them all into
+the wind. Decidedly shy of the Prussians with their new manoeuvres, and
+terrible way of coming on, as if sure of beating. In the Saxon quarter,
+certain Austrian regiments of horse would not charge at all; merely kept
+firing from their carbines, and when the time came ran.
+
+As for the Saxons, they have been beaten these two hours; that is to
+say, hopeless these two hours, and getting beaten worse and worse. The
+Saxons cannot stand, but neither generally will they run; they dispute
+every ditch, morass and tuft of wood, especially every village. Wrecks
+of the muddy desperate business last, hour after hour. "I gave my men a
+little rest under the garden walls," says one Saxon Gentleman, "or they
+would have died, in the heat and thirst and extreme fatigue: I would
+have given 100 gulden [10 pounds Sterling] for a glass of water."
+[ _Helden-Geschichte,_ ubi supra.] The Prussians push them on, bayonet
+in back; inexorable, not to be resisted; slit off whole battalions of
+them (prisoners now, and quarter given); take all their guns, or all
+that are not sunk in the quagmires;--in fine, drive them, part into the
+Mountains direct, part by circuit thither, down upon the rear of the
+Austrian fight: through Hausdorf, Seifersdorf and other Mountain gorges,
+where we hear no more of them, and shall say no more of them. A sore
+stroke for poor old Weissenfels; the last public one he has to take, in
+this world, for the poor man died before long. Nobody's blame, he says;
+every Saxon man did well; only some Austrian horse-regiments, that we
+had among us, were too shy. Adieu to poor old Weissenfels. Luck of war,
+what else,--thereby is he in this pass.
+
+And now new Prussian force, its Saxons being well abolished, is pressing
+down upon Prince Karl's naked left flank. Yes;--Prince Karl too will
+have to go. His cavalry is, for most part, shaken into ragged clouds;
+infantry, steady enough men, cannot stand everything. "I have observed,"
+says Friedrich, "if you step sharply up to an Austrian battalion [within
+fifty paces or so], and pour in your fire well, in about a quarter of
+an hour you see the ranks beginning to shake, and jumble towards
+indistinctness;" [_Military Instructions._ ] a very hopeful symptom to
+you!
+
+It was at this moment that Lieutenant-General Gessler, under whom is the
+Dragoon regiment Baireuth, who had kept his place in spite of Valori's
+message, determined on a thing,--advised to it by General Schmettau
+(younger Schmettau), who was near. Gessler, as we saw, stood in the rear
+line, behind that gap (most likely one of several gaps, or wide spaces,
+left too wide, as we explained); Gessler, noticing the jumbly condition
+of those Austrian battalions, heaped now one upon another in this
+part,--motions to the Prussian Infantry to make what farther room
+is needful; then dashes through, in two columns (self and
+the Dragoon-Colonel heading the one, French Chasot, who is
+Lieutenant-Colonel, heading the other), sabre in hand, with
+extraordinary impetus and fire, into the belly of these jumbly
+Austrians; and slashes them to rags, "twenty battalions of them," in an
+altogether unexampled manner. Takes "several thousand prisoners," and
+such a haul of standards, kettle-drums and insignia of honor, as was
+never got before at one charge. Sixty-seven standards by the tale, for
+the regiment (by most All-Gracious Permission) wears, ever after, "67"
+upon its cartridge-box, and is allowed to beat the grenadier
+march; [Orlich, ii. 179 (173 n., 179 n., slightly wrong);
+_Militair-Lexikon,_ ii. 9, iv. 465, 468. See Preuss, i. 212; _OEuvres de
+Frederic;_ &c. &c.]--how many kettle-drums memory does not say.
+
+Prince Karl beats retreat, about 8 in the morning; is through
+Hohenfriedberg about 10 (cannon covering there, and Nadasti as
+rear-guard): back into the Mountains; a thoroughly well-beaten man.
+Towards Bolkenhayn, the Saxons and he; their heavy artillery and baggage
+had been left safe there. Not much pursued, and gradually rearranging
+himself; with thoughts,--no want of thoughts! Came pouring down,
+triumphantly invasive, yesterday; returns, on these terms, in about
+fifteen hours. Not marching with displayed banners and field-music, this
+time; this is a far other march. The mouse-trap had been left open, and
+we rashly went in!--Prince Karl's loss, including that of the Saxons
+(which is almost equal, though their number in the field was but HALF),
+is 9,000 dead and wounded, 7,000 prisoners, 66 cannon, 73 flags and
+standards; the Prussian is about 5,000 dead and wounded. [In Orlich (ii.
+182) all the details.] Friedrich, at sight of Valori, embraces his GROS
+VALORI; says, with a pious emotion in voice and look, "My friend, God
+has helped me wonderfully this day!" Actually there was a kind of devout
+feeling visible in him, thinks Valori: "A singular mixture, this
+Prince, of good qualities and of bad; I never know which preponderates."
+[Valori, SOEPIUS.] As is the way with fat Valoris, when they come into
+such company.
+
+Friedrich is blamed by some military men, and perhaps himself thought it
+questionable, that he did not pursue Prince Karl more sharply. He says
+his troops could not; they were worn out with the night's marching and
+the day's fighting. He himself may well be worn out. I suppose, for the
+last four-and-twenty hours he, of all the contemporary sons of Adam,
+has probably been the busiest. Let us rest this day; rest till to-morrow
+morning, and be thankful. "So decisive a defeat," writes he to his
+Mother (hastily, misdating "6th" June for 4th), "has not been since
+Blenheim" [Letter in _OEuvres de Frederic,_ xxvi. 71.] (which is
+tolerably true); and "I have made the Princes sign their names," to give
+the good Mother assurance of her children in these perils of war. Seldom
+has such a deliverance come to a man.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XI.--CAMP OF CHLUM: FRIEDRICH CANNOT ACHIEVE PEACE.
+
+Friedrich marched, on the morrow, likewise to Bolkenhayn; which the
+enemy have just left; our hussars hanging on their rear, and bickering
+with Nadasti. Then again on the morrow, Sunday,--"twelve hours of
+continuous rain," writes Valori; but there is no down-pour, or distress,
+or disturbance that will shake these men from their ranks, writes
+Valori. And so it goes on, march after march, the Austrians ahead,
+Dumoulin and our hussars infesting their rear, which skilfully defended
+itself: through Landshut down into Bohemia; where are new successive
+marches, the Prussian quarterstaff stuck into the back of defeated
+Austria, "Home with you; farther home!"--and shogging it on,--without
+pause, for about a fortnight to come. And then only with temporary
+pause; that is to say, with intricate manoeuvrings of a month long,
+which shove it to Konigsgratz, its ultimatum, beyond which there is no
+getting it. The stages and successive campings, to be found punctually
+in the old Books and new, can interest only military readers. Here is a
+small theological thing at Landshut, from first hand:--
+
+JUNE 8th, 1745. "The Army followed Dumoulin's Corps, and marched upon
+Landshut. On arriving in that neighborhood, the King was surrounded by
+a troop of 2,000 Peasants,"--of Protestant persuasion very evidently!
+(which is much the prevailing thereabouts),--"who begged permission of
+him 'to massacre the Catholics of these parts, and clear the country of
+them altogether.' This animosity arose from the persecutions which the
+Protestants had suffered during the Austrian domination, when
+their churches used to be taken from them and given to the Popish
+priests,"--churches and almost their children, such was the anxiety to
+make them orthodox. The patience of these peasants had run over; and
+now, in the hour of hope, they proposed the above sweeping measure. "The
+King was very far from granting them so barbarous a permission. He told
+them, 'They ought rather to conform to the Scripture precept, to bless
+those that cursed them, and pray for those that despitefully used them;
+such was the way to gain the Kingdom of Heaven.' The peasants," rolling
+dubious eyes for a moment, "answered, His Majesty was right; and
+desisted from their cruel pretension." [_OEuvres de Frederic,_
+ii.218.]...--"On Hohenfriedberg Day," says another Witness, "as far as
+the sound of the cannon was heard, all round, the Protestants fell on
+their knees, praying for victory to the Prussians;" [In Ranke, iii.
+259.] and at Breslau that evening, when the "Thirteen trumpeting
+Postilions" came tearing in with the news, what an enthusiasm without
+limit!
+
+Prince Karl has skill in choosing camps and positions: his Austrians are
+much cowed; that is the grievous loss in his late fight. So, from June
+8th, when they quit Silesia,--by two roads to go more readily,--all
+through that month and the next, Friedrich spread to the due width,
+duly pricking into the rear of them, drives the beaten hosts onward and
+onward. They do not think of fighting; their one thought is to get into
+positions where they can have living conveyed to them, and cannot be
+attacked; for the former of which objects, the farther homewards they
+go, it is the better. The main pursuit, as I gather, goes leftward from
+Landshut, by Friedland,--the Silesian Friedland, once Wallenstein's.
+Through rough wild country, the southern slope of the Giant Mountains,
+goes that slow pursuit, or the main stream of it, where Friedrich
+in person is; intricate savage regions, cut by precipitous rocks and
+soaking quagmires, shaggy with woods: watershed between the Upper Elbe
+and Middle Oder; Glatz on our left,--with the rain of its mountains
+gathering to a Neisse River, eastward, which we know; and on their west
+or hither side, to a Mietau, Adler, Aupa and other many-branched feeders
+of the Elbe. Most complex military ground, the manoeuvrings on it
+endless,--which must be left to the reader's fancy here.
+
+About the end of June, Karl and his Austrians find a place suitable to
+their objects: Konigsgratz, a compact little Town, in the nook between
+the Elbe and Adler; covered to west and to south by these two streams;
+strong enough to east withal; and sure and convenient to the southern
+roads and victual. Against which Friedrich's manoeuvres avail nothing;
+so that he at last (20th July) crosses Elbe River; takes, he likewise,
+an inexpugnable Camp on the opposite shore, at a Village called Chlum;
+and lies there, making a mutual dead-lock of it, for six weeks or
+more. Of the prior Camps, with their abundance of strategic shufflings,
+wheelings, pushings, all issuing in this of Chlum, we say nothing: none
+of them,--except the immediately preceding one, called of Nahorzan,
+called also of Drewitz (for it was in parts a shifting entity, and flung
+the LIMBS of it about, strategically clutching at Konigsgratz),--had any
+permanency: let us take Chlum (the longest, and essentially the last in
+those parts) as the general summary of them, and alone rememberable by
+us. ["Camp of Gross-Parzitz [across the Mietau, to dislodge Prince Karl
+from his shelter behind that stream], June 14th:" "Camp of Nahorzan,
+June 18th [and abstruse manoeuvrings, of a month, for Konigsgratz]: 20th
+July," cross Elbe for Chlum; and lie, yourself also inexpugnable, there.
+See _OEuvres de Frederic,_ (iii. 120 et seq.); especially see Orlich
+(ii. pp. 193, 194, 203, &c. &c.),--with an amplitude of inorganic
+details, sufficient to astonish the robustest memory!]
+
+Friedrich's purposes, at Chlum or previously, are not towards conquests
+in Bohemia, nor of fighting farther, if he can help it. But, in the mean
+while, he is eating out these Bohemian vicinages; no invasion of Silesia
+possible from that quarter soon again. That is one benefit: and he hopes
+always his enemies, under screw of military pressure with the one hand,
+and offer of the olive-branch with the other, will be induced to grant
+him Peace. Britannic Majesty, after Fontenoy and Hohenfriedberg, not to
+mention the first rumors of a Jacobite Rebellion, with France to rear of
+it, is getting eager to have Friedrich settled with, and withdrawn from
+the game again;--the rather, as Friedrich, knowing his man, has ceased
+latterly to urge him on the subject. Peace with George the Purseholder,
+does not that mean Peace with all the others? Friedrich knows the high
+Queen's indignation; but he little guesses, at this time, the humor of
+Bruhl and the Polish Majesty. He has never yet sent the Old Dessauer in
+upon them; always only keeps him on the slip, at Magdeburg; still
+hoping actualities may not be needed. He hopes too, in spite of her
+indignation, the Hungarian Majesty, with an Election on hand, with the
+Netherlands at such a pass, not to speak of Italy and the Middle Rhine,
+will come to moderate views again. On which latter points, his reckoning
+was far from correct! Within three months, Britannic Majesty and he did
+get to explicit Agreement (CONVENTION OF HANOVER, 26th August): but in
+regard to the Polish Majesty and the Hungarian there proved to be no
+such result attainable, and quite other methods necessary first!
+
+"Of military transactions in this Camp of Chlum, or in all these
+Bohemian-Silesian Camps, for near four months, there is nothing, or as
+good as nothing: Chlum has no events; Chlum vigilantly guards itself;
+and expects, as the really decisive to it, events that will happen far
+away. We are to conceive this military business as a dead-lock;
+attended with hussar skirmishes; attacks, defences, of outposts, of
+provision-wagons from Moravia or Silesia:--Friedrich has his food from
+Silesia chiefly, by several routes, 'convoys come once in the five
+days.' His horse-provender he forages; with Tolpatches watching him, and
+continual scufflings of fight: 'for hay and glory,' writes one
+Prussian Officer, 'I assure you we fight well!' Endless enterprising,
+manoeuvring, counter-manoeuvring there at first was; and still is, if
+either party stir: but here, in their mutually fixed camps, tacit
+mutual observances establish themselves; and amid the rigorous armed
+vigilantes, there are traits of human neighborship. As usual in such
+cases. The guard-parties do not fire on one another, within certain
+limits: a signal that there are dead to bury, or the like, is strictly
+respected. On one such occasion it was (June 30th, Camp-of-Nahorzan
+time) that Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick--Prince Ferdinand, with a young
+Brother Albert volunteering and learning his business here, who are both
+Prussian--had a snatch of interview with a third much-loved Brother,
+Ludwig, who is in the Austrian service. A Prussian officer, venturing
+beyond the limits, had been shot; Ferdinand's message, 'Grant us burial
+of him!' found, by chance, Brother Ludwig in command of that Austrian
+outpost; who answers: 'Surely;--and beg that I may embrace my Brothers!'
+And they rode out, those three, to the space intermediate; talked there
+for half an hour, till the burial was done. [Mauvillon, _Geschichte
+Ferdinands von Braunschweig-Luneburg,_ i. 118.] Fancy such an interview
+between the poor young fellows, the soul of honor each, and tied in that
+manner!
+
+"Trenck of the Life-guard was not quite the soul of honor. It was in the
+Nahorzan time too that Trenck, who had, in spite of express order to the
+contrary, been writing to his Cousin the indigo Pandour, was put under
+arrest when found out. 'Wrote merely about horses: purchase of horses,
+so help me God!' protests the blusterous Life-guardsman, loud as lungs
+will,--whether with truth in them, nobody can say. 'Arrest for breaking
+orders!' answers Friedrich, doubting or disbelieving the horses; and
+loud Trenck is packed over the Hills to Glatz; to Governor Fouquet, or
+Substitute;--where, by not submitting and repenting, by resisting and
+rebelling, and ever again doing it, he makes out for himself, with
+Fouquet and his other Governors, what kind of life we know! 'GARDEZ
+E'TROITEMENT CE DROLE-LA, IL A VOULU DEVENIR PANDOUR AUPRES DE SON ONCLE
+(Keep a tight hold of this fine fellow; he wanted to become Pandour
+beside his Uncle)!' writes Friedrich:--'Uncle' instead of 'Cousin,' all
+one to Friedrich. This he writes with his own hand, on the margin: 28th
+June, 1745; the inexorable Records fix that date. [Rodenbeck. iii. 381.
+Copy of the Warrant, once PENES ME.] Which I should not mention, except
+for another inexorable date (30th September), that is coming; and
+the perceptible slight comfort there will be in fixing down a
+loud-blustering, extensively fabulous blockhead, still fit for the
+Nurseries, to one undeniable premeditated lie, and tar-marking him
+therewith, for benefit of more serious readers." As shall be done, were
+the 30th of September come!
+
+Here is still something,--if it be not rather nothing, by a great
+hand! Date uncertain; Camp-of-Chlum time, pretty far on:... "There are
+continual foragings, on both sides; with parties mutually dashing out to
+hinder the same. The Prussians have a detached post at Smirzitz; which
+is much harassed by Hungarians lurking about, shooting our sentry and
+the like. An inventive head contrives this expedient. Stuff a Prussian
+uniform with straw; fix it up, by aid of ropes and check-strings, to
+stand with musket shouldered, and even to glide about to right and left,
+on judicious pulling. So it is done: straw man is made; set upon his
+ropes, when the Tolpatches approach; and pensively saunters to and
+fro,--his living comrades crouching in the bushes near by. Tolpatches
+fire on the walking straw sentry; straw sentry falls flat; Tolpatches
+rush in, esurient, triumphant; are exploded in a sharp blast of musketry
+from the bushes all round, every wounded man made prisoner;--and come
+no more back to that post." Friedrich himself records this little fact:
+"slight pleasantry to relieve the reader's mind," says he, in narrating
+it. [_OEuvres,_ iii. 123.]--Enough of those small matters, while so
+many large are waiting.
+
+June 26th, a month before Chlum, General Nassau had been detached, with
+some 8 or 10,000, across Glatz Country, into Upper Silesia, to sweep
+that clear again. Hautcharmoi, quitting the Frontier Towns, has joined,
+raising him to 15,000; and Nassau is giving excellent account of the
+multitudinous Pandour doggeries there; and will retake Kosel, and
+have Upper Silesia swept before very long. [Kosel, "September 5th:"
+Excellent, lucid and even entertaining Account of Nassau's Expedition,
+in the form of DIARY (a model, of its kind), in _Feldzuge,_ iv. 257,
+371, 532.] On the other hand, the Election matter (KAISERWAHL, a most
+important point) is obviously in threatening, or even in desperate
+state! That famed Middle-Rhine Army has gone to the--what shall we say?
+
+JULY 5th-19th, MIDDLE-RHINE COUNTRY. "The first Election-news that
+reaches Friedrich is from the Middle-Rhine Country, and of very
+bad complexion. Readers remember Traun, and his Bathyanis, and his
+intentions upon Conti there. In the end of May, old Traun, things being
+all completed in Bavaria, had got on march with his Bavarian Army,
+say 40,000, to look into Prince Conti down in those parts; a fact very
+interesting to the Prince. Traun held leftward, westward, as if for the
+Neckar Valley,--'Perhaps intending to be through upon Elsass, in those
+southern undefended portions of the Rhine?' Conti, and his Segur, and
+Middle-Rhine Army stood diligently on their guard; got their forces,
+defences, apparatuses, hurried southward, from Frankfurt quarter where
+they lay on watch, into those Neckar regions. Which seen to be done,
+Traun whirled rapidly to rightward, to northward; crossed the Mayn
+at Wertheim, wholly leaving the Neckar and its Conti; having weighty
+business quite in the other direction,--on the north side of the Mayn,
+namely; on the Kinzig River, where Bathyani (who has taken D'Ahremberg's
+command below Frankfurt, and means to bestir himself in another than the
+D'Ahremberg fashion) is to meet him on a set day. Traun having thus,
+by strategic suction, pulled the Middle-Rhine Army out of his and
+Bathyani's way, hopes they two will manage a junction on the Kinzig;
+after junction they will be a little stronger than Conti, though
+decidedly weaker taken one by one. Traun, in the long June days, had
+such a march, through the Spessart Forest (Mayn River to his left, with
+our old friends Dettingen, Aschaffenburg, far down in the plain), as
+was hardly ever known before: pathless wildernesses, rocky steeps and
+chasms; the sweltering June sun sending down the upper snows upon him in
+the form of muddy slush; so that 'the infantry had to wade haunch-deep
+in many of the hollow parts, and nearly all the cavalry lost its
+horse-shoes.' A strenuous march; and a well-schemed. For at the Kinzig
+River (Conti still far off in the Neckar country), Bathyani punctually
+appeared, on the opposite shore; and Traun and he took camp together;
+July 5th, at Langen-Selbord (few miles north of Hanau, which we
+know);--and rest there; calculating that Conti is now a manageable
+quantity;--and comfortably wait till the Grand-Duke arrives. [Adelung,
+iv. 421; v. 36.] For this is, theoretically, HIS Army; Grand-Duke Franz
+being the Commander's Cloak, this season; as Karl was last,--a right
+lucky Cloak he, while Traun lurked under him, not so lucky since! July
+13th, Franz arrived; and Traun, under Franz, instantly went into Conti
+(now again in those Frankfurt parts); clutched at Conti, Briareus-like,
+in a multiform alarming manner: so that Conti lost head; took to mere
+retreating, rushing about, burning bridges;--and in fine, July 19th, had
+flung himself bodily across the Rhine (clouds of Tolpatches sticking to
+him), and left old Traun and his Grand-Duke supreme lord in those parts.
+Who did NOT invade Elsass, as was now expected; but lay at Heidelberg,
+intending to play pacifically a surer card. All French are out of
+Teutschland again; and the game given up. In what a premature and
+shameful manner! thinks Friedrich.
+
+"Nominally it was the Grand-Duke that flung Conti over the Rhine; and
+delivered Teutschland from its plagues. After which fine feat, salvatory
+to the Cause of Liberty, and destructive to French influence, what is
+to prevent his election to the Kaisership? Friedrich complains aloud:
+'Conti has given it up; you drafted 15,000 from him (for imaginary uses
+in the Netherlands),--you have given it up, then! Was that our bargain?'
+'We have given it up,' answers D'Argenson the War-minister, writing to
+Valori; 'but,'--And supplies, instead of performance according to the
+laws of fact, eloquent logic; very superfluous to Friedrich and the said
+laws!--Valori, and the French Minister at Dresden, had again been trying
+to stir up the Polish Majesty to stand for Kaiser; but of course that
+enterprise, eager as the Polish Majesty might be for such a dignity, had
+now to collapse, and become totally hopeless. A new offer of
+Friedrich's to co-operate had been refused by Bruhl, with a brevity, a
+decisiveness--'Thinks me finished (AUX ABOIS),' says Friedrich; 'and not
+worth giving terms to, on surrendering!' The foolish little creature;
+insolent in the wrong quarter!" [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 128.]
+
+'The German Burden, then,--which surely was mutual, at lowest, and
+lately was French altogether,--the French have thrown it off; the French
+have dropped their end of the BEARING-POLES (so to speak), and left
+Friedrich by himself, to stand or stagger, under the beweltered broken
+harness-gear and intolerable weight! That is one's payment for cutting
+the rope from their neck last year!--Long since, while the present
+Campaign was being prepared for, under such financial pressures,
+Friedrich had bethought him, "The French might, at least give me money,
+if they can nothing else?"--and he had one day penned a Letter with that
+object; but had thrown it into his desk again, "No; not till the very
+last extremity, that!" Friedrich did at last despatch the unpleasant
+missive: "Service done you in Elsass, let us say little of it; but the
+repayment has been zero hitherto: your Bavarian expenses (poor Kaiser
+gone, and Peace of Fussen come!) are now ended:--A round sum, say of
+600,000 pounds, is becoming indispensable here, if we are to keep on
+our feet at all!" Herr Ranke, who has seen the Most Christian King's
+response (though in a capricious way), finds "three or four successive
+redactions" of the difficult passage; all painfully meaning,
+"Impossible, alas!"--painfully adding, "We will try, however!" And,
+after due cunctations, Friedrich waiting silent the while,--Louis, Most
+Christian King, who had failed in so many things towards Friedrich, does
+empower Valori To offer him a subsidy of 600,000 livres a month, till we
+see farther. Twenty thousand pounds a month; he hopes this will suffice,
+being himself run terribly low. Friedrich's feeling is to be guessed:
+"Such a dole might answer to a Landgraf of Hessen-Darmstadt; but to me
+is not in the least suitable;"--and flatly refuses it; FIEREMENT, says
+Valori. [Ranke, iii. 235, 299 n. (not the least of DATE allowed us in
+either case); Valori. i. 240.]
+
+MON GROS VALORI, who could not himself help all this, poor soul, "falls
+now into complete disgrace;" waits daily upon Friedrich at the giving
+out of the parole, "but frequently his Majesty does not speak to me at
+all." Hardly looks at me, or only looks as if I had suddenly become Zero
+Incarnate. It is now in these days, I suppose, that Friedrich writes
+about the "Scamander Battle" (of Fontenoy), and "Capture of Pekin," by
+way of helping one to fight the Austrians according to Treaty. And has
+a touch of bitter sarcasm in uttering his complaints against, such
+treatment,--the heart of him, I suppose, bitter enough. Most Christian
+King has felt this of the Scamander, Friedrich perceives; Louis's next
+letter testifies pique;--and of course we are farther from help, on
+that side, than ever. "From the STANDE of the Kur-Mark [Brandenburg]
+Friedrich was offered a considerable subsidy instead; and joyfully
+accepted the same, 'as a loan:'"--paid it punctually back, too; and
+never, all his days, forgot it of those STANDE. [Stenzel, iv. 255;
+Ranke, &c.]
+
+
+
+
+CAMP OF DIESKAU: BRITANNIC MAJESTY MAKES PEACE, FOR HIMSELF, WITH
+FRIEDRICH; BUT CANNOT FOR AUSTRIA OR SAXONY.
+
+About the middle of August, there are certain Saxon phenomena which
+awaken dread expectation in the world. Friedrich, watching, Argus-like,
+near and far, in his Chlum observatory, has noticed that Prince Karl
+is getting reinforced in Konigsgratz; 10,000 lately, 7,000 more
+coming;--and contrariwise that the Saxons seem to be straggling off from
+him; ebbing away, corps after corps,--towards Saxony, can it be? There
+are whispers of "Bavarian auxiliaries" being hired for them, too. And
+little Bruhl's late insolence; Bruhl's evident belief that "we are
+finished (AUX ABOIS)"? Putting all this together, Friedrich judges--with
+an indignation very natural--that there is again some insidious Saxon
+mischief, most likely an attack on Brandenburg, in the wind. Friedrich
+orders the Old Dessauer, "March into them, delay no longer!" and
+publishes a clangorously indignant Manifesto (evidently his own writing,
+and coming from the heart): [In Adelung, v. 64-71 (no date; "middle of
+August," say the Books).] "How they have, not bound by their Austrian
+Treaty, wantonly invaded our Silesia; have, since and before, in spite
+of our forbearance, done so many things:--and, in fact, have finally
+exhausted our patience; and are forcing us to seek redress and safety by
+the natural methods," which they will see how they like!--
+
+Old Leopold advances straightway, as bidden, direct for the Saxon
+frontier. To whom Friedrich shoots off detachments,--Prince Dietrich,
+with so many thousands, to reinforce Papa; then General Gessler with
+so many,--till Papa is 30,000 odd; and could eat Saxony at a mouthful;
+nothing whatever being yet ready there on Bruhl's part, though he has
+such immense things in the wind!--Nevertheless Friedrich again paused;
+did not yet strike. The Saxon question has Russian bug-bears, no end of
+complications. His Britannic Majesty, now at Hanover, and his prudent
+Harrington with him, are in the act of laboring, with all earnestness,
+for a general Agreement with Friedrich. Without farther bitterness,
+embroilment and bloodshed: how much preferable for Friedrich! Old
+Dessauer, therefore, pauses: "Camp of Dieskau," which we have often
+heard of, close on the Saxon Border; stands there, looking over, as with
+sword drawn, 30,000 good swords,--but no stroke, not for almost three
+months more. In three months, wretched Bruhl had not repented; but, on
+the contrary, had completed his preparations, and gone to work;--and the
+stroke did fall, as will be seen. That is Bruhl's posture in the matter.
+[Ranke, iii. 231, 314.]
+
+To Britannic George, for a good while past, it has been manifest that
+the Pragmatic Sanction, in its original form, is an extinct object; that
+reconquest of Silesia, and such like, is melancholy moonshine; and that,
+in fact, towards fighting the French with effect, it is highly necessary
+to make peace with Friedrich of Prussia again. This once more is
+George's and his Harrington's fixed view. Friedrich's own wishes are
+known, or used to be, ever since the late Kaiser's death,--though
+latterly he has fallen silent, and even avoids the topic when offered
+(knowing his man)! Herrington has to apply formally to Friedrich's
+Minister at Hanover. "Very well, if they are in earnest this time," so
+Friedrich instructs his Minister: "My terms are known to you; no change
+admissible in the terms;--do not speak with me on it farther: and,
+observe, within four weeks, the thing finished, or else broken off!"
+[Ranke, iii. 277-281.] And in this sense they are laboring incessantly,
+with Austria, with Saxony,--without the least success;--and Excellency
+Robinson has again a panting uncomfortable time. Here is a scene
+Robinson transacts at Vienna, which gives us a curious face-to-face
+glimpse of her Hungarian Majesty, while Friedrich is in his Camp at
+Chlum.
+
+
+
+
+SCHONBRUNN, 2d AUGUST, 1745, ROBINSON HAS AUDIENCE OF HER HUNGARIAN
+MAJESTY.
+
+Robinson, in a copious sonorous speech (rather apt to be copious, and to
+fall into the Parliamentary CANTO-FERMO), sets forth how extremely
+ill we Allies are faring on the French hand; nothing done upon Silesia
+either; a hopeless matter that,--is it not, your Majesty? And your
+Majesty's forces all lying there, in mere dead-lock; and we in such need
+of them! "Peace with Prussia is indispensable."--To which her Majesty
+listened, in statuesque silence mostly; "never saw her so reserved
+before, my Lord."...
+
+ROBINSON.... "'Madam, the Dutch will be obliged to accept Neutrality'
+[and plump down again, after such hoisting]!
+
+QUEEN. "'Well, and if they did, they? It would be easier to accommodate
+with France itself, and so finish the whole matter, than with Prussia."
+My Army could not get to the Netherlands this season. No General of
+mine would undertake conducting it at this day of the year. Peace with
+Prussia, what good could it do at present?'
+
+ROBINSON. "'England has already found, for subsidies, this year,
+1,178,753 pounds. Cannot go on at that rate. Peace with Prussia is one
+of the returns the English Nation expects for all it has done.'
+
+QUEEN. "'I must have Silesia again: without Silesia the Kaiserhood were
+an empty title. "Or would you have us administer it under the guardiancy
+of Prussia!"'...
+
+ROBINSON. "'In Bohemia itself things don't look well; nothing done on
+Friedrich: your Saxons seem to be qnarrelling with you, and going home.'
+
+QUEEN. "'Prince Karl is himself capable of fighting the Prussians again.
+Till that, do not speak to me of Peace! Grant me only till October!'
+
+ROBINSON. "'Prussia will help the Grand-Duke to Kaisership.'
+
+QUEEN. "'The Grand-Duke is not so ambitions of an empty honor as to
+engage in it under the tutelage of Prussia. Consider farther: the
+Imperial dignity, is it compatible with the fatal deprivation of
+Silesia? "One other battle, I say! Good God, give me only till the month
+of October!"'
+
+ROBINSON. "'A battle, Madam, if won, won't reconquer Silesia; if lost,
+your Majesty is ruined at home.'
+
+QUEEN. "'DUSSE'JE CONCLURE AVEC LUI LE LENDEMAIN, JE LUI LIVRERAIS
+BATAILLE CE SOIR (Had I to agree with him to-morrow, I would try him in
+a battle this evening)!'" [Robinson's Despatch, 4th August, 1745. Ranke,
+iii. 287; Raumer, pp. 161, 162.]
+
+Her Majesty is not to be hindered; deaf to Robinson, to her Britannic
+George who pays the money. "Cruel man, is that what you call keeping the
+Pragmatic Sanction; dismembering me of Province after Province, now in
+Germany, then in Italy, on pretext of necessity? Has not England money,
+then? Does not England love the Cause of Liberty? Give me till October!"
+Her Majesty did take till October, and later, as we shall see; poor
+George not able to hinder, by power of the purse or otherwise: who can
+hinder high females, or low, when they get into their humors? Much of
+this Austrian obstinacy, think impartial persons, was of female nature.
+We shall see what profit her Majesty made by taking till October.
+
+As for George, the time being run, and her Majesty and Saxony
+unpersuadable, he determined to accept Friedrich's terms himself, in
+hope of gradually bringing the others to do it. August 26th, at Hanover,
+there is signed a CONVENTION OF HANOVER between Friedrich and him:
+"Peace on the old Breslau-Berlin terms,--precisely the same terms, but
+Britannic Majesty to have them guaranteed by All the Powers, on the
+General Peace coming,--so that there be no snake-procedure henceforth."
+Silesia Friedrich's without fail, dear Hanover unmolested even by a
+thought of Friedrich's;--and her Hungarian Majesty to be invited, nay
+urged by every feasible method, to accede. [Adelung, v. 75; is "in
+Rousset, xix. 441;" in &c. &c.] Which done, Britannic Majesty--for
+there has hung itself out, in the Scotch Highlands, the other day
+("Glenfinlas, August 12th"), a certain Standard "TANDEM TRIUMPHANS," and
+unpleasant things are imminent!--hurries home at his best pace, and has
+his hands full there, for some time. On Austria, on Saxony, he could
+not prevail: "By no manner of means!" answered they; and went their own
+road,--jingling his Britannic subsidies in their pocket; regardless of
+the once Supreme Jove, who is sunk now to a very different figure on the
+German boards.
+
+Friedrich's outlook is very bad: such a War to go on, and not even
+finance to do it with. His intimates, his Rothenburg one time, have
+"found him sunk in gloomy thought." But he wears a bright face usually.
+No wavering or doubting in him, his mind made up; which is a great help
+that way. Friedrich indicates, and has indicated everywhere, for many
+months, that Peace, precisely on the old footing, is all he wants: "The
+Kaiser being dead, whom I took up arms to defend, what farther object is
+there?" says he. "Renounce Silesia, more honestly than last time; engage
+to have it guaranteed by everybody at the General Peace (or perhaps
+Hohenfriedberg will help to guarantee it),--and I march home!" My money
+is running down, privately thinks he; guarantee Silesia, and I shall
+be glad to go. If not, I must raise money somehow; melt the big silver
+balustrades at Berlin, borrow from the STANDE, or do something; and, in
+fact, must stand here, unless Silesia is guaranteed, and struggle till I
+die.
+
+That latter withal is still privately Friedrich's thought. Under his
+light air, he carries unspoken that grimly clear determination, at all
+times, now and henceforth; and it is an immense help to the guidance
+of him. An indispensable, indeed. No king or man, attempting anything
+considerable in this world, need expect to achieve it except, tacitly,
+on those same terms, "I will achieve it or die!" For the world, in spite
+of rumors to the contrary, is always much of a bedlam to the sanity
+(so far as he may have any) of every individual man. A strict place,
+moreover; its very bedlamisms flowing by law, as do alike the sudden
+mud-deluges, and the steady Atlantic tides, and all things whatsoever: a
+world inexorable, truly, as gravitation itself;--and it will behoove
+you to front it in a similar humor, as the tacit basis for whatever wise
+plans you lay. In Friedrich, from the first entrance of him on the stage
+of things, we have had to recognize this prime quality, in a fine tacit
+form, to a complete degree; and till his last exit, we shall never find
+it wanting. Tacit enough, unconscious almost, not given to articulate
+itself at all;--and if there be less of piety than we could wish in the
+silence of it, there is at least no play-actor mendacity, or cant of
+devoutness, to poison the high worth of it. No braver little figure
+stands on the Earth at that epoch. Ready, at the due season, with
+his mind silently made up;--able to answer diplomatic Robinsons,
+Bartensteins and the very Destinies when they apply. If you will
+withdraw your snakish notions, will guarantee Silesia, will give him
+back his old Treaty of Berlin in an irrefragable shape, he will march
+home; if not, he will never march home, but be carried thither dead
+rather. That is his intention, if the gods permit.
+
+
+
+
+GRAND-DUKE FRANZ IS ELECTED KAISER (13TH SEPTEMBER, 1745); FRIEDRICH,
+THE SEASON AND FORAGE BEING DONE, MAKES FOR SILESIA.
+
+There occurred at Frankfurt--the clear majority, seven of the nine
+Electors, Bavaria itself (nay Bohemia this time, "distaff" or not),
+and all the others but Friedrich and Kur-Pfalz, being so disposed or
+so disposable, Traun being master of the ground--no difficulty about
+electing Grand-Duke Franz Stephan of Tuscany? Joint-King of Bohemia, to
+be Kaiser of the Holy Romish Reich. Friedrich's envoy protested;--as did
+Kur-Pfalz's, with still more vehemence, and then withdrew to Hanau: the
+other Seven voted September 13th 1745: and it was done. A new Kaiser,
+Franz Stephan, or Franz I.,--with our blessing on him, if that can
+avail much. But I fear it cannot. Upon such mendacious Empty-Case
+of Kaiserhood, without even money to feed itself, not to speak of
+governing, of defending and coercing; upon such entities the blessings
+of man avail little; the gods, having warned them to go, do not bless
+them for staying!--However, tar-barrels burn, the fountains play (wine
+in some of them, I hope); Franz is to be crowned in a fortnight hence,
+with extraordinary magnificence. At this last part of it Maria Theresa
+will, in her own high person, attend; and proceeds accordingly towards
+Frankfurt, in the end of September (say the old Books), so soon as the
+Election is over.
+
+Hungarian Majesty's bearing was not popular there, according to
+Friedrich,--who always admires her after a sort, and always speaks of
+her like a king and gentleman:--but the High Lady, it is intimated, felt
+somewhat too well that she was high. Not sorry to have it known, under
+the due veils, that her Kaiser-Husband is but of a mimetic nature; that
+it is she who has the real power; and that indeed she is in a victorious
+posture at present. Very high in her carriage towards the Princes of the
+Reich, and their privileges:--poor Kur-Pfalz's notary, or herald, coming
+to protest (I think, it was the second time) about something, she quite
+disregarded his tabards, pasteboards, or whatever they were, and clapt
+him in prison. The thing was commented upon; but Kur-Pfalz got no
+redress. Need we repeat,--lazy readers having so often met him, and
+forgotten him again,--this is a new younger Kur-Pfalz: Karl Theodor,
+this one; not Friedrich Wilhelm's old Friend, but his Successor, of the
+Sulzbach line; of whom, after thirty years or so, we may again hear. He
+can complain about his violated tabard; will get his notary out of jail
+again, but no redress.
+
+Highish even towards her friends, this "Empress-Queen"
+(KAISERIN-KONIGIN, such her new title), and has a kind of
+"Thank-you-for-Nothing" air towards them. Prussian Majesty, she said,
+had unquestionable talents; but, oh, what a character! Too much levity,
+she said, by far; heterodox too, in the extreme; a BOSER MANN;--and what
+a neighbor has he been! As to Silesia, she was heard to say, she
+would as soon part with her petticoat as part with it. [_OEuvres de
+Frederic,_ iii. 126, 128.]--So that there is not the least prospect of
+peace here? "None," answer Friedrich's emissaries, whom he had empowered
+to hint the thing. Which is heavy news to Friedrich.
+
+Early in August, not long after that Audience of Robinson's, her
+Majesty, after repeated written messages to Prince Karl, urging him to
+go into fight again or attempt something, had sent two high messengers:
+Prince Lobkowitz, Duke d'Ahremberg, high dignitaries from Court, have
+come to Konigsgratz with the latest urgencies, the newest ideas; and
+would fain help Prince Karl to attempt something. Daily they used to
+come out upon a little height, in view of Friedrich's tent, and gaze in
+upon him, and round all Nature, "with big tubes," he says, "as if
+they had been astronomers;" but never attempted anything. We remember
+D'Ahremberg, and what part he has played, from the Dettingen times and
+onward. "A debauched old fellow," says Friedrich; "gone all to hebetude
+by his labors in that line; agrees always with the last speaker." Prince
+Karl seems to have little stomach himself; and does not see his way into
+(or across) another Battle. Lobkowitz, again, is always saying: "Try
+something! We are now stronger than they, by their detachings, by our
+reinforcings" (indeed, about twice their number, regular and irregular),
+though most of the Saxons are gone home. After much gazing through
+their tubes, the Austrians (August 23d) do make a small shift of place,
+insignificant otherwise; the Prussians, next day, do the like, in
+consequence; quit Chlum, burning their huts; post themselves a little
+farther up the Elbe,--their left at a place called Jaromirz, embouchure
+of the Aupa into Elbe, [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 129.]--and are
+again unattackable.
+
+The worst fact is the multitude of Pandours, more and more infesting our
+provision-roads; and that horse-forage itself is, at last, running
+low. Detachments lie all duly round to right and left, to secure our
+communications with Silesia, especially to left, out of Glatz, where
+runs one of the chief roads we have. But the service is becoming daily
+more difficult. For example:--
+
+"NEUSTADT, 8th SEPTEMBER. In that left-hand quarter, coming out of
+Glatz at a little Bohemian Town called Neustadt, the Prussian Commander,
+Tauenzien by name, was repeatedly assaulted; and from September 8th, had
+to stand actual siege, gallantly repulsing a full 10,000 with their big
+artillery, though his walls were all breached, for about a week, till
+Friedrich sent him relief. Prince Lobkowitz, our old anti-Belleisle
+friend, who is always of forward fiery humor, had set them on this
+enterprise; which has turned out fruitless. The King is much satisfied
+with Tauenzien; [Ib. 132.] of whom we shall hear again. Who indeed
+becomes notable to us, were it only for getting one Lessing as
+secretary, by and by: Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, whose fame has since
+gone into all countries; the man having been appointed a 'Secretary'
+to the very Destinies, in some sort; that is to say, a Writer of Books
+which have turned out to have truth in them! Tauenzien, a grimmish
+aquiline kind of man, of no superfluous words, has distinguished himself
+for the present by defending Neustadt, which the Austrians fully counted
+to get hold of."
+
+Let us give another little scene; preparatory to quitting this Country,
+as it is evident the King and we will soon have to do; Country being
+quite eaten out, Pandours getting ever rifer, and the Season done:--
+
+JAROMIRZ, "EARLY IN SEPTEMBER," 1745. "Jaromirz is a little Bohemian
+Town on the Aupa, or between the Aupa and Metau branches of the Upper
+Elbe; four or five miles north of Semonitz, where Friedrich's quarter
+now is. Valori, so seldom spoken to, is lodged in a suburb there: 'Had
+not you better go into the town itself?' his Majesty did once say; but
+Valori, dreading nothing, lodged on,--'Landlord a Burgher whom I thought
+respectable.' Respectable, yes he; but his son had been dealing with
+Franquini the Pandour, and had sold Valori,--night appointed, measures
+all taken; a miracle if Valori escape. Franquini, chief of 30,000
+Pandours, has come in person to superintend this important capture; and
+lies hidden, with a strong party, in the woods to rearward. Prussians
+about 200, scattered in posts, occupy the hedges in front, for guard of
+the ovens; to rear, Jaromirz being wholly ours, there is no suspicion.
+
+"In the dead of the night, Franquini emerges from the woods; sends
+forward a party of sixty, under the young Judas; who, by methods
+suitable, gets them stealthily conducted into Papa's Barn, which looks
+across a courtyard into Valori's very windows. From the Barn it is easy,
+on paws of velvet, to get into the House, if you have a Judas to open
+it. Which you have:--bolts all drawn for you, and even beams ready for
+barricading if you be meddled with. 'Upstairs is his Excellency asleep;
+Excellency's room is--to right, do you remember; or to left'--'Pshaw, we
+shall find it!' The Pandours mount; find a bedroom, break it open,--some
+fifteen or sixteen of them, and one who knows a little French;--come
+crowding forward: to the horror and terror of the poor inhabitant.' 'QUE
+VOULEZ-VOUS DONC?' 'His Excellency Valori!' 'Well, no violence; I am
+your prisoner: let me dress!' answers the supposed Excellency,--and
+contrives to secrete portfolios, and tear or make away with papers.
+And is marched off, under a select guard, who leave the rest to do the
+pillage. And was not Valori at all; was Valori's Secretary, one D'Arget,
+who had called himself Valori on this dangerous occasion! Valori sat
+quaking behind his partition; not till the Pandours began plundering the
+stables did the Prussian sentry catch sound of them, and plunge in."
+
+Friedrich had his amusement out of this adventure; liked D'Arget,
+the clever Secretary; got D'Arget to himself before long, as will be
+seen;--and, in quieter times, dashed off a considerable Explosion of
+Rhyme, called LE PALLADION (Valori as Prussia's "Palladium," with
+Devils attempting to steal him, and the like), which was once thought an
+exquisite Burlesque,--Kings coveting a sight of it, in vain,--but is
+now wearisome enough to every reader. [Valori, i. 242; _OEuvres de
+Frederic,_ iii. 130: for the Fact. Exquisite Burlesque, PALLADION
+itself, is in _OEuvres,_ xi. 192-271 (see IB. 139): a bad copy of
+that very bad Original, JEANNE D'ARC,--the only thing now good in it,
+Friedrich's polite yet positive refusal to gratify King Louis and his
+Pompdour with a sight of it (see IB. PREFACE, x-xiv, Friedrich's Letter
+to Louis; date of request and of refusal, March, 1750).]--Let us attend
+his Majesty's exit from Bohemia.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII.--BATTLE OF SOHR.
+
+The famed beautiful Elbe River rises in romantic chasms, terrible to the
+picturesque beholder, at the roots of the Riesengebirge; overlooked
+by the Hohe-Kamms, and highest summits of that chain. "Out of eleven
+wells," says gentle Dulness, "EILF or ELF QUELLEN, whence its name, Elbe
+for ELF." Sure enough, it starts out of various wells; [Description, in
+Zollner, _Briefe uber Schlesien,_ ii. 305; in &c. &c.] rushes out, like
+a great peacock's or pasha's tail, from the roots of the Giant Mountains
+thereabouts; and hurries southward,--or even rather eastward, at first;
+for (except the Iser to westward, which does not fall in for a great
+while) its chief branches come from the eastern side: Aupa, Metau,
+Adler, the drainings of Glatz, and of that rugged Country where
+Friedrich has been camping and manoeuvring all summer. On the whole,
+its course is southward for the first seventy or eighty miles, washing
+Jaromirz, Konigshof, Konigsgratz, down to Pardubitz: at Pardubitz it
+turns abruptly westward, and holds on so, bending even northward, by
+hill and plain, through the rest of its five or six hundred miles.
+
+Its first considerable branch, on that eastern or left bank, is the
+Aupa, which rises in the Pass of Schatzlar (great struggling there, for
+convoys, just now); goes next by Trautenau, which has lately been burnt;
+and joins the Elbe at Jaromirz, where Valori was stolen, or nearly so,
+from under the Prussian left wing. The Aupa runs nearly straight south;
+the Elbe, till meeting it, has run rather southeast; but after joining
+they go south together, augmented by the Metau, by the Adler, down to
+Pardubitz, where the final turn to west occurs. Jaromirz, which lies in
+the very angle of Elbe and Aupa, is the left wing of Friedrich's Camp;
+main body of the Camp lies on the other side of the Elbe, but of course
+has bridges (as at Smirzitz, where that straw sentry did his pranks
+lately); bridges are indispensable, part of our provision coming always
+by that BOHEMIAN Neustadt, from the northeast quarter out of Silesia;
+though the main course of our meal (and much fighting for it) is direct
+from the north, by the Pass of Schatzlar,--"Chaslard," as poor Valori
+calls it.
+
+Thus Friedrich lay, when Valori escaped being stolen; when Tauenzien
+was assailed by the 10,000 Pandours with siege artillery, and stood
+inexpugnable in the breach till Friedrich relieved him. Those Pandours
+"had cut away his water, for the last two days;" so that, except
+for speedy relief, all valor had been in vain. Water being gone, not
+recoverable without difficulties, Neustadt was abandoned (September
+16th, as I guess);--one of our main Silesian roads for meal has ceased.
+We have now only Schatzlar to depend on; where Franquini--lying westward
+among the glens of the Upper Elbe, and possessed of abundant talent in
+the Tolpatch way (witness Valori's narrow miss lately)--gives us trouble
+enough. Friedrich determines to move towards Schatzlar. Homewards, in
+fact; eating the Country well as he goes.
+
+Saturday, 18th September, Friedrich crosses the Elbe at Jaromirz.
+Entirely unopposed; the Austrians were all busy firing FEU-DE-JOIE
+for the Election of their Grand-Duke: Election done five days ago at
+Frankfurt, and the news just come. So they crackle about, and deliver
+rolling fire, at a great rate; proud to be "IMPERIAL Army" henceforth,
+as if that could do much for them. There was also vast dining, for
+three days, among the high heads, and a great deal of wine spent. That
+probably would have been the chance to undertake something upon them,
+better than crossing the Elbe, says Friedrich looking back. But he did
+not think of it in time; took second-best in place of best.
+
+He is now, therefore, over into that Triangular piece of Country between
+Elbe and Aupa (if readers will consult their Map); in that triangle,
+his subsequent notable operations all lie. He here proposes to move
+northward, by degrees,--through Trautenau, Schatzlar, and home; well
+eating this bit of Country too, the last uneaten bit, as he goes. This
+well eaten, there will be no harbor anywhere for Invasion, through the
+Winter coming. One of my old Notes says of it, in the topographic point
+of view:--
+
+"It is a triangular patch of Country, which has lain asleep since the
+Creation of the World; traversed only by Boii (BOI-HEIM-ERS, Bohemians),
+Czechs and other such populations, in Human History; but which Friedrich
+has been fated to make rather notable to the Moderns henceforth. Let me
+recommend it to the picturesque tourist, especially to the military
+one. Lovers of rocky precipices, quagmires, brawling torrents and the
+unadulterated ruggedness of Nature, will find scope there; and it was
+the scene of a distinguished passage of arms, with notable display of
+human dexterity and swift presence of mind. For the rest, one of the
+wildest, and perhaps (except to the picturesque tourist) most unpleasant
+regions in the world. Wild stony upland; topmost Upland, we may say,
+of Europe in general, or portion of such Upland; for the rainstorms
+hereabouts run several roads,--into the German Ocean and Atlantic by the
+Elbe, into the Baltic by the Oder, into the Black Sea by the Donau;--and
+it is the waste Outfield whither you rise, by long weeks-journeys, from
+many sides.
+
+"Much of it, towards the angle of Elbe and Aupa, is occupied by a huge
+waste Wood, called 'Kingdom Forest' (KONIGREICH SYLVA or WALD, peculium
+of Old Czech Majesties, I fancy); may be sixty square miles in area, the
+longer side of which lies along the Elbe. A Country of rocky defiles;
+lowish hills chaotically shoved together, not wanting their brooks and
+quagmires, straight labyrinthic passages; shaggy with wild wood. Some
+poor Hamlets here and there, probably the sleepiest in Nature, are
+scattered about; there may be patches ploughable for rye [modern Tourist
+says snappishly, There are many such; whole region now drained; reminded
+me of Yorkshire Highlands, with the Western Sun gilding it, that fine
+afternoon!]--ploughable for rye, buckwheat; boggy grass to be gathered
+in summer; charcoaling to do; pigs at least are presumable, among
+these straggling outposts of humanity in their obscure Hamlets: poor
+ploughing, moiling creatures, they little thought of becoming notable so
+soon! None of the Books (all intent on mere soldiering) take the least
+notice of them; not at the pains to spell their Hamlets right: no
+more notice than if they also had been stocks and moss-grown stones.
+Nevertheless, there they did evidently live, for thousands of years
+past, in a dim manner;--and are much terrified to have become the seat
+of war, all on a sudden. Their poor Hamlets, Sohr, Staudentz, Prausnitz,
+Burgersdorf and others still send up a faint smoke; and have in them,
+languidly, the live-coal of mysterious human existence, in those
+woods,--to judge by the last maps that have come out. A thing worth
+considering by the passing tourist, military or other."
+
+It is in this Kingdom Forest (which he calls ROYAUME DE SILVA, instead
+of SYLVA DE ROYAUME) that Friedrich now marches; keeping the body of the
+Forest well on his left, and skirting the southern and eastern sides
+of it. Rough marching for his Majesty; painfully infested by Nadastian
+Tolpatches; who run out on him from ambushes, and need to be scourged;
+one ambush in particular, at a place called Liebenthal (second day's
+march, and near the end of it),--where our Prussian Hussars, winding
+like fiery dragons on the dangerous precipices, gave them better than
+they brought, and completely quenched their appetite for that day. After
+Liebenthal, the march soon ends; three miles farther on, at the dim
+wold-hamlet of Staudentz: here a camp is pitched; here, till the Country
+is well eaten out, or till something else occur, we propose to tarry for
+a time.
+
+Horse-forage abounds here; but there is no getting of it without
+disturbance from those dogs; you must fight for every truss of grass:
+if a meal-train is coming, as there does every five days, you have
+to detach 8,000 foot and 3,000 horse to help it safe in. A fretting
+fatiguing time for regular troops. Our bakery is at Trautenau,--where
+Valori is now lodging. The Tolpatchery, unable to take Trautenau, set
+fire to it, though it is their own town, their own Queen's town; thatchy
+Trautenau, wooden too in the upper stories of it, takes greedily to
+the fire; goes all aloft in flame, and then lies black. A scandalous
+transaction, thinks Friedrich. The Prussian corn lay nearly all in
+cellars; little got, even of the Prussians, by such an atrocity: and
+your own poor fellow-subjects, where are they? Valori was burnt out
+here; again exploded from his quarters, poor man;--seems to have thought
+it a mere fire in his own lodging, and that he was an unfortunate
+diplomatist. Happily he got notice (PRIVATISSIME, for no officer dare
+whisper in such cases) that there is an armed party setting out for
+Silesia, to guard meal that is coming: Valori yokes himself to this
+armed party, and gets safe over the Hills with it,--then swift, by extra
+post, to Breslau and to civilized (partially civilized) accommodation,
+for a little rest after these hustlings and tossings.
+
+Friedrich had lain at Staudentz, in this manner, bickering continually
+for his forage, and eating the Country, for about ten days: and now,
+as the latter process is well on, and the season drawing to a close:
+he determines on a shift northward. Thursday, 30th September next, let
+there be one other grand forage, the final one in this eaten tract, then
+northward to fresh grounds. That, it appears, was the design. But,
+on Wednesday, there came in an Austrian deserter; who informs us that
+Prince Karl is not now in Konigsgratz, but in motion up the Elbe;
+already some fifty miles up; past Jaromirz: his rear at Konigshof, his
+van at Arnau,--on a level with burnt Trautenau, and farther north than
+we ourselves are. This is important news. "Intending to block us out
+from Schatzlar? Hmh!" Single scouts, or small parties, cannot live in
+this Kingdom Wood, swarming with Pandours: Friedrich sends out a Colonel
+Katzler, with 500 light horse, to investigate a little. Katzler
+pushes forward, on such lane or forest road-track as there is, towards
+Konigshof; beats back small hussar parties;--comes, in about an hour's
+space, not upon hussars merely, but upon dense masses of heavy horse
+winding through the forest lanes; and, with that imperfect intelligence,
+is obliged to return. The deserter spake truth, apparently; and that
+is all we can know. Forage scheme is given up; the order is, "Baggage
+packed, and MARCH to-morrow morning at ten." Long before ten, there
+had great things befallen on the morrow!--Try to understand this Note a
+little:--
+
+"The Camp of Staudentz-which two persons (the King, and General Stille,
+a more careful reporter, who also was an eye-witness) have done their
+best to describe--will, after all efforts, and an Ordnance Map to help,
+remain considerably unintelligible to the reader; as is too usual
+in such cases. A block of high-lying ground; Friedrich's Camp on it,
+perhaps two miles long, looks to the south; small Village of Staudentz
+in front; hollow beyond that, and second small Village, Deutsch
+Prausnitz, hanging on the opposite slope, with shaggy heights beyond,
+and the Kingdom Forest there beginning: on the left, defiles, brooks
+and strait country, leading towards the small town of Eypel: that is our
+left and front aspect, a hollow well isolating us on those sides. Hollow
+continues all along the front; hollow definite on our side of it, and
+forming a tolerable defence:--though again, I perceive, to rightward at
+no great distance, there rise High Grounds which considerably overhang
+us." A thing to be marked! "These we could not occupy, for want of men;
+but only maintain vedettes upon them. Over these Heights, a mile or
+two westward of this hollow of ours, runs the big winding hollow called
+Georgengrund (GEORGE'S BOTTOM), which winds up and down in that Kingdom
+Forest, and offers a road from Konigshof to Trautenau, among other
+courses it takes.
+
+"From the crown of those Heights on our right flank here, looking to
+the west, you might discern (perhaps three miles off, from one of
+the sheltering nooks in the hither side of that Georgengrund), rising
+faintly visible over knolls and dingles, the smoke of a little Forest
+Village. That Village is Sohr; notable ever since, beyond others, in
+the Kingdom Wood. Sohr, like the other Villages, has its lane-roads; its
+road to Trautenau, to Konigshof, no doubt; but much nearer you, on our
+eastern slope of the Heights, and far hitherward of Sohr, which is on
+the western, goes the great road [what is now the great road], from
+Konigshof to Trautenau, well visible from Friedrich's Camp, though still
+at some distance from it. Could these Heights between us and Sohr, which
+lie beyond the great road, be occupied, we were well secured; isolated
+on the right too, as on the other sides, from Kingdom Forest and its
+ambushes. 'Should have been done,' admits Friedrich; 'but then, as
+it is, there are not troops enough:' with 18,000 men you cannot do
+everything!"
+
+Here, however, is the important point. In Sohr, this night, 29th
+September, in a most private manner, the Austrians, 30,000 of them and
+more, have come gliding through the woods, without even their pipe lit,
+and with thick veil of hussars ahead! Outposts of theirs lie squatted in
+the bushes behind Deutsch Prausnitz, hardly 500 yards from Friedrich's
+Camp. And eastward, leftward of him, in the defiles about Eypel, lie
+Nadasti and Ruffian Trenck, with ten or twelve thousand, who are to take
+him in rear. His "Camp of Staudentz" will be at a fine pass to-morrow
+morning. The Austrian Gentlemen had found, last week, a certain bare
+Height in the Forest (Height still known), from which they could use
+their astronomer tubes day after day; [Orlich, ii. 225.] and now they
+are about attempting something!
+
+Thursday morning, very early, 30th September, 1745, Friedrich was in his
+tent, busy with generals and march-routes,--when a rapid orderly comes
+in, from that Vedette, or strong Piquet, on the Heights to our right:
+"Austrians visibly moving, in quantity, near by!" and before he has done
+answering, the officer himself arrives: "Regular Cavalry in great force;
+long dust-cloud in Kingdom Forest, in the gray dawn; and, so far as we
+can judge, it is their Army coming on." Here is news for a poor man, in
+the raw of a September morning, by way of breakfast to him! "To arms!"
+is, of course, Friedrich's instant order; and he himself gallops to the
+Piquet on the Heights, glass in hand. "Austrian Army sure enough,
+thirty to thirty-five thousand of them, we only eighteen. [_OEuvres
+de Frederic,_ iii. 139.] Coming to take us on the right flank here;
+to attack our Camp by surprise: will crush us northward through the
+defiles, and trample us down in detail? Hmh! To run for it, will never
+do. We must fight for it, and even attack THEM, as our way is, though on
+such terms. Quick, a plan!" The head of Friedrich is a bank you cannot
+easily break by coming on it for plans: such a creature for impromptu
+plans, and unexpected dashes swift as the panther's, I have hardly
+known,--especially when you squeeze him into a corner, and fancy he is
+over with it! Friedrich gallops down, with his plan clear enough; and
+already the Austrians, horse and foot, are deploying upon those Heights
+he has quitted; Fifty Squadrons of Horse for left wing to them, and
+a battery of Twenty-eight big Guns is establishing itself where
+Friedrich's Piquet lately stood.
+
+Friedrich's right flank has to become his front, and face those
+formidable Austrian Heights and Batteries; and this with more than
+Prussian velocity, and under the play of those twenty-eight big guns,
+throwing case-shot (GRENADES ROYALES) and so forth, all the while.
+To Valori, when he heard of the thing, it is inconceivable how mortal
+troops could accomplish such a movement; Friedrich himself praises
+it, as a thing honorably well done. Took about half an hour; case-shot
+raining all the while; soldier honorably never-minding: no flurry,
+though a speed like that of spinning-tops. And here we at length are,
+Staudentz now to rear of us, behind our centre a good space; Burgersdorf
+in front of us to right, our left reaching to Prausnitz: Austrian lines,
+three deep of them, on the opposite Height; we one line only, which
+matches them in length.
+
+They, that left wing of horse, should have thundered down on us,
+attacking us, not waiting our attack, thinks Friedrich; but they
+have not done it. They stand on their height there, will perhaps fire
+carbines, as their wont is. "You, Buddenbrock, go into them with your
+Cuirassiers!" Buddenbrock and the Cuirassiers, though it is uphill,
+go into them at a furious rate; meet no countercharge, mere sputter of
+carbines;--tumble them to mad wreck, back upon their second line, back
+upon their third: absurdly crowded there on their narrow height, no room
+to manoeuvre; so that they plunge, fifty squadrons of them, wholly into
+the Georgengrund rearward, into the Kingdom Wood, and never come on
+again at all. Buddenbrock has done his job right well.
+
+Seeing which, our Infantry of the right wing, which stood next to
+Buddenbrock, made impetuous charge uphill, emulous to capture that
+Battery of Twenty-eight; but found it, for some time, a terrible
+attempt. These Heights are not to be called "hills," still less
+"mountains" (as in some careless Books); but it is a stiff climb at
+double-quick, with twenty-eight big guns playing in the face of you.
+Storms of case-shot shear away this Infantry, are quenching its noble
+fury in despair; Infantry visibly recoiling, when our sole Three
+Regiments of Reserve hurry up to support. Round these all rallies;
+rushes desperately on, and takes the Battery,--of course, sending the
+Austrian left wing rapidly adrift, on loss of the same.
+
+This, I consider, is the crisis of the Fight; the back of the Austrian
+enterprise is already broken, by this sad winging of it on the left. But
+it resists still; comes down again,--the reserve of their left wing
+seen rapidly making for Burgersdorf, intending an attack there; which we
+oppose with vigor, setting Burgersdorf on fire for temporary screen; and
+drive the Austrian reserve rapidly to rearward again. But there is rally
+after rally of them. They rank again on every new height, and dispute
+there; loath to be driven into Kingdom Wood, after such a flourish of
+arms. One height, "bushy steep height," the light-limbed valiant Prince,
+little Ferdinand of Brunswick, had the charge of attacking; and he did
+it with his usual impetus and irresistibility:--and, strangely enough,
+the defender of it chanced to be that Brother of his, Prince Ludwig,
+with whom he had the little Interview lately. Prince Ludwig got a wound,
+as well as lost his height. The third Brother, poor Prince Albrecht,
+who is also here, as volunteer apprentice, on the Prussian side, gets
+killed. There will never be another Interview, for all three, between
+the Camps! Strange times for those poor Princes, who have to seek
+soldiering for their existence.
+
+Meanwhile the Cavalry of Buddenbrock, that is to say of the right wing,
+having now no work in that quarter, is despatched to reinforce the left
+wing, which has stood hitherto apart on its own ground; not attacked or
+attacking,--a left wing REFUSED, as the soldiers style it. Reinforced by
+Buddenbrock, this left wing of horse does now also storm forward;--"near
+the Village of Prausnitz" (Prausnitz a little way to rear of it),
+thereabouts, is the scene of its feat. Feat done in such fashion that
+the Austrians opposite will not stand the charge at all; but gurgle
+about in a chaotic manner; then gallop fairly into Kingdom Wood, without
+stroke struck; and disappear, as their fellows had done. Whereupon
+the Prussian horse breaks in upon the adjoining Infantry of that flank
+(Austrian right flank, left bare in this manner); champs it also into
+chaotic whirlpools; cuts away an outskirt of near 2,000 prisoners,
+and sets the rest running. This seems to have been pretty much the
+COUP-DE-GRACE of the Fight; and to have brought the Austrian dispute to
+finis. From the first, they had rallied on the heights; had struggled
+and disputed. Two general rallies they made, and various partial, but
+none had any success. They were driven on, bayonet in back, as the
+phrase is: with this sad slap on their right, added to that old one on
+their left, what can they now do but ebb rapidly; pour in cataracts
+into Kingdom Wood, and disappear there? [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii.
+135-143; Stille, pp. 144-163; Orlich, ii. 227-243; _Feldzuge,_ i. 357,
+363, 374.]
+
+Prince Karl's scheme was good, says Friedrich; but it was ill executed.
+He never should have let us form; his first grand fault was that he
+waited to be attacked, instead of attacking. Parts of his scheme were
+never executed at all. Duke d'Ahremberg, for instance, it is said, had
+so dim a notion of the ground, that he drew up some miles off, with
+his back to the Prussians. Such is the rumor,--perhaps only a rumor,
+in mockery of the hebetated old gentleman fallen unlucky? On the
+other hand, that Nadasti made a failure which proved important, is
+indubitable. Nadasti, with some thousands of Tolpatchery, was at
+Liebenthal, four miles to southeast of the action; Ruffian Trenck lay
+behind Eypel, perhaps as far to east, of it: Trenck and Nadasti were to
+rendezvous, to unite, and attack the Prussian Camp on its rear,--"Camp,"
+so ran the order, for it was understood the Prussians would all be
+there, we others attacking it in front and both flanks;--which turned
+out otherwise, not for Nadasti alone!
+
+Nadasti came to his rendezvous in time; Ruffian Trenck did not:
+Nadasti grew tired of waiting for Trenck, and attacked the Camp by
+himself:--Camp, but not any men; Camp being now empty, and the men all
+fighting, ranked at right angles to it, furlongs and miles away. Nadasti
+made a rare hand of the Camp; plundered everything, took all the King's
+Camp-furniture, ready money, favorite dog Biche,--likewise poor
+Eichel his Secretary, who, however, tore the papers first. Tolpatchery
+exultingly gutted the Camp; and at last set fire to it,--burnt even some
+eight or ten poor Prussian sick, and also "some women whom they caught.
+We found the limbs of these poor men and women lying about," reports
+old General Lehwald; who knew about it. A doggery well worthy of the
+gallows, think Lehwald and I. "Could n't help it; ferocity of wild men,"
+says Nadasti. "Well; but why not attack, then, with your ferocity?"
+Confused Court-martial put these questions, at Vienna subsequently; and
+Ruffian Trenck, some say, got injustice, Nadasti shuffling things upon
+him; for which one cares almost nothing. Lehwald, lying at Trautenau,
+had heard the firing at sunrise; and instantly marched to help: he only
+arrived to give Nadasti a slash or two, and was too late for the Fight.
+One Schlichtling, on guard with a weak party, saved what was in the
+right wing of the Camp,--small thanks to him, the Main Fight being so
+near: Friedrich's opinion is, an Officer, in Schlichtling's place, ought
+to have done more, and not have been so helpless.
+
+This was the Battle of Sohr; so called because the Austrians had begun
+there, and the Prussians ended there. The Prussian pursuit drew bridle
+at that Village; unsafe to prosecute Austrians farther, now in the deeps
+of Kingdom Forest. The Battle has lasted five hours. It must be now
+getting towards noon; and time for breakfast, if indeed any were to be
+had; but that is next to impossible, Nadasti having been so busy. Not
+without extreme difficulty is a manchet of bread, with or without a drop
+of wine, procured for the King's Majesty this day. Many a tired hero
+will have nothing but tobacco, with spring-water, to fall back upon.
+Never mind! says the King, says everybody. After all, it is a cheap
+price to pay for missing an attack from Pandours in the rear, while such
+crisis went on ahead.
+
+Lying COUSIN Trenck, of the Life-guard, who is now in Glatz, gives vivid
+eye-witness particulars of these things, time of the morning and so on;
+says expressly he was there, and what he did there, [Frederic Baron de
+Trenck, _Memoires, traduits par lui-meme_ (Strasburg and Paris, 1789),
+i. 74-78, 79.]--though in Glatz under lock and key, three good months
+before. "How could I help mistakes," said he afterwards, when people
+objected to this and that in his blusterous mendacity of a Book: "I had
+nothing but my poor agitated memory to trust to!" A man's memory, when
+it gets the length of remembering that he was in the Battle of Sohr
+while bodily absent, ought it not to--in fact, to strike work; to still
+its agitations altogether, and call halt? Trenck, some months after,
+got clambered out of Glatz, by sewers, or I forget how; and leaped, or
+dropped, from some parapet into the River Neisse,--sinking to the loins
+in tough mud, so that he could not stir.
+
+MAP TO GO HERE----BOOK 15--page 499----
+
+"Fouquet let me stand there half a day, before he would pick me
+out again." Rigorous Bouquet, human mercy forbidding, could not let
+him stand there in permanence,--as we, better circumstanced, may with
+advantage try to do, in time coming!
+
+Friedrich lay at Sohr five days; partly for the honor of the thing,
+partly to eat out the Country to perfection. Prince Karl, from
+Konigshof, soon fell back to Konigsgratz; and lay motionless there,
+nothing but his Tolpatcheries astir, Sohr Country all eaten, Friedrich,
+in the due Divisions, marched northward. Through Trautenau, Schatzlar,
+his own Division, which was the main one;--and, fencing off the
+Tolpatches successfully with trouble, brings all his men into Silesia
+again. A good job of work behind them, surely! Cantons them to right and
+left of Landshut, about Rohnstock and Hohenfriedberg, hamlets known so
+well; and leaving the Young Dessauer to command, drives for Berlin (30th
+October),--rapidly, as his wont is. Prince Karl has split up his force
+at Konigsgratz; means, one cannot doubt, to go into winter-quarters.
+If he think of invading, across that eaten Country and those bad
+Mountains,--well, our troops can all be got together in six hours' time.
+
+At Trautenau, a week after Sohr, Friedrich had at last received the
+English ratification of that Convention of Hanover, signed 26th August,
+almost a month ago; not ratified till September 22d. About which there
+had latterly been some anxiety, lest his Britannic Majesty himself might
+have broken off from it. With Austria, with Saxony, Britannic Majesty
+has been entirely unsuccessful:--"May not Sohr, perhaps, be a fresh
+persuasive?" hopes Friedrich;--but as to Britannic Majesty's breaking
+off, his thoughts are far from that, if we knew! Poor Majesty: not long
+since, Supreme Jove of Germany; and now--is like to be swallowed
+in ragamuffin street-riots; not a thunder-bolt within clutch of him
+(thunder-bolts all sticking in the mud of the Netherlands, far off), and
+not a constable's staff of the least efficacy! Consider these dates in
+combination. Battle of Sohr was on THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th:--
+
+"SUNDAY preceding, SEPTEMBER 26th, was such a Lord's-Day in the City of
+Edinburgh, as had not been seen there,--not since Jenny Geddes's stool
+went flying at the Bishop's head, above a hundred years before. Big
+alarm-bell bursting out in the middle of divine service; emptying all
+the Churches ('Highland rebels just at hand!')--into General Meeting of
+the Inhabitants, into Chaos come again, for the next forty hours.
+Till, in the gaunt midnight, Tuesday, 2 A.M., Lochiel with about 1,000
+Camerons, waiting slight opportunity, crushed in through the Netherbow
+Port; and"--And, about noon of that day, a poor friend of ours,
+loitering expectant in the road that leads by St. Anthony's Well, saw
+making entry into paternal Holyrood,--the Young Pretender, in person,
+who is just being proclaimed Prince of Wales, up in the High-street
+yonder! "A tall slender young man, about five feet ten inches high; of
+a ruddy complexion, high-nosed, large rolling brown eyes; long-visaged,
+red-haired, but at that time wore a pale periwig. He was in a Highland
+habit [coat]; over the shoulder a blue sash wrought with gold; red
+velvet breeches; a green velvet bonnet, with white cockade on it and
+a gold lace. His speech seemed very like that of an Irishman; very sly
+[how did you know, my poor friend?];--spoke often to O'Sullivan [thought
+to be a person of some counsel; had been Tutor to Maillebois's Boys, had
+even tried some irregular fighting under Maillebois]--to O'Sullivan and"
+[Henderson, _Highland Rebellion,_ p. 14.]... And on Saturday, in short,
+came PRESTONPANS. Enough of such a Supreme Jove; good for us here as a
+timetable chiefly, or marker of dates!
+
+Sunday, 3d October, King's Adjutant, Captain Mollendorf, a young Officer
+deservedly in favor, arrives at Berlin with the joyful tidings of
+this Sohr business ("Prausnitz" we then called it): to the joy of all
+Prussians, especially of a Queen Mother, for whom there is a Letter in
+pencil. After brief congratulation, Mollendorf rushes on; having next to
+give the Old Dessauer notice of it in his Camp at Dieskau, in the Halle
+neighborhood. Mollendorf appears in Halle suddenly next morning, Monday,
+about ten o'clock, sixteen postilions trumpeting, and at their swiftest
+trot, in front of him;--shooting, like a melodious morning-star, across
+the rusty old city, in this manner,--to Dieskau Camp, where he gives the
+Old Dessauer his good news. Excellent Victory indeed; sharp striking,
+swift self-help on our part. Halle and the Camp have enough to think
+of, for this day and the next. Whither Mollendorf went next, we will not
+ask: perhaps to Brunswick and other consanguineous places?--Certain it
+is,
+
+"On Wednesday, the 6th, about two in the afternoon, the Old Dessauer
+has his whole Army drawn out there, with green sprigs in their hats,
+at Dieskau, close upon the Saxon Frontier; and, after swashing and
+manoeuvring about in the highest military style of art, ranks them
+all in line, or two suitable lines, 30,000 of them; and then,
+with clangorous outburst of trumpet, kettle-drum and all manner of
+field-music, fires off his united artillery a first time; almost shaking
+the very hills by such a thunderous peal, in the still afternoon. And
+mark, close fitted into the artillery peal, commences a rolling fire,
+like a peal spread out in threads, sparkling strangely to eye and ear;
+from right to left, long spears of fire and sharp strokes of sound,
+darting aloft, successive simultaneous, winding for the space of miles,
+then back by the rear line, and home to the starting-point: very
+grand indeed. Again, and also again, the artillery peal, and rolling
+small-arms fitted into it, is repeated; a second and a third time,
+kettle-drums and trumpets doing what they can. That was the Old
+Dessauer's bonfiring (what is called FEU-DE-JOIE), for the Victory of
+Sohr; audible almost at Leipzig, if the wind were westerly. Overpowering
+to the human mind; at least, to the old Newspaper reporter of that day.
+But what was strangest in the business," continues he "(DAS CURIEUSESTE
+DABEY), was that the Saxon Uhlans, lying about in the villages across
+the Border, were out in the fields, watching the sight, hardly 300 yards
+off, from beginning to end; and little dreamed that his High Princely
+Serenity," blue of face and dreadful in war, "was quite close to them,
+on the Height called Bornhock; condescending to 'take all this into
+High-Serene Eye-shine there; and, by having a white flag waved,
+deigning to give signal for the discharges of the artillery.'"
+[_Helden-Geschichte,_ i. 1124.]
+
+By this the reader may know that the Old Dessauer is alive, ready for
+action if called on; and Bruhl ought to comprehend better how riskish
+his game with edge-tools is. Bruhl is not now in an unprepared
+state:--here are Uhlans at one's elbow looking on. Rutowski's Uhlans;
+who lies encamped, not far off, in good force, posted among morasses;
+strongly entrenched, and with schemes in his head, and in Bruhl's, of
+an aggressive, thrice-secret and very surprising nature! I remark only
+that, in Heidelberg Country, victorious old Traun is putting his people
+into winter-quarters; himself about to vanish from this History, [Went
+to SIEBENBURGEN (Transylvania) as Governor; died there February,
+1748, age seventy-one (_Maria Theresiens Leben,_ p. 56 n.).]--and has
+detached General Grune with 10,000 men; who left Heidelberg October 9th,
+on a mysterious errand, heeded by nobody; and will turn up in the next
+Chapter.
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII.--SAXONY AND AUSTRIA MAKE A SURPRISING LAST ATTEMPT.
+
+After this strenuous and victorious Campaign, which has astonished all
+public men, especially all Pragmatic Gazetteers, and with which all
+Europe is disharmoniously ringing, Friedrich is hopeful there will be
+Peace, through England;--cannot doubt, at least, but the Austrians have
+had enough for one year;--and looks forward to certain months, if not
+of rest, yet of another kind of activity. Negotiation, Peace through
+England, if possible; that is the high prize: and in the other case,
+or in any case, readiness for next Campaign;--which with the treasury
+exhausted, and no honorable subsidy from France, is a difficult problem.
+
+That was Friedrich's, and everybody's, program of affairs for the months
+coming: but in that Friedrich and everybody found themselves greatly
+mistaken. Bruhl and the Austrians had decided otherwise. "Open
+mouse-trap," at Striegau; claws of the sleeping cat, at Sohr: these were
+sad experiences; ill to bear, with the Sea-Powers grumbling on you, and
+the world sniffing its pity on you;--but are not conclusive, are only
+provoking and even maddening, to the sanguine mind. Two sad failures;
+but let us try another time. "A tricky man; cunning enough, your King of
+Prussia!" thinks Bruhl, with a fellness of humor against Friedrich which
+is little conceivable to us now: "Cunning enough. But it is possible
+cunning may be surpassed by deeper cunning!"--and decides, Bartenstein
+and an indignant Empress-Queen assenting eagerly, That there shall, in
+the profoundest secrecy till it break out, be a third, and much fiercer
+trial, this Winter yet. The Bruhl-Bartenstein plan (owing mainly to the
+Russian Bugbear which hung over it, protective, but with whims of its
+own) underwent changes, successive redactions or editions; which the
+reader would grudge to hear explained to him. [Account of them in
+Orlich, ii. 273-278 (from various RUTOWSKI Papers; and from the
+contemporary satirical Pamphlet, "MONDSCHEINWURFE, Mirror-castings of
+Moonshine, by ZEBEDAUS Cuckoo,) beaten Captain of a beaten Army."] Of the
+final or acted edition, some loose notion, sufficient for our purpose,
+may be collected from the following fractions of Notes:--
+
+NOVEMBER 17th (INTERIOR OF GERMANY).... "Feldmarschall-Lieutenant von
+Grune, a General of mark, detached by Traun not long since, from the
+Rhine Country, with a force of 10,000 men, why is he marching about:
+first to Baireuth Country, 'at Hof, November 9th,' as if for Bohemia;
+then north, to Gera ('lies at Gera till the 17th'), as if for
+Saxony Proper? Prince Karl, you would certainly say, has gone into
+winter-quarters; about Konigsgratz, and farther on? Gone or going,
+sure enough, is Prince Karl, into the convenient Bohemian
+districts,--uncertain which particular districts; at least the Young
+Dessauer, watching him from the Silesian side, is uncertain which.
+Better be vigilant, Prince Leopold!--Grune, lying at Gera yonder, is not
+intending for Prince Karl, then? No, not thither. Then perhaps
+towards Saxony, to reinforce the Saxons? Or some-whither to find fat
+winter-quarters: who knows? Indeed, who cares particularly, for such
+inconsiderable Grune and his 10,000!--
+
+"The Saxons quitted their inexpugnable Camp towards Halle, some time
+ago; went into cantonments farther inland;--the Old Dessauer (middle
+of October) having done the like, and gone home: his force lies rather
+scattered, for convenience of food and forage. From the Silesian
+side, again, Prince Leopold, whose head-quarters are about Striegau,
+intimates, That he cannot yet say, with certainty, what districts Prince
+Karl will occupy for winter-quarters in Bohemia. Prince Karl is vaguely
+roving about; detaching Pandours to the Silesian Mountains, as if for
+checking our victorious Nassau there;--always rather creeping northward;
+skirting Western Silesia with his main force; 30,000 or better, with
+Lobkowitz and Nadasti ahead. Meaning what? Be vigilant, my young friend.
+
+"The private fact is, Prince Karl does not mean to go into
+winter-quarters at all. In private fact, Prince Karl is one of Three
+mysterious Elements or Currents, sent on a far errand: Grune is another:
+Rutowski's Saxon Camp (now become Cantonment) is a third. Three Currents
+instinct with fire and destruction, but as yet quite opaque; which have
+been launched,--whitherward thinks the reader? On Berlin itself, and
+the Mark of Brandenburg; there to collide, and ignite in a marvellous
+manner. There is their meeting-point: there shall they, on a sudden,
+smite one another into flame; and the destruction blaze, fiery enough,
+round Friedrich and his own Brandenburg homesteads there!--
+
+"It is a grand scheme; scheme at least on a grand scale. For the LEGS of
+it, Grune's march and Prince Karl's, are about 600 miles long! Plan due
+chiefly, they say, to the yellow rage of Bruhl; aided by the contrivance
+of Rutowski, and the counsel of Austrian military men. For there is much
+consulting about it, and redacting of it; Polish Majesty himself
+very busy. To Bruhl's yellow rage it is highly solacing and hopeful.
+'Rutowski, lying close in his Cantonments, and then suddenly springing
+out, will overwhelm the Old Dessauer, who lies wide;--can do it, surely;
+and Grune is there to help if necessary. Dessauer blown to pieces,
+Grune, with Rutowski combined, push in upon Brandenburg,--Grune himself
+upon Berlin,--from the west and south, nobody expecting him. Prince
+Karl, not taking into winter-quarters in Bohemia, as they idly think;
+but falling down the Valley of the Bober, or Bober and Queiss, into the
+Lausitz (to Gorlitz, Guben, where we have Magazines for him), comes upon
+it from the southeast,--nobody expecting any of them. Three simultaneous
+Armies hurled on the head of your Friedrich; combustible deluges flowing
+towards him, as from the ends of Germany; so opaque, silent, yet of fire
+wholly: will not that surprise him!' thinks Bruhl. These are the schemes
+of the little man."
+
+Bruhl, having constituted himself rival to Friedrich, and fallen into
+pale or yellow rage by the course things took, this Plan is naturally
+his chief joy, or crown of joys; a bubbling well of solace to him in
+his parched condition. He should, obviously, have kept it secret;
+thrice-secret, the little fool;--but a poor parched man is not always
+master of his private bubbling wells in that kind! Wolfstierna is
+Swedish Envoy at Dresden; Rudenskjold, Swedish Envoy at Berlin, has
+run over to see him in the dim November days. Swedes, since Ulrique's
+marriage, are friendly to Prussia. Bruhl has these two men to dinner;
+talks with them, over his wine, about Friedrich's insulting usage
+of him, among other topics. "Insulting; how, your Excellency?" asks
+Rudenskjold, privately a friend of Friedrich. Bruhl explains, with voice
+quivering, those cuts in the Friedrich manifesto of August last, and
+other griefs suffered; the two Swedes soothing him with what oil they
+have ready. "No matter!" hints Bruhl; and proceeds from hint to hint,
+till the two Swedes are fully aware of the grand scheme: Grune, Prince
+Karl; and how Destruction, with legs 500 miles long, is steadily
+advancing to assuage one with just revenge. "Right, your
+Excellency!"--only that Rudenskjold proceeds to Berlin; and there
+straightway ("8th November") punctually makes Friedrich also aware.
+[Stenzel, iv. 262; Ranke, iii. 317-323; Friedrich's own narrative of
+it, _OEuvres,_ iii. 148.] Foolish Bruhl: a man that has a secret should
+not only hide it, but hide that he has it to hide.
+
+
+
+
+FRIEDRICH GOES OUT TO MEET HIS THREE-LEGGED MONSTER; CUTS ONE LEG OF IT
+IN TWO (Fight of Hennersdorf, 23d November, 1745).
+
+Friedrich, having heard the secret, gazes into it with horror and
+astonishment: "What a time I have! This is not living; this is being
+killed a thousand times a day!" [Ranke (iii. 321 n.): TO whom said, we
+are not told.]--with horror and astonishment; but also with what most
+luminous flash of eyesight is in him; compares it with Prince Karl's
+enigmatic motions, Grune's open ones and the other phenomena;--perceives
+that it is an indisputable fact, and a thrice-formidable; requiring to
+be instantly dealt with by the party interested! Whereupon, after hearty
+thanks to Rudenskjold, there occur these rapidly successive phases of
+activity, which we study to take up in a curt form.
+
+FIRST (probably 9th or 10th November), there is Council held with
+Minister Podewils and the Old Dessauer; Council from which comes little
+benefit, or none. Podewils and Old Leopold stare incredulous; cannot
+be made to believe such a thing. "Impossible any Saxon minister or man
+would voluntarily bring the theatre of war into his own Country, in
+this manner!" thinks the Old Dessauer, and persists to think,--on what
+obstinate ground Friedrich never knew. To which Podewils, "who
+has properties in the Lausitz, and would so fain think them safe,"
+obstinately, though more covertly, adheres. "Impossible!" urge both
+these Councillors; and Friedrich cannot even make them believe it.
+Believe it; and, alas, believing it is not the whole problem!
+
+Happily Friedrich has the privilege of ordering, with or without their
+belief. "You, Podewils, announce the matter to foreign Courts. You,
+Serene Highness of Anhalt, at your swiftest, collect yonder, and encamp
+again. Your eye well on Grune and Rutowski; and the instant I give you
+signal--! I am for Silesia, to look after Prince Karl, the other long
+leg of this Business." Old Leopold, according to Friedrich's account, is
+visibly glad of such opportunity to fight again before he die: and yet,
+for no reason except some senile jealousy, is not content with these
+arrangements; perversely objects to this and that. At length the
+King says,--think of this hard word, and of the eyes that accompany
+it!--"When your Highness gets Armies of your own, you will order them
+according to your mind; at present, it must be according to mine." On,
+then; and not a moment lost: for of all things we must be swift!
+
+Old Leopold goes accordingly. Friedrich himself goes in a week hence.
+Orders, correspondences from Podewils and the rest, are flying right and
+left;--to Young Leopold in Silesia, first of all. Young Leopold draws
+out his forces towards the Silesian-Lausitz border, where Prince Karl's
+intentions are now becoming visible. And,--here is the second phase
+notable,--
+
+"On Monday, 15th, ["18th," _Feldzuge,_ i. 402 (see Rodenbeck, i. 122).]
+at 7 A.M.," Friedrich rushes off, by Crossen, full speed for Liegnitz;
+"with Rothenburg, with the Prince of Prussia and Ferdinand of Brunswick
+accompanying." With what thoughts,--though, in his face, you can read
+nothing; all Berlin being already in such tremor! Friedrich is in
+Liegnitz next day; and after needful preliminaries there, does, on the
+Thursday following, "at Nieder-Adelsdorf," not far off, take actual
+command of Prince Leopold's Army, which had lain encamped for some days,
+waiting him. And now with such force in hand,--35,000, soldiers every
+man of them, and freshened by a month's rest,--one will endeavor to do
+some good upon Prince Karl. Probably sooner than Prince Karl supposes.
+For there is great velocity in this young King; a panther-like
+suddenness of spring in him: cunning, too, as any Felis of them; and
+with claws like the Felis Leo on occasion. Here follows the brief
+Campaign that ensued, which I strive greatly to abridge.
+
+Prince Karl's intentions towards Frankfurt-on-Oder Country, through the
+Lausitz, are now becoming practically manifest. There is a Magazine for
+him at Guben, within thirty miles of Frankfurt; arrangements getting
+ready all the way. A winter march of 150 miles;--but what, say the
+spies, is to hinder? Prince Karl dreams not that Friedrich is on the
+ground, or that anybody is aware. Which notion Friedrich finds that it
+will be extremely suitable to maintain in Prince Karl. Friedrich is now
+at Adelsdorf, some thirty miles eastward of the Lausitz Border, perhaps
+forty or more from the route Prince Karl will follow through that
+Province.
+
+"It is a high-lying irregularly hilly Country; hilly, not mountainous.
+Various streams rise out of it that have a long course,--among others,
+the Spree, which washes Berlin;--especially three Valleys cross it,
+three Rivers with their Valleys: Bober, Queiss, Neisse (the THIRD Neisse
+we have come upon); all running northward, pretty much parallel, though
+all are branches of the Oder. This is Neisse THIRD, we say; not the
+Neisse of Neisse City, which we used to know at the north base of
+the Giant Mountains, nor the Roaring Neisse, which we have seen at
+Hohenfriedberg; but a third [and the FOURTH and last, "Black Neisse,"
+thank Heaven, is an upper branch of this, and we have, and shall have,
+nothing to do with it!]--third Neisse, which we may call the Lausitz
+Neisse. On which, near the head of it, there is a fine old spinning,
+linen-weaving Town called Zittau,--where, to make it memorable, one
+Tourist has read, on the Town-house, an Inscription worth repeating:
+'BENE FACERE ET MALE AUDIRE REGIUM EST, To do good and have evil said
+of you, is a kingly thing.' Other Towns, as Gorlitz, and seventy miles
+farther the above-said Guben, lie on this same Neisse,--shall we
+add that Herrnhuth stands near the head of it? The wondrous Town of
+Herrnhuth (LORD'S-KEEPING), founded by Count Zinzendorf, twenty
+years before those dates; ["In 1722, the first tree felled" (LIVES of
+Zinzendorf).] where are a kind of German Methodist-Quakers to this day,
+who have become very celebrated in the interim. An opulent enough, most
+silent, strictly regular, strange little Town. The women are in uniform;
+wives, maids, widows, each their form of dress. Missionaries, speaking
+flabby English, who have been in the West Indies or are going thither,
+seem to abound in the place; male population otherwise, I should think,
+must be mainly doing trade elsewhere; nothing but prayers, preachings,
+charitable boarding-schooling and the like, appeared to be going on.
+Herrnhuth is 'a Sabbath Petrified; Calvinistic Sabbath done into Stone,'
+as one of my companions called it." [Tourist's Note (Autumn, 1852).]
+
+Herrnhuth, of which all Englishmen have heard, stands near the head of
+this our third Neisse; as does Zittau, a few miles higher up. I can do
+nothing more to give it mark for them. Bober Valley, then Queiss Valley,
+which run parallel though they join at last, and become Bober wholly
+before getting into the Oder,--these two Valleys and Rivers lie in
+Friedrich's own Territory; and are between him and the Lausitz, Queiss
+River being the boundary of Silesia and the Lausitz here. It is down
+the Neisse that Prince Karl means to march. There are Saxons already
+gathering about Zittau; and down as far as Guben they are making
+Magazines and arrangements,--for it is all their own Country in those
+years, though most of it is Prussia's now. Prince Karl's march will go
+parallel to the Bober and the Queiss; separated from the Queiss in this
+part by an undulating Hill-tract of twenty miles or more.
+
+Friedrich has had somewhat to settle for the Southern Frontier of
+Silesia withal, which new doggeries of Pandours are invading,--to lie
+ready for Prince Karl on his return thither, whose grand meaning all
+this while (as Friedrich well knows), is "Silesia in the lump" again,
+had he once cut us off from Brandenburg and our supplies! General
+Nassau, far eastward, who is doing exploits in Moravia itself,--him
+Friedrich has ordered homeward, westward to his own side of the
+Mountains, to attend these new Pandour gentlemen; Winterfeld he has
+called home, out of those Southern mountains, as likely to be usefuler
+here on this Western frontier. Winterfeld arrived in Camp the same day
+with Friedrich; and is sent forward with a body of 3,000 light troops,
+to keep watch about the Lausitz Frontier and the River Queiss; "careful
+not to quit our own side of that stream,"--as we mean to hoodwink Prince
+Karl, if we can!
+
+Friedrich lies strictly within his own borders, for a day or two; till
+Prince Karl march, till his own arrangements are complete. Friedrich
+himself keeps the Bober, Winterfeld the Queiss; "all pass freely out of
+the Lausitz; none are allowed to cross into it: thereby we hear notice
+of Prince Karl, he none of us." Perfectly quiescent, we, poor creatures,
+and aware of nothing! Thus, too, Friedrich--in spite of his warlike
+Manifesto, which the Saxons are on the eve of answering with a formal
+Declaration of War--affects great rigor in considering the Saxons as not
+yet at war with him: respects their frontier, Winterfeld even punishes
+hussars "for trespassing on Lausitz ground." Friedrich also affects to
+have roads repaired, which he by no means intends to travel:--the whole
+with a view of lulling Prince Karl; of keeping the mouse-trap open,
+as he had done in the Striegau case. It succeeded again, quite as
+conspicuously, and at less expense.
+
+Prince Karl--whose Tolpatch doggery Winterfeld will not allow to pass
+the Queiss, and to whom no traveller or tidings can come from beyond
+that River--discerns only, on the farther shore of it, Winterfeld with
+his 3,000 light troops. Behind these, he discerns either nothing, or
+nothing immediately momentous; but contentedly supposes that this, the
+superficies of things, is all the solid-content they have. Prince
+Karl gets under way, therefore, nothing doubting; with his Saxons as
+vanguard. Down the Neisse Valley, on the right or Queiss-ward side of
+it: Saturday, 20th November, is his first march in Lusatian territory.
+He lies that night spread out in three Villages, Schonberg, Schonbrunn,
+Kieslingswalde; [_Feldzuge,_ i. 407 (Bericht von der Action bey
+Katholisch-Hennersdorf, &c.).] some ten miles long; parallel to the
+Neisse River, and about four miles from it, east or Queiss-ward of it.
+Karl himself is rear, at Schonberg; fierce Lobkowitz is centre; the
+Saxons are vanguard, 6,000 in all, posted in Villages, which again are
+some ten or twelve miles ahead of Prince Karl's forces; the Queiss on
+their right hand, and the Naumburg Bridge of Queiss, where Winterfeld
+now is, about fifteen miles to east. Their Uhlans circulate through
+the intervening space (were much patrolling needed, in such quiet
+circumstances), and maintain the due communication. There lies Prince
+Karl, on Saturday night, 20th November, 1745; an Army of perhaps 40,000,
+dnngerously straggling out above twenty miles long; and appears to see
+no difficulty ahead. The Saxons, I think, are to continue where they
+are; guarding the flank, while the Prince and Lobkowitz push
+forward, closer by Neisse River. In four marches more, they can be in
+Brandenburg, with Guben and their Magazines at hand.
+
+Seeing which state of matters, Winterfeld gives Friedrich notice of
+it; and that he, Winterfeld, thinks the moment is come. "Pontoons to
+Naumburg, then!" orders Friedrich. Winterfeld, at the proper moment, is
+to form a Bridge there. One permanent Bridge there already is; and two
+fords, one above it, one below: with a second Bridge, there will be
+roadway for four columns, and a swift transit when needful. Sunday,
+21st, Friedrich quits the Bober, diligently towards Naumburg; marches
+Sunday, Monday; Tuesday, 23d, about eleven A.M., begins to arrive there;
+Winterfeld and passages all ready. Forward, then, and let us drive in
+upon Prince Karl; and either cut him in two, or force him to fight us;
+he little thinks where or on what terms. Sure enough, in the worst place
+we can choose for him! Friedrich begins crossing in four columns at
+one P.M.; crosses continuously for four hours; unopposed, except some
+skirmishing of Uhlans, while his Cavalry is riding the Fords to right
+and left; Uhlans were driven back swiftly, so soon as the Cavalry got
+over. At five in the evening, he has got entirely across, 35,000 horse
+and foot: Ziethen is chasing the Uhlans at full speed; who at least will
+show us the way,--for by this time a mist has begun falling, and the
+brief daylight is done.
+
+Friedrich himself, without waiting for the rear of his force, and some
+while before this mist fell (as I judge), is pushing forward, "a miller
+lad for his guide," across to Hennersdorf,--Katholisch-Hennersdorf, a
+long straggling Village, eight or ten miles off, and itself two miles
+long,--where he understands the Saxons are. Miller lad guides us, over
+height and hollow, with his best skill, at a brisk pace;--through one
+hollow, where he has known the cattle pasture in summer time; but which
+proves impassable, and mere quagmire, at this season. No getting through
+it, you unfortunate miller lad (GARCON DE MEUNIER). Nevertheless, we did
+find passage through the skirts of it: nay this quagmire proved the
+luck of us; for the enemy, trusting to it, had no outguard there, never
+expecting us on that side. So that the vanguard, Ziethen and rapid
+Hussars, made an excellent thing of it. Ziethen sends us word, That he
+has got into the body of Hennersdorf,--"found the Saxon Quartermaster
+quietly paying his men;"--that he, Ziethen, is tolerably master of
+Hennersdorf, and will amuse the enemy till the other force come up.
+
+Of course Friedrich now pushes on, double speed; detaches other force,
+horse and foot: which was lucky, says my informant; for the Ziethen
+Hussars, getting good plunder, had by no means demolished the Saxons;
+but had left them time to draw up in firm order, with a hedge in front,
+a little west of the Village;--from which post, unassailable by Ziethen,
+they would have got safe off to the main body, with little but an
+affront and some loss of goods. The new force--a rapid Katzler
+with light horse in the van, cuirassiers and foot rapidly following
+him--sweeps past the long Village, "through a thin wood and a defile;"
+finds the enemy firmly ranked as above said; cavalry their left,
+infantry on right, flanked by an impenetrable hedge; and at once strikes
+in. At once, Katzler does, on order given; but is far too weak. Charges,
+he; but is counter-charged, tumbled back; the Saxons, horse and foot,
+showing excellent fight. At length, more Prussian force coming up,
+cuirassiers charge them in front, dragoons in flank, hussars in rear;
+all attacking at once, and with a will; and the poor Saxon Cavalry is
+entirely cut to shreds.
+
+And now there remains only the Infantry, perhaps about 1,000 men (if one
+must guess); who form a square; ply vigorously their field-pieces and
+their fire-arms; and cannot be broken by horse-charges. In fact, these
+Saxons made a fierce resistance;--till, before long, Prussian Infantry
+came up; and, with counter field-pieces and musketries, blasted gaps
+in them; upon which the Cavalry got admittance, and reduced the gallant
+fellows nearly wholly to annihilation either by death or capture. There
+are 914 Prisoners in this Action, 4 big guns, and I know not how many
+kettle-drums, standards and the like,--all that were there, I suppose.
+The number of dead not given. [Orlich, ii. 291; _Feldzuge,_i. 400-413.]
+But, in brief, this Saxon Force is utterly cut to pieces; and only
+scattered twos and threes of it rush through the dark mist; scattering
+terror to this hand and that. The Prussians take their post at and round
+Hennersdorf that night;--bivouacking, though only in sack trousers, a
+blanket each man:--"We work hard, my men, and suffer all things for a
+day or two, that it may save much work afterwards," said the King to
+them; and they cheerfully bivouacked.
+
+This was the Action of Katholisch-Hennersdorf, fought on Tuesday,
+23d November, 1745; and still celebrated in the Prussian Annals, and
+reckoned a brilliant passage of war. KATHOLISCH-Hennersdorf, some
+ten miles southwest of Naumburg ON THE QUEISS (for there are, to my
+knowledge, Twenty-five other Villages called Hennersdorf, and Three
+several Towns of Naumburg, and many Castles and Hamlets so named in dear
+Germany of the Nomenclatures):--Katholisch-Hennersdorf is the place,
+and Tuesday about dusk the time. A sharp brush of fighting; not great in
+quantity, but laid in at the right moment, in the right place. Like
+the prick of a needle, duly sharp, into the spinal marrow of a gigantic
+object; totally ruinous to such object. Never, or rarely, in the Annals
+of War, was as much good got of so little fighting. You may, with labor
+and peril, plunge a hundred dirks into your boaconstrictor; hack him
+with axes, bray him with sledge-hammers; that is not uncommon: but the
+one true prick in the spinal marrow, and the Artist that can guide you
+well to that, he and it are the notable and beneficent phenomena.
+
+
+
+
+PRINCE KARL, CUT IN TWO, TUMBLES HOME AGAIN DOUBLE-QUICK.
+
+Next morning, Wednesday, 24th, the Prussians are early astir again;
+groping, on all manner of roads, to find what Prince Karl is doing, in
+a world all covered in thick mist. They can find nothing of him, but
+broken tumbrils, left baggage-wagons, rumor of universal marching hither
+and marching thither;--evidences of an Army fallen into universal St.
+Vitus's-Dance; distractedly hurrying to and fro, not knowing whitherward
+for the moment, except that it must be homewards, homewards with
+velocity.
+
+Prince Karl's farther movements are not worth particularizing. Ordering
+and cross-ordering; march this way; no, back again: such a scene in that
+mist. Prince Karl is flowing homeward; confusedly deluging and gurgling
+southward, the best he can. Next afternoon, near Gorlitz, and again one
+other time, he appears drawn up, as if for fighting; but has himself no
+such thought; flies again, without a shot; leaves Gorlitz to capitulate,
+that afternoon; all places to capitulate, or be evacuated. We hear he is
+for Zittau; Winterfeld with light horse hastens after him, gets sight of
+him on the Heights at Zittau yonder, [ _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 157;
+Orlich, ii. 296.] "about two in the morning:" but the Prince has not
+the least notion to fight. Prince leaves Zittau to capitulate,--quits
+silently the Heights of Zittau at two A.M. (Winterfeld, very lively in
+the rear of him, cutting off his baggage);--and so tumbles, pell-mell,
+through the Passes of Gabel, home to Bohemia again. Let us save this
+poor Note from the fire:
+
+"On Saturday night, November 27th, the Prussians, pursuing Prince Karl,
+were cantoned in the Herrnhuth neighborhood,--my informant's regiment
+in the Town of Herrnhuth itself. [_Feldzuge,_ i. ubi supra.] Yes, there
+lay the Prussians over Sunday; and might hear some weighty expounder,
+if they liked. Considerably theological, many of these poor Prussian
+soldiers; carrying a Bible in their knapsack, and devout Psalms in the
+heart of them. Two-thirds of every regiment are LANDESKINDER, native
+Prussians; each regiment from a special canton,--generally rather
+religious men. The other third are recruits, gathered in the Free Towns
+of the Reich, or where they can be got; not distinguished by devotion
+these, we may fancy, only trained to the uttermost by Spartan drill."
+
+Before the week is done, that "first leg" of the grand Enterprise (the
+Prince-Karl leg) is such a leg as we see. "Silesia in the lump,"--fond
+dream again, what a dream! Old Dessauer getting signal, where now, too
+probably, is Saxony itself?--Ranking again at Aussig in Bohemia, Prince
+Karl--5,000 of his men lost, and all impetus and fire gone--falls gently
+down the Elbe, to join Rutowski at least; and will reappear within four
+weeks, out of Saxon Switzerland, still rather in dismal humor.
+
+The Prussian Troops, in four great Divisions, are cantoned in that
+Lausitz Country, now so quiet; in and about Bautzen and three other
+Towns of the neighborhood; to rest and be ready for the old Dessauer,
+when we hear of him. The "Magazine at Guben in 138 wagons," the Gorlitz
+and other Magazines of Prince Karl in the due number of wagons, supply
+them with comfortable unexpected provender. Thus they lie cantoned;
+and have with despatch effectually settled their part of the problem.
+Question now is, How will it stand with the Old Dessauer and his part?
+Or, better still, Would not perhaps the Saxons, in this humiliated
+state, accept Peace, and finish the matter?
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV.--BATTLE OF KESSELSDORF.
+
+A "Correspondence" of a certain Excellency Villiers, English Minister
+at Dresden,--Sir Thomas Villiers, Grandfather of the present Earl of
+Clarendon,--was very famous in those weeks; and is still worth mention,
+as a trait of Friedrich's procedure in this crisis. Friedrich, not
+intoxicated with his swift triumph over Prince Karl, but calculating
+the perils and the chances still ahead,--miserably off for money
+too,--admits to himself that not revenge or triumph, that Peace is the
+one thing needful to him. November 29th, Old Leopold is entering Saxony;
+and in the same hours, Podewils at Berlin, by order of Friedrich, writes
+to Villiers who is in Dresden, about Peace, about mediating for Peace:
+"My King ready and desirous, now as at all times, for Peace; the terms
+of it known; terms not altered, not alterable, no bargaining or higgling
+needed or allowable. CONVENTION OF HANOVER, let his Polish Majesty
+accede honestly to that, and all these miseries are ended."
+["CORRESPONDANCE DU ROI AVEC SIR THOMAS VILLIERS;" commences, on
+Podewils's part, 28th November; on Friedrich's, 4th December; ends,
+on Villier's, 18th December; fourteen Pieces in all, four of them
+Friedrich's: Given in _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 183-216 (see IB, 158),
+and in many other Books.]
+
+Villiers starts instantly on this beneficent business; "goes to Court,
+on it, that very night;" Villiers shows himself really diligent,
+reasonable, loyal; doing his very best now and afterwards; but has no
+success at all. Polish Majesty is obstinate,--I always think, in the way
+sheep are, when they feel themselves too much put upon;--and is deaf
+to everybody but Bruhl. Bruhl answers: "Let his Prussian Majesty retire
+from our Territory;--what is he doing in the Lausitz just now! Retire
+from our Territory; THEN we will treat!" Bruhl still refuses to be
+desperate of his bad game;--at any rate, Bruhl's rage is yellower
+than ever. That, very evening, while talking to Villiers, he has had
+preparations going on;--and next morning takes his Master, Polish
+Majesty August III., with some comfortable minimum of apparatus
+(cigar-boxes not forgotten), off to Prag, where they can be out of
+danger till the thing decide itself. Villiers follows to Prag; desists
+not from his eloquent Letters, and earnest persuasions at Prag; but
+begins to perceive that the means of persuading Bruhl will be a much
+heavier kind of artillery.
+
+On the whole, negotiations have yet done little. Britannic George,
+though Purseholder, what is his success here? As little is the Russian
+Bugbear persuasive on Friedrich himself. The Czarina of the Russias, a
+luxurious lady, of far more weight than insight, has just notified to
+him, with more emphasis than ever, That he shall not attack Saxony; that
+if he do, she with considerable vigor will attack him! That has always
+been a formidable puzzle for Friedrich: however, he reflects that the
+Russians never could draw sword, or be ready with their Army, in less
+than six months, probably not in twelve; and has answered, translating
+it into polite official terms: "Fee-faw-fum, your Czarish Majesty!
+Question is not now of attacking, but of being myself attacked!"--and so
+is now running his risks with the Czarina.
+
+Still worse was the result he got from Louis XV. Lately, "for form's
+sake," as he tells us, "and not expecting anything," he had (November
+15th) made a new appeal to France: "Ruin menacing your Most Christian
+Majesty's Ally, in this huge sudden crisis of invasive Austrian-Saxons;
+and for your Majesty's sake, may I not in some measure say?" To which
+Louis's Answer is also given. A very sickly, unpleasant Document;
+testifying to considerable pique against Friedrich;--Ranke says, it was
+a joint production, all the Ministers gradually contributing each his
+little pinch of irony to make it spicier, and Louis signing when it was
+enough;--very considerable pique against Friedrich; and something of the
+stupid sulkiness as of a fat bad boy, almost glad that the house is on
+fire, because it will burn his nimble younger brother, whom everybody
+calls so clever: "Sorry indeed, Sir my Brother, most sorry:--and so
+you have actually signed that HANOVER CONVENTION with our worst Enemy?
+France is far from having done so; France has done, and will do, great
+things. Our Royal heart grieves much at your situation; but is not
+alarmed; no, Your Majesty has such invention, vigor and ability,
+superior to any crisis, our clever younger Brother! And herewith we
+pray God to have you in his holy keeping." This is the purport of King
+Louis's Letter;--which Friedrich folds together again, looking up from
+perusal of it, we may fancy with what a glance of those eyes. [Louis's
+Original, in _OEuvres de Frederic,_ iii. 173, 174 (with a much
+more satirical paraphrase than the above), and Friedrich's Answer
+adjoined,--after the events had come.]
+
+He is getting instructed, this young King, as to alliances, grand
+combinations, French and other. His third Note to Villiers intimates,
+"It being evident that his Polish Majesty will have nothing from us
+but fighting, we must try to give it him of the best kind we have."
+["Bautzen, 11th December, 1745" (UBI SUPRA).] Yes truly; it is the
+ULTIMATE persuasive, that. Here, in condensed form, are the essential
+details of the course it went, in this instance:--General Grune, on
+the road to Berlin, hearing of the rout at Hennersdorf, halted
+instantly,--hastened back to Saxony, to join Rutowski there, and stand
+on the defensive. Not now in that Halle-Frontier region (Rutowski has
+quitted that, and all the intrenchments and marshy impregnabilities
+there); not on that Halle-Frontier, but hovering about in the
+interior, Rutowski and Grune are in junction; gravitating towards
+Dresden;--expecting Prince Karl's advent; who ought to emerge from the
+Saxon Switzerland in few days, were he sharp; and again enable us to
+make a formidable figure. Be speedy, Old Dessauer: you must settle the
+Grune-Rutowski account before that junction, not after it!
+
+The Old Dessauer has been tolerably successful, and by no means thinks
+he has been losing time. November 29th, "at three in the morning," he
+stept over into Saxony with its impregnable camps; drove Rutowski's
+rear-guard, or remnant, out of the quagmires, canals and intrenchments,
+before daylight; drove it, that same evening, or before dawn of the
+morrow, out of Leipzig: has seized that Town,--lays heavy contribution
+on it, nearly 50,000 pounds (such our strait for finance), "and be sure
+you take only substantial men as sureties!" [Orlich, ii. 308.]--and
+will, and does after a two days' rest, advance with decent celerity
+inwards; though "One must first know exactly whither; one must have
+bread, and preparations and precautions; do all things solidly and in
+order," thinks the Old Dessauer. Friedrich well knows the whither; and
+that Dresden itself is, or may be made, the place for falling in with
+Rutowski. Friedrich is now himself ready to join, from the Bautzen
+region; the days and hours precious to him; and spurs the Old Dessauer
+with the sharpest remonstrances. "All solidly and in order, your
+Majesty!" answers the Old Dessauer: solid strong-boned old coach-horse,
+who has his own modes of trotting, having done many a heavy mile of it
+in his time; and whose skin, one hopes, is of the due thickness against
+undue spurring.
+
+Old Dessauer wishes two things: bread to live upon; and a sure Bridge
+over the Elbe whereby Friedrich may join him. Old Dessauer makes for
+Torgau, far north, where is both an Elbe Bridge and a Magazine; which he
+takes; Torgau and pertinents now his. But it is far down the Elbe, far
+off from Bautzen and Friedrich: "A nearer Bridge and rendezvous, your
+Highness! Meissen [where they make the china, only fifty miles from me,
+and twenty from Dresden], let that be the Bridge, now that you have got
+victual. And speedy; for Heaven's sake, speedy!" Friedrich pushes out
+General Lehwald from Bautzen, with 4,000 men, towards Meissen Bridge;
+Lehwald does not himself meddle with the Bridge, only fires shot across
+upon the Saxon party, till the Old Dessauer, on the other bank, come
+up;--and the Old Dessauer, impatience thinks, will never come. "Three
+days in Torgau, yes, Your Majesty: I had bread to bake, and the very
+ovens had to be built." A solid old roadster, with his own modes of
+trotting; needs thickness of skin. [Friedrich's Letters to Leopold, in
+Orlich, ii. 431, 435 (6th-10th December, 1745).]
+
+At long last, on Sunday, 12th December, about two P.M., the Old Dessauer
+does appear; or General Gessler, his vanguard, does appear,--Gessler of
+the sixty-seven standards,--"always about an hour ahead." Gessler has
+summoned Meissen; has not got it, is haggling with it about terms, when,
+towards sunset of the short day, Old Dessauer himself arrives. Whereupon
+the Saxon Commandant quits the Bridge (not much breaking it); and glides
+off in the dark, clear out of Meissen, towards Dresden,--chased, but
+successfully defending himself. [See Plan, p. 10.] "Had he but stood out
+for two days!" say the Saxons,--"Prince Karl had then been up, and much
+might have been different." Well, Friedrich too would have been up,
+and it had most likely been the same on a larger scale. But the Saxon
+Commandant did not stand out; he glided off, safe; joined Rutowski and
+Grune, who are lying about Wilsdruf, six or seven miles on the hither
+side of Dresden, and eagerly waiting for Prince Karl. "Bridge and Town
+of Meissen are your Majesty's," reports the Old Dessauer that night:
+upon which Friedrich instantly rises, hastening thitherward. Lehwald
+comes across Meissen Bridge, effects the desired junction; and all
+Monday the Old Dessauer defiles through Meissen town and territory;
+continually advances towards Dresden, the Saxons harassing the flanks
+of him a little,--nay in one defile, being sharp strenuous fellows, they
+threw his rear into some confusion; cut off certain carts and prisoners,
+and the life of one brave General, Lieutenant-General Roel, who had
+charge there. "Spurring one's trot into a gallop! This comes of your
+fast marching, of your spurring beyond the rules of war!" thinks Old
+Leopold; and Friedrich, who knows otherwise, is very angry for a moment.
+
+But indeed the crisis is pressing. Prince Karl is across the Metal
+Mountains, nearing Dresden from the east; Friedrich strikes into march
+for the same point by Meissen, so soon as the Bridge is his. Old Leopold
+is advancing thither from the westward,--steadily hour by hour; Dresden
+City the fateful goal. There,--in these middle days of December, 1745
+(Highland Rebellion just whirling back from Derby again, "the London
+shops shut for one day"),--it is clear there will be a big and bloody
+game played before we are much older. Very sad indeed: but Count Bruhl
+is not persuadable otherwise. By slumbering and sluggarding, over their
+money-tills and flesh-pots; trying to take evil for good, and to say,
+"It will do," when it will not do, respectable Nations come at last
+to be governed by Bruhls; cannot help themselves;--and get their backs
+broken in consequence. Why not? Would you have a Nation live forever
+that is content to be governed by Bruhls? The gods are wiser!--It is now
+the 13th; Old Dessauer tramping forward, hour by hour, towards Dresden
+and some field of Fate.
+
+On Tuesday, 14th, by break of day, Old Dessauer gets on march again;
+in four columns, in battle order; steady all day,--hard winter weather,
+ground crisp, and flecked with snow. The Pass at Neustadt, "his cavalry
+went into it at full gallop;" but found nobody there. That night
+he encamps at a place called Rohrsdorf; which may be eight miles
+west-by-north from Dresden, as the crow flies; and ten or more, if you
+follow the highway round by Wilsdruf on your right. The real direct
+Highway from Meissen to Dresden is on the other side of the Elbe, and
+keeps by the River-bank, a fine level road; but on this western side,
+where Leopold now is, the road is inland, and goes with a bend. Leopold,
+of course, keeps command of this road; his columns are on both sides of
+it, River on their left at some miles distance; and incessantly expect
+to find Rutowski, drawn out on favorable ground somewhere. The country
+is of fertile, but very broken character; intersected by many
+brooks, making obliquely towards the Elbe (obliquely, with a leaning
+Meissen-wards); country always mounting, till here about Rohrsdorf we
+seem to have almost reached the watershed, and the brooks make for the
+Elbe, leaning Dresden way. Good posts abound in such broken country,
+with its villages and brooks, with its thickets, hedges and patches of
+swamp. But Rutowski has not appeared anywhere, during this Tuesday.
+
+Our four columns, therefore, lie all night, under arms, about Rohrsdorf:
+and again by morrow's dawn are astir in the old order, crunching far
+and wide the frozen ground; and advance, charged to the muzzle with
+potential battle. Slightly upwards always, to the actual watershed
+of the country; leaving Wilsdruf a little to their right. Wilsdruf is
+hardly past, when see, from this broad table-land, top of the country:
+"Yonder is Rutowski, at last;--and this new Wednesday will be a day!"
+Yonder, sure enough: drawn out three or four miles long; with his
+right to the Elbe, his left to that intricate Village of Kesselsdorf;
+bristling with cannon; deep gullet and swampy brook in front of him: the
+strongest post a man could have chosen in those parts.
+
+The Village of Kesselsdorf itself lies rather in a hollow; in the slight
+beginning, or uppermost extremity, of a little Valley or Dell, called
+the Tschonengrund,--which, with its quaggy brook of a Tschone, wends
+northeastward into the Elbe, a course of four or five miles: a little
+Valley very deep for its length, and getting altogether chasmy and
+precipitous towards the Elbe-ward or lower end. Kesselsdorf itself,
+as we said, is mainly in a kind of hollow: between Old Leopold and
+Kesselsdorf the ground rather mounts; and there is perceptibly a flat
+knoll or rise at the head of it, where the Village begins. Some trees
+there, and abundance of cannon and grenadiers at this moment. It is the
+southwestern or left-most point of Rutowski's line; impregnable with
+its cannon-batteries and grenadiers. Rightward Rutowski extends in long
+lines, with the quaggy-dell of Tschonengrund in front of him, parallel
+to him; Dell ever deepening as it goes. Northeastward, at the extreme
+right, or Elbe point of it, where Grune and the Austrians stand, it has
+grown so chasmy, we judge that Grune can neither advance nor be
+
+MAP/PLAN GOES HERE--book 15 continuation --page 10--
+
+advanced upon:e,--which he did all day,
+in a purely meditative posture. Rutowski numbers 35,000, now on this
+ground, with immensity of cannon; 32,000 we, with only the usual
+field-artillery, and such a Tschonengrund, with its half-frozen
+quagmires ahead. A ticklish case for the old man, as he grimly
+reconnoitres it, in the winter morning.
+
+Grim Old Dessauer having reconnoitred, and rapidly considered, decides
+to try it,--what else?--will range himself on the west side of that
+Tschonengrund, horse and foot; two lines, wide as Rutowski opposite him;
+but means to direct his main and prime effort against Kesselsdorf, which
+is clearly the key of the position, if it can be taken. For which end
+the Old Dessauer lengthens himself out to rightward, so as to outflank
+Kesselsdorf;--neglecting Grune (refusing Grune, as the soldiers
+say):--"our horse of the right wing reached from the Wood called
+Lerchenbusoh (LARCH-BUSH) rightward as far as Freyberg road; foot
+all between that Lerchenbusch and the big Birch-tree on the road to
+Wilsdruf; horse of the left wing, from there to Roitsch." [Stille (p.
+181), who was present. See Plan.] It was about two P.M. before the old
+man got all his deployments completed; what corps of his, deploying this
+way or that, came within wind of Kesselsdorf, were saluted with cannon,
+thirty pieces or more, which are in battery, in three batteries, on the
+knoll there; but otherwise no fighting as yet. At two, the Old Dessauer
+is complete; he reverently doffs his hat, as had always been his wont,
+in prayer to God, before going in. A grim fervor of prayer is in his
+heart, doubtless; though the words as reported are not very regular or
+orthodox: "O HERR GOTT, help me yet this once; let me not be disgraced
+in my old days! Or if thou wilt not help me, don't help those HUNDSVOGTE
+[damned Scoundrels, so to speak], but leave us to try it ourselves!"
+That is the Old Scandinavian of a Dessauer's prayer; a kind of GODUR
+he too, Priest as well as Captain: Prayer mythically true as given;
+mythically, not otherwise. [Ranke, iii. 334 n.] Which done, he waves his
+hat once, "On, in God's name!" and the storm is loose. Prussian right
+wing pushing grandly forward, bent in that manner, to take Kesselsdorf
+and its fire-throats in flank.
+
+The Prussians tramp on with the usual grim-browed resolution, foot
+in front, horse in rear; but they have a terrible problem at that
+Kesselsdorf, with its retrenched batteries, and numerous grenadiers
+fighting under cover. The very ground is sore against them; uphill, and
+the trampled snow wearing into a slide, so that you sprawl and stagger
+sadly. Thirty-one big guns, and about 9,000 small, pouring out mere
+death on you, from that knoll-head. The Prussians stagger; cannot stand
+it; bend to rightwards, and get out of shot-range; cannot manage it
+this bout. Rally, reinforce; try it again. Again, with a will; but again
+there is not a way. The Prussians are again repulsed; fall back, down
+this slippery course, in more disorder than the first time. Had the
+Saxons stood still, steadily handling arms, how, on such terms, could
+the Prussians ever have managed it?
+
+But at sight of this second repulse, the Saxon grenadiers, and
+especially one battalion of Austrians who were there (the only Austrians
+who fought this day), gave a shout "Victory!"--and in the height of
+their enthusiasm, rushed out, this Austrian battalion first and the
+Saxons after them, to charge these Prussians, and sweep the world clear
+of them. It was the ruin of their battle; a fatal hollaing before you
+are out of the woods. Old Leopold, quick as thought, noticing the thing,
+hurls cavalry on these victorious down-plunging grenadiers; slashes them
+asunder, into mere recoiling whirlpools of ruin; so that "few of
+them got back unwounded;" and the Prussians storming in along with
+them,--aided by ever new Prussians, from beyond the Tschonengrund
+even,--the place was at length carried; and the Saxon battle became
+hopeless.
+
+For, their right being in such hurricane, the Prussians from the
+centre, as we hint, storm forward withal; will not be held back by the
+Tschonengrund. They find the Tschonengrund quaggy in the extreme, "brook
+frozen at the sides, but waist-deep of liquid mud in the centre;" cross
+it, nevertheless, towards the upper part of it,--young Moritz of Dessau
+leading the way, to help his old Father in extremity. They climb the
+opposite side,--quite slippery in places, but "helping one another
+up;"--no Saxons there till you get fairly atop, which was an oversight
+on the Saxon part. Fairly atop, Moritz is saluted by the Saxons with
+diligent musket-volleys; but Moritz also has musket-volleys in him,
+bayonet-charges in him; eager to help his old Papa at this hard pinch.
+Old Papa has the Saxons in flank; sends more and ever more other cavalry
+in on them; and in fact, the right wing altogether storms violently
+through Kesselsdorf, and sweeps it clean. Whole regiments of the Saxons
+are made prisoners; Roel's Light Horse we see there, taking standards;
+cutting violently in to avenge Roel's death, and the affront they had
+at Meissen lately. Furious Moritz on their front, from across the
+Tschonengrund; furious Roel (GHOST of Roel) and others in their flank,
+through Kesselsdorf: no standing for the Saxons longer.
+
+About nightfall,--their horse having made poorish fight, though the foot
+had stood to it like men,--they roll universally away. The Prussian left
+wing of horse are summoned through the Tschonengrund to chase: had there
+remained another hour of daylight, the Saxon Army had been one wide
+ruin. Hidden in darkness, the Saxon Army ebbed confusedly towards
+Dresden: with the loss of 6,000 prisoners and 3,000 killed and wounded:
+a completely beaten Army. It is the last battle the Saxons fought as
+a Nation,--or probably will fight. Battle called of Kesselsdorf:
+Wednesday, 15th December, 1745.
+
+Prince Karl had arrived at Dresden the night before; heard all this
+volleying and cannonading, from the distance; but did not see good to
+interfere at all. Too wide apart, some say; quartered at unreasonably
+distant villages, by some irrefragable ignorant War-clerk of Bruhl's
+appointing,--fatal Bruhl. Others say, his Highness had himself no mind;
+and made excuses that his troops were tired, disheartened by the two
+beatings lately,--what will become of us in case of a third or fourth!
+It is certain, Prince Karl did nothing. Nor has Grime's corps, the
+right wing, done anything except meditate:--it stood there unattacked,
+unattacking; till deep in the dark night, when Rutowski remembered
+it, and sent it order to come home. One Austrian battalion, that of
+grenadiers on the knoll at Kesselsdorf, did actually fight;--and did
+begin that fatal outbreak, and quitting of the post there; "which lost
+the Battle to us!" say the Saxons.
+
+Had those grenadiers stood in their place, there is no Prussian but
+admits that it would have been a terrible business to take Kesselsdorf
+and its batteries. But they did not stand; they rushed out, shouting
+"Victory;" and lost us the battle. And that is the good we have got of
+the sublime Austrian Alliance; and that is the pass our grand scheme
+of Partitioning Prussia has come to? Fatal little Bruhl of the three
+hundred and sixty-five clothes-suits; Valet fatally become divine in
+Valet-hood,--are not you costing your Country dear!
+
+Old Dessauer, glorious in the last of his fields, lay on his arms all
+night in the posts about; three bullets through his roquelaure, no
+scratch of wound upon the old man. Young Moritz too "had a bullet
+through his coat-skirt, and three horses shot under him; but no hurt,
+the Almighty's grace preserving him." [_Feldzuge,_i. 434.] This Moritz
+is the Third of the Brothers, age now thirty-three; and we shall hear
+considerably about him in times coming. A lean, tall, austere man; and,
+"of all the Brothers, most resembled his Father in his ways." Prince
+Dietrich is in Leipzig at present; looking to that contribution of
+50,000 pounds; to that, and to other contributions and necessary
+matters;--and has done all his fighting (as it chanced), though he
+survived his Brothers many years. Old Papa will now get his discharge
+before long (quite suddenly, one morning, by paralytic stroke, 7th
+April, 1747); and rest honorably with the Sons of Thor. [Young Leopold,
+the successor, died 16th December, 1751, age fifty-two; Dietrich (who
+had thereupon quitted soldiering, to take charge of his Nephew left
+minor, and did not resume it), died 2d December, 1769; Moritz (soldier
+to the last), 11th April, 1760. See _Militair-Lexikon,_i. 43, 34,
+38,47.]
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV.--PEACE OF DRESDEN: FRIEDRICH DOES MARCH HOME.
+
+Friedrich himself had got to Meissen, Tuesday, 14th; no enemy on his
+road, or none to speak of: Friedrich was there, or not yet far across,
+all Wednesday; collecting himself, waiting, on the slip, for a signal
+from Old Leopold. Sound of cannon, up the Elbe Dresden-ward, is
+reported there to Friedrich, that afternoon: cannon, sure enough, notes
+Friedrich; and deep dim-rolling peals, as of volleying small-arms;
+"the sky all on fire over there," as the hoar-frosty evening fell. Old
+Leopold busy at it, seemingly. That is the glare of the Old Dessauer's
+countenance; who is giving voice, in that manner, to the earthly and the
+heavenly powers; conquering Peace for us, let us hope!
+
+Friedrich, as may be supposed, made his best speed next morning: "All
+well!" say the messengers; all well, says Old Leopold, whom he meets
+at Wilsdruf, and welcomes with a joyful embrace; "dismounting from his
+horse, at sight of Leopold, and advancing to meet him with doffed hat
+and open arms,"--and such words and treatments, that day, as made the
+old man's face visibly shine. "Your Highness shall conduct me!" And the
+two made survey together of the actual Field of Kesselsdorf; strewn with
+the ghastly wrecks of battle,--many citizens of Dresden strolling about,
+or sorrowfully seeking for their lost ones among the wounded and dead.
+No hurt to these poor citizens, who dread none; help to them rather:
+such is Friedrich's mind,--concerning which, in the Anecdote-Books,
+there are Narratives (not worth giving) of a vapidly romantic character,
+credible though inexact. [For the indisputable pa so we leave him
+standing therrt, see Orlich, ii. 343, 344; and _OEuvres de
+Frederic,_ iii. 170.] Friedrich, who may well be profuse of thanks and
+praises, charms the Old Dessauer while they walk together; brave old man
+with his holed roquelaure. For certain, he has done the work there,--a
+great deal of work in his time! Joy looks through his old rough face, of
+gunpowder color: the Herr Gott has not delivered him to those damned
+Scoundrels in the end of his days.--On the morrow, Friday, Leopold
+rolled grandly forward upon Dresden; Rutowski and Prince Karl vanishing
+into the Metal Mountains, by Pirna, for Bohemia, at sound of him,--as he
+had scarcely hoped they would.
+
+On the Saturday evening, Dresden, capable of not the least defence, has
+opened all its gates, and Friedrich and the Prussians are in Dresden;
+Austrians and wrecked Saxons falling back diligently towards the Metal
+Mountains for Bohemia, diligent to clear the road for him. Queen and
+Junior Princes are here; to whom, as to all men, Friedrich is courtesy
+itself; making personal visit to the Royalties, appointing guards of
+honor, sacred respect to the Royal Houses; himself will lodge at the
+Princess Lubomirski's, a private mansion.
+
+"That ferocious, false, ambitious King of Prussia"--Well, he is not to
+be ruined in open fight, on the contrary is ruinous there; nor by the
+cunningest ambuscades, and secret combinations, in field or cabinet: our
+overwhelming Winter Invasion of him--see where it has ended! Bruhl and
+Polish Majesty--the nocturnal sky all on fire in those parts, and loud
+general doomsday come--are a much-illuminated pair of gentlemen.
+
+From the time Meissen Bridge was lost, Prince Karl too showing himself
+so languid, even Bruhl had discerned that the case was desperate. On the
+very day of Kesselsdorf,--not the day BEFORE, which would have been
+such a thrift to Bruhl and others!--Friedrich had a Note from Villiers,
+signifying joyfully that his Polish Majesty would accept Peace. Thanks
+to his Polish Majesty:--and after Kesselsdorf, perhaps the Empress-Queen
+too will! Friedrich's offers are precisely what they were, what they
+have always been: "Convention of Hanover; that, in all its parts; old
+treaty of Breslau, to be guaranteed, to be actually kept. To me Silesia
+sure;--from you, Polish Majesty, one million crowns as damages for
+the trouble and cost this Triple Ambuscade of yours has given me; one
+million crowns, 150,000 pounds we will say; and all other requisitions
+to cease on the day of signature. These are my terms: accept these; then
+wholly, As you were, Empress-Queen and you, and all surviving creatures:
+and I march home within a week." Villiers speeds rapidly from Prag, with
+the due olive-branch; with Count Harrach, experienced Austrian, and full
+powers. Harrach cannot believe his senses: "Such the terms to be still
+granted, after all these beatings and rebeatings!"--then at last does
+believe, with stiff thankfulness and Austrian bows. The Negotiation need
+not occupy many hours.
+
+"His Majesty of Prussia was far too hasty with this Peace," says Valori:
+"he had taken a threap that he would have it finished before the Year
+was done:"--in fact, he knows his own mind, MON GROS VALORI, and that
+is what few do. You shear through no end of cobwebs with that fine
+implement, a wisely fixed resolution of your own. A Peace slow enough
+for Valori and the French: where could that be looked for?--Valori is at
+Berlin, in complete disgrace; his Most Christian King having behaved so
+like a Turk of late. Valori, horror-struck at such Peace, what shall
+he do to prevent it, to retard it? One effort at least. D'Arget his
+Secretary, stolen at Jaromirz, is safe back to him; ingenious, ingenuous
+D'Arget was always a favorite with Friedrich: despatch D'Arget to
+him. D'Arget is despatched; with reasons, with remonstrances, with
+considerations. D'Arget's Narrative is given: an ingenuous off-hand
+Piece;--poor little crevice, through which there is still to be had,
+singularly clear, and credible in every point, a direct glimpse of
+Friedrich's own thoughts, in that many-sounding Dresden,--so loud,
+that week, with dinner-parties, with operas, balls, Prussian war-drums,
+grand-parades and Peace-negotiations.
+
+
+ THE SIEUR D'ARGET TO EXCELLENCY VALORI (at Berlin).
+
+ "DRESDEN, 1745" (dateless otherwise, must be
+ December, between 18th and 25th).
+"MONSEIGNEUR,--I arrived yesterday at 7 P.M.; as I had the honor of
+forewarning you, by the word I wrote to the Abbe [never mind what Abbe;
+another Valori-Clerk] from Sonnenwalde [my half-way house between Berlin
+and this City]. I went, first of all, to M. de Vaugrenand," our Envoy
+here; "who had the goodness to open himself to me on the Business now
+on hand. In my opinion, nothing can be added to the excellent
+considerations he has been urging on the King of Prussia and the Count
+de Podewils.
+
+"At half-past 8, I went to his Prussian Majesty's; I found he was
+engaged with his Concert,"--lodges in the Lubomirski Palace, has his
+snatch of melody in the evening of such discordant days,--"and I could
+not see him till after half-past 9. I announced myself to M. Eichel; he
+was too overwhelmed with affairs to give me audience. I asked for Count
+Rothenburg; he was at cards with the Princess Lubomirski. At last, I did
+get to the King: who received me in the most agreeable way; but was just
+going to Supper; said he must put off answering till to-morrow morning,
+morning of this day. M. de Vaugrenand had been so good as prepare me on
+the rumors of a Peace with Saxony and the Queen of Hungary. I went to M.
+Podewils; who said a great many kind things to me for you. I could only
+sketch out the matter, at that time; and represented to Podewils the
+brilliant position of his Master, who had become Arbiter of the Peace
+of Europe; that the moment was come for making this Peace a General One,
+and that perhaps there would be room for repentance afterwards, if the
+opportunity were slighted. He said, his Master's object was that same;
+and thus closed the conversation by general questions.
+
+"This morning, I again presented myself at the King of Prussia's. I had
+to wait, and wait; in fine, it was not till half-past 5 in the evening
+that he returned, or gave me admittance; and I stayed with him till
+after 7,"--when Concert-time was at hand again. Listen to a remarkable
+Dialogue, of the Conquering Hero with a humble Friend whom he likes.
+"His Majesty condescended (A DAIGNE) to enter with me into all manner of
+details; and began by telling me,
+
+"That M. de Valori had done admirably not to come, himself, with that
+Letter from the King [Most Christian, OUR King; Letter, the sickly
+Document above spoken of]; that there could not have been an Answer
+expected,--the Letter being almost of ironical strain; his Majesty [Most
+Christian] not giving him the least hope, but merely talking of his fine
+genius, and how that would extricate him from the perilous entanglement,
+and inspire him with a wise resolution in the matter! That he had, in
+effect, taken a resolution the wisest he could; and was making his Peace
+with Saxony and the Queen of Hungary. That he had felt all the dangers
+of the difficult situations he had been in,"--sheer destruction
+yawning all round him, in huge imminency, more than once, and no
+friend heeding;--"that, weary of playing always double-or-quits, he had
+determined to end it, and get into a state of tranquillity, which both
+himself and his People had such need of. That France could not, without
+difficulty, have remedied his mishaps; and that he saw by the King's
+Letter, there was not even the wish to do it. That his, Friedrich's,
+military career was completed,"--so far as HE could foresee or
+decide! "That he would not again expose his Country to the Caprices of
+Fortune, whose past constancy to him was sufficiently astonishing to
+raise fears of a reverse (HEAR!). That his ambitions were fulfilled, in
+having compelled his Enemies to ask Peace from him in their own Capital,
+with the Chancellor of Bohemia [Harrach, typifying fallen Austrian
+pride] obliged to co-operate.
+
+"That he would always be attached to our King's interests, and set
+all the value in the world on his friendship; but that he had not been
+sufficiently assisted to be content. That, observing henceforth an
+exact neutrality, he might be enabled to do offices of mediation; and to
+carry, to the one side and to the other, words of peace. That he offered
+himself for that object, and would be charmed to help in it; but that he
+was fixed to stop there. That in regard to the basis of General Peace,
+he had Two Ideas [which the reader can attend to, and see where they
+differed from the Event, and where not]:--One was, That France should
+keep Ypres, Furnes, Tournay [which France did not], giving up the
+Netherlands otherwise, with Ostend, to the English [to the English!]
+in exchange for Cape Breton. The other was, To give up more of our
+Conquests [we gave them all up, and got only the glory, and our
+Cod-fishery, Cape Breton, back, the English being equally generous], and
+bargain for liberty to re-establish Dunkirk in its old condition [not
+a word of your Dunkirk; there is your Cape Breton, and we also will go
+home with what glory there is,--not difficult to carry!]. But that it
+was by England we must make the overtures, without addressing ourselves
+to the Court of Vienna; and put it in his, Friedrich's, power to propose
+a receivable Project of Peace. That he well conceived the great point
+was the Queen of Spain [Termagant and Jenkins's Ear; Termagant's
+Husband, still living, is a lappet of Termagant's self]: but that she
+must content herself with Parma and Piacenza for the Infant, Don Philip
+[which the Termagant did]; and give back her hold of Savoy [partial
+hold, of no use to her without the Passes] to the King of Sardinia." And
+of the JENKINS'S-EAR question, generous England will say nothing? Next
+to nothing; hopes a modicum of putty and diplomatic varnish may close
+that troublesome question,--which springs, meanwhile, in the centre of
+the world!--
+
+"These kind condescensions of his Majesty emboldened me to represent to
+him the brilliant position he now held; and how noble it would be,
+after having been the Hero of Germany, to become, instead of one's own
+pacificator, the Pacificator of Europe. 'I grant you,' said he, (MON
+CHER D'Arget; but it is too dangerous a part for playing. A reverse
+brings me to the edge of ruin: I know too well the mood of mind I
+was in, last time I left Berlin with that Three-legged Immensity of
+Atropos, NOT yet mown down at Hennersdorf by a lucky cut), ever to
+expose myself to it again! If luck had been against me there, I saw
+myself a Monarch without throne; and my subjects in the cruelest
+oppression. A bad game that: always, mere CHECK TO YOUR KING; no other
+move;--I refer it to you, friend D'Arget:--in fine, I wish to be at
+peace.'
+
+"I represented to him that the House of Austria would never, with a
+tranquil eye, see his House in possession of Silesia. 'Those that come
+after me,' said he, 'will do as they like; the Future is beyond man's
+reach. Those that come after will do as they can. I have acquired; it is
+theirs to preserve. I am not in alarm about the Austrians;--and this
+is my answer to what you have been saying about the weakness of my
+guarantees. They dread my Army; the luck that I have. I am sure of
+their sitting quiet for the dozen years or so which may remain to me of
+life;--quiet till I have, most likely, done with it. What! Are we never
+to have any good of our life, then (NE DOIS-JE DONC JAMAIS JOUIR)? There
+is more for me in the true greatness of laboring for the happiness of
+my subjects, than in the repose of Europe. I have put Saxony out of a
+condition to do hurt. She owes 14,775,000 crowns of debt [two millions
+and a quarter sterling]; and by the Defensive Alliance which I form with
+her, I provide myself [but ask Bruhl withal!] a help against Austria. I
+would not henceforth attack a cat, except to defend myself.' ["These
+are his very words," adds D'Arget;--and well worth noting.] (Ambition
+(GLOIRE) and my interests were the occasion of my first Campaigns.
+The late Kaiser's situation, and my zeal for France [not to mention
+interests again], gave rise to these second: and I have been fighting
+always since for my own hearths,--for my very existence, I might say!
+Once more, I know the state I had got into:--if I saw Prince Karl at
+the gates of Paris, I would not stir.'--'And us at the gates of Vienna,'
+answered I promptly, 'with the same indifference?'--'Yes; and I swear
+it to you, D'Arget. In a word, I want to have some good of my life (VEUX
+JOUIR). What are we, poor human atoms, to get up projects that cost so
+much blood? Let us live, and help to live.'
+
+"The rest of the conversation passed in general talk, about Literature,
+Theatres and such objects. My reasonings and objectings, on the great
+matter, I need not farther detail: by the frank discourse his Prussian
+Majesty was kind enough to go into, you may gather perhaps that my
+arguments were various, and not ill-chosen;--and it is too evident they
+have all been in vain."--Your Excellency's (really in a very faithful
+way)-- D'ARGET. [Valori, i. 290-294 (no date, except "Dresden,
+1745,"--sleepy Editor feeling no want of any).]
+
+D'Arget, about a month after this, was taken into Friedrich's service;
+Valori consenting, whose occupation was now gone;--and we shall hear of
+D'Arget again. Take this small Note, as summary of him: "D'Arget (18th
+January, 1746) had some title, 'Secretary at Orders (SECRETAIRE DES
+COMMANDEMENTS),' bit of pension; and continued in the character of
+reader, or miscellaneous literary attendant and agent, very much liked
+by his Master, for six years coming. A man much heard of, during those
+years of office. March, 1752, having lost his dear little Prussian Wife,
+and got into ill health and spirits, he retired on leave to Paris; and
+next year had to give up the thought of returning;--though he still, and
+to the end, continued loyally attached to his old Master, and more
+or less in correspondence with him. Had got, before long, not through
+Friedrich's influence at Paris, some small Appointment in the ECOLE
+MILITAIRE there. He is, of all the Frenchmen Friedrich had about him,
+with the exception of D'Argens alone, the most honest-hearted. The above
+Letter, lucid, innocent, modest, altogether rational and practical, is
+a fair specimen of D'Arget: add to it the prompt self-sacrifice (and in
+that fine silent way) at Jaromirz for Valori, and readers may conceive
+the man. He lived at Paris, in meagre but contented fashion, RUE
+DE L'ECOLE MILITAIRE, till 1778; and seems, of all the Ex-Prussian
+Frenchmen, to have known most about Friedrich; and to have never spoken
+any falsity against him. Duvernet, the 'M----' Biographer of VOLTAIRE,
+frequented him a good deal; and any true notions, or glimmerings of
+such, that he has about Prussia, are probably ascribable to D'Arget."
+[See _OEuvres de Frederic,_ xx. (p. xii of PREFACE to the D'ARGET
+CORRESPONDENCE there).]
+
+The Treaty of Dresden can be read in Scholl, Flassan, Rousset, Adelung;
+but, except on compulsion, no creature will now read it,--nor did this
+Editor, even he, find it pay. Peace is made. Peace of Dresden is signed,
+Christmas Day, 1745: "To me Silesia, without farther treachery or trick;
+you, wholly as you were." Europe at large, as Friedrich had done, sees
+"the sky all on fire about Dresden." The fierce big battles done against
+this man have, one and all of them, become big defeats. The strenuous
+machinations, high-built plans cunningly devised,--the utmost sum-total
+of what the Imperial and Royal Potencies can, for the life of them, do:
+behold, it has all tumbled down here, in loud crash; the final peal of
+it at Kesselsdorf; and the consummation is flame and smoke, conspicuous
+over all the Nations. You will let him keep his own henceforth, then,
+will you? Silesia, which was NOT yours nor ever shall be? Silesia and
+no afterthought? The Saxons sign, the high Plenipotentiaries all; in the
+eyes of Villiers, I am told, were seen sublimely pious tears.
+Harrach, bowing with stiff, almost incredulous, gratitude, swears and
+signs;--hurries home to his Sovereign Lady, with Peace, and such a smile
+on his face; and on her Imperial Majesty's such a smile!--readers shall
+conceive it.
+
+There are but Two new points in the Treaty of Dresden,--nay properly
+there is but One point, about which posterity can have the least care
+or interest; for that other, concerning "The Toll of Schidlo," and
+settlement of haggles on the Navigation of the Elbe there, was not
+kept by the Saxons, but continued a haggle still: this One point is
+the Eleventh Article. Inconceivably small; but liable to turn up on
+us again, in a memorable manner. That let us translate,--for M.
+de Voltaire's sake, and time coming! STEUER means Land-Tax;
+OBER-STEUER-EINNAHME will be something like Royal Exchequer, therefore;
+and STEUER-SCHEIN will be approximately equivalent to Exchequer Bill.
+Article Eleventh stipulates:
+
+"All subjects and servants of his Majesty the King of Prussia who hold
+bonds of the Saxon OBER-STEUER-EINNAHME shall be paid in full, capital
+and interest, at the times, and to the amount, specified in said
+STEUER-SCHEINE or Bonds." That is Article Eleventh.--"The Saxon
+Exchequer," says an old Note on it, "thanks to Bruhl's extravagance, has
+been as good as bankrupt, paying with inconvertible paper, with SCHEINE
+(Things to be SHOWN), for some time past; which paper has accordingly
+sunk, let us say, 25 per cent below its nominal amount in gold. All
+Prussian subjects, who hold these Bonds, are to be paid in gold; Saxons,
+and others, will have to be content with paper till things come round
+again, if things ever do." Yes;--and, by ill chance, the matter will
+attract M. de Voltaire's keen eye in the interim!
+
+Friedrich stayed eight days in Dresden, the loud theme of Gazetteers and
+rumors; the admired of two classes, in all Countries: of the many who
+admire success, and also of the few who can understand what it is to
+deserve success. Among his own Countrymen, this last Winter has kindled
+all their admirations to the flaming pitch. Saved by him from imminent
+destruction; their enemies swept home as if by one invincible; nay, sent
+home in a kind of noble shame, conquered by generosity. These feelings,
+though not encouraged to speak, run very high. The Dresdeners in private
+society found him delightful; the high ladies especially: "Could you
+have thought it; terrific Mars to become radiant Apollo in this manner!"
+From considerable Collections of Anecdotes illustrating this fact, in a
+way now fallen vapid to us,--I select only the Introduction:--
+
+"Do readers recollect Friedrich's first visit to Dresden [in 1728],
+seventeen years ago; and a certain charming young Countess Flemming,
+at that time only fourteen; who, like a Hebe as she was, contrived
+beautiful surprises for him, and among other things presented him, so
+gracefully, on the part of August the Strong, with his first flute?"--No
+reader of this History can recollect it; nor indeed, except in a
+mythic sense, believe it! A young Countess Flemming (daughter of old
+Feldmarschall Flemming) doubtless there might be, who presented him a
+flute; but as to HIS FIRST flute--? "That same charming young Countess
+Flemming is still here, age now thirty-one; charming, more than ever,
+though now under a changed name; having wedded a Von Racknitz (Supreme
+Gentleman-Usher, or some such thing) a few years ago, and brought him
+children and the usual felicities. How much is changed! August the
+Strong, where is he; and his famous Three Hundred and Fifty-four,
+Enchantress Orzelska and the others, where are they? Enchantress
+Orzelska wedded, quarrelled, and is in a convent: her charming destiny
+concluded. Rutowski is not now in the Prussian Army: he got beaten,
+Wednesday last, at Kesselsdorf, fighting against that Army. And the
+Chevalier de Saxe, he too was beaten there;--clambering now across the
+Metal Mountains, ask not of him. And the Marechal de Saxe, he takes
+Cities, fights Battles of Fontenoy, 'mumbling a lead bullet all day;'
+being dropsical, nearly dead of debaucheries; the most dissolute (or
+probably so) of all the Sons of Adam in his day. August the Physically
+Strong is dead. August the Spiritually Weak is fled to Prag with his
+Bruhl. And we do not come, this time, to get a flute; but to settle
+the account of Victories, and give Peace to Nations. Strange, here as
+always, to look back,--to look round or forward,--in the mad huge whirl
+of that loud-roaring Loom of Time!--One of Countess Racknitz's
+Sons happened to leave MANUSCRIPT DIARIES [rather feeble, not too
+exact-looking], and gives us, from Mamma's reminiscences"... Not a word
+more. [Rodenbeck, _Beitrage,_ i. 440, et seq.]
+
+The Peace, we said, was signed on Christmas-day. Next day, Sunday,
+Friedrich attended Sermon in the Kreuzkirche (Protestant High-Church of
+Dresden), attended Opera withal; and on Monday morning had vanished
+out of Dresden, as all his people had done, or were diligently doing.
+Tuesday, he dined briefly at Wusterhausen (a place we once knew well),
+with the Prince of Prussia, whose it now is; got into his open carriage
+again, with the said Prince and his other Brother Ferdinand; and drove
+swiftly homeward. Berlin, drunk with joy, was all out on the streets,
+waiting. On the Heath of Britz, four or five miles hitherward of Berlin,
+a body of young gentlemen ("Merchants mostly, who had ridden out so
+far") saluted him with "VIVAT FRIEDRICH DER GROSSE (Long live Friedrich
+THE GREAT)!" thrice over;--as did, in a less articulate manner, Berlin
+with one voice, on his arrival there; Burgher Companies lining the
+streets; Population vigorously shouting; Pupils of the Koln Gymnasium,
+with Clerical and School Functionaries in mass, breaking out into Latin
+Song:--
+
+ "VIVAT, VIVAT FRIDERICUS REX;
+ VIVAT AUGUSTUS, MAGNUS, FELIX, PATER, PATRI-AE--!"
+
+--and what not. [Preuss, i. 220; who cites _Beschreibung_ ("Description
+of his Majesty's Triumphant Entry, on the" &c.) and other Contemporary
+Pamphlets. Rodenbeck, i. 124.] On reaching the Portal of the Palace,
+his Majesty stept down; and, glancing round the Schloss-Platz and the
+crowded windows and simmering multitudes, saluted, taking off his hat;
+which produced such a shout,--naturally the loudest of all. And so EXIT
+King, into his interior. Tuesday, 2-3 P.M., 28th December, 1745: a King
+new-christened in the above manner, so far as people could.
+
+Illuminated Berlin shone like noon, all that night (the beginning of a
+GAUDEAMUS which lasted miscellaneously for weeks):--but the King stole
+away to see a friend who was dying; that poor Duhan de Jaudun, his early
+Schoolmaster, who had suffered much for him, and whom he always much
+loved. Duhan died, in a day or two. Poor Jordan, poor Keyserling (the
+"Cesarion" of young days): them also he has lost; and often laments, in
+this otherwise bright time. (In _OEuvres,_ xvii. 288; xviii. 141; IB.
+142--painfully tender Letters to Frau von Camas and others, on these
+events).
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Friedrich II. of Prussia,
+Vol. XV. (of XXI.), by Thomas Carlyle
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+Project Gutenberg Etext of Thomas Carlyle's "History of
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+History of Friedrich II of Prussia V
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+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK XV.
+
+ SECOND SILESIAN WAR, IMPORTANT EPISODE
+ IN THE GENERAL EUROPEAN ONE.
+
+ 15th Aug. 1744-25th Dec. 1745.
+
+
+ Chapter I.
+
+ PRELIMINARY: HOW THE MOMENT ARRIVED.
+
+Battle being once seen to be inevitable, it was Friedrich's plan
+not to wait for it, but to give it. Thanks to Friedrich Wilhelm and
+himself, there is no Army, nor ever was any, in such continual
+preparation. Military people say, "Some Countries take six months,
+some twelve, to get in motion for war: but in three weeks Prussia
+can be across the marches, and upon the throat of its enemy."
+Which is an immense advantage to little Prussia among its big
+neighbors. "Some Countries have a longer sword than Prussia;
+but none can unsheathe it so soon:"--we hope, too, it is moderately
+sharp, when wielded by a deft hand.
+
+The French, as was intimated, are in great vigor, this Year;
+thoroughly provoked; and especially since Friedrich sent his
+Rothenburg among them, have been doing their very utmost.
+Their main effort is in the Netherlands, at present;--and indeed,
+as happened, continues all through this War to be. They by no means
+intend, or ever did, to neglect Teutschland; yet it turns out, they
+have pretty much done with their fighting there. And next Year,
+driven or led by accidents of various kinds, they quit it
+altogether; and turning their whole strength upon the Netherlands
+and Italy, chiefly on the Netherlands, leave Friedrich, much to his
+astonishment, with the German War hanging wholly round HIS neck,
+and take no charge of it farther! In which, to Friedrich's
+Biographers, there is this inestimable benefit, if far the reverse
+to Friedrich's self: That we shall soon have done with the French,
+then; with them and with so much else; and may, in time coming, for
+most part, leave their huge Sorcerer's Sabbath of a European War to
+dance itself out, well in the distance, not encumbering us farther,
+like a circumambient Bedlam, as it has hitherto done.
+Courage, reader! Let us give, in a glance or two, some notion of
+the course things took, and what moment it was when Friedrich
+struck in;--whom alone, or almost alone, we hope to follow
+thenceforth; "Dismal Swamp" (so gracious was Heaven to us) lying
+now mostly to rearward, little as we hoped it!
+
+It was mere accident, a series of bad accidents, that led King
+Louis and his Ministers into gradually forsaking Friedrich.
+They were the farthest in the world from intending such a thing.
+Contrariwise, what brain-beating, diplomatic spider-weaving,
+practical contriving, now and afterwards, for that object;
+especially now! Rothenburg, Noailles, Belleisle, Cardinal Tencin,
+have been busy; not less the mistress Chateauroux, who admires
+Friedrich, being indeed a high-minded unfortunate female, as they
+say; and has thrown out Amelot, not for stammering alone. They are
+able, almost high people, this new Chateauroux Ministry, compared
+with some; and already show results.
+
+Nay, what is most important of all, France has (unconsciously, or
+by mere help of Noailles and luck) got a real General to her
+Armies: Comte de Saxe, now Marechal de Saxe; who will shine very
+splendent in these Netherland operations,--counter-shone by mere
+Wades, D'Ahrembergs, Cumberlands,--in this and the Four following
+Years. Noailles had always recognized Comte de Saxe; had long
+striven for him, in Official quarters; and here gets the light of
+him unveiled at last, and set on a high place: loyal Noailles.
+
+This was the Year, this 1744, when Louis XV., urged by his
+Chateauroux, the high-souled unfortunate female, appeared in person
+at the head of his troops: "Go, Sire, go, MON CHOU (and I will
+accompany); show yourself where a King should be, at the head of
+your troops; be a second Louis-le-Grand!" Which he did, his
+Chateauroux and he; actually went to the Netherlands, with baggage-
+train immeasurable, including not cooks only, but play-actors with
+their thunder-barrels (off from Paris, May 3d), to the admiration
+of the Universe. [Adelung, iv. 113; Barbier, ii. 391, 394; Dulaure,
+<italic> Hist. de Paris; <end italic> &c.] Took the command,
+nominal-command, first days of June; and captured in no-time Menin,
+Ipres, Furnes, and the Fort of Knock, and as much of the Austrian
+Netherlands as he liked,--that is to say, saw Noailles and Saxe do
+it;--walking rapidly forward from Siege to Siege, with a most
+thundering artillery; old Marshal Wade and consorts dismally eating
+their victuals, and looking on from the distance, unable to attempt
+the least stroke in opposition. So that the Dutch Barrier, if
+anybody now cared for it, did go all flat; and the Balance of Power
+gets kicked out of its sacred pivot: to such purpose have the Dutch
+been hoisted! Terrible to think of;--had not there, from the
+opposite quarter, risen a surprising counterpoise; had not there
+been a Prince Karl, with his 70,000, pressing victoriously over the
+Rhine; which stayed the French in these sacrilegious procedures.
+
+
+ PRINCE KARL GETS ACROSS THE RHINE (20 JUNE-2 JULY, 1744).
+
+Prince Karl, some weeks ago, at Heilbronn, joined his Rhine Army,
+which had gathered thither from the Austrian side, through Baiern,
+and from the Hither-Austrian or Swabian Winter-quarters; with full
+intent to be across the Rhine, and home upon Elsass and the
+Compensation Countries, this Summer, under what difficulties
+soever. Karl, or, as some whisper, old Marshal Traun, who is
+nominally second in command, do make a glorious campaign of it,
+this Year;--and lift the Cause of Liberty, at one time, to the
+highest pitch it ever reached. Here, in brief terms, is Prince
+Karl's Operation on the Rhine, much admired by military men:--
+
+"STOCKSTADT, JUNE 20th, 1744. Some thirty and odd miles north of
+Mannheim, the Rhine, before turning westward at Mainz, makes one
+other of its many Islands (of which there are hundreds since the
+leap at Schaffhausen): one other, and I think the biggest of them
+all; perhaps two miles by five; which the Germans call KUHKOPF
+(Cowhead), from the shape it has,--a narrow semi-ellipse;
+River there splitting in two, one split (the western) going
+straight, the other bending luxuriantly round: so that the HIND-
+head or straight end of the Island lies towards France, and the
+round end, or cow-LIPS (so to speak) towards native Teutschland,
+and the woody Hills of the Berg-Strasse thereabouts. Stockstadt,
+chief little Town looking over into this Cowhead Island, lies under
+the CHIN: understand only farther that the German branch carries
+more than two-thirds of the River; that on the Island itself there
+is no town, or post of defence; and that Stockstadt is the place
+for getting over. Coigny and the French, some 40,000, are guarding
+the River hereabouts, with lines, with batteries, cordons, the best
+they can; Seckendorf, with 20,000 more ('Imperial' Old Bavarian
+Troops, revivified, recruited by French pay), is in his garrison of
+Philipsburg, ready to help when needed:"--not moulting now, at
+Wembdingen, in that dismal manner; new-feathered now into "Kaiser's
+Army;" waiting in his Philipsburg to guard the River there.
+"Coigny's French have ramparts, ditches, not quite unfurnished, on
+their own shore, opposite this Cowhead Island (ISLE DE HERON, as
+they call it); looking over to the hind-head, namely: but they have
+nothing considerable there; and in the Island itself, nothing
+whatever. 'If now Stockstadt were suddenly snatched by us,' thinks
+Karl;--'if a few pontoons were nimbly swung in?'
+
+"JUNE 20th,--Coigny's people all shooting FEU-DE-JOIE, for that
+never enough to be celebrated Capture of Menin and the Dutch
+Barrier a fortnight ago,--this is managed to be done. The active
+General Barenklau, active Brigadier Daun under him, pushes rapidly
+across into Kuhkopf; rapidly throws up intrenchments, ramparts,
+mounts cannon, digs himself in,--greatly to Coigny's astonishment;
+whose people hereabouts, and in all their lines and posts, are busy
+shooting FEU-DE-JOIE for those immortal Dutch victories, at the
+moment, and never dreaming of such a thing. Fresh force floods in,
+Prince Karl himself arrives next day, in support of Barenklau;
+Coigny (head-quarters at Speyer, forty miles south) need not
+attempt dislodging him; but must stand upon his guard, and prepare
+for worse. Which he does with diligence; shifting northward into
+those Stockstadt-Mainz parts; calling Seckendorf across the River,
+and otherwise doing his best,--for about ten days more, when worse,
+and almost worst, did verily befall him.
+
+"No attempt was made on Barenklau; nor, beyond the alarming of the
+Coigny-Seckendorf people, did anything occur in Cowhead Island,--
+unless it were the finis of an ugly bully and ruffian, who has more
+than once afflicted us: which may be worth one word.
+Colonel Mentzel [copper-faced Colonel, originally Play-actor,
+"Spy in Persia," and I know not what] had been at the seizure of
+Kuhkopf; a prominent man. Whom, on the fifth day after ('June
+25th'), Prince Karl overwhelmed with joy, by handing him a Patent
+of Generalcy: 'Just received from Court, my Friend, on account of
+your merits old and late.'--'Aha,' said Barenklau, congratulating
+warmly: 'Dine with me, then, Herr General Mentzel, this very day.
+The Prince himself is to be there, Highness of Hessen-Darmstadt,
+and who not; all are impatient to drink your health!' Mentzel had a
+glorious dinner; still more glorious drink,--Prince Karl and the
+others, it is said, egging him into much wild bluster and
+gasconade, to season their much wine. Eminent swill of drinking,
+with the loud coarse talk supposable, on the part of Mentzel and
+consorts did go on, in this manner, all afternoon: in the evening,
+drunk Mentzel came out for air; went strutting and staggering
+about; emerging finally on the platform of some rampart, face of
+him huge and red as that of the foggiest rising Moon;--and stood,
+looking over into the Lorraine Country; belching out a storm of
+oaths, as to his taking it, as to his doing this and that; and was
+even flourishing his sword by way of accompaniment; when, lo,
+whistling slightly through the summer air, a rifle-ball from some
+sentry on the French side (writers say, it was a French drummer,
+grown impatient, and snatching a sentry's piece) took the brain of
+him, or the belly of him; and he rushed down at once, a totally
+collapsed monster, and mere heap of dead ruin, never to trouble
+mankind more." [<italic> Guerre de Boheme, <end italic> iii. 165.]
+For which my readers and I are rather thankful. Voltaire, and
+perhaps other memorable persons, sometimes mention this brute
+(miraculous to the Plebs and Gazetteers); otherwise eternal
+oblivion were the best we could do with him. Trenck also, readers
+will be glad to understand, ends in jail and bedlam by and by.
+
+"Prince Karl had not the least intention of crossing by this
+Cowhead Island. Nevertheless he set about two other Bridges in the
+neighborhood, nearer Mainz (few miles below that City);
+kept manoeuvring his Force, in huge half-moon, round that quarter,
+and mysteriously up and down; alarming Coigny wholly into the Mainz
+region. For the space of ten days; and then, stealing off to
+Schrock, a little Rhine Village above Philipsburg, many miles away
+from Coigny and his vigilantes, he--
+
+"NIGHT OF 30th JUNE-1st JULY, Suddenly shot Pandour Trenck,
+followed by Nadasti and 6,000, across at Schrock who scattered
+Seckendorf's poor outposts thereabouts to the winds; 'built a
+bridge before morning, and next day another.' Next day Prince Karl
+in person appeared; and on the 3d of July, had his whole Army with
+its luggages across; and had seized the Lines of Lauterburg and
+Weissenburg (celebrated northern defence of Elsass),--much to
+Coigny's amazement; and remained inexpugnable there, with Elsass
+open to him, and to Coigny shut, for the present! [Adelung, iv.
+139-141.] Coigny made bitter wail, accusation, blame of Seckendorf,
+blame of men and of things; even tried some fighting, Seckendorf
+too doing feats, to recover those Lines of Weissenburg: but could
+not do it. And, in fact, blazing to and fro in that excited rather
+than luminous condition, could not do anything; except retire into
+the strong posts of the background; and send express on express,
+swifter than the wind if you can, to a victorious King overturning
+the Dutch Barrier: 'Help, your Majesty, or we are lost; and France
+is--what shall I say!'"
+
+"Admirable feat of Strategy! What a General, this Prince Karl!"
+exclaimed mankind,--Cause-of-Liberty mankind with special
+enthusiasm; and took to writing LIVES of Prince Karl, [For
+instance, <italic> The Life of his Highness Prince Charles of &c.,
+with &c. &c. <end italic> (London, 1746); one of the most
+distracted Blotches ever published under the name of Book;--
+wakening thoughts of a public dimness very considerable indeed, to
+which this could offer itself as lamp!] as well as tar-burning and
+TE-DEUM-ing on an extensive scale. For it had sent the Cause of
+Liberty bounding up again to the top of things, this of crossing
+the Rhine, in such fashion. And, in effect, the Cause of Liberty,
+and Prince Karl himself, had risen hereby to their acme or
+culminating point in World-History; not to continue long at such
+height, little as they dreamt of that, among their tar-burnings.
+The feat itself--contrived by Nadasti, people say, and executed
+(what was the real difficulty) by Traun--brought Prince Karl very
+great renown, this Year; and is praised by Friedrich himself, now
+and afterwards, as masterly, as Julius Caesar's method, and the
+proper way of crossing rivers (when executable) in face of an
+enemy. And indeed Prince Karl, owing to Traun or not, is highly
+respectable in the way of Generalship at present; and did in these
+Five Months, from June onward, really considerable things. At his
+very acme of Life, as well as of Generalship; which, alas, soon
+changed, poor man; never to culminate again. He had got, at the
+beginning of the Year, the high Maria Theresa's one Sister,
+Archduchess Maria Anna, to Wife; [Age then twenty-five gone:
+"born 14th September, 1718; married to Prince Karl 7th January,
+1744; died, of childbirth, 16th December same year" (Hormayr,
+<italic> OEsterreichischer Plutarch, <end italic> iv. erstes
+Baudchen, 54).] the crown of long mutual attachment; she safe now
+at Brussels, diligent Co-Regent, and in a promising family-way; he
+here walking on victorious:--need any man be happier? No man can be
+supremely happy long; and this General's strategic felicity and his
+domestic were fatally cut down almost together. The Cause of
+Liberty, too, now at the top of its orbit, was--But let us stick by our Excerpting:
+
+"DUNKIRK, 19th JULY, 1744 [Princess Ulrique's Wedding, just two
+days ago]. King Louis, on hearing of the Job's-news from Elsass,
+instantly suspended his Conquests in Flanders; detached Noailles,
+detached this one and that, double-quick, Division after Division
+(leaving Saxe, with 45,000, to his own resources, and the fatuities
+of Marshal Wade); and, 19th July, himself hastens off from Dunkirk
+(leaving much of the luggage, but not the Chateauroux behind him),
+to save his Country, poor soul. But could not, in the least, save
+it; the reverse rather. August 4th, he got to Metz, Belleisle's
+strong town, about 100 miles from the actual scene; his detached
+reinforcements, say 50,000 men or so, hanging out ahead like flame-
+clouds, but uncertain how to act;--Noailles being always
+cunctatious in time of crisis, and poor Louis himself nothing of a
+Cloud-Compeller;--and then,
+
+"METZ, AUGUST 8th, The Most Christian King fell ill; dangerously,
+dreadfully, just like to die. Which entirely paralyzed Noailles and
+Company, or reduced them to mere hysterics, and excitement of the
+unluminous kind. And filled France in general, Paris in particular,
+with terror, lamentation, prayers of forty hours; and such a
+paroxysm of hero-worship as was never seen for such an object
+before." [Espagnac, ii. 12; Adelung, iv. 180; <italic> Fastes de
+Louis XV., <end italic> ii. 423; &c. &c.]
+
+For the Cause of Liberty here, we consider, was the culminating
+moment; Elsass, Lorraine and the Three Bishoprics lying in their
+quasi-moribund condition; Austrian claims of Compensation ceasing
+to be visions of the heated brain, and gaining some footing on the
+Earth as facts. Prince Karl is here actually in Elsass, master of
+the strong passes; elate in heart, he and his; France, again, as if
+fallen paralytic, into temporary distraction; offering for
+resistance nothing hitherto but that universal wailing of mankind,
+Hero-worship of a thrice-lamentable nature, and the Prayers of
+Forty-Hours! Most Christian Majesty, now IN EXTREMIS, centre of the
+basest hubbub that ever was, is dismissing Chateauroux.
+Noailles, Coigny and Company hang well back upon the Hill regions,
+and strong posts which are not yet menaced; or fly vaguely, more or
+less distractedly, hither and thither; not in the least like
+fighting Karl, much less like beating him. Karl has Germany free at
+his back (nay it is a German population round him here); neither
+haversack nor cartridge-box like to fail: before him are only a
+Noailles and consorts, flying vaguely about;--and there is in Karl,
+or under the same cloak with him at present, a talent of
+manoeuvring men, which even Friedrich finds masterly. If old
+Marshal Wade, at the other end of the line, should chance to awaken
+and press home on Saxe, and his remnant of French, with right
+vigor? In fact, there was not, that I can see, for centuries past,
+not even at the Siege of Lille in Marlborough's time, a more
+imminent peril for France.
+
+
+ FRIEDRICH DECIDES TO INTERVENE.
+
+King Friedrich, on hearing of these Rhenish emergencies and of King
+Louis's heroic advance to the rescue, perceived that for himself
+too the moment was come; and hastened to inform heroic Louis, That
+though the terms of their Bargain were not yet completed, Sweden,
+Russia and other points being still in a pendent condition, he,
+Friedrich,--with an eye to success of their Joint Adventure, and to
+the indispensability of joint action, energy, and the top of one's
+speed now or never,--would, by the middle of this same August, be
+on the field with 100,000 men. "An invasion of Bohemia, will not
+that astonish Prince Karl; and bring him to his Rhine-Bridges
+again? Over which, if your Most Christian Majesty be active, he
+will not get, except in a half, or wholly ruined state. Follow him
+close; send the rest of your force to threaten Hanover; sit well on
+the skirts of Prince Karl. Him as he hurries homeward, ruined or
+half-ruined, him, or whatever Austrian will fight, I do my best to
+beat. We may have Bohemia, and a beaten Austria, this very Autumn:
+see,--and, in one Campaign, there is Peace ready for us!" This is
+Friedrich's scheme of action; success certain, thinks he, if only
+there be energy, activity, on your side, as there shall be on mine;
+--and has sent Count Schmettau, filled with fiery speed and
+determination, to keep the French full of the like, and concert
+mutual operations.
+
+"Magnanimous!" exclaim Noailles and the paralyzed French Gentlemen
+(King Louis, I think, now past speech, for Schmettau only came
+August 9th): "Most sublime behavior, on his Prussian Majesty's
+part!" own they. And truly it is a fine manful indifference (by no
+means so common as it should be) to all interests, to all
+considerations, but that of a Joint Enterprise one has engaged in.
+And truly, furthermore, it was immediate salvation to the paralyzed
+French Gentlemen, in that alarming crisis; though they did not much
+recognize it afterwards as such: and indeed were conspicuously
+forgetful of all parts of it, when their own danger was over.
+
+Maria Theresa's feelings may be conceived; George II's feelings;
+and what the Cause of Liberty in general felt, and furiously said
+and complained, when--suddenly as a DEUS EX MACHINA, or Supernal
+Genie in the Minor Theatres--Friedrich stept in. Precisely in this
+supreme crisis, 7th August, 1744, Friedrich's Minister, Graf von
+Dohna, at Vienna, has given notice of the Frankfurt Union, and
+solemn Engagement entered into: "Obliged in honor and conscience;
+will and must now step forth to right an injured Kaiser;
+cannot stand these high procedures against an Imperial Majesty
+chosen by all the Princes of the Reich, this unheard-of protest
+that the Kaiser is no Kaiser, as if all Germany were but Austria
+and the Queen of Hungary's. Prussian Majesty has not the least
+quarrel of his own with the Queen of Hungary, stands true, and will
+stand, by the Treaty of Berlin and Breslau;--only, with certain
+other German Princes, has done what all German Princes and peoples
+not Austrian are bound to do, on behalf of their down-trodden
+Kaiser, formed a Union of Frankfurt; and will, with armed hand if
+indispensable, endeavor to see right done in that matter."
+[In <italic> Adelung, <end italic> iv. 155, 156, the Declaration
+itself (Audience, "7th August, 1744." Dohna off homeward "on the
+second day after").]
+
+This is the astonishing fact for the Cause of Liberty; and no
+clamor and execration will avail anything. This man is prompt, too;
+does not linger in getting out his Sword, when he has talked of it.
+Prince Karl's Operation is likely to be marred amazingly. If this
+swift King (comparable to the old Serpent for devices) were to
+burst forth from his Silesian strengths; tread sharply on the TAIL
+of Prince Karl's Operation, and bring back the formidably fanged
+head of IT out of Alsace, five hundred miles all at once,--there
+would be a business!
+
+We will now quit the Rhine Operations, which indeed are not now of
+moment; Friedrich being suddenly the key of events again. I add
+only, what readers are vaguely aware of, that King Louis did not
+die; that he lay at death's door for precisely one week (8th-15th
+August), symptoms mending on the 15th. In the interim,--Grand-
+Almoner Fitz-James (Uncle of our Conte di Spinelli) insisting that
+a certain Cardinal, who had got the Sacraments in hand, should
+insist; and endless ministerial intrigue being busy,--moribund
+Louis had, when it came to the Sacramental point, been obliged to
+dismiss his Chateauroux. Poor Chateauroux; an unfortunate female;
+yet, one almost thinks, the best man among them: dismissed at Metz
+here, and like to be mobbed! That was the one issue of King Louis's
+death-sickness. Sublime sickness; during which all Paris wept
+aloud, in terror and sorrow, like a child that has lost its mother
+and sees a mastiff coming; wept sublimely, and did the Prayers of
+Forty-Hours; and called King Louis Le BIEN-AIME (The Well-
+beloved):--merely some obstruction in the royal bowels, it turned
+out;--a good cathartic, and the Prayers of Forty-Hours, quite
+reinstated matters. Nay reinstated even Chateauroux, some time
+after,--"the Devil being well again," and, as the Proverb says,
+quitting his monastic view. Reinstated Chateauroux: but this time,
+poor creature, she continued only about a day:--"Sudden fever,
+from excitement," said the Doctors: "Fever? Poison, you mean!"
+whispered others, and looked for changes in the Ministry.
+Enough, oh, enough!--
+
+Old Marshal Wade did not awaken, though bawled to by his Ligoniers
+and others, and much shaken about, poor old gentleman.
+"No artillery to speak of," murmured he; "want baggage-wagons,
+too!" and lay still. "Here is artillery!" answered the Official
+people; "With my own money I will buy you baggage-wagons!" answered
+the high Maria Anna, in her own name and her Prince Karl's, who are
+Joint-Governors there. Possibly he would have awakened, had they
+given him time. But time, in War especially, is the thing that is
+never given. Once Friedrich HAD struck in, the moment was gone by.
+Poor old Wade! Of him also enough.
+
+
+
+ Chapter II.
+
+ FRIEDRICH MARCHES UPON PRAG, CAPTURES PRAG.
+
+It was on Saturday, "early in the morning," 15th August, 1744, that
+Friedrich set out, attended by his two eldest Brothers, Prince of
+Prussia and Prince Henri, from Potsdam, towards this new Adventure,
+which proved so famous since. Sudden, swift, to the world's
+astonishment;--actually on march here, in three Columns (two
+through Saxony by various routes southeastward, one from Silesia
+through Glatz southwestward), to invade Bohemia: rumor says 100,000
+strong, fact itself says upwards of 80,000, on their various
+routes, converging towards Prag. [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end
+italic> ii. 1165. Orlich (ii. 25, 27) enumerates the various
+regiments.] His Columns, especially his Saxon Columns, are already
+on the road; he joins one Column, this night, at Wittenberg; and is
+bent, through Saxony, towards the frontiers of Bohemia, at the
+utmost military speed he has.
+
+Through Saxony about 60,000 go: he has got the Kaiser's Order to
+the Government of Saxony, "Our august Ally, requiring on our
+Imperial business a transit through you;"--and Winterfeld, an
+excellent soldier and negotiator, has gone forward to present said
+Order. A Document which flurries the Dresden Officials beyond
+measure. Their King is in Warsaw; their King, if here, could do
+little; and indeed has been inclining to Maria Theresa this long
+while. And Winterfeld insists on such despatch;--and not even the
+Duke of Weissenfels is in Town, Dresden Officials "send off five
+couriers and thirteen estafettes" to the poor old Duke;
+[<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 1163.] get him at
+last; and-- The march is already taking effect; they may as well
+consent to it: what can they do but consent! In the uttermost
+flurry, they had set to fortifying Dresden; all hands driving
+palisades, picking, delving, making COUPURES (trenches, or sunk
+barricades) in the streets;--fatally aware that it can avail
+nothing. Is not this the Kaiser's Order? Prussians, to the amount
+of 60,000, are across our Frontiers, rapidly speeding on.
+
+"Friedrich's Manifesto--under the modest Title, 'ANZEIGE DER
+URSACHEN (Advertisement of the Causes which have induced his
+Prussian Majesty to send the Romish Kaiser's Majesty some Auxiliary
+Troops)'--had appeared in the Berlin Newspapers Thursday, 13th,
+only two days before. An astonishment to all mankind; which gave
+rise to endless misconceptions of Friedrich: but which, supporting
+itself on proofs, on punctually excerpted foot-notes, is
+intrinsically a modest, quiet Piece; and, what is singular in
+Manifestoes, has nothing, or almost nothing, in it that is not, so
+far as it goes, a perfect statement of the fact. 'Auxiliary troops,
+that is our essential character. No war with her Hungarian Majesty,
+or with any other, on our own score. But her Hungarian Majesty, how
+has she treated the Romish Kaiser, her and our and the Reich's
+Sovereign Head, and to what pass reduced him; refusing him Peace on
+any terms, except those of self-annihilation; denying that he is a
+Kaiser at all;'--and enumerates the various Imperial injuries, with
+proof given, quiet footnotes by way of proof; and concludes in
+these words: 'For himself his Majesty requires nothing.
+The question here is not of his Majesty's own interest at all
+[everything his Majesty required, or requires, is by the Treaty of
+Berlin solemnly his, if the Reich and its Laws endure]: and he has
+taken up arms simply and solely in the view of restoring to the
+Reich its freedom, to the Kaiser his Headship of the Reich, and to
+all Europe the Peace which is so desirable.' [Given in Seyfarth,
+<italic> Beylage, <end italic> i. 121-136, with date
+"August, 1744."]
+
+"'Pretences, subterfuges, lies!' exclaimed the Austrian and Allied
+Public everywhere, or strove to exclaim; especially the English
+Public, which had no difficulty in so doing;--a Public comfortably
+blank as to German facts or non-facts; and finding with amazement
+only this a very certain fact, That hereby is their own Pragmatic
+thunder checked in mid-volley in a most surprising manner, and the
+triumphant Cause of Liberty brought to jeopardy again.
+'Perfidious, ambitious, capricious!' exclaimed they: 'a Prince
+without honor, without truth, without constancy;'--and completed,
+for themselves, in hot rabid humor, that English Theory of
+Friedrich which has prevailed ever since. Perhaps the most
+surprising item of which is this latter, very prominent in those
+old times, That Friedrich has no 'constancy,' but follows his
+'caprices,' and accidental whirls of impulse:--item which has
+dropped away in our times, though the others stand as stable as
+ever. A monument of several things! Friedrich's suddenness is an
+essential part of what fighting talent he has: if the Public,
+thrown into flurry, cannot judge it well, they must even misjudge
+it: what help is there?
+
+"That the above were actually Friedrich's reasons for venturing
+into this Big Game again, is not now disputable. And as to the
+rumor, which rose afterwards (and was denied, and could only be
+denied diplomatically to the ear, if even to the ear), That
+Friedrich by Secret Article was 'to have for himself the Three
+Bohemian Circles, Konigsgratz, Bunzlau, Leitmeritz, which lie
+between Schlesien and Sachsen,' [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end
+italic> i. 1081; Scholl, ii. 349.]--there is not a doubt but
+Friedrich had so bargained, 'Very well, if we can get said
+Circles!' and would right cheerfully have kept and held them, had
+the big game gone in all points completely well (game, to reinstate
+the Kaiser BOTH in Bohemia and Bavaria) by Friedrich's fine
+playing. Not a doubt of all this:--nor of what an extremely
+hypothetic outlook it then and always was; greatly too weak for
+enticing such a man."
+
+Friedrich goes in Three Columns. One, on the south or left shore of
+the Elbe, coming in various branches under Friedrich himself;
+this alone will touch on Dresden, pass on the south side of
+Dresden; gather itself about Pirna (in the Saxon Switzerland so
+called, a notable locality); thence over the Metal Mountains into
+Bohmen, by Toplitz, by Lowositz, Leitmeritz, and the Highway called
+the Pascopol, famous in War. The Second Column, under Leopold the
+Young Dessauer, goes on the other or north side of the Elbe, at a
+fair distance; marching through the Lausitz (rendezvous or
+starting-point was Bautzen in the Lausitz) straight south, to meet
+the King at Leitmeritz, where the grand Magazine is to be;
+and thence, still south, straight upon Prag, in conjunction with
+his Majesty or parallel to him. [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end
+italic> i. 1081.] These are the Two Saxon Columns. The Third
+Column, under Schwerin, collects itself in the interior of Silesia;
+is issuing, by Glatz Country, through the Giant Mountains,
+BOHMISCHE KAMME (Bohemian COMBS as they are called, which Tourists
+know), by the Pass of Braunau,--disturbing the dreams of Rubezahl,
+if Rubezahl happen to be there. This, say 20,000, will come down
+upon Prag from the eastern side; and be first on the ground (31st
+August),--first by one day. In the home parts of Silesia, well
+eastward of Glatz, there is left another Force of 20,000, which can
+go across the Austrian Border there, and hang upon the Hills,
+threatening Olmutz and the Moravian Countries, should need be.
+
+And so, in its Three Columns, from west, from north, from east, the
+march, with a steady swiftness, proceeds. Important especially
+those Two Saxon Columns from west and north: 60,000 of them, "with
+a frightful (ENTSETZLICH) quantity of big guns coming up the Elbe."
+Much is coming up the Elbe; indispensable Highway for this
+Enterprise. Three months' provisions, endless artillery and
+provender, is on the Elbe; 480 big boats, with immense VORSPANN (of
+trace-horses, dreadful swearing, too, as I have heard), will pass
+through the middle of Dresden: not landing by any means. "No, be
+assured of it, ye Dresdeners, all flurried, palisaded, barricaded;
+no hair of you shall be harmed." After a day or two, the flurry of
+Saxony subsided; Prussians, under strict discipline, molest no
+private person; pay their way; keep well aloof, to south and to
+north, of Dresden (all but the necessary ammunition-escorts do);--
+and require of the Official people nothing but what the Law of the
+Reich authorizes to "Imperial Auxiliaries" in such case.
+"The Saxons themselves," Friedrich observes, "had some 40,000, but
+scattered about; King in Warsaw:--dreadful terror; making COUPURES
+and TETES-DE-PONT;--could have made no defence." Had we diligently
+spent eight days on them! reflects he afterwards. "To seize Saxony
+[and hobble it with ropes, so that at any time you could pin it
+motionless, and even, if need were, milk the substance out of it],
+would not have detained us eight days." [<italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> iii. 53.] Which would have been the true
+plan, had we known what was getting ready there! Certain it is,
+Friedrich did no mischief, paid for everything; anxious to keep
+well with Saxony; hoping always they might join him again, in such
+a Cause. "Cause dear to every Patriot German Prince," urges
+Friedrich,--though Bruhl, and the Polish, once "Moravian," Majesty
+are of a very different opinion:--
+
+"Maria Theresa, her thoughts at hearing of it may be imagined:
+'The Evil Genius of my House afoot again! My high projects on
+Elsass and Lorraine; Husband for Kaiser, Elsass for the Reich and
+him, Lorraine for myself and him; gone probably to water!'
+Nevertheless she said (an Official person heard her say), 'My right
+is known to God; God will protect me, as He has already done.'
+[<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 1024.] And rose very
+strong, and magnanimously defiant again; perhaps, at the bottom of
+her heart, almost glad withal that she would now have a stroke for
+her dear Silesia again, unhindered by Paladin George and his
+Treaties and notions. What measures, against this nefarious
+Prussian outbreak, hateful to gods and men, are possible, she
+rapidly takes: in Bohemia, in Bavaria and her other Countries, that
+are threatened or can help. And abates nothing of heart or hope;--
+praying withal, immensely, she and her People, according to the
+mode they have. Sending for Prince Karl, we need not say, double-
+quick, as the very first thing.
+
+"Of Maria Theresa in Hungary,--for she ran to Presburg again with
+her woes (August 16th, Diet just assembling there),--let us say
+only that Hungary was again chivalrous; that old Palfy and the
+general Hungarian Nation answered in the old tone,--VIVAT MARIA;
+AD ARMA, AD ARMA! with Tolpatches, Pandours, Warasdins;--and, in
+short, that great and small, in infinite 'Insurrection,' have still
+a stroke of battle in them PRO REGE NOSTRO. Scarcely above a
+District or two (as the JASZERS and KAUERS, in their over-cautious
+way) making the least difficulty. Much enthusiasm and unanimity in
+all the others; here and there a Hungarian gentleman complaining
+scornfully that their troops, known as among the best fighters in
+Nature, are called irregular troops,--irregular, forsooth! In one
+public consultation [District not important, not very spellable,
+though doubtless pronounceable by natives to it], a gentleman
+suggests that 'Winter is near; should not there be some slight
+provision of tents, of shelter in the frozen sleety Mountains, to
+our gallant fellows bound thither?' Upon which another starts up,
+'When our Ancestors came out of Asia Minor, over the Palus Maeotis
+bound in winter ice; and, sabre in hand, cut their way into this
+fine Country which is still ours, what shelter had they? No talk of
+tents, of barracks or accommodation there; each, wrapt in his sheep
+skin, found it shelter sufficient. Tents!' [<italic> Helden-
+Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 1030.] And the thing was carried
+by acclamation.
+
+"Wide wail in Bohemia that War is coming back. Nobility all making
+off, some to Vienna or the intermediate Towns lying thitherward,
+some to their Country-seats; all out of Prag. Willing mind on the
+part of the Common People; which the Government strains every nerve
+to make the most of. Here are fasts, processions, Prayers of Forty-
+Hours; here, as in Vienna and elsewhere. In Vienna was a Three
+Days' solemn Fast: the like in Prag, or better; with procession to
+the shrine of St. Vitus,--little likely to help, I should fear.
+'Rise, all fencible men,' exclaims the Government,--'at least we
+will ballot, and make you rise:'--Militia people enter Prag to the
+extent of 10,000; like to avail little, one would fear. General
+Harsch, with reinforcement of real soldiers, is despatched from
+Vienna; Harsch, one of our ablest soldiers since Khevenhuller died,
+gets in still in time; and thus increases the Garrison of regulars
+to 4,000, with a vigorous Captain to guide it. Old Count Ogilvy,
+the same whom Saxe surprised two years ago in the moonlight,
+snatching ladders from the gallows,--Ogilvy is again Commandant;
+but this time nominal mainly, and with better outlooks, Harsch
+being under him. In relays, 3,000 of the Militia men dig and shovel
+night and day; repairing, perfecting the ramparts of the place.
+Then, as to provisions, endless corn is introduced,--farmers
+forced, the unwilling at the bayonet's point, to deliver in their
+corn; much of it in sheaf, so that we have to thrash it in the
+market-place, in the streets that are wide: and thus in Prag is
+heard the sound of flails, among the Militia-drums and so many
+other noises. With the great church-organs growling; and the bass
+and treble MISERERE of the poor superstitious People rising, to
+St. Vitus and others. In fact, it is a general Dance of St. Vitus,
+--except that of the flails, and Militia-men working at the
+ramparts,--mostly not leading any-whither." ["LETTER from a Citizen
+of Prag," date, 21st Sept. (in <italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end
+italic> ii. 1168), which gives several curious details.]
+
+Meanwhile Friedrich's march from west, from north, from east, is
+flowing on; diligent, swift; punctual to its times, its places; and
+meets no impediment to speak of. At Tetschen on the Saxon-Bohemian
+Frontier,--a pleasant Schloss perched on its crags, as Tourists
+know, where the Elbe sweeps into Saxon Switzerland and its long
+stone labyrinths,--at Tetschen the Austrians had taken post;
+had tried to block the River, driving piles into it, and tumbling
+boulders into it, with a view to stop the 480 Prussian Boats.
+These people needed to be torn out, their piles and they: which was
+done in two days, the soldier part of it; and occupied the boatmen
+above a week, before all was clear again. Prosperous, correct to
+program, all the rest; not needing mention from us;--here are the
+few sparks from it that dwell in one's memory:--
+
+"AUGUST 15th, 1744, King left Potsdam; joined his First Column that
+night, at Wittenberg. Through Mieissen, Torgau, Freyberg; is at
+Peterswalde, eastern slope of the Metal Mountains, August 25th;
+all the Columns now on Bohemian ground.
+
+"Friedrich had crossed Elbe by the Bridge of Meissen: on the
+southern shore, politely waiting to receive his Majesty, there
+stood Feldmarschall the Duke of Weissenfels; to whom the King gave
+his hand," no doubt in friendly style, "and talked for above half
+an hour,"--with such success! thinks Friedrich by and by. We have
+heard of Weissenfels before; the same poor Weissenfels who was
+Wilhelmina's Wooer in old time, now on the verge of sixty;
+an extremely polite but weakish old gentleman; accidentally
+preserved in History. One of those conspicuous "Human Clothes-
+Horses" (phantasmal all but the digestive part), which abound in
+that Eighteenth Century and others like it; and distress your
+Historical studies. Poor old soul; now Feldmarschall and Commander-
+in-Chief here. Has been in Turk and other Wars; with little profit
+to himself or others. Used to like his glass, they say; is still
+very poor, though now Duke in reality as well as title (succeeded
+two egregious Brothers, some years since, who had been
+spendthrift): he has still one other beating to get in this world,
+--from Friedrich next year. Died altogether, two years hence; and
+Wilhelmina heard no more of him.
+
+"At Meissen Bridge, say some, was this Half-hour's Interview;
+at Pirna, the Bridge of Pirna, others say; [See Orlich, ii. 25;
+and <italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 1166.]--quite
+indifferent to us which. At Pirna, and hither and thither in Saxon
+Switzerland, Friedrich certainly was. 'Who ever saw such positions,
+your Majesty?' For Friedrich is always looking out, were it even
+from the window of his carriage, and putting military problems to
+himself in all manner of scenery, 'What would a man do, in that
+kind of ground, if attacking, if attacked? with that hill, that
+brook, that bit of bog?' and advises every Officer to be
+continually doing the like. [MILITARY INSTRUCTIONS? RULES FOR A
+GOOD COMMANDER OF &c.?--I have, for certain, read this Passage;
+but the reference is gone again, like a sparrow from the house-
+top!] That is the value of picturesque or other scenery to
+Friedrich, and their effect on good Prussian Officers and him.
+
+"... At Tetschen, Colonel Kahlbutz," diligent Prussian Colonel,
+"plucks out those 100 Austrians from their rock nest there;
+makes them prisoners of war;--which detained the Leitmeritz branch
+of us two days. August 28th, junction at Leitmeritz thereupon.
+Magazine established there. Boats coming on presently. Friedrich
+himself camped at Lobositz in this part,"--Lobositz, or Lowositz,
+which he will remember one day.
+
+"AUGUST 29th, March to Budin; that is, southward, across the Eger,
+arrive within forty miles of Prag. Austrian Bathyani, summoned
+hastily out of his Bavarian posts, to succor in this pressing
+emergency, has arrived in these neighborhoods,--some 12,000
+regulars under him, preceded by clouds of hussars, whom Ziethen
+smites a little, by way of handsel;--no other Austrian force to
+speak of hereabouts; and we are now between Bathyani and Prag.
+
+"SEPTEMBER 1st, To Mickowitz, near Welwarn, twenty miles from Prag.
+September 2d, Camp on the Weissenberg there." [<italic> Helden-
+Geschichte, <end italic> i. 1080.]
+
+And so they are all assembled about Prag, begirdling the poor
+City,--third Siege it has stood within these three years (since
+that moonlight November night in 1741);--and are only waiting for
+their heavy artillery to begin battering. The poor inhabitants, in
+spite of three sieges; the 10,000 raw militia-men, mostly of
+Hungarian breed; the 4,000 regulars, and Harsch and old Ogilvy, are
+all disposed to do their best. Friedrich is naturally in haste to
+get hold of Prag. But he finds, on taking survey: that the sword-
+in-hand method is not now, as in 1741, feasible at all; that the
+place is in good posture of strength; and will need a hot battering
+to tear it open. Owing to that accident at Tetschen, the siege-
+cannon are not yet come up: "Build your batteries, your Moldau-
+bridges, your communications, till the cannon come; and beware of
+Bathyani meddling with your cannon by the road!"
+
+"Bathyani is within twenty miles of us, at Beraun, a compact little
+Town to southwest; gathering a Magazine there; and ready for
+enterprises,--in more force than Friedrich guesses. 'Drive him out,
+seize that Magazine of his!' orders Friedrich (September 5th);
+and despatches General Hacke on it, a right man,"--at whose wedding
+we assisted (wedding to an heiress, long since, in Friedrich
+Wilhelm's time), if anybody now remembered. "And on the morrow
+there falls out a pretty little 'Action of Beraun,' about which
+great noise was made in the Gazettes PRO and CONTRA: which did not
+dislodge Bathyani by airy means; but which might easily have ruined
+the impetuous Hacke and his 6,000, getting into masked batteries,
+Pandour whirlwinds, charges of horses 'from front, from rear, and
+from both flanks,'--had not he, with masterly promptitude, whirled
+himself out of it, snatched instantly what best post there was, and
+defended himself inexpugnably there, for six hours, till relief
+came." [DIE BEY BERAUN VORGEFALLENE ACTION (in Seyfarth, <italic>
+Beylage, <end italic> i. 136, 137).] Brilliant little action, well
+performed on both sides, but leading to nothing; and which shall
+not concern us farther. Except to say that Bathyani did now, more
+at his leisure, retire out of harm's way; and begin collecting
+Magazines at Pilsen far rearward, which may prove useful to Prince
+Karl, in the route Prince Karl is upon.
+
+Siege-cannon having at last come (September 8th), the batteries are
+all mounted:--on Wednesday, 9th, late at night, the Artillery, "in
+enormous quantity," opens its dread throat; poor Prag is startled
+from its bed by torrents of shot, solid and shell, from three
+different quarters; and makes haste to stand to its guns.
+From three different quarters; from Bubenetsch northward; from the
+Upland of St. Lawrence (famed WEISSENBERG, or White-Hill) westward;
+and from the Ziscaberg eastward (Hill of Zisca, where iron Zisca
+posted himself on a grand occasion once),--which latter is a broad
+long Hill, west end of it falling sheer over Prag; and on another
+point of it, highest point of all, the Praguers have a strong
+battery and works. The Prag guns otherwise are not too effectual;
+planted mostly on low ground. By much the best Prag battery is this
+of the Ziscaberg. And this, after two days' experience had of it,
+the Prussians determine to take on the morrow.
+
+SEPTEMBER 12th, Schwerin, who commands on that side, assaults
+accordingly; with the due steadfastness and stormfulness:
+throwing shells and balls by way of prelude. Friedrich, with some
+group of staff-officers and dignitaries, steps out on the
+Bubenetsch post, to see how this affair of the Ziscaberg will
+prosper: the Praguers thereabouts, seeing so many dignitaries, turn
+cannon on them. "Disperse, IHR HERREN; have a care!" cried
+Friedrich; not himself much minding, so intent upon the Ziscaberg.
+And could have skipt indifferently over your cannon-balls ploughing
+the ground,--had not one fateful ball shattered out the life of
+poor Prince Wilhelm; a good young Cousin of his, shot down here at
+his hand. Doubtless a sharp moment for the King. Prince Margraf
+Wilhelm and a poor young page, there they lie dead; indifferent to
+the Ziscaberg and all coming wars of mankind. Lamentation,
+naturally, for this young man,--Brother to the one who fell at
+Mollwitz, youngest Brother of the Margraf Karl, who commands in
+this Bubenetsch redoubt:--But we must lift our eye-glass again;
+see how Schwerin is prospering. Schwerin, with due steadfastness
+and stormfulness, after his prelude of bomb-shells, rushes on
+double-quick; cannot be withstood; hurls out the Praguers, and
+seizes their battery; a ruinous loss to them.
+
+Their grand Zisca redoubt is gone, then; and two subsidiary small
+redoubts behind it withal, which the French had built, and named
+"the magpie-nests (NIDS A PIE);" these also are ours. And we
+overhang, from our Zisca Hill, the very roofs, as it were;
+and there is nothing but a long bare curtain now in this quarter,
+ready to be battered in breach, and soon holed, if needful. It is
+not needful,--not quite. In the course of three days more, our
+Bubenetsch battery, of enormous power, has been so diligent, it has
+set fire to the Water-mill; burns irretrievably the Water-mill, and
+still worse, the wooden Sluice of the Moldau; so that the river
+falls to the everywhere wadable pitch. And Governor Harsch
+perceives that all this quarter of the Town is open to any comer;--
+and, in fact, that he will have to get away, the best he can.
+
+White flag accordingly (Tuesday, 15th): "Free withdrawal, to the
+Wischerad; won't you?" "By no manner of means!" answers Friedrich.
+Bids Schwerin from his Ziscaberg make a hole or two in that
+"curtain" opposite him; and gets ready for storm. Upon which
+Harsch, next morning, has to beat the chamade, and surrender
+Prisoner of War. And thus, Wednesday, 16th, it is done: a siege of
+one week, no more,--after all that thrashing of grain, drilling of
+militia, and other spirited preparation. Harsch could not help it;
+the Prussian cannonading was so furious. [Orlich, ii. 36-39;
+<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> i. 1082, and ii. 1168;
+<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 56; &c. &c.]
+
+Prag has to swear fealty to the Kaiser; and "pay a ransom of
+200,000 pounds." Drilled militia, regulars, Hungarians, about
+16,000,--only that many of the Tolpatches contrived to whisk
+loose,--are marched prisoners to Glatz and other strong places.
+Prag City, with plenty of provision in it, is ours. A brilliant
+beginning of a Campaign; the eyes of all Europe turned again, in
+very various humor, on this young King. If only the French do their
+duty, and hang well on the skirts of Marshal Traun (or of Prince
+Karl, the Cloak of Traun), who is hastening hitherward all he can.
+
+
+
+ Chapter III.
+
+ FRIEDRICH, DILIGENT IN HIS BOHEMIAN CONQUESTS, UNEXPECTEDLY
+ COMES UPON PRINCE KARL, WITH NO FRENCH ATTENDING HIM.
+
+This electrically sudden operation on Prag was considered by
+astonished mankind, whatever else they might think about it, a
+decidedly brilliant feat of War: falling like a bolt out of the
+blue,--like three bolts, suddenly coalescing over Prag, and
+striking it down. Friedrich himself, though there is nothing of
+boast audible here or anywhere, was evidently very well satisfied;
+and thought the aspects good. There is Prince Karl whirling
+instantly back from his Strasburg Prospects; the general St. Vitus
+Dance of Austrian things rising higher and higher in these home
+parts:--reasonable hope that "in the course of one Campaign," proud
+obstinate Austria might feel itself so wrung and screwed as to be
+glad of Peace with neighbors not wishing War. That was the young
+King's calculation at this time. And, had France done at all as it
+promised,--or had the young King himself been considerably wiser
+than he was,--he had not been disappointed in the way we shall see!
+
+Friedrich admits he did not understand War at this period. His own
+scheme now was: To move towards the southwest, there to abolish
+Bathyani and his Tolpatches, who are busy gathering Magazines for
+Prince Karl's advent; to seize the said Magazines, which will be
+very useful to us; then advance straight towards the Passes of the
+Bohemian Mountains. Towns of Furth, Waldmunchen, unfortunate Town
+of Cham (burnt by Trenck, where masons are now busy); these stand
+successive in the grand Pass, through which tbe highway runs;
+some hundred miles or so from where we are: march, at one's
+swiftest, thitherward, Bathyani's Magazines to help; and there
+await Prince Karl? It was Friedrich's own notion; not a bad one,
+though not the best. The best, he admits, would have been: To stay
+pretty much where he was; abolish Bathyani's Tolpatch people,
+seizing their Magazines, and collecting others; in general, well
+rooting and fencing himself in Prag, and in the Circles that lie
+thereabouts upon the Elbe,--bounded to southward by the Sazawa
+(branch of the Moldau), which runs parallel to the Elbe;--but well
+refusing to stir much farther at such an advanced season of
+the year.
+
+That second plan would have been the wisest:--then why not, follow
+it? Too tame a plan for the youthful mind. Besides, we perceive, as
+indeed is intimated by himself, he dreaded the force of public
+opinion in France. "Aha, look at your King of Prussia again.
+Gone to conquer Bohemia; and, except the Three Circles he himself
+is to have of it, lets Bohemia go to the winds!" This sort of
+thing, Friedrich admits, he dreaded too much, at that young period;
+so loud had the criticisms been on him, in the time of the Breslau
+Treaty: "Out upon your King of Prussia; call you that an honorable
+Ally!" Undoubtedly a weakness in the young King; inasmuch, says he,
+as "every General [and every man, add we] should look to the fact,
+not to the rumor of the fact." Well; but, at least, he will adopt
+his own other notion; that of making for the Passes of the Bohemian
+Mountains; to abolish Bathyani at least, and lock the door upon
+Prince Karl's advent? That was his own plan; and, though second-
+best, that also would have done well, had there been no third.
+
+But there was, as we hinted, a third plan, ardently favored by
+Belleisle, whose war-talent Friedrich much respected at this time:
+plan built on Belleisle's reminiscences of the old Tabor-Budweis
+businesses, and totally inapplicable now. Belleisle said,
+"Go southeast, not southwest; right towards the Austrian Frontier
+itself; that will frighten Austria into a fine tremor. Shut up the
+roads from Austria: Budweis, Neuhaus; seize those two Highroad
+Towns, and keep them, if you would hold Bohemia; the want of them
+was our ruin there." Your ruin, yes: but your enemy was not coming
+from Alsace and the southwest then. He was coming from Austria;
+and your own home lay on the southwest: it is all different now!
+Friedrich might well think himself bewitched not to have gone for
+Cham and Furth, and the Passes of the Bohmer-Wald, according to his
+own notion. But so it was; he yielded to the big reputation of
+Belleisle, and to fear of what the world would say of him in
+France; a weakness which he will perhaps be taught not to repeat.
+In fact, he is now about to be taught several things;--and will
+have to pay his school-wages as he goes.
+
+
+ FRIEDRICH, LEAVING SMALL GARRISON IN PRAG, RUSHES SWIFTLY UP
+ THE MOLDAU VALLEY, UPON THE TABOR-BUDWEIS COUNTRY; TO PLEASE
+ HIS FRENCH FRIENDS.
+
+Friedrich made no delay in Prag; in haste at this late time of
+year. September 17th, on the very morrow of the Siege, the
+Prussians get in motion southward; on the 19th, Friedrich, from his
+post to north of the City, defiles through Prag, on march to
+Kunraditz,--first stage on that questionable Expedition up the
+Moldau Valley, right bank; towards Tabor, Budweis, Neuhaus;
+to threaten Austria, and please Belleisle and the French.
+
+Prag is left under General Einsiedel with a small garrison of
+5,000;--Einsiedel, a steady elderly gentleman, favorite of
+Friedrich Wilhelm's, has brief order, or outline of order to be
+filled up by his own good sense. Posadowsky follows the march, with
+as many meal-wagons as possible,--draught-cattle in very
+ineffectual condition. Our main Magazine is at Leitmeritz (should
+have been brought on to Prag, thinks Friedrich); Commissariat very
+ill-managed in comparison to what it ought to be,--to what it shall
+be, if we ever live to make another Campaign. Heavy artillery is
+left in Prag (another fault); and from each regiment, one of its
+baggage-wagons. [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> i. 1083;
+Orlich, ii. 41 et seqq.; <italic> Frederic, iii. 59; &c.] "We rest
+a day here at Kunraditz: 21st September, get to the Sazawa River;
+--22d, to Bistritz (rest a day);--26th, to Miltschin; and 27th, to
+Tabor:"--But the Diary would be tedious.
+
+Friedrich goes in two Columns; one along the great road towards
+Tabor, under Schwerin this, and Friedrich mainly with him; the
+other to the right, along the River's bank, under Leopold, Young
+Dessauer, which has to go by wild country roads, or now and then
+roads of its own making; and much needs the pioneer (a difficult
+march in the shortening days). Posadowsky follows with the
+proviant, drawn by cattle of the horse and ox species, daily
+falling down starved: great swearing there too, I doubt not!
+General Nassau is vanguard, and stretches forward successfully at a
+much lighter pace.
+
+There are two Rivers, considerable branches of the Moldau, coming
+from eastward; which, and first of them the Sazawa, concern us
+here. After mounting the southern Uplands from Prag for a day or
+two, you then begin to drop again, into the hollow of a River
+called Sazawa, important in Bohemian Wars. It is of winding course,
+the first considerable branch of the Moldau, rising in Teutschbrod
+Country, seventy or eighty miles to east of us: in regard to
+Sazawa, there is, at present, no difficulty about crossing; the
+Country being all ours. After the Sazawa, mount again, long miles,
+day after day, through intricate stony desolation, rocks, bogs,
+untrimmed woods, you will get to Miltschin, thence to Tabor:
+Miltschin is the crown of that rough moor country; from Prag to
+Tabor is some sixty miles. After Miltschin the course of those
+brown mountain-brooks is all towards the Luschnitz, the next
+considerable branch of the Moldau; branch still longer and more
+winding than the Sazawa; Tabor towers up near this branch; Budweis,
+on the Moldau itself, is forty miles farther; and there at last you
+are out of the stony moors, and in a rich champaign comfortable to
+man and horse, were you but once there, after plodding through the
+desolations. But from that Sazawa by the Luschnitz on to Budweis,
+mounting and falling in such fashion, there must be ninety miles or
+thereby. Plod along; and keep a sharp eye on the whirling clouds of
+Pandours, for those too have got across upon us,--added to the
+other tempests of Autumn.
+
+On the ninth day of their march, the Prussians begin to descry on
+the horizon ahead the steeples and chimney-tops of Tabor, on its
+high scarped rock, or "Hill of Zisca,"--for it was Zisca and his
+Hussites that built themselves this Bit of Inexpugnability, and
+named it Tabor from their Bibles,--in those waste mountain regions.
+On the tenth day (27th September), the Prussians without difficulty
+took Tabor; walls being ruined, garrison small. We lie at Tabor
+till the 30th, last day of September. Thence, 2d October, part of
+us to Moldau-Tein rightwards; where cross the Moldau by a Bridge,--
+"Bridge" one has heard of, in old Broglio times;--cross there, with
+intent (easily successful) to snatch that "Castle of Frauenberg,"
+darling of Broglio, for which he fought his Pharsalia of a Sahay to
+no purpose!
+
+Both Columns got united at Tabor; and paused for a day or two, to
+rest, and gather up their draggled skirts there. The Expedition
+does not improve in promise, as we advance in it; the march one of
+the most untowardly; and Posadowsky comes up with only half of his
+provision-carts,--half of his cattle having fallen down of bad
+weather, hill-roads and starvation; what could he do? That is an
+ominous circumstance, not the less.
+
+Three things are against the Prussians on this march; two of them
+accidental things. FIRST, there is, at this late season too, the
+intrinsic nature of the Country; which Friedrich with emphasis
+describes as boggy, stony, precipitous; a waste, hungry and
+altogether barren Country,--too emphatically so described. But then
+SECONDLY, what might have been otherwise, the Population, worked
+upon by Austrian officials, all fly from the sight of us;
+nothing but fireless deserted hamlets; and the corn, if they ever
+had any, all thrashed and hidden. No amount of money can purchase
+any service from them. Poor dark creatures; not loving Austria
+much, but loving some others even less, it would appear. Of Bigoted
+Papist Creed, for one thing; that is a great point. We do not
+meddle with their worship more or less; but we are Heretics, and
+they hate us as the Night. Which is a dreadful difficulty you
+always have in Bohemia: nowhere but in the Circle of Konigsgraz,
+where there are Hussites (far to the rear of us at this time), will
+you find it otherwise. This is difficulty second.
+
+Then, THIRDLY, what much aggravates it,--we neglected to abolish
+Bathyani! And here are Bathyani's Pandours come across the Moldau
+on us. Plenty of Pandours;--to whom "10,000 fresh Hungarians," of a
+new Insurrection which has been got up there, are daily speeding
+forward to add themselves:--such a swarm of hornets, as darkens the
+very daylight for you. Vain to scourge them down, to burn them off
+by blaze of gunpowder: they fly fast; but are straightway back
+again. They lurk in these bushy wildernesses, scraggy woods:
+no foraging possible, unless whole regiments are sent out to do it;
+you cannot get a letter safely carried for them. They are an
+unspeakable contemptible grief to the earnest leader of men.--Let
+us proceed, however; it will serve nothing to complain. Let us hope
+the French sit well on the skirts of Prince Karl: these sorrowful
+labors may all turn to good, in that case.
+
+Friedrich pushes on from Tabor; shoots partly (as we have seen)
+across the Moldau, to the left bank as well; captures romantic
+Frauenberg on its high rock, where Broglio got into such a fluster
+once. We could push to Pisek, too, and make a "Bivouac of Pisek,"
+if we lost our wits! Nassau is in Budweis, in Neuhaus; and proper
+garrisons are gone thither: nothing wanting on our side of the
+business. But these Pandours, these 10,000 Insurrection Hungarians,
+with their Trencks spurring them! A continual unblessed swarm of
+hornets, these; which shut out the very light of day from us.
+Too literally the light of day: we can get no free messaging from
+part to part of our own Army even. "As many as six Orderlies have
+been despatched to an outlying General; and not one of them could
+get through to him. They have snapt up three Letter-bags destined
+for the King himself. For four weeks he is absolutely shut out from
+the rest of Europe;" knows not in the least what the Kaiser, or the
+Most Christian or any other King, is doing; or whether the French
+are sitting well on Prince Karl's skirts, or not attempting that at
+all. This also is a thing to be amended, a thing you had to learn,
+your Majesty? An Army absolutely shut out from news, from letters,
+messages to or fro, and groping its way in darkness, owing to these
+circumambient thunder-clouds of Tolpatches, is not a well-situated
+Army! And alas, when at last the Letter-bag did get through, and--
+But let us not anticipate!
+
+At Tabor there arose two opinions; which, in spite of the King's
+presence, was a new difficulty. South from Tabor a day's march, the
+Highway splits; direct way for Vienna; left-hand goes to Neuhaus,
+right-hand, or straightforward rather, goes to Budweis, bearing
+upon Linz: which of these two? Nassau has already seized Budweis;
+and it is a habitable champaign country in comparison.
+Neuhaus, farther from the Moldau and its uses, but more imminent on
+Austria, would be easy to seize; and would frighten the Enemy more.
+Leopold the Young Dcssauer is for Budweis; rapid Schwerin, a hardy
+outspoken man, is emphatic for the other place as Head-quarter.
+So emphatic are both, that the two Generals quarrel there;
+and Friedrich needs his authority to keep them from outbreaks, from
+open incompatibility henceforth, which would be destructive to the
+service. For the rest, Friedrich seizes both places; sends a
+detachment to Neuhaus as well; but holds by Budweis and the Moldau
+region with his main Army; which was not quite gratifying to the
+hardy Schwerin. On the opposite or left bank, holding Frauenberg,
+the renowned Hill-fortress there, we make inroads at discretion:
+but the country is woody, favorable to Pandours; and the right bank
+is our chief scene of action. How we are to maintain ourselves in
+this country? To winter in these towns between the Sazawa and the
+Luschnitz? Unless the French sit well on Prince Karl's skirts, it
+will not be possible.
+
+
+ THE FRENCH ARE LITTLE GRATEFUL FOR THE PLEASURE DONE THEM
+ AT SUCH RUINOUS EXPENSE.
+
+French sitting well on Prince Karl's skirts? They are not molesting
+Prince Karl in the smallest; never tried such a thing;--are turned
+away to the Brisgan, to the Upper Rhine Country; gone to besiege
+Freyburg there, and seize Towns; about the Lake of Constance, as if
+there were no Friedrich in the game! It must be owned the French do
+liberally pay off old scores against Friedrich,--if, except in
+their own imagination, they had old scores against him. No man ever
+delivered them from a more imminent peril; and they, the rope once
+cut that was strangling them, magnificently forget who cut it; and
+celebrate only their own distinguished conduct during and after the
+operation. To a degree truly wonderful.
+
+It was moonlight, clear as day that night, 23d August, when Prince
+Karl had to recross the Rhine, close in their neighborhood;
+[<italic> Guerre de Boheme, <end italic> iii. 196.]--and instead of
+harassing Prince Karl "to half or to whole ruin," as the bargain
+was, their distinguished conduct consisted in going quietly to
+their beds (old Marechal de Noailles even calling back some of his
+too forward subalterns), and joyfully leaving Prince Karl, then and
+afterwards, to cross the Rhine, and march for Bohmen, at his own
+perfect convenience.
+
+"Seckendorf will sit on Karl's skirts," they said: "too late for
+US, this season; next season, you shall see!" Such was their
+theory, after Louis got that cathartic, and rose from bed.
+Schmettau, with his importunities, which at last irritated
+everybody, could make nothing more of it. "Let the King of France
+crown his glories by the Siege of Freyburg, the conquest of
+Brisgau:--for behoof of the poor Kaiser, don't you observe?
+Hither Austria is the Kaiser's;--and furthermore, were Freyburg
+gone, there will be no invading of Elsass again" (which is anotber
+privately very interesting point)!
+
+And there, at Freyburg, the Most Christian King now is, and his
+Army up to the knees in mud, conquering Hither Austria; besieging
+Freyburg, with much difficulty owing to the wet,--besieging there
+with what energy; a spectacle to the world! And has, for the
+present, but one wife, no mistress either! With rapturous eyes
+France looks on; with admiration too big for words. Voltaire, I
+have heard, made pilgrimage to Freyburg, with rhymed Panegyric in
+his pocket; saw those miraculous operations of a Most Christian
+King miraculously awakened; and had the honor to present said
+Panegyric; and be seen, for the first time, by the royal eyes,--
+which did not seem to relish him much. [The Panegyric (EPITRE AU
+ROI DEVANT FRIBOURG) is in <italic> OEuvres de Voltaire, <end
+italic> xvii. 184.] Since the first days of October, Freyburg had
+been under constant assault; "amid rains, amid frosts; a siege long
+and murderous" (to the besieging party);--and was not got till
+November 5th; not quite entirely, the Citadels of it, till November
+25th; Majesty gone home to Paris, to illuminations and triumphal
+arches, in the interim. [Adelung, iv. 266; Barbier, ii. 414 (13th
+November, &c.), for the illuminations, grand in the extreme, in
+spite of wild rains and winds.] It had been a difficult and bloody
+conquest to him, this of Freyburg and the Brisgau Country; and I
+never heard that either the Kaiser or he got sensible advantage by
+it,--though Prince Karl, on the present occasion, might be said to
+get a great deal.
+
+"Seckendorf will do your Prince Karl," they had cried always:
+"Seckendorf and his Prussian Majesty! Are not we conquering Hither
+Austria here, for the Kaiser's behoof?" Seckendorf they did
+officially appoint to pursue; appoint or allow;--and laid all the
+blame on Seckendorf; who perhaps deserved his share of it.
+Very certain it is, Seckendorf did little or nothing to Prince
+Karl; marched "leisurely behind him through the Ober-Pfalz,"--
+skirting Baireuth Country, Karl and he, to Wilhelmina's grief;
+[Her Letters (<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> xxvii.
+i. 133, &c.).]--"leisurely behind him at a distance of four days,"
+knew better than meddle with Prince Karl. So that Prince Karl, "in
+twenty-one marches," disturbed only by the elements and bad roads,
+reached Waldmunchen 26th September, in the Furth-Cham Country;
+[Ranke, iii. 187.] and was heard to exclaim: "We are let off for
+the fright, then (NOUS VOILA QUITTES POUR LA PEUR)!"--Seckendorf,
+finding nothing to live upon in Ober-Pfalz, could not attend Prince
+Karl farther; but turned leftwards home to Bavaria; made a kind of
+Second "Reconquest of Bavaria" (on exactly the same terms as the
+First, Austrian occupants being all called off to assist in Bohmen
+again);--concerning which, here is an Excerpt:--
+
+"Seckendorf, following at his leisure, and joined by the Hessians
+and Pfalzers, so as now to exceed 30,000, leaves Prince Karl and
+the rest of the enterprise to do as it can; and applies himself,
+for his own share, as the needfulest thing, to getting hold of
+Bavaria again, that his poor Kaiser may have where to lay his head,
+and pay old servants their wages. Dreadfully exclaimed against, the
+old gentleman, especially by the French co-managers: 'Why did not
+the old traitor stick in the rear of Prince Karl, in the difficult
+passes, and drive him prone,--while we went besieging Freyburg, and
+poaching about, trying for a bit of the Brisgau while chance
+served!' A traitor beyond doubt; probably bought with money down:
+thinks Valori. But, after all, what could Seckendorf do? He is now
+of weight for Barenklau and Bavaria, not for much more. He does
+sweep Barenklau and his Austrians from Bavaria, clear out (in the
+course of this October), all but Ingolstadt and two or three strong
+towns,--Passau especially, 'which can be blockaded, and afterwards
+besieged if needful.' For the rest, he is dreadfully ill-off for
+provisions, incapable of the least, attempt on Passau (as Friedrich
+urged, on hearing of him again); and will have to canton himself in
+home-quarters, and live by his shifts till Spring.
+
+"The noise of French censure rises loud, against not themselves,
+but against Seckendorf:--Friedrich, before that Tolpatch eclipse of
+Correspondence [when three of his Letter-bags were seized, and he
+fell quite dark], had too well foreboded, and contemptuously
+expressed his astonishment at the blame BOTH were well earning:
+Passau, said he, cannot you go at least upon Passau; which might
+alarm the Enemy a little, and drag him homewards? 'Adieu, my dear
+Seckendorf, your Officer will tell you how we did the Siege of
+Prag. You and your French are wetted hens (POULES MOUILLEES),'--
+cowering about like drenched hens in a day of set rain. 'As I hear
+nothing of either of you, I must try to get out of this business
+without your help;'"--otherwise it will be ill for me indeed!
+[Excerpted Fragment of a Letter from Friedrich,--(exact date not
+given, date of EXCERPT is, Donanworth Country, 23d September,
+1744),--which the French Agent in Seckendorf's Army had a reading
+of (<italic> Campagnes de Coigny, <end italic> iv. 185-187;
+ib. 216-219: cited in Adelung, iv. 225).] "Which latter expression
+alarmed the French, and set them upon writing and bustling, but not
+upon doing anything."
+
+"Prince Karl had crossed the Rhine unmolested, in the clearest
+moonlight, August 23d-24th; Seckendorf was not wholly got to
+Heilbronn, September 8th: a pretty way behind Prince Karl!
+The 6,000 Hessians, formerly in English pay, indignant Landgraf
+Wilhelm [who never could forgive that Machiavellian conduct of
+Carteret at Hanau, never till he found out what it really was] has,
+this year, put into French pay. And they have now joined
+Seckendorf; [Espagnac, ii. 13; Buchholz, ii. 123.] Prince Friedrich
+[Britannic Majesty's Son-in-law], not good fat Uncle George,
+commanding them henceforth:--with extreme lack of profit to Prince
+Friedrich, to the Hessians, and to the French, as will appear in
+time. These 6,000, and certain thousands of Pfalzers likewise in
+French pay, are now with Seckendorf, and have raised him to above
+30,000;--it is the one fruit King Friedrich has got by that 'Union
+of Frankfurt,' and by all his long prospective haggling, and
+struggling for a 'Union of German Princes in general.' Two pears,
+after that long shaking of the tree; both pears rotten, or indeed
+falling into Seckendorf, who is a basket of such quality!
+'Seckendorf, increased in this munificent manner, can he still do
+nothing?' cry the French: 'the old traitor!'--'I have no
+magazines,' said Seckendorf, 'nothing to live upon, to shoot with;
+no money!' And it is a mutual crescendo between the 'perfidious
+Seckendorf' and them; without work done. In the Nurnberg Country,
+some Hussars of his picked up Lord Holderness, an English
+Ambassador making for Venice by that bad route. 'Prisoner, are not
+you?' But they did not use him ill; on consideration, the Heads of
+Imperial Departments gave him a Pass, and he continued his Venetian
+Journey (result of it zero) without farther molestation that I
+heard of. [Adelung, iv. 222.]
+
+"These French-Seckendorf cunctations, recriminations and drenched-
+hen procedures are an endless sorrow to poor Kaiser Karl; who at
+length can stand it no longer; but resolves, since at least
+Bavaria, though moneyless and in ruins, is his, he will in person
+go thither; confident that there will be victual and equipment
+discoverable for self and Army were he there. Remonstrances avail
+not: 'Ask me to die with honor, ask me not to lie rotting here;'
+[Ib. iv. 241.]--and quits Frankfurt, and the Reich's-Diet and its
+babble, 17th October, 1744 (small sorrow, were it for the last
+time),--and enters his Munchen in the course of a week.
+[17th October, 1744, leaves Frankfurt; arrives in Munchen 23d
+(Adelung, iv. 241-244).] Munchen is transported with joy to see the
+Legitimate Sovereign again; and blazes into illuminations,--
+forgetful who caused its past wretchednesses, hoping only all
+wretchedness is now ended. Let ruined huts, and Cham and the burnt
+Towns, rebuild themselves; the wasted hedges make up their gaps
+again: here is the King come home! Here, sure enough, is an
+unfortunate Kaiser of the Holy Romish Reich, who can once more hope
+to pay his milk-scores, being a loved Kurfurst of Bavaria at least.
+Very dear to the hearts of these poor people;--and to their purses,
+interests and skins, has not he in another sense been dear? What a
+price the ambitions and cracked phantasms of that weak brain have
+cost the seemingly innocent population! Population harried,
+hungered down, dragged off to perish in Italian Wars; a Country
+burnt, tribulated, torn to ruin, under the harrow of Fate and
+ruffian Trenck and Company. Britannic George, rather a dear morsel
+too, has come much cheaper hitherto. England is not yet burnt;
+nothing burning there,--except the dull fire of deliriums;
+Natural Stupidities all set flaming, which (whatever it may BE in
+the way of loss) is not felt as a loss, but rather as a comfort for
+the time being;--and in fact there are only, say, a forty or fifty
+thousand armed Englishmen rotted down, and scarcely a Hundred
+Millions of money yet spent. Nothing to speak of, in the cause of
+Human Liberty. Why Populations suffer for their guilty Kings?
+My friend, it is the Populations too that are guilty in having such
+Kings. Reverence, sacred Respect for Human Worth, sacred Abhorrence
+of Human Unworth, have you considered what it means? These poor
+Populations have it not, or for long generations have had it less
+and less. Hence, by degrees, this sort of 'Kings' to them, and
+enormous consequences following!"--
+
+Karl VII. got back to Munchen 23d October, 1744; and the tar-
+barrels being once burnt, and indispensable sortings effected, he
+went to the field along with Seckendorf, to encourage his men under
+Seckendorf, and urge the French by all considerations to come on.
+And really did what he could, poor man. But the cordage of his life
+had been so strained and torn, he was not now good for much;
+alas, it had been but little he was ever good for. A couple of dear
+Kurfursts, his Father and he; have stood these Bavarian Countries
+very high, since the Battle of Blenheim and downwards!
+
+
+
+ Chapter IV.
+
+ FRIEDRICH REDUCED TO STRAlTS; CANNOT MAINTAIN HIS
+ MOLDAU CONQUESTS AGAINST PRICE KARL.
+
+One may fancy what were Friedrich's reflections when he heard that
+Prince Karl had, prosperously and unmolested, got across, by those
+Passes from the Ober-Pfalz, into Bohmen and the Circle of Pilsen,
+into junction with Bathyani and his magazines; ["At Mirotitz,
+October 2d" (Ranke, iii. 194); Orlich, ii. 49.] heard, moreover,
+that the Saxons, 20,000 strong, under Weissenfels, crossing the
+Metal Mountains, coming on by Eger and Karlsbad regions, were about
+uniting with him (bound by Treaty to assist the Hungarian Majesty
+when invaded);--and had finally, what confirms everything, that the
+said Prince Karl in person (making for Budweis, "just seen his
+advanced guard," said rumor under mistake) was but few miles off.
+Few miles off, on the other side of the Moldau;--of unknown
+strength, hidden in the circumambient clouds of Pandours.
+
+Suppressing all the rages and natural reflections but those needful
+for the moment, Friedrich (October 4th, by Moldau-Tein) dashes
+across the Moldau, to seek Prince Karl, at the place indicated, and
+at once smite him down if possible;--that will be a remedy for all
+things. Prince Karl is not there, nor was; the indication had been
+false; Friedrich searches about, for four days, to no purpose.
+Prince Karl, he then learns for certain, has crossed the Moldau
+farther down, farther northward, between Prag and us. Means to cut
+us off from Prag, then, which is our fountain of life in these
+circumstances? That is his intention:--"Old Traun, who is with him,
+understands his trade!" thinks Friedrich. Traun, or the Prince, is
+diligently forming magazines, all the Country carrying to him, in
+the Town of Beneschau, hither side of the Sazawa, some seventy
+miles north of us, an important Town where roads meet:--unless we
+can get hold of Beneschau, it will be ill with us here! Across the
+River again, at any rate; and let us hasten thither. That is an
+affair which must be looked to; and speed is necessary!
+
+OCTOBER 8th, After four days' search ending in this manner,
+Friedrich swiftly crosses towards Tabor again, to Bechin (over on
+the Luschnitz, one march), there to collect himself for Beneschau
+and the other intricacies. Towards Tabor again, by his Bridge of
+Moldau-Tein;--clouds of Pandour people, larger clouds than usual,
+hanging round; hidden by the woods till Friedrich is gone.
+Friedrich being gone, there occurs the AFFAIR OF MOLDAU-TEIN, much
+talked of in Prussian Books. Of which, in extreme condensation,
+this is the essence:--
+
+"OCTOBER 9th. Friedrich once off to Bechin, the Pandour clouds
+gather on his rearguard next day at Tein Bridge here, to the number
+of about 10,000 [rumor counts 14,000]; and with desperate intent,
+and more regularity than usual, attack the Tein-Bridge Party, which
+consists of perhaps 2,000 grenadiers and hussars, the whole under
+Ziethen's charge,--obliged to wait for a cargo of Bread-wagons
+here. 'Defend your Bridge, with cannon, with case-shot:' that is
+what the grenadiers do. The Pandour cloud, with horrid lanes cut in
+it, draws back out of this; then plunges at the River itself, which
+can be ridden above or below; rides it, furious, by the thousand:
+'Off with your infantry; quit the Bridge!' cries Ziethen to his
+Captain there: 'Retire you, Parthian-like; thrice-steady,' orders
+Ziethen: 'It is to be hoped our hussars can deal with this mad-
+doggery!' And they do it; cutting in with iron discipline, with
+fierceness not undrilled; a wedge of iron hussars, with ditto
+grenadiers continually wheeling, like so many reapers steady among
+wind-tossed grain; and gradually give the Pandours enough.
+Seven hours of it, in all: 'of their sixty cartridges the
+grenadiers had fired fifty-four,' when it ended, about 7 P.M.
+The coming Bread-wagons, getting word, had to cast their loaves
+into the River (sad to think of); and make for Bechin at their
+swiftest. But the rearguard got off with its guns, in this
+victorious manner: thanks to Major-General Ziethen, Colonel Reusch
+and the others concerned. [<italic> Feldzuge der Preussen, i. 268;
+Orlich, ii. 55.]
+
+"Ziethen handsels his Major-Generalcy in this fine way:
+[Patent given him "3d October, 1744," only a week ago, "and ordered
+to be dated eight months back" (Rodenbeck, i. 109).] a man who has
+had promotion, and also has had none, and may again come to have
+none;--and is able to do either way. Never mind, my excellent tacit
+friend! Ziethen is five-and-forty gone; has a face which is
+beautiful to me, though one of the coarsest. Face thrice-honest,
+intricately ploughed with thoughts which are well kept silent (the
+thoughts, indeed, being themselves mostly inarticulate; thoughts of
+a simple-hearted, much-enduring, hot-tempered son of iron and
+oatmeal);--decidedly rather likable, with its lazily hanging
+under-lip, and respectable bearskin cylinder atop."
+
+
+ FRIEDRICH TRIES TO HAVE BATTLE FROM PRINCE KARL, IN THE MOLDAU
+ COUNTRIES; CANNOT, OWING TO THE SKILL OF PRINCE KARL OR OF OLD
+ FELDMARSCHALL TRAUN;--HAS TO RETIRE BEHIND THE SAZAWA, AND
+ ULTIMATELY BEHIND THE ELBE, WITH MUCH LABOR IN VAIN.
+
+OCTOBER 14th-18th: RETREAT FROM BECHIN-TABOR COUNTRY TO BENESCHAU.
+... "These Pandours give us trouble enough; no Magazine here, no
+living to be had in this Country beside them. Unfortunate Colonel
+Jahnus went out from Tabor lately, to look after requisitioned
+grains: infinite Pandours set upon him [Muhlhausen is the memorable
+place]; Jahnus was obstinate (too obstinate, thinks Friedrich), and
+perished on the ground, he and 200 of his. [<italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> iii. 61.] Nay, next, a swarm of them came to
+Tabor itself, Nadasti at their head; to try whether Tabor, with its
+small garrison, could not be escaladed, and perhaps Prince Henri,
+who lies sick there, be taken? Tabor taught them another lesson;
+sent them home with heads broken;--which Friedrich thinks was an
+extremely suitable thing. But so it stands: Here by the thousand
+and the ten thousand they hang round us; and Prince Karl-- It is of
+all things necessary we get hold of that Beneschau, and the
+Magazine he is gathering there!
+
+"Rapidity is indispensable,--and yet how quit Tabor? We have
+detachments out at Neuhaus, at Budweis, and in Tabor 300 men in
+hospital, whom there are no means of carrying. To leave them to the
+Tolpaches? Friedrich confesses he was weak on this occasion;
+he could not leave these 300 men, as was his clear duty, in this
+extremity of War. He ordered in his Neuhaus Detachment; not yet any
+of the others. He despatched Schmerin towards Beneschau with all
+his speed; Schwerin was lucky enough to take Beneschau and its
+provender,--a most blessed fortune,--and fences himself there.
+Hearing which, Friedrich, having now got the Neuhaus Detachment in
+hand, orders the other Three, the Budweis, the Tabor here, and the
+Frauenberg across the River, to maintain themselves; and then,
+leaving those southern regions to their chance, hastens towards
+Beneschau and Schwerin; encamps (October 18th) near Beneschau,--
+'Camp of Konopischt,' unattackable Camp, celebrated in the Prussian
+Books;--and there, for eight days, still on the south side of
+Sazawa, tries every shift to mend the bad posture of affairs in
+that Luschnitz-Sazawa Country. His Three Garrisons (3,000 men in
+them, besides the 300 sick) he now sees will not be able to
+maintain themselves; and he sends in succession 'eight messengers,'
+not one messenger of whom could get through, to bid them come away.
+His own hope now is for a Battle with Prince Karl; which might
+remedy all things. [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic>
+iii. 62-64.]"
+
+That is Friedrich's wish; but it is by no means Traun's, who sees
+that hunger and wet weather will of themselves suffice for
+Friedrich. There ensues accordingly, for three weeks to come, in
+that confused Country, a series of swift shufflings, checkings and
+manoeuvrings between these two, which is gratifying and instructive
+to the strategic mind, but cannot be inflicted upon common readers.
+Two considerable chess-players, an old and a young; their chess-
+board a bushy, rocky, marshy parallelogram, running fifty miles
+straight east from Prag, and twenty or fewer south, of which Prag
+is the northwest angle, and Beneschau, or the impregnable
+Konopischt the southwest: the reader must conceive it; and how
+Traun will not fight Friedrich, yet makes him skip hither and
+thither, chiefly by threatening his victuals. Friedrich's main
+magazine is now at Pardubitz, the extreme northeast angle of the
+parallelogram. Parallelogram has one river in it, with the
+innumerable rocks and brooks and quagmires, the river Sazawa;
+and on the north side, where are Kuttenberg, Czaslau, Chotusitz,
+places again become important in this business, it is bounded by
+another river, the Elbe. Intricate manoeuvring there is here, for
+three weeks following: "old Traun an admirable man!" thinks
+Friedrich, who ever after recognized Traun as his Schoolmaster in
+the art of War. We mark here and there a date, and leave it
+to readers.
+
+"RADICZ, OCTOBER 21st-22d. At Radicz, a march to southwest of us,
+and on our side of the Moldau, the Saxons, under Weissenfels,
+20,000 effective, join Prince Karl; which raises his force to
+69,514 men, some 10,000 more than Friedrich is master of. [Orlich,
+ii. 66.] Prospect of wintering between the Luschnitz and the Sazawa
+there is now little; unless they will fight us, and be beaten.
+Friedrich, from his inaccessible Camp of Konopischt, manoeuvres,
+reconnoitres, in all directions, to produce this result; but to no
+purpose. An Austrian Detachment did come, to look after Beneschau
+and the Magazines there; but rapidly drew back again, finding
+Konopischt on their road, and how matters were. Friedrich will
+guard the door of this Sazawa-Elbe tract of Country; hope of the
+Sazawa-Luschnitz tract has, in few days, fallen extinct. Here is
+news come to Konopischt: our Three poor Garrisons, Budweis, Tabor,
+Frauenberg, already all lost; guns and men, after defence to the
+last cartridge,--in Frauenberg their water was cut off, it was
+eight-and-forty hours of thirst at Frauenberg:--one way or other,
+they are all Three gone; eight couriers galloping with message,
+'Come away,' were all picked up by the Pandours; so they stood, and
+were lost. 'Three thousand fighting men gone, for the weak chance
+of saving three hundred who were in hospital!' thinks Friedrich:
+War is not a school of the weak pities. For the chance of ten, you
+lose a hundred and the ten too. Sazawa-Elbe tract of country, let
+us vigilantly keep the door of that!
+
+"SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24th, Friedrich out reconnoitring from
+Konopischt discovers of a certainty that the whole Austrian-Saxon
+force is now advaucing towards Beneschau, and will, this night,
+encamp at Marschowitz, to southwest, only one march from us! On the
+instant Friedrich hurries back; gets his Army on march thitherward,
+though the late October sun is now past noon; off instantly;
+a stroke yonder will perhaps be the cure of all. Such roads we had,
+says Friedrich, as never Army travelled before: long after
+nightfall, we arrive near the Austrian camp, bivouac as we can till
+daylight return. At the first streak of day, Friedrich and his
+chief generals are on the heights with their spy-glasses:
+Austrian Army sure enough; and there they have altered their
+posture overnight (for Traun too has been awake); they lie now
+opposite our RIGHT flank; 'on a scarped height, at the foot of
+which, through swamps and quagmires, runs a muddy stream.'
+Unattackable on this side: their right flank and foot are safe
+enough. Creep round and see their left:--Nothing but copses, swampy
+intricacies! We may shoulder arms again, and go back to Konopischt:
+no fight here! [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 63,
+64; Orlich, ii. 69.] Speaking of defensive Campaigns, says
+Friedrich didactically, years afterwards, 'If such situations are
+to answer the purpose intended, the front and flanks must be
+equally strong, but the rear entirely open. Such, for instance, are
+those heights which have an extensive front, and whose flanks are
+covered by morasses:--as was Prince Karl's Camp at Marschowitz in
+the year 1744, with its front covered by a stream, and the wings by
+deep hollows; or that which we ourselves then occupied at
+Konopischt,--as you well remember. [<italic> Military Instructions
+<end italic> (above cited), p. 44.]
+
+"OCTOBER 26th-NOVEMBER 1st. The Sazawa-Luschnitz tract of Country
+is quite lost, then; lost with damages: the question now is, Can we
+keep the Sazawa-Elbe tract? For about three weeks more, Friedrich
+struggles for that object; cannot compass that either. Want of
+horse-provender is very great:--country entirely eaten, say the
+peasants, and not a truss remaining. October 26th, Friedrich has to
+cross the Sazawa; we must quit the door of that tract (hunger
+driving us), and fight for the interior in detail. Traun gets to
+Beneschau in that cheap way; and now, in behalf of Traun, the
+peasants find forage enough, being zealous for Queen and creed.
+Pandours spread themselves all over this Sazawa-Elbe country;
+endanger our subsistences, make our lives miserable. It is the old
+story: Friedrich, famine and mud and misery of Pandours compelling,
+has to retire northward, Elbe-ward, inch by inch; whither the
+Austrians follow at a safe distance, and, in spite of all
+manoeuvring, cannot be got to fight.
+
+"Brave General Nassau, who much distinguishes himself in these
+businesses, has (though Friedrich does not yet know it) dexterously
+seized Kolin, westward in those Elbe parts,--ground that will be
+notable in years coming. Important little feat of Nassau's; of
+which anon. On the other hand, our Magazine at Pardubitz, eastward
+on the Elbe, is not out of danger: Pandours and regulars 2,000 and
+odd, 'sixty of the Pandour kind disguised as peasants leading hay-
+carts,' made an attempt there lately; but were detected by the
+vigilant Colonel, and blown to pieces, in the nick of time, some of
+them actually within the gate. [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end
+italic> iii. 65.] Nay, a body of Austrian regulars were in full
+march for Kolin lately, intending to get hold of the Elbe itself at
+that point (midway between Prag and Pardubitz): but the prompt
+General Nassau, as we remarked, had struck in before them; and now
+holds Kolin;--though, for several days, Friedrich could not tell
+what had become of Nassau, owing to the swarms of Pandours.
+
+"Friedrich, standing with his back to Prag, which is fifty miles
+from him, and rather in need of his support than able to give him
+any; and drawing his meal from the uncertain distance, with
+Pandours hovering round,--is in difficult case. While old Traun is
+kept luminous as mid-day; the circumambient atmosphere of Pandours
+is tenebrific to Friedrich, keeps him in perpetual midnight. He has
+to read his position as with flashes of lightning, for most part.
+A heavy-laden, sorely exasperated man; and must keep his haggard
+miseries strictly secret; which I believe he does. Were Valori
+here, it is very possible he might find the countenance FAROUCHE
+again; eyes gloomy, on damp November mornings! Schwerin, in a huff,
+has gone home: Since your Majesty is pleased to prefer his young
+Durchlaucht of Anhalt's advice, what can an elderly servant (not
+without rheumatisms) do other?--'Well!' answers Friedrich, not with
+eyes cheered by the phenomenon. The Elbe-Sazawa tract, even this
+looks as if it would be hard to keep. A world very dark for
+Friedrich, enveloped so by the ill chances and the Pandours.
+But what help?
+
+"From the French Camp far away, there comes, dated 17th October
+(third week of their Siege of Freyburg), by way of help to
+Friedrich, magnanimous promise: 'So soon as this Siege is done,
+which will be speedily, though it is difficult, we propose to send
+fifty battalions and a hundred squadrons,'"--say only 60,000 horse
+and foot (not a hoof or toe of which ever got that length, on
+actually trying it),--"towards Westphalia, to bring the Elector of
+Koln to reason [poor Kaiser's lanky Brother, who cannot stand the
+French procedures, and has lately sold himself, that is sold his
+troops, to England], and keep the King of England and the Dutch in
+check,"--by way of solacement to your Majesty. Will you indeed, you
+magnanimous Allies?--This was picked up by the Pandours; and I know
+not but Friedrich was spared the useless pain of reading it.
+[Orlich, ii. 73.]
+
+"NOVEMBER 1st-9th: FRIEDRICH LOSES SAZAWA-ELBE COUNTRY TOO. On the
+first day of November, here is a lightning-flash which reveals
+strange things to Friedrich. Traun's late manoeuvrings, which have
+been so enigmatic, to right and to left, upon Prag and other
+points, issue now in an attempt towards Pardubitz; which reveals to
+Friedrich the intention Traun has formed, of forcing him to choose
+one of those two places, and let go the other. Formidable, fatal,
+thinks Friedrich; and yet admirable on the part of Traun: 'a design
+beautiful and worthy of admiration.' If we stay near Prag, what
+becomes of our communication with Silesia; what becomes of Silesia
+itself? If we go towards Pardubitz, Prag and Bohmen are lost!
+What to do? 'Despatch reinforcement to Pardubitz; thanks to Nassau,
+the Kolin-Pardubitz road is ours!' That is done, Pardubitz saved
+for the moment. Could we now get to Kuttenberg before the old
+Marshal, his design were overset altogether. Alas, we cannot march
+at once, have to wait a day for the bread. Forward, nevertheless;
+and again forward, and again; three heavy marches in November
+weather: let us make a fourth forced march, start to-morrow before
+dawn,--Kuttenberg above all things! In vain; to-morrow, 4th
+November, there is such a fog, dark as London itself, from six in
+the morning onwards, no starting till noon: and then impossible,
+with all our efforts, to reach Kuttenberg. We have to halt an eight
+miles short of it, in front of Kolin; and pitch tents there. On the
+morrow, 5th November, Traun is found encamped, unattackable,
+between us and our object; sits there, at his ease in a friendly
+Country, with Pandour whirlpools flowing out and in; an irreducible
+case to Friedrich. November 5th, and for three days more,
+Friedrich, to no purpose, tries his utmost;--finds he will have to
+give up the Elbe-Sazawa region, like the others. Monday, November
+9th, Friedrich gathers himself at Kolin; crosses the Elbe by Kolin
+Bridge, that day. Point after point of the game going against him."
+
+Kolin was, of course, attacked, that Monday evening, so soon as the
+main Army crossed: but, so soon as the Army left, General Nassau
+had taken his measures; and, with his great guns and his small,
+handled the Pandours in a way that pleased us. [<italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> iii. 68.] Thursday night following, they
+came back, with regular grenadiers to support; under cloud of
+night, in great force, ruffian Trenck at the head of them:
+a frightful phenomenon to weak nerves. But this also Nassau treated
+in such a fiery fashion that it vanished without return;
+three hundred dead left on the ground, and ruffian Trenck riding
+off with his own crown broken,--beautiful indigo face streaking
+itself into GINGHAM-pattern, for the moment!
+
+Except Pardubitz, where also the due battalions are left, Friedrich
+now holds no post south of the Elbe in this quarter; Elbe-Sazawa
+Tract is gone like the others, to all appearance. And we must now
+say, Silesia or Prag? Prince Leopold, Council-of-War being held on
+the matter, is for keeping hold of Prag: "Pity to lose all the
+excellent siege-artillery we brought thither," says he. True, too
+true; an ill-managed business that of Prag! thinks Friedrich sadly
+to himself: but what is Prag and artillery, compared to Silesia?
+Parthian retreat into Silesia; and let Prag and the artillery go:
+that, to Friedrich, is clearly the sure course. Or perhaps the
+fatal alternative will not actually arrive? So long as Pardubitz
+and Kolin hold; and we have the Elbe for barrier? Truth is, Prince
+Karl has himself written to Court that, having now pushed his Enemy
+fairly over the Elbe, and winter being come with its sleets and
+slushes, ruinous to troops that have been so marched about, the
+Campaign ought to end;--nay, his own young Wife is in perilous
+interesting circumstances, and the poor Prince wishes to be home.
+To which, however, it is again understood, Maria Theresa has
+emphatically answered, "No,--finish first!"
+
+NOVEMBER 9th-19th: WE DEFEND THE ELBE RIVER. Friedrich has posted
+himself on the north shore of the Elbe, from Pardubitz to the other
+side of Kolin; means to defend that side of the River, where go the
+Silesian roads. At Bohdenetz, short way across from Pardubitz, he
+himself is; Prince Leopold is near Kolin: thirty miles of river-
+bank to dispute. The controversy lasts ten days; ends in
+ELBE-TEINITZ, a celebrated "passage," in Books and otherwise.
+Friedrich is in shaggy, intricate country; no want of dingles,
+woods and quagmires; now and then pleasant places too,--here is
+Kladrup for example, where our Father came three hundred miles to
+dine with the Kaiser once. The grooms and colts are all off at
+present; Father and Kaiser are off; and much is changed since then.
+Grim tussle of War now; sleety winter, and the Giant Mountains in
+the distance getting on their white hoods! Friedrich doubtless has
+his thoughts as he rides up and down, in sight of Kladrup, among
+other places, settling many things; but what his thoughts were, he
+is careful not to say except where necessary. Much is to be looked
+after, in this River controversy of thirty miles. Detachments lie,
+at intervals, all the way; and mounted sentries, a sentry every
+five miles, patrol the River-bank; vigilant, we hope, as lynxes.
+Nothing can cross but alarm will be given, and by degrees the whole
+Prussian force be upon it. This is the Circle of Konigsgratz, this
+that now lies to rear; and happily there are a few Hussites in it,
+not utterly indisposed to do a little spying for us, and bring a
+glimmering of intelligence, now and then.
+
+It is now the second week that Frietrich has lain so, with his
+mounted patrols in motion, with his Hussite spies; guarding Argus-
+like this thirty miles of River; and the Austrians attempt nothing,
+or nothing with effect. If the Austrians go home to their winter-
+quarters, he hopes to issue from Kolin again before Spring, and to
+sweep the Elbe-Sazawa Tract clear of them, after all. Maria Theresa
+having answered No, it is likely the Austrians will try to get
+across: Be vigilant therefore, ye mounted sentries. Or will they
+perhaps make an attempt on Prag? Einsiedel, who has no garrison of
+the least adequacy, apprises us That "in all the villages round
+Prag people are busy making ladders,"--what can that mean?
+Friedrich has learned, by intercepted letters, that something great
+is to be done on Wednesday, 18th: he sends Rothenburg with
+reinforcement to Einsiedel, lest a scalade of Prag should be on the
+cards. Rothenburg is right welcome in the lines of Prag, though
+with reinforcement still ineffectual; but it is not Prag that is
+meant, nor is Wednesday the day. Through Wednesday, Friedrich, all
+eye and ear, could observe nothing: much marching to and fro on the
+Austrian side of the River; but apparently it comes to nothing?
+The mounted patrols had better be vigilant, however.
+
+On the morrow, 5 A.M., what is this that is going on? Audible
+booming of cannon, of musketry and battle, echoing through the
+woods, penetrates to Friedrich's quarters at Bohdenetz in the
+Pardubitz region: Attack upon Kolin, Nassau defending himself
+there? Out swift scouts, and see! Many scouts gallop out; but none
+comes back. Friedrich, for hours, has to remain uncertain; can only
+hope Nassau will defend himself. Boom go the distant volleyings;
+no scout comes back. And it is not Nassau or Kolin; it is something
+worse: very glorious for Prussian valor, but ruinous to
+this Campaign.
+
+The Austrians, at 2 o'clock this morning, Austrians and Saxons,
+came in great force, in dead silence, to the south brink of the
+River, opposite a place called Teinitz (Elbe-Teinitz), ten miles
+east of Kolin; that was the fruit of their marching yesterday.
+They sat there forbidden to speak, to smoke tobacco or do anything
+but breathe, till all was ready; till pontoons, cannons had come
+up, and some gleam of dawn had broken. At the first gleam of dawn,
+as they are shoving down their pontoon boats, there comes a
+"WER-DA, Who goes?" from our Prussian patrol across the River.
+Receiving no answer, he fires; and is himself shot down.
+One Wedell, Wedell and Ziethen, who keep watch in this part, start
+instantly at sound of these shots; and make a dreadful day of it
+for these invasive Saxon and Austrian multitudes. Naturally, too,
+they send off scouts, galloping for more help, to the right and to
+the left. But that avails not. Wild doggery of Pandours, it would
+seem, have already swum or waded the River, above Teinitz and
+below:--"Want of vigilance!" barks Friedrich impatiently: but such
+a doggery is difficult to watch with effect. At any rate, to the
+right and to the left, the woods are already beset with Pandours;
+every scout sent out is killed: and to east or to west there comes
+no news but an echoing of musketry, a boom of distant cannon.
+[Orlich, ii. 82-85.] Saxon-Austrian battalions, four or five, with
+unlimited artillery going, VERSUS Wedell's one battalion, with
+musketry and Ziethen's hussars: it is fearful odds. The Prussians
+stand to it like heroes; doggedly, for four hours, continue the
+dispute,--till it is fairly desperate; "two bridges of the enemy's
+now finished;"--whereupon they manoeuvre off, with Parthian or
+Prussian countenance, into the woods, safe, towards Kolin;
+"despatching definite news to Friedrich, which does arrive about
+11 A.M., and sets him at once on new measures."
+
+This is a great feat in the Prussian military annals; for which,
+sad as the news was, Wedell got the name of Leonidas attached to
+him by Friedrich himself. And indeed it is a gallant passage of
+war; "Forcing of the Elbe at Teinitz;" of which I could give two
+Narratives, one from the Prussian, and one from the Saxon side;
+[Seyfarth, <italic> Beylage, <end italic> i. 595-598; <italic>
+Helden-Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 1175-1181.] didactic,
+admonitory to the military mind, nay to the civic reader that has
+sympathy with heroisms, with work done manfully, and terror and
+danger and difficulty well trampled under foot. Leonidas Wedell has
+an admirable silence, too; and Ziethen's lazily hanging under-lip
+is in its old attitude again, now that the spasm is over. "WAS
+THUTS? They are across, without a doubt. We would have helped it,
+and could not. Steady!"--
+
+
+ FRIEDRICH'S RETREAT; ESPECIALLY EINSIEDEL'S FROM PRAG.
+
+Seeing, then, that they are fairly over, Friedrich, with a
+creditable veracity of mind, sees also that the game is done;
+and that same night he begins manoeuvring towards Silesia, lest far
+more be lost by continuing the play. One column, under Leopold the
+Young Dessauer, goes through Glatz, takes the Magazine of Pardubitz
+along with it: good to go in several columns, the enemy will less
+know which to chase. Friedrich, with another column, will wait for
+Nassau about Konigsgratz, then go by the more westerly road,
+through Nachod and the Pass of Braunau. Nassau, who is to get
+across from Kolin, and join us northwards, has due rendezvous
+appointed him in the Konigsgratz region. Einsiedel, in Prag, is to
+spike his guns, since he cannot carry them; blow up his bastions,
+and the like; and get away with all discretion and all diligence,--
+northwestward first, to Leitmeritz, where our magazines are;
+there to leave his heavier goods, and make eastward towards
+Friedland, and across the "Silesian Combs" by what Passes he can.
+Will have a difficult operation; but must stand to it. And speed;
+steady, simultaneous, regular, unresting velocity; that is the word
+for all. And so it is done,--though with difficulty, on the part of
+poor Einsiedel for one. It was Thursday, 19th November, when the
+Austrians got across the Elbe: on Monday, 23d, the Prussian
+rendezvousings are completed; and Friedrich's column, and the Glatz
+one under Leopold, are both on march; infinite baggage-wagons
+groaning orderly along ("sick-wagons well ahead," and the like
+precautions and arrangements), on both these highways for Silesia:
+and before the week ends, Thursday, 26th, even Einsiedel is under
+way. Let us give something of poor Einsiedel, whose disasters made
+considerable noise in the world, that Winter and afterwards.
+
+"The two main columns were not much molested; that which went by
+Glatz, under Leopold, was not pursued at all. On the rear of
+Friedrich's own column, going towards Braunau, all the way to
+Nachod or beyond, there hung the usual doggery of Pandours, which
+required whipping off from time to time; bnt in the defiles and
+difficult places due precaution was taken, and they did little real
+damage. Truchsess von Waldburg [our old friend of the Spartan feat
+near Austerlitz in the MORAVIAN-FORAY time, whom we have known in
+London society as Prussian Envoy in bygone years] was in one of the
+divisions of this column; and one day, at a village where there was
+a little river to cross (river Mietau, Konigsgratz branch of the
+Elbe), got provoked injudiciously into fighting with a body of
+these people. Intent not on whipping them merely, but on whipping
+them to death, Truchsess had already lost some forty men, and the
+business with such crowds of them was getting hot; when, all at
+once a loud squeaking of pigs was heard in the village,"--
+apprehensive swineherd hastily penning his pigs belike, and some
+pig refractory;--"at sound of which, the Pandour multitude suddenly
+pauses, quits fighting, and, struck by a new enthusiasm, rushes
+wholly into the village; leaving Truchsess, in a tragi-comic humor,
+victorious, but half ashamed of himself. [<italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> iii. 73.] In the beginning of December,
+Friedrich's column reached home, by Braunau through the Mountains,
+the same way part of it had come in August; not quite so brilliant
+in equipment now as then.
+
+"It was upon Einsiedel's poor Garrison, leaving Prag in such haste,
+that the real stress of the retreat fell; its difficulties great
+indeed, and its losses great. Einsiedel did what was possible;
+but all things are not possible on a week's warning. He spiked
+great guns, shook endless hundredweights of powder, and 10,000
+stand of arms, into the River; he requisitioned horses, oxen,
+without number; put mines under the bastions, almost none of which
+went off with effect. He kept Prag accurately shut, the Praguers
+accurately in the dark; took his measures prudently; and labored
+night and day. One measure I note of him: stringent Proclamation to
+the inhabitants of Prag, 'Provision yourselves for three months;
+nothing but starvation ahead otherwise.' Alas, we are to stand a
+fourth siege, then? say the Praguers. But where are provisions to
+be had? At such and such places; from the Royal Magazines only, if
+you bring a certificate and ready money! Whereby Einsiedel got
+delivered of his meal-magazine, for one thing. But his difficulties
+otherwise were immense.
+
+"On the Thursday morning, 26th November, 1744, he marched.
+His wagons had begun the night before; and went all night, rumbling
+continuous (Anonymous of Prag [Second "LETTER from a Citizen, &c."
+(date, 27th November, see supra, p. 348), in <italic> Helden-
+Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 1181-1188.] hearing them well),
+through the Karlthor, northwest gate of Prag, across the Moldau
+Rridge. All night across that bridge,--Leitmeritz road, great road
+to the northwest:--followed finally by the march of horse and foot.
+But news had already fled abroad. Five hundred Pandours were in the
+City, backed by the Butchers' lads and other riotous GESINDEL,
+before the rear-guard got away. Sad tugging and wriggling in
+consequence, much firing from windows, and uproarious chaos;--so
+that Rothenburg had at last to remount a couple of guns, and blow
+it off with case-shot. A drilled Prussian rear-guard struggling,
+with stern composure, through a real bit of burning chaos.
+With effect, though not without difficulty. Here is the scene on
+the Noldau Bridge, and past that high Hradschin [Old Palace of the
+Bohemian Kings (pronounce RADsheen); one of the steepest Royal
+Sites in the world.] mass of buildings; all Prag, not the Hradschin
+only, struggling to give us fatal farewell if it durst. River is
+covered with Pandours firing out of boats; Bridge encumbered to
+impassability by forsaken wagons, the drivers of which had cut
+traces and run; shot comes overhead from the Hradschin on our left,
+much shot, infinite tumult all round; thoroughfare impossible for
+two-wheeled vehicle, or men in rank. 'Halt!' cries Colonel Brandes,
+who has charge of the thing; divides them in three: 'First one
+party, deal with these river-boats, that Pandour doggery;
+second party, pull these stray wagons to right and left, making the
+way clear; third party, drag our own wagons forward, shoulder to
+shaft, and yoke them out of shot-range;--you, Captain Carlowitz,'
+and calls twenty volunteers to go with Carlowitz, and drag their
+own cannon, 'step you forward, keep the gate of that Hradschin till
+we all pass!' In this manner, rapid, hard of stroke, clear-headed
+and with stern regularity, drilled talent gets the burning Nessus'-
+shirt wriggled off; and tramps successfully forth with its
+baggages. About 11 A.M., this rearguard of Brandes's did; should
+have been at seven,--right well that it could be at all.
+
+"Einsiedel, after this, got tolerably well to Leitmeritz; left his
+heavy baggage there; then turned at an acute angle right eastward,
+towards the Silesian Combs, as ordered: still a good seventy miles
+to do, and the weather getting snowy and the days towards their
+shortest. Worse still; old Weissenfels, now in Prag with his
+Saxons, is aware that Einsiedel, before ending, will touch on a
+wild high-lying corner of the Lausitz which is Saxon Country;
+and thitherward Weissenfels has despatched Chevalier de Saxe (in
+plenty of time, November 29th), with horse and foot, to waylay
+Einsiedel, and block the entrance of the Silesian Mountains for
+him. Whereupon, in the latter end of his long march, and almost
+within sight of home, ensues the hardest brush of all for
+Einsiedel. And, in the desolation of that rugged Hill country of
+the Lausitz, 'HOCHWALD (Upper Weld),' twenty or more miles from
+Bohemian Friedland, from his entrance on the Mountain Barrier and
+Silesian Combs, there are scenes--which gave rise to a Court-
+Martial before long. For unexpectedly, on the winter afternoon
+(December 9th), Einsiedel, struggling among the snows and pathless
+Hills, comes upon Chevalier de Saxe and his Saxon Detachment,--
+intrenched with trees, snow-redoubts, and a hollow bog dividing us;
+plainly unassailable;--and stands there, without covering, without
+'food, fire, or salt,' says one Eye-witness, 'for the space of
+fourteen hours.' Gazing gloomily into it, exchanging a few shots,
+uncertain what more to do; the much-dubitating Einsiedel. 'At which
+the men were so disgusted and enraged, they deserted [the foreign
+part of them, I fancy] in groups at a time,' says the above
+Eye-witness. Not to think what became of the equipments, baggage-
+wagons, sick-wagons:--too evident Einsiedel's loss, in all kinds,
+was very considerable. Nassau, despatched by Leopold out of Glatz,
+from the other side of the Combs, is marching to help Einsiedel;--
+who knows, at this moment, where or whitherward? For the peasants
+are all against us; our very guides desert, and become spies.
+'Push to the left, over the Hochwald top, must not we?' thinks
+Einsiedel: 'that is Lausitz, a Saxon Country; and Saxony, though
+the Saxons stand intrenched here, with the knife at our throat, are
+not at war with us, oh no, only allies of her Majesty of Hungary,
+and neutral otherwise!' And here, it is too clear, the Chevalier de
+Saxe stands intrenched behind his trees and snow; and it is the
+fourteenth hour, men deserting by the hundred, without fire and
+without salt; and Nassau is coming,--God knows by what road!
+
+"Einsiedel pushes to the left, the Hochwald way; finds, in the
+Hochwald too, a Saxon Commandant waiting him, with arms strictly
+shouldered. 'And we cannot pass through this moor skirt of Lausitz,
+say you, then?' 'Unarmed, yes; your muskets can come in wagons
+after you,' replies the Saxon Commandant of Lausitz.
+'Thousand thanks, Herr Commandant; but we will not give you all
+that trouble,' answer Einsiedel and his Prussians; 'and march on,
+overwhelming him with politenesses,' says Friedrich;--the approach
+of Nassau, above all, being a stringent civility. Of course,
+despatch is very requisite to Einsiedel; the Chevalier, with his
+force, being still within hail. The Prussians march all night, with
+pitch-links flaring,--nights (I think) of the 13th-15th December,
+1744, up among the highlands there, rugged buttresses of the
+Silesian Combs: a sight enough to astonish Rubezahl, if he happened
+to be out! As good chance would have it, Nassau and Einsiedel, by
+preconcert, partly by lucky guess of their own, were hurrying by
+the same road: three heaven-rending cheers (December 16th) when we
+get sight of Nassau; and find that here is land! December 16th, we
+are across,--by Ruckersdorf, not far from Friedland (Bohmisch
+Friedland, not the Silesian town of that name, once Wallenstein's);
+--and rejoice now to look back on labor done." [<italic> Helden-
+Geschichte, <end italic> ii. 1181-1190, 1191-1194; <italic>
+Feldzuge, <end italic> i. 278-280.]
+
+These were intricate strange scenes, much talked of at the time:
+Rothenburg, ugly Walrave, Hacke, and other known figures, concerned
+in them. Scenes in which Friedrich is not well informed; who much
+blames Einsiedel, as he is apt to do the unsuccessful. Accounts
+exist, both from the Prussian and from the Saxon side, decipherable
+with industry; not now worth deciphering to English readers.
+Only that final scene of the pitch-links, the night before meeting
+with Nassau, dwells voluntarily in one's memory. And is the
+farewell of Einsiedel withal. Friedrich blames him to the last:
+though a Court-Martial had sat on his case, some months after, and
+honorably acquitted him. Good solid, silent Einsiedel;--and in some
+months more, he went to a still higher court, got still stricter
+justice: I do not hear expressly that it was the winter marches, or
+strain of mind; but he died in 1745; and that flare of pitch-links
+in Rubezahl's country is the last scene of him to us,--and the end
+of Friedrich's unfortunate First Expedition in the Second
+Silesian War.
+
+"Foiled, ultimately, then, on every point; a totally ill-ordered
+game on our part! Evidently we, for our part, have been altogether
+in the wrong, in various essential particulars. Amendment, that and
+no other, is the word now. Let us take the scathe and the scorn
+candidly home to us;--and try to prepare for doing better.
+The world will crow over us. Well, the world knows little about it;
+the world, if it did know, would be partly in the right!"--Wise is
+he who, when beaten, learns the reasons of it, and alters these.
+This wisdom, it must be owned, is Friedrich's; and much
+distinguishes him among generals and men. Veracity of mind, as I
+say, loyal eyesight superior to sophistries; noble incapacity of
+self-delusion, the root of all good qualities in man. His epilogue
+to this Campaign is remarkable;--too long for quoting here, except
+the first word of it and the last:--
+
+"No General committed more faults than did the King in this
+Campaign. ... The conduct of M. de Traun is a model of perfection,
+which every soldier that loves his business ought to study, and try
+to imitate, if he have the talent. The king has himself admitted
+that he regarded this Campaign as his school in the Art of War, and
+M. de Traun as his teacher." But what shall we say? "Bad is often
+better for Princes than good;--and instead of intoxicating them
+with presumption, renders them circumspect and modest."
+[<italic> OEuvres, <end italic> iii.76, 77.] Let us still hope!--
+
+
+
+ Chapter V.
+
+ FRIEDRICH, UNDER DIFFICULTIES, PREPARES FOR A
+ NEW CAMPAIGN.
+
+To the Court of Vienna, especially to the Hungarian Majesty, this
+wonderful reconquest of Bohemia, without battle fought,--or any
+cause assignable but Traun's excellent manoeuvring and Friedrich's
+imprudences and trust in the French,--was a thing of heavenly
+miracle; blessed omen that Providence had vouchsafed to her prayers
+the recovery of Silesia itself. All the world was crowing over
+Friedrich: but her Majesty of Hungary's views had risen to a
+clearly higher pitch of exultation and triumphant hope, terrestrial
+and celestial, than any other living person's. "Silesia back
+again," that was now the hope and resolution of her Majesty's high
+heart: "My wicked neighbor shall be driven out, and smart dear for
+the ill he has done; Heaven so wills it!" "Very little uplifts the
+Austrians," says Valori; which is true, under such a Queen;
+"and yet there is nothing that can crush them altogether down,"
+adds he.
+
+No sooner is Bohemia cleared of Friedrich, than Maria, winter as it
+is, orders that there be, through the Giant-Mountains, vigorous
+assault upon Silesia. Highland snows and ices, what are these to
+Pandour people, who, at their first entrance on the scene of
+History, "crossed the Palus-Maeotis itself [Father of Quagmires, so
+to speak] in a frozen state," and were sufficiently accommodated
+each in his own dirty sheepskin? "Prosecute the King of Prussia,"
+ordered she; "take your winter-quarters in Silesia!"--and Traun, in
+spite of the advanced season, and prior labors and hardships, had
+to try, from the southwestern Bohemian side, what he could do;
+while a new Insurrection, coming through the Jablunka, spread
+itself over the southeast and east. Seriously invasive multitudes;
+which were an unpleasant surprise to Friedrich; and did, as we
+shall see, require to be smitten back again, and re-smitten;
+making a very troublesome winter to the Prussians and themselves;
+but by no means getting winter-quarters, as they once hoped.
+
+In a like sense, Maria Theresa had already (December 2d) sent forth
+her Manifesto or Patent, solemnly apprising her ever-faithful
+Silesian Populations, "That the Treaty of Breslau, not by her
+fault, is broken; palpably a Treaty no longer. That they,
+accordingly, are absolved from all oaths and allegiance to the King
+of Prussia; and shall hold themselves in readiness to swear anew to
+her Majesty, which will be a great comfort to such faithful
+creatures; suffering, as her Majesty explains to them that they
+have done, under Prussian tyranny for these two years past.
+Immediate dead-lift effort there shall be; that is certain:
+and 'the Almighty God assisting, who does not leave such injustices
+unpunished, We have the fixed Christian hope, Omnipotence blessing
+our arms, of almost immediately (EHESTENS) delivering you from this
+temporary Bondage (BISHERIGEN JOCH).' You can pray, in the mean
+while, for the success of her Majesty's arms; good fighting, aided
+by prayer, in a Cause clearly Heaven's, will now, to appearance,
+bring matters swiftly round again, to the astonishment and
+confusion of bad men." [In <italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic>
+ii. 1194-1198; Ib. 1201-1206, is Friedrich's Answer, "19th
+December, 1744."]
+
+These are her Majesty's views; intensely true, I doubt not, to her
+devout heart. Robinson and the English seem not to be enthusiastic
+in that direction; as indeed how can they? They would fain be
+tender of Silesia, which they have guaranteed; fain, now and
+afterwards, restrain her Majesty from driving at such a pace down
+hill: but the declivity is so encouraging, her Majesty is not to be
+restrained, and goes faster and faster for the time being.
+And indeed, under less devout forms, the general impression, among
+Pragmatic people, Saxon, Austrian, British even, was, That
+Friedrich had pretty much ruined himself, and deserved to do so;
+that this of his being mere "Auxiliary" to a Kaiser in distress was
+an untenable pretext, now justly fallen bankrupt upon him.
+The evident fact, That he had by his "Frankfurt Union," and
+struggles about "union," reopened the door for French tribulations
+and rough-ridings in the Reich, was universally distasteful;
+all chance of a "general union of German Princes, in aid of their
+Kaiser," was extinct for the present.
+
+Friedrich's rapidity had served him ill with the Public, in this as
+in some other instances! Friedrich, contemplating his situation,
+not self-delusively, but with the candor of real remorse, was by no
+means yet aware how very bad it was. For six months coming, partly
+as existing facts better disclosed themselves, as France, Saxony
+and others showed what spirit they were of; partly as new sinister
+events and facts arrived one after the other,--his outlook
+continued to darken and darken, till it had become very dark
+indeed. There is perennially the great comfort, immense if you can
+manage it, of making front against misfortune; of looking it
+frankly in the face, and doing with a resolution, hour by hour,
+your own utmost against it. Friedrich never lacked that comfort;
+and was not heard complaining. But from December 13th, 1744, when
+he hastened home to Berlin, under such aspects, till June 4th,
+1745, when aspects suddenly changed, are probably the worst six
+months Friedrich had yet had in the world. During which, his
+affairs all threatening to break down about him, he himself,
+behooving to stand firm if the worst was not to realize itself, had
+to draw largely on what silent courage, or private inexpugnability
+of mind, was in him,--a larger instalment of that royal quality (as
+I compute) than the Fates had ever hitherto demanded of him.
+Ever hitherto; though perhaps nothing like the largest of all,
+which they had upon their Books for him, at a farther stage!
+As will be seen. For he was greatly drawn upon in that way, in his
+time. And he paid always; no man in his Century so well; few men,
+in any Century, better. As perhaps readers may be led to guess or
+acknowledge, on surveying and considering. To see, and
+sympathetically recognize, cannot be expected of modern readers,
+in the present great distance, and changed conditions of men
+and things.
+
+Friedrich, after despatching Nassau to cut out Einsiedel, had
+delivered the Silesian Army to the Old Dessauer, who is to command
+in chief during Winter; and had then hastened to Berlin,--many
+things there urgently requiring his presence; preparations,
+reparations, not to speak of diplomacies, and what was the heaviest
+item of all, new finance for the coming exertions. In Schweidnitz,
+on Leopold's appearance, there had been an interview, due
+consultings, orderings; which done, Friedrich at once took the
+road; and was at Berlin, Monday, December 14th,--precisely in the
+time while Nassau and Einsiedel were marching with torchlights in
+Rubezahl's Country, and near ending their difficult enterprise
+better or worse.
+
+Friedrich, fastening eagerly on Home business, is astonished and
+provoked to learn that the Austrians, not content with pushing him
+out of Bohmen, are themselves pushing into Schlesien,--so Old
+Leopold reports, with increasing emphasis day by day; to whom
+Friedrich sends impatient order: Hurl them out again; gather what
+force you need, ten thousand, or were it twenty or thirty thousand,
+and be immediate about it; "I will as soon be pitched
+(HERAUSGESCHMISSEN) out of the Mark of Brandenburg as out of
+Schlesien:" no delay, I tell you! And as the Old Dessauer still
+explains that the ten or fifteen thousand he needs are actually
+assembling, and cannot be got on march quite in a moment, Friedrich
+dashes away his incipient Berlin Operations; will go himself and do
+it. Haggle no more, you tedious Old Dessauer:--
+
+BERLIN, "19th DECEMBER," 1744. "On the 21st [Monday, one week after
+my arriving], I leave Berlin, and mean to be at Neisse on the 24th
+at latest. Your Serenity will in the interim make out the Order-of-
+Battle [which is also Order-of-March] for what regiments are come
+in. For I will, on the 25th, without delay, cross the Neisse, and
+attack those people, cost what it may,--to chase them out of
+Schlesien and Glatz, and follow them so far as possible.
+Your Serenity will therefore take your measures, and provide
+everything, so far as in this short time you can, that the project
+may be executable the moment I arrive." [Friedrich to the Old
+Dessauer (<italic> Orlich, <end italic> ii. 356).]
+
+And rushed off accordingly, in a somewhat flamy humor; but at
+Schweidnitz, where the Old Dessauer met him again, became convinced
+that the matter was weightier than he thought; not one of
+Tolpatchery alone, but had Traun himself in it. Upon which
+Friedrich candidly drew bridle; hastened back, and, with a loss of
+four days, was at his Potsdam Affairs again. To which he stuck
+henceforth, ardently, and I think rather with increase of gloom,
+though without spurt of impatience farther, for three months to
+come. Before his return,--nay, had he known, it was the night
+before he went away,--a strange little thing had happened in the
+opposite or Western parts: surprising accident to Marechal de
+Belleisle; which now lies waiting his immediate consideration.
+But let us finish Silesia first.
+
+
+ OLD DESSAUER REPELS THE SILESIAN INVASION (Winter, 1744-45).
+
+"This Silesian Affair includes due inroad of Pandours; or indeed
+two inroads, southwest and southeast; and in the southwest, or
+Traun quarter, regulars are the main element of it. Traun, 20,000
+strong, PLUS stormy-enough Pandour ACCOMPANIMENT, is by this time
+through into Glatz; in three columns;--is master of all Glatz,
+except the Rock-Fortress itself; and has spread himself, right and
+left, along the Neisse River, and from the southwest northwards, in
+a skilful and dangerous manner. In concert with whom, far to the
+east, are Pandour whirlwinds on their own footing (brand-new
+'Insurrection' of them, got thus far) starting from Olmutz and
+Brunn; scouring that eastern country, as far as Namslau northward
+[a place we were at the taking of, in old Brieg times]; much more,
+infesting the Mountains of the South. A rather serious thing;
+with Traun for general manager of it."
+
+With Traun, we say: poor Prince Karl is off, weeks ago; on the
+saddest of errands. His beautiful young Wife,--Hungarian Majesty's
+one Sister, Vice-Regents of the Netherlands he and she, conspicuous
+among the bright couples of the world,--she had a bad lying-in
+(child still-born), while those grand Moldau Operations went on;
+has been ill, poor lady, ever since; and, at Brussels, on December
+16th, she herself lies dead, Prince Karl weeping over her and the
+days that will not return. Prince Karl's felicities, private and
+public, had been at their zenith lately, which was very high
+indeed; but go on declining from this day. Never more the Happiest
+of Husbands (did not wed again at all); still less the Greatest of
+Captains, equal or superior to Caesar in the Gazetteer judgment,
+with distracted EULOGIES, BIOGRAPHIES and such like filling the
+air: before long, a War-Captain of quite moderate renown; which we
+shall see sink gradually into no renown at all, and even (unjustly)
+into MINUS quantities, before all end. A mad world, my masters!
+
+"Between Traun on the southwest hand, and his Pandours on the
+southeast, the small Prussian posts have all been driven in upon
+Troppau-Jagerndorf region; more and more narrowed there;--and, in
+fine (two days before this new Interview of Leopold and the
+impatient King at Schweidnitz), have had to quit the Troppau-
+Jagerndorf position; to quit the Hills altogether, and are now in
+full march towards Brieg. Of which march I should say nothing, were
+it not that Marwitz, Father of Wilhelmina's giggling Marmitzes,
+commanded;--and came by his death in the course of it; though our
+Wilhelmina is not now there, pen in hand, to tell us what the
+effects at Baireuth were. Marwitz had been left for dead on the
+Field of Mollwitz; lay so all night, but was nursed to some kind of
+strength again by those giggling young women; and came back to
+Schlesien, to posts of chief trust, for the last year or two,--was
+guarding the Mountains, and even invading Mahren, during the late
+Campaign;--but saw himself reduced latterly to Jagerndorf and
+Troppau; and had even to retreat out of these. And in the whirlpool
+of hurries thereupon,--how is not very clear; by apoplexy, say
+some; by accidental pistol from a servant of his own; in actual
+skirmish with Pandours,--too certainly, one way or the other, on
+December 23d (just during that second Interview at Schweidnitz),
+brave old Marwitz did suddenly sink dead, and is ended.
+[<italic> Helden-Geschichte, ii. 1201.] Even so, ye poor giggling
+creatures, and your loud weeping will not mend it at all!
+
+"Friedrich, looking candidly into these phenomena, could not but
+see that: what with Tolpatcheries, what with Traun's 20,000
+regulars, and the whole Army at their back, his Silesian Border is
+girt in by a very considerable inroad of Austrians,-- huge Chain of
+them, in horse-shoe form, 300 miles long, pressing in; from beyond
+Glatz and Landshut, round by the southern Mountains, and up
+eastward again as far as Namslau, nothing but war whirlwinds in
+regular or irregular form, in the centre of them Traun;--and that
+the Old Dessauer really must have time to gird himself for dealing
+with Traun and them.
+
+"It was not till January 9th that Old Leopold, 25,000 strong,
+equipped to his mind, which was a difficult matter, crossed the
+Neisse River; and marched direct upon Traun, with Ziethen charging
+ahead. Actually marched; after which the main wrestle was done in a
+week. January 16th, Old Leopold got to Jagerndorf; found the actual
+Traun concentrated at Jagerndorf; and drew up, to be ready for
+assault to-morrow morning,--had not Traun, candidly computing,
+judged it better to glide wholly away in the night-time, diligently
+towards Mahren, breaking the bridges behind him. And so, in effect,
+to give up the Silesian Invasion for this time. After which, though
+there remained a good deal of rough tussling with Pandour details,
+and some rugged exploits of fight, there is--except that of Lehwald
+in clearing of Glatz--nothing farther that we can afford to speak
+of. Lehwald's exploit, Lehwald VERSUS Wallis (same Wallis who
+defended Glogau long since), which came to be talked of, and got
+name and date, 'Action of Habelschwert, February 14th,' something
+almost like a pitched fight on the small scale, is to the
+following effect:--
+
+"PLOMNITZ, NEAR HABELSCHWERT, 14th FEBRUARY, 1745. Old General
+Lehwald, marching in the hollow ground near Habelschwert (hollow of
+the young Neisse River, twenty miles south of Glatz), with intent
+to cut that Country free; the Enemy, whom he is in search of,
+appears in great force,--posted on the uphill ground ahead, half-
+frozen difficult stream in front of them, cannon on flank, Pandour
+multitude in woods; all things betokening inexpugnability on the
+part of the Enemy. So that Lehwald has to take his measures; study
+well where the vital point is, the root of that extensive Austrian
+junglery, and cut in upon the same. By considerable fire of effort,
+the uphill ground, half-frozen stream, sylvan Pandours, cannon-
+batteries, and what inexpugnabilities there may be, are subdued;
+Austrian wide junglery, the root of it slit asunder rolls homeward
+simultaneously, not too fast: nay it halted, and re-ranked itself
+twice over, finding woods and quaggy runlets to its mind; but was
+always slit out again, disrooted, and finally tumbled home, having
+had enough. 'Wenzel Wallis,' Friedrich asserts with due scorn, 'was
+all this while in a Chapel; praying ardently,' to St. Vitus, or one
+knows not whom; 'without effect; till they shouted to him, "Beaten,
+Sir! Off, or you are lost!" upon which he sprang to saddle, and
+spurred with both heels (PIQUA DES DEUX).' [<italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> iii. 79. 80.] That was the feat of Lehwald,
+clearing the Glatz Country with one good cut: a skilful Captain;
+now getting decidedly oldish, close on sixty; whom we shall meet
+again a dozen years hence, still in harness.
+
+"The old Serene Highness himself, face the color of gun-powder, and
+bluer in the winter frost, went rushing far and wide in an open
+vehicle, which he called his 'cart;' pushing out detachments,
+supervising everything; wheeling hither and thither as needful;
+sweeping out the Pandour world, and keeping it out: not much of
+fighting needed, but 'a great deal of marching [murmurs Friedrich],
+which in winter is as bad, and wears down the force of the
+battalions.' Of all which we give no detail: sufficient to fancy,
+in this manner, the Old Dessauer flapping his wide military wings
+in the faces of the Pandour hordes, with here and there a hard
+twitch from beak or claws; tolerably keeping down the Pandour
+interest all Winter. His sons, Leopold and Dietrich, were under
+him, occasionally beside him; the Junior Leopold so worn down with
+feverish gout he could hardly sit on horseback at all, while old
+Papa went tearing about in his cart at that rate."
+[<italic> Unternehmung in Ober-Schlesien, unter dem Fursten Leopold
+von Anhalt-Dessau, im Januar und Februar, <end italic> 1745
+(Seyfarth, <italic> Beylage, <end italic> i. 141-152); Stenzel, iv.
+232; &c.]
+
+There was, on the 21st of February, TE-DEUM sung in the churches of
+Berlin "for the Deliverance of Silesia from Invasion." Not that
+even yet the Pandours would be quite quiet, or allow Old Leopold to
+quit his cart; far from it. And they returned in such increased and
+tempestuous state, as will again require mention, with the earliest
+Spring:--precursors to a second, far more serious and deadly
+"Invasion of Silesia;" for which it hangs yet on the balance
+whether there will be a TE-DEUM or a MISERERE to sing!
+
+Hungarian Majesty, disappointed of Silesia,--which, it seems, is
+not to be had "all at once (EHESTENS)," in the form of miracle,--
+makes amends by a rush upon Seckendorf and Bavaria; attacks
+Seckendorf furiously ("Bathyani pressing up the Donau Valley, with
+Browne on one hand, and Barenklau on the other") in midwinter;
+and makes a terrible hand of him; reducing his "Reconquest of
+Bavaria" to nothing again, nay to less. Of which in due time.
+
+
+ THE FRENCH FULLY INTEND TO BEHAVE BETTER NEXT SEASON TO FRIEDRICH
+ AND THEIR GERMAN ALLIES;--BUT ARE PREVENTED BY VARIOUS ACCIDENTS
+ (November, 1744-April, 1745; April-August, 1745).
+
+It is not divine miracle, Friedrich knows well, that has lost him
+his late Bohemian Conquests without battle fought: it was rash
+choosing of a plan inexecutable without French co-operation,--
+culpable blindness to the chance that France would break its
+promises, and not co-operate. Had your Majesty forgotten the Joint-
+Stock Principle, then? His Majesty has sorrowful cause to remember
+it, from this time, on a still larger scale!
+
+Reflections, indignant or exculpatory, on the conduct of the French
+in this Business are useless to Friedrich, and to us. The
+performance, on their part, has been nearly the worst;--though
+their intentions, while the Austrian Dragon had them by the throat,
+were doubtless enthusiastically good! But, the big Austrian Dragon
+being jerked away from Elsass, by Friedrich's treading on his tail,
+500 miles off, they were charmed, quite into new enthusiasm, to be
+rid of said Dragon: and, instead of chasing HIM according to
+bargain, took to destroying his DEN, that he might be harmless
+thenceforth. Freyburg is a captured Town, to the joy and glory of
+admiring France; and Friedrich's Campaign has gone the road we see!
+The Freyburg Illuminations having burnt out, there might rise, in
+the triumphant mind, some thought of Friedrich again,--perhaps
+almost of a remorseful nature? Certain it is, the French intentions
+are now again magnanimous, more so than ever; coupled now with some
+attempts at fulfilment, too; which obliges us to mention them here.
+They were still a matter of important hope to Friedrich; hope which
+did not quite go out till August coming. Though, alas, it did then
+go out, in gusts of indignation on Friedrich's part! And as the
+whole of these magnanimous French intentions, latter like former,
+again came to zero, we are interested only in rendering them
+conceivable to readers for Friedrich's sake,--with the more
+brevity, the better for everybody. Two grand French Attempts there
+were; listen, on the threshold, a little:--
+
+... "It is certain the French intend gloriously; regardless of
+expense. They are dismantling Freyburg, to render it harmless
+henceforth. But, withal, in answer to the poor Kaiser's shrieks,
+they have sent Segur [our old Linz friend], with 12,000, to assist
+Seckendorf; 'the bravest troops in the world,'"--who did bravely
+take one beating (at Pfaffenhofen, as will be seen), and go home
+again. ("They have Coigny guarding those fine Brisgau Conquests.
+And are furthermore diplomatizing diligently, not to say
+truculently, in the Rhine Countries; bullying poor little fat
+Kur-Trier, lean Kur-Koln and others, 'To join the Frankfurt Union'
+(not one of whom would, under menace),--though 'it is the clear
+duty of all Reich's-Princes with a Kaiser under oppression:'--and
+have marched Maillebois, directly after Freyburg, into the Middle-
+Rhine Countries, to Koln Country, to Mainz Country, and to and
+fro, in support of said compulsory diplomacies;--but without the
+least effect."
+
+To the "Middle-Rhine Countries," observe, and under Maillebois,
+then under Conti, little matter under whom: only let readers
+recollect the name of it;--for it is the FIRST of the French
+Attempts to do something of a joint-stock nature; something for
+self AND Allies, instead of for self only. It caused great alarm in
+those months, to Britannic George and others; and brought out poor
+Duc d'Ahremberg with portions (no English included) of the poor
+Pragmatic Army, to go marching about in the winter slushes, instead
+of resting in bed, [Adelung, iv. 276, 420 ("December, 1744-June,
+1745").]--and is indeed a very loud business in the old Gazettes
+and books, till August coming. Business which almost broke poor
+D'Ahremberg's heart, he says, "till once I got out of it" (was
+TURNED out, in fact): Business of Pragmatic Army, under
+D'Ahremberg, VERSUS Middle-Rhine Army under Maillebois, under
+Conti; Business now wholly of Zero VERSUS Zero to us,--except for a
+few dates and reflex glimmerings upon King Friedrich. Result
+otherwise-- We shall see the Result!
+
+"Attempt SECOND was still more important to Friedrich; being
+directed upon the Kaiser and Bavaria. Belleisle is to go thither
+and take survey; Belleisle thither first: you may judge if the
+intention is sincere! Valori is quite eloquent upon it.
+Directly after Freyburg, says he, Sechelles, that first of
+Commissaries, was sent to Munchen. Sechelles cleared up the chaos
+of Accounts; which King Louis then instantly paid. 'Your Imperial
+Majesty shall have Magazines also,' said Louis, regardless of
+expense; 'and your Army, with auxiliaries (Segur and 25,000 of them
+French), shall be raised to 60,000.' Belleisle then came: 'We will
+have Ingolstadt, the first thing, in Spring.' Alas, Belleisle had
+his Accident in the Harz; and all went aback, from that time."
+[Valori, i. 322-329.] Aback, too indisputably, all!--"And
+Belleisle's Accident?" Patience, readers.
+
+"The truth is, Attempt SECOND, and chief, broke down at once
+[Bathyani beating it to pieces, as will be seen],--the ruins of it
+painfully reacting on Attempt FIRST; which had the like fate some
+months later;--and there was no THIRD made. And, in fact, from the
+date of that latter down-break, August, or end of July, 1745 [and
+quite especially from "September 13th," by which time several
+irrevocable things had happened, which we shall hear of], the
+French withdrew altogether out of German entanglements;
+and concentrated themselves upon the Netherlands, there to demolish
+his Britannic Majesty, as the likelier enterprise. This was a
+course to which, ever since the Exit of Broglio and the Oriflamme,
+they had been more and more tending and inclining, 'Nothing for us
+but loss on loss, to be had in Germany!' and so they at last
+frankly gave up that bad Country. They fought well in the
+Netherlands, with great splendor of success, under Saxe VERSUS
+Cumberland and Company. They did also some successful work in
+Italy;--and left Friedrich to bear the brunt in Germany; too glad
+if he or another were there to take Germany off their hand!
+Friedrich's feelings on his arriving at this consummation, and
+during his gradual advance towards it, which was pretty steady all
+along from those first 'drenched-hen (POULES MOUILLEES)'
+procedures, were amply known to Excellency Valori, and may be
+conceived by readers,"--who are slightly interested in the dates of
+them at farthest. And now for the Belleisle Accident, with these
+faint preliminary lights.
+
+
+ STRANGE ACCIDENT TO MARECHAL DE BELLEISLE IN THE
+ HARZ MOUNTAINS (20th December, 1744).
+
+Siege of Freyburg being completed, and the River and most other
+things (except always the bastions, which we blow up) being let
+into their old channels there, Marechal de Belleisle, who is to
+have a chief management henceforth,--the Most Christian King
+recognizing him again as his ablest man in war or peace,--sets
+forth on a long tour of supervision, of diplomacy and general
+arrangement, to prepare matters for the next Campaign. Need enough
+of a Belleisle: what a business we have made of it, since Friedrich
+trod on the serpent's tail for us.! Nothing but our own Freyburg to
+show for ourselves; elsewhere, mere down-rush of everything
+whitherward it liked;--and King Friedrich got into such a humor!
+Friedrich must be put in tune again; something real and good to be
+agreed on at Berlin: let that be the last thing, crown of the
+whole. The first thing is, look into Bavaria a little; and how the
+Kaiser, poor gentleman, in want of all requisites but good-will,
+can be put into something of fighting posture.
+
+"In the end of November, Marechal Duc de Belleisle, with his
+Brother the Chevalier (now properly the Count, there having been
+promotions), and a great retinue more, alights at Munchen;
+holds counsel with the poor Kaiser for certain days:--Money wanted;
+many things wanted; and all things, we need not doubt, much fallen
+out of square. 'Those Seckendorf troops in their winter-quarters,'
+say our French Inspectors and Segur people, as usual, 'do but look
+on it, your Excellency! Scattered, along the valleys, into the very
+edge of Austria; Austria will swallow them, the first thing, next
+year; they will never rendezvous again except in the Austrian
+prisons. Surely, Monseigneur, only a man ignorant of war, or with
+treasonous intention [or ill-off for victuals],--could post troops
+in that way? Seckendorf is not ignorant of war!' say they.
+[Valori, i. 206.] For, in fact, suspicion runs high; and there is
+no end to the accusations just and unjust; and Seckendorf is as ill
+treated as any of us could wish. Poor old soul. Probably nobody in
+all the Earth, but his old Wife in the Schloss of Altenburg, has
+any pity for him,--if even she, which I hope. He has fought and
+diplomatized and intrigued in many countries, very much; and in his
+old days is hard bested. Monseigueur, whose part is rather that of
+Jove the Cloud-compeller, is studious to be himself noiseless amid
+this noise; and makes no alteration in the Seckendorf troops;
+but it is certain he meant to do it, thinks Valori."
+
+And indeed Seckendorf, tired of the Bavarian bed-of-roses, had
+privately fixed with himself to quit the same;--and does so,
+inexorable to the very Kaiser, on New-Year arriving.
+[<italic> Seckendorfs Leben, <end italic> p. 365.] Succeeded by
+Thorring (our old friend DRUM Thorring), if that be an improvement.
+Marechal de Belleisle has still a long journey ahead, and
+infinitely harder problems than these,--assuagement of the King of
+Prussia, for example. Let us follow his remarkable steps.
+
+"WEDNESDAY, 9th DECEMBER, 1744, the Marechal leaves Munchen,
+northwards through OEttingen and the Bamberg-Anspach regions
+towards Cassel;--journey of some three hundred and fifty miles:
+with a great retinue of his own; with an escort of two hundred
+horse from the Kaiser; these latter to prevent any outfall or
+insult in the Ingolstadt quarter, where the Austrians have a
+garrison, not at all very tightly blocked by the Seckendorf people
+thereabouts. No insult or outfall occurring, the Marechal dismisses
+his escort at OEttingen; fares forward in his twenty coaches and
+fourgons, some score or so of vehicles:--mere neutral Imperial
+Countries henceforth, where the Kaiser's Agent, as Marechal de
+Belleisle can style himself, and Titular Prince of the German
+Empire withal, has only to pay his way. By Donauworth, by
+OEttingen; over the Donau acclivities, then down the pleasant
+Valley of the Mayn. [See REVIEW OF THE CASE OF MARSHAL BELLEISLE
+(or Abstract of it, <italic> Gentleman's Magazine, <end italic>
+1745, pp. 366-373); &c. &c.]
+
+"SUNDAY, 13th DECEMBER, Marechal de Belleisle arrives at Hanau
+[where we have seen Conferences held before now, and Carteret,
+Prince Karl and great George our King very busy], there to confer
+with Marshals Coigny, Maillebois and other high men, Commanders in
+those Rhine parts. Who all come accordingly, except Marechal
+Maillebois, who is sorry that he absolutely cannot; but will surely
+do himself the honor as Monseigneur returns." As Monseigneur
+returns! "And so, on Monday, 14th, Monseigneur starts for Cassel;
+say a hundred miles right north; where we shall meet Prince Wilhelm
+of Hessen-Cassel, a zealous Ally; inform him how his Troops, under
+Seckendorf, are posted [at Vilshofen yonder; hiding how perilous
+their post is, or promising alterations]; perhaps rest a day or
+two, consulting as to the common weal: How the King of Prussia
+takes our treatment of him? How to smooth the King of Prussia, and
+turn him to harmony again? We are approaching the true nodus of our
+business, difficulty of difficulties; and Wilhelm, the wise
+Landgraf, may afford a hint or two. Thus travels magnanimous
+Belleisle in twenty vehicles, a man loaded with weighty matters, in
+these deep Winter months; suffering dreadfully from rheumatic
+neuralgic ailments, a Doctor one of his needfulest equipments;
+and has the hardest problem yet ahead of him.
+
+"Prince Wilhelm's consultations are happily lost altogether;
+buried from sight forever, to the last hint,--all except as to what
+road to Berlin would be the best from Cassel. By Leipzig, through
+low-lying country, is the great Highway, advisable in winter;
+but it runs a hundred and thirty miles to right, before ever
+starting northward; such a roundabout. Not to say that the Saxons
+are allies of Austria,--if there be anything in that.
+Enemies, they, to the Most Christian King: though surely, again, we
+are on Kaiser's business, nay we are titular 'Prince of the Reich,'
+for that matter, such the Kaiser's grace to us? Well; it is better
+perhaps to AVOID the Saxon Territory. And, of course, the
+Hanoverian much more; through which lies the other Great Road!
+'Go by the Harz,' advises Landgraf Wilhelm: 'a rugged Hill Country;
+but it is your hypotenuse towards Berlin; passes at once, or nearly
+so, from Cassel Territory into Prussian: a rugged road, but a
+shorter and safer.' That is the road Belleisle resolves upon.
+Twenty carriages; his Brother the Chevalier and himself occupy one;
+and always the courier rides before, ordering forty post-horses to
+be ready harnessed.
+
+"SUNDAY, 20th DECEMBER, 1744. In this way they have climbed the
+eastern shin of the Harz Range, where the Harz is capable of wheel-
+carriages; and hope now to descend, this night, to Halberstadt;
+and thence rapidly by level roads to Berlin. It is sinking towards
+dark; the courier is forward to Elbingerode, ordering forty horses
+to be out. Roughish uphill road; winter in the sky and earth,
+winter vapors and tumbling wind-gusts: westward, in torn storm-
+cloak, the Bracken, with its witch-dances; highland Goslar, and
+ghost of Henry the Fowler, on the other side of it. A multifarious
+wizard Country, much overhung by goblin reminiscences, witch-
+dances, sorcerers'-sabbaths and the like,--if a rheumatic gentleman
+cared to look on it, in the cold twilight. Brrh! Waste chasmy
+uplands, snow-choked torrents; wild people, gloomy firs! Here at
+last, by one's watch 5 P.M., is Elbingerode, uncomfortable little
+Town; and it is to be hoped the forty post-horses are ready.
+
+"Behold, while the forty post-horses are getting ready, a thing
+takes place, most unexpected;--which made the name of Elbingerode
+famous for eight months to come. Of which let us hastily give the
+bare facts, Fancy making of them what she can. Was Monseigneur
+aware that this Elbingerode, with a patch of territory round it, is
+Hanoverian ground; one of those distracted patches or ragged
+outskirts frequent in the German map? Prussia is not yet, and
+Hessen-Cassel has ceased to be. Undoubtedly Hanoverian!
+Apparently the Landgraf and Monseigneur had not thought of that.
+But Munchhausen of Hanover, spies informing him, had. The Bailiff
+(Vogt, AdVOCATus) has gathered twenty JAGER [official Game-keepers]
+with their guns, and a select idle Sunday population of the place
+with or without guns: the Vogt steps forward, and inquires for
+Monseigneur's passport. 'No passport, no need of any!'--'Pardon!'
+and signifies to Monseigneur, on the part of George Elector of
+Hanover, King of Great Britain, France and Ireland, that
+Monseigneur is arrested!
+
+"Monseigneur, with compressed or incompressible feelings,
+indignantly complies,--what could he else, unfortunate rheumatic
+gentleman?--and is plucked away in such sudden manner, he for one,
+out of that big German game of his raising. The twenty vehicles are
+dragged different roads; towards Scharzfels, Osterode, or I know
+not where,--handiest roads to Hanover;--and Monseigneur himself has
+travelling treatment which might be complained of, did not one
+disdain complaint: 'my Brother parted from me, nay my Doctor, and
+my Interpreter;'"--not even speech possible to me. [Letter of
+Belleisle next morning, "Neuhof, 21st December, 9 A.M." (in
+<italic> Valori, <end italic> i. 204), to Munchhausen at
+Hanover,--by no possibility "to Valori," as the distracted French
+Editor has given it!] That was the Belleisle Accident in the Harz,
+Sunday Evening, 20th December, 1744.
+
+"Afflicted indignant Valori, soon enough apprised, runs to
+Friedrich with the news,--greets Friedrich with it just alighting
+from that Silesian run of his own. Friedrich, not without several
+other things to think of, is naturally sorry at such news;
+sorry for his own sake even; but not overmuch. Friedrich refuses
+'to despatch a party of horse,' and cut out Marechal de Belleisle.
+"That will never do, MON CHER!'--and even gets into FROIDES
+PLAISANTERIES: 'Perhaps the Marechal did it himself?
+Tallard, prisoner after Blenheim, made PEACE, you know, in
+England?'--and the like; which grieved the soul of Valori, and
+convinced him of Friedrich's inhumanity, in a crying case.
+
+"Belleisle is lugged on to Hanover; his case not doubtful to
+Munchhausen, or the English Ministry,--though it raised great
+argument, (was the capture fair, was it unfair? Is he entitled to
+exchange by cartel, or not entitled?' and produced, in the next
+eight months, much angry animated pamphleteering and negotiation.
+For we hear by and by, he is to be forwarded to Stade, on the
+Hamburg sea-coast, where English Seventy-fours are waiting for him;
+his case still undecided;--and, in effect, it was not till after
+eight months that he got dismissal. 'Lodged handsomely in Windsor
+Palace,' in the interim; free on his parole, people of rank very
+civil to him, though the Gazetteers were sometimes ill-tongued,--
+had he understood their PATOIS, or concerned himself about such
+things. ["TUESDAY, 18th FEBRUARY [lst March, 1745], Marshal
+Belleisle landed at Harwich; lay at Greenwich Palace, having
+crossed Thames at the Isle of Dogs: next morning, about 10, set
+out, in a coach-and-six, Colonel Douglas and two troops of horse
+escorting; arrived 3 P.M.,--by Camberwell, Clapham, Wandsworth,
+over Kingston and Staines Bridges,--at Windsor Castle, and the
+apartments ready for him." (<italic> Gentleman's Magazine, <end
+italic> 1745, p 107.) Was let go 13th (24th) August, again with
+great pomp and civilities (ib. p. 442). See Adelung, iv. 299, 346;
+v. 83, 84.]
+
+"It was a current notion among contemporary mankind, this of
+Friedrich, that Belleisle's capture might be a mere collusion,
+meant to bring about a Peace in that Tallard fashion,--wide of the
+truth as such a notion is, far as any Peace was from following.
+To Britannic George and his Hanoverians it had merely seemed, Here
+was a chief War-Captain and Diplomatist among the French; the pivot
+of all these world-wide movements, as Valori defines him;
+which pivot, a chance offering, it were well to twitch from its
+socket, and see what would follow. Perhaps nothing will follow;
+next to nothing? A world, all waltzing in mad war, is not to be
+stopped by acting on any pivot; your waltzing world will find new
+pivots, or do without any, and perhaps only waltz the more madly
+for wanting the principal one."
+
+This withdrawal of Belleisle, the one Frenchman respected by
+Friedrich, or much interested for his own sake in things German, is
+reckoned a main cause why the French Alliance turned out so ill for
+Friedrich; and why French effort took more and more a Netherlands
+direction thenceforth, and these new French magnanimities on
+Friedrich's behalf issued in futility again. Probably they never
+could have issued in very much: but it is certain that, from this
+point, they also do become zero; and that Friedrich, from his
+French alliance, reaped from first to last nothing at all, except a
+great deal of obloquy from German neighbors, and from the French
+side endless trouble, anger and disappointment in every particular.
+Which 'might be a joy (though not unmixed) to Britannic Majesty and
+the subtle followers who had ginned this fine Belleisle bird in its
+flight over the Harz Range? Though again, had they passively let
+him wing his way, and he had GOT "to be Commander and Manager," as
+was in agitation,--he, Belleisle and in Germany, instead of
+Marechal de Saxe with the Netherlands as chief scene,--what an
+advantage might that have been to them!
+
+
+ THE KAISER KARL VII. GETS SECURED FROM OPPRESSIONS, IN A
+ TRAGIC WAY. FRIEDRICH PROPOSES PEACE, BUT TO NO PURPOSE.
+
+A still sadder cross for Friedrich, in the current of foreign
+Accidents and Diplomacies, was the next that befell; exactly a
+month later,--at Munchen, 20th January, 1745. Hardly was
+Belleisle's back turned, when her Hungarian Majesty, by her
+Bathyani and Company, broke furiously in upon the poor Kaiser and
+his Seckendorf-Segur defences. Belleisle had not reached the Harz,
+when all was going topsy-turvy there again, and the Donau-Valley
+fast falling back into Austrian hands. Nor is that the worst, or
+nearly so.
+
+"MUNCHEN, 20th JANUARY, 1745. This day poor Kaiser Karl laid down
+his earthly burden here, and at length gave all his enemies the
+slip. He had been ill of gout for some time; a man of much malady
+always, with no want of vexations and apprehensions. Too likely the
+Austrians will drive him out of Munchen again; then nothing but
+furnished lodgings, and the French to depend upon. He had been much
+chagrined by some Election, just done, in the Chapter of Salzburg.
+[Adelung, iv. 249, 276, 313.] The Archbishop there--it was Firmian,
+he of the SALZBURG EMIGRATION, memorable to readers--had died, some
+while ago. And now, in flat contradiction to Imperial customs,
+prerogatives, these people had admitted an Austrian Garrison;
+and then, in the teeth of our express precept, had elected an
+Austrian to their benefice: what can one account it but an insult
+as well as an injury? And the neuralgic maladies press sore, and
+the gouty twinges; and Belleisle is seized, perhaps with important
+papers of ours; and the Seckendorf-Segur detachments were ill
+placed; nay here are the Austrians already on the throat of them,
+in midwinter! It is said, a babbling valet, or lord-in-waiting,
+happened to talk of some skirmish that had fallen out (called a
+battle, in the valet rumor), and how ill the French and Bavarians
+had fared in it, owing to their ill behavior. And this, add they,
+proved to be the ounce-weight too much for the so heavy-laden back.
+
+"The Kaiser took to bed, not much complaining; patient, mild,
+though the saddest of all mortals; and, in a day or two, died.
+Adieu, adieu, ye loved faithful ones; pity me, and pray for me!
+He gave his Wife, poor little fat devout creature, and his poor
+Children (eldest lad, his Heir, only seventeen), a tender blessing;
+solemnly exhorted them, To eschew ambition, and be warned by his
+example;--to make their peace with Austria; and never, like him,
+try COM' E DURO CALLE, and what the charity of Christian Kings
+amounts to. This counsel, it is thought, the Empress Dowager
+zealously accedes to, and will impress upon her Son. That is the
+Austrian and Cause-of-Liberty account: King Friedrich, from the
+other side, has heard a directly opposite one. How the Kaiser, at
+the point of death, exhorted his son, 'Never forget the services
+which the King of France and the King of Prussia have done us, and
+do not repay them with ingratitude.' [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic,
+<end italic> iii. 92;--and see (PER CONTRA) in Adelung, iv. 314 A;
+in Coxe, &c.] The reader can choose which he will, or reject both
+into the region of the uncertain. 'Karl Albert's pious and
+affectionate demeanor drew tears from all eyes,' say the by-
+standers: 'the manner in which he took leave of his Empress
+would have melted a heart of stone.' He was in his forty-eighth
+year; he had been, of all men in his generation, the most
+conspicuously unhappy."
+
+What a down-rush of confusion there ensued on this event, not to
+Bavaria alone, but to all the world, and to King Friedrich more
+than another, no reader can now take the pains of conceiving.
+The "Frankfurt Union," then, has gone to air! Here is now no
+"Kaiser to be delivered from oppression:" here is a new Kaiser to
+be elected,--"Grand-Duke Franz the man," cry the Pragmatic
+Potentates with exultation, "no Belleisle to disturb!"--and
+questions arise innumerable thereupon, Will France go into
+electioneering again? The new Kur-Baiern, only seventeen, poor
+child, cannot be set up as candidate. What will France do with HIM;
+what he with France? Whom can the French try as Candidate against
+the Grand-Duke? Kur-Sachsen, the Polish Majesty again? Belleisle
+himself must have paused uncertain over such a welter,--and
+probably have done, like the others, little or nothing in it, but
+left it to collapse by natural gravitation.
+
+Hungarian Majesty checked her Bavarian Armaments a little:
+"If perhaps this young Kur-Baiern will detach himself from France,
+and on submissive terms come over to us?" Whereupon, at Munchen,
+and in the cognate quarters, such wriggling, dubitating and
+diplomatizing, as seldom was,--French, Anti-French (Seckendorf
+busiest of all), straining every nerve in that way, and for almost
+three months, nothing coming of it,--till Hungarian Majesty sent
+her Barenklaus and Bathyanis upon them again; and these rapidly
+solved the question, in what way we shall see!
+
+Friedrich has still his hopes of Bavaria, so grandiloquent are the
+French in regard to it; who but would hope? The French diplomatize
+to all lengths in Munchen, promising seas and mountains; but they
+perform little; in an effectual manner, nothing. Bavarian "Army
+raised to 60,000;" counts in fact little above half that number;
+with no General to it but an imaginary one; Segur's actual French
+contingent, instead of 25,000, is perhaps 12,000;--and so of other
+things. Add to all which, Seckendorf is there, not now as War-
+General, but as extra-official "Adviser;" busier than ever,--
+"scandalous old traitor!" say the French;--and Friedrich may justly
+fear that Bavaria will go, by collapse, a bad road for him.
+
+Friedrich, a week or two after the Kaiser's death, seeing Bavarian
+and French things in such a hypothetic state, instructs his
+Ambassador at London to declare his, Friedrich's, perfect readiness
+and wish for Peace: "Old Treaty of Breslau and Berlin made
+indubitable to me; the rest of the quarrel has, by decease of the
+Kaiser, gone to air." To which the Britannic Majesty, rather elated
+at this time, as all Pragmatic people are, answers somewhat in a
+careless way, "Well, if the others like it!" and promises that he
+will propose it in the proper quarter. So that henceforth there is
+always a hope of Peace through England; as well as contrariwise,
+especially till Bavaria settle itself (in April next), a hope of
+great assistance from the French. Here are potentialities and
+counter-potentialities, which make the Bavarian Intricacy very
+agitating to the young King, while it lasts. And indeed his world
+is one huge imbroglio of Potentialities and Diplomatic Intricacies,
+agitating to behold. Concerning which we have again to remark how
+these huge Spectres of Diplomacy, now filling Friedrich's world,
+came mostly in result to Nothing;--shaping themselves wholly, for
+or against, in exact proportion, direct or inverse, to the actual
+Quantity of Battle and effective Performance that happened to be
+found in Friedrich himself. Diplomatic Spectralities, wide
+Fatamorganas of hope, and hideous big Bugbears blotting out the
+sun: of these, few men ever had more than Friedrich at this time.
+And he is careful, none carefuler, not to neglect his Diplomacies
+at any time;--though he knows, better than most, that good fighting
+of his own is what alone can determine the value of these
+contingent and aerial quantities,--mere Lapland witchcraft the
+greater part of them.
+
+A second grand Intricacy and difficulty, still more enigmatic, and
+pressing the tighter by its close neighborhood, was that with the
+Saxons. "Are the Saxons enemies; are they friends? Neutrals at
+lowest; bound by Treaty to lend Austria troops; but to lend for
+defence merely, not for offence! Could not one, by good methods,
+make friends with his Polish Majesty?" Friedrich was far from
+suspecting the rages that lurked in the Polish Majesty, and least
+of all owing to what. Owing to that old MORAVIAN-FORAY business;
+and to his, Friedrich's, behavior to the Saxons in it; excellent
+Saxons, who had behaved so beautifully to Friedrich! That is the
+sad fact, however. Stupid Polish Majesty has his natural envies,
+jealousies, of a Brandenburg waxing over his head at this rate.
+But it appears, the Moravian Foray entered for a great deal into
+the account, and was the final overwhelming item. Bruhl, by much
+descanting on that famous Expedition,--with such candid Eye-
+witnesses to appeal to, such corroborative Staff-officers and
+appliances, powerful on the idle heart and weak brain of a Polish
+Majesty,--has brought it so far. Fixed indignation, for intolerable
+usage, especially in that Moravian-Foray time: fixed; not very
+malignant, but altogether obstinate (as, I am told, that of the
+pacific sheep species usually is); which carried Bruhl and his
+Polish Majesty to extraordinary heights and depths in years coming!
+But that will deserve a section to itself by and by.
+
+A third difficulty, privately more stringent than any, is that of
+Finance. The expenses of the late Bohemian Expedition, "Friedrich's
+Army costing 75,000 pounds a month," have been excessive. For our
+next Campaign, if it is to be done in the way essential, there are,
+by rigorous arithmetic, "900,000 pounds" needed. A frugal Prussia
+raises no new taxes; pays its Wars from "the Treasure," from the
+Fund saved beforehand for emergencies of that kind; Fund which is
+running low, threatening to be at the lees if such drain on it
+continue. To fight with effect being the one sure hope, and salve
+for all sores, it is not in the Army, in the Fortresses, the
+Fighting Equipments, that there shall be any flaw left!
+Friedrich's budget is a sore problem upon him; needing endless
+shift and ingenuity, now and onwards, through this war:--already,
+during these months, in the Berlin Schloss, a great deal of those
+massive Friedrich-Wilhelm plate Sumptuosities, especially that
+unparalleled Music-Balcony up stairs, all silver, has been, under
+Fredersdorf's management, quietly taken away; "carried over, in the
+night-time, to the Mint." [Orlich, ii. 126-128.]
+
+And, in fact, no modern reader, not deeper in that distressing
+story of the Austrian-Succession War than readers are again like to
+be, can imagine to himself the difficulties of Friedrich at this
+time, as they already lay disclosed, and kept gradually disclosing
+themselves, for months coming; nor will ever know what
+perspicacity, patience of scanning, sharpness of discernment,
+dexterity of management, were required at Friedrich's hands;--and
+under what imminency of peril, too; victorious deliverance, or ruin
+and annihilation, wavering fearfully in the balance for him, more
+than once, or rather all along. But it is certain the deeper one
+goes into that hideous Medea's Caldron of stupidities, once so
+flamy, now fallen extinct, the more is one sensible of Friedrich's
+difficulties; and of the talent for all kinds of Captaincy,--by no
+means in the Field only, or perhaps even chiefly,--that was now
+required of him. Candid readers shall accept these hints, and do
+their best:--Friedrich himself made not the least complaint of
+men's then misunderstanding him; still less will he now!
+We, keeping henceforth the Diplomacies, the vaporous Foreshadows,
+and general Dance of Unclean Spirits with their intrigues and
+spectralities, well underground, so far as possible, will stick to
+what comes up as practical Performance on Friedrich's part, and try
+to give intelligible account of that.
+
+Valori says, he is greatly changed, and for the better, by these
+late reverses of fortune. All the world notices it, says Valori.
+No longer that brief infallibility of manner; that lofty light air,
+that politely disdainful view of Valori and mankind: he has now
+need of men. Complains of nothing, is cheerful, quizzical;--
+ardently busy to "grind out the notches," as our proverb is; has a
+mild humane aspect, something of modesty, almost of piety in him.
+Help me, thou Supreme Power, Maker of men, if my purposes are
+manlike! Though one does not go upon the Prayers of Forty-Hours, or
+apply through St. Vitus and such channels, there may be something
+of authentic petition to Heaven in the thoughts of that young man.
+He is grown very amiable; the handsomest young bit of Royalty now
+going. He must fight well next Summer, or it will go hard with him!
+
+
+
+
+ Chapter VI.
+
+ VALORI GOES ON AN ELECTIONEERING MISSION TO DRESDEN.
+
+Some time in January, a new Frenchman, a "Chevalier de Courten," if
+the name is known to anybody, was here at Berlin; consulting,
+settling about mutual interests and operations. Since Belleisle is
+snatched from us, it is necessary some Courten should come;
+and produce what he has got: little of settlement, I should fear,
+of definite program that will hold water; in regard to War
+operations chiefly a magazine of clouds. [Specimens of it, in
+Ranke, iii. 219.] For the rest, the Bavarian question; and very
+specially, Who the new Emperor is to be? "King of Poland, thinks
+your Majesty?"--"By all means," answers Friedrich, "if you can!
+Detach him from Austria; that will be well!" Which was reckoned
+magnanimous, at least public-spirited, in Friedrich; considering
+what Saxony's behavior to him had already been. "By all means, his
+Polish Majesty for Kaiser; do our utmost, Excellencies Valori,
+Courten and Company!" answers Friedrich,--and for his own part,
+I observe, is intensely busy upon Army matters, looking after the
+main chance.
+
+And so Valori is to go to Dresden, and manage this cloud or
+cobwebbery department of the thing; namely, persuade his Polish
+Majesty to stand for the Kaisership: "Baiern, Pfalz, Koln,
+Brandenburg, there are four votes, Sire; your own is five: sure of
+carrying it, your Polish Majesty; backed by the Most Christian
+King, and his Allies and resources!" And Polish Majesty does, for
+his own share, very much desire to be Kaiser. But none of us yet
+knows how he is tied up by Austria, Anti-Friedrich, Anti-French
+considerations; and can only "accept if it is offered me:" thrice-
+willing to accept, if it will fall into my mouth; which, on those
+terms, it has so little chance of doing!--Saxony and its mysterious
+affairs and intentions having been, to Friedrich, a riddle and
+trouble and astonishment, during all this Campaign, readers ought
+to know the fact well;--and no reader could stand the details of
+such a fact. Here, in condensed form, are some scraps of Excerpt;
+which enable us to go with Valori on this Dresden Mission, and look
+for ourselves:--
+
+
+ 1. FRIEDRICH'S POSITION TOWARDS SAXONY.
+
+"... By known Treaty, the Polish Majesty is bound to assist the
+Hungarian with 12,000 men, 'whenever invaded in her own dominions.'
+Polish Majesty had 20,000 in the field for that object lately,--
+part of them, 8,000 of them, hired by Britannic subsidy, as he
+alleges. The question now is, Will Saxony assist Austria in
+invading Silesia, with or without Britannic subsidy?
+Friedrich hopes that this is impossible! Friedrich is deeply
+unaware of the humor he has raised against himself in the Saxon
+Court-circles; how the Polish Majesty regards that Moravian Foray;
+with what a perfect hatred little Bruhl regards him, Friedrich;
+and to what pitch of humor, owing to those Moravian-Foray
+starvings, marchings about and inhuman treatment of the poor Saxon
+Army, not to mention other offences and afflictive considerations,
+Bruhl has raised the simple Polish Majesty against Friedrich.
+These things, as they gradually unfolded themselves to Friedrich,
+were very surprising. And proved very disadvantageous at the
+present juncture and for a long time afterwards. To Friedrich
+disadvantageous and surprising; and to Saxony, in the end, ruinous;
+poor Saxony having got its back broken by them, and never stood up
+in the world since! Ruined by this wretched little Bruhl;
+and reduced, from the first place in Northern Teutschland, to a
+second or third, or no real place at all."
+
+
+ 2. THERE IS A, "UNION OF WARSAW" (8th January, 1745);
+ AND STILL MORE SPECIALLY A "TREATY OF WARSAW"
+ (8th January-18th May, 1745).
+
+"January 8th, 1745, before the Old Dessauer got ranked in Schlesien
+against Traun, there had concluded itself at Warsaw, by way of
+counterpoise to the 'Frankfurt Union,' a 'Union of Warsaw,' called
+also 'Quadruple Alliance of Warsaw;' the Parties to which were
+Polish Majesty, Hungarian ditto, Prime-Movers, and the two
+Sea-Powers as Purseholders; stipulating, to the effect: 'We Four
+will hold together in affairs of the Reich VERSUS that dangerous
+Frankfurt Union; we will'--do a variety of salutary things; and as
+one practical thing, 'There shall be, this Season, 30,000 Saxons
+conjoined to the Austrian Force, for which we Sea-Powers will
+furnish subsidy.'--This was the one practical point stipulated,
+January 8th; and farther than this the Sea-Powers did not go, now
+or afterwards, in that affair.
+
+"But there was then proposed by the Polish and Hungarian Majesties,
+in the form of Secret Articles, an ulterior Project; with which the
+Sea-Powers, expressing mere disbelief and even abhorrence of it,
+refused to have any concern now or henceforth. Polish Majesty, in
+hopes it would have been better taken, had given his 30,000
+soldiers at a rate of subsidy miraculously low, only 150,000 pounds
+for the whole: but the Sea-Powers were inexorable, perhaps almost
+repented of their 150,000 pounds; and would hear nothing farther of
+secret Articles and delirious Projects.
+
+"So that the 'Union of Warsaw' had to retire to its pigeon-hole,
+content with producing those 30,000 Saxons for the immediate
+occasion; and there had to be concocted between the Polish and
+Hungarian Majesties themselves what is now, in the modern
+Pamphlets, called a 'TREATY of Warsaw,'--much different from the
+innocent, 'UNION of Warsaw;' though it is merely the specifying and
+fixing down of what had been shadowed out as secret codicils in
+said 'Union,' when the Sea-Power parties obstinately recoiled.
+Treaty of Warsaw let us continue to call it; though its actual
+birth-place was Leipzig (in the profoundest secrecy, 18th May,
+1745), above four months after it had tried to be born at Warsaw,
+and failed as aforesaid. Warsaw Union is not worth speaking of;
+but this other is a Treaty highly remarkable to the reader,--and to
+Friedrich was almost infinitely so, when he came to get wind of it
+long after.
+
+"Treaty which, though it proved abortional, and never came to
+fulfilment in any part of it, is at this day one of the
+remarkablest bits of sheepskin extant in the world. It was signed
+18th May, 1745; [Scholl, ii. 350.] and had cost a great deal of
+painful contriving, capable still of new altering and retouching,
+to hit mutual views: Treaty not only for reconquering Silesia
+(which to the Two Majesties, though it did not to the Sea-Powers,
+seems infallible, in Friedrich's now ruined circumstances), but for
+cutting down that bad Neighbor to something like the dimensions
+proper for a Brandenburg Vassal;--in fact, quite the old
+'Detestable Project' of Spring, 1741, only more elaborated into
+detail (in which Britannic George knows better than to meddle!)--
+Saxony to have share of the parings, when we get them.
+'What share?' asked Saxony, and long keeps asking. 'A road to
+Warsaw; Strip of Country carrying us from the end of the Lausitz,
+which is ours, into Poland, which we trust will continue ours,
+would be very handy! Duchy of Glogau; some small paring of Silesia,
+won't your Majesty?' 'Of my Silesia not one hand-breadth,' answered
+the Queen impatiently (though she did at last concede some outlying
+hand-breadths, famed old 'Circle of Schwiebus,' if I recollect);
+and they have had to think of other equivalent parings for Saxony's
+behoof (Magdeburg, Halberstadt, Saale-Circle, or one knows not
+what); and have had, and will have, their adoes to get it fixed.
+Excellent bearskin to be slit into straps; only the bear is still
+on his feet!--Polish Majesty and Hungarian, Polish with especial
+vigor, Bruhl quite restless upon it, are--little as Valori or any
+mortal could dream of it--engaged in this partition of the
+bearskin, when Valori arrives. Of their innocent Union of Warsaw,
+there was, from the first, no secret made; but the Document now
+called 'TREATY of Warsaw' needs to lie secret and thrice-secret;
+and it was not till 1756 that Friedrich, having unearthed it by
+industries of his own, and studied it with great intensity for some
+years, made it known to the world." [Adelung, v. 308. 397;
+Ranke, iii. 231 (who, for some reason of his own, dates "3d May"
+instead of 18th}.]
+
+Treaties, vaporous Foreshadows of Events, have oftenest something
+of the ghost in them; and are importune to human nature, longing
+for the Events themselves; all the more if they have proved
+abortional Treaties, and become doubly ghost-like or ghastly.
+Nevertheless the reader is to note well this Treaty of Warsaw, as
+important to Friedrich and him; and indeed it is perhaps the
+remarkablest Treaty, abortional or realized, which got to parchment
+in that Century. For though it proved abortional, and no part of
+it, now or afterwards, could be executed, and even the subsidy and
+30,000 Saxons (stipulated in the "UNION of Warsaw") became crow's-
+meat in a manner,--this preternatural "Treaty of Warsaw," trodden
+down never so much by the heel of Destiny, and by the weight of new
+Treaties, superseding it or presupposing its impossibility or
+inconceivability, would by no means die (such the humor of Bruhl,
+of the Two Majesties and others); but lay alive under the ashes,
+carefully tended, for Ten or Twenty Years to come;--and had got all
+Europe kindled again, for destruction of that bad Neighbor, before
+it would itself consent to go out! And did succeed in getting
+Saxony's back broken, if not the bad Neighbor's,--in answer to the
+humor of little Bruhl; unfortunate Saxony to possess such a Bruhl!
+
+In those beautiful Saxon-Austrian developments of the Treaty of
+Warsaw, Czarina Elizabeth, bobbing about in that unlovely whirlpool
+of intrigues, amours, devotions and strong liquor, which her
+History is, took (ask not for what reason) a lively part:--and
+already in this Spring of 1745, they hope she could, by "a gift of
+two millions for her pleasures" (gift so easy to you Sea-Powers),
+be stirred up to anger against Friedrich. And she did, in effect,
+from this time, hover about in a manner questionable to Friedrich;
+though not yet in anger, but only with the wish to be important,
+and to make herself felt in Foreign affairs. Whether the Sea-Powers
+gave her that trifle of pocket-money ("for her pleasures"), I never
+knew; but it is certain they spent, first and last, very large
+amounts that way, upon her and hers; especially the English did,
+with what result may be considered questionable.
+
+As for Graf von Bruhl, most rising man of Saxony, once a page;
+now by industry King August III.'s first favorite and factotum;
+the fact that he cordially hates Friedrich is too evident; but the
+why is not known to me. Except indeed, That no man--especially no
+man with three hundred and sixty-five fashionable suits of clothes
+usually about him, different suit each day of the year--can be
+comfortable in the evident contempt of another man. Other man of
+sarcastic bantering turn, too; tongue sharp as needles;
+whose sayings many birds of the air are busy to carry about.
+Year after year, Bruhl (doubtless with help enough that way, if
+there had needed such) hates him more and more; as the too jovial
+Czarina herself comes to do, wounded by things that birds have
+carried. And now we will go with Valori,--seeing better into some
+things than Valori yet can.
+
+
+ 3. VALORI'S ACCOUNT OF HIS MISSION (in compressed form).
+ [Valori, i. 211-219.]
+
+"Valori [I could guess about the 10th of February, but there is no
+date at all] was despatched to Dresden with that fine project,
+Polish Majesty for Kaiser: is authorized to offer 60,000 men, with
+money corresponding, and no end of brilliant outlooks;--must keep
+back his offers, however, if he find the people indisposed.
+Which he did, to an extreme degree; nothing but vague talk,
+procrastination, hesitation on the part of Bruhl. This wretched
+little Bruhl has twelve tailors always sewing for him, and three
+hundred and sixty-five suits of clothes: so many suits, all
+pictured in a Book; a valet enters every morning, proposes a suit,
+which, after deliberation, with perhaps amendments, is acceded to,
+and worn at dinner. Vainest of human clothes-horses; foolishest
+coxcomb Valori has seen: it is visibly his notion that it was he,
+Bruhl, by his Saxon auxiliaries, by his masterly strokes of policy,
+that checkmated Friedrich, and drove him from Bohemia last Year;
+and, for the rest, that Friedrich is ruined, and will either shirk
+out of Silesia, or be cut to ribbons there by the Austrian force
+this Summer. To which Valori hints dissent; but it is ill received.
+Valori sees the King; finds him, as expected, the fac-simile of
+Bruhl in this matter; Jesuit Guarini the like: how otherwise?
+They have his Majesty in their leash, and lead him as they please.
+
+"At four every morning, this Guarini, Jesuit Confessor to the King
+and Queen, comes to Bruhl; Bruhl settles with him what his Majesty
+shall think, in reference to current business, this day;
+Guarini then goes, confesses both Majesties; confesses, absolves,
+turns in the due way to secular matters. At nine, Bruhl himself
+arrives, for Privy Council: 'What is your Majesty pleased to think
+on these points of current business?' Majesty serenely issues his
+thoughts, in the form of orders; which are found correct to
+pattern. This is the process with his Majesty. A poor Majesty,
+taking deeply into tobacco; this is the way they have him benetted,
+as in a dark cocoon of cobwebs, rendering the whole world invisible
+to him. Which cunning arrangement is more and more perfected every
+year; so that on all roads he travels, be it to mass, to hunt, to
+dinner, any-whither in his Palace or out of it, there are faithful
+creatures keeping eye, who admit no unsafe man to the least glimpse
+of him by night or by day. In this manner he goes on; and before
+the end of him, twenty years hence, has carried it far. Nothing but
+disgust to be had out of business;--mutinous Polish Diets too, some
+forty of them, in his time, not one of which did any business at
+all, but ended in LIBERUM VETO, and Billingsgate conflagration,
+perhaps with swords drawn: [See Buchholz, 154; &c.]--business more
+and more disagreeable to him. What can Valori expect, on this
+heroic occasion, from such a King?
+
+"The Queen herself, Maria Theresa's Cousin, an ambitious
+hard-favored Majesty,--who had sense once to dislike Bruhl, but has
+been quite reconciled to him by her Jesuit Messenger of Heaven
+(which latter is an oily, rather stupid creature, who really wishes
+well to her, and loves a peaceable life at any price),--even she
+will not take the bait. Valori was in Dresden nine days (middle
+part of February, it is likely); never produced his big bait, his
+60,000 men and other brilliancies, at all. He saw old Feldmarschall
+Konigseck passing from Vienna towards the Netherlands Camp;
+where he is to dry-nurse (so they irreverently call it, in time
+coming) his Royal Highness of Cumberland, that magnificent English
+Babe of War, and do feats with him this Summer." Konigseck, though
+Valori did not know it, has endless diplomacies to do withal;
+inspections of troops, advisings, in Hanover, in Holland, in
+Dresden here; [Anonymous, <italic> Duke of Cumberland, <end italic>
+p. 186.]--and secures the Saxon Electoral-Vote for his Grand-Duke
+in passing. "The welcome given to Konigseck disgusted Valori;
+on the ninth day he left; said adieu, seeing them blind to their
+interest; and took post for Berlin,"--where he finds Friedrich much
+out of humor at the Saxon reception of his magnanimities. [Valori,
+i. 211-219; <italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 81-85.
+For details on Bruhl, see <italic> Graf von Bruhl, Leben und
+Charakter <end italic> (1760, No Place): Anonymous, by one Justi, a
+noted Pamphleteer of the time: exists in English too, or partly
+exists; but is unreadable, except on compulsion; and totally
+unintelligible till after very much inquiry elsewhere.]
+
+This Saxon intricacy, indecipherable, formidable, contemptible, was
+the plague of Friedrich's life, one considerable plague, all
+through this Campaign. Perhaps nothing in the Diplomatic sphere of
+things caused him such perplexity, vexation, indignation.
+An insoluble riddle to him; extremely contemptible, yet,--with a
+huge Russia tacked to it, and looming minatory in the distance,--
+from time to time, formidable enough. Let readers keep it in mind,
+and try to imagine it. It cost Friedrich such guessing, computing,
+arranging, rearranging, as would weary the toughest reader to hear
+of in detail. How Friedrich did at last solve it (in December
+coming), all readers will see with eyes!--
+
+
+ MIDDLE-RHINE AWNY IN A STAGGERING STATE; THE BAVARIAN
+ INTRICACY SETTLES ITSELF, THE WRONG WAY.
+
+Early in March it becomes surmisable that Maillebois's Middle-Rhine
+Army will not go a good road. Maillebois has been busy in those
+countries, working extensive discontent; bullying mankind "to join
+the Frankfurt Union," to join France at any rate, which nobody
+would consent to; and exacting merciless contributions, which
+everybody had to consent to and pay.--And now, on D'Ahremberg's
+mere advance, with that poor Fraction of Pragmatic Army, roused
+from its winter sleep, Maillebois, without waiting for
+D'Ahremberg's attack, rapidly calls in his truculent detachments,
+and rolls confusedly back into the Frankfurt regions. [Adelung, iv.
+276-352 (December, 1744-March, 1745).] Upon which D'Ahremberg--if
+by no means going upon Maillebois's throat--sets, at least, to
+coercing Wilhelm of Hessen, our only friend in those parts; who is
+already a good deal disgusted with the Maillebois procedures, and
+at a loss what to do on the Kaiser's death, which has killed the
+Frankfurt Union too. Wise Wilhelm consents, under D'Ahremberg's
+menaces, to become Neutral; and recall his 6,000 out of Baiern,--
+wishes he had them home beside him even now!
+
+With an Election in the wind, it is doubly necessary for the
+French, who have not even a Candidate as yet, to stand supreme and
+minatory in the Frankfurt Country; and to King Friedrich it is
+painfully questionable, whether Maillebois can do it. "Do it we
+will; doubt not that, your Majesty!" answer Valori and the French;
+--and study to make improvements, reinforcements, in their Rhine
+Army. And they do, at least, change the General of their Middle-
+Rhine Army,--that is to say, recall Prince Conti out of Italy,
+where he has distinguished himself, and send Maillebois thither in
+his stead,--who likewise distinguishes himself THERE, if that could
+be a comfort to us! Whether the distinguished Conti will maintain
+that Frankfurt Country in spite of the Austrians and their Election
+movements, is still a question with Friedrich, though Valori
+continued assuring him (always till July came) that, it was beyond
+question. "Siege of Tournay, vigorous Campaign in the Netherlands
+(for behoof of Britannic George)!" this is the grand French program
+for the Year. This good intention was achieved, on the French part;
+but this, like Aaron's rod among the serpents, proved to have EATEN
+the others as it wriggled along!--
+
+Those Maillebois-D'Ahremberg affairs throw a damp on the Bavarian
+Question withal;--in fact, settle the Bavarian Question; her
+Hungarian Majesty, tired of the delays, having ordered Bathyani to
+shoulder arms again, and bring a decision. Bathyani, with Barenklau
+to right of him, and Browne (our old Silesian friend) to left, goes
+sweeping across those Seckendorf-Segur posts, and without
+difficulty tumbles everything to ruin, at a grand rate. The traitor
+Seckendorf had made such a choice of posts,--left unaltered by Drum
+Thorring;--what could French valor do? Nothing; neither French
+valor, nor Bavarian want of valor, could do anything but whirl to
+the right-about, at sight of the Austrian Sweeping-Apparatus;
+and go off explosively, as in former instances, at a rate almost
+unique in military annals. Finished within three weeks or so!--
+We glance only at two points of it. March 21st, Bathyani stood to
+arms (to BESOMS we might call it), Browne on the left, Barenklau on
+the right: it was March 21st when Bathyani started from Passau, up
+the Donau Countries;--and within the week coming, see:--
+
+"VILSHOFEN, 28th MARCH, 1745. Here, at the mouth of the Vils River
+(between Inn and Iser), is the first considerable Post;
+garrison some 4,000; Hessians and Prince Friedrich the main
+part,--who have their share of valor, I dare say; but with such
+news out of Hessen, not to speak of the prospects in this Country,
+are probably in poorish spirits for acting. General Browne summons
+them in Vilshofen, this day; and, on their negative, storms in upon
+them, bursts them to pieces; upon which they beat chamade. But the
+Croats, who are foremost, care nothing for chamade: go plundering,
+slaughtering; burn the poor Town; butcher [in round numbers] 3,000
+of the poor Hessians; and wound General Browne himself, while he
+too vehemently interferes." [Adelung, iv. 356, and the half-
+intelligible Foot-note in Ranke, iii. 220.] This was the finale of
+those 6,000 Hessians, and indeed their principal function, while in
+French pay;--and must have been, we can Judge how surprising to
+Prince Friedrich, and to his Papa on hearing of it!
+Note another point.
+
+Precisely about this time twelvemonth, "March 16th, 1746," the same
+Prince Friedrich, with remainder of those Hessians, now again
+completed to 6,000, and come back with emphasis to the Britannic
+side of things, was--marching out of Edinburgh, in much state, with
+streamers, kettle-drums, Highness's coaches, horses, led-horses, on
+an unexpected errand. [Henderson (Whig Eye-witness). <italic>
+History of the Rebellion, <end italic> 1745 and 1746 (London, 1748,
+reprint from the Edinburgh edition), pp. 104, 106, 107.]
+Toward Stirling, Perth; towards Killiecrankie, and raising of what
+is called "the Siege of Blair in Athol" (most minute of "sieges,"
+but subtending a great angle there and then);--much of unexpected,
+and nearer home than "Tournay and the Netherlands Campaign," having
+happened to Britannic George in the course of this year, 1746!
+"Really very fine troops, those Hessians [observes my orthodox Whig
+friend]: they carry swords as well as guns and bayonets;
+their uniform is blue turned up with white: the Hussar part of
+them, about 500, have scimitars of a great length; small horses,
+mostly black, of Swedish breed; swift durable little creatures,
+with long tails." Honors, dinners, to his Serene Highness had been
+numerous, during the three weeks we had him in Edinburgh;
+"especially that Ball, February 21st (o.s.), eve of his Consort the
+Princess Mary's Birthday [EVE of birthday, "let us dance the
+auspicious morning IN] was, for affluence of Nobility and Gentry of
+both sexes," a sublime thing. ...
+
+PFAFFENHOFEN, APRIL 15th. "Unfortunate Segur, the Segur of Linz
+three years ago,--whose conduct was great, according to Valori, but
+powerless against traitors and fate!--was again, once more,
+unfortunate in those parts. Unfortunate Segur drew up at
+Pfaffenhofen (centre of the Country, many miles from Vilshofen) to
+defend himself, when fallen upon by Barenklau, in that manner;
+but could not, though with masterly demeanor; and had to retreat
+three days, with his face to the enemy, so to speak, fighting and
+manoeuvring all the way: no shelter for him either but Munchen, and
+that, a most temporary one. Instead of taking Straubingen, taking
+Passau, perhaps of pushing on to Vienna itself, this is what we
+have already come to. No Rhine Army, Middle-Rhine Army, Coigny,
+Maillebois, Conti, whoever it was, should send us the least
+reinforcement, when shrieked to. No outlook whatever but rapid
+withdrawal, retreat to the Rhine Army, since it will not stir to
+help us." [Adelung, iv. 360.]
+
+"The young Kur-Baiern is still polite, grateful [to us French],
+overwhelms us with politeness; but flies to Augsburg, as his Father
+used to do. Notable, however, his poor fat little Mother won't,
+this time: 'No, I will stay here, I for one, and have done with
+flying and running; we have had enough of that!' Seckendorf, quite
+gone from Court in this crisis, reappears, about the middle of
+April, in questionable capacity; at a place called Fussen, not far
+off, at the foot of the Tyrol Hills;--where certain Austrian
+Dignitaries seem also to be enjoying a picturesque Easter!
+Yes indeed: and, on APRIL 22d, there is signed a 'PEACE OF FUSSEN'
+there; general amicable AS-YOU-WERE, between Austria and Bavaria
+('Renounce your Anti-Pragmatic moonshine forevermore, vote for our
+Grand-Duke; there is your Bavaria back, poor wretches!')--
+and Seckendorf, it is presumable, will get his Turkish
+arrears liquidated.
+
+"The Bavarian Intricacy, which once excelled human power, is
+settled, then. Carteret and Haslang tried it in vain [dreadful
+heterodox intentions of secularizing Salzburg, secularizing Passau,
+Regensburg, and loud tremulous denial of such];--Carteret and
+Wilhelm of Hesseu [Conferences of Hanau, which ruined Carteret], in
+vain; King Friedrich, and many Kings, in vain: a thing nobody could
+settle;--and it has at last settled itself, as the generality of
+ill-guided and unlucky things do, by collapse. Delirium once out,
+the law of gravity acts; and there the mad matter lies."
+
+"Bought by Austria, that old villain!" cry the French.
+Friedrich does not think the Austrians bought Seckendorf, having no
+money at present; but guesses they may have given him to understand
+that a certain large arrear of payment due ever since those Turkish
+Wars,--when Seckendorf, instead of payment, was lodged in the
+Fortress of Gratz, and almost got his head cut off,--should now be
+paid down in cash, or authentic Paper-money, if matters become
+amicable. [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 22;
+<italic> Seckendorfs Leben, <end italic> pp. 367-376.] As they have
+done, in Friedrich's despite;--who seems angrier at the old stager
+for this particular ill-turn than for all the other many; and long
+remembers it, as will appear.
+
+
+
+ Chapter VII.
+
+ FRIEDRICH IN SILESIA; UNUSUALLY BUSY.
+
+Here, sure enough, are sad new intricacies in the Diplomatic,
+hypothetic sphere of things; and clouds piling themselves ahead, in
+a very minatory manner to King Friedrich. Let King Friedrich, all
+the more, get his Fighting Arrangements made perfect. Diplomacy is
+clouds; beating of your enemies is sea and land. Austria and the
+Gazetteer world consider Friedrich to be as good as finished:
+but that is privately far from being Friedrich's own opinion;--
+though these occurrences are heavy and dismal to him, as none of us
+can now fancy.
+
+Herr Ranke has got access, in the Archives, to a series of private
+utterances by Friedrich,--Letters from him, of a franker nature
+than usual, and letting us far deeper into his mind;--which must
+have been well worth reading in the original, in their fully dated
+and developed condition. From Herr Ranke's Fragmentary Excerpts,
+let us, thankful for what we have got, select one or two.
+The Letters are to Minister Podewils at Berlin; written from
+Silesia (Neisse and neighborhood), where, since the middle of
+March, Friedrich has been, personally pushing on his Army
+Preparations, while the above sinister things befell.
+
+
+ KING FRIEDRICH TO PODEWILS, IN BERLIN (under various dates,
+ March-April, 1745).
+
+NEISSE, 29th MARCH. ... "We find ourselves in a great crisis. If we
+don't, by mediation of England, get Peace, our enemies from
+different sides [Saxony, Austria, who knows if not Russia withal!]
+will come plunging in against me. Peace I cannot force them to.
+But if they must have War, we will either beat them, or none of us
+will see Berlin again." [Ranke, iii. 236 et seqq.]
+
+APRIL (no day given). ... "In any case, I have my troops well
+together. The sicknesses are ceasing; the recruitments are coming
+in: shortly all will be complete. That does not hinder us from
+making Peace, if it will only come; but, in the contrary case,
+nobody can accuse me of neglecting what was necessary."
+
+APRIL 17th (still from Neisse). ... "I toil day and night to
+improve our situation. The soldiers will do their duty. There is
+none among us who will not rather have his backbone broken than
+give up one foot-breadth of ground. They must either grant us a
+good Peace, or we will surpass ourselves by miracles of daring;
+and force the enemy to accept it from us."
+
+APRIL 20th. "Our situation is disagreeable; constrained, a kind of
+spasm: but my determination is taken. If we needs must fight, we
+will do it like men driven desperate. Never was there a greater
+peril than that I am now in. Time, at its own pleasure, will untie
+this knot; or Destiny, if there is one, determine the event.
+The game I play is so high, one cannot contemplate the issue with
+cold blood. Pray for the return of my good luck."--Two days hence,
+the poor young Kur-Baiern, deaf to the French seductions and
+exertions, which were intense, had signed his "Peace of Fussen"
+(22d April 1745),--a finale to France on the German Field, as may
+be feared! The other Fragments we will give a little farther on.
+
+Friedrich had left Berlin for Silesia March 15th; rather sooner
+than he counted on,--Old Leopold pleading to be let home.
+At Glogau, at Breslau, there had been the due inspecting:
+Friedrich got to Neisse on the 23d (Bathyani just stirring in that
+Bavarian Business, Vilshofen and the Hessians close ahead); and on
+the 27th, had dismissed Old Leopold, with thanks and sympathies,--
+sent him home, "to recover his health." Leopold's health is
+probably suffering; but his heart and spirits still more. Poor old
+man, he has just lost--the other week, "5th February" last--his
+poor old Wife, at Dessau; and is broken down with grief. The soft
+silk lining of his hard Existence, in all parts of it, is torn
+away. Apothecary Fos's Daughter, Reich's Princess, Princess of
+Dessau, called by whatever name, she had been the truest of Wives;
+"used to attend him in all his Campaigns, for above fifty years
+back." "Gone, now, forever gone!"--Old Leopold had wells of strange
+sorrow in the rugged heart of him,--sorrow, and still better
+things,--which he does not wear on his sleeve. Here is an incident
+I never can forget;--dating twelve or thirteen years ago (as is
+computable), middle of July, 1732.
+
+"Louisa, Leopold's eldest Daughter, Wife of Victor Leopold,
+reigning Prince of Anhalt-Bernburg, lay dying of a decline."
+Still only twenty-three, poor Lady, though married seven years ago;
+--the end now evidently drawing nigh. "A few days before her
+death,--perhaps some attendant sorrowfully asking, 'Can we do
+nothing, then?'--she was heard to say, 'If I could see my Father at
+the head of his Regiment, yet once!'"--Halle, where the Regiment
+lies, is some thirty or more miles off; and King Friedrioh Wilhelm,
+I suppose, would have to be written to:--Leopold was ready the
+soonest possible; and, "at a set hour, marched, in all pomp, with
+banner flying, music playiug, into the SCHLOSS-HOF (Palace Court)
+of Bernburg; and did the due salutations and manoeuvrings,--his
+poor Daughter sitting at her window, till they ended;"--figure
+them, the last glitter of those muskets, the last wail of that
+band-music!--"The Regiment was then marched to the Waisenhaus
+(ORPHAN-HOUSE), where the common men were treated with bread and
+beer; all the Officers dining at the Prince's Table. All the
+Officers, except Leopold alone, who stole away out of the crowd;
+sat himself upon the balustrade of the Saale Bridge, and wept into
+the river." [LEBEN (12mo; not Rannft's, but Anonymous like his),
+p. 234 n.]--Leopold is now on the edge of seventy; ready to think
+all is finished with him. Perhaps not quite, my tough old friend;
+recover yourself a little, and we shall see!
+
+Old Leopold is hardly home at Dessau, when new Pandour Tempests,
+tides of ravaging War, again come beating against the Giant
+Mountains, pouring through all passes; from utmost Jablunka,
+westward by Jagerndorf to Glatz, huge influx of wild riding hordes,
+each with some support of Austrian grenadiers, cannoniers;
+threatening to submerge Silesia. Precursors, Friedrich need not
+doubt, of a strenuous regular attempt that way, Hungarian Majesty's
+fixed intention, hope and determination is, To expel him
+straightway from Silesia. Her Patent circulates, these three
+months; calling on all men to take note of that fixed fact,
+especially on all Silesian men to note it well, and shift their
+allegiance accordingly. Silesian men, in great majority,--our
+friend the Mayor of Landshut, for example?--are believed to have no
+inclination towards change: and whoever has, had clearly better not
+show any till he see! [In Ranke (iii. 234), there is vestige of
+some intended "voluntary subscription by the common people of
+Glatz," for Friedrich's behoof;--contrariwise, in Orlich (ii. 380,
+"6th February, 1745," from the Dessau Archives), notice of one
+individual, suspected of stirring for Austria, whom "you are to put
+under lock and key;"--but he runs off, and has no successor, that I
+hear of.]--
+
+Friedrich's thousand-fold preliminary orderings, movements,
+rearrangings in his Army matters, must not detain us here;--still
+less his dealings with the Pandour element, which is troublesome,
+rather than dangerous. Vigilance, wise swift determination, valor
+drilled to its work, can deal with phenomena of that nature, though
+never so furious and innumerable. Not a cheering service for
+drilled valor, but a very needful one. Continual bickerings and
+skirmishings fell out, sometimes rising to sharp fight on the small
+scale:--Austrian grenadiers with cannon are on that Height to left,
+and also on this to right, meaning to cut off our march;
+the difficult landscape furnished out, far and wide, with Pandour
+companies in position: you must clash in, my Burschen; seize me
+that cannon-battery yonder; master such and such a post,--there is
+the heart of all that network of armed doggery; slit asunder that,
+the network wholly will tumble over the Hills again. Which is
+always done, on the part of the Prussian Burschen; though sometimes
+not, without difficulty.--His Majesty is forming Magazines at
+Neisse, Brieg, and the principal Fortresses in those parts;
+driving on all manner of preparations at the rapidest rate of
+speed, and looking with his own eyes into everything. The regiments
+are about what we may call complete, arithmetically and otherwise;
+the cavalry show good perfection in their new mode of manoeuvring;
+--it is to be hoped the Fighting Apparatus generally will give fair
+account of itself when the time comes. Our one anchor of hope, as
+now more and more appears.
+
+On the Pandour element he first tried (under General Hautcharmoi,
+with Winterfeld as chief active hand) a direct outburst or two,
+with a view to slash them home at once. But findiug that it was of
+no use, as they always reappeared in new multitudes, he renounced
+that; took to calling in his remoter outposts; and, except where
+Magazines or the like remained to be cared for, let the Pandours
+baffle about, checked only by the fortified Towns, and more and
+more submerge the Hill Country. Prince Karl, to be expected in the
+form of lion, mysteriously uncertain on which side coming to invade
+us,--he, and not the innumerable weasel kind, is our important
+matter! By the end of April (news of the PEACE OF FUSSEN coming
+withal), Friedrich had quitted Neisse; lay cantoned, in Neisse
+Valley (between Frankenstein and Patschkau, "able to assemble in
+forty-eight hours"); studying, with his whole strength, to be ready
+for the mysterious Prince Karl, on whatever side he might arrive;
+--and disregarding the Pandours in comparison.
+
+The points of inrush, the tideways of these Pandour Deluges seem to
+be mainly three. Direct through the Jablunka, upon Ratibor Country,
+is the first and chief; less direct (partly supplied by REFLUENCES
+from Ratibor, when Ratibor is found not to answer), a second
+disembogues by Jagerndorf; a third, the westernmost, by Landshut.
+Three main ingresses: at each of which there fall out little
+Fights; which are still celebrated in the Prussian Books, and
+indeed well deserve reading by soldiers that would know their
+trade. In the Ratibor parts, the invasive leader is a General
+Karoly, with 12,000 under him, who are the wildest horde of all:
+"Karoly lodges in a wood: for himself there is a tent;
+his companions sleep under trees, or under the open sky, by the
+edge of morasses." [Ranke, iii. 244.] It was against this Karoly
+and his horde that Hautcharmoi's little expedition, or express
+attacking party to drive them home again, was shot out (8th-2lst
+April). Which did its work very prettily; Winterfeld, chief hand in
+it, crowning the matter by a "Fight of Wurbitz," [Orlich, ii. 136
+(21st April).]--where Winterfeld, cutting the taproot, in his usual
+electric way, tumbles Karoly quite INTO the morasses, and clears
+the country of him for a time. For a time; though for a time only;
+--Karoly or others returning in a week or two, to a still higher
+extent of thousands; mischievous as ever in those Ratibor-Namslau
+countries. Upon which, Friedrich, finding this an endless business,
+and nothing like the most important, gives it up for the present;
+calls in his remoter detachments; has his Magazines carted home to
+the Fortress Towns,--Karoly trying, once or so, to hinder in that
+operation, but only again getting his crown broken. ["Fight of
+Mocker," May 4th (Orlich, ii. 141).] Or if carting be too
+difficult, still do not waste your Magazine:--Margraf Karl, for
+instance, is ordered to Jagerndorf with his Detachment, "to eat the
+Magazine;" hungry Pandours looking on, till he finish. On which
+occasion a renowned little Fight took place (Fight of Neustadt, or
+of Jagerndorf-Neustadt), as shall be mentioned farther on.
+
+So that, for certain weeks to come, the Tolpatcheries had free
+course, in those Frontier parts; and were left to rove about, under
+check only of the Garrison Towns; Friedrich being obliged to look
+elsewhere after higher perils, which were now coming in view.
+In which favorable circumstances, Karoly and Consorts did, at last,
+make one stroke in those Ratibor countries; that of Kosel, which
+was greatly consolatory. [26th May, 1743 (Orlich, ii. 156-158).]
+"By treachery of an Ensign who had deserted to them [provoked by
+rigor of discipline, or some intolerable thing], they glided
+stealthily, one night, across the ditches, into Kosel" (a half-
+fortified place, Prussian works only half finished): which, being
+the Key of the Oder in those parts, they reckoned a glorious
+conquest; of good omen and worthy of TE-DEUMS at Vienna. And they
+did eagerly, without the least molestation, labor to complete the
+Prussian works at Kosel: "One garrison already ours!"--which was
+not had from them without battering (and I believe, burning), when
+General von Nassau came to inquire after it; in Autumn next.
+
+Friedrich had always hoped that the Saxons, who are not yet in
+declared War with him, though bound by Treaty to assist the Queen
+of Hungary under certain conditions, would not venture on actual
+Invasion of his Territories; but in this, as readers anticipate,
+Friedrich finds himself mistaken. Weissenfels is hastening from the
+Leitmeritz northwestern quarter, where he has wintered, to join
+Prince Karl, who is gathering himself from Olmutz and his
+southeastern home region; their full intention is to invade Silesia
+together, and they hope now at length to make an end of Friedrich
+and it. These Pandour hordes, supported by the necessary grenadiers
+and cannoniers, are sent as vanguard; these cannot themselves beat
+him; but they may induce him (which they do not) to divide his
+Force; they may, in part, burn him away as by slow fire, after
+which he will be the easier to beat. Instead of which, Friedrich,
+leaving the Pandours to their luck, lies concentrated in Neisse
+Valley; watching, with all his faculties, Prince Karl's own advent
+(coming on like Fate, indubitable, yet involved in mysteries
+hitherto); and is perilously sensible that only in giving that a
+good reception is there any hope left him.
+
+Prince Karl "who arrived in Olmutz April 30th," commands in chief
+again,--saddened, poor man, by the loss of his young Wife, in
+December last; willing to still his grief in action for the cause
+SHE loved;--but old Traun is not with him this year: which is a
+still more material circumstance. Traun is to go this year, under
+cloak not of Prince Karl, but of Grand-Duke Franz, to clear those
+Frankfurt Countries for the KAISERWAHL and him. Prince Conti lies
+there, with his famous "Middle-Rhine Army" (D'Ahremberg, from the
+western parts, not nearly so diligent upon him as one could wish);
+and must, at all rates, be cleared away. Traun, taking command of
+Bathyani's Army (now that it has finished the Bavarian job), is
+preparing to push down upon Conti, while Bathyani (who is to
+supersede the laggard D'Ahremberg) shall push vigorously up;--and
+before summer is over, we shall hear of Traun again, and Conti will
+have heard!--
+
+Friedrich's indignation, on learning that the Saxons were actually
+on march, and gradually that they intended to invade him, was
+great; and the whole matter is portentously enigmatic to him, as he
+lies vigilant in Neisse Valley, waiting on the When and the How.
+Indignation;--and yet there is need of caution withal. To be ready
+for events, the Old Dessauer has, as one sure measure, been
+requested to take charge, once more, of a "Camp of Observation" on
+the Saxon Frontier (as of old, in 1741); and has given his consent:
+["April 25th" consents (Orlich, ii. 130).] "Camp of Magdeburg,"
+"Camp of Dieskau;" for it had various names and figures; checkings
+of your hand, then layings of it on, heavier, lighter and again
+heavier, according to one's various READINGS of the Saxon Mystery;
+and we shall hear enough about it, intermittently, till December
+coming: when it ended in a way we shall not forget!--On which take
+this Note:--
+
+"The Camp of Observation was to have begun May 1st; did begin
+somewhat later, 'near Magdeburg,' not too close on the Frontier,
+nor in too alarming strength; was reinforced to about 30,000;
+in which state [middle of August] it stept forward to Wieskau, then
+to Dieskau, close on the Saxon Border; and became,--with a Saxon
+Camp lying close opposite, and War formally threatened, or almost
+declared, on Saxony by Friedrich,--an alarmingly serious matter.
+Friedrich, however, again checked his hand; and did not consummate
+till November-December. But did then consummate; greatly against
+his will; and in a way flamingly visible to all men!"
+[Orlich, ii. 130, 209, 210: <italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end
+italic> ii. 1224-1226; i. 1117.]
+
+Friedrich's own incidental utterances (what more we have of
+Fractions from the Podewils Letters), in such portentous aspect of
+affairs, may now be worth giving. It is not now to Jordan that he
+writes, gayly unbosoming himself, as in the First War,--poor Jordan
+lies languishing, these many months; consumptive, too evidently
+dying:--Not to Jordan, this time; nor is the theme "GLOIRE" now,
+but a far different!
+
+
+ FRIEDRICH TO PODEWILS (as before, April-May, 1745).
+
+April 20th or so, Orders are come to Berlin (orders, to Podewils's
+horror at such a thought), Whitherward, should Berlin be assaulted,
+the Official Boards, the Preciosities and household gods are to
+betake themselves:--to Magdeburg, all these, which is an
+impregnable place; to Stettin, the Two Queens and Royal Family, if
+they like it better. Podewils in horror, "hair standing on end,"
+writes thereupon to Eichel, That he hopes the management, "in a
+certain contingency," will be given to Minister Boden; he Podewils,
+with his hair in that posture, being quite unequal to it.
+Friedrich answers:--
+
+"APRIL 26th. ... 'I can understand how you are getting uneasy, you
+Berliners. I have the most to lose of you all; but I am quiet, and
+prepared for events. If the Saxons take part,' as they surely will,
+'in the Invasion of Silesia, and we beat them, I am determined to
+plunge into Saxony. For great maladies, there need great remedies.
+Either I will maintain my all, or else lose my all. [Hear it,
+friend; and understand it,--with hair lying flat!] It is true, the
+disaffection of the Russian Court, on such trifling grounds, was
+not to be expected; and great misfortune can befall us.
+Well; a year or two sooner, a year or two later,--it is not worth
+one's while to bother about the very worst. If things take the
+better turn, our condition will be surer and firmer than it was
+before. If we have nothing to reproach ourselves with, neither need
+we fret and plague ourselves about bad events, which can happen to
+any man.'--'I am causing despatch a secret Order for Boden [on YOU
+know what], which you will not deliver him till I give sign.'"--
+On hearing of the Peace of Fussen, perhaps a day or so later,
+Friedrich again writes:--
+
+"APRIL [no distinct date; Neisse still? QUITS Neisse, April 28th].
+... Peace of Fussen, Bavaria turned against me? 'I can say nothing
+to it,--except, There has come what had to come. To me remains only
+to possess myself in patience. If all alliances, resources, and
+negotiations fail, and all conjunctures go against me, I prefer to
+perish with honor, rather than lead an inglorious life deprived of
+all dignity. My ambition whispers me that I have done more than
+another to the building up of my House, and have played a
+distinguished part among the crowned heads of Europe. To maintain
+myself there, has become as it were a personal duty; which I will
+fulfil at the expense of my happiness and my life. I have no choice
+left: I will maintain my power, or it may go to ruin, and the
+Prussian name be buried under it. If the enemy attempt anything
+upon us, we will either beat him, or we will all be hewed to
+pieces, for the sake of our Country, and the renown of Brandenburg.
+No other counsel can I listen to.'"
+
+SAME LETTER, OR ANOTHER? (Herr Ranke having his caprices!) ...
+"You are a good man, my Podewils, and do what can be expected of
+you" (Podewils has been apologizing for his terrors; and referring
+hopefully "to Providence"): "Perform faithfully the given work on
+your side, as I on mine; for the rest, let what you call
+'Providence' decide as it likes [UNE PROVIDENCE AVEUGLE? Ranke, who
+alone knows, gives "BLINDE VORSEHUNG." What an utterance, on the
+part of this little Titan! Consider it as exceptional with him,
+unusual, accidental to the hard moment, and perhaps not so impious
+as it looks!]--Neither our prudence nor our courage shall be liable
+to blame; but only circumstances that would not favor us. ...
+
+"I prepare myself for every event. Fortune may be kind or be
+unkind, it shall neither dishearten me nor uplift me. If I am to
+perish, let it be with honor, and sword in hand. What the issue is
+to be-- Well, what pleases Heaven, or the Other Party (J'AI JETE LE
+BONNET PAR DESSUS LES MOULINS)! Adieu, my dear Podewils; become as
+good a philosopher as you are a politician; and learn from a man
+who does not go to Elsner's Preaching [fashionable at the time],
+that one must oppose to ill fortune a brow of iron; and, during
+this life, renounce all happiness, all acquisitions, possessions
+and lying shows, none of which will follow us beyond the grave."
+[Ranke, iii. pp. 238-241.]
+
+"By what points the Austrian-Saxon Armament will come through upon
+us? Together will it be, or separately? Saxons from the Lausitz,
+Austrians from Bohmen, enclosing us between two fires?"--were
+enigmatic questions with Friedrich; and the Saxons especially are
+an enigma. But that come they will, that these Pandours are their
+preliminary veiling-apparatus as usual, is evident to him; and that
+he must not spend himself upon Pandours; but coalesce, and lie
+ready for the main wrestle. So that from April 28th, as above
+noticed, Friedrich has gone into cantonments, some way up the
+Neisse Valley, westward of Neisse Town; and is calling in his
+outposts, his detachments; emptying his Frontier Magazines;--
+abandoning his Upper-Silesian Frontier more and more, and in the
+end altogether, to the Pandour hordes; a small matter they,
+compared to the grand Invasion which is coming on. Here, with
+shiftings up the Neisse Valley, he lies till the end of May;
+watching Argus-like, and scanning with every faculty the Austrian-
+Saxon motions and intentions, until at length they become clear to
+him, and we shall see how he deals with them.
+
+His own lodging, or head-quarter, most of this time (4th May-27th
+May), is in the pleasant Abbey of Camenz (mythic scene of that
+BAUMGARTEN-SKIRMISH business, in the First Silesian War). He has
+excellent Tobias Stusche for company in leisure hours; and the
+outlook of bright Spring all round him, flowering into gorgeous
+Summer, as he hurries about on his many occasions, not of an
+idyllic nature. [Orlich, ii. 139; Ranke, iii. 242-249.] But his
+Army is getting into excellent completeness of number, health,
+equipment, and altogether such a spirit as he could wish. May 22d,
+here is another snatch from some Note to Podewils, from this balmy
+Locality, potential with such explosions of another kind.
+CAMENZ, MAY 22d. ... "The Enemies are making movements; but nothing
+like enough as yet for our guessing their designs. Till we see,
+therefore, the thunder lies quiet in us (LA FOUDRE REPOSE EN MES
+MAINS). Ah, could we but have a Day like that May Eleventh!"
+[Ranke, iii. 248 n.]
+
+What "that May Eleventh" is or was? Readers are curious to know;
+especially English readers, who guess FONTENOY. And Historic Art,
+if she were strict, would decline to inform them at any length;
+for really the thing is no better than a "Victory on the Scamander,
+and a Siege of Pekin" (as a certain observer did afterwards define
+it), in reference to the matter now on hand! Well, Pharsalia,
+Arbela, the Scamander, Armageddon, and so many Battles and
+Victories being luminous, by study, to cultivated Englishmen, and
+one's own Fontenoy such a mystery and riddle,--Art, after
+consideration, reluctantly consents to be indulgent; will produce
+from her Paper Imbroglios a slight Piece on the subject, and print
+instead of burning.
+
+
+
+ Chapter VIII.
+
+ THE MARTIAL BOY AND HIS ENGLISH versus THE LAWS 0F NATURE.
+
+"Glorious Campaign in the Netherlands, Siege of Tournay, final ruin
+of the Dutch Barrier!" this is the French program for Season 1745,
+--no Belleisle to contradict it; Belleisle secure at Windsor, who
+might have leant more towards German enterprises. And to this his
+Britannic Majesty (small gain to him from that adroitness in the
+Harz, last winter!) has to make front. And is strenuously doing so,
+by all methods; especially by heroic expenditure of money, and
+ditto exposure of his Martial Boy. Poor old Wade, last year,--
+perhaps Wade did suffer, as he alleged, from "want of sufficient
+authority in that mixed Army"? Well, here is a Prince of the Blood,
+Royal Highness of Cumberland, to command in chief. With a Konigseck
+to dry-nurse him, may not Royal Highness, luck favoring, do very
+well? Luck did not favor; Britannic Majesty, neither in the
+Netherlands over seas, nor at home (strange new domestic wool, of a
+tarry HIGHLAND nature, being thrown him to card, on the sudden!),
+made a good Campaign, but a bad. And again a bad (1746) and again
+(1747), ever again, till he pleased to cease altogether. Of which
+distressing objects we propose that the following one glimpse be
+our last.
+
+
+ BATTLE OF FONTENOY (11th May, 1745).
+
+... "In the end of April, Marechal de Saxe, now become very famous
+for his sieges in the Netherlands, opened trenches before Tournay;
+King Louis, with his Dauphin, not to speak of mistresses, play-
+actors and cookery apparatus (in wagons innumerable), hastens to be
+there. A fighting Army, say of 70,000, besides the garrisons; and
+great things, it is expected, will be done; Tournay, in spite of
+strong works and Dutch garrison of 9,000, to be taken in the first
+place.
+
+"Of the Siege, which was difficult and ardent, we will remember
+nothing, except the mischance that befell a certain 'Marquis de
+Talleyrand' and his men, in the trenches, one night. Night of the
+8th-9th May, by carelessness of somebody, a spark got into the
+Marquis's powder, two powder-barrels that there were; and, with
+horrible crash, sent eighty men, Marquis Talleyrand and Engineer
+Du Mazis among them, aloft into the other world; raining down their
+limbs into the covered way, where the Dutch were very inhuman to
+them, and provoked us to retaliate. [Espagnac, ii. 27.] Du Mazis I
+do not know; but Marquis de Talleyrand turns out, on study of the
+French Peerages, to be Uncle of a lame little Boy, who became Right
+Reverend Tallyrand under singular conditions, and has made the name
+very current in after-times!--
+
+"Hearing of this Siege, the Duke of Cumberland hastened over from
+England, with intent to raise the same. Mustered his 'Allied Army'
+(once called 'Pragmatic'),--self at the head of it; old Count
+Konigseck, who was NOT burnt at Chotusitz, commanding the small
+Austrian quota [Austrians mainly are gone laggarding with
+D'Ahremberg up the Rhine]; and a Prince of Waldeck the Dutch,--on
+the plain of Anderlecht near Brussels, May 4th; [Anonymous,
+<italic> Life of Cumberland, <end italic> p. 180; Espagnac, ii.
+26.] and found all things tolerably complete. Upon which,
+straightway, his Royal Highness, 60,000 strong let us say, set
+forth; by slowish marches, and a route somewhat leftward of the
+great Tournay Road [no place on it, except perhaps STEENKERKE, ever
+heard of by an English reader]; and on Sunday, 9th May, [Espagnac,
+ii. 27.] precisely on the morrow after poor Talleyrand had gone
+aloft, reached certain final Villages: Vezon, Maubray, where he
+encamps, Briffoeil to rear; Camp looking towards Tournay and the
+setting sun,--with Fontenoy short way ahead, and Antoine to left of
+it, and Barry with its Woods to right:--small peaceable Villages,
+which become famous in the Newspapers shortly after. [Patch of Map
+at p. 440.] Royal Highness, resting here at Vezon, is but some six
+or seven miles from Tournay; in low undulating Country, woody here
+and there, not without threads of running water, and with frequent
+Villages and their adjuncts: the part of it now interesting to us
+lies all between the Brussels-Tournay Road and the Scheld River,--
+all in immediate front of his Royal Highness,--to southeastward
+from beleaguered Tournay, where said Road and River intersect.
+How shall he make some impression on the Siege of Tournay?
+That is now the question; and his Royal Highness struggles to
+manoeuvre accordingly.
+
+Marechal de Saxe, whose habit is much that of vigilance,
+forethought, sagacious precaution, singular in so dissolute a man,
+has neglected nothing on this occasion. He knows every foot of the
+ground, having sieged here, in his boyhood, once before. Leaving
+the siege-trenches at Tournay, under charge of a ten or fifteen
+thousand, he has taken camp here; still with superior force (56,000
+as they count, Royal Highness being only 50,000 ranked), barring
+Royal Highness's way. Tournay, or at least the Marechal's trenches
+there, are on the right bank of the Scheld; which flows from
+southeast, securing all on that hand. The broad Brussels Highway
+comes in to him from the east;--north of that he has nothing to
+fear, the ground being cut with bogs; no getting through upon him,
+that way, to Tournay and what he calls the 'Under Scheld.'
+The 'Upper Scheld' too, avail them nothing. There is only that
+triangle to the southeast, between Road and River, where the Enemy
+is now manoeuvring in front of him, from which damage can well
+come; and he has done his best to be secure there. Four villages or
+hamlets, close to the Scheld and onwards to the Great Road,--
+Antoine, Fontenoy, Barry, Ramecroix, with their lanes and boscages,
+--make a kind of circular base to his triangle; base of some six or
+eight miles; with hollows in it, brooks, and northward a
+considerable Wood [BOIS DE BARRY, enveloping Barry and Ramecroix,
+which do not prove of much interest to us, though the BOIS does of
+a good deal]. In and before each of those villages are posts and
+defences; in Antoine and Fontenoy elaborate redoubts, batteries,
+redans connecting: in the Wood (BOIS DE BARRY), an abattis, or wall
+of felled trees, as well as cannon; and at the point of the Wood,
+well within double range of Fontenoy, is a Redoubt, called of Eu
+(REDOUTE D'EU, from the regiment occupying it), which will much
+concern his Royal Highness and us. Saxe has a hundred pieces of
+cannon [say the English, which is correct], consummately disposed
+along this space; no ingress possible anywhere, except through the
+cannon's throat; torrents of fire and cross-fire playing on you.
+He is armed to the teeth, as they say; and has his 56,000 arranged
+according to the best rules of tactics, behind this murderous line
+of works. If his Royal Highness think of breaking in, he may count
+on a very warm reception indeed.
+
+"Saxe is only afraid his Royal Highness will not. Outside of these
+lines, with a 50,000 dashing fiercely round us, under any kind of
+leading; pouncing on our convoys; harassing and sieging US,--our
+siege of Toumay were a sad outlook. And this is old Austrian
+Konigseck's opinion, too; though, they say, Waldeck and the Dutch
+(impetuous in theory at least) opined otherwise, and strengthened
+Royal Highness's view. Two young men against one old: 'Be it so,
+then!' His Royal Highness, resolute for getting in, manoeuvres and
+investigates, all Monday 10th; his cannon is not to arrive
+completely till night; otherwise he would be for breaking in at
+once: a fearless young man, fearless as ever his poor Father was;
+certainly a man SANS PEUY, this one too; whether of much AVIS, we
+shall see anon.
+
+"Tuesday morning early, 11th May, 1745, cannon being up, and
+dispositions made, his Royal Highness sallies out; sees his men
+taking their ground: Dutch and Austrians to the left, chiefly
+opposite Antoine; English, with some Hanoverians, in the centre and
+to the right; infantry in front, facing Fontenoy, cavalry to rear
+flanking the Wood of Barry,--Konigseck, Ligonier and others able,
+assisting to plant them advantageously; cannon going, on both
+sides, the while; radiant enthusiasm, SANS PEUR ET SANS AVIS,
+looking from his Royal Highness's face. He has been on horseback
+since two in the morning; cannon started thundering between five
+and six,--has killed chivalrous Grammont over yonder (the Grammont
+of Dettingen), almost at the first volley. And now about the time
+when ploughers breakfast (eight A.M., no ploughing hereabouts
+to-day!), begins the attack, simultaneously or in swift succession,
+on the various batteries which it will be necessary to attack
+and storm.
+
+"The attacks took place; but none of them succeeded. Dutch and
+Austrians, on the extreme left, were to have stormed Antoine by the
+edge of the River; that was their main task; right skirt of them to
+help US meanwhile with Fontenoy. And they advanced, accordingly;
+but found the shot from Antoine too fierce: especially when a
+subsidiary battery opened from across the River, and took them in
+flank, the Dutch and Austrians felt astonished; and hastily drew
+aside, under some sheltering mound or earthwork they had found for
+themselves, or prudently thrown up the night before. There, under
+their earthwork, stood the Dutch and Austrians; patiently expecting
+a fitter time,--which indeed never occurred; for always, the
+instant they drew out, the batteries from Antoine, and from across
+the River, instantly opened upon them, and they had to draw in
+again. So that they stood there, in a manner, all day; and so to
+speak did nothing but patiently expect when it should be time to
+run. For which they were loudly censured, and deservedly.
+Antoine is and remains a total failure on the part of the Dutch
+and Austrians.
+
+"Royal Highness in person, with his English, was to attack
+Fontenoy;--and is doing so, by battery and storm, at various
+points; with emphasis, though without result. As preliminary, at an
+early stage he had sent forward on the right, by the Wood of Barry,
+a Brigadier Ingoldsby 'with Semple's Highlanders' and other force,
+to silence 'that redoubt yonder at the point of the Wood,'--
+redoubt, fort, or whatever it be (famous REDOUTE D'EU, as it turned
+out!),--which guards Fontenoy to north, and will take us in flank,
+nay in rear, as we storm the cannon of the Village.
+Ingoldsby, speed imperative on him, pushed into the Wood; found
+French light-troops ('God knows how many of them!') prowling about
+there; found the Redoubt a terribly strong thing, with ditch,
+drawbridge, what not; spent thirty or forty of his Highlanders, in
+some frantic attempt on it by rule of thumb;--and found 'He would
+need artillery' and other things. In short, Ingoldsby, hasten what
+he might, could not perfect the preparations to his mind, had to
+wait for this and for that; and did not storm the Redoubt d'Eu at
+all; but hung fire, in an unaccountable manner. For which he had to
+answer (to Court-Martial, still more to the Newspapers) afterwards;
+and prove that it was misfortune merely, or misfortune and
+stupidity combined. Too evident, the REDOUTE D'EU was not taken,
+then or thenceforth; which might have proved the saving of the
+whole affair, could Ingoldsby have managed it. Royal Highness
+attacked Fontenoy, and re-attacked, furiously, thrice over; and had
+to desist, and find Fontenoy impossible on those terms.
+
+"Here is a piece of work. Repulsed at all those points; and on the
+left and on the right, no spirit visible but what deserves repulse!
+His Royal Highness blazes into resplendent PLATT-DEUTSCH rage, what
+we may call spiritual white-heat, a man SANS PEUR at any rate, and
+pretty much SANS AVIS; decides that he must and will be through
+those lines, if it please God; that he will not be repulsed at his
+part of the attack, not he for one; but will plunge through, by
+what gap there is [900 yards Voltaire measures it
+[<italic> OEuvres, <end italic> xxviii. 150 (SIECLE DE LOUIS
+QUINZE, c. xv. "BATAILLE DE FONTENOI,"--elaborately exact on all
+sucb points).]] between Fontenoy and that Redoubt with its laggard
+Ingoldsby; and see what the French interior is like! He rallies
+rapidly, rearranges; forms himself in thin column or columns [three
+of them, I think,--which gradually got crushed into one, as they
+advanced, under caunon-shot on both hands],--wheeling his left
+round, to be rear, his right to be head of said column or columns.
+In column, the cannon-shot from Fontenoy on the left, and Redoubt
+d'Eu on our right, will tell less on us; and between these two
+death-dealing localities, by the hollowest, least shelterless way
+discoverable, we mean to penetrate: (Forward, my men, steady and
+swift, till we are through the shot-range, and find men to grapple
+with, instead of case-shot and projectile iron!' Marechal de Saxe
+owned afterwards, 'He should have put an additional redoubt in that
+place, but he did not think any Army would try such a thing'
+(cannon batteries playing on each hand at 400 yards distance);--nor
+has any Army since or before!
+
+"These columns advance, however; through bushy hollows, water-
+courses, through what defiles or hollowest grounds there are;
+endure the cannon-shot, while they must; trailing their own heavy
+guns by hand, and occasionally blasting out of them where the
+ground favors;--and do, with indignant patience, wind themselves
+through, pretty much beyond direct shot-range of either d'Eu or
+Fontenoy. And have actually got into the interior mystery of the
+French Line of Battle,--which is not a little astonished to see
+them there! It is over a kind of blunt ridge, or rising ground,
+that they are coming: on the crown of this rising ground, the
+French regiment fronting it (GARDES FRANCAISES as it chanced to be)
+notices, with surprise, field-cannon pointed the wrong way;
+actual British artillery unaccountably showing itself there.
+Regiment of GARDES rushes up to seize said field-pieces: but, on
+the summit, perceives with amazement that it cannot; that a heavy
+volley of musketry blazes into it (killing sixty men); that it will
+have to rush back again, and report progress: Huge British force,
+of unknown extent, is readjusting itself into column there, and
+will be upon us on the instant. Here is news!
+
+"News true enough. The head of the English column comes to sight,
+over the rising ground, close by: their officers doff their hats,
+politely saluting ours, who return the civility: was ever such
+politeness seen before? It is a fact; and among the memorablest of
+this Battle. Nay a certain English Officer of mark--Lord Charles
+Hay the name of him, valued surely in the annals of the Hay and
+Tweeddale House--steps forward from the ranks, as if wishing
+something. Towards whom [says the accurate Espagnac] Marquis
+d'Auteroche, grenadier-lieutenant, with air of polite
+interrogation, not knowing what he meant, made a step or two:
+'Monsieur,' said Lord Charles (LORD CHARLES-HAY), 'bid your people
+fire (FAITES TIRER VOS GENS)!' 'NON, MONSIEUR, NOUS NE TIRONS
+JAMAIS LES PREMIERS (We never fire first).' [Espagnac, ii. 60 (of
+the ORIGINAL, Toulouse, 1789); ii. 48 of the German Translation
+(Leipzig, 1774), our usual reference. Voltaire, endlessly informed
+upon details this time, is equally express: "MILORD CHARLES HAY,
+CAPITAINE AUX GARDES ANGLAISES, CRIA: 'MESSIEURS DES GARDES
+FRANCAISES, TIREZ!' To which Count d'Auteroche with a loud voice
+answered" &c. (<italic> OEuvres, vol. xxviii. p. 155.) See also
+<italic> Souvenirs du Marquis de Valfons <end italic> (edited by a
+Grand-Nephew, Paris, 1860), p. 151;--a poor, considerably noisy and
+unclean little Book; which proves unexpectedly worth looking at, in
+regard to some of those poor Battles and personages and
+occurrences: the Bohemian Belleisle-Broglio part, to my regret, if
+to no other person's, has been omitted, as extinct, or
+undecipherable by the Grand-Nephew.] After YOU, Sirs! Is not this a
+bit of modern chivalry? A supreme politeness in that sniffing
+pococurante kind; probably the highest point (or lowest) it ever
+went to. Which I have often thought of."
+
+It is almost pity to disturb an elegant Historical Passage of this
+kind, circulating round the world, in some glory, for a century
+past: but there has a small irrefragable Document come to me, which
+modifies it a good deal, and reduces matters to the business form.
+Lord Charles Hay, "Lieutenant-Colonel," practical Head, "of the
+First Regiment of Foot-guards," wrote, about three weeks after (or
+dictated in sad spelling, not himself able to write for wounds), a
+Letter to his Brother, of which here is an Excerpt at first hand,
+with only the spelling altered: ... "It was our Regiment that
+attacked the French Guards: and when we came within twenty or
+thirty paces of them, I advanced before our Regiment; drank to them
+[to the French, from the pocket-pistol one carries on such
+occasions], and told them that we were the English Guards, and
+hoped that they would stand till we came quite up to them, and not
+swim the Scheld as they did the Mayn at Dettingen [shameful THIRD-
+BRIDGE, not of wood, though carpeted with blue cloth there]!
+Upon which I immediately turned about to our own Regiment;
+speeched them, and made them huzza,"--I hope with a will.
+"An Officer [d'Auteroche] came out of the ranks, and tried to make
+his men huzza; however, there were not above three or four in their
+Brigade that did." ["Ath, May ye 20th, o.s." (to John, Fourth
+Marquis of Tweeddale, last "Secretary of State for Scotland," and a
+man of figure in his day): Letter is at Yester House, East Lothian;
+Excerpt PENES ME.] ...
+
+Very poor counter-huzza. And not the least whisper of that sublime
+"After you, Sirs!" but rather, in confused form, of quite the
+reverse; Hay having been himself fired into ("fire had begun on my
+left;" Hay totally ignorant on which side first),--fired into,
+rather feebly, and wounded by those D'Auteroche people, while he
+was still advancing with shouldered arms;--upon which, and not till
+which, he did give it them: in liberal dose; and quite blew them
+off the ground, for that day. From all which, one has to infer,
+That the mutual salutation by hat was probably a fact; that, for
+certain, there was some slight preliminary talk and gesticulation,
+but in the Homeric style, by no means in the Espagnac-French,--
+not chivalrous epigram at all, mere rough banter, and what is
+called "chaffing;"--and in short, that the French Mess-rooms (with
+their eloquent talent that way) had rounded off the thing into the
+current epigrammatic redaction; the authentic business-form of it
+being ruggedly what is now given. Let our Manuscript proceed.
+
+"D'Auteroche declining the first fire,"--or accepting it, if ever
+offered, nobody can say,--"the three Guards Regiments, Lord
+Charles's on the right, give it him hot and heavy, 'tremendous
+rolling fire;' so that D'Auteroche, responding more or less, cannot
+stand it; but has at once to rustle into discontinuity, he and his,
+and roll rapidly out of the way. And the British Column advances,
+steadily, terribly, hurling back all opposition from it; deeper and
+deeper into the interior mysteries of the French Host; blasting its
+way with gunpowder;--in a magnificent manner. A compact Column,
+slowly advancing,--apparently of some 16,000 foot.
+Pauses, readjusts itself a little, when not meddled with;
+when meddled with, has cannon, has rolling fire,--delivers from it,
+in fact, on both hands such a torrent of deadly continuous fire as
+was rarely seen before or since. 'FEU INFERNAL,' the French call
+it. The French make vehement resistance. Battalions, squadrons,
+regiment after regiment, charge madly on this terrible Column; but
+rush only on destruction thereby. Regiment This storms in from the
+right, regiment That from the left; have their colonels shot, 'lose
+the half of their people;' and hastily draw back again, in a
+wrecked condition. The cavalry-horses cannot stand such smoke and
+blazing; nor indeed, I think, can the cavaliers. REGIMENT DU ROI
+rushing on, full gallop, to charge this Column, got one volley from
+it [says Espagnac] which brought to the ground 460 men.
+Natural enough that horses take the bit between their teeth;
+likewise that men take it, and career very madly in such
+circumstances!
+
+MAP Chap. VIII, Book 15, PAGE 440 GOES ABOUT HERE--------
+
+
+"The terrible Column with slow inflexibility advances; cannon (now
+in reversed position) from that Redoubt d'Eu ('Shame on you,
+Ingoldsby!'), and irregular musketry from Fontenoy side, playing
+upon it; defeated regiments making barriers of their dead men and
+firing there; Column always closing its gapped ranks, and girdled
+with insupportable fire. It ought to have taken Fontenoy and
+Redoubt d'Eu, say military men; it ought to have done several
+things! It has now cut the French fairly in two;--and Saxe, who is
+earnestly surveying it a hundred paces ahead, sends word, conjuring
+the King to retire instantly,--across the Scheld, by Calonne Bridge
+and the strong rear-guard there,--who, however, will not. King and
+Dauphin, on horseback both, have stood 'at the Justice (GALLOWS, in
+fact) of our Lady of the Woods,' not stirring much, occasionally
+shifting to a windmill which is still higher,--ye Heavens, with
+what intrepidity, all day!--'a good many country-folk in trees
+close behind them.' Country-folk, I suppose, have by this time seen
+enough, and are copiously making off: but the King will not, though
+things do look dubious.
+
+"In fact, the Battle hangs now upon a hair; the Battle is as good
+as lost, thinks Marechal de Saxe. His battle-lines torn in two in
+that manner, hovering in ragged clouds over the field, what hope is
+there in the Battle? Fontenoy is firing blank, this some time;
+its cannon-balls done. Officers, in Antoine, are about withdrawing
+the artillery,--then again (on new order) replacing it awhile.
+All are looking towards the Scheld Bridge; earnestly entreating his
+Majesty to withdraw. Had the Dutch, at this point of time, broken
+heartily in, as Waldeck was urging them to do, upon the redoubts of
+Antoine; or had his Royal Highness the Duke, for his own behoof,
+possessed due cavalry or artillery to act upon these ragged clouds,
+which hang broken there, very fit for being swept, were there an
+artillery-and-horse besom to do it,--in either of these cases the
+Battle was the Duke's. And a right fiery victory it would have
+been; to make his name famous; and confirm the English in their mad
+method of fighting, like Baresarks or Janizaries rather than
+strategic human creatures. [See, in Busching's <italic> Magazin,
+<end italic> xvi. 169 ("Your illustrious 'Column,' at Fontenoy?
+It was fortuitous, I say; done like janizaries;" and so forth), a
+Criticism worth reading by soldiers.]
+
+"But neither of these contingencies had befallen. The Dutch-
+Austrian wing did evince some wish to get possession of Antoine;
+and drew out a little; but the guns also awoke upon them;
+whereupon the Dutch-Austrians drew in again, thinking the time not
+come. As for the Duke, he had taken with him of cannon a good few;
+but of horse none at all (impossible for horse, unless Fontenoy and
+the Redoubt d'Eu were ours!)--and his horse have been hanging
+about, in the Wood of Barry all this while, uncertain what to do;
+their old Commander being killed withal, and their new a dubitative
+person, and no orders left. The Duke had left no orders; having
+indeed broken in here, in what we called a spiritual white-heat,
+without asking himself much what he would do when in: 'Beat the
+French, knock them to powder if I can!'--Meanwhile the French
+clouds are reassembling a little: Royal Highness too is readjusting
+himself, now got '300 yards ahead of Fontenoy,'--pauses there about
+half an hour, not seeing his way farther.
+
+"During which pause, Duc de Richelieu, famous blackguard man,
+gallops up to the Marechal, gallops rapidly from Marechal to King;
+suggesting, 'were cannon brought AHEAD of this close deep Column,
+might not they shear it into beautiful destruction; and then a
+general charge be made?' So counselled Richelieu: it is said, the
+Jacobite Irishman, Count Lally of the Irish Brigade, was prime
+author of this notion,--a man of tragic notoriety in time coming.
+["Thomas Arthur Lally Comte de Tollendal," patronymically
+"O'MuLALLY of TULLINDALLY" (a place somewhere in Connaught,
+undiscoverable where, not material where): see our dropsical friend
+(in one of his wheeziest states), <italic> King James's Irish
+Army-List <end italic> (Dublin, 1855), pp. 594-600.] Whoever was
+author of it, Marechal de Saxe adopts it eagerly, King Louis
+eagerly: swift it becomes a fact. Universal rally, universal
+simultaneous charge on both flanks of the terrible Column: this it
+might resist, as it has done these two hours past; but cannon
+ahead, shearing gaps through it from end to end, this is what no
+column can resist;--and only perhaps one of Friedrich's columns (if
+even that) with Friedrich's eye upon it, could make its half-right-
+about (QUART DE CONVERSION), turn its side to it, and manoeuvre out
+of it, in such circumstances. The wrathful English column, slit
+into ribbons, can do nothing at manoeuvring; blazes and rages,--
+more and more clearly in vain; collapses by degrees, rolls into
+ribbon-coils, and winds itself out of the field. Not much chased,--
+its cavalry now seeing a job, and issuing from the Wood of Barry to
+cover the retreat. Not much chased;--yet with a loss, they say, in
+all, of 7,000 killed and wounded, and about 2,000 prisoners;
+French loss being under 5,000.
+
+"The Dutch and Austrians had found that the fit time was now come,
+or taken time by the forelock,--their part of the loss, they said,
+was a thousand and odd hundreds. The Battle ended about two o'clock
+of the day; had begun about eight. Tuesday, 11th May, 1745: one of
+the hottest half-day's works I have known. A thing much to be
+meditated by the English mind.--King Louis stept down from the
+Gallows-Hill of Our Lady; and KISSED Marechal de Saxe. Saxe was
+nearly dead of dropsy; could not sit on horseback, except for
+minutes; was carried about in a wicker bed; has had a lead bullet
+in his mouth, all day, to mitigate the intolerable thirst.
+Tournay was soon taken; the Dutch garrison, though strong, and in a
+strong place, making no due debate.
+
+"Royal Highness retired upon Ath and Brussels; hovered about,
+nothing daunted, he or his: 'Dastard fellows, they would not come
+out into the open ground, and try us fairly!' snort indignantly the
+Gazetteers and enlightened Public. [Old Newspapers.]
+Nothing daunted;--but, as it were, did not do anything farther,
+this Campaign; except lose Gand, by negligence VERSUS vigilance,
+and eat his victuals,--till called home by the Rebellion Business,
+in an unexpected manner! Fontenoy was the nearest approach he ever
+made to getting victory in a battle; but a miss too, as they all
+were. He was nothing like so rash, on subsequent occasions; but had
+no better luck; and was beaten in all his battles--except the
+immortal Victory of Culloden alone. Which latter indeed, was it not
+itself (in the Gazetteer mind) a kind of apotheosis, or lifting of
+a man to the immortal gods,--by endless tar-barrels and beer, for
+the time being?
+
+"Old Marechal de Noailles was in this Battle; busy about the
+redans, and proud to see his Saxe do well. Chivalrous Grammont,
+too, as we saw, was there,---killed at the first discharge.
+Prince de Soubise too (not killed); a certain Lord George Sackville
+(hurt slightly,--perhaps had BETTER have been killed!)--and others
+known to us, or that will be known. Army-Surgeon La Mettrie, of
+busy brain, expert with his tourniquets and scalpels, but of wildly
+blusterous heterodox tongue and ways, is thrice-busy in Hospital
+this night,--'English and French all one to you, nay, if anything,
+the English better!' those are the Royal orders:--La Mettrie will
+turn up, in new capacity, still blusterous, at Berlin, by and by.
+
+"The French made immense explosions of rejoicing over this Victory
+of Fontenoy; Voltaire (now a man well at Court) celebrating it in
+prose and verse, to an amazing degree (21,000 copies sold in one
+day); the whole Nation blazing out over it into illuminations, arcs
+of triumph and universal three-times-three:--in short, I think,
+nearly the heartiest National Huzza, loud, deep, long-drawn, that
+the Nation ever gave in like case. Now rather curious to consider,
+at this distance of time. Miraculous Anecdotes, true and not true,
+are many. Not to mention again that surprising offer of the first
+fire to us, what shall we say of the 'two camp-sutlers whom I
+noticed,' English females of the lowest degree; 'one of whom was
+busy slitting the gold-lace from a dead Officer, when a cannon-ball
+came whistling, and shore her head away. Upon which, without sound
+uttered, her neighbor snatched the scissors, and deliberately
+proceeded.' [De Hordt, <italic> Memoires, <end italic> i. 108.
+A FRENCH OFFICER'S ACCOUNT (translated in <italic> Gentleman's
+Magazine, <end italic> 1745; where, pp. 246, 250, 291, 313, &c.,
+are many confused details and speculations on this subject).]
+A deliberate gloomy people;--unconquerable except by French
+prowess, glory to that same!"
+
+Britannic Majesty is not successful this season; Highland
+Rebellions rising on him, and much going awry. He is founding his
+National Debt, poor Majesty; nothing else to speak of. His poor
+Army, fighting never so well in Foreign quarrels,--and generally
+itself standing the brunt, with the co-partners looking on till it
+is time to run (as at Roucoux again next season, and at Lauffeld
+next),--can win nothing but hard knocks and losses. And is defined
+by mankind,--in phraseology which we have heard again since then!
+--as having "the heart of a Lion and the head of an Ass."
+[Old Pamphlets, SOEPIUS.] Portentous to contemplate!--
+
+Cape Breton was besieged this Summer, in a creditable manner;
+and taken. The one real stroke done upon France this Year, or
+indeed (except at sea) throughout the War. "Ruin to their
+Fisheries, and a clear loss of 1,400,000 pounds a year."
+Compared with which all these fine "Victories in Flanders" are a
+bottle of moonshine. This was actually a kind of stroke;--and this,
+one finds, was accomplished, under presidency of a small squadron
+of King's ships, by ('New-England Volunteers," on funds raised by
+subscription, in the way of joint-stock. A shining Colonial feat;
+said to be very perfectly done, both scrip part of it, and fighting
+part; [Adelung, v. 32-35 ("27th June, 1745, after a siege of
+forty-nine days"): see "Gibson, <italic> Journal of the Siege;"
+<end italic> "Mr. Prince (of the South Church, Boston),
+THANKSGIVING SERMON (price fourpence);" &c. &c.: in the Old
+Newspapers, 1745, 1748, multifarious Notices about it, and then
+about the "repayment" of those excellent "joint-stock" people.]
+--and might have yielded, what incalculable dividends in the
+Fishery way! But had to be given up again, in exchange for the
+Netherlands, when Peace came. Alas, your Majesty! Would it be quite
+impossible, then, to go direct upon your own sole errand, the
+JENKINS'S-EAR one, instead of stumbling about among the Foreign
+chimney-pots, far and wide, under nightmares, in this terrible
+manner?--Let us to Silesia again.
+
+
+
+ Chapter IX.
+
+ THE AUSTRIAN-SAXON ARMY INVADES SILESIA, ACROSS THE
+ MOUNTAINS.
+
+Valori, who is to be of Friedrich's Campaign this Year, came
+posting off directly in rear of the glorious news of Fontenoy;
+found Friedrich at Camenz, rather in spirits than otherwise;
+and lodged pleasantly with Abbot Tobias and him, till the Campaign
+should begin. Two things surprise Valori: first, the great
+strength, impregnable as it were, to which Neisse has been brought
+since he saw it last,--superlative condition of that Fortress, and
+of the Army itself, as it gathers daily more and more about
+Frankenstein here:--and then secondly, and contrariwise, the
+strangely neglected posture of mountainous or Upper Silesia, given
+up to Pandours. Quite submerged, in a manner: Margraf Karl lies
+quiet among them at Jagerndorf, "eating his magazine;" General
+Hautcharmoi (Winterfeld's late chief in that Wurben affair), with
+his small Detachment, still hovers about in those Ratibor parts,
+"with the Strong Towns to fall-back upon," or has in effect fallen
+back accordingly; and nothing done to coerce the Pandours at all.
+While Prince Karl and Weissenfels are daily coming on, in force
+100,000, their intention certain; force, say, about 100,000
+regular! Very singular to Valori.
+
+"Sire, will not you dispute the Passes, then?" asks Valori, amazed:
+"Not defend your Mountain rampart, then?" "MON CHER; the Mountain
+rampart is three or four hundred miles long; there are twelve or
+twenty practicable roads through it. One is kept in darkness, too;
+endless Pandour doggery shutting out your daylight:--ill defending
+such a rampart," answers Friedrich. "But how, then," persists
+Valori; "but--?" "One day the King answered me," says Valori,
+"'MON AMI, if you want to get the mouse, don't shut, the trap;
+leave the trap open (ON LAISSE LA SOURICIERE OUVERTE)!'" Which was
+a beam of light to the inquiring thought of Valori, a military man
+of some intelligence. [See VALORI, i. 222, 224, 228.]
+
+That, in fact, is Friedrich's purpose privately formed. He means
+that the Austrians shall consider him cowed into nothing, as he
+understands they already do; that they shall enter Silesia in the
+notion of chasing him; and shall, if need be, have the pleasure of
+chasing him,--till perhaps a right moment arrive. For he is full of
+silent finesse, this young King; soon sees into his man, and can
+lead him strange dances on occasion. In no man is there a
+plentifuler vein of cunning, nor of a finer kind. Lynx-eyed
+perspicacity, inexhaustible contrivance, prompt ingenuity,--a man
+very dangerous to play with at games of skill. And it is cunning
+regulated always by a noble sense of honor, too; instinctively
+abhorrent of attorneyism and the swindler element: a cunning, sharp
+as the vulpine, yet always strictly human, which is rather
+beautiful to see. This is one of Friedrich's marked endowments.
+Intellect sun-clear, wholly practical (need not be specially deep),
+and entirely loyal to the fact before it; this--if you add rapidity
+and energy, prompt weight of stroke, such as was seldom met with--
+will render a man very dangerous to his adversary in the game of
+war.--Here is the last of our Pandour Adventures for the present:--
+
+"From May 12th, Friedrich had been gathering closer and closer
+about Frankenstein; by the end of the month (28th, as it proved) he
+intends that all Detachments shall be home, and the Army take Camp
+there. The most are home; Margraf Karl, at Jagerndorf, has not yet
+done eating his magazine; but he too must come home. Summon the
+Margraf home:--it is not doubted he will cut himself through, he
+and his 12,000; but such is the swarm of Pandours hovering between
+him and us, no estafette, or cleverest letter-bearer, can hope to
+get across to him. Ziethen with 500 Hussars, he must take the
+Letter; there is no other way. Ziethen mounts; fares swiftly forth,
+towards Neustadt, with his Letter; lodges in woods; dodges the
+thick-crowding Tolpatcheries (passes himself off for a Tolpatchery,
+say some, and captures Hungarian Staff-Officers who come to give
+him orders [Frau van Blumenthal, <italic> Life of De Ziethen, <end
+italic> pp. 171-181 (extremely romantic; now given up as mythical,
+for most part): see Orlich (ii. 150); but also Ranke (iii. 245),
+Preuss, &c.]); is at length found out, and furiously set upon,
+'Ziethen, Hah!'--but gets to Jagerndorf, Margraf Karl coming out to
+the rescue, and delivers his Letter. 'Home, then, all of us
+to-morrow!' And so, Saturday, 22d May, before we get to Neustadt on
+the way home, there is an authentic passage of arms, done very
+brilliantly by Margraf Karl against Pandours and others.
+
+"To right of us, to left, barring our road, the enemy, 20,000 of
+them, stand ranked on heights, in chosen positions; cannon-
+batteries, grenadiers, dragoons of Gotha and infinite Pandours:
+military jungle bristling far and wide. And you must push it
+heartily, and likewise cut the tap-root of it (seize its big guns),
+or it will not roll away. Margraf Karl shoots forth his steady
+infantry ('Silent till you see the whites of their eyes!'),--his
+cavalry with new manoeuvres; whose behavior is worthy of Ziethen
+himself:--in brief, the jungle is struck as by a whirlwind, the
+tap-root of it cut, and rolls simultaneously out of range, leaving
+only the Regiment of Gotha,, Regiment of Ogilvy and some Regulars,
+who also get torn to shreds, and utterly ruined. Seeing which, the
+Pandour jungle plunges wholly into the woods, uttering horrible
+cries (EN POUSSANT DES CRIS TERRIBLES), says Friedrich.
+[<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 106. More
+specially BERICHTE VON DER AM 22 MAI, 1745 BEY NEUSTADT IN OBER-
+SCHLESIEN VORGEFALLENER ACTION (Seyfarth, <italic> Beylage, <end
+italic> i. 159-166).] Our new cavalry-manoeuvres deserve praise.
+Margraf Karl had the honor to gain his Cousin's approbation this
+day; and to prove himself, says the Cousin, (worthy of the
+grandfather he came from,'--my own great-grandfather;
+Great Elector, Friedrich-Wilhelm; whose style of motion at
+Fehrbellin, or on the ice of the Frische Haf (soldiers all in
+sledges, tearing along to be at the Swedes), was probably somewhat
+of this kind." ...
+
+"Some days ago, Winterfeld had been pushed out to Landshut, with
+Detachment of 2,000, to judge a little for himself which way the
+Austrians were coming, and to scare off certain Uhlans (the SAXON
+species of Tolpatchery), who were threatening to be mischievous
+thereabouts. The Uhlans, at sound of Winterfeld, jingled away at
+once: but, in a day or two, there came upon him, on the sudden,
+Pandour outburst in quite other force;--and in the very hours while
+Ziethen was struggling into Jagerndorf, and still more emphatically
+next day, while Margraf Karl was handling his Pandours,--Colonel
+Winterfeld, a hundred miles to westward lapped among the Mountains,
+chanced to be dealing again with the same article. Very busy with
+it, from 4 o'clock this morning; likely to give a good account of
+the job. Steadily defending Landshut and himself, against the
+grenadier battalions, cannon and furious overplus of Pandours
+(8,000 or 9,000, it is said, six to one or so in the article of
+cavalry), which General Nadasti, a scientific leader of men or
+Pandours, skilfully and furiously hurls upon Landshut and him, in
+an unexpected manner. Colonel Winterfeld had need of all his heart
+and energy, in the intricate ground; against the furious overplus
+well manoeuvred: but in him too there are manoeuvres; if he fall
+back here, it is to rush on double strong there; hour after hour he
+inexpugnably defends himself,--till General Stille, Friedrich's old
+Tutor, our worthy writing friend, whom we occasionally quote, comes
+up with help; and Nadasti is at once brushed home again, with sore
+smart of failure, and 'the loss of 600 killed,' among other items.
+[<italic> Bericht von der am 21 Mai, 1745 bey Landshut
+rorgefallener Action, in Feldzuge, <end italic> i. 302-305 (or in
+Seyfarth, <italic> Beylage, <end italic> i. 155-158); <italic>
+OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 105; Stille, pp. 120-124
+(who misdates, "23d May" for 22d).] Colonel Winterfeld was made
+Major-General next day, for this action. Colonel Winterfeld is
+cutting out a high course for himself, by his conduct in these
+employments; solidity, brilliant effectuality, shining through all
+he does; his valor and value, his rapid just insight, fiery energy
+and nobleness of mind more and more disclosing themselves,--to one
+who is a judge of men, and greatly needs for his own use the first-
+rate quality in that article."
+
+Friedrich has left the mouse-trap open;--and latterly has been
+baiting it with a pleasant spicing of toasted cheese. One of his
+Spies, reporting from Prince Karl's quarters, Friedrich has at this
+time discovered to be a Double-Spy, reporting thither as well.
+Double-Spy, there is an ugly fact;--perhaps not quite convenient to
+abolish it by hemp and gibbet; perhaps it could be turned to use,
+as most facts can? "Very good, my expert Herr von Schonfeld [that
+was the knave's name]; and now of all things, whenever the Prince
+does get across,--instant word to us of that! Nothing so important
+to us. If he should get BETWEEN us and Breslau, for example, what
+would the consequence be!" To this purport Friedrich instructs his
+Double-Spy; sends him off, unhanged, to Prince Karl's Camp, to blab
+this fresh bit of knowledge. "We likewise," says Friedrich,
+"ordered some repairs on the roads leading to Breslau;"--last turn
+of the hand to our bit of toasted fragrancy. And Prince Karl is
+actually striding forward, at an eager pace:--and Nadasti VERSUS
+Winterfeld, the other day, could Winterfeld have guessed it, was
+the actual vanguard of the march; and will be up again straightway!
+Whereupon Winterfeld too is called home; and all eyes are bent on
+the Landshut side.
+
+Prince Karl, under these fine omens, had been urgent on the Saxons
+to be swift; Saxons under Weissenfels did at last "get their cannon
+up," and we hear of them for certain, in junction with the
+Austrians, at Schatzlar, on the Bohemian side of the Giant-
+Mountains; climbing with diligence those wizard solitudes and
+highland wastes. In a word, they roll across into Silesia, to
+Landshut (29th May); nothing doubting but Friedrich has cowered
+into what retreats he has, as good as desperate of Silesia, and
+will probably be first heard of in Breslau, when they get thither
+with their sieging guns. No cautious sagacious old Feldmarschall
+Traun is in that Host at present; nothing but a Prince Karl, and a
+poor Duke of Weissenfels; who are too certain of several things;--
+very capable of certainty, and also of doubt, the wrong way of the
+facts. Their force is, by strict count, 75,000; and they march from
+Landshut, detained a little by provender concerns, on the last day
+of May. [Orlich, ii. 146; Ranke, iii. 247; Stenzel, iv. 245.]
+
+May 28th, Friedrich had encamped at Frankenstein; May 30th, he sets
+forth northwestward, to be nearer the new scene; encamps at
+Reichenbach, that night; pushes forward again, next day, for
+Schweidnitz, for Striegau (in all, a shift northwest of some forty
+miles);--and from June 1st, lies stretched out between Schweidnitz
+and Striegau, nine miles long; well hidden in the hollows of the
+little Rivers thereabouts (Schweidnitz Water, Striegau Water), with
+their little knolls and hills; watching Prince Karl's probable
+place of egress from the Mountain Country opposite. His main Camp
+is from Schweidnitz to Jauernik, some five miles long; but he has
+his vanguard up as far as Striegau, Dumoulin and Winterfeld as
+vanguard, in good strength, a little way behind or westward of that
+Town and Stream; Nassau and his Division are screened in the Wood
+called Nonnenbusch (NUN'S BUSH), and there are outposts sprinkled
+all about, and vedettes watching from the hill-tops, from the
+Stanowitz Foxhill; the Zedlitz "Cowhill," "Winchill:" an Army not
+courting observation, but intent very much to observe. Nadasti has
+appeared again; at Freyburg, few miles off, on this side of the
+Mountains; goes out scouting, reconnoitring; but is "fired at from
+the growing corn," and otherwise hoodwinked by false symptoms, and
+makes little of that business. Friedrich's Army we will compute at
+70,000. [General-Lieutenant Freiherr Leo von Lutzow, <italic> Die
+Schlacht von Hohenfriedbeg <end italic> (Potsdam, 1845), pp. 18,
+21.] Not quite equal in number to Prince Karl's; and, in other
+particulars, willing and longing that Prince Karl would arrive, and
+try its quality.
+
+Friedrich's head-quarter is at Jauernik: he goes daily riding
+hither, thither; to the top of the Fuchsberg (FOXHILL at Stanowitz)
+with eager spy-glass; daily many times looks with his spy-glass to
+the ragged peaks about Bolkenhayn, Kauder, Rohnstock; expecting the
+throw of the dice from that part. On Thursday, 3d June: Do you
+notice that cloud of dust rising among the peaks over yonder?
+Dust-cloud mounting higher and higher. There comes the big crisis,
+then! There are the combined Weissenfels and Karl with their
+Austrian Saxons, issuing proudly from their stone labyrinth;
+guns, equipments, baggages, all perfectly brought through; rich
+Silesian plain country now fairly at their feet, Breslau itself but
+a few marches off:--at sight of all which, the Austrian big host
+bursts forth into universal field-music, and shakes out its banners
+to the wind. Thursday, 3d June, 1745; a dramatic Entry of something
+quite considerable on the Stage of History.
+
+Friedrich, with Nassau and generals round, stands upon the
+Fuchsberg,--his remarks not given, his looks or emotions not
+described to us, his thought well known,--and looks at it through
+his TUBUS (or spy-glass): There they are, then, and the big moment
+is come! Friedrich had seen the dust and the manoeuvring of them,
+deeper in the Hills, from this same Fuchsberg yesterday, and
+inferred what was coming; calculated by what roads or hill-tracks
+they could issue: and how he, in each case, was to deal with them;
+his march-routes are all settled, plank-bridges repaired, all
+privately is ready for these proud Austrian musical gentlemen, here
+in the hollow. Friedrich has been upon this Fuchsberg with his
+TUBUS daily, many times since Monday last: it is our general
+observatorium, says Stille, and commands a fine view into the
+interior of these Hills. A Fuchsberg which has become notable in
+the Prussian maps: "the Stanowitz Fuchsberg," east side of Striegau
+Water,--let no tourist mistake himself; for there are two or even
+three other Fuchsbergs, a mile or so northward on the western side
+of that Stream, which need to be distinguished by epithets, as the
+Striegau Fuchsberg, the Graben Fuchsberg, and perhaps still others:
+comparable to the FOUR Neisse rivers, three besides the one we
+know, which occur in this piece of Country! Our German cousins, I
+have often sorrowed to find, have practically a most poor talent
+for GIVING NAMES; and indeed much, for ages back, is lying in a sad
+state of confusion among them. Many confused things, rotting far
+and wide, in contradiction to the plainest laws of Nature;
+things as well as names! All the welcomer this Prussian Army, this
+young Friedrich leading it; they, beyond all earthly entities of
+their epoch, are not in a state of confusion, but of most strict
+conformity to the laws of Arithmetic and facts of Nature: perhaps a
+very blessed phenomenon for Germany in the long-run.
+
+Prince Karl with Weissenfels, General Berlichingen and many plumed
+dignitaries, are dining on the Hill-top near Hohenfriedberg:
+after having given order about everything, they witness there, over
+their wine, the issue of their Columns from the Mountains;
+which goes on all afternoon, with field-music, spread banners;
+and the oldest General admits he never saw a finer review-
+manoeuvre, or one better done, if so well. Thus sit they on the
+Hill-top (GALGENBERG, not far from the gallows of the place, says
+Friedrich), in the beautiful June afternoon. Silesia lying
+beautifully azure at their feet; the Zobtenberg, enchanted
+Mountain, blue and high on one's eastern horizon;
+Prussians noticeable only in weak hussar parties four or five miles
+off, which vanish in the hollow grounds again. All intending for
+Breslau, they, it is like;--and here, red wine and the excellent
+manoeuvre going on. "The Austrian-and-Saxon Army streamed out all
+afternoon," says a Country Schoolmaster of those parts, whose
+Day-book has been preserved, [In Lutzow, pp. 123-132.] "each
+regiment or division taking the place appointed it; all afternoon,
+till late in the night, submerging the Country as in a deluge,"
+five miles long of them; taking post at the foot of the Hills
+there, from Hohenfriedberg round upon Striegau, looking towards the
+morrow's sunrise. To us poor country-folk not a beautiful sight;
+their light troops flying ahead, and doing theft and other mischief
+at a sad rate.
+
+On the other hand, the Austrian and Saxon gentlemen, from their
+Gallows-Hill at Hohenfriedberg, notice, four or five miles in the
+distance, opposite them, or a little to the left of opposite, a
+Body of Prussian horse and foot, visibly wending northward; like a
+long glittering serpent, the glitter of their muskets flashing back
+yonder on the afternoon sun and us, as they mount from hollow to
+height. Ten or twelve thousand of them; making for Striegau, to
+appearance. Intending to bivouac or billet there, and keep some
+kind of watch over us; belike with an eye to being rear-guard, on
+the retreat towards Breslau to-morrow? Or will they retreat without
+attempting mischief? Serenity of Weissenfels engages to seize the
+heights and proper posts, over yonder, this night yet; and will
+take Striegau itself, the first thing, to-morrow morning.
+
+Yes, your Serenities, those are Prussians in movement: Vanguard
+Corps of Dumoulin, Winterfeld;--Rittmeister Seydlitz rides yonder:
+--and it is not their notion to retreat without mischief. For there
+stands, not so far off, on the Stanowitz Fuchsberg, a brisk little
+Gentleman, if you could notice him; with his eyes fixed on you, and
+plans in the head of him now getting nearly mature. For certain, he
+is pushing out that column of men; and all manner of other columns
+are getting order to push out, and take their ground; and to-morrow
+morning--you will not find him in retreat! Such are the phenomena
+in that Striegau-Hohenfriedberg region, while the sun is bending
+westward, on Thursday, 3d June, 1745.
+
+"From Hohenfriedberg, which leans against the higher Mountains,
+there may be, across to Striegau northeast, which stands well apart
+from them, among lower Hills of its own, a distance of about five
+English miles. The intervening country is of flat, though upland
+nature: the first broad stage, or STAIR-STEP, so to speak, leading
+down into the general interior levels of Silesia in those parts.
+A tract which is now tolerably dried by draining, but was then
+marshy as well as bushy:--flat to the eye, yet must be
+imperceptibly convexed a little, for the line of watershed is
+hereabouts: walk from Hohenfriedberg to Striegau, the water on your
+left hand flows, though mainly in ditches or imperceptible oozings,
+to the north and west,--there to fall into an eastern fork of the
+Roaring Neisse [one of our three new Neisses, which is a very quiet
+stream here; runs close by the Mountain base, fed by many torrents,
+and must get its name, WUTHENDE or Roaring, from the suddenness of
+its floods]: into this, bound northward and westward, run or ooze
+all waters on your left hand, as you go to Striegau. Right hand,
+again, or to eastward, you will find all sauntering, or running in
+visible brooks into Striegau Water [little River notable to us],
+which comes circling from the Mountains, past Hohenfriedberg,
+farther south; and has got to some force as a stream before it
+reaches Striegau, and turns abruptly eastward;--eastward, to join
+Schweidnitz Water, and form with it the SECOND stair-step downwards
+to the Plain Country. Has its Fuchsbergs, Kuhbergs and little
+knolls and heights interspersed, on both sides of it, in the
+conceivable way.
+
+"So that, looking eastward from the heights of Hohenfriedberg, our
+broad stage or stair-step has nothing of the nature of a valley,
+but rather is a kind of insensibly swelling plain between two
+valleys, or hollows, of small depth; and slopes both ways.
+Both ways; but MORE towards the Striegau-Water valley or hollow;
+and thence, in a lazily undulating manner, to other hollows and
+waters farther down. Friedrich's Camp lies in the next, the
+Schweidnitz-Water hollow; and is five, or even nine miles long,
+from Schweidnitz northward;--much hidden from the Austrian-Saxon
+gentlemen at present. No hills farther, mere flat country, to
+eastward of that. But to the north, again, about Striegau, the
+hollow deepens, narrows; and certain Hills," much notable at
+present, "rise to west of Striegau, definite peaked Hills, with
+granite quarries in them and basalt blocks atop:--Striegau, it
+appears, is, in old Czech dialect, TRZIZA, which means TRIPLE HILL,
+the 'Town of the Three Hills.' [Lutzow, p. 28.] An ancient quaint
+little Town, of perhaps 2,000 souls: brown-gray, the stones of it
+venerably weathered; has its wide big market-place, piazza, plain-
+stones, silent enough except on market-days: nestles itself
+compactly in the shelter of its Three Hills, which screen it from
+the northwest; and has a picturesque appearance, its Hills and it,
+projected against the big Mountain range beyond, as you approach it
+from the Plain Country.
+
+"Hohenfriedberg, at the other corner of our battle-stage, on the
+road to Landshut, is a Village of no great compass; but sticks
+pleasantly together, does not straggle in the usual way;
+climbs steep against its Gallows-Hill (now called 'SIEGESBERG,
+Victory Hill,' with some tower or steeple-monument on it, built by
+subscription); and would look better, if trimmed a little and
+habitually well swept. The higher Mountain summits, Landshut way,
+or still more if you look southeastward, Glatz-ward, rise blue and
+huge, remote on your right; to left, the Roaring Neisse range close
+at hand, is also picturesque, though less Alpine in type."
+[Tourist's Note (1858).] ... And of all Hills, the notablest, just
+now to us, are those "Three" at Striegau.
+
+Those Three Hills of Striegau his Serenity of Weissenfels is to lay
+hold of, this night, with his extreme left, were it once got
+deployed and bivouacked. Those Hills, if he can: but Prussian
+Dumoulin is already on march thither; and privately has his eye
+upon them, on Friedrich's part!--For the rest, this upland
+platform, insensibly sloping two ways, and as yet undrained, is of
+scraggy boggy nature in many places; much of it damp ground, or
+sheer morass; better parts of it covered, at this season, with rank
+June grass, or greener luxuriance of oats and barley. A humble
+peaceable scene; peaceable till this afternoon; dotted, too, with
+six or seven poor Hamlets, with scraggy woods, where they have
+their fuel; most sleepy littery ploughman Hamlets, sometimes with a
+SCHLOSS or Mansion for the owner of the soil (who has absconded in
+the present crisis of things), their evening smoke rising rather
+fainter than usual; much cookery is not advisable with Uhlans and
+Tolpatchcs flying about. Northward between Striegau and the higher
+Mountains there is an extensive TEICHWIRTHSCHAFT, or "Pond-
+Husbandry" (gleaming visible from Hohenfriedberg Gallows-Hill just
+now); a combination of stagnant pools and carp-ponds, the ground
+much occupied hereabouts with what they name Carp-Husbandry.
+Which is all drained away in our time, yet traceable by the
+studious:--quaggy congeries of sluices and fish-ponds, no road
+through them except on intricate dams; have scrubby thickets about
+the border;--this also is very strong ground, if Weissenfels
+thought of defence there.
+
+Which Weissenfels does not, but only of attack. He occupies the
+ground nevertheless, rearward of this Carp-Husbandry, as becomes a
+strategic man; gradually bivouacking all round there, to end on the
+Three Hills, were his last regiments got up. The Carp-Husbandry is
+mainly about Eisdorf Hamlet:--in Pilgramshayn, where Weissenfels
+once thought of lodging, lives our Writing Schoolmaster.
+The Mountains lie to westward; flinging longer shadows, as the
+invasive troops continually deploy, in that beautiful manner;
+and coil themselves strategically on the ground, a bent rope,
+cordon, or line (THREE lines in depth), reaching from the front
+skirts of Hohenfriedberg to the Hills at Striegau again,--terrible
+to behold.
+
+In front of Hohenfriedberg, we say, is the extremity or right wing
+of the Austrian-Saxon bivouac, or will be when the process is
+complete; five miles to northeast, sweeping round upon Striegau
+region, will be their left, where mainly are the Saxons,--to nestle
+upon those Three Hills of Striegau: whitherward however, Dumoulin,
+on Friedrich's behalf, is already on march. Austrian-Saxon bivouac,
+as is the way in regulated hosts, can at once become Austrian-Saxon
+order-of-battle: and then, probably, on the Chord of that Arc of
+five miles, the big Fight will roll to-morrow; Striegau one end of
+it, Hohenfriedbcrg the other. Flattish, somewhat elliptic upland,
+stair-step from the Mountains, as we called it; tract considerably
+cut with ditches, carp-husbandries, and their tufts of wood;
+line from Striegau to Hohenfriedberg being axis or main diameter of
+it, and in general the line of watershed: there, probably, will the
+tug of war be. Friedrich, on his Fuchsberg, knows this;
+the Austrian-Saxon gentlemen, over their wine on the Gallows-Hill,
+do not yet know it, but will know.
+
+It was about four in the afternoon, when Valori, with a companion,
+waiting a good while in the King's Tent at Jauernik, at last saw
+his Majesty return from the Fuchsberg observatory. Valori and
+friend have great news: "Tournay fallen; siege done, your Majesty!"
+Valori's friend is one De Latour; who had brought word of Fontenoy
+("important victory on the Scamander," as Friedrich indignantly
+defined it to himself); and was bid wait here till this Siege-of-
+Tournay consummation ("as helpful to me as the Siege of Pekin!")
+should supervene. They hasten to salute his Majesty with the
+glorious tidings, Hmph! thinks Friedrich: and we are at death-grips
+here, little to be helped by your taking Pekin! However, he lets
+wit of nothing. "I make my compliments; mean to fight to-morrow."
+[Valori, i. 228.] Valori, as old soldier and friend, volunteers to
+be there and assist:--Good.
+
+Friedrich, I presume, at this late hour of four, may bc snatching a
+morsel of dinner; his orderlies are silently speeding, plans taken,
+orders given: To start all, at eight in the evening, for the Bridge
+of Striegau; there to cross, and spread to the right and to the
+left. Silent, not a word spoken, not a pipe lighted: silently
+across the Striegau Water there. A march of three miles for the
+nearest, who are here at Jauernik; of nine miles for the farthest
+about Schweidnitz; at Schweidnitz leave all your baggage, safe
+under the guns there. To the Bridge of Striegau, diligently,
+silently march along; Bridge of Striegau, there cross Striegau
+Water, and deploy to right and to left, in the way each of you
+knows. These are Friedrich's orders.
+
+Late in the dusk, Dumoulin and Winterfeld, whom we saw silently on
+march some hours ago, have silently glided past Striegau, and got
+into the Three-Hill region, which is some furlong or so farther
+north:--to his surprise, Dumoulin finds Saxon parties posting
+themselves thereabouts. He attacks said Saxon parties; and after
+some slight tussle, drives them mostly from their Three Hills;
+mostly, not altogether; one Saxon Hill is precipitous on our hither
+side of it, and we must leave that till the dawn break. Of the
+other Heights Dumoulin takes good possession, with cannon too, to
+be ready against dawn;--and ranks himself out to leftward withal,
+along the plain ground; for he is to be right wing, had the other
+troops come up. These are now all under way; astir from Jauernik
+and Schweidnitz, silently streaming along; and Dumoulin bivouacs
+here,--very silent he: not so silent the Saxons; who are still
+marching in, over yonder, to westward of Dumoulin, their rear-guard
+groping out its posts as it best can in the dark. Elsewhere, miles
+and miles along the foot of the Mountains, Austrian-Saxon watch-
+fires flame through the ambrosial night; and it is an impressive
+sight for Dumoulin,--still more for the poor Schoolmaster at
+Pilgramshayn and others, less concerned than Dumoulin. "It was
+beautiful," says Stille, who was there, "to see how the plain about
+Rohnstock, and all over that way, was ablaze with thousands of
+watch-fires (TAUSEND UND ABER TAUSEND); by the light of these, we
+could clearly perceive the enemy's troops continually defile from
+the Hills the whole night through." [Cited in Seyfarth, i. 630.]
+
+Serenity of Weissenfels, after all, does not lodge at Pilgramshayn; far in the night, he goes to sleep at Rohnstock, a Schloss and
+Hamlet on that fork of Roaring Neisse, by the foot of the
+Mountains; three or four miles off, yet handy enough for picking up
+Striegau the first thing to-morrow. His Highness Prince Karl lies
+in Hausdorf, tolerable quarters, pretty much in the centre of his
+long bivouac; day's business well done, and bottle (as one's wont
+rather is) well enjoyed. Nadasti has been out scouting; but was
+pricked into by hussar parties, fired into from the growing corn;
+and could make out little, but the image of his own ideas.
+Nadasti's ultimate report is, That the Prussians are perfectly
+quiet in their camp; from Jauernik to Schweidnitz, watch-fires all
+alight, sentries going their rounds. And so they are, in fact;
+sentries and watch-fires,--but now nothing else there, a mere shell
+of a camp; the men of it streaming steadily along, without speech,
+without tobacco; and many of them are across Striegau Bridge by
+this time!--
+
+It was past eleven, so close and continuous went this march, before
+Valori and his Latour, with their carriages and furnitures, could
+find an interval, and get well into it. Never will Valori forget
+the discipline of these Prussians, and how they marched.
+Difficult ways; the hard road is for their artillery; the men march
+on each side, sometimes to mid-leg in water,--never mind. Wholly in
+order, wholly silent; Valori followed them three leagues close, and
+there was not one straggler. Every private man, much more every
+officer, knows well what grim errand they are on; and they make no
+remarks. Steady as Time; and, except that their shoes are not of
+felt, silent as he. The Austrian watch-fires glow silent manifold
+to leftward yonder; silent overhead are the stars:--the path of all
+duty, too, is silent (not about Striegau alone) for every well-
+drilled man. To-morrow;--well, to-morrow?
+
+A grimmish feeling against the Saxons is understood to be prevalent
+among these men. Bruhl, Weissenfels himself, have been reported
+talking high,--"Reduce our King to the size of an Elector again,"
+and other foolish things;--indeed, grudges have been accumulating
+for some time. "KEIN PARDON (No quarter)!" we hear has been a word
+among the Saxons, as they came along; the Prussians growl to one
+another, "Very well then, None!" Nay Friedrich's general order is,
+"No prisoners, you cavalry, in the heat of fight; cavalry, strike
+at the faces of them: you infantry, keep your fire till within
+fifty steps; bayonet withal is to be relied on." These were
+Friedrich's last general orders, given in the hollow of the night,
+near the foot of that Fuchsberg where he had been so busy all day;
+a widish plain space hereabouts, Striegau Bridge now near: he had
+lain snme time in his cloak, waiting till the chief generals, with
+the heads of their columns, could rendezvous here. He then sprang
+on horseback; spoke briefly the essential things (one of them the
+above);--"Had meant to be more minute, in regard to positions and
+the like; but all is so in darkness, embroiled by the flare of the
+Austrian watch-fires, we can make nothing farther of localities at
+present: Striegau for right wing, left wing opposite to
+Hohenfriedberg,--so, and Striegau Water well to rear of us.
+Be diligent, exact, all faculties awake: your own sense, and the
+Order of Battle which you know, must do the rest. Forward; steady:
+can I doubt but you will acquit yourselves like Prussian men?"
+And so they march, across the Bridge at Striegau, south outskirt of
+the Town,--plank Bridge, I am afraid;--and pour themselves, to
+right and to left, continually the livelong night.
+
+To describe the Battle which ensued, Battle named of Striegau or
+Hohenfriedberg, excels the power of human talent,--if human talent
+had leisure for such employment. It is the huge shock and clash of
+70,000 against 70,000, placed in the way we said. An enormous
+furious SIMALTAS (or "both-at-once," as the Latins phrase it),
+spreading over ten square miles. Rather say, a wide congeries of
+electric simultaneities; all ELECTRIC, playing madly into one
+another; most loud, most mad: the aspect of which is smoky,
+thunderous, abstruse; the true SEQUENCES of which, who shall
+unravel? There are five accounts of it, all modestly written, each
+true-looking from its own place: and a thrice-diligent Prussian
+Officer, stationed on the spot in late years, has striven well to
+harmonize them all. [Five Accounts: 1. The Prussian Official
+Account, in <italic> Helden-Geschichte,<end italic> i. 1098-1102.
+2. The Saxon, ib. 1103-1108. 3. The Austrian, ib. 1109-1115.
+4. Stille's (ii. 125-133, of English Translation). 5. Friedrich's
+own, <italic> OEuvres, <end italic> iii. 108-118. Lutzow, above
+cited, is the harmonizer. Besides which, two of value, in <italic>
+Feldzuge, <end italic> i. 310-323, 328-336; not to mention
+Cogniazzo, <italic> Confessions of an Austrian Veeran <end italic>
+(Breslau, 1788-1791: strictly Anonymous at that time, and candid,
+or almost more, to Prussian merit;--still worth reading, here and
+throughout), ii. 123-135; &c. &c.] Well worth the study of military
+men;--who might make tours towards this and the other great battle-
+field, and read such things, were they wise. For us, a feature or
+two, in the huge general explosion, to assist the reader's fancy in
+conceiving it a little, is all that can be pretended to.
+
+
+
+ Chapter X.
+
+ BATTLE OF HOHENFRIEDBERG.
+
+With the first streak of dawn, the dispute renewed itself between
+those Prussians and Saxons who are on the Heights of Striegau.
+The two Armies are in contact here; they lie wide apart as yet at
+the other end. Cannonading rises here, on both sides, in the dim
+gray of the morning, for the possession of these Heights.
+The Saxons are out-cannonaded and dislodged, other Saxons start to
+arms in support: the cry "To arms!" spreads everywhere, rouses
+Weissenfels to horseback; and by sunrise a furious storm of battle
+has begun, in this part. Hot and fierce on both sides; charges of
+horse, shock after shock, bayonet-charges of foot; the great guns
+going like Jove's thunder, and the continuous tearing storm of
+small guns, very loud indeed: such a noise, as our poor
+Schoolmaster, who lives on this spot, thinks he will hear only once
+again, when the Last Trumpet sounds! It did indeed, he informs us,
+resemble the dissolution of Nature: "For all fell dark too;"
+a general element of sulphurous powder-smoke, streaked with dull
+blazes; and death and destruction very nigh. What will become of
+poor pacific mortals hereabouts? Rittmeister Seydlitz, Winterfeld
+his patron ride, with knit brows, in these horse-charges;
+fiery Rothenburg too; Truchsess von Waldburg, at the head of his
+Division,--poor Truchsess known in London society, a cannon-ball
+smites the life out of him, and he ended here.
+
+At the first clash of horse and foot, the Saxons fancied they
+rather had it; at the second, their horse became distressed; at the
+third, they rolled into disorderly heaps. The foot also, stubborn
+as they were, could not stand that swift firing, followed by the
+bayonet and the sabre; and were forced to give ground. The morning
+sun shone into their eyes, too, they say; and there had risen a
+breath of easterly wind, which hurled the smoke upon them, so that
+they could not see. Decidedly staggering backwards; getting to be
+taken in flank and ruined, though poor Weissenfels does his best.
+About five in the morning, Friedrich came galloping hitherward;
+Valori with him: "MON AMI, this is looking well! This will do,
+won't it?" The Saxons are fast sinking in the scale; and did
+nothing thenceforth but sink ever faster; though they made a stiff
+defence, fierce exasperation on both sides; and disputed every
+inch. Their position, in these scraggy Woods and Villages, in these
+Morasses and Carp-Husbandries, is very strong.
+
+It had proved to be farther north, too, than was expected; so that
+the Prussians had to wheel round a little (right wing as a centre,
+fighting army as radius) before they could come parallel, and get
+to work: a delicate manoeuvre, which they executed to Valori's
+admiration, here in the storm of battle; tramp, tramp, velocity
+increasing from your centre outwards, till at the end of the
+radius, the troops are at treble-quick, fairly running forward, and
+the line straight all the while. Admirable to Valori, in the hot
+whirlwind of battle here. For the great guns go, in horrid salvos,
+unabated, and the crackling thunder of the small guns; "terrible
+tussling about those Carp-ponds, that quaggy Carp-husbandry," says
+the Schoolmaster, "and the Heavens blotted out in sulphurous fire-
+streaked smoke. What had become of us pacific? Some had run in
+time, and they were the wisest; others had squatted, who could find
+a nook suitable. Most of us had gathered into the Nursery-garden at
+the foot of our Village; we sat quaking there,--our prayers grown
+tremulously vocal;--in tears and wail, at least the women part.
+Enemies made reconcilement with each other," says he, "and dear
+friends took farewell." [His Narrative, in Lutzow, UBI SUPRA.]
+One general Alleleu; the Last Day, to all appearance, having come.
+Friedrich, seeing things in this good posture, gallops to the left
+again, where much urgently requires attention from him.
+
+On the Austrian side, Prince Karl, through his morning sleep at
+Hausdorf, had heard the cannonading: "Saxons taking Striegau!"
+thinks he; a pleasant lullaby enough; and continues to sleep and
+dream. Agitated messengers rush in, at last; draw his curtains:
+"Prussians all in rank, this side Striegau Water; Saxons beaten, or
+nearly so, at Striegau: we must stand to arms, your Highness!"--
+"To arms, of course," answers Karl; and hurries now, what he can,
+to get everything in motion. The bivouac itself had been in order
+of battle; but naturally there is much to adjust, to put in trim;
+and the Austrians are not distinguished for celerity of movement.
+All the worse for them just now.
+
+On Friedrich's side, so far as I can gather, there have happened
+two cross accidents. First, by that wheeling movement, done to
+Valori's admiration in the Striegau quarter, the Prussian line has
+hitched itself up towards Striegau, has got curved inward, and
+covers less ground than was counted on; so that there is like to be
+some gap in the central part of;--as in fact there was, in spite of
+Friedrich's efforts, and hitchings of battalions and squadrons:
+an indisputable gap, though it turned to rich profit for Friedrich;
+Prince Karl paying no attention to it. Upon such indisputable gap a
+wakeful enemy might have done Friedrich some perilous freak;
+but Karl was in his bed, as we say;--in a terrible flurry, too,
+when out of bed. Nothing was done upon the gap; and Friedrich had
+his unexpected profit by it before long.
+
+The second accident is almost worse. Striegau Bridge (of planks, as
+I feared), creaking under such a heavy stream of feet aud wheels
+all night, did at last break, in some degree, and needed to be
+mended; so that the rearward regiments, who are to form Friedrich's
+left wing, are in painful retard;--and are becoming frightfully
+necessary, the Austrians as yet far outflanking us, capable of
+taking us in flank with that right wing of theirs! The moment was
+agitating to a General-in-chief: Valori will own this young King's
+bearing was perfect; not the least flurry, though under such a
+strain. He has aides-de-camp, dashing out every-whither with
+orders, with expedients; Prince Henri, his younger Brother:
+galloping the fastest; nay, at last, he begs Valori himself to
+gallop, with orders to a certain General Gessler, in whose Brigade
+are Dragoons. Which Valori does,--happily without effect on
+Gessler; who knows no Valori for an aide-de-camp, and keeps the
+ground appointed him; rearward of that gap we talked of.
+
+Happily the Austrian right wing is in no haste to charge.
+Happily Ziethen, blocked by that incumbrance of the Bridge mending,
+"finds a ford higher up," the assiduous Ziethen; splashes across,
+other regiments following; forms in line well leftward; and instead
+of waiting for the Austrian charge, charges home upon them,
+fiercely through the difficult grounds, No danger of the Austrians
+outflanking us now; they are themselves likely to get hard measure
+on their flank. By the ford and by the Bridge, all regiments, some
+of them at treble-quick, get to their posts still in time.
+Accident second has passed without damage. Forward, then;
+rapid, steady; and reserve your fire till within fifty paces!--
+Prinoe Ferdinand of Brunswick (Friedrich's Brother-in-law, a
+bright-eyed steady young man, of great heart for fight) tramps
+forth with his Division:--steady!--all manner of Divisions tramp
+forth; and the hot storm, Ziethen and cavalry dashing upon that
+right wing of theirs, kindles here also far and wide.
+
+The Austrian cavalry on this wing and elsewhere, it is clear, were
+ill off. "We could not charge the Prussian left wing, say they,
+partly because of the morasses that lay between us; and partly
+[which is remarkable] because they rushed across and charged us."
+[Austrian report, <italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end italic>
+i. 1113.] Prince Karl is sorry to report such things of his
+cavalry; but their behavior was bad and not good. The first shock
+threw them wavering; the second,--nothing would persuade them to
+dash forth and meet it. High officers commanded, obtested, drew out
+pistols, Prince Karl himself shot a fugitive or two,--it was to no
+purpose; they wavered worse at every new shock; and at length a
+shock came (sixth it was, as the reporter counts) which shook them
+all into the wind. Decidedly shy of the Prussians with their new
+manoeuvres, and terrible way of coming on, as if sure of beating.
+In the Saxon quarter, certain Austrian regiments of horse would not
+charge at all; merely kept firing from their carbines, and when the
+time came ran.
+
+As for the Saxons, they have been beaten these two hours; that is
+to say, hopeless these two hours, and getting beaten worse and
+worse. The Saxons cannot stand, but neither generally will they
+run; they dispute every ditch, morass and tuft of wood, especially
+every village. Wrecks of the muddy desperate business last, hour
+after hour. "I gave my men a little rest under the garden walls,"
+says one Saxon Gentleman, "or they would have died, in the heat and
+thirst and extreme fatigue: I would have given 100 gulden
+[10 pounds Sterling] for a glass of water." [<italic> Helden-
+Geschichte, <end italic> ubi supra.] The Prussians push them on,
+bayonet in back; inexorable, not to be resisted; slit off whole
+battalions of them (prisoners now, and quarter given); take all
+their guns, or all that are not sunk in the quagmires;--in fine,
+drive them, part into the Mountains direct, part by circuit
+thither, down upon the rear of the Austrian fight: through
+Hausdorf, Seifersdorf and other Mountain gorges, where we hear no
+more of them, and shall say no more of them. A sore stroke for poor
+old Weissenfels; the last public one he has to take, in this world,
+for the poor man died before long. Nobody's blame, he says;
+every Saxon man did well; only some Austrian horse-regiments, that
+we had among us, were too shy. Adieu to poor old Weissenfels.
+Luck of war, what else,--thereby is he in this pass.
+
+And now new Prussian force, its Saxons being well abolished, is
+pressing down upon Prince Karl's naked left flank. Yes;--Prince
+Karl too will have to go. His cavalry is, for most part, shaken
+into ragged clouds; infantry, steady enough men, cannot stand
+everything. "I have observed," says Friedrich, "if you step sharply
+up to an Austrian battalion [within fifty paces or so], and pour in
+your fire well, in about a quarter of an hour you see the ranks
+beginning to shake, and jumble towards indistinctness;"
+[<italic> Military Instructions. <end italic>] a very hopeful
+symptom to you!
+
+It was at this moment that Lieutenant-General Gessler, under whom
+is the Dragoon regiment Baireuth, who had kept his place in spite
+of Valori's message, determined on a thing,--advised to it by
+General Schmettau (younger Schmettau), who was near. Gessler, as we
+saw, stood in the rear line, behind that gap (most likely one of
+several gaps, or wide spaces, left too wide, as we explained);
+Gessler, noticing the jumbly condition of those Austrian
+battalions, heaped now one upon another in this part,--motions to
+the Prussian Infantry to make what farther room is needful;
+then dashes through, in two columns (self and the Dragoon-Colonel
+heading the one, French Chasot, who is Lieutenant-Colonel, heading
+the other), sabre in hand, with extraordinary impetus and fire,
+into the belly of these jumbly Austrians; and slashes them to rags,
+"twenty battalions of them," in an altogether unexampled manner.
+Takes "several thousand prisoners," and such a haul of standards,
+kettle-drums and insignia of honor, as was never got before at one
+charge. Sixty-seven standards by the tale, for the regiment (by
+most All-Gracious Permission) wears, ever after, "67" upon its
+cartridge-box, and is allowed to beat the grenadier march;
+[Orlich, ii. 179 (173 n., 179 n., slightly wrong); <italic>
+Militair-Lexikon, <end italic> ii. 9, iv. 465, 468. See Preuss,
+i. 212; <italic> OEuvres de Frederic; <end italic> &c. &c.]--how
+many kettle-drums memory does not say.
+
+Prince Karl beats retreat, about 8 in the morning; is through
+Hohenfriedberg about 10 (cannon covering there, and Nadasti as
+rear-guard): back into the Mountains; a thoroughly well-beaten man.
+Towards Bolkenhayn, the Saxons and he; their heavy artillery and
+baggage had been left safe there. Not much pursued, and gradually
+rearranging himself; with thoughts,--no want of thoughts!
+Came pouring down, triumphantly invasive, yesterday; returns, on
+these terms, in about fifteen hours. Not marching with displayed
+banners and field-music, this time; this is a far other march.
+The mouse-trap had been left open, and we rashly went in!--Prince
+Karl's loss, including that of the Saxons (which is almost equal,
+though their number in the field was but HALF), is 9,000 dead and
+wounded, 7,000 prisoners, 66 cannon, 73 flags and standards;
+the Prussian is about 5,000 dead and wounded. [In Orlich (ii. 182)
+all the details.] Friedrich, at sight of Valori, embraces his GROS
+VALORI; says, with a pious emotion in voice and look, "My friend,
+God has helped me wonderfully this day!" Actually there was a kind
+of devout feeling visible in him, thinks Valori: "A singular
+mixture, this Prince, of good qualities and of bad; I never know
+which preponderates." [Valori, SOEPIUS.] As is the way with fat
+Valoris, when they come into such company.
+
+Friedrich is blamed by some military men, and perhaps himself
+thought it questionable, that he did not pursue Prince Karl more
+sharply. He says his troops could not; they were worn out with the
+night's marching and the day's fighting. He himself may well be
+worn out. I suppose, for the last four-and-twenty hours he, of all
+the contemporary sons of Adam, has probably been the busiest.
+Let us rest this day; rest till to-morrow morning, and be thankful.
+"So decisive a defeat," writes he to his Mother (hastily, misdating
+"6th" June for 4th), "has not been since Blenheim" [Letter in
+<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> xxvi. 71.] (which is
+tolerably true); and "I have made the Princes sign their names," to
+give the good Mother assurance of her children in these perils of
+war. Seldom has such a deliverance come to a man.
+
+
+
+ Chapter XI.
+
+ CAMP OF CHLUM: FRIEDRICH CANNOT ACHIEVE PEACE.
+
+Friedrich marched, on the morrow, likewise to Bolkenhayn; which the
+enemy have just left; our hussars hanging on their rear, and
+bickering with Nadasti. Then again on the morrow, Sunday,--"twelve
+hours of continuous rain," writes Valori; but there is no down-
+pour, or distress, or disturbance that will shake these men from
+their ranks, writes Valori. And so it goes on, march after march,
+the Austrians ahead, Dumoulin and our hussars infesting their rear,
+which skilfully defended itself: through Landshut down into
+Bohemia; where are new successive marches, the Prussian
+quarterstaff stuck into the back of defeated Austria, "Home with
+you; farther home!"--and shogging it on,--without pause, for about
+a fortnight to come. And then only with temporary pause; that is to
+say, with intricate manoeuvrings of a month long, which shove it to
+Konigsgratz, its ultimatum, beyond which there is no getting it.
+The stages and successive campings, to be found punctually in the
+old Books and new, can interest only military readers. Here is a
+small theological thing at Landshut, from first hand:--
+
+JUNE 8th, 1745. "The Army followed Dumoulin's Corps, and marched
+upon Landshut. On arriving in that neighborhood, the King was
+surrounded by a troop of 2,000 Peasants,"--of Protestant persuasion
+very evidently! (which is much the prevailing thereabouts),--"who
+begged permission of him 'to massacre the Catholics of these parts,
+and clear the country of them altogether.' This animosity arose
+from the persecutions which the Protestants had suffered during the
+Austrian domination, when their churches used to be taken from them
+and given to the Popish priests,"--churches and almost their
+children, such was the anxiety to make them orthodox. The patience
+of these peasants had run over; and now, in the hour of hope, they
+proposed the above sweeping measure. "The King was very far from
+granting them so barbarous a permission. He told them, 'They ought
+rather to conform to the Scripture precept, to bless those that
+cursed them, and pray for those that despitefully used them;
+such was the way to gain the Kingdom of Heaven.' The peasants,"
+rolling dubious eyes for a moment, "answered, His Majesty was
+right; and desisted from their cruel pretension." [<italic> OEuvres
+de Frederic, <end italic> ii.218.] ...--"On Hohenfriedberg Day,"
+says another Witness, "as far as the sound of the cannon was heard,
+all round, the Protestants fell on their knees, praying for victory
+to the Prussians;" [In Ranke, iii. 259.] and at Breslau that
+evening, when the "Thirteen trumpeting Postilions" came tearing in
+with the news, what an enthusiasm without limit!
+
+Prince Karl has skill in choosing camps and positions:
+his Austrians are much cowed; that is the grievous loss in his late
+fight. So, from June 8th, when they quit Silesia,--by two roads to
+go more readily,--all through that month and the next, Friedrich
+spread to the due width, duly pricking into the rear of them,
+drives the beaten hosts onward and onward. They do not think of
+fighting; their one thought is to get into positions where they can
+have living conveyed to them, and cannot be attacked; for the
+former of which objects, the farther homewards they go, it is the
+better. The main pursuit, as I gather, goes leftward from Landshut,
+by Friedland,--the Silesian Friedland, once Wallenstein's.
+Through rough wild country, the southern slope of the Giant
+Mountains, goes that slow pursuit, or the main stream of it, where
+Friedrich in person is; intricate savage regions, cut by
+precipitous rocks and soaking quagmires, shaggy with woods:
+watershed between the Upper Elbe and Middle Oder; Glatz on our
+left,--with the rain of its mountains gathering to a Neisse River,
+eastward, which we know; and on their west or hither side, to a
+Mietau, Adler, Aupa and other many-branched feeders of the Elbe.
+Most complex military ground, the manoeuvrings on it endless,--
+which must be left to the reader's fancy here.
+
+About the end of June, Karl and his Austrians find a place suitable
+to their objects: Konigsgratz, a compact little Town, in the nook
+between the Elbe and Adler; covered to west and to south by these
+two streams; strong enough to east withal; and sure and convenient
+to the southern roads and victual. Against which Friedrich's
+manoeuvres avail nothing; so that he at last (20th July) crosses
+Elbe River; takes, he likewise, an inexpugnable Camp on the
+opposite shore, at a Village called Chlum; and lies there, making a
+mutual dead-lock of it, for six weeks or more. Of the prior Camps,
+with their abundance of strategic shufflings, wheelings, pushings,
+all issuing in this of Chlum, we say nothing: none of them,--
+except the immediately preceding one, called of Nahorzan, called
+also of Drewitz (for it was in parts a shifting entity, and flung
+the LIMBS of it about, strategically clutching at Konigsgratz),--
+had any permanency: let us take Chlum (the longest, and essentially
+the last in those parts) as the general summary of them, and alone
+rememberable by us. ["Camp of Gross-Parzitz [across the Mietau, to
+dislodge Prince Karl from his shelter behind that stream], June
+14th:" "Camp of Nahorzan, June 18th [and abstruse manoeuvrings, of
+a month, for Konigsgratz]: 20th July," cross Elbe for Chlum;
+and lie, yourself also inexpugnable, there. See <italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> (iii. 120 et seq.); especially see Orlich
+(ii. pp. 193, 194, 203, &c. &c.),--with an amplitude of inorganic
+details, sufficient to astonish the robustest memory!]
+
+Friedrich's purposes, at Chlum or previously, are not towards
+conquests in Bohemia, nor of fighting farther, if he can help it.
+But, in the mean while, he is eating out these Bohemian vicinages;
+no invasion of Silesia possible from that quarter soon again.
+That is one benefit: and he hopes always his enemies, under screw
+of military pressure with the one hand, and offer of the olive-
+branch with the other, will be induced to grant him Peace.
+Britannic Majesty, after Fontenoy and Hohenfriedberg, not to
+mention the first rumors of a Jacobite Rebellion, with France to
+rear of it, is getting eager to have Friedrich settled with, and
+withdrawn from the game again;--the rather, as Friedrich, knowing
+his man, has ceased latterly to urge him on the subject. Peace with
+George the Purseholder, does not that mean Peace with all the
+others? Friedrich knows the high Queen's indignation; but he little
+guesses, at this time, the humor of Bruhl and the Polish Majesty.
+He has never yet sent the Old Dessauer in upon them; always only
+keeps him on the slip, at Magdeburg; still hoping actualities may
+not be needed. He hopes too, in spite of her indignation, the
+Hungarian Majesty, with an Election on hand, with the Netherlands
+at such a pass, not to speak of Italy and the Middle Rhine, will
+come to moderate views again. On which latter points, his reckoning
+was far from correct! Within three months, Britannic Majesty and he
+did get to explicit Agreement (CONVENTION OF HANOVER, 26th August):
+but in regard to the Polish Majesty and the Hungarian there proved
+to be no such result attainable, and quite other methods
+necessary first!
+
+"Of military transactions in this Camp of Chlum, or in all these
+Bohemian-Silesian Camps, for near four months, there is nothing, or
+as good as nothing: Chlum has no events; Chlum vigilantly guards
+itself; and expects, as the really decisive to it, events that will
+happen far away. We are to conceive this military business as a
+dead-lock; attended with hussar skirmishes; attacks, defences, of
+outposts, of provision-wagons from Moravia or Silesia:--Friedrich
+has his food from Silesia chiefly, by several routes, 'convoys come
+once in the five days.' His horse-provender he forages;
+with Tolpatches watching him, and continual scufflings of fight:
+'for hay and glory,' writes one Prussian Officer, 'I assure you we
+fight well!' Endless enterprising, manoeuvring, counter-
+manoeuvring there at first was; and still is, if either party stir:
+but here, in their mutually fixed camps, tacit mutual observances
+establish themselves; and amid the rigorous armed vigilantes, there
+are traits of human neighborship. As usual in such cases.
+The guard-parties do not fire on one another, within certain
+limits: a signal that there are dead to bury, or the like, is
+strictly respected. On one such occasion it was (June 30th, Camp-
+of-Nahorzan time) that Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick--Prince
+Ferdinand, with a young Brother Albert volunteering and learning
+his business here, who are both Prussian--had a snatch of interview
+with a third much-loved Brother, Ludwig, who is in the Austrian
+service. A Prussian officer, venturing beyond the limits, had been
+shot; Ferdinand's message, 'Grant us burial of him!' found, by
+chance, Brother Ludwig in command of that Austrian outpost;
+who answers: 'Surely;--and beg that I may embrace my Brothers!'
+And they rode out, those three, to the space intermediate;
+talked there for half an hour, till the burial was done.
+[Mauvillon, <italic> Geschichte Ferdinands von Braunschweig-
+Luneburg, i. 118.] Fancy such an interview between the poor young
+fellows, the soul of honor each, and tied in that manner!
+
+"Trenck of the Life-guard was not quite the soul of honor. It was
+in the Nahorzan time too that Trenck, who had, in spite of express
+order to the contrary, been writing to his Cousin the indigo
+Pandour, was put under arrest when found out. 'Wrote merely about
+horses: purchase of horses, so help me God!' protests the
+blusterous Life-guardsman, loud as lungs will,--whether with truth
+in them, nobody can say. 'Arrest for breaking orders!' answers
+Friedrich, doubting or disbelieving the horses; and loud Trenck is
+packed over the Hills to Glatz; to Governor Fouquet, or Substitute;
+--where, by not submitting and repenting, by resisting and
+rebelling, and ever again doing it, he makes out for himself, with
+Fouquet and his other Governors, what kind of life we know!
+'GARDEZ E'TROITEMENT CE DROLE-LA, IL A VOULU DEVENIR PANDOUR AUPRES
+DE SON ONCLE (Keep a tight hold of this fine fellow; he wanted to
+become Pandour beside his Uncle)!' writes Friedrich:--'Uncle'
+instead of 'Cousin,' all one to Friedrich. This he writes with his
+own hand, on the margin: 28th June, 1745; the inexorable Records
+fix that date. [Rodenbeck. iii. 381. Copy of the Warrant, once
+PENES ME.] Which I should not mention, except for another
+inexorable date (30th September), that is coming; and the
+perceptible slight comfort there will be in fixing down a loud-
+blustering, extensively fabulous blockhead, still fit for the
+Nurseries, to one undeniable premeditated lie, and tar-marking him
+therewith, for benefit of more serious readers." As shall be done,
+were the 30th of September come!
+
+Here is still something,--if it be not rather nothing, by a great
+hand! Date uncertain; Camp-of-Chlum time, pretty far on: ...
+"There are continual foragings, on both sides; with parties
+mutually dashing out to hinder the same. The Prussians have a
+detached post at Smirzitz; which is much harassed by Hungarians
+lurking about, shooting our sentry and the like. An inventive head
+contrives this expedient. Stuff a Prussian uniform with straw;
+fix it up, by aid of ropes and check-strings, to stand with musket
+shouldered, and even to glide about to right and left, on judicious
+pulling. So it is done: straw man is made; set upon his ropes, when
+the Tolpatches approach; and pensively saunters to and fro,--his
+living comrades crouching in the bushes near by. Tolpatches fire on
+the walking straw sentry; straw sentry falls flat; Tolpatches rush
+in, esurient, triumphant; are exploded in a sharp blast of musketry
+from the bushes all round, every wounded man made prisoner;--and
+come no more back to that post." Friedrich himself records this
+little fact: "slight pleasantry to relieve the reader's mind," says
+he, in narrating it. [<italic> OEuvres, <end italic> iii. 123.]
+--Enough of those small matters, while so many large are waiting.
+
+June 26th, a month before Chlum, General Nassau had been detached,
+with some 8 or 10,000, across Glatz Country, into Upper Silesia, to
+sweep that clear again. Hautcharmoi, quitting the Frontier Towns,
+has joined, raising him to 15,000; and Nassau is giving excellent
+account of the multitudinous Pandour doggeries there; and will
+retake Kosel, and have Upper Silesia swept before very long.
+[Kosel, "September 5th:" Excellent, lucid and even entertaining
+Account of Nassau's Expedition, in the form of DIARY (a model, of
+its kind), in <italic> Feldzuge, <end italic> iv. 257, 371, 532.]
+On the other hand, the Election matter (KAISERWAHL, a most
+important point) is obviously in threatening, or even in desperate
+state! That famed Middle-Rhine Army has gone to the--what shall
+we say?
+
+JULY 5th-19th, MIDDLE-RHINE COUNTRY. "The first Election-news that
+reaches Friedrich is from the Middle-Rhine Country, and of very bad
+complexion. Readers remember Traun, and his Bathyanis, and his
+intentions upon Conti there. In the end of May, old Traun, things
+being all completed in Bavaria, had got on march with his Bavarian
+Army, say 40,000, to look into Prince Conti down in those parts;
+a fact very interesting to the Prince. Traun held leftward,
+westward, as if for the Neckar Valley,--'Perhaps intending to be
+through upon Elsass, in those southern undefended portions of the
+Rhine?' Conti, and his Segur, and Middle-Rhine Army stood
+diligently on their guard; got their forces, defences, apparatuses,
+hurried southward, from Frankfurt quarter where they lay on watch,
+into those Neckar regions. Which seen to be done, Traun whirled
+rapidly to rightward, to northward; crossed the Mayn at Wertheim,
+wholly leaving the Neckar and its Conti; having weighty business
+quite in the other direction,--on the north side of the Mayn,
+namely; on the Kinzig River, where Bathyani (who has taken
+D'Ahremberg's command below Frankfurt, and means to bestir himself
+in another than the D'Ahremberg fashion) is to meet him on a set
+day. Traun having thus, by strategic suction, pulled the Middle-
+Rhine Army out of his and Bathyani's way, hopes they two will
+manage a junction on the Kinzig; after junction they will be a
+little stronger than Conti, though decidedly weaker taken one by
+one. Traun, in the long June days, had such a march, through the
+Spessart Forest (Mayn River to his left, with our old friends
+Dettingen, Aschaffenburg, far down in the plain), as was hardly
+ever known before: pathless wildernesses, rocky steeps and chasms;
+the sweltering June sun sending down the upper snows upon him in
+the form of muddy slush; so that 'the infantry had to wade haunch-
+deep in many of the hollow parts, and nearly all the cavalry lost
+its horse-shoes.' A strenuous march; and a well-schemed. For at the
+Kinzig River (Conti still far off in the Neckar country), Bathyani
+punctually appeared, on the opposite shore; and Traun and he took
+camp together; July 5th, at Langen-Selbord (few miles north of
+Hanau, which we know);--and rest there; calculating that Conti is
+now a manageable quantity;--and comfortably wait till the Grand-
+Duke arrives. [Adelung, iv. 421; v. 36.] For this is,
+theoretically, HIS Army; Grand-Duke Franz being the Commander's
+Cloak, this season; as Karl was last,--a right lucky Cloak he,
+while Traun lurked under him, not so lucky since! July 13th, Franz
+arrived; and Traun, under Franz, instantly went into Conti (now
+again in those Frankfurt parts); clutched at Conti, Briareus-like,
+in a multiform alarming manner: so that Conti lost head; took to
+mere retreating, rushing about, burning bridges;--and in fine, July
+19th, had flung himself bodily across the Rhine (clouds of
+Tolpatches sticking to him), and left old Traun and his Grand-Duke
+supreme lord in those parts. Who did NOT invade Elsass, as was now
+expected; but lay at Heidelberg, intending to play pacifically a
+surer card. All French are out of Teutschland again; and the
+game given up. In what a premature and shameful manner!
+thinks Friedrich.
+
+"Nominally it was the Grand-Duke that flung Conti over the Rhine;
+and delivered Teutschland from its plagues. After which fine feat,
+salvatory to the Cause of Liberty, and destructive to French
+influence, what is to prevent his election to the Kaisership?
+Friedrich complains aloud: 'Conti has given it up; you drafted
+15,000 from him (for imaginary uses in the Netherlands),--you have
+given it up, then! Was that our bargain?' 'We have given it up,'
+answers D'Argenson the War-minister, writing to Valori; 'but,'--
+And supplies, instead of performance according to the laws of fact,
+eloquent logic; very superfluous to Friedrich and the said laws!--
+Valori, and the French Minister at Dresden, had again been trying
+to stir up the Polish Majesty to stand for Kaiser; but of course
+that enterprise, eager as the Polish Majesty might be for such a
+dignity, had now to collapse, and become totally hopeless. A new
+offer of Friedrich's to co-operate had been refused by Bruhl, with
+a brevity, a decisiveness--'Thinks me finished (AUX ABOIS),' says
+Friedrich; 'and not worth giving terms to, on surrendering!'
+The foolish little creature; insolent in the wrong quarter!"
+[<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 128.]
+
+'The German Burden, then,--which surely was mutual, at lowest, and
+lately was French altogether,--the French have thrown it off;
+the French have dropped their end of the BEARING-POLES (so to
+speak), and left Friedrich by himself, to stand or stagger, under
+the beweltered broken harness-gear and intolerable weight! That is
+one's payment for cutting the rope from their neck last year!--
+Long since, while the present Campaign was being prepared for,
+under such financial pressures, Friedrich had bethought him,
+"The French might, at least give me money, if they can nothing
+else?"--and he had one day penned a Letter with that object;
+but had thrown it into his desk again, "No; not till the very last
+extremity, that!" Friedrich did at last despatch the unpleasant
+missive: "Service done you in Elsass, let us say little of it;
+but the repayment has been zero hitherto: your Bavarian expenses
+(poor Kaiser gone, and Peace of Fussen come!) are now ended:--
+A round sum, say of 600,000 pounds, is becoming indispensable here,
+if we are to keep on our feet at all!" Herr Ranke, who has seen the
+Most Christian King's response (though in a capricious way), finds
+"three or four successive redactions" of the difficult passage;
+all painfully meaning, "Impossible, alas!"--painfully adding, "We
+will try, however!" And, after due cunctations, Friedrich waiting
+silent the while,--Louis, Most Christian King, who had failed in so
+many things towards Friedrich, does empower Valori To offer him a
+subsidy of 600,000 livres a month, till we see farther.
+Twenty thousand pounds a month; he hopes this will suffice, being
+himself run terribly low. Friedrich's feeling is to be guessed:
+"Such a dole might answer to a Landgraf of Hessen-Darmstadt; but to
+me is not in the least suitable;"--and flatly refuses it;
+FIEREMENT, says Valori. [Ranke, iii. 235, 299 n. (not the least of
+DATE allowed us in either case); Valori. i. 240.]
+
+MON GROS VALORI, who could not himself help all this, poor soul,
+"falls now into complete disgrace;" waits daily upon Friedrich at
+the giving out of the parole, "but frequently his Majesty does not
+speak to me at all." Hardly looks at me, or only looks as if I had
+suddenly become Zero Incarnate. It is now in these days, I suppose,
+that Friedrich writes about the "Scamander Battle" (of Fontenoy),
+and "Capture of Pekin," by way of helping one to fight the
+Austrians according to Treaty. And has a touch of bitter sarcasm in
+uttering his complaints against, such treatment,--the heart of him,
+I suppose, bitter enough. Most Christian King has felt this of the
+Scamander, Friedrich perceives; Louis's next letter testifies
+pique;--and of course we are farther from help, on that side, than
+ever. "From the STANDE of the Kur-Mark [Brandenburg] Friedrich was
+offered a considerable subsidy instead; and joyfully accepted the
+same, 'as a loan:'"--paid it punctually back, too; and never, all
+his days, forgot it of those STANDE. [Stenzel, iv. 255; Ranke, &c.]
+
+
+ CAMP OF DIESKAU: BRITANNIC MAJESTY MAKES PEACE, FOR HIMSELF,
+ WITH FRIEDRICH; BUT CANNOT FOR AUSTRIA OR SAXONY.
+
+About the middle of August, there are certain Saxon phenomena which
+awaken dread expectation in the world. Friedrich, watching, Argus-
+like, near and far, in his Chlum observatory, has noticed that
+Prince Karl is getting reinforced in Konigsgratz; 10,000 lately,
+7,000 more coming;--and contrariwise that the Saxons seem to be
+straggling off from him; ebbing away, corps after corps,--towards
+Saxony, can it be? There are whispers of "Bavarian auxiliaries"
+being hired for them, too. And little Bruhl's late insolence;
+Bruhl's evident belief that "we are finished (AUX ABOIS)"?
+Putting all this together, Friedrich judges--with an indignation
+very natural--that there is again some insidious Saxon mischief,
+most likely an attack on Brandenburg, in the wind. Friedrich orders
+the Old Dessauer, "March into them, delay no longer!" and publishes
+a clangorously indignant Manifesto (evidently his own writing, and
+coming from the heart): [In Adelung, v. 64-71 (no date; "middle of
+August," say the Books).] "How they have, not bound by their
+Austrian Treaty, wantonly invaded our Silesia; have, since and
+before, in spite of our forbearance, done so many things:--and, in
+fact, have finally exhausted our patience; and are forcing us to
+seek redress and safety by the natural methods," which they will
+see how they like!--
+
+Old Leopold advances straightway, as bidden, direct for the Saxon
+frontier. To whom Friedrich shoots off detachments,--Prince
+Dietrich, with so many thousands, to reinforce Papa; then General
+Gessler with so many,--till Papa is 30,000 odd; and could eat
+Saxony at a mouthful; nothing whatever being yet ready there on
+Bruhl's part, though he has such immense things in the wind!--
+Nevertheless Friedrich again paused; did not yet strike. The Saxon
+question has Russian bug-bears, no end of complications.
+His Britannic Majesty, now at Hanover, and his prudent Harrington
+with him, are in the act of laboring, with all earnestness, for a
+general Agreement with Friedrich. Without farther bitterness,
+embroilment and bloodshed: how much preferable for Friedrich!
+Old Dessauer, therefore, pauses: "Camp of Dieskau," which we have
+often heard of, close on the Saxon Border; stands there, looking
+over, as with sword drawn, 30,000 good swords,--but no stroke, not
+for almost three months more. In three months, wretched Bruhl had
+not repented; but, on the contrary, had completed his preparations,
+and gone to work;--and the stroke did fall, as will be seen.
+That is Bruhl's posture in the matter. [Ranke, iii. 231, 314.]
+
+To Britannic George, for a good while past, it has been manifest
+that the Pragmatic Sanction, in its original form, is an extinct
+object; that reconquest of Silesia, and such like, is melancholy
+moonshine; and that, in fact, towards fighting the French with
+effect, it is highly necessary to make peace with Friedrich of
+Prussia again. This once more is George's and his Harrington's
+fixed view. Friedrich's own wishes are known, or used to be, ever
+since the late Kaiser's death,--though latterly he has fallen
+silent, and even avoids the topic when offered (knowing his man)!
+Herrington has to apply formally to Friedrich's Minister at
+Hanover. "Very well, if they are in earnest this time," so
+Friedrich instructs his Minister: "My terms are known to you;
+no change admissible in the terms;--do not speak with me on it
+farther: and, observe, within four weeks, the thing finished, or
+else broken off!" [Ranke, iii. 277-281.] And in this sense they are
+laboring incessantly, with Austria, with Saxony,--without the least
+success;--and Excellency Robinson has again a panting uncomfortable
+time. Here is a scene Robinson transacts at Vienna, which gives us
+a curious face-to-face glimpse of her Hungarian Majesty, while
+Friedrich is in his Camp at Chlum.
+
+
+ SCHONBRUNN, 2d AUGUST, 1745, ROBINSON HAS AUDIENCE OF
+ HER HUNGARIAN MAJESTY.
+
+Robinson, in a copious sonorous speech (rather apt to be copious,
+and to fall into the Parliamentary CANTO-FERMO), sets forth how
+extremely ill we Allies are faring on the French hand; nothing done
+upon Silesia either; a hopeless matter that,--is it not, your
+Majesty? And your Majesty's forces all lying there, in mere dead-
+lock; and we in such need of bhem! "Peace with Prussia is
+indispensable."--To which her Majesty listened, in statuesque
+silence mostly; "never saw her so reserved before, my Lord." ...
+
+ROBINSON. ... "'Madam, the Dutch will be obliged to accept
+Neutrality' [and plump down again, after such hoisting]!
+
+QUEEN. "'Well, and if they did, they? "It would be easier to
+accommodate with France itself, and so finish the whole matter,
+than with Prussia." My Army could not get to the Netherlands this
+season. No General of mine would undertake conducting it at this
+day of the year. Peace with Prussia, what good could it do
+at present?'
+
+ROBINSON. "'England has already found, for subsidies, this year,
+1,178,753 pounds. Cannot go on at that rate. Peace with Prussia is
+one of the returns the English Nation expects for all it has done.'
+
+QUEEN. "'I must have Silesia again: without Silesia the Kaiserhood
+were an empty title. "Or would you have us administer it under the
+guardiancy of Prussia!"' ...
+
+ROBINSON. "'In Bohemia itself things don't look well; nothing done
+on Friedrich: your Saxons seem to be qnarrelling with you, and
+going home.'
+
+QUEEN. "'Prince Karl is himself capable of fighting the Prussians
+again. Till that, do not speak to me of Peace! Grant me only
+till October!'
+
+ROBINSON. "'Prussia will help the Grand-Duke to Kaisership.'
+
+QUEEN. "'The Grand-Duke is not so ambitions of an empty honor as to
+engage in it under the tutelage of Prussia. Consider farther:
+the Imperial dignity, is it compatible with the fatal deprivation
+of Silesia? "One other battle, I say! Good God, give me only till
+the month of October!"'
+
+ROBINSON. "'A battle, Madam, if won, won't reconquer Silesia;
+if lost, your Majesty is ruined at home.'
+
+QUEEN. "'DUSSE'JE CONCLURE AVEC LUI LE LENDEMAIN, JE LUI LIVRERAIS
+BATAILLE CE SOIR (Had I to agree with him to-morrow, I would try
+him in a battle this evening)!'" [Robinson's Despatch, 4th August,
+1745. Ranke, iii. 287; Raumer, pp. 161, 162.]
+
+Her Majesty is not to be hindered; deaf to Robinson, to her
+Britannic George who pays the money. "Cruel man, is that what you
+call keeping the Pragmatic Sanction; dismembering me of Province
+after Province, now in Germany, then in Italy, on pretext of
+necessity? Has not England money, then? Does not England love the
+Cause of Liberty? Give me till October!" Her Majesty did take till
+October, and later, as we shall see; poor George not able to
+hinder, by power of the purse or otherwise: who can hinder high
+females, or low, when they get into their humors? Much of this
+Austrian obstinacy, think impartial persons, was of female nature.
+We shall see what profit her Majesty made by taking till October.
+
+As for George, the time being run, and her Majesty and Saxony
+unpersuadable, he determined to accept Friedrich's terms himself,
+in hope of gradually bringing the others to do it. August 26th, at
+Hanover, there is signed a CONVENTION OF HANOVER between Friedrich
+and him: "Peace on the old Breslau-Berlin terms,--precisely the
+same terms, but Britannic Majesty to have them guaranteed by All
+the Powers, on the General Peace coming,--so that there be no
+snake-procedure henceforth." Silesia Friedrich's without fail, dear
+Hanover unmolested even by a thought of Friedrich's;--and her
+Hungarian Majesty to be invited, nay urged by every feasible
+method, to accede. [Adelung, v. 75; is "in Rousset, xix. 441;"
+in &c. &c.] Which done, Britannic Majesty--for there has hung
+itself out, in the Scotch Highlands, the other day ("Glenfinlas,
+August 12th"), a certain Standard "TANDEM TRIUMPHANS," and
+unpleasant things are imminent!--hurries home at his best pace, and
+has his hands full there, for some time. On Austria, on Saxony, he
+could not prevail: "By no manner of means!" answered they; and went
+their own road,--jingling his Britannic subsidies in their pocket;
+regardless of the once Supreme Jove, who is sunk now to a very
+different figure on the German boards.
+
+Friedrich's outlook is very bad: such a War to go on, and not even
+finance to do it with. His intimates, his Rothenburg one time, have
+"found him sunk in gloomy thought." But he wears a bright face
+usually. No wavering or doubting in him, his mind made up; which is
+a great help that way. Friedrich indicates, and has indicated
+everywhere, for many months, that Peace, precisely on the old
+footing, is all he wants: "The Kaiser being dead, whom I took up
+arms to defend, what farther object is there?" says he.
+"Renounce Silesia, more honestly than last time; engage to have it
+guaranteed by everybody at the General Peace (or perhaps
+Hohenfriedberg will help to guarantee it),--and I march home!"
+My money is running down, privately thinks he; guarantee Silesia,
+and I shall be glad to go. If not, I must raise money somehow; melt
+the big silver balustrades at Berlin, borrow from the STANDE, or do
+something; and, in fact, must stand here, unless Silesia is
+guaranteed, and struggle till I die.
+
+That latter withal is still privately Friedrich's thought. Under
+his light air, he carries unspoken that grimly clear determination,
+at all times, now and henceforth; and it is an immense help to the
+guidance of him. An indispensable, indeed. No king or man,
+attempting anything considerable in this world, need expect to
+achieve it except, tacitly, on those same terms, "I will achieve it
+or die!" For the world, in spite of rumors to the contrary, is
+always much of a bedlam to the sanity (so far as he may have any)
+of every individual man. A strict place, moreover; its very
+bedlamisms flowing by law, as do alike the sudden mud- deluges, and
+the steady Atlantic tides, and all things whatsoever: a world
+inexorable, truly, as gravitation itself;--and it will behoove you
+to front it in a similar humor, as the tacit basis for whatever
+wise plans you lay. In Friedrich, from the first entrance of him on
+the stage of things, we have had to recognize this prime quality,
+in a fine tacit form, to a complete degree; and till his last exit,
+we shall never find it wanting. Tacit enough, unconscious almost,
+not given to articulate itself at all;--and if there be less of
+piety than we could wish in the silence of it, there is at least no
+play-actor mendacity, or cant of devoutness, to poison the high
+worth of it. No braver little figure stands on the Earth at that
+epoch. Ready, at the due season, with his mind silently made
+up;--able to answer diplomatic Robinsons, Bartensteins and the very
+Destinies when they apply. If you will withdraw your snakish
+notions, will guarantee Silesia, will give him back his old Treaty
+of Berlin in an irrefragable shape, he will march home; if not, he
+will never march home, but be carried thither dead rather. That is
+his intention, if the gods permit.
+
+ GRAND-DUKE FRANZ IS ELECTED KAISER (13TH SEPTEMBER, 1745);
+ FRIEDRICH, THE SEASON AND FORAGE BEING DONE, MAKES
+ FOR SILESIA.
+
+There occurred at Frankfurt--the clear majority, seven of the nine
+Electors, Bavaria itself (nay Bohemia this time, "distaff" or not),
+and all the others but Friedrich and Kur-Pfalz, being so disposed
+or so disposable, Traun being master of the ground--no difficulty
+about electing Grand-Duke Franz Stephan of Tuscany? Joint-King of
+Bohemia, to be Kaiser of the Holy Romish Reich. Friedrich's envoy
+protested;--as did Kur-Pfalz's, with still more vehemence, and then
+withdrew to Hanau: the other Seven voted September 13th 1745: and
+it was done. A new Kaiser, Franz Stephan, or Franz I.,--with our
+blessing on him, if that can avail much. But I fear it cannot. Upon
+such mendacious Empty-Case of Kaiserhood, without even money to
+feed itself, not to speak of governing, of defending and coercing;
+upon such entities the blessings of man avail little; the gods,
+having warned them to go, do not bless them for staying! --However,
+tar-barrels burn, the fountains play (wine in some of them, I
+hope); Franz is to be crowned in a fortnight hence, with
+extraordinary magnificence. At this last part of it Maria Theresa
+will, in her own high person, attend; and proceeds accordingly
+towards Frankfurt, in the end of September (say the old Books), so
+soon as the Election is over.
+
+Hungarian Majesty's bearing was not popular there, according to
+Friedrich,--who always admires her after a sort, and always speaks
+of her like a king and gentleman:--but the High Lady, it is
+intimated, felt somewhat too well that she was high. Not sorry to
+have it known, under the due veils, that her Kaiser-Husband is but
+of a mimetic nature; that it is she who has the real power; and
+that indeed she is in a victorious posture at present. Very high in
+her carriage towards the Princes of the Reich, and their
+privileges:--poor Kur-Pfalz's notary, or herald, coming to protest
+(I think, it was the second time) about something, she quite
+disregarded his tabards, pasteboards, or whatever they were, and
+clapt him in prison. The thing was commented upon; but Kur-Pfalz
+got no redress. Need we repeat,--lazy readers having so often met
+him, and forgotten him again,--this is a new younger Kur-Pfalz:
+Karl Theodor, this one; not Friedrich Wilhelm's old Friend, but his
+Successor, of the Sulzbach line; of whom, after thirty years or so,
+we may again hear. He can complain about his violated tabard; will
+get his notary out of jail again, but no redress.
+
+Highish even towards her friends, this "Empress-Queen"
+(KAISERIN-KONIGIN, such her new title), and has a kind of
+"Thank-you-for-
+Nothing" air towards them. Prussian Majesty, she said, had
+unquestionable talents; but, oh, what a character! Too much levity,
+she said, by far; heterodox too, in the extreme; a BOSER MANN;--and
+what a neighbor has he been! As to Silesia, she was heard to say,
+she would as soon part with her petticoat as part with it.
+[<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 126, 128.]--
+So that there is not the least prospect of peace here? "None,"
+answer Friedrich's emissaries, whom he had empowered to hint the
+thing. Which is heavy news to Friedrich.
+
+Early in August, not long after that Audience of Robinson's, her
+Majesty, after repeated written messages to Prince Karl, urging him
+to go into fight again or attempt something, had sent two high
+messengers: Prince Lobkowitz, Duke d'Ahremberg, high dignitaries
+from Court, have come to Konigsgratz with the latest urgencies, the
+newest ideas; and would fain help Prince Karl to attempt something.
+Daily they used to come out upon a little height, in view of
+Friedrich's tent, and gaze in upon him, and round all Nature, "with
+big tubes," he says, "as if they had been astronomers;" but never
+attempted anything. We remember D'Ahremberg, and what part he has
+played, from the Dettingen times and onward. "A debauched old
+fellow," says Friedrich; "gone all to hebetude by his labors in
+that line; agrees always with the last speaker." Prince Karl seems
+to have little stomach himself; and does not see his way into (or
+across) another Battle. Lobkowitz, again, is always saying:
+"Try something! We are now stronger than they, by their detachings,
+by our reinforcings" (indeed, about twice their number, regular and
+irregular), though most of the Saxons are gone home. After much
+gazing through their tubes, the Austrians (August 23d) do make a
+small shift of place, insignificant otherwise; the Prussians, next
+day, do the like, in consequence; quit Chlum, burning their huts;
+post themselves a little farther up the Elbe,--their left at a
+place called Jaromirz, embouchure of the Aupa into Elbe,
+[<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 129.]--and are
+again unattackable.
+
+The worst fact is the multitude of Pandours, more and more
+infesting our provision-roads; and that horse-forage itself is, at
+last, running low. Detachments lie all duly round to right and
+left, to secure our communications with Silesia, especially to
+left, out of Glatz, where runs one of the chief roads we have.
+But the service is becoming daily more difficult. For example:--
+
+"NEUSTADT, 8th SEPTEMBER. In that left-hand quarter, coming out of
+Glatz at a little Bohemian Town called Neustadt, the Prussian
+Commander, Tauenzien by name, was repeatedly assaulted; and from
+September 8th, had to stand actual siege, gallantly repulsing a
+full 10,000 with their big artillery, though his walls were all
+breached, for about a week, till Friedrich sent him relief.
+Prince Lobkowitz, our old anti-Belleisle friend, who is always of
+forward fiery humor, had set them on this enterprise; which has
+turned out fruitless. The King is much satisfied with Tauenzien;
+[Ib. 132.] of whom we shall hear again. Who indeed becomes notable
+to us, were it only for getting one Lessing as secretary, by and
+by: Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, whose fame has since gone into all
+countries; the man having been appointed a 'Secretary' to the very
+Destinies, in some sort; that is to say, a Writer of Books which
+have turned out to have truth in them! Tauenzien, a grimmish
+aquiline kind of man, of no superfluous words, has distinguished
+himself for the present by defending Neustadt, which the Austrians
+fully counted to get hold of."
+
+Let us give another little scene; preparatory to quitting this
+Country, as it is evident the King and we will soon have to do;
+Country being quite eaten out, Pandours getting ever rifer, and the
+Season done:--
+
+JAROMIRZ, "EARLY IN SEPTEMBER," 1745. "Jaromirz is a little
+Bohemian Town on the Aupa, or between the Aupa and Metau branches
+of the Upper Elbe; four or five miles north of Semonitz, where
+Friedrich's quarter now is. Valori, so seldom spoken to, is lodged
+in a suburb there: 'Had not you better go into the town itself?'
+his Majesty did once say; but Valori, dreading nothing, lodged on,
+--'Landlord a Burgher whom I thought respectable.' Respectable, yes
+he; but his son had been dealing with Franquini the Pandour, and
+had sold Valori,--night appointed, measures all taken; a miracle if
+Valori escape. Franquini, chief of 30,000 Pandours, has come in
+person to superintend this important capture; and lies hidden, with
+a strong party, in the woods to rearward. Prussians about 200,
+scattered in posts, occupy the hedges in front, for guard of the
+ovens; to rear, Jaromirz being wholly ours, there is no suspicion.
+
+"In the dead of the night, Franquini emerges from the woods;
+sends forward a party of sixty, under the young Judas; who, by
+methods suitable, gets them stealthily conducted into Papa's Barn,
+which looks across a courtyard into Valori's very windows. From the
+Barn it is easy, on paws of velvet, to get into the House, if you
+have a Judas to open it. Which you have:--bolts all drawn for you,
+and even beams ready for barricading if you be meddled with.
+'Upstairs is his Excellency asleep; Excellency's room is--to right,
+do you remember; or to left'--'Pshaw, we shall find it!'
+The Pandours mount; find a bedroom, break it open,--some fifteen or
+sixteen of them, and one who knows a little French;--come crowding
+forward: to the horror and terror of the poor inhabitant.'
+'QUE VOULEZ-VOUS DONC?' 'His Excellency Valori!' 'Well, no
+violence; I am your prisoner: let me dress!' answers the supposed
+Excellency,--and contrives to secrete portfolios, and tear or make
+away with papers. And is marched off, under a select guard, who
+leave the rest to do the pillage. And was not Valori at all;
+was Valori's Secretary, one D'Arget, who had called himself Valori
+on this dangerous occasion! Valori sat quaking behind his
+partition; not till the Pandours began plundering the stables did
+the Prussian sentry catch sound of them, and plunge in."
+
+Friedrich had his amusement out of this adventure; liked D'Arget,
+the clever Secretary; got D'Arget to himself before long, as will
+be seen;--and, in quieter times, dashed off a considerable
+Explosion of Rhyme, called LE PALLADION (Valori as Prussia's
+"Palladium," with Devils attempting to steal him, and the like),
+which was once thought an exquisite Burlesque,--Kings coveting a
+sight of it, in vain,--but is now wearisome enough to every reader.
+[Valori, i. 242; <italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic>
+iii. 130: for the Fact. Exquisite Burlesque, PALLADION itself, is
+in <italic> OEuvres, <end italic> xi. 192-271 (see IB. 139): a bad
+copy of that very bad Original, JEANNE D'ARC,--the only thing now
+good in it, Friedrich's polite yet positive refusal to gratify King
+Louis and his Pompdour with a sight of it (see IB. PREFACE, x-xiv,
+Friedrich's Letter to Louis; date of request and of refusal, March,
+1750).]--Let us attend his Majesty's exit from Bohemia.
+
+
+
+ Chapter XII.
+
+ BATTLE OF SOHR.
+
+The famed beautiful Elbe River rises in romantic chasms, terrible
+to the picturesque beholder, at the roots of the Riesengebirge;
+overlooked by the Hohe-Kamms, and highest summits of that chain.
+"Out of eleven wells," says gentle Dulness, "EILF or ELF QUELLEN,
+whence its name, Elbe for ELF." Sure enough, it starts out of
+various wells; [Description, in Zollner, <italic> Briefe uber
+Schlesien, <end italic> ii. 305; in &c. &c.] rushes out, like a
+great peacock's or pasha's tail, from the roots of the Giant
+Mountains thereabouts; and hurries southward,--or even rather
+eastward, at first; for (except the Iser to westward, which does
+not fall in for a great while) its chief branches come from the
+eastern side: Aupa, Metau, Adler, the drainings of Glatz, and of
+that rugged Country where Friedrich has been camping and
+manoeuvring all summer. On the whole, its course is southward for
+the first seventy or eighty miles, washing Jaromirz, Konigshof,
+Konigsgratz, down to Pardubitz: at Pardubitz it turns abruptly
+westward, and holds on so, bending even northward, by hill and
+plain, through the rest of its five or six hundred miles.
+
+Its first considerable branch, on that eastern or left bank, is the
+Aupa, which rises in the Pass of Schatzlar (great struggling there,
+for convoys, just now); goes next by Trautenau, which has lately
+been burnt; and joins the Elbe at Jaromirz, where Valori was
+stolen, or nearly so, from under the Prussian left wing. The Aupa
+runs nearly straight south; the Elbe, till meeting it, has run
+rather southeast; but after joining they go south together,
+augmented by the Metau, by the Adler, down to Pardubitz, where the
+final turn to west occurs. Jaromirz, which lies in the very angle
+of Elbe and Aupa, is the left wing of Friedrich's Camp; main body
+of the Camp lies on the other side of the Elbe, but of course has
+bridges (as at Smirzitz, where that straw sentry did his pranks
+lately); bridges are indispensable, part of our provision coming
+always by that BOHEMIAN Neustadt, from the northeast quarter out of
+Silesia; though the main course of our meal (and much fighting for
+it) is direct from the north, by the Pass of Schatzlar,--
+"Chaslard," as poor Valori calls it.
+
+Thus Friedrich lay, when Valori escaped being stolen;
+when Tauenzien was assailed by the 10,000 Pandours with siege
+artillery, and stood inexpugnable in the breach till Friedrich
+relieved him. Those Pandours "had cut away his water, for the last
+two days;" so that, except for speedy relief, all valor had been in
+vain. Water being gone, not recoverable without difficulties,
+Neustadt was abandoned (September 16th, as I guess);--one of our
+main Silesian roads for meal has ceased. We have now only Schatzlar
+to depend on; where Franquini--lying westward among the glens of
+the Upper Elbe, and possessed of abundant talent in the Tolpatch
+way (witness Valori's narrow miss lately)--gives us trouble enough.
+Friedrich determines to move towards Schatzlar. Homewards, in fact;
+eating the Country well as he goes.
+
+Saturday, 18th September, Friedrich crosses the Elbe at Jaromirz.
+Entirely unopposed; the Austrians were all busy firing FEU-DE-JOIE
+for the Election of their Grand-Duke: Election done five days ago
+at Frankfurt, and the news just come. So they crackle about, and
+deliver rolling fire, at a great rate; proud to be "IMPERIAL Army"
+henceforth, as if that could do much for them. There was also vast
+dining, for three days, among the high heads, and a great deal of
+wine spent. That probably would have been the chance to undertake
+something upon them, better than crossing the Elbe, says Friedrich
+looking back. But he did not think of it in time; took second-best
+in place of best.
+
+He is now, therefore, over into that Triangular piece of Country
+between Elbe and Aupa (if readers will consult their Map); in that
+triangle, his subsequent notable operations all lie. He here
+proposes to move northward, by degrees,--through Trautenau,
+Schatzlar, and home; well eating this bit of Country too, the last
+uneaten bit, as he goes. This well eaten, there will be no harbor
+anywhere for Invasion, through the Winter coming. One of my old
+Notes says of it, in the topographic point of view:--
+
+"It is a triangular patch of Country, which has lain asleep since
+the Creation of the World; traversed only by Boii (BOI-HEIM-ERS,
+Bohemians), Czechs and other such populations, in Human History;
+but which Friedrich has been fated to make rather notable to the
+Moderns henceforth. Let me recommend it to the picturesque tourist,
+especially to the military one. Lovers of rocky precipices,
+quagmires, brawling torrents and the unadulterated ruggedness of
+Nature, will find scope there; and it was the scene of a
+distinguished passage of arms, with notable display of human
+dexterity and swift presence of mind. For the rest, one of the
+wildest, and perhaps (except to the picturesque tourist) most
+unpleasant regions in the world. Wild stony upland; topmost Upland,
+we may say, of Europe in general, or portion of such Upland;
+for the rainstorms hereabouts run several roads,--into the German
+Ocean and Atlantic by the Elbe, into the Baltic by the Oder, into
+the Black Sea by the Donau;--and it is the waste Outfield whither
+you rise, by long weeks-journeys, from many sides.
+
+"Much of it, towards the angle of Elbe and Aupa, is occupied by a
+huge waste Wood, called 'Kingdom Forest' (KONIGREICH SYLVA or WALD,
+peculium of Old Czech Majesties, I fancy); may be sixty square
+miles in area, the longer side of which lies along the Elbe.
+A Country of rocky defiles; lowish hills chaotically shoved
+together, not wanting their brooks and quagmires, straight
+labyrinthic passages; shaggy with wild wood. Some poor Hamlets here
+and there, probably the sleepiest in Nature, are scattered about;
+there may be patches ploughable for rye [modern Tourist says
+snappishly, There are many such; whole region now drained;
+reminded me of Yorkshire Highlands, with the Western Sun gilding
+it, that fine afternoon!]--ploughable for rye, buckwheat;
+boggy grass to be gathered in summer; charcoaling to do; pigs at
+least are presumable, among these straggling outposts of humanity
+in their obscure Hamlets: poor ploughing, moiling creatures, they
+little thought of becoming notable so soon! None of the Books (all
+intent on mere soldiering) take the least notice of them; not at
+the pains to spell their Hamlets right: no more notice than if they
+also had been stocks and moss-grown stones. Nevertheless, there
+they did evidently live, for thousands of years past, in a dim
+manner;--and are much terrified to have become the seat of war, all
+on a sudden. Their poor Hamlets, Sohr, Staudentz, Prausnitz,
+Burgersdorf and others still send up a faint smoke; and have in
+them, languidly, the live-coal of mysterious human existence, in
+those woods,--to judge by the last maps that have come out. A thing
+worth considering by the passing tourist, military or other."
+
+It is in this Kingdom Forest (which he calls ROYAUME DE SILVA,
+instead of SYLVA DE ROYAUME) that Friedrich now nmrches;
+keeping the body of the Forest well on his left, and skirting the
+southern and eastern sides of it. Rough marching for his Majesty;
+painfully infested by Nadastian Tolpatches; who run out on him from
+ambushes, and need to be scourged; one ambush in particular, at a
+place called Liebenthal (second day's march, and near the end of
+it),-- where our Prussian Hussars, winding like fiery dragons on
+the dangerous precipices, gave them better than they brought, and
+completely quenched their appetite for that day. After Liebenthal,
+the march soon ends; three miles farther on, at the dim wold-hamlet
+of Staudentz: here a camp is pitched; here, till the Country is
+well eaten out, or till something else occur, we propose to tarry
+for a time.
+
+Horse-forage abounds here; but there is no getting of it without
+disturbance from those dogs; you must fight for every truss of
+grass: if a meal-train is coming, as there does every five days,
+you have to detach 8,000 foot and 3,000 horse to help it safe in.
+A fretting fatiguing time for regular troops. Our bakery is at
+Trautenau,--where Valori is now lodging. The Tolpatchery, unable to
+take Trautenau, set fire to it, though it is their own town, their
+own Queen's town; thatchy Trautenau, wooden too in the upper
+stories of it, takes greedily to the fire; goes all aloft in flame,
+and then lies black. A scandalous transaction, thinks Friedrich.
+The Prussian corn lay nearly all in cellars; little got, even of
+the Prussians, by such an atrocity: and your own poor fellow-
+subjects, where are they? Valori was burnt out here; again exploded
+from his quarters, poor man;--seems to have thought it a mere fire
+in his own lodging, and that he was an unfortunate diplomatist.
+Happily he got notice (PRIVATISSIME, for no officer dare whisper in
+such cases) that there is an armed party setting out for Silesia,
+to guard meal that is coming: Valori yokes himself to this armed
+party, and gets safe over the Hills with it,--then swift, by extra
+post, to Breslau and to civilized (partially civilized)
+accommodation, for a little rest after these hustlings
+and tossings.
+
+Friedrich had lain at Staudentz, in this manner, bickering
+continually for his forage, and eating the Country, for about ten
+days: and now, as the latter process is well on, and the season
+drawing to a close: he determines on a shift northward.
+Thursday, 30th September next, let there be one other grand forage,
+the final one in this eaten tract, then northward to fresh grounds.
+That, it appears, was the design. But, on Wednesday, there came in
+an Austrian deserter; who informs us that Prince Karl is not now in
+Konigsgratz, but in motion up the Elbe; already some fifty miles
+up; past Jaromirz: his rear at Konigshof, his van at Arnau,--on a
+level with burnt Trautenau, and farther north than we ourselves
+are. This is important news. "Intending to block us out from
+Schatzlar? Hmh!" Single scouts, or small parties, cannot live in
+this Kingdom Wood, swarming with Pandours: Friedrich sends out a
+Colonel Katzler, with 500 light horse, to investigate a little.
+Katzler pushes forward, on such lane or forest road-track as there
+is, towards Konigshof; beats back small hussar parties;--comes, in
+about an hour's space, not upon hussars merely, but upon dense
+masses of heavy horse winding through the forest lanes; and, with
+that imperfect intelligence, is obliged to return. The deserter
+spake truth, apparently; and that is all we can know. Forage scheme
+is given up; the order is, "Baggage packed, and MARCH to-morrow
+morning at ten." Long before ten, there had great things befallen
+on the morrow!--Try to understand this Note a little:--
+
+"The Camp of Staudentz- which two persons (the King, and General
+Stille, a more careful reporter, who also was an eye-witness) have
+done their best to describe--will, after all efforts, and an
+Ordnance Map to help, remain considerably unintelligible to the
+reader; as is too usual in such cases. A block of high-lying
+ground; Friedrich's Camp on it, perhaps two miles long, looks to
+the south; small Village of Staudentz in front; hollow beyond that,
+and second small Village, Deutsch Prausnitz, hanging on the
+opposite slope, with shaggy heights beyond, and the Kingdom Forest
+there beginning: on the left, defiles, brooks and strait country,
+leading towards the small town of Eypel: that is our left and front
+aspect, a hollow well isolating us on those sides. Hollow continues
+all along the front; hollow definite on our side of it, and forming
+a tolerable defence:--though again, I perceive, to rightward at no
+great distance, there rise High Grounds which considerably overhang
+us." A thing to be marked! "These we could not occupy, for want of
+men; but only maintain vedettes upon them. Over these Heights, a
+mile or two westward of this hollow of ours, runs the big winding
+hollow called Georgengrund (GEORGE'S BOTTOM), which winds up and
+down in that Kingdom Forest, and offers a road from Konigshof to
+Trautenau, among other courses it takes.
+
+"From the crown of those Heights on our right flank here, looking
+to the west, you might discern (perhaps three miles off, from one
+of the sheltering nooks in the hither side of that Georgengrund),
+rising faintly visible over knolls and dingles, the smoke of a
+little Forest Village. That Village is Sohr; notable ever since,
+beyond others, in the Kingdom Wood. Sohr, like the other Villages,
+has its lane-roads; its road to Trautenau, to Konigshof, no doubt;
+but much nearer you, on our eastern slope of the Heights, and far
+hitherward of Sohr, which is on the western, goes the great road
+[what is now the great road], from Konigshof to Trautenau, well
+visible from Friedrich's Camp, though still at some distance from
+it. Could these Heights between us and Sohr, which lie beyond the
+great road, be occupied, we were well secured; isolated on the
+right too, as on the other sides, from Kingdom Forest and its
+ambushes. 'Should have been done,' admits Friedrich; 'but then,
+as it is, there are not troops enough:' with 18,000 men you cannot
+do everything!"
+
+Here, however, is the important point. In Sohr, this night, 29th
+September, in a most private manner, the Austrians, 30,000 of them
+and more, have come gliding through the woods, without even their
+pipe lit, and with thick veil of hussars ahead! Outposts of theirs
+lie squatted in the bushes behind Deutsch Prausnitz, hardly 500
+yards from Friedrich's Camp. And eastward, leftward of him, in the
+defiles about Eypel, lie Nadasti and Ruffian Trenck, with ten or
+twelve thousand, who are to take him in rear. His "Camp of
+Staudentz" will be at a fine pass to-morrow morning. The Austrian
+Gentlemen had found, last week, a certain bare Height in the Forest
+(Height still known), from which they could use their astronomer
+tubes day after day; [Orlich, ii. 225.] and now they are about
+attempting something!
+
+Thursday morning, very early, 30th September, 1745, Friedrich was
+in his tent, busy with generals and march-routes,--when a rapid
+orderly comes in, from that Vedette, or strong Piquet, on the
+Heights to our right: "Austrians visibly moving, in quantity, near
+by!" and before he has done answering, the officer himself arrives:
+"Regular Cavalry in great force; long dust-cloud in Kingdom Forest,
+in the gray dawn; and, so far as we can judge, it is their Army
+coming on." Here is news for a poor man, in the raw of a September
+morning, by way of breakfast to him! "To arms!" is, of course,
+Friedrich's instant order; and he himself gallops to the Piquet on
+the Heights, glass in hand. "Austrian Army sure enough, thirty to
+thirty-five thousand of them, we only eighteen. [<italic> OEuvres
+de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 139.] Coming to take us on the right
+flank here; to attack our Camp by surprise: will crush us northward
+through the defiles, and trample us down in detail? Hmh! To run for
+it, will never do. We must fight for it, and even attack THEM, as
+our way is, though on such terms. Quick, a plan!" The head of
+Friedrich is a bank you cannot easily break by coming on it for
+plans: such a creature for impromptu plans, and unexpected dashes
+swift as the panther's, I have hardly known,--especially when you
+squeeze him into a corner, and fancy he is over with it!
+Friedrich gallops down, with his plan clear enough; and already the
+Austrians, horse and foot, are deploying upon those Heights he has
+quitted; Fifty Squadrons of Horse for left wing to them, and a
+battery of Twenty-eight big Guns is establishing itself where
+Friedrich's Piquet lately stood.
+
+Friedrich's right flank has to become his front, and face those
+formidable Austrian Heights and Batteries; and this with more than
+Prussian velocity, and under the play of those twenty-eight big
+guns, throwing case-shot (GRENADES ROYALES) and so forth, all the
+while. To Valori, when he heard of the thing, it is inconceivable
+how mortal troops could accomplish such a movement;
+Friedrich himself praises it, as a thing honorably well done.
+Took about half an hour; case-shot raining all the while;
+soldier honorably never-minding: no flurry, though a speed like
+that of spinning-tops. And here we at length are, Staudentz now to
+rear of us, behind our centre a good space; Burgersdorf in front of
+us to right, our left reaching to Prausnitz: Austrian lines, three
+deep of them, on the opposite Height; we one line only, which
+matches them in length.
+
+They, that left wing of horse, should have thundered down on us,
+attacking us, not waiting our attack, thinks Friedrich; but they
+have not done it. They stand on their height there, will perhaps
+fire carbines, as their wont is. "You, Buddenbrock, go into them
+with your Cuirassiers!" Buddenbrock and the Cuirassiers, though it
+is uphill, go into them at a furious rate; meet no countercharge,
+mere sputter of carbines;--tumble them to mad wreck, back upon
+their second line, back upon their third: absurdly crowded there on
+their narrow height, no room to manoeuvre; so that they plunge,
+fifty squadrons of them, wholly into the Georgengrund rearward,
+into the Kingdom Wood, and never come on again at all.
+Buddenbrock has done his job right well.
+
+Seeing which, our Infantry of the right wing, which stood next to
+Buddenbrock, made impetuous charge uphill, emulous to capture that
+Battery of Twenty-eight; but found it, for some time, a terrible
+attempt. These Heights are not to be called "hills," still less
+"mountains" (as in some careless Books); but it is a stiff climb at
+double-quick, with twenty-eight big guns playing in the face of
+you. Storms of case-shot shear away this Infantry, are quenching
+its noble fury in despair; Infantry visibly recoiling, when our
+sole Three Regiments of Reserve hurry up to support. Round these
+all rallies; rushes desperately on, and takes the Battery,--of
+course, sending the Austrian left wing rapidly adrift, on loss of
+the same.
+
+This, I consider, is the crisis of the Fight; the back of the
+Austrian enterprise is already broken, by this sad winging of it on
+the left. But it resists still; comes down again,--the reserve of
+their left wing seen rapidly making for Burgersdorf, intending an
+attack there; which we oppose with vigor, setting Burgersdorf on
+fire for temporary screen; and drive the Austrian reserve rapidly
+to rearward again. But there is rally after rally of them.
+They rank again on every new height, and dispute there; loath to be
+driven into Kingdom Wood, after such a flourish of arms.
+One height, "bushy steep height," the light-limbed valiant Prince,
+little Ferdinand of Brunswick, had the charge of attacking; and he
+did it with his usual impetus and irresistibility:--and, strangely
+enough, the defender of it chanced to be that Brother of his,
+Prince Ludwig, with whom he had the little Interview lately.
+Prince Ludwig got a wound, as well as lost his height. The third
+Brother, poor Prince Albrecht, who is also here, as volunteer
+apprentice, on the Prussian side, gets killed. There will never be
+another Interview, for all three, between the Camps! Strange times
+for those poor Princes, who have to seek soldiering for
+their existence.
+
+Meanwhile the Cavalry of Buddenbrock, that is to say of the right
+wing, having now no work in that quarter, is despatched to
+reinforce the left wing, which has stood hitherto apart on its own
+ground; not attacked or attacking,--a left wing REFUSED, as the
+soldiers style it. Reinforced by Buddenbrock, this left wing of
+horse does now also storm forward;--"near the Village of Prausnitz"
+(Prausnitz a little way to rear of it), thereabouts, is the scene
+of its feat. Feat done in such fashion that the Austrians opposite
+will not stand the charge at all; but gurgle about in a chaotic
+manner; then gallop fairly into Kingdom Wood, without stroke
+struck; and disappear, as their fellows had done. Whereupon the
+Prussian horse breaks in upon the adjoining Infantry of that flank
+(Austrian right flank, left bare in this manner); champs it also
+into chaotic whirlpools; cuts away an outskirt of near 2,000
+prisoners, and sets the rest running. This seems to have been
+pretty much the COUP-DE-GRACE of the Fight; and to have brought the
+Austrian dispute to finis. From the first, they had rallied on the
+heights; had struggled and disputed. Two general rallies they made,
+and various partial, but none had any success. They were driven on,
+bayonet in back, as the phrase is: with this sad slap on their
+right, added to that old one on their left, what can they now do
+but ebb rapidly; pour in cataracts into Kingdom Wood, and disappear
+there? [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 135-143;
+Stille, pp. 144-163; Orlich, ii. 227-243; <italic> Feldzuge, <end
+italic> i. 357, 363, 374.]
+
+Prince Karl's scheme was good, says Friedrich; but it was ill
+executed. He never should have let us form; his first grand fault
+was that he waited to be attacked, instead of attacking. Parts of
+his scheme were never executed at all. Duke d'Ahremberg, for
+instance, it is said, had so dim a notion of the ground, that he
+drew up some miles off, with his back to the Prussians. Such is the
+rumor,--perhaps only a rumor, in mockery of the hebetated old
+gentleman fallen unlucky? On the other hand, that Nadasti made a
+failure which proved important, is indubitable. Nadasti, with some
+thousands of Tolpatchery, was at Liebenthal, four miles to
+southeast of the action; Ruffian Trenck lay behind Eypel, perhaps
+as far to east, of it: Trenck and Nadasti were to rendezvous, to
+unite, and attack the Prussian Camp on its rear,--"Camp," so ran
+the order, for it was understood the Prussians would all be there,
+we others attacking it in front and both flanks;--which turned out
+otherwise, not for Nadasti alone!
+
+Nadasti came to his rendezvous in time; Ruffian Trenck did not:
+Nadasti grew tired of waiting for Trenck, and attacked the Camp by
+himself:--Camp, but not any men; Camp being now empty, and the men
+all fighting, ranked at right angles to it, furlongs and miles
+away. Nadasti made a rare hand of the Camp; plundered everything,
+took all the King's Camp-furniture, ready money, favorite dog
+Biche,--likewise poor Eichel his Secretary, who, however, tore the
+papers first. Tolpatchery exultingly gutted the Camp; and at last
+set fire to it,--burnt even some eight or ten poor Prussian sick,
+and also "some women whom they caught. We found the limbs of these
+poor men and women lying about," reports old General Lehwald;
+who knew about it. A doggery well worthy of the gallows, think
+Lehwald and I. "Could n't help it; ferocity of wild men," says
+Nadasti. "Well; but why not attack, then, with your ferocity?"
+Confused Court-martial put these questions, at Vienna subsequently;
+and Ruffian Trenck, some say, got injustice, Nadasti shuffling
+things upon him; for which one cares almost nothing. Lehwald, lying
+at Trautenau, had heard the firing at sunrise; and instantly
+marched to help: he only arrived to give Nadasti a slash or two,
+and was too late for the Fight. Oue Schlichtling, on guard with a
+weak party, saved what was in the right wing of the Camp,--small
+thanks to him, the Main Fight being so near: Friedrich's opinion
+is, an Officer, in Schlichtling's place, ought to have done more,
+and not have been so helpless.
+
+This was the Battle of Sohr; so called because the Austrians had
+begun there, and the Prussians ended there. The Prussian pursuit
+drew bridle at that Village; unsafe to prosecute Austrians farther,
+now in the deeps of Kingdom Forest. The Battle has lasted five
+hours. It must be now getting towards noon; and time for breakfast,
+if indeed any were to be had; but that is next to impossible,
+Nadasti having been so busy. Not without extreme difficulty is a
+manchet of bread, with or without a drop of wine, procured for the
+King's Majesty this day. Many a tired hero will have nothing but
+tobacco, with spring-water, to fall back upon. Never mind! says the
+King, says everybody. After all, it is a cheap price to pay for
+missing an attack from Pandours in the rear, while such crisis went
+on ahead.
+
+Lying COUSIN Trenck, of the Life-guard, who is now in Glatz, gives
+vivid eye-witness particulars of these things, time of the morning
+and so on; says expressly he was there, and what he did there,
+[Frederic Baron de Trenck, <italic> Memoires, traduits par lui-meme
+<end italic> (Strasbnrg and Paris, 1789), i. 74-78, 79.]--though in
+Glatz under lock and key, three good months before. "How could I
+help mistakes," said he afterwards, when people objected to this
+and that in his blusterous mendacity of a Book: "I had nothing but
+my poor agitated memory to trust to!" A man's memory, when it gets
+the length of remembering that he was in the Battle of Sohr while
+bodily absent, ought it not to--in fact, to strike work; to still
+its agitations altogether, and call halt? Trenck, some months
+after, got clambered out of Glatz, by sewers, or I forget how;
+and leaped, or dropped, from some parapet into the River Neisse,--
+sinking to the loins in tough mud, so that he could not stir
+
+MAP TO GO HERE----BOOK 15-- page 499----
+
+farther. "Fouquet let me stand there half a day, before he would
+pick me out again." Rigorous Bouquet, human mercy forbidding, could
+not let him stand there in permanence,--as we, better
+circumstanced, may with advantage try to do, in time coming!
+
+Friedrich lay at Sohr five days; partly for the honor of the thing,
+partly to eat out the Country to perfection. Prince Karl, from
+Konigshof, soon fell back to Konigsgratz; and lay motionless there,
+nothing but his Tolpatcheries astir, Sohr Country all eaten,
+Friedrich, in the due Divisions, marched northward.
+Through Trautenau, Schatzlar, his own Division, which was the main
+one;--and, fencing off the Tolpatches successfully with trouble,
+brings all his men into Silesia again. A good job of work behind
+them, surely! Cantons them to right and left of Landshut, about
+Rohnstock and Hohenfriedberg, hamlets known so well; and leaving
+the Young Dessauer to command, drives for Berlin (30th October),--
+rapidly, as his wont is. Prince Karl has split up his force at
+Konigsgratz; means, one cannot doubt, to go into winter-quarters.
+If he think of invading, across that eaten Country and those bad
+Mountains,--well, our troops can all be got together in six
+hours' time.
+
+At Trautenau, a week after Sohr, Friedrich had at last received the
+English ratification of that Convention of Hanover, signed 26th
+August, almost a month ago; not ratified till September 22d.
+About which there had latterly been some anxiety, lest his
+Britannic Majesty himself might have broken off from it.
+With Austria, with Saxony, Britannic Majesty has been entirely
+unsuccessful:--"May not Sohr, perhaps, be a fresh persuasive?"
+hopes Friedrich;--but as to Britannic Majesty's breaking off, his
+thoughts are far from that, if we knew! Poor Majesty: not long
+since, Supreme Jove of Germany; and now--is like to be swallowed in
+ragamuffin street-riots; not a thunder-bolt within clutch of him
+(thunder-bolts all sticking in the mud of the Netherlands, far
+off), and not a constable's staff of the least efficacy!
+Consider these dates in combination. Battle of Sohr was on
+THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th:--
+
+"SUNDAY preceding, SEPTEMBER 26th, was such a Lord's-Day in the
+City of Edinburgh, as had not been seen there,--not since Jenny
+Geddes's stool went flying at the Bishop's head, above a hundred
+years before. Big alarm-bell bursting out in the middle of divine
+service; emptying all the Churches ('Highland rebels just at
+hand!')--into General Meeting of the Inhabitants, into Chaos come
+again, for the next forty hours. Till, in the gaunt midnight,
+Tuesday, 2 A.M., Lochiel with about 1,000 Camerons, waiting slight
+opportunity, crushed in through the Netherbow Port; and"--And,
+about noon of that day, a poor friend of ours, loitering expectant
+in the road that leads by St. Anthony's Well, saw making entry into
+paternal Holyrood,--the Young Pretender, in person, who is just
+being proclaimed Prince of Wales, up in the High-street yonder!
+"A tall slender young man, about five feet ten inches high; of a
+ruddy complexion, high-nosed, large rolling brown eyes; long-
+visaged, red-haired, but at that time wore a pale periwig. He was
+in a Highland habit [coat]; over the shoulder a blue sash wrought
+with gold; red velvet breeches; a green velvet bonnet, with white
+cockade on it and a gold lace. His speech seemed very like that of
+an Irishman; very sly [how did you know, my poor friend?];--spoke
+often to O'Sullivan [thought to be a person of some counsel; had
+been Tutor to Maillebois's Boys, had even tried some irregular
+fighting under Maillebois]--to O'Sullivan and" [Henderson, <italic>
+Highland Rebellion, <end italic> p. 14.] ... And on Saturday, in
+short, came PRESTONPANS. Enough of such a Supreme Jove; good for us
+here as a timetable chiefly, or marker of dates!
+
+Sunday, 3d October, King's Adjutant, Captain Mollendorf, a young
+Officer deservedly in favor, arrives at Berlin with the joyful
+tidings of this Sohr business ("Prausnitz" we then called it):
+to the joy of all Prussians, especially of a Queen Mother, for whom
+there is a Letter in pencil. After brief congratulation, Mollendorf
+rushes on; having next to give the Old Dessauer notice of it in his
+Camp at Dieskau, in the Halle neighborhood. Mollendorf appears in
+Halle suddenly next morning, Monday, about ten o'clock, sixteen
+postilions trumpeting, and at their swiftest trot, in front of
+him;--shooting, like a melodious morning-star, across the rusty old
+city, in this manner,--to Dieskau Camp, where he gives the Old
+Dessauer his good news. Excellent Victory indeed; sharp striking,
+swift self-help on our part. Halle and the Camp have enough to
+think of, for this day and the next. Whither Mollendorf went next,
+we will not ask: perhaps to Brunswick and other consanguineous
+places?--Certain it is,
+
+"On Wednesday, the 6th, about two in the afternoon, the Old
+Dessauer has his whole Army drawn out there, with green sprigs in
+their hats, at Dieskau, close upon the Saxon Frontier; and, after
+swashing and manoeuvring about in the highest military style of
+art, ranks them all in line, or two suitable lines, 30,000 of them;
+and then, with clangorous outburst of trumpet, kettle-drum and all
+manner of field-music, fires off his united artillery a first time;
+almost shaking the very hills by such a thunderous peal, in the
+still afternoon. And mark, close fitted into the artillery peal,
+commences a rolling fire, like a peal spread out in threads,
+sparkling strangely to eye and ear; from right to left, long spears
+of fire and sharp strokes of sound, darting aloft, successive
+simultaneous, winding for the space of miles, then back by the rear
+line, and home to the starting-point: very grand indeed. Again, and
+also again, the artillery peal, and rolling small-arms fitted into
+it, is repeated; a second and a third time, kettle-drums and
+trumpets doing what they can. That was the Old Dessauer's bonfiring
+(what is called FEU-DE-JOIE), for the Victory of Sohr; audible
+almost at Leipzig, if the wind were westerly. Overpowering to the
+human mind; at least, to the old Newspaper reporter of that day.
+But what was strangest in the business," continues he "(DAS
+CURIEUSESTE DABEY), was that the Saxon Uhlans, lying about in the
+villages across the Border, were out in the fields, watching the
+sight, hardly 300 yards off, from beginning to end; and little
+dreamed that his High Princely Serenity," blue of face and dreadful
+in war, "was quite close to them, on the Height called Bornhock;
+condescending to 'take all this into High-Serene Eye-shine there;
+and, by having a white flag waved, deigning to give signal for the
+discharges of the artillery.'" [<italic> Helden-Geschichte, <end
+italic> i. 1124.]
+
+By this the reader may know that the Old Dessauer is alive, ready
+for action if called on; and Bruhl ought to comprehend better how
+riskish his game with edge-tools is. Bruhl is not now in an
+unprepared state:--here are Uhlans at one's elbow looking on.
+Rutowski's Uhlans; who lies encamped, not far off, in good force,
+posted among morasses; strongly entrenched, and with schemes in his
+head, and in Bruhl's, of an aggressive, thrice-secret and very
+surprising nature! I remark only that, in Heidelberg Country,
+victorious old Traun is putting his people into winter-quarters;
+himself about to vanish from this History, [Went to SIEBENBURGEN
+(Transylvania) as Governor; died there February, 1748, age
+seventy-one (<italic> Maria Theresiens Leben, <end italic> p. 56
+n.).]--and has detached General Grune with 10,000 men; who left
+Heidelberg October 9th, on a mysterious errand, heeded by nobody;
+and will turn up in the next Chapter.
+
+
+
+ Chapter XIII.
+
+ SAXONY AND AUSTRIA MAKE A SURPRISING LAST ATTEMPT.
+
+After this strenuous and victorious Campaign, which has astonished
+all public men, especially all Pragmatic Gazetteers, and with which
+all Europe is disharmoniously ringing, Friedrich is hopeful there
+will be Peace, through England;--cannot doubt, at least, but the
+Austrians have had enough for one year;--and looks forward to
+certain months, if not of rest, yet of another kind of activity.
+Negotiation, Peace through England, if possible; that is the high
+prize: and in the other case, or in any case, readiness for next
+Campaign;--which with the treasury exhausted, and no honorable
+subsidy from France, is a difficult problem.
+
+That was Friedrich's, and everybody's, program of affairs for the
+months coming: but in that Friedrich and everybody found themselves
+greatly mistaken. Bruhl and the Austrians had decided otherwise.
+"Open mouse-trap," at Striegau; claws of the sleeping cat, at Sohr:
+these were sad experiences; ill to bear, with the Sea-Powers
+grumbling on you, and the world sniffing its pity on you;--but are
+not conclusive, are only provoking and even maddening, to the
+sanguine mind. Two sad failures; but let us try another time.
+"A tricky man; cunning enough, your King of Prussia!" thinks Bruhl,
+with a fellness of humor against Friedrich which is little
+conceivable to us now: "Cunning enough. But it is possible cunning
+may be surpassed by deeper cunning!"--and decides, Bartenstein and
+an indignant Empress-Queen assenting eagerly, That there shall, in
+the profoundest secrecy till it break out, be a third, and much
+fiercer trial, this Winter yet. The Bruhl-Bartenstein plan (owing
+mainly to the Russian Bugbear which hung over it, protective, but
+with whims of its own) underwent changes, successive redactions or
+editions; which the reader would grudge to hear explained to him.
+[Account of them in Orlich, ii. 273-278 (from various RUTOWSKI
+Papers; and from the contemporary satirical Pamphlet,
+"MONDSCHEINWURFE, Mirror-castings of Moonshine, by ZEBEDAUS Cuckoo,
+beaten Captain of a beaten Army."] Of the final or acted edition,
+some loose notion, sufficient for our purpose, may be collected
+from the following fractions of Notes:--
+
+NOVEMBER 17th (INTERIOR OF GERMANY). ... "Feldmarschall-Lieutenant
+von Grune, a General of mark, detached by Traun not long since,
+from the Rhine Country, with a force of 10,000 men, why is he
+marching about: first to Baireuth Country, 'at Hof, November 9th,'
+as if for Bohemia; then north, to Gera ('lies at Gera till the
+17th'), as if for Saxony Proper? Prince Karl, you would certainly
+say, has gone into winter-quarters; about Konigsgratz, and farther
+on? Gone or going, sure enough, is Prince Karl, into the convenient
+Bohemian districts,--uncertain which particular districts; at least
+the Young Dessauer, watching him from the Silesian side, is
+uncertain which. Better be vigilant, Prince Leopold!--Grune, lying
+at Gera yonder, is not intending for Prince Karl, then? No, not
+thither. Then perhaps towards Saxony, to reinforce the Saxons?
+Or some-whither to find fat winter-quarters: who knows? Indeed, who
+cares particularly, for such inconsiderable Grune and his 10,000!--
+
+"The Saxons quitted their inexpugnable Camp towards Halle, some
+time ago; went into cantonments farther inland;--the Old Dessauer
+(middle of October) having done the like, and gone home: his force
+lies rather scattered, for convenience of food and forage. From the
+Silesian side, again, Prince Leopold, whose head-quarters are about
+Striegau, intimates, That he cannot yet say, with certainty, what
+districts Prince Karl will occupy for winter-quarters in Bohemia.
+Prince Karl is vaguely roving about; detaching Pandours to the
+Silesian Mountains, as if for checking our victorious Nassau
+there;--always rather creeping northward; skirting Western Silesia
+with his main force; 30,000 or better, with Lobkowitz and Nadasti
+ahead. Meaning what? Be vigilant, my young friend.
+
+"The private fact is, Prince Karl does not mean to go into winter-
+quarters at all. In private fact, Prince Karl is one of Three
+mysterious Elements or Currents, sent on a far errand: Grune is
+another: Rutowski's Saxon Camp (now become Cantonment) is a third.
+Three Currents instinct with fire and destruction, but as yet quite
+opaque; which have been launched,--whitherward thinks the reader?
+On Berlin itself, and the Mark of Brandenburg; there to collide,
+and ignite in a marvellous manner. There is their meeting-point:
+there shall they, on a sudden, smite one another into flame;
+and the destruction blaze, fiery enough, round Friedrich and his
+own Brandenburg homesteads there!--
+
+"It is a grand scheme; scheme at least on a grand scale. For the
+LEGS of it, Grune's march and Prince Karl's, are about 600 miles
+long! Plan due chiefly, they say, to the yellow rage of Bruhl;
+aided by the contrivance of Rutowski, and the counsel of Austrian
+military men. For there is much consulting about it, and redacting
+of it; Polish Majesty himself very busy. To Bruhl's yellow rage it
+is highly solacing and hopeful. 'Rutowski, lying close in his
+Cantonments, and then suddenly springing out, will overwhelm the
+Old Dessauer, who lies wide;--can do it, surely; and Grune is there
+to help if necessary. Dessauer blown to pieces, Grune, with
+Rutowski combined, push in upon Brandenburg,--Grune himself upon
+Berlin,--from the west and south, nobody expecting him. Prince
+Karl, not taking into winter-quarters in Bohemia, as they idly
+think; but falling down the Valley of the Bober, or Bober and
+Queiss, into the Lausitz (to Gorlitz, Guben, where we have
+Magazines for him), comes upon it from the southeast,--nobody
+expecting any of them. Three simultaneous Armies hurled on the head
+of your Friedrich; combustible deluges flowing towards him, as from
+the ends of Germany; so opaque, silent, yet of fire wholly:
+will not that surprise him!' thinks Bruhl. These are the schemes of
+the little man."
+
+Bruhl, having constituted himself rival to Friedrich, and fallen
+into pale or yellow rage by the course things took, this Plan is
+naturally his chief joy, or crown of joys; a bubbling well of
+solace to him in his parched condition. He should, obviously, have
+kept it secret; thrice-secret, the little fool;--but a poor parched
+man is not always master of his private bubbling wells in that
+kind! Wolfstierna is Swedish Envoy at Dresden; Rudenskjold, Swedish
+Envoy at Berlin, has run over to see him in the dim November days.
+Swedes, since Ulrique's marriage, are friendly to Prussia.
+Bruhl has these two men to dinner; talks with them, over his wine,
+about Friedrich's insulting usage of him, among other topics.
+"Insulting; how, your Excellency?" asks Rudenskjold, privately a
+friend of Friedrich. Bruhl explains, with voice quivering, those
+cuts in the Friedrich manifesto of August last, and other griefs
+suffered; the two Swedes soothing him with what oil they have
+ready. "No matter!" hints Bruhl; and proceeds from hint to hint,
+till the two Swedes are fully aware of the grand scheme:
+Grune, Prince Karl; and how Destruction, with legs 500 miles long,
+is steadily advancing to assuage one with just revenge.
+"Right, your Excellency!"--only that Rudenskjold proceeds to
+Berlin; and there straightway ("8th November") punctually makes
+Friedrich also aware. [Stenzel, iv. 262; Ranke, iii. 317-323;
+Friedrich's own narrative of it, <italic> OEuvres, <end italic>
+iii. 148.] Foolish Bruhl: a man that has a secret should not only
+hide it, but hide that he has it to hide.
+
+
+ FRIEDRICH GOES OUT TO MEET HIS THREE-LEGGED MONSTER;
+ CUTS ONE LEG OF IT IN TWO (Fight of
+ Hennersdorf, 23d November, 1745).
+
+Friedrich, having heard the secret, gazes into it with horror and
+astonishment: "What a time I have! This is not living; this is
+being killed a thousand times a day!" [Ranke (iii. 321 n.): TO whom
+said, we are not told.]--with horror and astonishment; but also
+with what most luminous flash of eyesight is in him; compares it
+with Prince Karl's enigmatic motions, Grune's open ones and the
+other phenomena;--perceives that it is an indisputable fact, and a
+thrice-formidable; requiring to be instantly dealt with by the
+party interested! Whereupon, after hearty thanks to Rudenskjold,
+there occur these rapidly successive phases of activity, which we
+study to take up in a curt form.
+
+FIRST (probably 9th or 10th November), there is Council held with
+Minister Podewils and the Old Dessauer; Council from which comes
+little benefit, or none. Podewils and Old Leopold stare
+incredulous; cannot be made to believe such a thing.
+"Impossible any Saxon minister or man would voluntarily bring the
+theatre of war into his own Country, in this manner!" thinks the
+Old Dessauer, and persists to think,--on what obstinate ground
+Friedrich never knew. To which Podewils, "who has properties in the
+Lausitz, and would so fain think them safe," obstinately, though
+more covertly, adheres. "Impossible!" urge both these Councillors;
+and Friedrich cannot even make them believe it. Believe it;
+and, alas, believing it is not the whole problem!
+
+Happily Friedrich has the privilege of ordering, with or without
+their belief. "You, Podewils, announce the matter to foreign
+Courts. You, Serene Highness of Anhalt, at your swiftest, collect
+yonder, and encamp again. Your eye well on Grune and Rutowski;
+and the instant I give you signal--! I am for Silesia, to look
+after Prince Karl, the other long leg of this Business."
+Old Leopold, according to Friedrich's account, is visibly glad of
+such opportunity to fight again before he die: and yet, for no
+reason except some senile jealousy, is not content with these
+arrangements; perversely objects to this and that. At length the
+King says,--think of this hard word, and of the eyes that accompany
+it!--"When your Highness gets Armies of your own, you will order
+them accordiug to your mind; at present, it must be according to
+mine." On, then; and not a moment lost: for of all things we must
+be swift!
+
+Old Leopold goes accordingly. Friedrich himself goes in a week
+hence. Orders, correspondences from Podewils and the rest, are
+flying right and left;--to Young Leopold in Silesia, first of all.
+Young Leopold draws out his forces towards the Silesian-Lausitz
+border, where Prince Karl's intentions are now becoming visible.
+And,--here is the second phase notable,--
+
+"On Monday, 15th, ["18th," <italic> Feldzuge, <end italic> i. 402
+(see Rodenbeck, i. 122).] at 7 A.M.," Friedrich rushes off, by
+Crossen, full speed for Liegnitz; "with Rothenburg, with the Prince
+of Prussia and Ferdinand of Brunswick accompanying." With what
+thoughts,--though, in his face, you can read nothing; all Berlin
+being already in such tremor! Friedrich is in Liegnitz next day;
+and after needful preliminaries there, does, on the Thursday
+following, "at Nieder-Adelsdorf," not far off, take actual command
+of Prince Leopold's Army, which had lain encamped for some days,
+waiting him. And now with such force in hand,--35,000, soldiers
+every man of them, and freshened by a month's rest,--one will
+endeavor to do some good upon Prince Karl. Probably sooner than
+Prince Karl supposes. For there is great velocity in this young
+King; a panther-like suddenness of spring in him: cunning, too, as
+any Felis of them; and with claws like the Felis Leo on occasion.
+Here follows the brief Campaign that ensued, which I strive greatly
+to abridge.
+
+Prince Karl's intentions towards Frankfurt-on-Oder Country, through
+the Lausitz, are now becoming practically manifest. There is a
+Magazine for him at Guben, within thirty miles of Frankfurt;
+arrangements getting ready all the way. A winter march of 150
+miles;--but what, say the spies, is to hinder? Prince Karl dreams
+not that Friedrich is on the ground, or that anybody is aware.
+Which notion Friedrich finds that it will be extremely suitable to
+maintain in Prince Karl. Friedrich is now at Adelsdorf, some thirty
+miles eastward of the Lausitz Border, perhaps forty or more from
+the route Prince Karl will follow through that Province.
+
+"It is a high-lying irregularly hilly Country; hilly, not
+mountainous. Various streams rise out of it that have a long
+course,--among others, the Spree, which washes Berlin;--especially
+three Valleys cross it, three Rivers with their Valleys:
+Bober, Queiss, Neisse (the THIRD Neisse we have come upon);
+all running northward, pretty much parallel, though all are
+branches of the Oder. This is Neisse THIRD, we say; not the Neisse
+of Neisse City, which we used to know at the north base of the
+Giant Mountains, nor the Roaring Neisse, which we have seen at
+Hohenfriedberg; but a third [and the FOURTH and last, "Black
+Neisse," thank Heaven, is an upper branch of this, and we have, and
+shall have, nothing to do with it!]--third Neisse, which we may
+call the Lausitz Neisse. On which, near the head of it, there is a
+fine old spinning, linen-weaving Town called Zittau,--where, to
+make it memorable, one Tourist has read, on the Town-house, an
+Inscription worth repeating: 'BENE FACERE ET MALE AUDIRE REGIUM
+EST, To do good and have evil said of you, is a kingly thing.'
+Other Towns, as Gorlitz, and seventy miles farther the above-said
+Guben, lie on this same Neisse,--shall we add that Herrnhuth stands
+near the head of it? The wondrous Town of Herrnhuth (LORD'S-
+KEEPING), founded by Count Zinzendorf, twenty years before those
+dates; ["In 1722, the first tree felled" (LIVES of Zinzendorf).]
+where are a kind of German Methodist-Quakers to this day, who have
+become very celebrated in the interim. An opulent enough, most
+silent, strictly regular, strange little Town. The women are in
+uniform; wives, maids, widows, each their form of dress.
+Missionaries, speaking flabby English, who have been in the West
+Indies or are going thither, seem to abound in the place;
+male population otherwise, I should think, must be mainly doing
+trade elsewhere; nothing but prayers, preachings, charitable
+boarding-schooling and the like, appeared to be going on.
+Herrnhuth is 'a Sabbath Petrified; Calvinistic Sabbath done into
+Stone,' as one of my companions called it." [Tourist's Note
+(Autumn, 1852).]
+
+Herrnhuth, of which all Englishmen have heard, stands near the head
+of this our third Neisse; as does Zittau, a few miles higher up.
+I can do nothing more to give it mark for them. Bober Valley, then
+Queiss Valley, which run parallel though they join at last, and
+become Bober wholly before getting into the Oder,--these two
+Valleys and Rivers lie in Friedrich's own Territory; and are
+between him and the Lausitz, Queiss River being the boundary of
+Silesia and the Lausitz here. It is down the Neisse that Prince
+Karl means to march. There are Saxons already gathering about
+Zittau; and down as far as Guben they are making Magazines and
+arrangements,--for it is all their own Country in those years,
+though most of it is Prussia's now. Prince Karl's march will go
+parallel to the Bober and the Queiss; separated from the Queiss in
+this part by an undulating Hill-tract of twenty miles or more.
+
+Friedrich has had somewhat to settle for the Southern Frontier of
+Silesia withal, which new doggeries of Pandours are invading,--to
+lie ready for Prince Karl on his return thither, whose grand
+meaning all this while (as Friedrich well knows), is "Silesia in
+the lump" again, had he once cut us off from Brandenburg and our
+supplies! General Nassau, far eastward, who is doing exploits in
+Moravia itself,--him Friedrich has ordered homeward, westward to
+his own side of the Mountains, to attend these new Pandour
+gentlemen; Winterfeld he has called home, out of those Southern
+mountains, as likely to be usefuler here on this Western frontier.
+Winterfeld arrived in Camp the same day with Friedrich; and is sent
+forward with a body of 3,000 light troops, to keep watch about the
+Lausitz Frontier and the River Queiss; "careful not to quit our own
+side of that stream,"--as we mean to hoodwink Prince Karl, if
+we can!
+
+Friedrich lies strictly within his own borders, for a day or two;
+till Prince Karl march, till his own arrangements are complete.
+Friedrich himself keeps the Bober, Winterfeld the Queiss; "all pass
+freely out of the Lausitz; none are allowed to cross into it:
+thereby we hear notice of Prince Karl, he none of us."
+Perfectly quiescent, we, poor creatures, and aware of nothing!
+Thus, too, Friedrich--in spite of his warlike Manifesto, which the
+Saxons are on the eve of answering with a formal Declaration of
+War--affects great rigor in considering the Saxons as not yet at
+war with him: respects their frontier, Winterfeld even punishes
+hussars "for trespassing on Lausitz ground." Friedrich also affects
+to have roads repaired, which he by no means intends to travel:--
+the whole with a view of lulling Prince Karl; of keeping the mouse-
+trap open, as he had done in the Striegau case. It succeeded again,
+quite as conspicuously, and at less expense.
+
+Prince Karl--whose Tolpatch doggery Winterfeld will not allow to
+pass the Queiss, and to whom no traveller or tidings can come from
+beyond that River--discerns only, on the farther shore of it,
+Winterfeld with his 3,000 light troops. Behind these, he discerns
+either nothing, or nothing immediately momentous; but contentedly
+supposes that this, the superficies of things, is all the solid-
+content they have. Prince Karl gets under way, therefore, nothing
+doubting; with his Saxons as vanguard. Down the Neisse Valley, on
+the right or Queiss-ward side of it: Saturday, 20th November, is
+his first march in Lusatian territory. He lies that night spread
+out in three Villages, Schonberg, Schonbrunn, Kieslingswalde;
+[<italic> Feldzuge, <end italic> i. 407 (Bericht von der Action bey
+Katholisch-Hennersdorf, &c.).] some ten miles long; parallel to the
+Neisse River, and about four miles from it, east or Queiss-ward of
+it. Karl himself is rear, at Schonberg; fierce Lobkowitz is centre;
+the Saxons are vanguard, 6,000 in all, posted in Villages, which
+again are some ten or twelve miles ahead of Prince Karl's forces;
+the Queiss on their right hand, and the Naumburg Bridge of Queiss,
+where Winterfeld now is, about fifteen miles to east. Their Uhlans
+circulate through the intervening space (were much patrolling
+needed, in such quiet circumstances), and maintain the due
+communication. There lies Prince Karl, on Saturday night, 20th
+November, 1745; an Army of perhaps 40,000, dnngerously straggling
+out above twenty miles long; and appears to see no difficulty
+ahead. The Saxons, I think, are to continue where they are;
+guarding the flank, while the Prince and Lobkowitz push forward,
+closer by Neisse River. In four marches more, they can be in
+Brandenburg, with Guben and their Magazines at hand.
+
+Seeing which state of matters, Winterfeld gives Friedrich notice of
+it; and that he, Winterfeld, thinks the moment is come.
+"Pontoons to Naumburg, then!" orders Friedrich. Winterfeld, at the
+proper moment, is to form a Bridge there. One permanent Bridge
+there already is; and two fords, one above it, one below: with a
+second Bridge, there will be roadway for four columns, and a swift
+transit when needful. Sunday, 21st, Friedrich quits the Bober,
+diligently towards Naumburg; marches Sunday, Monday; Tuesday, 23d,
+about eleven A.M., begins to arrive there; Winterfeld and passages
+all ready. Forward, then, and let us drive in upon Prince Karl;
+and either cut him in two, or force him to fight us; he little
+thinks where or on what terms. Sure enough, in the worst place we
+can choose for him! Friedrich begins crossing in four columns at
+one P.M.; crosses continuously for four hours; unopposed, except
+some skirmishing of Uhlans, while his Cavalry is riding the Fords
+to right and left; Uhlans were driven back swiftly, so soon as the
+Cavalry got over. At five in the evening, he has got entirely
+across, 35,000 horse and foot: Ziethen is chasing the Uhlans at
+full speed; who at least will show us the way,--for by this time a
+mist has begun falling, and the brief daylight is done.
+
+Friedrich himself, without waiting for the rear of his force, and
+some while before this mist fell (as I judge), is pushing forward,
+"a miller lad for his guide," across to Hennersdorf,--Katholisch-
+Hennersdorf, a long straggling Village, eight or ten miles off, and
+itself two miles long,--where he understands the Saxons are.
+Miller lad guides us, over height and hollow, with his best skill,
+at a brisk pace;--through one hollow, where he has known the cattle
+pasture in summer time; but which proves impassable, and mere
+quagmire, at this season. No getting through it, you unfortunate
+miller lad (GARCON DE MEUNIER). Nevertheless, we did find passage
+through the skirts of it: nay this quagmire proved the luck of us;
+for the enemy, trustiug to it, had no outguard there, never
+expecting us on that side. So that the vanguard, Ziethen and rapid
+Hussars, made an excellent thing of it. Ziethen sends us word, That
+he has got into the body of Hennersdorf,--"found the Saxon
+Quartermaster quietly paying his men;"--that he, Ziethen, is
+tolerably master of Hennersdorf, and will amuse the enemy till the
+other force come up.
+
+Of course Friedrich now pushes on, double speed; detaches other
+force, horse and foot: which was lucky, says my informant; for the
+Ziethen Hussars, getting good plunder, had by no means demolished
+the Saxons; but had left them time to draw up in firm order, with a
+hedge in front, a little west of the Village;--from which post,
+unassailable by Ziethen, they would have got safe off to the main
+body, with little but an affront and some loss of goods. The new
+force--a rapid Katzler with light horse in the van, cuirassiers and
+foot rapidly following him--sweeps past the long Village, "through
+a thin wood and a defile;" finds the enemy firmly ranked as above
+said; cavalry their left, infantry on right, flanked by an
+impenetrable hedge; and at once strikes in. At once, Katzler does,
+on order given; but is far too weak. Charges, he; but is counter-
+charged, tumbled back; the Saxons, horse and foot, showing
+excellent fight. At length, more Prussian force coming up,
+cuirassiers charge them in front, dragoons in flank, hussars in
+rear; all attacking at once, and with a will; and the poor Saxon
+Cavalry is entirely cut to shreds.
+
+And now there remains only the Infantry, perhaps about 1,000 men
+(if one must guess); who form a square; ply vigorously their field-
+pieces and their fire-arms; and cannot be broken by horse-charges.
+In fact, these Saxons made a fierce resistance;--till, before long,
+Prussian Infantry came up; and, with counter field-pieces and
+musketries, blasted gaps in them; upon which the Cavalry got
+admittance, and reduced the gallant fellows nearly wholly to
+annihilation either by death or capture. There are 914 Prisoners in
+this Action, 4 big guns, and I know not how many kettle-drums,
+standards and the like,--all that were there, I suppose. The number
+of dead not given. [Orlich, ii. 291; <italic> Feldzuge, <end
+italic> i. 400-413.] But, in brief, this Saxon Force is utterly cut
+to pieces; and only scattered twos and threes of it rush through
+the dark mist; scattering terror to this hand and that.
+The Prussians take their post at and round Hennersdorf that night;
+--bivouacking, though only in sack trousers, a blanket each man:--
+"We work hard, my men, and suffer all things for a day or two, that
+it may save much work afterwards," said the King to them; and they
+cheerfully bivouacked.
+
+This was the Action of Katholisch-Hennersdorf, fought on Tuesday,
+23d November, 1745; and still celebrated in the Prussian Annals,
+and reckoned a brilliant passage of war. KATHOLISCH-Hennersdorf,
+some ten miles southwest of Naumburg ON THE QUEISS (for there are,
+to my knowledge, Twenty-five other Villages called Hennersdorf, and
+Three several Towns of Naumburg, and many Castles and Hamlets so
+named in dear Germany of the Nomenclatures):--Katholisch-
+Hennersdorf is the place, and Tuesday about dusk the time. A sharp
+brush of fighting; not great in quantity, but laid in at the right
+moment, in the right place. Like the prick of a needle, duly sharp,
+into the spinal marrow of a gigantic object; totally ruinous to
+such object. Never, or rarely, in the Annals of War, was as much
+good got of so little fighting. You may, with labor and peril,
+plunge a hundred dirks into your boaconstrictor; hack him with
+axes, bray him with sledge-hammers; that is not uncommon: but the
+one true prick in the spinal marrow, and the Artist that can
+guide you well to that, he and it are the notable and
+beneficent phenomena.
+
+
+ PRINCE KARL, CUT IN TWO, TUMBLES HOME AGAIN DOUBLE-QUICK.
+
+Next morning, Wednesday, 24th, the Prussians are early astir again;
+groping, on all manner of roads, to find what Prince Karl is doing,
+in a world all covered in thick mist. They can find nothing of him,
+but broken tumbrils, left baggage-wagons, rumor of universal
+marching hither and marching thither;--evidences of an Army fallen
+into universal St. Vitus's-Dance; distractedly hurrying to and fro,
+not knowing whitherward for the moment, except that it must be
+homewards, homewards with velocity.
+
+Prince Karl's farther movements are not worth particularizing.
+Ordering and cross-ordering; march this way; no, back again: such a
+scene in that mist. Prince Karl is flowing homeward; confusedly
+deluging and gurgling southward, the best he can. Next afternoon,
+near Gorlitz, and again one other time, he appears drawn up, as if
+for fighting; but has himself no such thought; flies again, without
+a shot; leaves Gorlitz to capitulate, that afternoon; all places to
+capitulate, or be evacuated. We hear he is for Zittau;
+Winterfeld with light horse hastens after him, gets sight of him on
+the Heights at Zittau yonder, [<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end
+italic> iii. 157; Orlich, ii. 296.] "about two in the morning:"
+but the Prince has not the least notion to fight. Prince leaves
+Zittau to capitulate,--quits silently the Heights of Zittau at two
+A.M. (Winterfeld, very lively in the rear of him, cutting off his
+baggage);--and so tumbles, pell-mell, through the Passes of Gabel,
+home to Bohemia again. Let us save this poor Note from the fire:
+
+"On Saturday night, November 27th, the Prussians, pursuing Prince
+Karl, were cantoned in the Herrnhuth neighborhood,--my informant's
+regiment in the Town of Herrnhuth itself. [<italic> Feldzuge, <end
+italic> i. ubi supra.] Yes, there lay the Prussians over Sunday;
+and might hear some weighty expounder, if they liked.
+Considerably theological, many of these poor Prussian soldiers;
+carrying a Bible in their knapsack, and devout Psalms in the heart
+of them. Two-thirds of every regiment are LANDESKINDER, native
+Prussians; each regiment from a special canton,--generally rather
+religious men. The other third are recruits, gathered in the Free
+Towns of the Reich, or where they can be got; not distinguished by
+devotion these, we may fancy, only trained to the uttermost by
+Spartan drill."
+
+Before the week is done, that "first leg" of the grand Enterprise
+(the Prince-Karl leg) is such a leg as we see. "Silesia in the
+lump,"--fond dream again, what a dream! Old Dessauer getting
+signal, where now, too probably, is Saxony itself?--Ranking again
+at Aussig in Bohemia, Prince Karl--5,000 of his men lost, and all
+impetus and fire gone--falls gently down the Elbe, to join Rutowski
+at least; and will reappear within four weeks, out of Saxon
+Switzerland, still rather in dismal humor.
+
+The Prussian Troops, in four great Divisions, are cantoned in that
+Lausitz Country, now so quiet; in and about Bautzen and three other
+Towns of the neighborhood; to rest and be ready for the old
+Dessauer, when we hear of him. The "Magazine at Guben in 138
+wagons," the Gorlitz and other Magazines of Prince Karl in the due
+number of wagons, supply them with comfortabIe unexpected
+provender. Thus they lie cantoned; and have with despatch
+effectually settled their part of the problem. Question now is, How
+will it stand with the Old Dessauer and his part? Or, better still,
+Would not perhaps the Saxons, in this humiliated state, accept
+Peace, and finish the matter?
+
+
+
+ Chapter XIV.
+
+ BATTLE OF KESSELSDORF.
+
+A "Correspondence" of a certain Excellency Villiers, English
+Minister at Dresden,--Sir Thomas Villiers, Grandfather of the
+present Earl of Clarendon,--was very famous in those weeks; and is
+still worth mention, as a trait of Friedrich's procedure in this
+crisis. Friedrich, not intoxicated with his swift triumph over
+Prince Karl, but calculating the perils and the chances still
+ahead,--miserably off for money too,--admits to himself that not
+revenge or triumph, that Peace is the one thing needful to him.
+November 29th, Old Leopold is entering Saxony; and in the same
+hours, Podewils at Berlin, by order of Friedrich, writes to
+Villiers who is in Dresden, about Peace, about mediating for Peace:
+"My King ready and desirous, now as at all times, for Peace; the
+terms of it known; terms not altered, not alterable, no bargaining
+or higgling needed or allowable. CONVENTION OF HANOVER, let his
+Polish Majesty accede honestly to that, and all these miseries are
+ended." ["CORRESPONDANCE DU ROI AVEC SIR THOMAS VILLIERS;"
+commences, on Podewils's part, 28th November; on Friedrich's, 4th
+December; ends, on Villier's, 18th December; fourteen Pieces in
+all, four of them Friedrich's: Given in <italic> OEuvres de
+Frederic, <end italic> iii. 183-216 (see IB, 158), and in many
+other Books.]
+
+Villiers starts instantly on this beneficent business; "goes to
+Court, on it, that very night;" Villiers shows himself really
+diligent, reasonable, loyal; doing his very best now and
+afterwards; but has no success at all. Polish Majesty is obstinate,
+--I always think, in the way sheep are, when they feel themselves
+too much put upon;--and is deaf to everybody but Bruhl.
+Bruhl answers: "Let his Prussian Majesty retire from our
+Territory;--what is he doing in the Lausitz just now! Retire from
+our Territory; THEN we will treat!" Bruhl still refuses to be
+desperate of his bad game;--at any rate, Bruhl's rage is yellower
+than ever. That, very evening, while talking to Villiers, he has
+had preparations going on;--and next morning takes his Master,
+Polish Majesty August III., with some comfortable minimum of
+apparatus (cigar-boxes not forgotten), off to Prag, where they can
+be out of danger till the thing decide itself. Villiers follows to
+Prag; desists not from his eloquent Letters, and earnest
+persuasions at Prag; but begins to perceive that the means of
+persuading Bruhl will be a much heavier kind of artillery.
+
+On the whole, negotiations have yet done little. Britannic George,
+though Purseholder, what is his success here? As little is the
+Russian Bugbear persuasive on Friedrich himself. The Czarina of the
+Russias, a luxurious lady, of far more weight than insight, has
+just notified to him, with more emphasis than ever, That he shall
+not attack Saxony; that if he do, she with considerable vigor will
+attack him! That has always been a formidable puzzle for Friedrich:
+however, he reflects that the Russians never could draw sword, or
+be ready with their Army, in less than six months, probably not in
+twelve; and has answered, translating it into polite official
+terms: "Fee-faw-fum, your Czarish Majesty! Question is not now of
+attacking, but of being myself attacked!"--and so is now running
+his risks with the Czarina.
+
+Still worse was the result he got from Louis XV. Lately, "for
+form's sake," as he tells us, "and not expecting anything," he had
+(November 15th) made a new appeal to France: "Ruin menacing your
+Most Christian Majesty's Ally, in this huge sudden crisis of
+invasive Austrian-Saxons; and for your Majesty's sake, may I not in
+some measure say?" To which Louis's Answer is also given. A very
+sickly, unpleasant Document; testifying to considerable pique
+against Friedrich;--Ranke says, it was a joint production, all the
+Ministers gradually contributing each his little pinch of irony to
+make it spicier, and Louis signing when it was enough;--very
+considerable pique against Friedrich; and something of the stupid
+sulkiness as of a fat bad boy, almost glad that the house is on
+fire, because it will burn his nimble younger brother, whom
+everybody calls so clever: "Sorry indeed, Sir my Brother, most
+sorry:--and so you have actually signed that HANOVER CONVENTION
+with our worst Enemy? France is far from having done so; France has
+done, and will do, great things. Our Royal heart grieves much at
+your situation; but is not alarmed; no, Your Majesty has such
+invention, vigor and ability, superior to any crisis, our clever
+younger Brother! And herewith we pray God to have you in his holy
+keeping." This is the purport of King Louis's Letter;--which
+Friedrich folds together again, looking up from perusal of it, we
+may fancy with what a glance of those eyes. [Louis's Original, in
+<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 173, 174 (with a
+much more satirical paraphrase than the above), and Friedrich's
+Answer adjoined,--after the events had come.]
+
+He is getting instructed, this young King, as to alliances, grand
+combinations, French and other. His third Note to Villiers
+intimates, "It being evident that his Polish Majesty will have
+nothing from us but fighting, we must try to give it him of the
+best kind we have." ["Bautzen, 11th December, 1745" (UBI SUPRA).]
+Yes truly; it is the ULTIMATE persuasive, that. Here, in condensed
+form, are the essential details of the course it went, in this
+instance:--
+
+General Grune, on the road to Berlin, hearing of the rout at
+Hennersdorf, halted instantly,--hastened back to Saxony, to join
+Rutowski there, and stand on the defensive. Not now in that Halle-
+Frontier region (Rutowski has quitted that, and all the
+intrenchments and marshy impregnabilities there); not on that
+Halle-Frontier, but hovering about in the interior, Rutowski and
+Grune are in junction; gravitating towards Dresden;--expecting
+Prince Karl's advent; who ought to emerge from the Saxon
+Switzerland in few days, were he sharp; and again enable us to make
+a formidable figure. Be speedy, Old Dessauer: you must settle the
+Grune-Rutowski account before that junction, not after it!
+
+The Old Dessauer has been tolerably successful, and by no means
+thinks he has been losing time. November 29th, "at three in the
+morning," he stept over into Saxony with its impregnable camps;
+drove Rutowski's rear-guard, or remnant, out of the quagmires,
+canals and intrenchments, before daylight; drove it, that same
+evening, or before dawn of the morrow, out of Leipzig: has seized
+that Town,--lays heavy contribution on it, nearly 50,000 pounds
+(such our strait for finance), "and be sure you take only
+substantial men as sureties!" [Orlich, ii. 308.]--and will, and
+does after a two days' rest, advance with decent celerity inwards;
+though "One must first know exactly whither; one must have bread,
+and preparations and precautions; do all things solidly and in
+order," thinks the Old Dessauer. Friedrich well knows the whither;
+and that Dresden itself is, or may be made, the place for falling
+in with Rutowski. Friedrich is now himself ready to join, from the
+Bautzen region; the days and hours precious to him; and spurs the
+Old Dessauer with the sharpest remonstrances. "All solidly and in
+order, your Majesty!" answers the Old Dessauer: solid strong-boned
+old coach-horse, who has his own modes of trotting, having done
+many a heavy mile of it in his time; and whose skin, one hopes, is
+of the due thickness against undue spurring.
+
+Old Dessauer wishes two things: bread to live upon; and a sure
+Bridge over the Elbe whereby Friedrich may join him. Old Dessauer
+makes for Torgau, far north, where is both an Elbe Bridge and a
+Magazine; which he takes; Torgau and pertinents now his. But it is
+far down the Elbe, far off from Bautzen and Friedrich: "A nearer
+Bridge and rendezvous, your Highness! Meissen [where they make the
+china, only fifty miles from me, and twenty from Dresden], let that
+be the Bridge, now that you have got victual. And speedy;
+for Heaven's sake, speedy!" Friedrich pushes out General Lehwald
+from Bautzen, with 4,000 men, towards Meissen Bridge; Lehwald does
+not himself meddle with the Bridge, only fires shot across upon the
+Saxon party, till the Old Dessauer, on the other bank, come up;--
+and the Old Dessauer, impatience thinks, will never come. "Three
+days in Torgau, yes, Your Majesty: I had bread to bake, and the
+very ovens had to be built." A solid old roadster, with his own
+modes of trotting; needs thickness of skin. [Friedrich's Letters to
+Leopold, in Orlich, ii. 431, 435 (6th-10th December, 1745).]
+
+At long last, on Sunday, 12th December, about two P.M., the Old
+Dessauer does appear; or General Gessler, his vanguard, does
+appear,--Gessler of the sixty-seven standards,--"always about an
+hour ahead." Gessler has summoned Meissen; has not got it, is
+haggling with it about terms, when, towards sunset of the short
+day, Old Dessauer himself arrives. Whereupon the Saxon Commandant
+quits the Bridge (not much breaking it); and glides off in the
+dark, clear out of Meissen, towards Dresden,--chased, but
+successfully defending himself. [See Plan, p. 10.] "Had he but
+stood out for two days!" say the Saxons,--"Prince Karl had then
+been up, and much might have been different." Well, Friedrich too
+would have been up, and it had most likely been the same on a
+larger scale. But the Saxon Commandant did not stand out; he glided
+off, safe; joined Rutowski and Grune, who are lying about Wilsdruf,
+six or seven miles on the hither side of Dresden, and eagerly
+waiting for Prince Karl. "Bridge and Town of Meissen are your
+Majesty's," reports the Old Dessauer that night: upon which
+Friedrich instantly rises, hastening thitherward. Lehwald comes
+across Meissen Bridge, effects the desired junction; and all Monday
+the Old Dessauer defiles through Meissen town and territory;
+continually advances towards Dresden, the Saxons harassing the
+flanks of him a little,--nay in one defile, being sharp strenuous
+fellows, they threw his rear into some confusion; cut off certain
+carts and prisoners, and the life of one brave General, Lieutenant-
+General Roel, who had charge there. "Spurring one's trot into a
+gallop! This comes of your fast marching, of your spurring beyond
+the rules of war!" thinks Old Leopold; and Friedrich, who knows
+otherwise, is very angry for a moment.
+
+But indeed the crisis is pressing. Prince Karl is across the Metal
+Mountains, nearing Dresden from the east; Friedrich strikes into
+march for the same point by Meissen, so soon as the Bridge is his.
+Old Leopold is advancing thither from the westward,--steadily hour
+by hour; Dresden City the fateful goal. There,--in these middle
+days of December, 1745 (Highland Rebellion just whirling back from
+Derby again, "the London shops shut for one day"),--it is clear
+there will be a big and bloody game played before we are much
+older. Very sad indeed: but Count Bruhl is not persuadable
+otherwise. By slumbering and sluggarding, over their money-tills
+and flesh-pots; trying to take evil for good, and to say, "It will
+do," when it will not do, respectable Nations come at last to be
+governed by Bruhls; cannot help themselves;--and get their backs
+broken in consequence. Why not? Would you have a Nation live
+forever that is content to be governed by Bruhls? The gods are
+wiser!--It is now the 13th; Old Dessauer tramping forward, hour by
+hour, towards Dresden and some field of Fate.
+
+On Tuesday, 14th, by break of day, Old Dessauer gets on march
+again; in four columns, in battle order; steady all day,--hard
+winter weather, ground crisp, and flecked with snow. The Pass at
+Neustadt, "his cavalry went into it at full gallop;" but found
+nobody there. That night he encamps at a place called Rohrsdorf;
+which may be eight miles west-by-north from Dresden, as the crow
+flies; and ten or more, if you follow the highway round by Wilsdruf
+on your right. The real direct Highway from Meissen to Dresden is
+on the other side of the Elbe, and keeps by the River-bank, a fine
+level road; but on this western side, where Leopold now is, the
+road is inland, and goes with a bend. Leopold, of course, keeps
+command of this road; his columns are on both sides of it, River on
+their left at some miles distance; and incessantly expect to find
+Rutowski, drawn out on favorable ground somewhere. The country is
+of fertile, but very broken character; intersected by many brooks,
+making obliquely towards the Elbe (obliquely, with a leaning
+Meissen-wards); country always mounting, till here about Rohrsdorf
+we seem to have almost reached the watershed, and the brooks make
+for the Elbe, leaning Dresden way. Good posts abound in such broken
+country, with its villages and brooks, with its thickets, hedges
+and patches of swamp. But Rutowski has not appeared anywhere,
+during this Tuesday.
+
+Our four columns, therefore, lie all night, under arms, about
+Rohrsdorf: and again by morrow's dawn are astir in the old order,
+crunching far and wide the frozen ground; and advance, charged to
+the muzzle with potential battle. Slightly upwards always, to the
+actual watershed of the country; leaving Wilsdruf a little to their
+right. Wilsdruf is hardly past, when see, from this broad table-
+land, top of the country: "Yonder is Rutowski, at last;--and this
+new Wednesday will be a day!" Yonder, sure enough: drawn out three
+or four miles long; with his right to the Elbe, his left to that
+intricate Village of Kesselsdorf; bristling with cannon;
+deep gullet and swampy brook in front of him: the strongest post a
+man could have chosen in those parts.
+
+The Village of Kesselsdorf itself lies rather in a hollow; in the
+slight beginning, or uppermost extremity, of a little Valley or
+Dell, called the Tschonengrund,--which, with its, quaggy brook of a
+Tschone, wends northeastward into the Elbe, a course of four or
+five miles: a little Valley very deep for its length, and getting
+altogether chasmy and precipitous towards the Elbe-ward or lower
+end. Kesselsdorf itself, as we said, is mainly in a kind of hollow:
+between Old Leopold and Kesselsdorf the ground rather mounts;
+and there is perceptibly a flat knoll or rise at the head of it,
+where the Village begins. Some trees there, and abundance of cannon
+and grenadiers at this moment. It is the southwestern or left-most
+point of Rutowski's line; impregnable with its cannon-batteries and
+grenadiers. Rightward Rutowski extends in long lines, with the
+quaggy-dell of Tschonengrund in front of him, parallel to him;
+Dell ever deepening as it goes. Northeastward, at the extreme
+right, or Elbe point of it, where Grune and the Austrians stand, it
+has grown so chasmy, we judge that Grune can neither advance nor be
+
+MAP/PLAN GOES HERE--book 15 continuation --page 10--
+
+
+advanced upon: so we leave him standing there,--which he did all
+day, in a purely meditative posture. Rutowski numbers 35,000, now
+on this ground, with immensity of cannon; 32,000 we, with only the
+usual field-artillery, and such a Tschonengrund, with its half-
+frozen quagmires ahead. A ticklish case for the old man, as he
+grimly reconnoitres it, in the winter morning.
+
+Grim Old Dessauer having reconnoitred, and rapidly considered,
+decides to try it,--what else?--will range himself on the west side
+of that Tschonengrund, horse and foot; two lines, wide as Rutowski
+opposite him; but means to direct his main and prime effort against
+Kesselsdorf, which is clearly the key of the position, if it can.
+be taken. For which end the Old Dessauer lengthens himself out to
+rightward, so as to outflank Kesselsdorf;--neglecting Grune
+(refusing Grune, as the soldiers say):--"our horse of the right
+wing reached from the Wood called Lerchenbusoh (LARCH-BUSH)
+rightward as far as Freyberg road; foot all between that
+Lerchenbusch and the big Birch-tree on the road to Wilsdruf;
+horse of the left wing, from there to Roitsch." [Stille (p. 181),
+who was present. See Plan.] It was about two P.M. before the old
+man got all his deployments completed; what corps of his, deploying
+this way or that, came within wind of Kesselsdorf, were saluted
+with cannon, thirty pieces or more, which are in battery, in three
+batteries, on the knoll there; but otherwise no fighting as yet.
+At two, the Old Dessauer is complete; he reverently doffs his hat,
+as had always been his wont, in prayer to God, before going in.
+A grim fervor of prayer is in his heart, doubtless; though the
+words as reported are not very regular or orthodox: "O HERR GOTT,
+help me yet this once; let me not be disgraced in my old days!
+Or if thou wilt not help me, don't help those HUNDSVOGTE [damned
+Scoundrels, so to speak], but leave us to try it ourselves!"
+That is the Old Scandinavian of a Dessauer's prayer; a kind of
+GODUR he too, Priest as well as Captain: Prayer mythically true as
+given; mythically, not otherwise. [Ranke, iii. 334 n.] Which done,
+he waves his hat once, "On, in God's name!" and the storm is loose.
+Prussian right wing pushing grandly forward, bent in that manner,
+to take Kesselsdorf and its fire-throats in flank.
+
+The Prussians tramp on with the usual grim-browed resolution, foot
+in front, horse in rear; but they have a terrible problem at that
+Kesselsdorf, with its retrenched batteries, and numerous grenadiers
+fighting under cover. The very ground is sore against them;
+uphill, and the trampled snow wearing into a slide, so that you
+sprawl and stagger sadly. Thirty-one big guns, and about 9,000
+small, pouring out mere death on you, from that knoll-head.
+The Prussians stagger; cannot stand it; bend to rightwards, and get
+out of shot-range; cannot manage it this bout. Rally, reinforce;
+try it again. Again, with a will; but again there is not a way.
+The Prussians are again repulsed; fall back, down this slippery
+course, in more disorder than the first time. Had the Saxons stood
+still, steadily handling arms, how, on such terms, could the
+Prussians ever have managed it?
+
+But at sight of this second repulse, the Saxon grenadiers, and
+especially one battalion of Austrians who were there (the only
+Austrians who fought this day), gave a shout "Victory!"--and in the
+height of their enthusiasm, rushed out, this Austrian battalion
+first and the Saxons after them, to charge these Prussians, and
+sweep the world clear of them. It was the ruin of their battle;
+a fatal hollaing before you are out of the woods. Old Leopold,
+quick as thought, noticing the thing, hurls cavalry on these
+victorious down-plunging grenadiers; slashes them asunder, into
+mere recoiling whirlpools of ruin; so that "few of them got back
+unwounded;" and the Prussians storming in along with them,--aided
+by ever new Prussians, from beyond the Tschonengrund even,--the
+place was at length carried; and the Saxon battle became hopeless.
+
+For, their right being in such hurricane, the Prussians from the
+centre, as we hint, storm forward withal; will not be held back by
+the Tschonengrund. They find the Tschonengrund quaggy in the
+extreme, "brook frozen at the sides, but waist-deep of liquid mud
+in the centre;" cross it, nevertheless, towards the upper part of
+it,--young Moritz of Dessau leading the way, to help his old Father
+in extremity. They climb the opposite side,--quite slippery in
+places, but "helping one another up;"--no Saxons there till you get
+fairly atop, which was an oversight on the Saxon part. Fairly atop,
+Moritz is saluted by the Saxons with diligent musket-volleys;
+but Moritz also has musket-volleys in him, bayonet-charges in him;
+eager to help his old Papa at this hard pinch. Old Papa has the
+Saxons in flank; sends more and ever more other cavalry in on them;
+and in fact, the right wing altogether storms violently through
+Kesselsdorf, and sweeps it clean. Whole regiments of the Saxons are
+made prisoners; Roel's Light Horse we see there, taking standards;
+cutting violently in to avenge Roel's death, and the affront they
+had at Meissen lately. Furious Moritz on their front, from across
+the Tschonengrund; furious Roel (GHOST of Roel) and others in their
+flank, through Kesselsdorf: no standing for the Saxons longer.
+
+About nightfall,--their horse having made poorish fight, though the
+foot had stood to it like men,--they roll universally away.
+The Prussian left wing of horse are summoned through the
+Tschonengrund to chase: had there remained another hour of
+daylight, the Saxon Army had been one wide ruin. Hidden in
+darkness, the Saxon Army ebbed confusedly towards Dresden: with the
+loss of 6,000 prisoners and 3,000 killed and wounded: a completely
+beaten Army. It is the last battle the Saxons fought as a Nation,--
+or probably will fight. Battle called of Kesselsdorf: Wednesday,
+15th December, 1745.
+
+Prince Karl had arrived at Dresden the night before; heard all this
+volleying and cannonading, from the distance; but did not see good
+to interfere at all. Too wide apart, some say; quartered at
+unreasonably distant villages, by some irrefragable ignorant War-
+clerk of Bruhl's appointing,--fatal Bruhl. Others say, his Highness
+had himself no mind; and made excuses that his troops were tired,
+disheartened by the two beatings lately,--what will become of us in
+case of a third or fourth! It is certain, Prince Karl did nothing.
+Nor has Grime's corps, the right wing, done anything except
+meditate:--it stood there unattacked, unattacking; till deep in the
+dark night, when Rutowski remembered it, and sent it order to come
+home. One Austrian battalion, that of grenadiers on the knoll at
+Kesselsdorf, did actually fight;--and did begin that fatal
+outbreak, and quitting of the post there; "which lost the Battle to
+us!" say the Saxons.
+
+Had those grenadiers stood in their place, there is no Prussian but
+admits that it would have been a terrible business to take
+Kesselsdorf and its batteries. But they did not stand; they rushed
+out, shouting "Victory;" and lost us the battle. And that is the
+good we have got of the sublime Austrian Alliance; and that is the
+pass our grand scheme of Partitioning Prussia has come to?
+Fatal little Bruhl of the three hundred and sixty-five clothes-
+suits; Valet fatally become divine in Valet-hood,--are not you
+costing your Country dear!
+
+Old Dessauer, glorious in the last of his fields, lay on his arms
+all night in the posts about; three bullets through his roquelaure,
+no scratch of wound upon the old man. Young Moritz too "had a
+bullet through his coat-skirt, and three horses shot under him;
+but no hurt, the Almighty's grace preserving him."
+[<italic> Feldzuge, <end italic> i. 434.] This Moritz is the Third
+of the Brothers, age now thirty-three; and we shall hear
+considerably about him in times coming. A lean, tall, austere man;
+and, "of all the Brothers, most resembled his Father in his ways."
+Prince Dietrich is in Leipzig at present; looking to that
+contribution of 50,000 pounds; to that, and to other contributions
+and necessary matters;--and has done all his fighting (as it
+chanced), though he survived his Brothers many years. Old Papa will
+now get his discharge before long (quite suddenly, one morning, by
+paralytic stroke, 7th April, 1747); and rest honorably with the
+Sons of Thor. [Young Leopold, the successor, died 16th December,
+1751, age fifty-two; Dietrich (who had thereupon quitted
+soldiering, to take charge of his Nephew left minor, and did not
+resume it), died 2d December, 1769; Moritz (soldier to the last),
+11th April, 1760. See <italic> Militair-Lexikon, <end italic> i.
+43, 34, 38,47.]
+
+
+
+ Chapter XV.
+
+ PEACE OF DRESDEN: FRIEDRICH DOES MARCH HOME.
+
+Friedrich himself had got to Meissen, Tuesday, l4th; no enemy on his
+road, or none to speak of: Friedrich was there, or not yet far
+across, all Wednesday; collecting himself, waiting, on the slip,
+for a signal from Old Leopold. Sound of cannon, up the Elbe
+Dresden-ward, is reported there to Friedrich, that afternoon:
+cannon, sure enough, notes Friedrich; and deep dim-rolling peals,
+as of volleying small-arms; "the sky all on fire over there," as
+the hoar-frosty evening fell. Old Leopold busy at it, seemingly.
+That is the glare of the Old Dessauer's countenance; who is giving
+voice, in that manner, to the earthly and the heavenly powers;
+conquering Peace for us, let us hope!
+
+Friedrich, as may be supposed, made his best speed next morning:
+"All well!" say the messengers; all well, says Old Leopold, whom he
+meets at Wilsdruf, and welcomes with a joyful embrace;
+"dismounting from his horse, at sight of Leopold, and advancing to
+meet him with doffed hat and open arms,"--and such words and
+treatments, that day, as made the old man's face visibly shine.
+"Your Highness shall conduct me!" And the two made survey together
+of the actual Field of Kesselsdorf; strewn with the ghastly wrecks
+of battle,--many citizens of Dresden strolling about, or
+sorrowfully seeking for their lost ones among the wounded and dead.
+No hurt to these poor citizens, who dread none; help to them
+rather: such is Friedrich's mind,--concerning which, in the
+Anecdote-Books, there are Narratives (not worth giving) of a
+vapidly romantic character, credible though inexact. [For the
+indisputable part, see Orlich, ii. 343, 344; and <italic> OEuvres
+de Frederic, <end italic> iii. 170.] Friedrich, who may well be
+profuse of thanks and praises, charms the Old Dessauer while they
+walk together; brave old man with his holed roquelaure.
+For certain, he has done the work there,--a great deal of work in
+his time! Joy looks through his old rough face, of gunpowder color:
+the Herr Gott has not delivered him to those damned Scoundrels in
+the end of his days.--On the morrow, Friday, Leopold rolled grandly
+forward upon Dresden; Rutowski and Prince Karl vanishing into the
+Metal Mountains, by Pirna, for Bohemia, at sound of him,--as he had
+scarcely hoped they would.
+
+On the Saturday evening, Dresden, capable of not the least defence,
+has opened all its gates, and Friedrich and the Prussians are in
+Dresden; Austrians and wrecked Saxons falling back diligently
+towards the Metal Mountains for Bohemia, diligent to clear the road
+for him. Queen and Junior Princes are here; to whom, as to all men,
+Friedrich is courtesy itself; making personal visit to the
+Royalties, appointing guards of honor, sacred respect to the
+Royal Houses; himself will lodge at the Princess Lubomirski's, a
+private mansion.
+
+"That ferocious, false, ambitious King of Prussia"--Well, he is not
+to be ruined in open fight, on the contrary is ruinous there;
+nor by the cunningest ambuscades, and secret combinations, in field
+or cabinet: our overwhelming Winter Invasion of him--see where it
+has ended! Bruhl and Polish Majesty--the nocturnal sky all on fire
+in those parts, and loud general doomsday come--are a much-
+illuminated pair of gentlemen.
+
+From the time Meissen Bridge was lost, Prince Karl too showing
+himself so languid, even Bruhl had discerned that the case was
+desperate. On the very day of Kesselsdorf,--not the day BEFORE,
+which would have been such a thrift to Bruhl and others!--Friedrich
+had a Note from Villiers, signifying joyfully that his Polish
+Majesty would accept Peace. Thanks to his Polish Majesty:--and
+after Kesselsdorf, perhaps the Empress-Queen too will!
+Friedrich's offers are precisely what they were, what they have
+always been: "Convention of Hanover; that, in all its parts;
+old treaty of Breslau, to be guaranteed, to be actually kept. To me
+Silesia sure;--from you, Polish Majesty, one million crowns as
+damages for the trouble and cost this Triple Ambuscade of yours has
+given me; one million crowns, 150,000 pounds we will say; and all
+other requisitions to cease on the day of signature. These are my
+terms: accept these; then wholly, As you were, Empress-Queen and
+you, and all surviving creatures: and I march home within a week."
+Villiers speeds rapidly from Prag, with the due olive-branch;
+with Count Harrach, experienced Austrian, and full powers.
+Harrach cannot believe his senses: "Such the terms to be still
+granted, after all these beatings and rebeatings!"--then at last
+does believe, with stiff thankfulness and Austrian bows.
+The Negotiation need not occupy many hours.
+
+"His Majesty of Prussia was far too hasty with this Peace," says
+Valori: "he had taken a threap that he would have it finished
+before the Year was done:"--in fact, he knows his own mind, MON
+GROS VALORI, and that is what few do. You shear through no end of
+cobwebs with that fine implement, a wisely fixed resolution of your
+own. A Peace slow enough for Valori and the French: where could
+that be looked for?--Valori is at Berlin, in complete disgrace;
+his Most Christian King having behaved so like a Turk of late.
+Valori, horror-struck at such Peace, what shall he do to prevent
+it, to retard it? One effort at least. D'Arget his Secretary,
+stolen at Jaromirz, is safe back to him; ingenious, ingenuous
+D'Arget was always a favorite with Friedrich: despatch D'Arget to
+him. D'Arget is despatched; with reasons, with remonstrances, with
+considerations. D'Arget's Narrative is given: an ingenuous off-hand
+Piece;--poor little crevice, through which there is still to be
+had, singularly clear, and credible in every point, a direct
+glimpse of Friedrich's own thoughts, in that many-sounding
+Dresden,--so loud, that week, with dinner-parties, with operas,
+balls, Prussian war-drums, grand-parades and Peace-negotiations.
+
+
+ THE SIEUR D'ARGET TO EXCELLENCY VALORI (at Berlin).
+
+ "DRESDEN, 1745" (dateless otherwise, must be
+ December, between 18th and 25th).
+"MONSEIGNEUR,--I arrived yesterday at 7 P.M.; as I had the honor of
+forewarning you, by the word I wrote to the Abbe [never mind what
+Abbe; another Valori-Clerk] from Sonnenwalde [my half-way house
+between Berlin and this City]. I went, first of all, to M. de
+Vaugrenand," our Envoy here; "who had the goodness to open himself
+to me on the Business now on hand. In my opinion, nothing can be
+added to the excellent considerations he has been urging on the
+King of Prussia and the Count de Podewils.
+
+"At half-past 8, I went to his Prussian Majesty's; I found he was
+engaged with his Concert,"--lodges in the Lubomirski Palace, has
+his snatch of melody in the evening of such discordant days,--
+"and I could not see him till after half-past 9. I announced myself
+to M. Eichel; he was too overwhelmed with affairs to give me
+audience. I asked for Count Rothenburg; he was at cards with the
+Princess Lubomirski. At last, I did get to the King: who received
+me in the most agreeable way; but was just going to Supper; said he
+must put off answering till to-morrow morning, morning of this day.
+M. de Vaugrenand had been so good as prepare me on the rumors of a
+Peace with Saxony and the Queen of Hungary. I went to M. Podewils;
+who said a great many kind things to me for you. I could only
+sketch out the matter, at that time; and represented to Podewils
+the brilliant position of his Master, who had become Arbiter of the
+Peace of Europe; that the moment was come for making this Peace a
+General One, and that perhaps there would be room for repentance
+afterwards, if the opportunity were slighted. He said, his Master's
+object was that same; and thus closed the conversation by
+general questions.
+
+"This morning, I again presented myself at the King of Prussia's.
+I had to wait, and wait; in fine, it was not till half-past 5 in
+the evening that he returned, or gave me admittance; and I stayed
+with him till after 7,"--when Concert-time was at hand again.
+Listen to a remarkable Dialogue, of the Conquering Hero with a
+humble Friend whom he likes. "His Majesty condescended (A DAIGNE)
+to enter with me into all manner of details; and began by
+telling me,
+
+"That M. de Valori had done admirably not to come, himself, with
+that Letter from the King [Most Christian, OUR King; Letter, the
+sickly Document above spoken of]; that there could not have been an
+Answer expected,--the Letter being almost of ironical strain;
+his Majesty [Most Christian] not giving him the least hope, but
+merely talking of his fine genius, and how that would extricate him
+from the perilous entanglement, and inspire him with a wise
+resolution in the matter! That he had, in effect, taken a
+resolution the wisest he could; and was making his Peace with
+Saxony and the Queen of Hungary. That he had felt all the dangers
+of the difficult situations he had been in,"--sheer destruction
+yawning all round him, in huge imminency, more than once, and no
+friend heeding;--"that, weary of playing always double-or-quits, he
+had determined to end it, and get into a state of tranquillity,
+which both himself and his People had such need of. That France
+could not, without difficulty, have remedied his mishaps; and that
+he saw by the King's Letter, there was not even the wish to do it.
+That his, Friedrich's, military career was completed,"--so far as
+HE could foresee or decide! "That he would not again expose his
+Country to the Caprices of Fortune, whose past constancy to him was
+sufficiently astonishing to raise fears of a reverse (HEAR!).
+That his ambitions were fulfilled, in having compelled his Enemies
+to ask Peace from him in their own Capital, with the Chancellor of
+Bohemia [Harrach, typifying fallen Austrian pride] obliged
+to co-operate.
+
+"That he would always be attached to our King's interests, and set
+all the value in the world on his friendship; but that he had not
+been sufficiently assisted to be content. That, observing
+henceforth an exact neutrality, he might be enabled to do offices
+of mediation; and to carry, to the one side and to the other, words
+of peace. That he offered himself for that object, and would be
+charmed to help in it; but that he was fixed to stop there. That in
+regard to the basis of General Peace, he had Two Ideas [which the
+reader can attend to, and see where they differed from the Event,
+and where not]:--One was, That France should keep Ypres, Furnes,
+Tournay [which France did not], giving up the Netherlands
+otherwise, with Ostend, to the English [to the English!] in
+exchange for Cape Breton. The other was, To give up more of our
+Conquests [we gave them all up, and got only the glory, and our
+Cod-fishery, Cape Breton, back, the English being equally
+generous], and bargain for liberty to re-establish Dunkirk in its
+old condition [not a word of your Dunkirk; there is your Cape
+Breton, and we also will go home with what glory there is,--not
+difficult to carry!]. But that it was by England we must make the
+overtures, without addressing ourselves to the Court of Vienna;
+and put it in his, Friedrich's, power to propose a receivable
+Project of Peace. That he well conceived the great point was the
+Queen of Spain [Termagant and Jenkins's Ear; Termagant's Husband,
+still living, is a lappet of Termagant's self]: but that she must
+content herself with Parma and Piacenza for the Infant, Don Philip
+[which the Termagant did]; and give back her hold of Savoy [partial
+hold, of no use to her without the Passes] to the King of
+Sardinia." And of the JENKINS'S-EAR question, generous England will
+say nothing? Next to nothing; hopes a modicum of putty and
+diplomatic varnish may close that troublesome question,--which
+springs, meanwhile, in the centre of the world!--
+
+"These kind condescensions of his Majesty emboldened me to
+represent to him the brilliant position he now held; and how noble
+it would be, after having been the Hero of Germany, to become,
+instead of one's own pacificator, the Pacificator of Europe.
+'I grant you,' said he, (MON CHER D'Arget; but it is too dangerous
+a part for playing. A reverse brings me to the edge of ruin: I know
+too well the mood of mind I was in, last time I left Berlin [with
+that Three-legged Immensity of Atropos, NOT yet mown down at
+Hennersdorf by a lucky cut], ever to expose myself to it again!
+If luck had been against me there, I saw myself a Monarch without
+throne; and my subjects in the cruelest oppression. A bad game
+that: always, mere CHECK TO YOUR KING; no other move;--I refer it
+to you, friend D'Arget:--in fine, I wish to be at peace.'
+
+"I represented to him that the House of Austria would never, with a
+tranquil eye, see his House in possession of Silesia. 'Those that
+come after me,' said he, 'will do as they like; the Future is
+beyond man's reach. Those that come after will do as they can.
+I have acquired; it is theirs to preserve. I am not in alarm about
+the Austrians;--and this is my answer to what you have been saying
+about the weakness of my guarantees. They dread my Army; the luck
+that I have. I am sure of their sitting quiet for the dozen years
+or so which may remain to me of life;--quiet till I have, most
+likely, done with it. What! Are we never to have any good of our
+life, then (NE DOIS-JE DONC JAMAIS JOUIR)? There is more for me in
+the true greatness of laboring for the happiness of my subjects,
+than in the repose of Europe. I have put Saxony out of a condition
+to do hurt. She owes 14,775,000 crowns of debt [two millions and a
+quarter sterling]; and by the Defensive Alliance which I form with
+her, I provide myself [but ask Bruhl withal!] a help against
+Austria. I would not henceforth attack a cat, except to defend
+myself.' ["These are his very words," adds D'Arget;--and well worth
+noting.] (Ambition (GLOIRE) and my interests were the occasion of
+my first Campaigns. The late Kaiser's situation, and my zeal for
+France [not to mention interests again], gave rise to these second:
+and I have been fighting always since for my own hearths,--for my
+very existence, I might say! Once more, I know the state I had got
+into:--if I saw Prince Karl at the gates of Paris, I would not
+stir.'--'And us at the gates of Vienna,' answered I promptly, 'with
+the same indifference?'--'Yes; and I swear it to you, D'Arget. In a
+word, I want to have some good of my life (VEUX JOUIR). What are
+we, poor human atoms, to get up projects that cost so much blood?
+Let us live, and help to live.'
+
+"The rest of the conversation passed in general talk, about
+Literature, Theatres and such objects. My reasonings and
+objectings, on the great matter, I need not farther detail: by the
+frank discourse his Prussian Majesty was kind enough to go into,
+you may gather perhaps that my arguments were various, and not ill-
+chosen;--and it is too evident they have all been in vain."--
+Your Excellency's (really in a very faithful way)-- D'ARGET.
+[Valori, i. 290-294 (no date, except "Dresden, 1745,"--sleepy
+Editor feeling no want of any).]
+
+D'Arget, about a month after this, was taken into Friedrich's
+service; Valori consenting, whose occupation was now gone;--and we
+shall hear of D'Arget again. Take this small Note, as summary of
+him: "D'Arget (18th January, 1746) had some title, 'Secretary at
+Orders (SECRETAIRE DES COMMANDEMENTS),' bit of pension; and
+continued in the character of reader, or miscellaneous literary
+attendant and agent, very much liked by his Master, for six years
+coming. A man much heard of, during those years of office.
+March, 1752, having lost his dear little Prussian Wife, and got
+into ill health and spirits, he retired on leave to Paris; and next
+year had to give up the thought of returning;--though he still, and
+to the end, continued loyally attached to his old Master, and more
+or less in correspondence with him. Had got, before long, not
+through Friedrich's influence at Paris, some small Appointment in
+the ECOLE MILITAIRE there. He is, of all the Frenchmen Friedrich
+had about him, with the exception of D'Argens alone, the most
+honest-hearted. The above Letter, lucid, innocent, modest,
+altogether rational and practical, is a fair specimen of D'Arget:
+add to it the prompt self-sacrifice (and in that fine silent way)
+at Jaromirz for Valori, and readers may conceive the man. He lived
+at Paris, in meagre but contented fashion, RUE DE L'ECOLE
+MILITAIRE, till 1778; and seems, of all the Ex-Prussian Frenchmen,
+to have known most about Friedrich; and to have never spoken any
+falsity against him. Duvernet, the 'M----' Biographer of VOLTAIRE,
+frequented him a good deal; and any true notions, or glimmerings of
+such, that he has about Prussia, are probably ascribable to
+D'Arget." [See <italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> xx.
+(p. xii of PREFACE to the D'ARGET CORRESPONDENCE there).]
+
+The Treaty of Dresden can be read in Scholl, Flassan, Rousset,
+Adelung; but, except on compulsion, no creature will now read it,--
+nor did this Editor, even he, find it pay. Peace is made. Peace of
+Dresden is signed, Christmas Day, 1745: "To me Silesia, without
+farther treachery or trick; you, wholly as you were." Europe at
+large, as Friedrich had done, sees "the sky all on fire about
+Dresden." The fierce big battles done against this man have, one
+and all of them, become big defeats. The strenuous machinations,
+high-built plans cunningly devised,--the utmost sum-total of what
+the Imperial and Royal Potencies can, for the life of them, do:
+behold, it has all tumbled down here, in loud crash; the final peal
+of it at Kesselsdorf; and the consummation is flame and smoke,
+conspicuous over all the Nations. You will let him keep his own
+henceforth, then, will you? Silesia, which was NOT yours nor ever
+shall be? Silesia and no afterthought? The Saxons sign, the high
+Plenipotentiaries all; in the eyes of Villiers, I am told, were
+seen sublimely pious tears. Harrach, bowing with stiff, almost
+incredulous, gratitude, swears and signs;--hurries home to his
+Sovereign Lady, with Peace, and such a smile on his face; and on
+her Imperial Majesty's such a smile!--readers shall conceive it.
+
+There are but Two new points in the Treaty of Dresden,--nay
+properly there is but One point, about which posterity can have the
+least care or interest; for that other, concerning "The Toll of
+Schidlo," and settlement of haggles on the Navigation of the Elbe
+there, was not kept by the Saxons, but continued a haggle still:
+this One point is the Eleventh Article. Inconceivably small;
+but liable to turn up on us again, in a memorable manner. That let
+us translate,--for M. de Voltaire's sake, and time coming!
+STEUER means Land-Tax; OBER-STEUER-EINNAHME will be something like
+Royal Exchequer, therefore; and STEUER-SCHEIN will be approximately
+equivalent to Exchequer Bill. Article Eleventh stipulates:
+
+"All subjects and servants of his Majesty the King of Prussia who
+hold bonds of the Saxon OBER-STEUER-EINNAHME shall be paid in full,
+capital and interest, at the times, and to the amount, specified in
+said STEUER-SCHEINE or Bonds." That is Article Eleventh.--
+"The Saxon Exchequer," says an old Note on it, "thanks to Bruhl's
+extravagance, has been as good as bankrupt, paying with
+inconvertible paper, with SCHEINE (Things to be SHOWN), for some
+time past; which paper has accordingly sunk, let us say, 25 per
+cent below its nominal amount in gold. All Prussian subjects, who
+hold these Bonds, are to be paid in gold; Saxons, and others, will
+have to be content with paper till things come round again, if
+things ever do." Yes;--and, by ill chance, the matter will attract
+M. de Voltaire's keen eye in the interim!
+
+Friedrich stayed eight days in Dresden, the loud theme of
+Gazetteers and rumors; the admired of two classes, in all
+Countries: of the many who admire success, and also of the few who
+can understand what it is to deserve success. Among his own
+Countrymen, this last Winter has kindled all their admirations to
+the flaming pitch. Saved by him from imminent destruction;
+their enemies swept home as if by one invincible; nay, sent home in
+a kind of noble shame, conquered by generosity. These feelings,
+though not encouraged to speak, run very high. The Dresdeners in
+private society found him delightful; the high ladies especially:
+"Could you have thought it; terrific Mars to become radiant Apollo
+in this manner!" From considerable Collections of Anecdotes
+illustrating this fact, in a way now fallen vapid to us,--I select
+only the Introduction:--
+
+"Do readers recollect Friedrich's first visit to Dresden [in 1728],
+seventeen years ago; and a certain charming young Countess
+Flemming, at that time only fourteen; who, like a Hebe as she was,
+contrived beautiful surprises for him, and among other things
+presented him, so gracefully, on the part of August the Strong,
+with his first flute?"--No reader of this History can recollect it;
+nor indeed, except in a mythic sense, believe it! A young Countess
+Flemming (daughter of old Feldmarschall Flemming) doubtless there
+might be, who presented him a flute; but as to HIS FIRST flute--?
+"That same charming young Countess Flemming is still here, age now
+thirty-one; charming, more than ever, though now under a changed
+name; having wedded a Von Racknitz (Supreme Gentleman-Usher, or
+some such thing) a few years ago, and brought him children and the
+usual felicities. How much is changed! August the Strong, where is
+he; and his famous Three Hundred and Fifty-four, Enchantress
+Orzelska and the others, where are they? Enchantress Orzelska
+wedded, quarrelled, and is in a convent: her charming destiny
+concluded. Rutowski is not now in the Prussian Army: he got beaten,
+Wednesday last, at Kesselsdorf, fighting against that Army. And the
+Chevalier de Saxe, he too was beaten there;--clambering now across
+the Metal Mountains, ask not of him. And the Marechal de Saxe, he
+takes Cities, fights Battles of Fontenoy, 'mumbling a lead bullet
+all day;' being dropsical, nearly dead of debaucheries; the most
+dissolute (or probably so) of all the Sons of Adam in his day.
+August the Physically Strong is dead. August the Spiritually Weak
+is fled to Prag with his Bruhl. And we do not come, this time, to
+get a flute; but to settle the account of Victories, and give Peace
+to Nations. Strange, here as always, to look back,--to look round
+or forward,--in the mad huge whirl of that loud-roaring Loom of
+Time!--One of Countess Racknitz's Sons happened to leave MANUSCRIPT
+DIARIES [rather feeble, not too exact-looking], and gives us, from
+Mamma's reminiscences" ... Not a word more. [Rodenbeck, <italic>
+Beitrage, <end italic> i. 440, et seq.]
+
+The Peace, we said, was signed on Christmas-day. Next day, Sunday,
+Friedrich attended Sermon in the Kreuzkirche (Protestant High-
+Church of Dresden), attended Opera withal; and on Monday morning
+had vanished out of Dresden, as all his people had done, or were
+diligently doing. Tuesday, he dined briefly at Wusterhausen (a
+place we once knew well), with the Prince of Prussia, whose it now
+is; got into his open carriage again, with the said Prince and his
+other Brother Ferdinand; and drove swiftly homeward. Berlin, drunk
+with joy, was all out on the streets, waiting. On the Heath of
+Britz, four or five miles hitherward of Berlin, a body of young
+gentlemen ("Merchants mostly, who had ridden out so far") saluted
+him with "VIVAT FRIEDRICH DER GROSSE (Long live Friedrich THE
+GREAT)!" thrice over;--as did, in a less articulate manner, Berlin
+with one voice, on his arrival there; Burgher Companies lining the
+streets; Population vigorously shouting; Pupils of the Koln
+Gymnasium, with Clerical and School Functionaries in mass, breaking
+out into Latin Song:--
+ "VIVAT, VIVAT FRIDERICUS REX;
+ VIVAT AUGUSTUS, MAGNUS, FELIX, PATER, PATRI-AE--!"
+--and what not. [Preuss, i. 220; who cites <italic> Beschreibung
+<end italic> ("Description of his Majesty's Triumphant Entry, on
+the" &c.) and other Contemporary Pamphlets. Rodenbeck, i. 124.]
+On reaching the Portal of the Palace, his Majesty stept down;
+and, glancing round the Schloss-Platz and the crowded windows and
+simmering multitudes, saluted, taking off his hat; which produced
+such a shout,--naturally the loudest of all. And so EXIT King, into
+his interior. Tuesday, 2-3 P.M., 28th December, 1745: a King new-
+christened in the above manner, so far as people could.
+
+Illuminated Berlin shone like noon, all that night (the beginning
+of a GAUDEAMUS which lasted miscellaneously for weeks):--but the
+King stole away to see a friend who was dying; that poor Duhan de
+Jaudun, his early Schoolmaster, who had suffered much for him, and
+whom he always much loved. Duhan died, in a day or two.
+Poor Jordan, poor Keyserling (the "Cesarion" of young days):
+them also he has lost; and often laments, in this otherwise bright
+time. {In <italic> OEuvres, <end italic> xvii. 288; xviii. 141;
+IB. 142 (painfully tender Letters to Frau von Camas and others, on
+these events).
+
+
+
+
+END OF BOOK XV-----
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg etext of Carlyle's "History of
+Friedrich II of Prussia V" volume 15.
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