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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55369 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55369)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Times of Her Majesty Caroline
-Matilda, Vol. 3 (of 3), by Sir C. F. Lachelles Wraxall
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Life and Times of Her Majesty Caroline Matilda, Vol. 3 (of 3)
- Queen of Denmark and Norway etc.
-
-Author: Sir C. F. Lachelles Wraxall
-
-Release Date: August 17, 2017 [EBook #55369]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HER MAJESTY CAROLINE MATILDA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jane Robins and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- +-------------------------------------------+
- | Note: |
- | |
- | = around word indicates bold =CAPSULE.= |
- | _ around word indicated italics _Erebus_ |
- +-------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-
-
- LIFE AND TIMES
-
- OF
-
- HER MAJESTY CAROLINE MATILDA.
-
-
-
-
- LIFE AND TIMES
-
- OF
-
- HER MAJESTY
-
- CAROLINE MATILDA,
-
- QUEEN OF DENMARK AND NORWAY,
-
- AND
-
- SISTER OF H. M. GEORGE III. OF ENGLAND,
-
- FROM FAMILY DOCUMENTS AND PRIVATE STATE ARCHIVES.
-
- BY
-
- SIR C. F. LASCELLES WRAXALL, BART.
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. III.
-
- LONDON:
-
- WM. H. ALLEN & CO., 13, WATERLOO PLACE, S.W.
-
- 1864.
-
- [_All Rights reserved._]
-
-
-
-
-LEWIS AND SON, PRINTERS, SWAN BUILDINGS, MOORGATE STREET.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS OF VOL. III.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- THE TRIAL OF COUNT BRANDT.
-
- PAGE
-
- The Indictment--Brandt at Court--The Assault on the King--The
- King's Deposition--The Queen and Struensee--Duty of
- a Good Citizen--The Confidant--The Alleged Forgery--The
- Sentence Proposed--The Defence--The King at Home--Duties
- of the Favourite--A Man of Courage--The Royal Gift--Brandt's
- Letter to his Judges--A Modest Request--Hurried
- Proceedings 1
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- THE TWO COUNTS.
-
- Struensee's Sentence--His General Conduct--The Maître des Requêtes--The
- German Language--Struensee's Despotism--The
- Council of the Thirty-two--The Cabinet Minister--The King's
- Presents--Struensee's Precautions--His Downfall--The Sentence
- Approved--Count Brandt--His Assault on the King--His
- Behaviour--The Royal Assent 33
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- THE EXECUTION.
-
- Confirmation of the Sentence--Struensee's Correspondence--Rantzau's
- Treachery--An Unfeeling Court--Struensee's Penitence--The
- Scaffold--April 28--Execution of Brandt--Horrible
- Details--Death of Struensee--His Character--Enlightened
- Despotism--The First Servant of the State--The Queen
- Dowager 71
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE HIGH COMMISSION.
-
- PAGE
-
- The Ten Prisoners--The Report--Lt.-Colonel von Hesselberg--Etats-rath
- Willebrandt--Professor Berger--Unjust Sentences--Von
- Gähler--Falckenskjold and Struensee--Serious Crimes--The
- Sentence--The Royal Approval--The Fortress of Munkholm--The
- Commandant--Resignation--The Order of Release--Curious
- Conditions--Death of Falckenskjold 103
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- DEPARTURE OF THE QUEEN.
-
- The British Fleet--Spirited Conduct of Keith--The Order of Release--The
- Prisoner Louisa Augusta--The Departure--The
- Landing at Stade--The Stay at Göhrde--Arrival in Celle--The
- Queen's Court--A Happy Family--Keith's Mission--Literary
- Pirates--Reverdil to the Rescue 141
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- THE SECRET AGENT.
-
- The Court at Celle--Mr. Wraxall--Presentation to the
- Queen--Hamburg--The Danish Nobility--The Proposition--The
- Credentials--Return to Celle--Baron von Seckendorf--The
- Queen's Acceptance--Another Visit to Celle--The Interview
- in the Jardin François--Caroline Matilda's Agreement--The
- Inn in the Wood--Baron von Bülow--A Strange Adventure--Arrival
- in England 167
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- 'TWIXT THE CUP AND THE LIP.
-
- Baron von Lichtenstein--The King's Instructions--The Arrival
- from Hamburg--The Four Articles--A Terrible Journey--Arrival
- at Celle--Interview with the Queen--Baron von Seckendorf--The
- Answer from Copenhagen--The Appeal to George
- III.--The Counter-Revolution--Another Visit to Celle--The
- Last Interview--The Queen's Gratitude--Return to London--Waiting
- for the Answer--A Sudden Blow 202
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- DEATH OF CAROLINE MATILDA.
-
- PAGE
-
- The Typhus Fever--Death of the Page--The Queen's Visit--Symptoms
- of Illness--Dr. Zimmermann--Pastor Lehzen--Caroline
- Matilda's Goodness of Heart--Her Death--The Funeral--General
- Grief--The Monuments--Letter to George III.--Proofs
- of Caroline Matilda's Innocence--The Queen's Character 242
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- WHEN ROGUES FALL OUT----.
-
- The Reaction--The King's Will--Köller-Banner--Rantzau's
- Dismissal--Prince Charles of Hesse--Court Intrigues--Eickstedt's
- Career--Beringskjold's Career and Death--Von der Osten--The
- Guldberg Ministry--The Prince Regent--The Coup d'État--Uncle
- and Nephew--Fate of Guldberg--Death of Juliana Maria 259
-
-
- APPENDIX A. 291
-
- APPENDIX B. 307
-
- APPENDIX C. 313
-
-
-
-
-LIFE AND TIMES
-
-OF
-
-CAROLINE MATILDA.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE TRIAL OF COUNT BRANDT.
-
- THE INDICTMENT--BRANDT AT COURT--THE ASSAULT ON THE KING--THE KING'S
- DEPOSITION--THE QUEEN AND STRUENSEE--DUTY OF A GOOD CITIZEN--THE
- CONFIDANT--THE ALLEGED FORGERY--THE SENTENCE PROPOSED--THE
- DEFENCE--THE KING AT HOME--DUTIES OF THE FAVOURITE--A MAN OF
- COURAGE--THE ROYAL GIFT--BRANDT'S LETTER TO HIS JUDGES--A MODEST
- REQUEST--HURRIED PROCEEDINGS.
-
-
-On the same day that the Fiscal General Wiwet handed in his indictment
-of Struensee, he delivered to the commission his charges against Count
-Brandt, which were to the following effect:--
-
-THE INDICTMENT OF COUNT BRANDT.
-
-As concerns the second principal prisoner, Count Enevold Brandt,
-we cannot say of him that he undertook something which he did not
-understand, but he has committed actions in which he ought not to have
-allowed himself to be used.
-
-I have already most submissively stated how he, after being dismissed
-from court, again returned to it; that it took place through the
-intercession of Count Struensee, who required a person in whom he could
-trust, who was bound to him, and who would neither betray Struensee's
-enterprises, nor allow other persons to betray them. It was his function,
-therefore, to pay attention to everything that his royal Majesty
-undertook, in word and in deed, and to prevent any one having access to
-the king who did not belong to the party.
-
-The attendance of the valets was for this purpose shortened. On the other
-hand, the king was to receive every morning the visit of a doctor, who
-gave him powders, although there was nothing the matter with his Majesty,
-and, as valet Torp stated, lit. F., p. 52, his Majesty was just as
-healthy as he had been before, and demanded no attendance from a doctor.
-
-This doctor, Professor Berger, who, as the chosen instrument of Counts
-Struensee and Brandt, there can be no doubt indulged in thoughts about
-great posts of honour to be acquired in Denmark, allowed himself to
-be employed in incommoding his Majesty every morning. The two other
-physicians in ordinary, Etats-rath von Berger and Piper, could not be
-induced to do such useless things; and hence we see that Professor Berger
-did not go solely on account of his Majesty's health, but in order that
-the morning hour might be spent with him, the confidant of the counts.
-
-It is not easy to understand how Count Brandt, of whom it must be
-confessed that he possessed common sense, and might have been useful to
-the king and country as a native, allowed himself to be persuaded to
-become a promoter of the Struensian undertakings. Nor is it possible to
-discover what could induce him, as a person of rank and family, to deny
-that _hauteur_ which is generally observed toward people of low origin,
-unless it was caused by an unbounded desire for honours and wealth, and
-that he consequently behaved like those who consort with, and are the
-accomplices of, thieves.
-
-If Count Brandt, as he says and writes, wished to leave the court and
-go on his travels, if only an income of 1,000 dollars were allowed
-him, because he saw that his remaining would do him no good, why did
-he remain? Why did he not say to his Majesty that he did not wish to
-stay at court any longer? What Count Brandt alleges, therefore, is only
-a subterfuge; and what he states in his memorials to Count Struensee
-is not earnestness, but merely threats against Count Struensee, who
-must effect that which Count Brandt desired to attain, as is visible
-from the fact that Count Struensee appears to have employed soothing
-language. For if Count Brandt regarded his position at court as a Hell
-(his own expression), he was at liberty to get rid of it by sending in
-his resignation. But it was not meant seriously. Hence he is not to be
-excused for accepting a post of which himself says:--"Mais je le force
-de vivre avec moi et pour comble de disgrâce je suis encore obligé à le
-(the king) traiter durement, à ce qu'il l'appelle pour qu'il ne devient
-insolent vis-à-vis de la Reine, et si cela arrive par hazard j'en porte
-la faute: cela tout seul est un Enfer." In this position with his royal
-Majesty he has proved himself guilty of the following capital crimes:--
-
-
-I.
-
-After free consideration and consultation he went in to the king his
-master, and then challenged, abused, attacked, beat, and bit his Majesty.
-This is certainly unheard of, and, I must say of this deed, "animus
-meminisse horret luctuque refugit." But it happened so, and Count
-Brandt's own confession and the statements of the witnesses confirm it.
-
-Count Brandt confessed before the commission that he--after his royal
-Majesty one day at breakfast had said something which he, Count
-Brandt, considered insulting, and his Majesty had thrown a lemon at
-him--consulted with Count Struensee on the matter, who advised him to
-go to the king and demand satisfaction. In consequence of this, after
-laying a riding-whip previously in a pianoforte standing in the king's
-ante-chamber, in order to threaten the king with it, he went into the
-king's cabinet, challenged, assaulted, and maltreated him. (_V._ his
-confession, lit. F., pp. 309 and 322.)
-
-This confession is confirmed by his Majesty's own declaration to valet
-Schleel, who, on the morning after the assault, came to his Majesty,
-and saw that the king's neck was scratched; by the statements of valet
-Brieghil, page of the bed-chamber Schack, valet Torp, and also by the
-evidence of the negro boy Moranti. From all this it is indisputably fully
-proved that Count Brandt laid hands on his Majesty in order to insult
-him--an awful deed, as King David says in the second book of Samuel,
-chap, i., vv. 14, 15, 16: "How wast thou not afraid to stretch forth
-thine hand to destroy the Lord's anointed? * * * * Thy blood be on thine
-own head."
-
-It is true that Count Brandt has tried to excuse this audacious deed,
-partly by the assurance that such things were frequently done to his
-Majesty by Count Holck and Warnstedt, partly by asserting that his royal
-Majesty has forgiven him this crime. But even if, as regards the first
-apology, we were to assume for a moment that such audacious deeds were
-really done by Count Holck and Von Warnstedt, this cannot exculpate Count
-Brandt, who was not justified in acting thus because another before
-him had committed these crimes and escaped punishment. And as regards
-the second excuse, his royal Majesty never forgave him his crime, for
-the witnesses I have mentioned declare, that after this occurrence his
-Majesty could not endure Count Brandt, and was afraid of being attacked
-by him; that his Majesty locked his door on the following night, which
-was not usually the case, and thus revealed that his Majesty had not
-forgiven Count Brandt the offence, and also that his Majesty ordered page
-Schack[1] to denounce Count Brandt's treatment of him to this commission,
-which would not have happened had the offence been pardoned. Although
-such conduct toward a king can never meet with an apology, still, if
-the assault had been made at the moment when Count Brandt considered
-himself insulted, and if it might appear that he had undertaken it in an
-outburst of excitement, a good deal might still be said against it. But
-in this case, where he goes in to his king after reflection, and in cold
-blood, orders out the persons present, so that there may be no witnesses
-of the improper deed, locks the door, in order that no one may afford
-assistance, seizes the king round the neck, threatens him with death; and
-when he at length lets him loose, after the king has spoken soothingly,
-threatens him that another time he shall not get off so cheaply; and,
-in addition, abuses the king, as himself is obliged to confess--nothing
-can be brought forward as the slightest excuse for him; he is a child of
-death, and one of the greatest criminals that ever trod the earth. He has
-acted against his oath, which commands him to risk his life and blood for
-his king and the defence of his life; but exactly contrary to this oath
-he attacks his king, and in such a way that the latter suffers a loss of
-blood.
-
-It is of no avail in his excuse that he alleges his royal Majesty
-assaulted him first, unless this occurred at a time when his Majesty was
-angry with him, and he merely defended himself, which is human; but still
-could not be permitted to any subject against his king. But that he goes
-in to the king at a time when he had no duties to perform, and only in
-order to say harsh things to the king; that he goes in to terrify the
-king; that he abuses him; that he defies the king,--all this leaves him
-no other mode of escape but his statement, that the king assaulted him
-first. But, in my opinion, every man who suffers such treatment in his
-own house has the right to regale a man with a cudgel who comes into his
-room for the purpose of prostituting him, and how much more so a king. If
-his Majesty had killed him, Count Brandt, on the spot, it would have been
-his well-merited reward, and could have been answered before God and man.
-
-As concerns Count Brandt's general behaviour toward his royal Majesty;
-for instance, his going in to the king in his _peignoir_, remaining with
-his Majesty with his hat on, or entering the king's room while playing
-the flute, this is really such conduct as no master would put up with
-from his servant, much less a king from his subject.
-
-Count Brandt, it is true, apologises for all this by saying that his
-Majesty would have it so, and that the same thing was done in the time
-of earlier servants in an even more indifferent way. But the former is
-only a proof of his Majesty's gentleness and kindness, which do not like
-to express what a man ought to say to himself, and the latter gives him
-no right; for must I be a churl because my predecessor was one? In this
-matter I could mention several instances of bad conduct on the part of
-Count Brandt in treating his royal Majesty contemptuously. But as the
-great crime swallows up all the rest, it is unnecessary to mention them
-here, and so make the trial longer. _Crimine ab uno discimus omnia._
-
-I will, therefore, now proceed to Count Brandt's second capital offence.
-
-
-II.
-
-Count Brandt has broken the fidelity which he owed to the king his master
-by virtue of the oath he took to his Majesty, by being an accomplice in
-the improper intercourse and intimacy which Count Struensee had acquired
-with the person to whom he certainly owed reverence and affection, but
-no tenderness. Count Brandt confesses this, and that Count Struensee
-confided it to him is proved by his, Brandt's, own confession, lit. a,
-pp. 40 and 41. It is true that Count Struensee, in his declaration, lit.
-a, p. 50, will not quite admit Count Brandt's statement; but no doubt
-can be possible when we remember that Count Brandt was placed about his
-Majesty to prevent other persons having access to the king, in order that
-Count Struensee might have the better opportunity to play his part. What
-could induce Count Struensee to share the booty with him, and to allow
-him to rise in honour equally with himself, unless it were done to render
-him, Brandt, faithful, silent, and attentive?
-
-That Count Brandt was cognizant of this illicit familiarity is
-furthermore shown by Count Struensee's reply to Count Brandt's letter,
-in which we read: "Je n'ai partagé avec personne la confiance que je
-vous ai donné: vous êtes le seul qui possède mes secrets, et à qui je
-m'explique sur tous les objets sans reserve." Count Brandt, generally
-as a subject, and specially as a royal official, Danish count and
-chamberlain, was commanded by the law to promote the king's welfare
-and prevent his detriment by his utmost efforts. Hence two duties were
-offered him: either to reveal the affair to the king, or to observe to
-the guilty party that such things must not be allowed; to oppose such a
-disgusting life, and threaten to reveal it to the king. I fancy I can
-hear a sincere friend of the king and of the honour of the royal family
-speaking thus to Count Struensee: "Audacious traitor and most impudent of
-the human race! you who ought to recognise and honour the supremacy and
-majesty, turn back from your impudence, and know that I, even through my
-birth, am bound to avert everything that entails the dishonour of the
-house of the king and his family." I believe that such language would
-have had more effect than all the memoirs. But, unhappily, money flowed,
-which Count Brandt needed; and hence he did not dare say, "May you be
-damned with your money!" I certainly see that I may be answered: "Why did
-not others do so? Why did the Fiscal General himself neglect it?" But to
-this it may be answered: "No one knew so much about it as Count Brandt.
-No one was so near the king as he; he kept every one away from the king,
-for the purpose that his royal Majesty might learn nothing about it
-from one or the other." But it was his duty, as he was always about the
-king, and was accurately acquainted with everything. If he were, on the
-contrary, to object that such matters did not concern him, although he
-is forced to confess having warned Count Struensee of what happened to
-them both on January 17, still he could have learned from Councillor of
-Chancery Blechinberg and his wife, and Mesdames Schiötte and Buch, what
-his duty was, and what he ought to have done. But as he not only omitted
-to do this, but did everything that lay in his power to prevent the
-affair reaching the king, and as Count Struensee has been found guilty in
-this matter of an assault on the king's supremacy, Count Brandt must be
-regarded as an accomplice, and punished in accordance with the paragraph
-of the law 6--4--14.
-
-
-III.
-
-In the same way as Count Brandt displayed faithlessness toward his king
-in the previous point, he furthermore showed it in the following affair,
-by joining Count Struensee in robbing the royal treasury of various sums
-of money.
-
-It is an easy matter for a person who is daily with his king, and in
-such a manner that no one else can reach him, to grow rich. But such
-an enterprise cannot be so easily excused, even if there be the king's
-assent to it, for the king's favour must be as little abused in money
-matters as in other things. To pocket a sum of 60,000 dollars for so
-short a period of service, because he annoyed the king, and waited on
-him, not to his comfort, but to his vexation and that of others, seems
-to denote audacity and impudence as well as slight reflection. To
-appropriate so large a sum in so short a time, while the land was sunk in
-debt, and seventy thousand human beings must contribute to it from their
-poverty, and save it out of their food, was not a wise action on the part
-of a man who wished to be regarded as a patriot. But his royal Majesty
-did not give Count Brandt any such sum; but Count Struensee procured it
-for him by converting 6,000 dollars into 60,000.
-
-I produce here the questions laid before Count Brandt in respect to this
-matter, and his answers. From these we learn that Count Brandt declares
-he first received 10,000 dollars and afterwards 60,000, although he
-alleges it was only 50,000, and lastly, at the new year, in addition to
-300 dollars, 3,000 more.
-
-Count Brandt is obliged himself to confess that there appears to him
-something strange and very suspicious in the document in which credit
-is taken for the 60,000 dollars, and which I have discussed more amply
-in the indictment of Count Struensee. Count Brandt does not deny having
-received the money, and that he gave no receipt for it, but thanked the
-king for it, though without mentioning the amount. If we now take into
-consideration what I said about this in my accusation against Count
-Struensee, not the slightest doubt can exist that Count Brandt was an
-accomplice in this audacious deed, and therefore was guilty of the crime
-of forgery.
-
-These are the principal crimes of Count Brandt as regards his own person.
-In addition, he took part in all the crimes which Count Struensee
-committed; he had confidants and instruments to set in work everything
-that Count Struensee wished, instead of acting in accordance with his
-oath and his duty, and avoiding those things which he knew would have
-evil results. I may be permitted to regard it as superfluous to enter
-more fully into these matters, as they are well known to the exalted
-commission, and I have sufficient proofs for my proposed sentence, which
-I most submissively offer for decision in the following terms:--
-
-"That Count Chamberlain Enevold Brandt, who has not only forgotten the
-most submissive veneration which he owed to the king his master, but
-also had the audacity to go into the king's cabinet, and then not only
-address his supreme royal Majesty in bad language, but also to commit
-the most audacious and unheard-of deed of laying hands on his lord the
-king, the anointed of God, as an insult to his royal Majesty, as well
-as behaved in many points unfaithfully to his Majesty, and consented to
-many things against his better knowledge, although his royal Majesty had
-shown him great favour,--be condemned by virtue of the paragraphs of
-the law 6--4--1--14, to forfeit his dignity as count and his office of
-chamberlain as well as his honour, life and estate; that after his coat
-of arms has been broken by the executioner, his right hand shall be cut
-off while alive, the body quartered and exposed on the wheel, his head
-and hands affixed to a pole, his fortune confiscated to the king, and his
-heirs, should he possess any, lose their rank and name."
-
- _April_ 21, 1772.
-
- F. W. WIWET.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As regards Brandt's confession of a knowledge of the familiarity between
-the queen and Struensee, it is probable that Brandt was persuaded that
-his life depended on what he might say about the _liaison_. What other
-motive could he have had for making such a confession? If Brandt had
-merely declared, like Berger and others, that he had suspicions on
-the subject, it would have been of no use. Something positive being
-required, he declared that he was informed of it. How could he be so? Was
-it by Struensee, who concealed nothing from him?
-
-But Struensee, instead of acknowledging this confidence, absolutely
-denied it, and no confrontation was ventured. Again, if Brandt's
-declaration was correct, why did Struensee repulse it so loudly? It
-appears indisputable that he did so because it was false.
-
-And the position in which Brandt placed himself by yielding to the
-solicitations of the commissioners was very probably the cause of his
-ruin. The mysteries of this trial must be buried with him. Without this
-motive, what interest could there have been in destroying a man like
-Brandt? Was there a shadow of justice in condemning him to death for
-things which were quite common with the king?
-
-Two days after this wretched indictment, which was merely handed in to
-the commission as a matter of form, the defence was delivered by Advocate
-Bang to the same judges, and was to the following effect:--
-
-
-BANG'S DEFENCE OF COUNT BRANDT.
-
-By the most gracious commands of his royal Majesty, of March 23,
-which are attached to this under lit. A, I shall lay before this high
-commission Count Brandt's defence--not the defence of the actions of
-which he is accused, but his defence in so far as the accusations are
-incorrect.
-
-It must reasonably insult Count Brandt to find that he whom his Majesty,
-through his own special favour, and as a reward for his faithful services
-to his king and master, raised to the rank of Count, selected for his
-daily intimate society, and honoured with many superfluous proofs of
-favour and confidence,--that he, I say, should see himself condemned
-to lose his dignity of count, his honour, life, and fortune, and have
-his body ill-treated by the executioner. But, according to his own
-declaration, made to me, his defender, neither his death, his disgrace,
-nor his torture, will be so painful to him as the sole idea that he has
-failed in the most submissive reverence, willingness, devotion, and
-fidelity, which his duty to his king and benefactor commanded, and by
-which he would have descended below humanity, and, so to speak, have
-borrowed a model of his actions from the evil spirits. If his conscience
-reproached him on these points, the bodily punishments would be no
-torture as compared with this grief; but he has, with a calm conscience,
-and unassailed by its gnawings, listened to the charges brought against
-him, and requested me to bring forward the following in his defence:--
-
-
-_Ad Præliminaria._
-
-The Fiscal General accuses Count Brandt (_a_) that by Count Struensee's
-regulation, and in _liaison_ with him, he was employed at court after his
-foreign tour, so that Count Struensee might have in him a man in whom he
-could trust, who would neither betray his designs, nor allow any one else
-to reveal them; (_b_) that Count Brandt kept people from the king who did
-not belong to the party; (_c_) that he shortened the attendance of the
-valets on the king's person, and, instead of it, arranged that Professor
-Berger, contrary to the king's wish, should wait on his Majesty in the
-mornings for the purpose of giving him powders, which were innocent,
-however; and (_d_) that he compelled the king to live with him, and
-treated him harshly.
-
-Count Brandt has never regarded it as a crime to have allowed himself
-to be recommended to his Majesty by the man to whom the king granted
-his favour and confidence. What he attained through Struensee's
-recommendation was only a continuation of what Privy Councillors Saldern
-and Bernstorff had begun. The aforesaid post was neither given him to
-keep things secret, nor to conceal from the king things which, according
-to the Fiscal General's opinion, his Majesty must not be allowed to know.
-As it is not specially mentioned what the things were which must be
-concealed from the king, while the counsel only appears to refer to that
-which is alleged under the third chief point, I will reserve my special
-reply to it, and here content myself with offering a general denial to
-the general statement. I do not know what sort of party it was of which
-the Fiscal General speaks when he says that Count Brandt prevented
-persons having access to the king who were not useful to the party. He
-probably supposes a party which was opposed to the king or the welfare of
-the country; but as he does not state of what persons the assumed party
-was composed, the nature of their actions, what designs they entertained,
-or by what means they were to be realised, I am here dispensed from the
-obligation of answering this specially, and can content myself with the
-remark that there was no such party hostile to the king and country so
-far as came to Count Brandt's knowledge. He certainly had the permission
-to be near the king's person, but had neither the power nor the wish to
-keep any one away from his Majesty; and the Fiscal General has not been
-able to mention a single person of sufficient dignity to have access to
-the king, and who was refused it by Count Brandt. I must remark here that
-the king was lord and master, and had merely to command by a sign who was
-to come and who to go, and how long each was to remain, in which Count
-Brandt never opposed the king's will.
-
-Had the king wished that the valets should remain longer with his
-Majesty, Count Brandt would not have prevented him; and this charge can
-the less be brought against him, as it can be seen from valet Schleel's
-evidence, how it had been ordered long before that not the valet, but Von
-Warnstedt, who formerly occupied Count Brandt's post, should dress and
-undress the king; and after Count Brandt, the black boys were ordered to
-perform this duty. Equally little can Professor Berger's morning visits
-be brought as a charge against Count Brandt, even if they had had evil
-consequences; while, on the contrary, the powders which the king took
-did not impair his health. Berger paid these visits so long as the king
-was willing to accept them; but when his Majesty no longer desired them,
-Berger kept away.
-
-The words in Count Brandt's letter to Count Struensee, which the Fiscal
-General treats as a crime, have been so fully explained by Count Brandt's
-reply to questions 92 and 93, p. 120 of the examination, that I have
-nothing to add but refer to it, and this explanation deprives that
-passage in the letter of all the harshness which might otherwise be
-found in it. With what right Count Brandt could be accused of having an
-understanding with Count Struensee, and of striving to sustain him, is
-proved by his explanation to questions 64, 65, and 68 of the examination,
-in which he gives a full account how he had resolved to overthrow Count
-Struensee, from the time when he perceived the encroachments of the
-latter; that he consulted with Count von der Osten about this operation,
-by which Count Struensee was to be placed under arrest at Kronborg--a
-proposal which was not carried into effect, solely through an earlier,
-riper, and more successful interruption. As regards this disposition, the
-count has appealed to the testimony of Privy Councillor von der Osten,
-and I am convinced that this statement of Count Brandt has been imparted
-to his excellency, who has not disavowed it. Count Brandt's letter to
-Struensee, and the answer of the latter, which have been produced by
-the Fiscal General, prove how little desire Count Brandt had to enter
-into Count Struensee's views; that his whole conduct and thought was
-to surrender the post which he occupied, and to be allowed to quit the
-court. There is further evidence of this in the fact that when Count
-Struensee offered him the ministerial post of Privy Councillor von
-der Osten, he refused it, and preferred retirement from court to this
-pleasant office. All this destroys the charges which the Fiscal General
-has alleged in the preliminary part of his indictment of Count Brandt.
-
-
-_Ad possum 1mum._
-
-"According to the Fiscal General, Count Brandt, of his free will, and
-after due reflection, went in to his master the king and challenged,
-abused, attacked, and bit him."
-
-If Count Brandt performed this execrable deed in the way the Fiscal
-General represents it, his righteous king would not have hesitated
-a moment to have had him thrown into fetters, and given him his
-well-merited reward--the hardest death. His Majesty, however after this
-event is stated to have occurred, namely, at the end of September, for
-several months admitted him to his presence as before, and granted him
-his most gracious daily intercourse, which satisfactorily proves that his
-royal Majesty did not regard the aforesaid occurrence as criminal.
-
-Count Brandt, for his part, equally little regarded it as audacious,
-either when the affair occurred, or afterwards. For, just as he described
-it, in its full details, in presence of the commission, when nothing
-could induce him to do so but the innocence which, according to his
-opinion, lay in the whole affair, if the circumstances connected with
-it were taken into consideration in the same way, his open confession
-proves the confidence he placed in his innocence, as the affair could
-not be proved by witnesses; and the man who knows himself to be innocent
-is never criminal. This confession of Count Brandt, therefore, must, as
-the sole existing proof in the affair, be registered as credible, just
-as well in those passages where it speaks for his acquittal as where it
-serves to testify against him.
-
-From this deposition, which perfectly agrees with Count Struensee's
-statement before the commission on March 21, we see what in this strange
-affair speaks in Count Brandt's defence. We must, therefore, regard
-in the first instance the peculiar circumstance that his Majesty the
-King, for the sake of enjoying the pleasures of private intercourse, as
-people of equal rank carry it on together--although the "sweetness" of
-such intercourse usually shuns thrones--commanded that the man whom
-he selected as his intimate should not consort with him as the king,
-but as his equal, or as one friend with the other. If Count Brandt,
-through submissive respect, addressed him differently, the king answered
-sarcastically, "Most submissive knave," in order to remind him of the
-commands which had been given, that Count Brandt in daily intercourse
-should forget he was the king, just as one of his Majesty's ancestors, of
-most revered memory used to act, and at times remarked, "Now the king is
-not at home;" and, again, when the free conversation was to have an end,
-"The king is at home again now."[2] But his present Majesty never would
-be at home, so to speak, for the man he had admitted to his intimacy, but
-demanded equality.
-
-From those men selected for his constant society, the king demanded what
-is understood by the term _un homme fait_, that they should be smart
-fellows, and before all, have their heart in the right place, of which
-they must furnish a proof if he desired it, and he could not on any
-terms endure cowards, because such disgusted his heroic nature. As now
-his Majesty had seen no proof of this good quality from Count Brandt,
-not even after many inducements had been given, because Count Brandt
-always held back, his Majesty most effectually forced them from him by
-threatening to cudgel him in the presence of the queen, Struensee, and
-other persons. Count Brandt, who regarded this as a real sign of the
-king's disfavour, fell into a state of desperation about it, until he was
-informed by Struensee, who had spoken with the king on the subject, that
-his Majesty's wishes and most gracious intentions were only directed to
-obtain a proof of Brandt's courage. It was for this reason that Count
-Brandt one evening, without feeling the slightest anger, went into
-the king, and, after ordering out the lad, who was not to witness the
-sport, stated to the king that he had been told by Count Struensee that
-his Majesty wished him to prove himself a man of courage, and to do so
-against the king. His Majesty, far from being offended at such a scene on
-the part of Count Brandt, "admitted" him, in accordance with his given
-order, at once to a fight, and the king himself made the first five or
-six attacks. This would have assuredly taken a very different course if
-the king had regarded it as an insult. On this occasion, his Majesty
-involuntarily thrust a finger into Count Brandt's mouth, which the latter
-quite as innocently seized with his teeth. The defence followed the
-attack: the king demanded of Count Brandt, _presta te virum_. Upon this
-Count Brandt seized the king by the coat, thrust him against the wall,
-and thus proved that he was stronger than the king; and with this the
-whole affair ended.
-
-Count Brandt persistently denies having beaten the king, or audaciously
-raised his hand against his Majesty; he only proved himself to be strong
-and brave, without seriousness or passion, by his Majesty's commands.
-His Majesty's own most gracious conduct to Count Brandt also proves that
-everything passed off without anger and annoyance, as his Majesty showed
-the count the signal favour of kissing him on the spot, and requesting
-him to remain and kill the time with conversation, which Count Brandt
-did by the king's orders, and all of which points to the disposition of
-their minds, and proves that they were not excited, as is also confirmed
-by Count Struensee's statement in the examination of March 21, that
-Count Brandt, when he went in to the king, was not at all irritated,
-but perfectly calm. After this time his Majesty also promoted him to
-be _grand maître de la garderobe_, and carried on his confidential
-intercourse with him for several months as before, all of which speaks
-for the nature of this affair. In Count Brandt's heart reigned no
-bitterness against the king, and no contempt: trembling from veneration,
-he performed the action which he would have regarded as audacious, had
-it not been for the king's command. It is true that Count Brandt, a few
-days previously, laid a riding whip upon a pianoforte standing in the
-king's ante-chamber, but only did so thoughtlessly, which he afterwards
-regretted, and as ill-deeds consist in actions carried out but not in
-inconsiderate designs, this occurrence cannot be reckoned as a crime on
-the part of Count Brandt.
-
-If Count Brandt employed some expressions against the king which,
-according to the strict letter, would be highly criminal, he only
-employed them in the tone of all the rest, and consequently only in jest.
-I pass over the statements of the witnesses examined, as these people
-neither heard nor saw the occurrence, but only testify what they heard
-said about it. On the other hand, the declaration which his Majesty laid
-before the commission, through his page of the chamber Schack, is of the
-extremest importance. I read it to Count Brandt, and he has requested me
-to make the following explanation about it:--
-
-"He did not remember this 'passage' in the way that it flowed from the
-page's lips: he considers himself too insignificant to contradict a
-declaration which emanated from the king his master, and only emboldens
-himself in dust and fetters to mention, that if his Majesty were most
-graciously disposed to take this affair seriously, as the declaration
-made by page of the chamber Schack appears to intimate, he regards
-himself as lost, and will not from this moment attempt any further
-justification, but will at once throw himself at his Majesty's feet, and
-seek his salvation in the king's clemency; but in the most submissive
-confidence in his Majesty's mercy, he would venture most humbly to remind
-him of the circumstances already mentioned."
-
-As concerns the charge which the Fiscal General derives from the fact
-that Count Brandt at times went to the king playing the flute, and
-with his hat on his head, and also in his _peignoir_, Count Brandt
-acknowledges that this did occur when he returned from the chase and
-was heated, but that it was not done through contempt of the king, but
-because his Majesty preferred such conduct, and never evinced any anger
-at it. He also dared to appear before the king in his _peignoir_, which
-consisted of a cloth surtout, because it was his Majesty's wish that he
-should come in the dress he was wearing when the king summoned him.
-
-
-_Ad passum_ 2_dum_.
-
-"That Count Brandt did not reveal to the king the improper intercourse
-which is said to have taken place between the queen and Struensee, by
-which he has rendered himself guilty of the punishment which the law
-dictates for this in 6--4--14."
-
-Although Count Brandt felt morally convinced of this improper intercourse
-between the queen and Count Struensee, still he possessed no juridical
-proof of it, much less such proofs as he could at once have produced in
-his defence against the denial of the guilty parties. And what might
-Count Brandt have reasonably expected if he had alleged such a crime
-against a reigning queen, who at that time possessed the king's heart,
-which would have disturbed the king, shamed the queen, and dishonoured
-the royal house? In that case, 6--4--1 of the law would have been proper
-for him, even if he could have proved his denunciation instantly. If,
-for his own part, he could have proved this crime with his life, he
-would, probably, not have spared his life. Things, however, under the
-circumstances, remained as they were. Count Brandt would have been a
-ruined man, without amending the business; and if such a sort of silence
-were a neck-breaking crime, only few persons in the country would retain
-their heads.
-
-
-_Ad passum_ 3_tium_.
-
-"That Count Brandt has been guilty of the crime of forgery."
-
-Whatever forgery Count Struensee may have committed, it does not affect
-Count Brandt. Even if Count Struensee may have converted the sum of
-6,000 dollars, approved by the king into 60,000, Count Brandt knows
-nothing about it. Count Brandt has not acknowledged this, and it has
-not been proved against him, nor did he receive 60,000 dollars all at
-once; but, on one occasion, 10,000 dollars, for which the king's note is
-still in existence; and the other 50,000 dollars were paid him by Baron
-Schimmelmann, and, according to Count Struensee's statement, were a
-present to him from the king. Count Brandt thanked the king for this, who
-answered him, "It was but fair he should give him a _douceur_, as he was
-always with him." Count Brandt never asked for this sum, and if it was
-given him by the king, he could not refuse it, the less so as, through
-his daily intercourse with the royal family, he was compelled to play
-high, in which he lost considerable sums. Count Brandt even declared on
-this occasion that if the king were indisposed to grant such large sums,
-he was ready to give the money back.
-
-From all this I believe I have proved that the crimes alleged against
-Count Brandt are exaggerated. I must therefore most submissively request
-that Count Enevold Brandt may be acquitted from the accusation of the
-Fiscal General.
-
-In all the rest he submits himself to the clemency of his most gracious
-king.
-
- O. L. BANG.
-
- _April_ 23, 1772.
-
-So little did Brandt comprehend the danger of his position, that he
-sent to the judges the following letter, in which, as Reverdil justly
-remarks, the Don Quixotism, levity, and inconsequence of his character
-are displayed in a manner which would be ridiculous under any other
-circumstances:--
-
-
-COUNT BRANDT'S PETITION.
-
-"_Pro Memoriâ._"
-
-I send you, my judges, a letter to his Majesty,[3] and leave it to you,
-when you have read it and this pro memoriâ, whether you will then think
-proper to have it delivered to the king or not. What I now write to you
-is in the same manner no document which I wish to be placed with the
-rest, or to be regarded as if it belonged to my trial.
-
-The letter to the king is rather badly written, but the pens given me
-were very bad. I beg the king's forgiveness, as I now know that in all
-cases, none excepted, it is the duty of a subject to humiliate himself
-before his monarch. Previously a flashing sword would not have brought me
-to do so.
-
-My letter could be more imploring and submissive, but I did not believe
-that this would please his Majesty. I employ the expression which the
-king so frequently used: "That no one knew so much about his affairs as I
-did." This he was accustomed to say to me when he was in a good temper,
-and I hope thus to recall his thoughts. He often added, that no one bore
-such a resemblance to him as myself; but I have omitted this expression,
-as the words would be too bold. I should prefer that this letter should
-be read to the king at a favourable moment, than that he should read it
-first himself.
-
-I find it natural that a double doubt will arise with you, my judges, and
-with all to whom you may show this letter:
-
-(1) Does Brandt deserve, from the nature of the affair, that the king
-should pardon him fully? and
-
-(2) What more does he want?
-
-With the same frankness with which I have explained myself during
-the whole of my trial, I can assert, that you would at once feel the
-heartiest compassion, if it were feasible to bring my affair entirely to
-light, partly by summoning fresh witnesses, partly by cross-examining
-those who have been heard: but I do not wish this, even though it might
-cost me life and liberty. I will only mention a few slight but important
-circumstances, which might induce you to believe that I must feel a
-bitterness against the king:
-
-(1) That I am said to have bitten the king's finger. My statement proves
-that I did not hear of it till afterwards. Consequently, it was not done
-_animo nocendi_, but was a natural movement for a man to close his mouth
-when his tongue was caught hold of, and as soon as I perceived it, I
-asked for pardon. The king tapped me on the cheek, and said: "It does not
-hurt."
-
-(2) I myself mentioned that I laid a riding whip on the pianoforte, with
-the intention of taking it in with me to the king: but could that have
-been known without my frankness? and woe to us, if every thought were to
-be punished!
-
-(3) On this occasion I employed improper language to the king, although
-not that of which I am accused: but in the melancholy alternative of
-displaying my courage either in words or deeds, I chose the former.
-
-(4) An important circumstance, which rendered a proof of such courage
-rather necessary, was that the king often said: "If I was certain you
-were a coward, I would post myself behind the door and kill you."
-
-(5) But why was the king so angry? Solely because, from that time, I was
-more serious and submissive than before, which I did to render the king
-more reserved, but which had the effect that he supposed I disliked him;
-and a temper, which has been once rendered captious, soon places the
-worst construction upon everything.
-
-(6) I declare before God, who knows my heart, that a similar scene never
-occurred before or afterwards. The king once threw his glove in my face:
-I stooped, picked it up, and said: "Why do you do that? I am really not
-cross with you;" and with this he was satisfied.
-
-(7) That I never regarded this occurrence as anything but a joke, the
-result of youth and eccentricity, is seen from the fact that when the
-commission began sitting, I was not aware of my offence.
-
-In this way I believe I have answered all doubts. I am quite ready to
-die, and to endure all the punishments that are imposed upon me. It is
-God's chastening hand, which I have deserved: but I consider it my duty
-to speak this once.
-
-His Majesty was angry with me: hence, I was imprisoned; hence, I was put
-in fetters. I can offer no objection to this: I kiss the hand that smites
-me, but the hand which smites me can also let loose and forgive, in the
-same way as Henri IV. frequently forgave much greater offences. Even
-should you consider that this is too great mercy, and if you wish that
-I should humiliate myself, personally, before his Majesty, I should not
-regard such a thing at all as a disgrace.
-
-Oh! my judges, if you would only see what my situation with the king was!
-and would you could feel as greatly, but forget quite as quickly, what
-my present position is! Your eyes would assuredly shed tears, and your
-hearts would be moved by the sincerest compassion! I commend my cause to
-the hands of God, and beg you for what I have no occasion to beg, namely,
-to follow your own convictions: with that I shall be perfectly satisfied.
-
-In the letter to his Majesty, I have begged to be allowed to pass my days
-in peace, and by that I mean a bailiwick in a remote province. I do not
-know whether such a post is vacant, of which I might entertain hopes, but
-I know that Bailiff Arnholdt, of Bramstedt[4] (in Holstein) has long
-wished himself away from there, and that this post is one of the worst.
-Further my wishes do not extend, and what right could I have to ask!
-
- BRANDT.
-
- _Frederikshaven, April_ 14, 1772.
-
-The drama of the great trial rapidly approached the catastrophe after the
-charges against Struensee and Brandt were delivered to the commissioners
-on April 21. Struensee's defence followed on the 22nd; the Fiscal
-General's reply and Brandt's defence on the 23rd; and so early as the
-25th the sentences were promulgated. In Brandt's trial a reply was not
-even considered necessary, for the accuser had announced this to be
-superfluous in his sentence, _ab uno discimus omnia_. But the orders
-from the highest quarters were for the greatest possible speed, and the
-length of the sentence proves that it had been drawn up beforehand. That
-two human lives were at stake, was only so far taken into consideration
-as it was necessary to prove two judicial murders justifiable by every
-resource of sophistry; but how little the venal judges succeeded in doing
-so, will be seen from a perusal of the memorable documents which are here
-published for the first time without any abbreviation.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 1: To form an idea of the pretended denunciation made by
-the king to the commission, it is only necessary to observe that page
-Schack, who was the intermediary, received for this gratifications and an
-employment whose appointments amounted to 4,000 crowns a-year.--_Mémoires
-de Falckenskjold_, p. 214.]
-
-[Footnote 2: An allusion to King Frederick III., who was fond of the
-bowl, and in his orgies permitted a general fraternity. In reference to
-this remark of the advocate, Mr. Wraxall says (in his "Northern Tour"):
-"This seems more like the speech of an Englishman than a Dane, and
-breathes a manly and unfettered spirit."]
-
-[Footnote 3: This letter no longer exists, and was, in all probability,
-suppressed by the commission.]
-
-[Footnote 4: On this point Reverdil writes: "The bailiwick of Bramstedt,
-bordering that held by M. Brandt the elder, was situated in the
-southernmost province of the kingdom, and near Hamburg. This remote
-province, consequently, suited him better than any other, and what he
-solicited as an exile, and to some extent as the equivalent of a capital
-punishment, would have been to any other person a very considerable
-recompense, and the end desired by some old servant of the state for a
-life usefully devoted to the advantage of the country."]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE TWO COUNTS.
-
- STRUENSEE'S SENTENCE--HIS GENERAL CONDUCT--THE MAITRE DES
- REQUETES--THE GERMAN LANGUAGE--STRUENSEE'S DESPOTISM--THE
- COUNCIL OF THE THIRTY-TWO--THE CABINET MINISTER--THE KING'S
- PRESENTS--STRUENSEE'S PRECAUTIONS--HIS DOWNFALL--THE SENTENCE
- APPROVED--COUNT BRANDT--HIS ASSAULT ON THE KING--HIS BEHAVIOUR--THE
- ROYAL ASSENT.
-
-
-STRUENSEE'S SENTENCE.[5]
-
-Apart from the fact that Count John Frederick Struensee has already been
-convicted, and has himself confessed that he has committed a terrible
-crime, which involves in an eminent degree an assault on the king's
-supremacy, or the crime of high treason, and according to the law
-(especially art. 1 of cap. iv. of book vi.) deserves the severe penalty
-of death; it is sufficiently notorious and proven that his whole conduct
-and management during the time when he had a share in the administration
-of the affairs was a chain, which, on one side, was composed of vain
-and audacious impetuosity; on the other, of tricks and intrigues,
-all of which operated to secure him the whole power and authority to
-the exclusion of others. At the same time he boldly employed all the
-measures which appeared to be useful in attaining his ends, without in
-the slightest degree reflecting whether they were permitted or not, and
-how far they accorded with the form of government and the constitution,
-the genius of the nation and the regulations and laws, both civil and
-fundamental, or were in strict opposition to them.
-
-His great design was partly to become privy cabinet minister, with the
-extraordinary and unparalleled authority which he filched in the last
-month of July, partly to exclude all the subjects from their king, and
-the king from them; partly to exercise at court and over his Majesty such
-an unbridled power as has been seen with astonishment.
-
-In order to attain this end, he strove, during his Majesty's foreign
-journey, to gain his most gracious favour by proved care for the king's
-health and pleasure. When his Majesty returned, Struensee behaved
-quietly, and seemed to think of nothing less than the attachment of
-charges and honours, although his ambition and his love of power desired
-them.
-
-He lived at court, amused himself, demanded no increase of his salary,
-and seemed to satisfy himself with peace and voluptuousness; but in
-secret he zealously strove to lay the foundation on which he intended to
-raise his proud fortune.
-
-It was not his business to learn the language of the country, to
-study the position and true interest of the kingdom, and to learn its
-civil laws and constitution. This was the way which he ought to have
-chosen; but about all these things he was, and remained, in the deepest
-ignorance. Instead of this, he preferred to establish the principles
-which his Majesty should follow in the government, so that he might use
-them in concealing his infamous propositions behind them, and as he had
-every reason to apprehend that either faithfully minded men might reveal
-his designs, or that the king himself should detect them; in order to
-prevent the former effect, he calumniated without distinction all those
-who had the honour of being allowed to approach the monarch, and in order
-to secure the latter, he strove to acquire a powerful protection, and
-to have in the king's neighbourhood so close, constant, and trustworthy
-a friend, that it was rendered almost impossible for his Majesty to
-penetrate this man's ways and designs.
-
-No sooner had he got his machine in perfect readiness in the year 1770
-than he at once set it in motion.
-
-Since the sovereignty our kings have had a council, composed of men who
-were experienced in the laws and customs of the country, and had studied
-the true state-system and real interests of the land, while, at the same
-time, they knew the rules which were applicable in cases that occurred.
-
-It was their office to attend the king, as often as matters of importance
-were to be laid before him, in order to afford his Majesty the necessary
-explanations about everything he wished to know, so that he might give
-his decision.
-
-These men, however, as members of the council, had no vote, no
-expedition, no secretaries; for everything depended on the king's will,
-and everything was carried into effect by the departments concerned.
-
-This traditional and so natural council Struensee and his adherents[6]
-wished to have entirely abolished and quashed, for this man apprehended
-that if such a council existed, and even if it were composed of his
-own friends, the time would arrive when it would oppose his injurious
-propositions, and reveal them to the king, as he could not exclude them
-(the members) from speaking with his Majesty, and representing to him
-what was best for him and the land.
-
-For this end Struensee had previously calumniated the ministry by all
-sorts of insinuations, and even depicted in the blackest colours those of
-their actions which were evidently to the advantage of the king and the
-state.
-
-His Majesty the king, who heartily loves his people, only desires honest
-officials, and jealously holds to his sovereign power, now lost his
-confidence in the council, wished to appoint other men to it, and to give
-it a different constitution; but Struensee, by false statements, and
-the most cunning tricks, laid such obstacles in the king's way that the
-council gradually ceased to meet, and was finally solemnly abolished by a
-decree of December 27, 1770.
-
-At the same time, he became _maître des requêtes_, and as it was his
-plan that only he should have the right to speak to the king about the
-affairs, and that all other persons should be excluded from doing so,
-it appeared to him that the remaining colleges might still lay some
-impediments in his way.
-
-In order to prevent this, he represented to his Majesty the King, who
-wished to be thoroughly acquainted with the affairs sent in from the
-colleges for his most gracious decision, that nothing would be more
-useful for this object than for the colleges to be ordered to deliver
-their written requests in a portfolio, so that the king might be allowed
-the requisite time to read through the memoirs and reflect.
-
-By this brilliant, and apparently so useful advice, this man gained his
-object of also "excluding" the colleges from the king.
-
-He soon seizes the portfolios, and thus becomes the sole master to lay
-matters before the king at his pleasure.
-
-If the colleges wished to produce further reasons for the king's better
-information, they must apply to Struensee, and thus he alone became what
-the council and the colleges together had formerly been.
-
-Under the pretext of a more rapid expedition of various matters, and in
-order to display the royal authority in its right supremacy, he issued
-cabinet decrees, which were carried out without the colleges concerned
-being informed of them,--a conduct which necessarily produced the
-greatest confusion, and which a man dared, who was neither acquainted
-with the country nor its laws, its condition nor its language. But this
-did not trouble him at all, so long as he could grasp all the respect and
-all the power.
-
-This ignorance of Count Struensee in everything, which every minister in
-Denmark must know, and his extremely slight efforts to obtain a knowledge
-of it, entailed innumerable disadvantages, both generally and for private
-persons.
-
-In the colleges, which were formerly accustomed to send in their reports
-in Danish, a special official had to be appointed to translate them into
-German, so that Count Struensee might read them in this language. The
-Danish Chancery, the only college which continued to report in Danish,
-had only too often opportunity for learning that these representations
-were not read at all, as only an extract of the proposition, which, by
-command, was inserted in what was called the Rotulus, was translated
-into German and seen by Count Struensee, after which the resolution
-ensued in the German language, and was again translated into Danish in
-the Chancery. It could not fail but that the resolution often proved
-equivocal, incomprehensible, and but little adapted to the affair, of
-which the man who represented it to his Majesty had only rarely a correct
-idea.
-
-Private persons who wished to send in petitions to the cabinet, and
-had drawn them up in the Danish language, ran about to find a German
-translator, as they were of the possibly not incorrect opinion that their
-memorial, if such was only in Danish, would not be read, while these
-cheap translations often turned out so, that it was impossible to discern
-what was the real object of the petition.
-
-Count Struensee's ignorance of the organization of the colleges, his
-unwillingness to instruct himself about it, and his exertions to reform
-the entire old state constitution, and to increase the number of his
-adherents by appointing persons everywhere, and to the highest offices,
-who owed their fortune to him--all this led him to lay hands on one
-college after the other. And as he would not and could not work himself,
-he employed other men in carrying out the important reforms, several of
-whom afterwards confessed that they had no knowledge of the advantages
-and defects of the former organization of these colleges, nor attempted
-to acquire it, as they were only ordered to draw up a plan of the new
-arrangements after a certain predetermined date.
-
-After Count Struensee had drawn all power and authority into his own
-hands by removing the privy council, by weakening and reconstituting, and
-by the exclusion of verbal reports, it was not long ere his Majesty's
-subjects perceived the effects of his, Struensee's, despotic principles
-and ideas.
-
-As a consequence of the before-mentioned paternal and mild government, to
-which people had been long accustomed in Denmark, and which had to some
-extent acquired a traditional right, every one who had obtained a royal
-appointment considered himself justified in believing that he should
-retain it so long as he behaved himself properly and attended to his
-duties, and therefore ran no risk of losing his post against his will, so
-long as he was not declared unworthy of it through a judicial sentence
-on account of malversation, errors, or negligence. These moderate
-principles, which characterised the mildness of the government, and had
-many excellent results, were not at all to Count Struensee's taste, who
-did not wish to be in the least degree impeded when the object was to
-ruin people, and imbue others with terror.
-
-For this reason it was heard frequently, nay, almost daily, that first
-one, then the other, royal official was removed by a cabinet order,
-without their learning what error they had committed, or in what their
-offence consisted.[7]
-
-Several persons also lost their posts without any royal resolution on the
-subject being imparted to them, and without knowing anything of it, till
-they learned that their office had been given to another man by a cabinet
-order. This conduct was even extended to the dismissal of entire colleges.
-
-The entire magistracy, consisting of from eighteen to twenty, or even
-more persons, was abolished, and a new magistracy was appointed by a
-cabinet order addressed on April 3, 1771, to the president, who had been
-appointed to this post only a few days previously, and also by a cabinet
-decree, and who contented himself with informing the previous members
-of the magistracy by letter that they were dismissed, and the new ones
-that they were to assemble at the town-hall without the deposed members
-learning what offence they had committed, or why they were discharged.
-
-In addition to the magistracy, there was another college or public
-assembly in Copenhagen, namely, the so-called thirty-two men, as, owing
-to the bravery and fidelity so solemnly displayed by the Copenhageners
-during the siege, and on the establishment of the sovereignty,[8] it was
-conceded among the privileges granted to the citizens on June 24, 1664,
-that they should be allowed to elect thirty-two of the best and most
-respected citizens, who would, with the magistracy, consult about the
-welfare of the city, and its revenues and out-goings. In these privileges
-access to his Majesty's person was also granted to the city deputies and
-the magistracy.
-
-This assembly, which was regarded as the highest of these privileges, and
-had had many good results, and, moreover, did not cost the king or city
-a farthing, was also dissolved by the aforesaid cabinet order, by virtue
-of which the chief president informed the men that they were no longer
-permitted to meet, and ordered the council-hall to be closed. This, and
-many other instances of a similar nature, which all proved that nothing
-was sacred to this equally incautious and absolute man, and that he was
-as great an enemy of all sense and mildness as he was of order and good
-morals, produced a striking effect upon the nation, which fancied itself
-suddenly removed under an "Oriental climate."
-
-Some lamented and sighed, others expressed their amazement or bitterness
-in one way or the other. But all were agreed that his Majesty's mild and
-paternal heart for his subjects was still the same, if their complaints
-and sighs could only penetrate to the throne, and the real posture of the
-affair be represented to his Majesty.
-
-This, however, seemed quite impossible, owing to the precautions which
-Count Struensee had taken in this respect. He had placed his intimate
-friend, Count Brandt, near the king,[9] and as he, in accordance with
-the well-known proverb, _nulla amicitia nisi inter bonos_, was not fully
-convinced of the duration of this friendship, he sought to insure its
-permanence by a mutual interest, and, as will be shown presently, at the
-expense of his Majesty and the royal treasury.
-
-Count Brandt, who was always about the king, confirmed him in everything
-that Count Struensee alleged or insinuated, and prevented everybody from
-having an opportunity to convince his Majesty of the opposite truth.
-
-There was no council, and, so to speak, no minister. No one succeeded in
-speaking alone with the king, save those persons of whose devotion Count
-Struensee considered himself assured and if it ever happened, it was only
-for moments which admitted of no detailed explanation or discussion. All
-the rest were held aloof from his Majesty, which was even extended to
-his Majesty's own most exalted relatives and his nearest family, toward
-whom the king had formerly displayed special tenderness and affection.
-But from the time when Count Struensee had usurped the administration of
-the court and of the whole country, the latter never had an opportunity
-of conversing alone with the king, as they would not have omitted to
-represent to his Majesty the good of his subjects and their grief,
-of which these exalted personages afterwards, when the opportunity
-was offered, have given incontrovertible proofs, which can never be
-sufficiently praised and recognised.
-
-It could not fail but that Count Struensee should render himself odious
-to all, through such despotic, arbitrary, and unreasonable conduct.
-
-His emissaries, and the adherents whom he still possessed, tried, even
-though they did not dare to justify or excuse his undertakings, at least
-to boast of his asserted disinterestedness, and to spread far and wide
-that he was satisfied with his moderate salary, without asking either
-money or honours for himself or his friends. How far this met with belief
-may be left an open question. But it is certain that Count Struensee took
-very carefully-devised measures to conceal his selfishness at that time,
-and so long as it lasted. But it was afterwards seen only too plainly
-that he was an extremely interested and selfish man, of whom it may be
-justly said that he pillaged his Majesty's treasury.
-
-He had a very respectable and considerable salary, which ought to have
-been sufficient, as he had everything free at court down to the very
-banquets he gave. He knew, and often enough proclaimed, in what a bad
-state the public treasury and his Majesty's were from former times.
-
-For all that, after the council was dissolved, and he had become _maître
-des requêtes_, he allowed hardly three months to pass ere he, by an
-abuse of his Majesty's good heart, demanded and received from his most
-gracious lord a present of 10,000 dollars for himself, and a similar sum
-for his friend Count Brandt. It might be supposed that so considerable
-a present for these two persons, of whom one was _maître des requêtes_,
-and the other _directeur des spectacles_, and who both had only held
-these offices for a short time, would have satisfied their greediness for
-a while. But, instead of this, we find that it grew and increased, for
-Count Struensee, after receiving the above mentioned present in February
-or March, again received in May, or at the end of two or three months,
-from his Majesty 50,000 or 60,000 dollars, and Count Brandt the same sum,
-so that these two persons, in the short time of three or four months,
-cost his Majesty, in addition to their regular salary, 140,000 dollars,
-or at least 120,000--for which of these two sums is the correct one
-cannot as yet be stated with certainty, owing to the confusion prevailing
-in Count Struensee's accounts--and this in addition to the presents which
-before and after this date they procured for their good friends: such as
-Justiz-rath Struensee 4,000 dollars, Countess Holstein 3,000, Chamberlain
-Falckenskjold 3,500 or more, and so on.
-
-That Count Struensee's irresponsible selfishness was duly considered and
-intended, is seen from the artificial machinery which he formed, solely
-that he might be able to take these sums without any one detecting it.
-
-For this purpose, he first proposed the abolition of what was called
-the "Trésor"--which consisted of a sum of money laid by for unforeseen
-expenses, and that it should be paid into the public treasury. As the
-Trésor, however, must pass through the cabinet on its way to the public
-exchequer, he proposed to his Majesty to reserve 250,000 dollars of the
-same, in order to form a special cabinet treasury which would stand under
-his control.
-
-In this way Count Struensee obtained a good opportunity for receiving
-considerable sums, without any one being acquainted with the fact.
-
-He behaved in such a way with this treasury, that after it was
-established in April, 1771, and at that time consisted of 250,000
-dollars, at the end of May only 118,000 dollars remained of the original
-contents, although the king had no other out-goings but these presents.
-
-The remaining 118,000 dollars would have gone by degrees the same road as
-the others if Struensee had been allowed sufficient time.
-
-Count Struensee's disgraceful avarice and selfishness are thus rendered
-so evident, that those persons who proclaimed him as disinterested
-must fairly confess that they knew him badly, and were not properly
-informed.[10]
-
-But this is not sufficient. There is the very strongest presumption that
-Count Struensee in this traffic committed an impudent, disgraceful, and
-highly criminal fraud. When the account found among Count Struensee's
-papers, and approved by his Majesty, of the income and expenditure of
-the special treasury for the months of April and May, was laid before
-his Majesty, as it was considered suspicious, the king at once declared
-that he perfectly well remembered having at that time given 10,000
-dollars to the queen, 6,000 to Count Brandt, and other 6,000 to Count
-Struensee, but no more. Just as these sums amount to 22,000 dollars, it
-is on an inspection of the document as clear as the sun that the addition
-was in the first instance 22,000 dollars, but the first figure two was
-converted into a three--a change which is so visible that it is at once
-noticed--and that a one was afterwards added, for which there was no
-other room but in front of the line drawn underneath, which is quite
-contrary to the practice in the other accounts, and in this very one on
-the preceding page, where the in-comings are calculated. Hence, then,
-the said sum of 22,000 dollars became 132,000, which is proved by the
-fact that the two sums of 6,000 dollars for Struensee and Brandt were
-converted into 60,000 by the addition of a cipher, and 2,000 dollars
-were added for Falckenskjold. This last sum seems to have been added, in
-order not to be obliged to convert the second two into a cipher in the
-sum of 22,000 dollars, which had become 130,000.
-
-These suppositions, the real strength of which only that man can
-comprehend who has the document in question before him, is also confirmed
-by other concurrent circumstances-—as, for instance, that the account for
-April and May is written by Struensee himself, while the other extracts
-and calculations are written by the secretary of the cabinet, which
-probably occurred because Count Struensee wished no one to be cognizant
-of the embezzlement effected by him, and further by the fact that, from
-this time, Count Struensee laid no account of the treasury before the
-king until the end of October, although in June there was an out-going of
-2,000 dollars, which were given to Justiz-rath Struensee.[11]
-
-This negligence or omission appears to have taken place purposely,
-so that his Majesty, after so long an interval, might not thoroughly
-remember the real state of the treasury. To this must be added his
-Majesty's own alleged and very natural conjecture that it cannot be
-credited that he gave Counts Struensee and Brandt 50,000 or 60,000
-dollars apiece, while he only made the queen a present of 10,000.
-
-Count Struensee, who is obliged to confess the selfishness of having
-requested this money of the king, will not, however, acknowledge this
-embezzlement, but asserts that his Majesty at that time, on his request,
-gave him 50,000 dollars, and Count Brandt the same sum, and that, as
-the 10,000 dollars previously given had not been taken to account, they
-were included in this amount. On the document being produced before the
-commission, however, he was obliged to allow that all the facts concurred
-against him to arouse such a presumption, which he had no evidence to
-refute, while at the same time, he regretted his want of accuracy and his
-negligence.
-
-That Count Struensee's ambition was not less than his avidity, and that
-his "moderation," as regards honours and titles, was in no way inferior
-to that for money and resources, is equally self-evident.
-
-Within two years he made such progress as others of greater nobility
-and higher merit hardly make in thirty years and more. According to the
-position which he occupied, he could not fail to stand in great honour
-both at court and in the city. But all this was not enough for him.
-
-Through constant persuasion he brought it about that his Majesty
-appointed him on July 14, 1771, privy cabinet minister, which design he
-contrived to conceal up to the last moment, even from his most intimate
-friends, just as he, and Chamberlain Brandt were a few days later raised
-to the rank of counts.[12]
-
-Although as privy cabinet minister he regarded himself as the first
-private person in the whole kingdom, still, the title and the authority
-he had hitherto possessed did not suffice him; but he wished to have
-prerogatives connected with them which were not at all seemly for a
-subject, and involved a portion of the sovereign authority which belonged
-to the king alone.
-
-Count Struensee had already seized on all the power, and as those persons
-who were about the king spoke in Struensee's behalf, and his Majesty
-thus only heard praises of his minister, it was perfectly natural that
-he should have a certain liking for him, and as he was nearly the only
-person who discussed the affairs with his Majesty, it could not fail
-that the latter should consent to everything he proposed. Thus he had
-everything that he could crave; but this was not sufficient to satisfy
-his immoderate ambition, as the colleges refused to obey unless they saw
-the king's signature.
-
-This did not suit Struensee, and there are grounds for believing that it
-did not agree with his secret designs, and his wish that his signature
-should be worth as much as the king's, and that the persons concerned
-should obey both signatures.
-
-This he attained by the royal order projected by himself, which was
-issued to the colleges on July 15, 1771, with reference to his office as
-privy cabinet minister, and was afterwards published by them; for in the
-first article of this cabinet order the decrees signed by Struensee, and
-provided with the cabinet seal, were placed perfectly parallel with those
-signed by his Majesty himself, and countersigned by Struensee, and in the
-fourth article it is expressly ordered that everybody should execute the
-cabinet orders issued and expedited by Struensee. It is true that this
-article seems to contain a certain limitation, where it states, "so far
-as no royal regulation or resolution speaks to the contrary;" but what
-follows on this may be rather regarded as an extension, for, instead of
-stating, as might be expected, that in such a case execution was to be
-deferred until a royal resolution was issued, it continues, "in which
-case, the fact is to be immediately reported to the cabinet," so that
-if any one thought it his duty to remonstrate against Struensee or his
-order, he would have to apply to Struensee himself; and if the minister
-then commanded him to obey his first order and carry it out, he must do
-so. This is what Count Struensee intended and practiced. In this way,
-however, he filched a portion of the sovereignty, and, from what had
-previously happened, it might be concluded that he intended to exercise
-it alone.
-
-As Struensee acknowledges having read the _Lex Regia_, and as he as
-minister must have been fully acquainted with its contents, he must have
-known that article 7 resolves "that all government decrees, letters, and
-documents shall be signed by the king himself." But the article of the
-royal law most applicable here is the 26th, in which the most revered
-king and first autocrat, Frederick III., appears to have had a species
-of presentiment that a Struensee might one day arise in Denmark, because
-it is stated in it how injurious it is when the mildness and kindness
-of kings and masters are so abused that their power and authority are
-cut away in an almost imperceptible manner, and for this reason it is
-recommended to, and impressed on, the kings of Denmark zealously to watch
-over their sovereignty and autocracy in order to keep it uninjured; and
-the conclusion is, that if any one should dare to desire or appropriate
-anything which might in any way be prejudicial to the sovereign authority
-and monarchical power of the king, everything of the sort shall be
-regarded as null and void, and those who have not hesitated to acquire
-such a thing, or tried to do so, shall be punished as insulters of
-majesty, because they have committed the greatest crime against the
-supremacy of the royal autocracy.
-
-Count Struensee could have read his sentence here, if he had not
-committed another and equally coarse offense against the king's highness,
-apart from the fact that he was not only an accomplice and adviser,
-but also an inciter of the assault made on his Majesty's person by his
-intimate friend Count Brandt.
-
-The way in which Count Struensee exercised the power and authority
-entrusted to him as privy cabinet minister does not excuse him, but, on
-the contrary, incriminates him in the highest degree, because it is a
-further proof that he regarded the welfare, honour, life, and property of
-his Majesty's subjects as purely dependent on his discretion.
-
-He revoked, by cabinet orders drawn up by himself, and under his hand,
-former royal resolutions, of whose existence he was cognizant.
-
-In the most important affairs he issued orders without his Majesty's
-knowledge, and he partly neglected the extracts from cabinet decrees
-imposed upon him as a duty by the resolution of July 15, which he was to
-lay before the king every week, or drew them up in such a way that it was
-impossible to discover the nature of the orders, or the effect they were
-intended to produce.
-
-When the direction of the privy treasury was entrusted to him--for
-he wished to direct all the treasuries--he thought proper to give
-the cashier fresh instructions from his hand; and when the cashier
-represented to him that he held a royal instruction which could only
-be revoked by another royal resolution, he gave him an answer which
-contained a species of reprimand, and ordered him to obey the order and
-instruction given by him, Struensee.
-
-The pretty corps of Horse Guards, which was composed exclusively of Danes
-and Norwegians, and consequently did not please Count Struensee--or, as
-it only consisted of two squadrons, was not very expensive--was disbanded
-in February, 1771, by Count Struensee's proposition, and in accordance
-with his wish, but against the opinion of the college.[13]
-
-The Fusilier Guards still remained. They consisted of five companies,
-and were composed of none but clever and trustworthy men, to whom the
-guard of the royal palace, and before the apartments of the royal house,
-could be safely entrusted; but they possessed a "quality" which prevented
-Struensee from being able to place confidence in them,--they were nearly
-all Danes and Norwegians.
-
-He had long resolved on the reduction of this corps, and spoken with
-several persons about it, most of whom, however, dissuaded him. At length
-he carried it through, and without his Majesty's knowledge (as the king
-himself has declared)[14] issued, on December 21, 1771, a cabinet order
-to the Generalty and Commissariat College, by which the five companies of
-Foot Guards were to be transformed into five companies of grenadiers, and
-one company of them be attached to each of the five regiments quartered
-in Copenhagen.
-
-He allowed December 21, 22, and 23 to pass without telling his Majesty
-anything about it, although Struensee, on the 23rd, procured the
-Generalty the royal approbation of the said order of the 21st, because
-this college required a royal resolution, and refused without it to
-execute the cabinet order, as it considered the affair of too great
-importance, and foresaw the consequences that would result from it.
-
-As, however, the Guards on December 24 declared that their capitulation
-must be kept, and that it was contrary to it to make them serve in other
-regiments, Struensee found himself compelled to lay the whole matter
-before his Majesty, and advised that force should be employed, and the
-Guards compelled to obey. However, a royal order was issued on December
-24, by which those guards who would not serve as grenadiers were granted
-their discharge.
-
-The result of this operation of Count Struensee's therefore was, that his
-Majesty lost from his military service several hundred brave, faithful,
-and trustworthy men, who were all natives. Count Struensee's improper
-and treacherous conduct in this affair is at once seen on comparing the
-protocol kept about the cabinet orders, with the weekly extract from
-them, which was laid before his Majesty.
-
-In the protocol we find the said order of December 21, under No. 709,
-quoted with the correct date. After this, several other cabinet orders
-were drawn up, to No. 733, on December 22, 23, and 24; but the second
-cabinet order of December 24 is not found among them, but a space is left
-open at the very end, in order to book it afterwards. But in the extract
-from the cabinet orders expedited from December 18 to 25, which was drawn
-up on December 31, and afterwards laid before his Majesty, we find these
-two orders of December 21 and 24 quoted together at the end, under the
-numbers 22 and 23, just as if they had been expedited at the same time
-and under the same date, while, on the contrary, the cabinet orders
-issued from December 22 to 23 are omitted from this extract. From this
-a general idea of the completeness and trustworthiness of these extracts
-may be formed.
-
-This protocol further proves how Count Struensee--although he had
-long before sufficiently provided that no one should bring before the
-king either verbally or in writing anything that might injure him,
-Struensee--found himself obliged, at the time when the guards were
-dismissed, to take just precautions. For under date of December 23 he
-expedited two cabinet orders, one to (the Danish chief postmaster)
-Etats-rath Waitz, in Hamburg, that the packets for his Majesty sent by
-post should be addressed to the cabinet, the other to Court-Intendant
-Wegener, by which all letters and parcels sent to the king, and letters
-and portfolios that came in from Copenhagen, should not be delivered
-in the king's ante-chamber, but in the cabinet. One of these orders,
-though they immediately concerned the king, was entirely omitted in the
-above-mentioned extract, while the other was quoted imperfectly, so that
-his Majesty was not at all informed of these regulations.
-
-Just as Count Struensee more and more evinced his distrust of the nation,
-so the reciprocal hatred of the nation against him increased more and
-more (and was expressed), in various ways. Thus, in the summer of 1771,
-various pasquinades were in circulation, and although their contents and
-style sufficiently proved that they emanated from the common people,
-still they all displayed the strongest attachment to his Majesty's
-person, and a readiness to sacrifice life and blood for him, while the
-bitterness had no other object but the privy cabinet minister and his
-adherents.
-
-This, and the fact that a few sailors and others who believed themselves
-insulted, went out to Hirschholm in order to lay their complaints before
-his Majesty himself, caused Count Struensee such terror, that he made
-preparations and was on the point of taking flight and running away.
-
-As he, however--probably by the advice of his friends--desisted from
-this design, it seemed as if he, on the other hand, prepared to maintain
-himself in his post, and against everybody, in every possible way. This
-gave cause to various hitherto unknown measures.
-
-When their Majesties came to town, at which times Count Struensee always
-accompanied them, they were surrounded by an unusual escort; wherever
-they stopped in town, at the palace or in the theatre, double sentries
-were posted, &c.
-
-Such a course increased the bitterness of the nation, and especially of
-the Copenhageners, against Count Struensee in more than one respect. They
-saw in it a proof that he persuaded his Majesty to believe there were
-among the inhabitants people who entertained bad designs against his
-Majesty and the royal house. They were confirmed in their suspicion that
-Count Struensee entertained other, more extensive, ambitious, and, at
-the same time, most audacious and criminal designs.
-
-It must also be confessed that much of what happened during this summer,
-but more especially in autumn, must confirm them in this belief, and
-produce a strong presumption of it, as he has himself been obliged to
-confess that several of his measures were intended to maintain himself in
-every way in the situation he occupied.
-
-As already stated, the Horse Guards were disbanded.
-
-As, however, Count Struensee, who always lived in fear, wished to have
-some cavalry in the vicinity of the court, an exercising troop was
-formed. But, ere long, he learned that both the officers and men of this
-corps were natives, so that they were not at all the sort he wanted,
-whence his confidence in them was lost, and this troop was also disbanded
-in the autumn.
-
-He then ordered the Seeland Dragoons to the court and the city, but they
-have given incontrovertible testimony that they were no better disposed
-toward him than the preceding dragoons.
-
-He now obtained a resolution that two of the regiments lying in garrison
-here should be removed to other towns in the spring. But, instead of
-letting this fall on the two youngest regiments, as the rule was, he
-wished--for reasons known to himself, and which it is not difficult to
-conjecture--that they should be his Majesty the King's, and his brother
-the Prince Frederick's, regiments, contrary to the opinion of the
-Generalty, and without informing his royal highness, the colonel of the
-latter regiment, or asking his assent to it. Furthermore, he managed to
-have a new commandant of Copenhagen appointed, in whom he believed he
-could place full confidence.
-
-But what heightened the distrust most, and excited the inhabitants
-of Copenhagen, was the following last-discovered circumstance, that,
-according to Struensee's instructions to the commandant, cannon, with
-cartridges and the proper complement of men, were held in readiness
-at the arsenal, so that they could be used at the first signal,—-a
-regulation which was also concealed from his Majesty.[15]
-
-The king and the royal house, as well as the whole nation, must at last
-lose all patience when they were compelled to see, in addition to all the
-rest, how audaciously he behaved in the harsh and extraordinary education
-which he dared to give to the crown prince, and by which his royal
-highness ran the greatest risk of losing his health and life.
-
-Thus, then, the bitterness was raised to the highest pitch, and must
-have had the most dangerous consequences, when a fortunate end was put
-to the widely-extended designs and despotic administration of this vain,
-thoughtless, arbitrary, and ambitious man.
-
-As it is clear, therefore, that Count Struensee, in more than one way and
-in more than one respect, has both himself committed the crime of high
-treason in an eminent degree, as well as participated in similar crimes
-with others; and that, further, his whole administration was a chain of
-violence and selfishness, which he ever sought to attain in a disgraceful
-and criminal manner; and that he also displayed contempt of religion,
-morality, and good manners, not only by word and deed, but also through
-public regulations, the following sentence is passed on him, according to
-the words of article 1 of chapter iv. of the 6th book of the Danish law:--
-
-Count John Frederick Struensee shall, as a well-deserved punishment for
-himself and an example and warning for others of the same mind, have
-forfeited honour, life, and property, and be degraded from his dignity
-of count, and all other honours which have been conferred on him, and
-his noble coat of arms be broken by the executioner: John Frederick
-Struensee's right hand shall be cut off while he is alive, and then his
-head, his body quartered and exposed on the wheel, but his head and hand
-shall be stuck upon a pole.
-
-The commission at the Christiansborg Palace, April 25, 1772.
-
- J. K. JUELL-WIND.
- H. STAMPE. LUXDORPH.
- KOFOD ANCHER.
- F. C. SEVEL.
- G. A. BRAËM.
- A. G. CARSTENS.
- J. C. E. SCHMIDT.
- O. GULDBERG.
-
-Two days after this barbarous sentence was passed, it received the full
-royal confirmation in the following words:—--
-
-_We hereby approve, in all points, the sentence passed by the Commission
-of Inquiry appointed by us at our Palace of Christiansborg, which
-declares John Frederick Struensee, on account of his crimen læsæ
-Majestatis, in more than one point to have forfeited honour, life, and
-property; he shall be degraded from his dignity of count, and all the
-other dignities conferred on him; his coat of arms shall also be broken
-by the executioner; his right hand shall be cut off while he is alive,
-and then his head, his body quartered and exposed on a wheel, but his
-head and hand stuck on a pole. To which those whom it concerns will pay
-most submissive attention._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Given at our Palace of Christiansborg, this April 27, 1772.
-
- CHRISTIAN.
-
- O. THOTT.
- LUXDORPH. A. SCHUMACHER.
- DONS. HOYER.
-
-
-COUNT BRANDT'S SENTENCE.
-
-By Count Brandt's own confession, the declaration of the ex-cabinet
-minister John Frederick Struensee, and various circumstances, it has been
-already proved that Count Enevold Brandt was not only Struensee's good
-friend, but also his intimate, whom he (Struensee) entrusted with his
-greatest secrets.
-
-In consideration of the gracious intimacy in which he stood with his
-Majesty the King, it would have been his duty, therefore, to prevent all
-the things which, according to his own declaration when examined, he
-disapproved, and must have recognised in Struensee's life, sentiments,
-and undertakings, as foolish, audacious, and detrimental both for the
-king and the government and the country.
-
-Instead of this, he, as a criminal subject and unworthy confidential
-servant of the king, made common cause with Struensee, continually
-remained his confidant, and sought to sustain him.
-
-He allowed himself to be employed by Struensee in keeping everybody
-from the king, so that nothing should be revealed to his Majesty about
-Struensee's criminal conduct, and the share himself had in it.
-
-To the great concern of all his fellow-subjects he behaved haughtily, and
-not with the due respect to his king, both in private and in the sight of
-all men.
-
-He did not show the submissive reverence to the king which every subject
-owes him, and expresses voluntary from his heart on every occasion in
-word and deed, but he rather opposed the king, in order to maintain
-Struensee's favour, and acquire an extravagant fortune and special
-advantages for himself.
-
-The memoirs exchanged between him and Struensee furnish a proof of his
-unreasonable pretension, and that he was conscious of his reprehensible
-behaviour toward the king. From this cause he should have altered his
-conduct, or sooner have resigned a post which was repulsive to him, and
-for which he did not consider himself equal. But no, he did not wish to
-oppose his patron and protector, who, for his own purposes, desired to
-keep him, Brandt, about the king's person, while, on the other hand,
-Count Brandt expected greater fortunes in service and pecuniary affairs
-from him, Struensee.
-
-As _directeur des spectacles_, he assisted Struensee in producing a
-misunderstanding in the royal family by contriving that a separate box
-should be given Prince Frederick in the playhouse, so that his royal
-highness should not be in the king's box, and thus have an opportunity
-for revealing to his Majesty, Brandt and his intimate friend's most
-culpable conduct.[16]
-
-He obtained through Struensee in a short period 60,000 dollars from the
-royal treasury, although he must have known, or at least could not have
-doubted, that he had not earned them by his services or general conduct.
-
-When he thanked his Majesty for this large sum, he did not mention the
-amount which Struensee had procured him, because he knew that the matter
-was not all right, and Struensee had forbidden his doing so, lest his
-Majesty might thus be informed of that which the approved extract, found
-among Struensee's papers, has since revealed to his Majesty and every
-other person who sees the extract.
-
-Count Brandt has been guilty of all this criminality, although his
-conscience must reveal to him at every moment that he was acting as an
-unfaithful subject, and against the duty and the bond imposed on him by
-the king's gracious familiarity, and in defiance of the warnings which
-the two letters from an anonymous writer found in Brandt's pocket-book so
-impressively and clearly contained, by reminding him of his duties, and
-advising him what he should do if he did not wish to risk his head.
-
-He only allowed himself to be ruled and guided by his arrogance,
-fortune-hunting, and avarice.
-
-But though the things mentioned appear so criminal, they cannot be
-compared with the crime of laying hands on the exalted person of his
-Majesty the King, which Count Enevold Brandt has himself clearly and
-regularly confessed in his examination before the commission, and as it
-has been proved and confirmed by several witnesses. For this crime may be
-regarded as if Count Brandt wished to hazard the king's death, because
-the result of such an assault cannot be foreseen, and an unlucky blow on
-a tender part has frequently caused death.
-
-He was angry with the king, and demanded satisfaction of his master,
-whose well-deserved admonition he ought to have accepted in penitence for
-his previous conduct, and have withdrawn himself from his (the king's)
-countenance, in order not to irritate him more.
-
-On the contrary, he consulted with his intimate friend Struensee how
-and when he should assault the king, and reflected what sort of weapon
-he should employ, and held it in readiness; but after more mature
-reflection, made no use of it.
-
-After he had been warned by Struensee that the king was now alone,
-and the right time had arrived, he goes with reflection, and a firm
-determination to avenge himself, in to the king, orders out the two lads
-in attendance, and bolts the door, so that no one may come in to oppose
-his resolution or to prevent his design, and forces his Majesty the King,
-by language and assault, to offer resistance.
-
-While doing so, he wounds his Majesty in the neck, bites his finger,
-and at the same time insults his benefactor and king by audacious words
-and expressions of such a nature that everybody must feel horrified at
-repeating them.
-
-It is true that Count Brandt has urged, in his excuse, that his Majesty
-has pardoned him for this occurrence, yet, even were it so, it can only
-be supposed that his Majesty wished to overlook so great an insult for
-a time. Count Brandt, however, has produced no proof of this, and his
-Majesty alone is in a position to judge how far this indulgence should
-extend.
-
-This most atrocious and audacious undertaking of Count Brandt cannot be
-regarded otherwise than as an open attack on the king's person, and the
-greatest crime of high treason, which deserves the punishment attached to
-such a crime in art. 1, 4th chapter of the 6th book of the Danish law.
-
-We, therefore, consider ourselves justified in condemning Count Brandt,
-and passing the following sentence:--
-
-Count Enevold Brandt shall have forfeited honour, life, and property,
-and be degraded from his dignity of count, and all the other honours
-conferred on him; his coat of arms shall be broken by the executioner on
-the scaffold; his right hand cut off while he is still alive; then the
-head; his body quartered and exposed on the wheel; but his head and hand
-stuck on a pole.
-
-The Commission at the Christiansborg Palace, this 25th April, 1772.
-
- J. K. JUELL-WIND.
- H. STAMPE. LUXDORPH.
- KOFOD ANCHER.
- F. E. SEVEL.
- G. A. BRAËM.
- A. G. CARSTENS.
- J. E. E. SCHMIDT.
- O. GULDBERG.
-
-The royal confirmation of the sentence was to the following effect:--
-
-_We hereby approve in all points the sentence passed by the Commission
-of Inquiry appointed by us at the Christiansborg Palace, which declares
-that Enevold Brandt, for his most atrocious and audacious design and
-assault on our own person, shall have forfeited honour, life, and
-property, and that he shall be degraded from his dignity as count, and
-all the other honours conferred on him; that his coat of arms shall be
-broken by the executioner on the scaffold; after that his right hand be
-cut off while he is alive; and then his head; and that the body shall
-be quartered and exposed on the wheel; but the head and hand stuck on a
-pole. Whereupon those whom it concerns are ordered to act accordingly._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Given at our Palace of Christiansborg, this April 27, 1772.
-
- CHRISTIAN.
-
- O. THOTT.
- LUXDORPH. A. SCHUMACHER.
- DONS. HOYER.
-
- * * * * *
-
-These sentences are certainly among the rarest documents which the annals
-of justice contain. Struensee was convicted of a single crime; Brandt was
-innocent. In the sentence, Struensee's crime is not stated, and the whole
-document is a disgustingly long narrative of undecided actions, not one
-of which would offer grounds for a sentence of death. Reverdil, usually
-so cool and impartial, cannot restrain his feelings when he writes about
-these atrocious verdicts:--
-
-"The sentences were minuted by Wiwet. They were inserted in the
-newspapers; among others, the _Leyden Gazette_. They seem expressly drawn
-up to dishonour the king, the judges, and the country. The crimes proved
-are confounded in them with presumptions, offences with imprudences,
-faults peculiar to favourites with those in which, as they were covered
-by the king's authority, the culpability falls on him. In the fear of
-not charging enough, intentions and passions are taken into account. In
-the sentence passed on Brandt, after describing the scene of fisticuffs,
-which so strongly revealed the king's imbecility, they were not ashamed
-to add: 'Count Brandt has certainly alleged in his defence that the
-king had pardoned him; but even supposing that the fact was proved, it
-could not be understood otherwise than that his Majesty was kind enough
-to suffer so great an extremity for a time. After all, the culprit has
-proved nothing in this respect, and his Majesty is the sole judge of the
-extent he gives to his own indulgence.' When this extraordinary document
-was read to the man whom it concerned, he said very justly in his way,
-that its author deserved a hundred lashes with a stirrup-leather."
-
-It is not surprising to find that the authenticity of the sentences was
-not believed when they were published in foreign countries. Thus we read
-in the _Annales Belgiques_ for May, 1772:--
-
-"A sentence ought to state the facts simply, and declare the penalty
-which is pronounced against the man who has been guilty of them. Care
-should be taken to avoid mixing up in it reasonings and epithets which
-denote in the judge a disposition for vengeance or any passion: now this
-pamphlet, which is offered us under the title of a sentence, displays
-from one end to the other such marked characters of a violent prejudice
-against the condemned, that this in itself would be sufficient to render
-it suspicious. It forms a tissue of vague imputations which can be easily
-destroyed."
-
-But the dominant faction did not trouble itself about what might be said:
-sentence had been passed, and the next matter of importance was to have
-it executed before any revulsion took place in public opinion.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 5: This is translated _verbatim_ from the original, published
-in 1772, a copy of which was forwarded me from the Danish Foreign Office.]
-
-[Footnote 6: These adherents who aided in the suppression of the privy
-council were Rantzau and Köller, that is to say, the men who figured
-among the principal enemies and accusers of Struensee. It was Rantzau who
-invented the decree that suppressed this council.--_Falckenskjold_, p.
-205.]
-
-[Footnote 7: Did they forget that the constitution which governs Denmark
-gives the king absolute power? Could not the king dismiss one of his
-officers without form of trial or the intervention of justice? Remember,
-that those who brought this charge against Struensee also removed from
-office persons who displeased them, and even deprived them of their
-liberty and property. What I personally experienced certainly places me
-in the position to judge.--_Falckenskjold_, p. 205.]
-
-[Footnote 8: A reference to the sieges of Charles X. in 1658 and 1659,
-and more especially to the violent assault by the Swedes on the night of
-February 11, 1659, which was repulsed by the citizens, and to the conduct
-of the Copenhageners at the Diet of 1660, when the sovereignty was handed
-over to Frederick III., and the previous electoral kingdom was converted
-into an agnatic-cognatic Denmark-Norway, exclusive of the German Duchies
-and counties.]
-
-[Footnote 9: This accusation is devoid of truth. Brandt could not always
-be about his Majesty. The truth is, that the king was no more difficult
-to approach under Struensee's administration than he had been under the
-previous ministry. He was frequently alone, and I saw him arrive thus
-at Gripsholm. It was after the fall of Struensee that the king, being
-closely watched, was only accessible as far as pleased the dominant
-party.-—_Falckenskjold_, p. 205.]
-
-[Footnote 10: I may remark that Struensee had a salary of 1,500 crowns as
-secretary to the cabinet; that he afterwards had 3,000 in his quality of
-councillor; that he lived inexpensively and dressed plainly; that only
-a few days before his fall he set up his carriage, the magnificence of
-which was imputed as a crime--it was a carriage in the English style,
-without gilding or painting, lined with straw-coloured cloth. Guldberg,
-who charged him with avidity, afterwards thought proper to accept a
-gratification of 100,000 crowns in one sum, by a note signed by the
-king.--_Falckenskjold_, p. 208.]
-
-[Footnote 11: If Struensee's enemies had not been his accusers and
-judges, they would not have compared a small present made to the queen
-with what the king gave to simple private persons without fortune, whom
-he had summoned and admitted to his familiarity. They would not have
-pretended to be ignorant why Struensee wrote the accounts of May, 1771,
-and did not write the following accounts when he had ceased to be cabinet
-secretary.—-_Falckenskjold_, p. 206.]
-
-[Footnote 12: Struensee had no more power on this account than when he
-was merely master of requests and private secretary to the king. The
-great reforms were effected while he occupied those two posts. Besides,
-according to the royal law, "the king can appoint any minister under such
-title and with such power as he pleases." It was no contravention of
-the law to accept an office which the king could give and revoke at his
-pleasure; but, with such a law as that of Denmark, weight may be attached
-to any sort of accusation. Count de St. Germain was accused of infringing
-the royal law, because he proposed to raze the useless fortresses
-and dress the army in blue. The first Bernstorff was also accused of
-contravention of the _Lex Regia_ when he was dismissed. The persons who
-condemned Struensee to death for having encroached on the absolute power
-of the king, issued the following decree on February 13, 1772, or while
-the trial was going on:--
-
-"All orders shall be drawn up by the council and through the council. No
-order given directly by the king shall be carried into effect, unless the
-bearer of it has made application to the department which it concerns,
-and this department has acknowledged the said order."—-_Falckenskjold_,
-p. 208.]
-
-[Footnote 13: It was, on the contrary, Struensee's principle to
-purge the army and civil service of foreigners, and only to leave
-natives; the reform had already been effected in this way in the
-regiment of Seeland Dragoons. Braëm, one of the commissioners to try
-Struensee, was well aware of this, as he was a member of the War
-Department.--_Falckenskjold_, p. 209.]
-
-[Footnote 14: The order concerning this reform is the only one which
-Struensee was accused of having issued without the king's privity. The
-War Department, of which I was a member, received on December 21 the
-Minutes of this order for the disbandment of the Foot Guards; it made
-no protest; it did not ask that the minute should be signed by the
-king, which was not necessary; the patent was immediately drawn up, and
-addressed, according to custom, to the king, that it might receive his
-signature and seal; the king signed this patent on December 23; such is
-the exact truth. How could it be stated in the sentence that the king had
-no cognizance on December 21 of a minute the patent of which he ratified
-on the 23rd by his signature? How could he be ignorant on December 24 of
-an order he had signed on the 23rd?--_Falckenskjold_, p. 209.]
-
-[Footnote 15: Struensee denied this: there were no proofs, and it is well
-known that this minister only gave orders in writing.]
-
-[Footnote 16: It is a curious fact that Brandt's having given Prince
-Frederick a separate box was made a capital crime; that Baron de
-Bülow, the king's equerry, was exiled for giving a separate stable to
-the horses of Prince Frederick; and that I was cruelly prosecuted for
-having allowed the band to play at a place which Prince Frederick was
-passing.--_Falckenskjold_, p. 222.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE EXECUTION.
-
- CONFIRMATION OF THE SENTENCE--STRUENSEE'S CORRESPONDENCE--RANTZAU'S
- TREACHERY--AN UNFEELING COURT--STRUENSEE'S PENITENCE--THE
- SCAFFOLD--APRIL 28--EXECUTION OF BRANDT--HORRIBLE DETAILS--DEATH OF
- STRUENSEE--HIS CHARACTER--ENLIGHTENED DESPOTISM--THE FIRST SERVANT OF
- THE STATE--THE QUEEN DOWAGER.
-
-
-On the same day that the sentences were signed by the Commissioners,
-Uldall, the counsel, went to Struensee, in order to inform him of the
-termination of the trial.
-
-When the advocate entered the cell, he said to the unhappy victim of a
-conspiracy:
-
-"Good count, I bring you bad news."
-
-And with these scant words he drew a copy of the approved sentence out of
-his pocket.
-
-Calmly and silently the man condemned to such a cruel death perused the
-sentence, but not the slightest alteration took place in his countenance.
-Then, he handed the ominous paper to Dr. Münter, who happened to be with
-him at the time.
-
-While the latter was trembling as he read the sentence, Struensee began
-to talk with composure with his counsel, and asked if all the points of
-his accusation had been regarded in passing his sentence, especially that
-about the education of the crown prince; to which Uldall answered in the
-affirmative. Struensee added, that he must confess that, if he had had
-children of his own, he would not have reared them in any other way.
-
-"And what will Brandt's fate be?" he exclaimed.
-
-"His sentence is exactly the same as yours," Uldall replied.
-
-"And could his counsel do nothing to save him?" Struensee went on to ask.
-
-"He said everything that could be urged in his favour, but Count Brandt
-has too much laid to his charge."
-
-This information caused Struensee greater emotion than the news of his
-own fate. But he soon regained his composure, and added a few words about
-a petition to the king for mercy, although he at the same time expressed
-his conviction, that even this last step would meet with no success.
-
-When Struensee and Münter were left alone again, the man who was now
-Death's own assured his friend that his impending punishment did not
-terrify him. He had thought that he might be broken on the wheel, and
-was already considering whether he could suffer this kind of death with
-patience.
-
-"If I have deserved such a death," he then added, "my infamy would not
-be removed, though those disgraceful circumstances were not annexed to
-it. And if I had not deserved it, which I cannot assert, sensible people
-would do me justice, and I should gain in point of honour. And upon the
-whole, what is honour or infamy in this world to me? My judges had the
-law before them, and therefore they could not decide otherwise. I confess
-my crime is great: I have violated the majesty of the king. Many things
-I might not have done if I had been sufficiently acquainted with the
-law,--But why did I neglect it?"
-
-These words, uttered by Struensee so shortly before his death, seemed
-to reveal a doubt of his perfect innocence. Perhaps, however, this
-uncertainty was rather produced by his conversion to the Christian
-religion, by the recollection of past errors, and by the effect of a long
-and painful imprisonment; while the imminent and awful close of his life
-might also have produced impressions on him which made him fancy himself
-guiltier than he really was. Or was it the voice of his conscience at the
-remembrance of the ruin which he had brought on his young queen, which
-spoke out of his soul, though he dared not clothe it in language?
-
-My readers will remember how much this unhappy man was affected by a
-letter which he received from his father, at the time when he still
-maintained his irreligious principles. He now delivered to Dr. Münter a
-letter for his parents, leaving him the option whether he would send it
-at once, or after the execution. Münter chose the latter course, as he
-knew Struensee's death was very near at hand, and he wished to save them
-the anxiety of expecting the melancholy news of it. The letter was to the
-following effect:--
-
- Your letters have increased my pain; but I have found in them that
- love which you always expressed for me. The memory of all the sorrow
- I have caused you, by living contrary to your good advice, and the
- great affliction my imprisonment and death must give you, grieve me
- the more, since, enlightened by truth, I see clearly the injury I
- have done. With the most sincere repentance I implore your pardon and
- forgiveness. I owe my present situation to my belief in the doctrine
- and redemption of Christ. Your prayers and your good example have
- contributed much toward it. Be assured that your son has found the
- great good, which you believe to be the only true one. Look upon his
- misfortune as the means which made him obtain it. All impressions
- which my fate could make or give will be weakened by this, as it has
- effaced them with me. I recommend myself to your further intercession
- before God. I pray incessantly to Christ, my Redeemer, that he may
- enable you to bear your present calamities. I owe the same to His
- assistance. My love to my brothers and sisters.
-
-Brandt also received from his defender, Bang, a copy of the sentence
-passed on him, and, like Struensee, sent in a petition for mercy. It
-was reported that he would be pardoned. For Owe Guldberg, the most
-influential of the judges at Christiansborg Palace, had thrown himself
-at the feet of Queen Juliana Maria, who now held the authority in her
-hands, and implored a mitigation of the punishment. But the queen dowager
-absolutely refused to listen to him, not even when Guldberg earnestly
-implored that at least Brandt's life might be saved. Crushed by such
-harshness, and bitterly undeceived as to the extent of his influence, he
-returned to his apartments, threw himself on the bed, refused to take
-food, and passed several days in apathetic reflection.
-
-Brandt's mother and brother asked permission to come to court to implore
-the king's clemency, and, being unable to obtain it, they wrote to
-the queen dowager and to Prince Frederick. The answers they received
-were full of compliments, but gave them no hope. It was said, however,
-that in the council, when the question of confirming the sentence was
-discussed, there were voices for mercy; but that Counts von Rantzau and
-Von der Osten absolutely opposed any being shown. The honour of the king
-should have demanded that Brandt's life should be spared, in order to
-conceal from the world what had passed between them, but the king had
-an extreme repugnance to this; the mere name of the ex-favourite made
-him tremble and turn pale. He positively declared that he would not save
-Brandt unless Struensee were also spared, and the ministry considered
-it necessary to immolate one of the victims, so as not to let the other
-escape. The two sentences were consequently confirmed without the
-slightest display of clemency.
-
-Count von Rantzau more particularly displayed a sustained hardness and
-fearful blackness of soul. He, doubtless, believed that by closing all
-access to clemency, by forcing to the scaffold two intimate friends, one
-of whom had been his benefactor, he should purge himself of the suspicion
-of complicity, and that by sheer hypocrisy he should cause his connection
-with the condemned men to be forgotten. At any other time, instead of
-sitting in the council and determining the fate of the culprits, he would
-have himself been the object of a severe sentence; instead of being
-spared for having betrayed the favourites, there would have been an
-additional charge against him, that of anticipating the royal commands to
-arrest them; hence, being well aware that, in spite of his dignities, he
-was marked, both as a restless and unbelieving man, he was more assiduous
-than any one in his attendance at the court chapel, and joined in singing
-hymns, which must have possessed all the charm of novelty for him.[17]
-
-How little feeling that most miserable of monarchs, Christian, really had
-in the whole matter, is seen by a perusal of the Danish journals at the
-time. The amusements of the court offer a most revolting exhibition of
-apathy and want of sympathy.
-
-On April 23, there was a masked ball, _en domino_, at which the king,
-the queen dowager, and their suite were present; on the 24th, instead of
-the play, a concert at the Danish theatre, where the royal family were
-present; on the 25th, the sentence on Counts Struensee and Brandt was
-pronounced in open court; in the evening, the opera of _Adrien en Syrie_
-was performed. The small-pox continuing its ravages, on the 26th, Sunday,
-profane amusements were interdicted by the new government. On the 27th,
-the king dined with his court at Charlottenlund, and returned to town at
-7 P.M.; he signed the sentences, and proceeded to the Italian Opera. On
-the 28th, the day of the execution, there was a grand concert at court.
-Well may a writer in the _Annales Belgiques_ for May, 1772, remark:--
-
-"If the king has unfortunately reached such a stage of unfeelingness,
-what praise does not Caroline Matilda deserve for having succeeded
-in captivating him so greatly that up to the present it was not even
-suspected that he possessed such a disposition?"
-
-In the meanwhile, Dr. Münter had informed Struensee, on April 26th, of
-the promulgation of the sentences, and that they would be carried into
-effect two days after. Struensee listened to him patiently, and then
-remarked, as to the circumstances which were to throw infamy upon his
-death--
-
-"I am far above all this, and I hope my friend Brandt may be the same.
-Here in this world--since I am on the point of leaving it--neither honour
-nor infamy can affect me any more. It is equally the same to me after
-death, whether my body putrifies under ground or in the open air; whether
-it serves to feed the worms or the birds. God will know very well how to
-preserve those particles of my body which, on the day of resurrection,
-are to constitute my future glorified body. It is not my all which is to
-be laid on the wheel. Thank God! I know now very well that this dust is
-not my whole being."
-
-After this they conversed quietly about various matters concerning
-Struensee's administration. The decision whether his government had
-been politically bad he left to posterity, and many times repeated his
-assurance that he was not conscious of any wrong intentions. When Dr.
-Münter left him, Struensee handed him the following letter for Frau von
-Berkentin at Pinneberg. This was the patroness who, as chief gouvernante
-to the prince royal, had recommended Struensee as physician in ordinary
-for the king's foreign tour:--
-
- I make use of the first moments which permit me to write to you.
- Business, duties, and my late connexions have perhaps lessened in me
- the remembrance of my former friends, but they have been not able
- to obliterate their memory entirely. My present leisure has revived
- it. If my silence has aroused suspicion as to my former sentiments,
- I beg pardon of all those who are entitled to my gratitude, and
- of you, gracious lady, in particular. This however, is not the
- only advantage which the change of my fate has produced. I owe my
- knowledge of truth to it; it has procured me a happiness of which
- I had no further expectation, as I had already lost sight of it. I
- entreat you to consider my misfortunes in no other light but that of
- religion. I gain more by them than I can ever lose; and I feel and
- assure you of this with conviction, ease, and joy of heart. I beg you
- to repeat what I now write in the house of Count Ahlefeldt and at
- Rantzau. I am under great obligations to these two families, and it
- has grieved me far more to have drawn with me into misfortune persons
- who are related to them.
-
-On the following day, April 27, Struensee also referred to his
-administration, and assured Münter again, most sacredly, that he had not
-falsified the accounts about the presents made by the king to him and
-Brandt. Münter's remarks on this subject are worthy quotation:--
-
-"It is difficult to dismiss every suspicion on this head against
-Struensee; and if he were guilty, of how little value would be his
-conversion! It has made me uneasy, frequently, and even now, still,
-after his death. All manner of appearances, his own confession that he
-could not free himself from all suspicion, and many other evidences,
-are against him. However, on the other side, it makes me easy that he
-confessed greater and more punishable crimes without constraint, but
-denied this with a firmness, calmness of mind and confidence, which,
-inexplicable as the matter remains, makes it difficult to believe him
-guilty."
-
-Struensee then handed to Münter the following letter to Chamberlain
-Christian Brandt, which he desired him to get delivered:--
-
- Permit me to bewail with you and with the gracious lady your mother,
- the fate of our dear Enevold. Do not think me unworthy of sharing
- your grief with you, though, accidentally, I have been the cause of
- it. You know how much I love him. He was the man of all the world
- who possessed the largest share of my friendship. His misfortunes
- cause me the greatest anxiety, and my own have been on his account
- most painful to me. He has shared my prosperity with me, and I trust
- that we shall now together enjoy that happiness which our Redeemer
- has promised us. I do not know anything wherewith I could comfort
- you. You are acquainted with religion. In that I found a refuge to
- comfort me on account of my misfortune. I pray to God that he may at
- this very moment let you feel all its power. I shall not cease to
- entertain a most lively sense of gratitude toward all those persons
- who are dear to me at Rantzau. I am wholly yours, &c.
-
- April 27, 1772.
-
- P.S.--I have been in hopes, and still flatter myself, that the
- sentence of my friend will be mitigated.
-
-To Münter, Struensee declared that Brandt's sentence of death could not
-be signed with a good conscience; for, he said, he could not regard
-the action for which his friend's life was forfeited as a crime, and
-he, Struensee, did not repent having taken part in it. On the other
-hand, he reproached Brandt, because in his intercourse with the king he
-neglected the reverence he owed him, which had also been the reason why
-he attracted the king's displeasure on himself.
-
-Of all the letters written by Struensee, the one he addressed to Count
-von Rantzau is assuredly the most remarkable. Instead of the reproaches
-with which he might have justly overwhelmed him, he wrote in the
-following forgiving spirit:[18]--
-
- This, Sir (Dr. Münter), is what I have begged you to say in my behalf
- to Count von Rantzau. I never entertained any feeling contrary to
- what his friendship had a right to expect. Though convinced long
- ago that he was acting against me, I did not venture to remove
- him from Copenhagen. The facilities I possessed for doing so,
- the solicitations addressed to me, and very powerful reasons not
- affecting me personally, could not induce me to do so. The Russian
- affairs will inform him of the measures taken against him, of which
- he is probably ignorant, as I never spoke to him about them in
- detail. I had conceived that his attachment to his master caused him
- to find the conduct of his friend blamable, but it did not enter my
- mind that he was capable of engaging any one to render his friend
- as unfortunate as possible. Still, convinced by experience, I have
- understood that the vivacity of zeal, circumstances, the persuasion
- of the peril with which the king was believed to be menaced, might
- stifle every other feeling. I have retained no bitterness against the
- count. Having been since enlightened by religion, I have preserved
- all the feelings of a personal attachment for him which, through
- various signs, his memory will, doubtless, bring before his eyes.
- I offer up vows for his prosperity. It is not in my power to give
- him stronger proofs than by ardently wishing that he may find the
- happiness which the truth of religion has taught me to know. I
- would desire the count, on this point, to remember, by analogy, his
- prejudices against medicine, and how he removed them by reading
- "Zimmermann," and by experiencing the good effects of the medicines
- I administered to him at Glückstadt. May these few words efface
- everything that the count nourishes against me in his mind! You
- will deliver this note to him, Sir, when no further motives are in
- existence which may make him attribute this step of mine to any other
- object.
-
- STRUENSEE.
-
- P.S. Having altered my mind, I have the honour to address this note
- directly to the count, instead of entrusting it to Dr. Münter.
-
- This 27th April, 1722.
-
- S.
-
-Struensee did not wish to take a personal farewell of his brother,
-Justiz-rath Struensee, because he was afraid that this might produce a
-scene which would be too affecting for both of them. He therefore begged
-Münter to do so for him. He entreated his brother's pardon for drawing
-him into his misfortunes, but hoped and was certain that his affairs
-would turn out well. He also assured him that he was leaving the world
-with true brotherly affection for him. He also wished his brother to
-be told of the sentiments in which he died. This commission Dr. Münter
-discharged on the same evening, and carried back the answer of the much
-afflicted brother.
-
-Brandt also received on April 27, from his chaplain, Dean Hee, the news
-of the confirmation of his sentence and the day of execution, which he
-heard unconcerned, and said that he readily submitted to the will of God.
-
-A report had been spread that Brandt had spoken recklessly while in
-prison, and sung merry songs. Hence the dean made a proposition to him,
-which he left to him to accept or not, that he should make a declaration
-of what his real sentiments were, in the presence of witnesses. He
-readily complied with the proposal, and Hee went to the commandant, who
-came with four officers, in whose presence Brandt declared that he was
-ready to die, and was not afraid of it; he likewise confessed before the
-omniscient God, that he had without hypocrisy sought for God's mercy;
-he likewise confessed, as he had done before, that he had acted very
-inconsiderately, that his levity had been very great, and that he, on
-this account, acknowledged God's mercy in suffering him to die, lest he
-should be drawn away again from religion. He said, he knew very well
-that the same levity of temper had induced him, in the beginning of his
-imprisonment, to talk in a manner he was now ashamed of, though he was
-sure in his conscience that many untruths were invented, and propagated
-among the people, but he forgave those who had been guilty of such a
-thing. Now, he wished that the gentlemen present would bear testimony to
-what he should say. He acknowledged himself a great sinner before God:
-a sinner who had gone astray, but was brought back by Christ. He then
-begged the commandant and the other officers to forgive him, if, by his
-levity, he had offended any one of them, and wished that God's mercy in
-Christ might always attend them as the greatest blessing. He said all
-this with such a readiness, and in such moving terms, that all who were
-present were affected by it, and every one of them wished that God would
-preserve him in this situation of mind to the last.
-
-In the meanwhile, the town council, the police, and military
-authorities, were making preparations for the execution. Copenhagen is
-surrounded on the land side, next the three suburbs, by three large
-fields bordered by neat _allées_, which are used as exercising grounds
-for the garrison, and for public festivities. On the easternmost of these
-fields, situated on the Sound, a scaffold, 8 yards long and broad, and
-27 feet in height, was erected; and on the gallows hill, a mile distant,
-and situated in the western suburb, two poles were planted, both of which
-were surrounded by four wheel-posts. It took some trouble to complete
-this job, because no artisans consented to undertake it. It was not until
-other workmen were persuaded that a pleasure-house was to be built on the
-field that the scaffold was completed. No wheelwright was willing either
-to supply the wheels; so that the eight carriage wheels required had to
-be begged from friends of the court party.
-
-When dawn broke on the 28th of April, 1772, a day which inflicted an
-eternal stain on the history of Denmark, the troops, consisting of 4,400
-sailors belonging to the vessels in ordinary, and armed with pikes,
-1,200 infantry, 300 dragoons, and, strange to say, the corps of military
-cadets, marched through the gates, in order to form a large circle round
-the stage of blood on the Osterfeld, keep back the eager countless
-mob, and be ready for any eventualities. General von Eickstedt, town
-commandant, had the supreme command of all the troops.
-
-The two gates of the citadel were also kept shut till the departure of
-the criminals; and the posts had been doubled in order to keep off the
-pressure of the crowd, who also congregated eagerly here.
-
-The two clergymen went at an early hour to the condemned men, and found
-them both calm and easy in mind. When Münter entered, Struensee was
-fully dressed, and lying on a couch. He was reading Schlegel's sermons
-on Christ's Passion, and a religious conversation began between the two,
-during which Münter looked very often toward the cell door with a fearful
-expectation; but the count not once.
-
-At length the officer on duty came in and requested Münter to step into
-the coach, and precede Struensee to the place of execution. Münter was
-greatly moved, but Struensee, as if it did not concern himself the least,
-comforted him by saying:--
-
-"Make yourself easy, my dear friend, by considering the happiness I am
-going to enter into, and with the consciousness that God has made you a
-means for procuring it for me."
-
-Soon after, the two delinquents were requested to get into their coaches,
-Brandt going on first. The latter, after praying fervently, had had
-his chains, which were fixed in the wall, taken off, and he put on the
-clothes in which he intended to appear on the scaffold. He then drank a
-dish of coffee and ate something, walking up and down the room, which
-he had not been able to do before. As often as Dr. Hee asked him how he
-found himself, he said that he was not afraid of dying. He afterwards
-asked Hee whether he had seen anybody executed before, and how far he was
-to lay his body bare for the execution.
-
-Struensee was dressed in a blue cut velvet coat with silver buttons;
-Brandt in a green court dress richly embroidered with gold, and both had
-costly fur pelisses thrown over them, but, as if in mockery, still had
-a chain on their hand and foot. This gay attire had been given them in
-order to remind the populace that the dizzy fall from the greatest power
-to the scaffold was the just punishment of their unparalleled crimes. By
-the side of each of the prisoners sat an officer, and opposite to them
-two sergeants. The two coaches were surrounded by 200 infantry soldiers
-with fixed bayonets, and an equal number of dragoons with drawn sabres.
-The procession was opened by a third coach, in which the Fiscal General
-and the king's bailiff were seated, and, facing them, the latter's
-deputy, holding two tin shields, on which the arms of the two counts were
-painted.
-
-Half-past eight was striking from the tower of the citadel when the three
-coaches began their progress to the scaffold, where they were expected by
-upwards of 30,000 persons.
-
-When the procession reached the spot, the Fiscal General and the king's
-bailiff with his assistant first mounted the scaffold, on which the
-executioner and his aids were awaiting their victims. They were followed
-by Brandt; his features were so unchanged, and his bearing was so
-perfectly calm, that it was generally supposed that a hope of mercy was
-aroused in his mind at this supreme moment. Dean Hee mounted the scaffold
-stairs immediately after him, and it was not till they reached the top
-that the prisoner's fetters were removed. Even here he assured Hee that
-his mind was composed, and that he was not afraid of death. The dean,
-however, continued to encourage him, and concluded with the words:--
-
-"Son, be of good cheer, for thy sins are forgiven thee."
-
-To which Brandt replied:--
-
-"Yes; they are all cast into the depths of the sea."
-
-The king's bailiff, Etats-rath Ortwed, now read the sentence; and when
-he had finished, the executioner advanced to receive the count's coat of
-arms. He asked Brandt whether it was his escutcheon, to which the other
-replied by a nod; he then swung it in the air, and broke it with the
-words:--
-
-"This is not done in vain, but as a just punishment."
-
-After the clergyman had read Brandt those things from the ritual which
-are usual on such occasions, Hee asked him whether, in addition to his
-other sins, he repented of his great crime of high treason? Brandt
-answered in the affirmative, and then added:--
-
-"I pray God, the king, and the country, for forgiveness, and only wish
-that God may bless the king and the whole land for the sake of Christ's
-blood."
-
-After these words the clergyman gave him the benediction, and, taking
-him by the hand, delivered him over to justice. When the executioner
-approached to assist Brandt in undressing, the latter said to him with
-firmness, though not without mildness, "Stand off, and do not presume
-to touch me!" He quickly let his pelisse fall, took off his hat, and
-himself removed his coat and waistcoat. After previously feeling in all
-the pockets, which he doubtless did out of habit, he also began to bare
-the right arm, from which the hand was to be cut off, but the executioner
-now advanced, and helped him to bare the whole arm as well as his
-neck.[19] After this, Brandt knelt down, and laid his head on one block
-and his hand on another. When the victim had thus offered himself for the
-execution of the sentence, the clergyman reminded him of the posture of
-the Saviour in the garden of Gethsemane, with his face on the ground, to
-which Brandt, lying on the block, replied in a loud voice:--
-
-"The blood of Christ intercedeth for me."
-
-Hee stepped back, and while he was saying, "O Christ, in Thee I live, in
-Thee I die! Oh! thou Lamb of God, that takest away the sins of the world,
-be merciful!" the execution was over. Brandt did not die as a hypocrite,
-but at the same time displayed no defiance.
-
-Immediately after, the executioner's aids advanced, stripped the body,
-and then divided it into four quarters with an axe. Each quarter was let
-down separately by a rope into a cart standing below, and the vessels
-with the entrails were also placed in it. Lastly, the head was held
-up, shown to the spectators, and then let down into the cart, together
-with the hand. After which the scaffold was strown with fresh sand, in
-readiness for Struensee.[20]
-
-During this awful tragedy Struensee sat in his coach, which was standing
-near the scaffold. When Brandt went up, Münter ordered the coach to be
-turned in such a way that they might not witness Brandt's execution. But
-Struensee's eyes had already found his unfortunate friend, and hence he
-said:--
-
-"I have seen him already."
-
-After some further exhortation, Münter said to the prisoner:--
-
-"Christ prayed for his murderers even on the cross. May I rely upon your
-leaving the world with the same sentiments of love toward those whom you
-might have reason to think your enemies?"
-
-"In the first place," Struensee replied, "I hope that there is no one who
-has a personal hatred against me; but that those who have promoted my
-misfortunes, have done it with the intention of doing good. Secondly, I
-look upon myself already as a citizen of another world, and consider that
-I am obliged to entertain sentiments conformable with this dignity; and
-I am sure that if I were to see those who might perhaps be my enemies
-here in the bliss of that world which I hope to enter into, it would give
-me the highest satisfaction. I pray to God that if my enemies hereafter
-repent of their behaviour toward me, this repentance may induce them to
-look out for that salvation which I confidently promise myself through
-the mercy of God."
-
-Struensee, during this conversation, suffered no other change than that
-he appeared very pale, and thinking and speaking evidently cost him more
-trouble than they had done earlier in the morning. Still he retained
-perfect composure, and saluted some of those around the coach by raising
-his hat, or by friendly glances. From the motion of the spectators, Dr.
-Münter, though he could not see the scaffold, guessed that Struensee's
-turn to ascend it had arrived, and that, with Brandt's death, all hope of
-a pardon had disappeared.
-
-When summoned by name, Struensee stepped out of the coach, and went, led
-by Münter, with dignity though humbly, through the ranks of favoured
-spectators, and bowed to them also. With difficulty he ascended the
-fifteen steps leading to the scaffold. When they reached the top, Münter
-spoke very concisely, and in a low voice, upon the words, "He that
-believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live." After this the
-sentence of the Commission of Inquiry and the royal confirmation were
-read to Struensee, and the king's own signature was shown him. Then came
-the breaking of the coat of arms, after which Struensee's chains were
-taken off. The clergyman once again went up to Struensee, and asked him
-various questions.
-
-"Are you very truly sorry for all those actions by which you have
-offended God and man?"
-
-"You know my late sentiments on this point," Struensee replied, "and I
-assure you they are this very moment just the same."
-
-"Do you trust in the redemption of Christ as the only ground of your
-being pardoned before God?"
-
-"I know no other means of receiving God's mercy, and I trust in this
-alone."
-
-"Do you leave this world without hatred or malice against any person
-whatever?"
-
-"I hope nobody hates me personally; and as for the rest, you know my
-sentiments on this head; they are the same as I told you before."
-
-Doctor Münter then laid his hand upon Struensee's head, and said with
-deep emotion, before he delivered him up to justice:--
-
-"Then go in peace whither God calls you! His grace be with you!"
-
-Struensee then took off his fur pelisse, removed his hat, and tried to
-undress himself, but his strength failed him in doing so, and he was
-obliged to ask the executioner's help. After this he produced a white
-handkerchief to bind his eyes with, but the executioner said that it was
-not necessary, and then assisted him in removing his shirt.
-
-Struensee then walked with hesitating steps the few yards leading to
-the block, which still reeked with the blood of his dearest friend; a
-stronger mind than Struensee ever possessed might have been unhinged
-by the dreadful scene before his eyes. He knelt down, but had great
-difficulty in placing himself in the proper position. As the executioner
-raised the axe to cut off his right hand, Münter began slowly pronouncing
-the words:--
-
-"Remember Jesus Christ crucified, who died, but is risen again."
-
-The first blow fell, and with it, Struensee was attacked by violent
-convulsions, the result of which was, that the second blow intended
-to behead the poor wretch, failed. He sprang up convulsively, but the
-assistant seized him by the hair, and pulled him down on the block by
-force; even when the head was removed, a portion of the chin was left
-behind.
-
-The same horrors were committed on his poor corpse as on Brandt's, but
-I have no heart to dwell on them: let us rather agree with the poet in
-saying,
-
- "Excidat illa dies ævo: nec postera credant
- Sæcula: nos certé taceamus et obruta multa
- Nocte tegi nostræ patiamur crimina gentis."
-
-The mangled remains, after they had been thrown into the cart, were
-conveyed all through the city to the field at the other extremity, where
-they were to be left to moulder or be devoured by the fowls of the
-air. For each, four stout balks were, at equal distances, driven into
-the earth; a taller pole was fixed in the centre; the entrails, &c.,
-were buried in a hole dug at the foot of the central pole; on the top
-the head was fixed, the pole being forced up inside the skull, through
-which a spike was driven to make it fast; the hand was nailed on a piece
-of board, placed transversely below the head; a cart wheel was fixed
-horizontally on the top of each of the four posts or pillars, on which a
-quarter of the body was exposed, made fast to the wheel by iron chains.
-
-The countless crowd, whose curiosity was now fully satisfied, returned
-to the city, shaken by the scenes they had witnessed, and the deep
-impression produced by the awful drama could be noticed for a long time.
-Convicts had to be employed on the next day in removing the scaffold, as
-no honest man would have a hand in it; but Gallows Hill preserved its
-decorations for some years, and even in 1775, Mr. Coxe saw Struensee's
-and Brandt's skulls and bones there.[21] All this was done to satiate
-the vengeance of the queen dowager. With a telescope in her hand,
-Juliana Maria had witnessed the whole execution from the tower of the
-Christiansborg, and when the turn arrived for the special object of her
-hatred, Struensee, she rubbed her hands joyously, and exclaimed, "Now
-comes the fat one."[22]
-
-But the queen did not neglect to observe decorum even in this affair, and
-hence, soon after the execution, sent for Dr. Münter, in order to hear
-all the details of the judicial murder from this immediate witness of the
-fearful scene. When he had ended his report, the queen burst into tears;
-but, as our Danish authority remarks, "it is notorious that a crocodile
-can weep." Then she said to Münter--
-
-"I feel sorry for the unhappy man. I have examined myself whether in all
-I have done against him I have acted through any feeling of personal
-enmity; but my conscience acquits me of it."
-
-After this, the queen dowager gave Dr. Münter a snuff-box of rock
-crystal, while a similar gift in porcelain was forwarded to Dean Hee.[23]
-
-But the historian, Suhm, who was attached to the court, and was one of
-the most zealous enemies of Struensee, tells us how far we are justified
-in believing the queen dowager's statement. As the queen occupied the
-upper floor of Christiansborg Palace, whence a view of the Gallows Hill
-was obtained, Chamberlain Suhm asked her some years later, why her
-Majesty, who had so many splendid palaces at her service, inhabited these
-unpretending rooms, and received the answer:--
-
-"And yet these rooms are dearer to me than all my most splendid
-apartments; for from these windows I saw my bitterest foe exposed on the
-wheel."
-
-Such was the end of a man whose miserable story is indubitably one
-of the most romantic episodes of his century; and it only required a
-Danish Walter Scott, in order to make of it an historical romance of
-the first class. For such a work the matter is fully sufficient. But
-for the same reason all efforts must fail to convert Struensee into the
-hero of a tragedy. Many poets, some of them in the first flight, have
-undertaken this ungrateful task, but have not attained any success worth
-mentioning. The reason can easily be found. Struensee was no hero; not
-even an original: he possessed no distinct character, but was merely
-a type of his age, and in spite of his undeniable talents, he was an
-ordinary adventurer after all. Fortune is as much the touchstone of
-minds as misfortune is. It subjected this man to a trial, and he came
-out of it badly. Arrogant and unbridled in fortune, he proved himself in
-misfortune despondent, cowardly, and even worthless. The fortune which
-he at first did not turn to a bad use, brought a king's sceptre into
-his hand, and he allowed it to be shamefully torn from him by people
-far inferior to him in intellect. A queen, young and beautiful as a May
-morning, supported him, and he betrayed her. He had felt a pride in being
-an avowed free-thinker, and he died with wailing and gnashing of teeth,
-as a penitent sinner. No, he was not a tragic hero. Even the genius of a
-Shakspere would have failed in rendering him one.
-
-It is a fact worthy of attention that Struensee possessed none of the
-qualities which generally presuppose success at court. He was not an
-amiable man, in the conventional sense of the term. The English envoy,
-Gunning, who was not ill-disposed toward him, expressly stated, in a
-despatch of April, 1770, that Struensee did not at all display in his
-conversation the liveliness and pleasantry by which other men pave the
-way to fortune. "His mode of behaving and expressing himself is dry and
-even unpleasant, so that it was a subject of general surprise how he
-contrived to acquire such unbounded influence over the king and queen."
-Further, the envoy allows the favourite "no inconsiderable acquirements,"
-but denies him all statesman-like ability and political tact. At the same
-time he was deficient in sufficient insight into Danish affairs. He was
-tolerably free from vanity, but not from an immoderate self-confidence,
-which not unfrequently degenerated into "impudence." The envoy, however,
-supplies us with the key to the enigma of Struensee's sudden elevation,
-when he mentions that he was "bold and enterprising," and such a man is
-sure to make his way among women.[24]
-
-Still, in spite of Struensee's deficiency and all his mistakes, so
-much justice must be done him as to allow that he desired the welfare
-of the state. He originally possessed a not ignoble mind, which was
-lowered and degraded by his fabulous elevation and sudden fall. Being
-formed of much softer and more worthless stuff than the metal out of
-which great, or even second-rate statesmen are composed, he could not
-endure either fortune or misfortune. An idealist, trained in the school
-of enlightened despotism, he did not understand that a nation must be
-raised from the bottom to the top. This was the mistake of the age.
-The reasons of state of a Frederick the Great or a Joseph II. were,
-after all, only an improvement of the breed. We have all due respect
-for those enlightened despots who have so far freed themselves from the
-swaddling-clothes of the Byzantine ideas about the divine right of kings,
-as to wish themselves to be merely regarded as the first servants of the
-state; but, at the same time, we are inclined to say with old Wieland,
-"May Heaven protect us from the luck of being obliged to live under the
-sceptre or stick of such first servants of the state." Struensee acted on
-the principle that, in order to make nations progress, nothing further
-was required than to realise by edicts the principles of the French
-philosophers and German illuminati. After the fashion of many other
-world-betterers of the age, he did not know or reflect that it is far
-more difficult to lead the unjudging masses to what is good, than to what
-is bad; that the most absurd prejudices of the plebs must be humoured
-far more than the noblest human privileges; that the coarse diplomacy of
-pot-house demagogues is sufficient to make the ignorant mob throw away
-the diamonds of truth and eagerly clutch at the _strass_ of falsehood and
-absurdity; and that, lastly, the people in all times are most willing, at
-the desire of their enemies, to hate, persecute, stone, and crucify their
-friends.
-
-It is possible, even probable, that, if Struensee had held the power
-longer, he would have passed from the experimentalising stage to really
-beneficial results. The beginning of his display of power was not so bad.
-Denmark had long sighed under the brutal dictatorship which the envoys
-of Russia exercised. Struensee broke this yoke, and did it so cleverly,
-that the ambitious czarina in Petersburg was obliged to give way, whether
-she liked it or not. The management of the foreign policy by Struensee
-least of all deserves blame, because it was based on the sensible
-principle that Denmark must live in peace and amity with all states, but
-not be subject to any one of them. The same praise cannot be afforded
-to Struensee's home administration. The tendency generally was good and
-reasonable here, but the execution left much, very much, to be desired.
-We find everywhere hasty attempts, but no thorough carrying through. A
-despotic theorising, which was followed by no energetic practice, and
-the most correct designs destroyed and confused by the interference
-of personal interests, sympathies, and antipathies, characterised the
-administration.
-
-Struensee's great fault was that he did not, and would not, understand
-that in statesman-like calculations, not abstract ideas but men are the
-figures employed in reckoning--men with all their weaknesses, follies,
-prejudices, and passions. Through mistaking this great fact, he contrived
-to embitter all classes of the nation. He offended the nobles without
-winning the peasants; he made the officers, soldiers, and sailors his
-enemies, without making the citizens his friends. And he did this among
-a people whose education was behindhand, and to whom he was an object of
-hatred, from the fact of his being a foreigner.
-
-After his fall, which every one but himself had foreseen--and we may
-fairly say that he signed his own death-warrant by the maniacal cabinet
-decree which placed all the authority in his hands--Struensee behaved
-like a miserable coward and traitor. It has been said that his judges,
-or, more correctly, executioners, terrified the ruined man by a menace of
-the torture, and, at the same time, deluded him by the idea that his sole
-chance of salvation was in compromising Caroline Matilda most deeply.
-But, for all this, a man would never do, and only a weakling and coward
-would do what he did, when he confessed, on February 21, that he had
-been the queen's lover. From this moment he could only lay claim to a
-feeling of contempt. It would not even excuse him were it true, as has
-been alleged, that a pretended confession of Caroline Matilda's guilt was
-shown him.
-
-Still the means employed to get rid of the favourites were most
-reprehensible. It is true that the queen dowager and Prince Frederick
-had a right to feel irritated at having no credit at a court where
-a Struensee domineered, and that they wished to remove him and his
-partisans. We can understand that Queen Juliana Maria, who had no
-experience of business, and Prince Frederick, who had scarce emerged from
-boyhood, should not suspect the extremities to which Guldberg's faction
-would lead them; and it may be true that it was owing to their generosity
-that the children of Caroline Matilda were not deprived of their rights.
-Nor can we positively condemn Guldberg for wishing to tear from Struensee
-powers which Struensee had torn from others. Perhaps Guldberg possessed
-more capacity, or a better claim to hold the power than he. But, as to
-the means employed in gaining the object, we cannot help agreeing with
-Falckenskjold when he says:
-
-"To make Struensee perish in order to seize on his office, was not this
-purchasing it very dearly? and especially to add the punishment of the
-unfortunate Brandt to that of Struensee, and to assail the liberties
-and fortunes of so many persons who were innocent of the ambition of
-these two men. And, in order to give a legal appearance to these
-proscriptions, they do not hesitate to abuse whatever is most sacred in
-human laws; they convert private intrigues into judicial proceedings;
-they employ calumnious libels as authentic documents and sentences; they
-raise the veil and expose to the public the domestic secrets of the
-king's house! They do not fear violently to break the happy union of the
-king with his consort; to render doubtful the rights of the issue of that
-union, by compromising the future tranquillity of the state; and, lastly,
-to cast on a young queen the affront of a mortal stain, and to condemn
-her to expire in a lengthened agony!
-
-"Was the post of a principal minister of the King of Denmark so
-important, or desirable at such a price?"
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 17: Reverdil, p. 422.]
-
-[Footnote 18: Reverdil is the only writer who produces this curious
-document.]
-
-[Footnote 19: Gespräch im Reiche der Todten.]
-
-[Footnote 20: Gespräch im Reiche der Todten.]
-
-[Footnote 21: Struensee's skull was eventually stolen by four English
-sailors, belonging to a Russian man-of-war commanded by Admiral Greig.]
-
-[Footnote 22: It has been said that Juliana Maria expressed a regret at
-not seeing the decapitated corpse of Caroline Matilda by the side of
-that of her accomplices. But such language would be quite contrary to
-the reserve, prudence, and dissimulation of which she furnished so many
-proofs during the whole of her life.]
-
-[Footnote 23: The Commission of Inquiry has received orders to consider
-in what manner the persons _employed in convicting_ the prisoners of
-state should be rewarded; in consequence of which it was allotted that
-Dr. Hee and Dr. Münter should each receive 300 rix dollars; but the court
-was of a different opinion, and judged it most proper to make presents to
-these ecclesiastics. The two civil officers who drew up the protocol each
-received 150 Danish ducats.--_Annual Register_ for 1772.]
-
-[Footnote 24: This letter I have found in Raumer's "Beiträge zur neueren
-Geschichte," vol. i.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE HIGH COMMISSION.
-
- THE TEN PRISONERS--THE REPORT--LIEUT.-COLONEL VON
- HESSELBERG--ETATS-RATH WILLEBRANDT--PROFESSOR BERGER--UNJUST
- SENTENCES--VON GAHLER--FALCKENSKJOLD AND STRUENSEE--SERIOUS
- CRIMES--THE SENTENCE--THE ROYAL APPROVAL--THE FORTRESS OF
- MUNKHOLM--THE COMMANDANT--RESIGNATION--THE ORDER OF RELEASE--CURIOUS
- CONDITIONS--DEATH OF FALCKENSKJOLD.
-
-
-After the execution of the two counts, the turn came for the other ten
-prisoners of state to be disposed of. In order to justify in the sight
-of Europe the sanguinary treatment of the two principal victims, these
-prisoners must also appear in the light of state criminals, although no
-actual offence could be proved against a single one of them. Although
-the grounds for their sentences are of the most paltry description,
-it is easy to discover in them that, after the removal of their real
-enemies, the dominant faction wished to affect a display of mercy,
-probably through fear of public opinion, which was beginning to be loudly
-expressed both at home and abroad, about the cruel fate of the two
-counts.
-
-The court believed it necessary to lay before the nation in print the
-sentences of Counts Struensee and Brandt, and with them a list of
-the crimes for which they were tried. This measure, however, had the
-contrary effect to what was expected. Nothing was seen in this sentence
-but a desire to prove the counts guilty, and a long series of absurd
-conclusions, by which it was sought to attain this object: the sentence
-on Count Brandt, more especially, revolted every one, and the general
-dissatisfaction was unmistakable.[25] Hence, although it was proposed in
-the council to lop off one or two more heads, one of the judges, Kofod
-Ancher, thought it was time to say to the king, as was said to Augustus,
-_siste carnifex_. It was therefore decided that the only victim of
-judicial vengeance should be Falckenskjold, who had dared to be an honest
-admirer of Struensee, and was really at the same time an enlightened
-statesman and politician.
-
-On April 21 a royal command was sent to the commissioners to hand in an
-accurate representation of the offences of all the other persons arrested
-on January 17, and more especially those who had been guilty of minor
-crimes. This order was executed in a "most humble" report, dated May
-5. The poor wretches had been allowed to pass all this time in prison,
-suffering from the most painful uncertainty.
-
-Frau von Gähler was placed at the head of the list as the least guilty
-sinner. She had attracted suspicion--so it was stated in the report--by
-her intercourse with Struensee, by an uninterrupted correspondence
-during the Holstein progress with her husband in Copenhagen, by her
-being selected to be constantly in attendance on the queen, by her and
-her husband's decoration with the queen's Order of Matilda; and lastly,
-by the rumour that important papers had been entrusted to her care. As,
-however, the closest investigation had not produced a tittle of proof
-against her, and her correspondence with her husband proved to be of the
-most innocent nature, while other ladies who stood under no suspicion had
-enjoyed equal favour at court, the commission had discovered nothing that
-could be brought as a charge against her.
-
-A similar declaration was issued by the commission in the matter of
-Lieutenant-Colonel von Hesselberg. This officer who--on account of the
-acquirements he had gained on foreign service, and the intelligence
-displayed by him while holding an appointment at the Academy of Military
-Cadets, had been proposed by Falckenskjold as lieutenant-colonel of
-the king's regiment, because the latter wished to have an efficient
-representative, while he went on diplomatic business to Russia--had
-received orders to have an eye on Struensee's youngest brother, who was
-appointed to his regiment. Such was the state crime brought against this
-man of honour by the exalted commissioners.
-
-As an example of the condition of the Danish army at that day, the
-circumstances connected with Hesselberg's appointment will be perused
-with interest. When Falckenskjold, shortly after his arrival from Russia,
-was appointed colonel of the king's regiment, the quartermaster delivered
-to him an account of the state of the regimental chest, according to
-which there ought to be 25,000 dollars in it. Falckenskjold replied, that
-he would take over the chest after a committee of inquiry had sat. The
-quartermaster objected that this was displaying an unusual suspicion,
-but Falckenskjold stuck to his text, and lo and behold! there were
-but 95 dollars in the chest. On his threatening to report the affair,
-5,000 dollars were produced, and the quartermaster bolted. A close
-investigation proved that the missing sum had been stolen by frauds, in
-which the officers were mixed up, and Falckenskjold was at last obliged
-to let the matter drop, but for this very reason selected Hesselberg, in
-whom he could trust, as his second in command.
-
-The third ill-used man, against whom the commission could not produce a
-_scintilla_ of evidence either, was Rear-Admiral Hansen. He had first
-formed Struensee's acquaintance when he received orders to join the
-Algerine Committee, and afterwards assumed a special command in the
-expedition. He had never spoken on any matters but those connected
-with the navy to Struensee, and yet was kept for months in prison as a
-dangerous criminal.
-
-Equally little could be alleged against Councillor of Legation
-Sturtz. His connection with Struensee had never possessed an intimate
-character, which was proved by the fact, that he had remained attached
-to Bernstorff. The sole reason for his lengthened residence at
-Hirschholm, in the summer of 1771, was, that he, as a clever amateur in
-portrait-painting, had received a commission to take the likeness of
-the queen and prince royal, and the diamond ring presented to him by
-the queen for his bride, was only an acknowledgment given him for these
-works of art, which are still in existence, and said to be excellent
-likenesses. Nor was anything in the slightest degree incriminating found
-among his papers.
-
-Lieutenant Aboe, of the navy, was the next prisoner declared to be
-innocent. When a cadet he had formed the acquaintance of Brandt, and
-became intimate with him, partly on account of the pecuniary assistance
-the latter gave him, partly to be recommended to Chamberlain Struensee,
-through whose application he obtained the interim post of master of the
-crews at the navy docks, and of adjutant to the Algerine expedition. In
-the latter capacity he frequently waited on Struensee, and handed in
-some pretended ameliorations in the administration of the navy, which,
-however, only proved his ignorance. He had no further connection with
-Struensee, and was, indeed, offended with the cabinet minister, because
-the latter did not sufficiently recognise his merits.
-
-The examination had thus proved that five innocent persons had been
-kept in a state of torturing uncertainty as to their fate, and in cruel
-imprisonment for four months and a half, while their relatives were
-exposed to public contumely.
-
-Of Etats-rath Willebrandt it was alleged that he had been so simple and
-bold as to wish to reform the Admiralty College, without having gained
-a proper insight of the administration of the navy, much less of the
-difference in the business of the department during peace and war, as
-he had solely obeyed the order given him to establish the Admiralty
-College after the pattern of that of the Generalty. The commissioners,
-it is true, declared that it was not within their competence to judge
-the value of a plan which in any case had been approved by his Majesty,
-and for this reason did not dare to express dissatisfaction with it.
-Still they thought themselves at liberty to state that which the result
-proved, that a portion of the plan, owing to Willebrandt's ignorance,
-produced irregularity and inconveniences, which could only be prevented
-by alterations and fresh expenses for the king's treasury. After this, an
-allusion was made to the affair with the enrolled sailors, who marched
-on Hirschholm in 1771. Willebrandt's offence, therefore--the report
-went on to say--consisted in his having undertaken to reform things of
-which he had no thorough knowledge, and he thus produced scenes which
-might easily have had dangerous consequences. It was not mentioned in
-the report, however, that the king had given him this order, that Count
-Haxthausen took part in it, and that both, when they drew up the plan,
-expressly requested that the new scheme might be previously examined by
-professional men.
-
-Professor Berger, the physician in ordinary, also appeared to the
-commission to have committed an offence. It was true that all the
-medicines found in his house proved to be innocuous; there was no proof
-that the steel cure attempted on his Majesty was improper; in the matter
-of the rearing of the crown prince he had not agreed in all points with
-Struensee, but rather had been the cause that warmer clothing and better
-food were granted his royal highness toward the close: it was also true
-that he expressed his anger at Struensee having acquired a power which he
-considered prejudicial to the nation; but he had given serious offence
-by concurring with Struensee, and giving his advice and propositions in
-reforms of which he probably knew nothing, more especially in things
-which did not concern his trade as physician, or the _res literariæ_
-generally. As a proof of this, it was alleged that he had proposed some
-persons to fill the places of the dismissed members of the magistracy,
-and that Struensee requested him to mention a person who would be
-suitable for the chief post in the navy yards. Still the commission would
-not venture to judge of the use or disadvantage of such propositions, as
-the papers found on the accused and the other prisoners, on which their
-argument must be founded, contained no information about them.
-
-This was everything that could be brought against a professional man,
-who, in spite of his zealous attention to the king's health, and his
-well-earned reputation, was dragged to the fortress, and, like a
-murderer, prohibited the use of knife and fork, and was not allowed to
-shave himself, or sleep on his own mattress.
-
-If the conduct of the commission had hitherto retained a varnish of
-justice, the royal resolution, minuted by Councillor of Conference
-Schumacher, and issued on May 18, was a strange proof of tyranny, which
-smote truth on the face with open falsehoods. For it was stated in this
-resolution, that the persons who had been guilty of the "smallest crimes"
-should be punished in the following way:--
-
-Frau von Gähler would be set at liberty, but must refrain from appearing
-at court so long as her husband's affair was not concluded.
-
-Rear-Admiral Hansen and Lieutenant Aboe would be discharged from arrest,
-and report themselves to the Admiralty College, where they would learn
-the king's commands with respect to them.
-
-Legations-rath Sturtz would also be released from arrest, and ordered to
-proceed to Holstein. He would retain his pension of 500 dollars, which
-had been granted him by the royal resolution of January 26, but must
-expend it away from the court.
-
-Etats-rath Willebrandt, after being discharged, would proceed to one of
-the small towns in Seeland, where an annual pension of 300 dollars would
-be paid him.
-
-Professor Berger, lastly, after being set at liberty, would go to
-Aalborg, in northern Jütland, where a pension of 300 dollars would be
-paid him, until a post of provincial surgeon became vacant in Jütland.
-
-These decisions the commissioners made known to the persons concerned
-with the solemn warning that, after the king had pardoned them this time,
-through special mercy, for their incautious, thoughtless, and criminal
-conduct, they must be very careful not to give rise to greater suspicion
-by word or writing, as, in that case, they would be subjected to a
-further examination, and might expect the king's most serious displeasure.
-
-The sovereign lord over the life and death of his subjects was
-consequently of a different opinion from the commissioners, who had found
-the accused guilty of no offence. But it was considered desirable to get
-rid of those persons most hated, and, in order to convict them, it was
-requisite to accuse them of offences at the expense of truth.
-
-Lieutenant-Colonel von Hesselberg, who was referred to the Commissariat
-College, learnt there that the king had appointed him Commander of the
-2nd National Battalion of Schleswig-Holstein. This distinguished officer
-afterwards became colonel of an infantry regiment in Norway, where he
-died in 1808, a lieutenant-general, and commandant of the fortress of
-Bergenhuus.
-
-Rear-Admiral Hansen was informed by the Admiralty that he had forfeited
-his post as deputy of the latter college, but would continue to serve the
-state. He died a few years after the catastrophe.
-
-Lieutenant Aboe, who also learnt his future fate from the Admiralty,
-received orders to pass two years abroad, but retained his commission and
-pay. Eventually, he left the service with the rank of captain, set up as
-a merchant in Copenhagen, failed, made voyages to the East Indies, and
-died after many hard adventures in Copenhagen.
-
-The three exiles, Legations-rath Sturtz, Etats-rath Willebrandt, and
-Professor Berger, in obedience to the royal commands, quitted the
-capital, and proceeded to their several destinations. When Falckenskjold
-was recalled from Switzerland by the crown prince in 1788, he found
-Willebrandt still in exile: Berger was a practising physician at Kiel,
-but Sturtz had died of grief.[26]
-
-The public of Copenhagen were astonished at this mild treatment of
-persons who had been kept in such close arrest. Much worse had been
-anticipated. But three state criminals still remained in prison, and
-what had been spared their associates, who were punished for having been
-proved innocent, could be done to them.
-
-Lieutenant-General von Gähler, Colonel and Chamberlain von Falckenskjold,
-and Justiz-rath Struensee, were still awaiting their sentence. But on
-May 10 an order had been issued to the commission to lay before the
-king a full report of the crimes of these men, for his Majesty's most
-gracious consideration and resolution. In obedience with this command,
-the commission sent in its report on May 30.
-
-With respect to Gähler, it was alleged that he was mixed up both in
-the Traventhal league and the abolition of the council. It was true
-that he had denied both, but, on the first point, the letters found
-at his house contradicted him. As regards the council, he had not, as
-his duty ordered, sufficiently represented the value of the council in
-his answers to the questions laid before him for explanation on Sept.
-24, 1770, and there were even strong reasons for conjecturing that he
-proposed and promoted the abolition of the council, because he was
-Struensee's principal adviser about this time. In the same way he had
-recommended to his friend Struensee, the abolition of the verbal reports
-of the colleges. By this, the general had helped to conceal Struensee's
-audacious conduct from the king, and given him, Struensee, opportunity
-for filching all the power and authority. It was allowed that Von Gähler,
-by his propositions, had no intention of sustaining Struensee in his
-situation and promoting his autocracy. Still, he ought, and must have
-noticed Struensee's boundless ambition, when he perceived that the latter
-"wished to apply the practice of his profession to the state, and began
-by amputating from it so important a limb as the council was." General
-von Gähler ought the less to have attempted to promote Struensee's views,
-as he was not adapted either by nature or Providence to regulate or
-remodel a state. He ought not to have furnished Struensee with projects,
-all the consequences of which he could not foresee. More especially, he
-ought not to have advised the suppression of verbal reports, but to have
-always opposed it. But he appeared to have been possessed by a mania
-for reformation. As a proof, it might be mentioned that he proposed the
-reform for which was introduced into Norway by the regulation of January
-14, 1771, that lands, after ten years' tenure, should become freehold,
-which no man of perspicuity could have advised.[27] The commission found
-a second instance in the reform of the two Chanceries, although the
-division of business, according to provinces, had had the best results.
-
-Before all, however, Von Gähler wished to remodel the navy. It was
-quite incredible what tricks he employed to get it into his hands, and
-the commission reports that the misfortune which befel the Algerine
-expedition gave Von Gähler the desired opportunity for effecting it. Herr
-von Gähler's crime, therefore, principally consisted in the fact, that
-he interfered in everything, and wished to reform all the regulations
-of the state, without possessing the requisite knowledge and insight,
-without knowing the advantages or defects of what existed, and without
-sufficiently pondering over the consequences of his propositions. The
-commission, however, could find no excuse in the circumstance that Von
-Gähler's proposed reforms only consisted of ideas and thoughts, whose
-trial by experiments injured nobody, because most of the affairs in which
-he interfered in no way concerned him, and the trouble he took in order
-to obtain a justification for doing so, proved a greater offence; for he
-had applied to Struensee, a man who was even more ignorant than himself
-in such things, and blindly followed everything that was proposed to
-him, especially when such propositions suggested radical changes. The
-commission, however, would not omit mentioning that the general, since
-May, 1771, had possessed no special influence over Struensee, because
-he had joined the opposition against the reduction of the Horse Guards,
-and besides, he had not commended himself to the cabinet minister, by
-representing to him how little the power he had appropriated agreed
-with the royal law. Lastly, the general also displayed firmness when
-the Foot Guards were disbanded; he had likewise resisted the removal
-of the two regiments, and in the Generalty represented to Chamberlain
-von Falckenskjold how improper it was to propose the regiment of the
-hereditary prince for such a dislocation, without first asking whether
-this would be agreeable to the prince.
-
-The second of the criminal three was Colonel and Chamberlain von
-Falckenskjold. According to the opinion of the commission, he was the
-man who, next to Brandt, stood in the closest intimacy with Struensee.
-Perhaps, however, Falckenskjold's notorious dislike of the hereditary
-prince, and his bold and manly behaviour in the presence of the
-commission, had their share in prejudicing his judges against him, so
-that they, through personal hatred, behaved in the most unscrupulous way
-toward a man of honour. Professor Sevel acted as inquisitor, and seemed
-to find a pleasure in insulting the fallen friend of Struensee by all
-sorts of cruel questions. We can form an idea of this man's moral value
-on seeing that Sevel, in his examination, so far forgot what he owed to
-himself as a judge, as to express his regret that Struensee had not been
-murdered by the sailors. In their report, the commissioners first made
-Falckenskjold's intimacy with Struensee a capital offence, and asserted
-that he had sought to maintain this intimacy so eagerly, because he and
-Brandt had received the greatest benefactions from Struensee. The latter
-not only conferred on him offices and honorary posts, but also gave him
-money out of the royal treasury.
-
-Thus, Falckenskjold, although on May 2, 1771, he had received from the
-cabinet treasury, in payment of his travelling expenses to Petersburg,
-the usual sum of 400 dollars, obtained on the 19th of the same month
-2,000 dollars more, under the same excuse, from the private treasury,
-and, after his return, or in a period of three months, a further sum of
-3,500 dollars. Of these amounts, Struensee paid him 1,000 dollars under
-the false allegation that Falckenskjold had spent them on the journey
-from his private means, while the 2,000 dollars were paid him without
-the king's cognizance. How he had earned these presents, neither he nor
-Struensee would have been able to specify, and the assertion that the
-king had promised to pay Von Falckenskjold's debts by degrees, was only
-an empty pretext, for the latter had deposited 2,000 dollars with the
-minister of finances, and therefore could only have had debts to the
-amount of 400 dollars; and moreover, he never expressed the proper thanks
-to his Majesty for such large gifts in money. The commission consequently
-assumed that Struensee desired to acquire Falckenskjold's gratitude,
-and declared in their report that they had strong grounds for believing
-that it had been arranged between the couple, that Struensee should be
-supported under all circumstances, and guarded against any possible
-surprise, on which Falckenskjold's own fortunes also depended.
-
-In understanding with Struensee, he proposed the abolition of the
-Chevalier guard, and no other had been more busy than Falckenskjold in
-setting at work the cabinet order of December 21. If any event occurred,
-and Struensee believed himself in danger, Falckenskjold was immediately
-at hand; he had not merely proved his devotedness to Struensee in this
-way, but also, for the sake of pleasing the minister, had neglected the
-reverence due to the hereditary prince, and in this had gone so far that
-he had furnished proofs of it in the presence of the entire public.
-Two facts had convinced the commission of this daring sentiment of
-Falckenskjold, which was based on affection for Struensee, namely, the
-removal of the prince's regiment, and more especially the occurrence on
-the walls. The latter event, the commission represented as follows:--
-
-In the spring of 1771, the prince was, one day, riding along the walls
-at the moment when Colonel Falckenskjold was "exercising" his band,
-composed of hautboists and fifers; the colonel blocked the road, and
-marched straight upon the prince. Both majors of the regiment called
-his attention to the fact, that the prince was coming toward them; but
-Falckenskjold let his men march on. A groom of the prince's now rode
-up, and requested room for his royal highness to pass. The adjutant
-reported it to the colonel, and asked whether the band should not leave
-off playing, and room be made for the prince? but Falckenskjold answered:
-"No, not even if the good God were to come along Himself." He allowed the
-band to continue playing, and the prince, in order to pass, was compelled
-to ride close to the parapet.
-
-Falckenskjold alleged, in his excuse, that he had orders to let the band
-play in public places, especially when the king came past, and for this
-reason there would have been an impropriety in his stopping the band on
-the arrival of the prince. The colonel also observed that, in France,
-where he had served a long time, an officer was rarely on guard without
-hearing the sentinel shout, "_Aux armes! le bon Dieu arrive!_" when the
-Catholic priests passed with the host, and hence it had grown into a
-habit to confirm a negative by saying, "No, I would not do it, even if
-_le bon Dieu_ were to come." The commission, however, considered that
-this sort of defence contradicted itself, and the colonel ought certainly
-to have made way for the prince.
-
-Colonel Falckenskjold's crime, consequently, consisted in his having
-sold himself to Struensee, in having always had an understanding with
-him, in having advised the reduction of both Guards, in having expressed
-himself for Struensee's conservation, in having given proofs, on every
-occasion, how anxious he was that Struensee should escape a surprise, and
-lastly, in having tried, for the sake of pleasing Struensee, to cause
-annoyance to his Royal Highness Prince Frederick, and, for this object,
-having been so audacious as to neglect the respect due to his royal
-highness. Without dwelling on Falckenskjold's numerous and high services
-to the king and country, the commission concluded their report with the
-disgraceful statement, that they could not refrain from seeing in Colonel
-and Chamberlain von Falckenskjold a foolhardy, detrimental, and the more
-dangerous man, because he would do anything for money.
-
-The third and last upon whom the commission had to express an opinion
-was Justiz-rath Struensee. As he had only been released from his chains
-by special favour, after his brother's execution, it might have been
-expected that the commission would depict him as a great criminal. It was
-quite different, however, though through no love of truth and justice on
-the part of the Inquisition, but in consequence of commands from higher
-quarters. For Frederick II. of Prussia, who had kept Struensee's place,
-as professor at Liegnitz, open for him, while he went to try his luck,
-allowed his minister, Herr von Arnim, whose tutor Struensee had been, to
-employ his master's name in claiming him.[28]
-
-The report on this prisoner of state, after opening with the statement
-that Justiz-rath Struensee, though he only possessed a theoretical
-knowledge of the laws and constitution of Denmark, readily accepted
-a seat as deputy in the Financial Department, and had the special
-inspection of the Mint, the Bank, and the course of Exchange--in the hope
-of obtaining a better knowledge of these branches of the administration
-by industry and work--acknowledged his irreproachable conduct in the
-latter respect, and added the remark, that the commission could express
-this with the greater confidence, as the College of Finances, at their
-request, had had the matter examined by an authority on the subject.
-As concerned his functions as deputy of the finances generally,
-however, the commission must blame Justiz-rath Struensee for a tendency
-to foolhardy boasting about services which he had not rendered, and
-arbitrariness in financial matters, as he wrote to a friend that all the
-others in the Financial College understood nothing, and eventually strove
-to become _Contrôleur Général des Finances_.
-
-Although, as regarded his official administration as deputy, there were
-no positive proofs that he had abused his charge to the injury of the
-king and country for his own interest, yet there was a tolerably strong
-presumption that, with the help of his brother and his office, he wished
-to render all the subjects in Denmark tributary to a few Brandenburg
-partners, who were to hold the salt and tobacco monopolies, in exchange
-for profits promised to him and his brother. As regards the salt-farming,
-the commission allowed that the Justiz-rath had accepted no benefit
-for himself, but annually paid over to the king the 10,000 dollars
-intended for himself. In the matter of the tobacco-farming, however,
-some suspicion clung to him that he, contrary to his brother's advice,
-accepted the two shares offered him to promote the affair. But although,
-in spite of all Justiz-rath Struensee's allegations to the contrary,
-the strongest presumptions existed against him and his integrity,
-the commissioners felt themselves bound to state that it was not his
-intention to deprive the Danish tobacco-planters and spinners of their
-livelihood, as the farming proposition was not carried into effect.[29]
-
-However--thus runs the forced conclusion of the report:--the reports as
-to the Justiz-rath's former life in Prussia are generally satisfactory,
-and he is honoured with the distinguished favour of Prince Henry, the
-brother of Frederick II., who takes a lively interest in him, and
-considers him incapable of any serious crime. Besides, no traces had been
-found that the Justiz-rath had intrigued with his brother, and just as
-few that he had interfered in things that did not concern him. Finally,
-it could not be alleged as an offence that he received 4,000 dollars
-from the private treasury, under the title of gratifications, because
-the first 2,000 were given him with the king's assent, and there was no
-evidence of his being aware that the other 2,000 were paid him without
-the cognizance of the king.
-
-After the commissioners, probably with a heavy heart, had closed their
-report in so mild a way, there followed, on June 12, 1772, a royal
-resolution, containing his Majesty's "will and commands" respecting the
-crimes of Lieutenant-General von Gähler, Colonel and Chamberlain von
-Falckenskjold, and Justiz-rath and Deputy of Finances Struensee. The king
-had learned from the report of the commissioners that--
-
-Von Gähler generally undertook to remodel and reform the whole
-arrangements of the state, though he possessed no vocation or knowledge
-for it; further, that Von Falckenskjold devoted himself entirely to
-Struensee, was joined with him in a portion of his injurious enterprises,
-and declared himself in favour of his conservation, and on all occasions
-furnished proof of this, and displayed a further audacious mode of
-behaviour; and that, lastly,
-
-Strong presumptions existed against Justiz-rath Struensee and his honest
-performance of his duties, and that he had not fully consulted with
-the other persons concerned on matters that came before the College of
-Finances.
-
-For this reason, the commission would make known to Lieutenant-General
-von Gähler, that, on account of his thoughtless and improper undertaking,
-he was dismissed from the king's service, had forfeited the royal favour
-granted him in the decree of March 26, 1767,[30] and must at once
-select a spot in the Danish monarchy--Seeland, Fühnen, and Schleswig
-excepted--where he would permanently reside, and commence his journey to
-it immediately after leaving the castle. At the same time, the commission
-would seriously warn him, under threats of the royal displeasure, not to
-speak or to write about public affairs, as his Majesty, through special
-clemency, granted him a pension of 500 dollars, and the same to his wife.
-
-
-The commission would demand of Colonel von Falckenskjold the
-chamberlain's key and the Russian order, and announce to him that, in
-consequence of his audacious and detrimental behaviour, he would be
-conveyed to the fortress of Munkholm, and be imprisoned there for life,
-half a dollar a day being allowed him from the treasury for his support.
-
-Lastly, the commission would announce to Justiz-rath Struensee that, as
-he had caused his arrest by his own suspicious behaviour, he was now
-released from it, but he must leave the country at once, after making a
-promise, on oath, to reveal neither in writing nor verbally anything he
-knew about the Danish state affairs, and neither to write nor to speak
-about the events which had lately occurred in Copenhagen, and he would
-also begin his journey immediately he was released from the castle.
-
-The fate of the three men was very different. Poor Von Gähler died in
-exile; Justiz-rath Struensee became Minister of State in Prussia, where
-he acquired a considerable fortune; he was ennobled in 1789 by the same
-court of Copenhagen which had his brother's escutcheon broken by the
-executioner.[31]
-
-As for the third person, he shall tell us his story himself, as it throws
-such an extraordinary light on the treatment of state prisoners at a
-period within a hundred years of our own.
-
-
-FALCKENSKJOLD'S ABODE AT MUNKHOLM.
-
-On June 12, 1772, Sevel, accompanied by the commandant of the marines and
-several officers, entered my prison and told me that the king stripped me
-of all my offices and the military order of Russia, and that I should be
-transported to a rock and be detained there for the rest of my days.
-
-The crowd of people who entered with Sevel had so deafened me, that a
-portion of what he said escaped me.
-
-I begged him to repeat how long I was to remain in detention.
-
-_For your whole life_, he replied, with a grin which I fancy I can still
-see.
-
-The commission had doubtless made a report. I requested the communication
-of it--it was refused me. I was promised a copy of my examination, but
-was unable to obtain it.
-
-Thus I was deprived of every document that might one day be useful in
-proving my innocence.
-
-On June 26, I was taken on board a merchant vessel the Admiralty had
-freighted in order to go to Munkholm, my place of destination; a sergeant
-and four grenadiers of Prince Frederick's regiment, chosen by Eickstedt,
-were ordered to guard me on board the vessel; two grenadiers with drawn
-sabres were to watch me and prevent me from speaking.
-
-I have since learned that the sergeant commanding this guard, had a
-promise of being made lieutenant if he could induce me to take any step
-which would cause me to be landed at Munkholm in chains. But the skipper
-had declared to the Admiralty that he would not allow any one but himself
-to give orders, and that if he required the guard, he would summon it.
-
-This worthy man contrived to make himself respected, and to protect me
-from ill treatment.
-
-The vessel touched at Christiansund, where a part of its cargo was to be
-delivered. A custom-house clerk came on board and wanted to speak with
-me. He wished to insult me, as he had been dismissed in 1763 from his
-rank of lieutenant; observe, that I had no part in military affairs till
-1771. I heard his conversation on this subject with the master, who saved
-me this annoyance.
-
-The vessel arrived at Munkholm on August 4th, and I parted, not without
-regret, from this honest skipper, who had so generously protected me.
-
-The fort of Munkholm is situated on a barren rock four hundred paces
-in circumference, in the middle of the sea, half a league from
-Trondhjem,[32] toward the 64° of northern latitude. During the winter it
-is covered with an almost continual fog; the snow hardly remains there
-eight days in succession; but it freezes there from the beginning of
-September, and snow falls in the month of June.
-
-The only inhabitants of this place consisted of a detachment of the
-garrison of Trondhjem, the fort commandant, the officers under him, and
-the prisoners guarded there.
-
-I was lodged in a low room a little above the ground-floor. Its planks
-and walls were damp, and the snow fell into it in a fine rain when it
-thawed. Under the window was a cistern of stagnant water; this lodging,
-which was also surrounded by the quarters of the soldiers and the
-prisoners, whose cries stunned me, was assuredly not good; but I was
-alone in it, had plenty of books, enjoyed the liberty of walking on the
-ramparts when I pleased, and I felt much less unhappy than in Copenhagen;
-everything is relative.
-
-I had been warned that the water of the fort was unhealthy, and produced
-gravel. I asked if I could have any other, and they offered me spirits,
-the beverage _par excellence_ at this spot, but it was worse for me than
-bad water.
-
-I could not procure good bread; old bread, partly spoiled, was purchased
-for the prisoners, which cost 12 per cent. less than the ordinary bread.
-Though the government had confiscated 8,000 crowns belonging to me, it
-only allowed me half-a-crown a day for my subsistence.
-
-A battalion of the Delmenhorst regiment was in garrison at Trondhjem; I
-had served in this regiment, and found at Munkholm soldiers of a company
-I had formerly commanded. They formed a plan for carrying me off and
-deserting, but not having been able to communicate their plan to me, they
-deserted without me, and tried to reach Sweden overland; a detachment,
-sent in pursuit, caught them and brought them back.
-
-The solders, generally, were in a profound state of wretchedness and
-demoralisation; the spirits and herrings on which they lived diffused a
-frightful stench, and I had a difficulty in protecting myself against
-their uncleanliness.
-
-Everything here depended on Lieut.-General von der Osten, grand bailiff
-and governor of Trondhjem: he was said to be fond of presents, and did
-not hesitate to ask them, and I had none to offer him. The commandant
-of Munkholm, on my arrival, had been a servant and woodcutter to a
-Copenhagen tradesman. He was first a gunner, then non-commissioned
-officer in the militia, afterwards a spy, captain of a company of guides,
-inspector of an hospital, and, lastly, commandant of Munkholm. This
-man, who was extremely brutal and coarse, was frequently intoxicated;
-he called himself an atheist, believed himself an engineer, astronomer,
-tactician, and decided on everything without allowing an answer; he
-declaimed a great deal, though I could not learn why, against Counts von
-Bernstorff and St. Germain.
-
-A poor author, a very pious man, who was placed here because he had the
-simplicity to believe in the freedom of the press, had become, on account
-of his devotion, odious to the commandant, who used to beat him. He also
-treated very badly another person who had held a post at court, although
-the latter made him presents.
-
-The other officers were given up to the most disgusting intoxication.
-
-I took great care to avoid these gentlemen, and only spoke to them when
-I could not help it. I do not believe it would have been very difficult
-for me to escape from this fortress, and, perhaps, Guldberg offered me
-the means by proposing to me a retreat at Vardohuus,[33] under the polar
-circle. But, I said to myself, what should I go so far to seek? more
-injustice and persecution!
-
-What had been done to me gave me a sort of disgust for human society. I
-had wished to render myself illustrious by arms--the perusal of the lives
-of celebrated warriors had inflamed my imagination at an early age. I
-aspired to become one day the rival of the Löwendahls and the Münnichs.
-My studies, my reflections, were all directed to this object. On emerging
-from childhood I took up arms and sought combats--I followed this career
-successfully. I was summoned to aid in the reformation of my country and
-the amelioration of its condition. I quit with regret the mode of life I
-had chosen and loved; I arrive, I consecrate my efforts, all my thoughts
-to this new task, and persecution, exile and contumely are my reward! No,
-I will not take a single step to return to society; I was never a man of
-pleasures, though not at all insensible to the enjoyments designated by
-that name; I shall, doubtless, learn to forget them. Society has rejected
-me; they refuse to allow me any part in its joys and honours, and I have
-been relegated to this rock. Well, then, let us perform our task apart,
-let us work to render this state supportable, and to depend on others as
-little as possible.
-
-I daily confirmed myself in these thoughts--a favourite and habitual
-subject of my reveries--and this has decided the rest of my life.
-
-I should be satisfied if I had a healthy lodging, good water, and if I
-were not obliged to speak to the people who surround me.
-
-The taste for study is a great resource for me. I read a great deal with
-a pen in my hand; on the margin of my books I note my souvenirs, my
-reflections, and trace the details of the campaigns I have been through,
-and develope the considerations I had sketched about the military
-condition of Denmark. I still like to occupy myself with society as a
-simple spectator, though I have no desire to act a part in it. I like
-to dream awake while walking. The ramparts are the ordinary scene of my
-promenades.
-
-Thence, when the weather is fine, I perceive the mountainous coasts of
-the mainland, the rocks, the valleys, the forests, the habitations,
-which form varied scenes, the islets and shoals with which the coast
-is studded. Sometimes I discern in the distance a vessel which is,
-perhaps, bringing me books; more frequently I watch the departure of the
-fishermen's boats, or else see them return, uttering shouts of joy and
-triumph, with the booty they have gained by so much fatigue and boldness
-in the dangerous Northern Seas.
-
-I also take pleasure in contemplating the fury of the waves raised by
-storms, and which break against the rock on which I am a captive.
-
-In the months of July and August the coast of Norway offers an aspect
-of magnificent vegetation; the navigation is active; clouds of birds
-appear to animate the rocks that border the shore; the sky is pure, and
-the view enjoyed from Munkholm is enchanting. The nights, especially,
-have a peculiar charm; the air has something unctuous and _suave_, which
-seems to soften my melancholy reveries; the nights at this period are a
-species of twilight, for at midnight it is clear enough to read even the
-finest type.
-
-I have found in an external staircase a spot which has grown my favourite
-asylum, even when winter has commenced. There I am sheltered against the
-north winds; there, and in the company of my books, wrapped up in an old
-bearskin coat, I feel less a prisoner than elsewhere; though the eyes of
-the sentry plunge into the spot, my presence in it could not be suspected.
-
-Since the commencement of my stay on the island, I have regulated the
-employment of my time. I rise in summer at daybreak, and in winter at
-eight o'clock. I employ the first hour of the day in pious meditations;
-I then occupy myself with readings that require some mental effort; a
-short walk precedes my dinner; I take a longer walk after the meal.
-Reading the newspapers, romances, or theatrical pieces, generally ends my
-evenings. The days on which the public papers arrive are holidays with
-me. The fort chaplain pays me a visit now and then: the one who held this
-office on my arrival has been removed to Bergen. His conversation caused
-me pleasure, and that of his successor pleases me no less; I have found
-them both enlightened, charitable, disposed to relieve me by consolatory
-discourses, and by procuring me books. The Danish clergy, generally,
-are distinguished from the rest of the nation by their virtues and
-information.
-
-When the weather is bad, I walk in a large room in the tower of the
-fortress; this room served as a lodging for Count von Griffenfeldt. He
-was the son of a wine-merchant, and rose by his merit to the place of
-grand chancellor of the kingdom and the dignity of count. He governed
-the state wisely; if he had retained the power, he would have prevented
-the wars that ruined Denmark under Christian V. His enemies had him
-condemned to the punishment which the unhappy Struensee underwent; but
-on the scaffold itself the penalty of death, which had been too hasty,
-was commuted, as if by mercy, into a confinement on this rock, where he
-prolonged his wretchedness for nineteen years, and died of the gravel.
-
-"Such," I said to myself, "is the fate which menaces me; but I shall
-not wait so long for it, for I believe that I can already feel the same
-malady."
-
-In October, 1774, the marriage festival of Prince Frederick was
-celebrated, and at this very period a despatch arrived for the commandant
-of Munkholm. He was recommended greater severity with his prisoners, and
-especially with me. This letter of General Hauch's was certainly not
-written with the intention of my seeing it, but it was shown me by the
-commandant. His attentions to me did not escape my notice; he, doubtless,
-wished to make me feel them; what did he expect from me?
-
-On March 1, 1775, a lodging was assigned me in another house, which
-had just been finished. I was given two rooms, but did not gain by the
-change. The other buildings of the fort, and in particular the one I
-had inhabited, were sheltered by the ramparts, while the new house,
-built in the angle of a lofty rock, was exposed to the north, east, and
-west winds. The beams that formed the walls did not join, any more than
-the planks of the floor; under my lodging a cellar seemed to breathe an
-icy blast through the openings in the flooring. The stove intended to
-heat the room could not protect me from the cold; yet its effect was
-sufficient when the snow fell to dissolve it into rain in the apartment;
-and it is in such a habitation, under the 64° of northern latitude, that
-I write this description, which is not exaggerated.
-
-In November, 1775, I was attacked by an hemorrhoidal colic, which caused
-me such pain as to draw shrieks from me. The surgeon who attended me
-evidently thought my condition desperate. The pain grew less, however;
-I needed rest, and begged the sentry not to let any one enter. I was
-beginning to sleep, when the commandant arrived; he entered in defiance
-of my orders, woke me, and said that as I was on the point of death, I
-ought to make haste, and leave a will in his favour; I evaded this by
-answering him that I did not intend dying yet. He assured me again that
-I must believe him, because he was commandant: I made no answer, and he
-went off growling, and soon after made a frightful disturbance, alleging
-that an attempt was going to be made to carry me off, and that a boat had
-been noticed in the neighbourhood.
-
-Early in 1776, the commandant of Munkholm was removed, and Major Colin
-took his place.
-
-This new commandant, two days after his arrival, sent me a bottle of good
-water, bread, and fresh butter; this procured me the best meal I had yet
-had. Under this commandant I enjoyed great tranquility and greater ease.
-I relieved myself by writing these memoirs, and I fancied that I felt
-less resentment at the evil that had been done me, in proportion as I
-wrote the narrative of it.
-
-It is certain that fate has been very contrary to me. I joined to the
-passion of arms a taste for meditation, study, and retirement. I eagerly
-desired to acquire glory, but an independence would have been sufficient
-for me: I could not hope for either now.
-
-Some one once said to Count de St. Germain, that it was surprising he
-should resolve to quit the service of France, when he had 60,000 livres a
-year from the king's bounty; he answered, that 100 crowns a year composed
-his whole patrimony, but he would sooner live on that than endure
-affronts.
-
-This answer struck me, and I resolved to save all I could, so as to
-acquire an independence. I possessed, in 1771, 8,000 crowns, which I had
-entrusted to Schimmelmann, while awaiting the opportunity to sink them
-in an annuity. If I did not succeed in a military career, I hoped with
-this resource to procure a retreat in an agreeable country, and in a warm
-climate.
-
-Now, my money is lost, I have no longer a career to follow, and I am a
-prisoner for life on a rock in 64° of northern latitude: but how great
-was my folly in leaving the service of Russia to come to Denmark!
-
-I was making these sad reflections when, on September 25, 1776, I was
-informed by a note from Lieutenant-General von der Osten, grand bailiff
-and commandant of Trondhjem, that I should receive a visit from him. I
-had not recovered from the surprise this note caused me, when Von der
-Osten himself appeared, followed by the commandant, a surgeon, and his
-valet. He hurriedly entered my room, shouting, _Pardon, pardon, in the
-king's name!_ He held in his hand a portfolio full of papers, among which
-were--
-
-1. An order for my release, addressed to General Hauch, in his quality of
-first deputy of the College of War: this order was signed by the king,
-and countersigned by Guldberg, under date, Frederiksborg, August 21, 1776.
-
-2. An order to the same effect, addressed to the commandant of Munkholm.
-
-3. An instruction referring to the engagement I was to sign and seal
-before obtaining my release.
-
-These three documents were to the effect that his Majesty, on the
-intercession of his Royal Highness Prince Frederick, his beloved brother,
-consented to pardon me by liberating me from the captivity in which I
-was at Munkholm, upon the following conditions:--
-
-I. That I should leave Trondhjem by sea, to proceed to the northern coast
-of France, and thence directly and immediately either to Provence or
-Languedoc, at my choice.
-
-II. That I would pledge myself never to return to Copenhagen, or the
-king's states.
-
-III. That I would not leave the country to which I was sent without the
-king's permission, and that I would not make frequent journeys.
-
-IV. That I would not approach the town of Orange (where Rantzau had taken
-up his abode).
-
-V. That I would not enter the service of any foreign power.
-
-VI. That I would not act, write, or speak in any way against the king or
-the royal family.
-
-VII. That I would take no part in affairs of state.
-
-If there was no vessel ready for me to embark, I was allowed to remain
-at Trondhjem; but I must not leave the town without the governor's
-permission, or go further than a league from it. The king granted me for
-my journey 800 crowns of the money which had belonged to me, and hopes
-were held out of a pension.
-
-The instruction concerning my engagement was very long. Guldberg, who had
-drawn it up, had interlarded it with a good many religious motives: he
-even alluded to the efficaciousness of Christ's blood; but, after all,
-it was probably to him that I owed the amelioration in my fate.
-
-General von der Osten added to the conditions various articles, by which
-he hoped to pay court to the minister.
-
-I signed what was asked, and though I felt perfectly well the value of
-an engagement imposed on a man who had not been legally convicted of any
-crime, I resolved to observe it. When this act was regularly drawn up,
-the general, in order to give the circumstance greater _éclat_, had me
-bled by his surgeon-major, after which he proposed to me a bottle of red
-wine to restore my senses.
-
-I excused myself by observing that I did not drink, and offered him a
-liqueur, of which I possessed two bottles.
-
-"I could carry them off," he said, after examining them; "but this
-commission must be worth more than that."
-
-This was giving me to understand that he reckoned on a goodly portion of
-my 800 crowns. It may be supposed that my intentions on this point did
-not at all accord with his.
-
-There was no vessel at Trondhjem destined for France, and I could not
-expect one for a long time, as from the beginning of September till the
-end of April the sea is very stormy in these latitudes, and hence I
-should have to wait eight full months before I could depart.
-
-In this situation I wrote to the court to offer my thanks for the mercy
-shown me, and to obtain permission to proceed to my destination by land.
-In the meanwhile I remained at Munkholm, hoping to be less exposed there
-to the importunities of the general. The court of Copenhagen rejected my
-request, but allowed me to take ship for Holland.
-
-Three vessels were preparing to sail for Amsterdam, one of which belonged
-to Trondhjem, and General von der Osten wished me to take passage in it;
-but I gave the preference to a Danish ship.
-
-The general offered me the services of his valet, to prepare a gold-laced
-coat; but this offer did not tempt me. I set out with my bearskin
-pelisse, which composed my wardrobe. I also carried off my 800 crowns,
-without leaving one for the general.
-
-The three vessels bound for Amsterdam set sail from Trondhjem on October
-16; two perished: the one I was on board reached Christiansund, where
-we remained till February 16. After a stormy navigation, we reached
-Amsterdam on March 10.
-
-On April 12, 1777, I arrived at Montpellier, where I fixed my domicile.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In 1780, Falckenskjold received permission to retire to the Pays de Vaud,
-where his friend Reverdil invited him, and he established his home at
-Lausanne. In 1787, the court of Petersburg proposed to him to re-enter
-its service; he was offered the post of chief of the staff in the army
-intended to act against the Turks. But, finding himself bound by the
-engagements he had made, he replied, that he could not accept the offer
-without the formal consent of the court of Copenhagen; and this court
-refused its assent, under the pretext that it needed his services. At the
-same time, it permitted Falckenskjold to return to Copenhagen, and seemed
-disposed to revoke his order of banishment.
-
-In the spring of 1788 he went to Copenhagen, but his reception there was
-such that he longed to return to his retreat at Lausanne. He obtained
-permission to go back, and, having recovered a portion of his property,
-which the state had seized, he invested it in annuities in the French
-funds. In the same year, war having broken out between Denmark and
-Sweden, the Danish government recalled Falckenskjold, conferring on him
-the rank and pay of a major-general; but when he was going to set out he
-learned that peace was signed, and he was saved the journey.
-
-His pay and savings enabled him to live comfortably, with such friends as
-Gibbon and Reverdil; and he kept his health till the last two years of
-his life, when he was attacked by a gouty rheumatism, the seeds of which
-he had contracted in his Munkholm prison. He died on September 30, 1820,
-at the age of eighty-two years and a few months.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 25: "Authentische Aufklärungen," p. 246.]
-
-[Footnote 26: "Mémoires de Falckenskjold," p. 252.]
-
-[Footnote 27: The judges could not have brought forward a greater proof
-of their ill-will than this. For even the usurping faction did not
-dare upset this regulation, which was so useful for the cultivation of
-desolate districts in Norway.]
-
-[Footnote 28: Reverdil, p. 437.]
-
-[Footnote 29: The judges evidently acted on the principle that if they
-threw mud enough, some of it would be sure to stick.]
-
-[Footnote 30: The royal promise to grant him a pension of 3,000 dollars
-when he retired from active service.]
-
-[Footnote 31: Struensee's younger brother, the lieutenant in
-Falckenskjold's regiment, also obtained employment in Prussia.]
-
-[Footnote 32: Canute the Great, A.D. 1028, founded on Munkholm a
-Monastery of Benedictines, the first of that order established in Norway;
-a low round tower is all that remains of it, and this is within the walls
-of the fortress. It was in a small gloomy chamber in this tower that the
-Staats minister of Denmark, Graf von Griffenfeldt, was immured from 1680
-to 1698. He was originally, Peter Schumacker. This dungeon is no longer
-shown; but it is said that he had worn a deep channel in the pavement in
-walking up and down, and indented the stone table where he had rested
-his hand in passing it. This fortress has ceased to be used for state
-prisoners, but it is still the dark and solitary rock which Victor Hugo
-has described in his "Hans of Iceland," looking more like a prison-house
-than a fortress.--_Murray's Handbook_ for Denmark, &c.]
-
-[Footnote 33: A small fort built by King Christian IV., more than 200
-years ago, as a protection for the Danish fisheries, and to guard against
-Russian encroachments in the Varanger Fjord.--_Murray's Handbook_ for
-Denmark, &c.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-DEPARTURE OF THE QUEEN.
-
- THE BRITISH FLEET--SPIRITED CONDUCT OF KEITH--THE ORDER OF
- RELEASE--THE PRINCESS LOUISA AUGUSTA--THE DEPARTURE--THE LANDING AT
- STADE--THE STAY AT GOHRDE--ARRIVAL IN CELLE--THE QUEEN'S COURT--A
- HAPPY FAMILY--KEITH'S MISSION--LITERARY PIRATES--REVERDIL TO THE
- RESCUE.
-
-
-We have seen that the sentence of the court, decreeing a dissolution of
-the marriage, was announced to Caroline Matilda. From this moment she was
-no longer regarded as queen, and all her ties with Denmark were broken
-off with her marriage. After her condemnation, the ambassadors of the
-foreign powers were convoked at the Christiansborg Palace. They proceeded
-thither in mourning, and heard from the grand-master that, as the king no
-longer had a consort, there was no longer a queen. The name of Caroline
-Matilda was from this moment effaced from the public prayers. She became
-a stranger to the country over which she had reigned.[34]
-
-As was the case with the other prisoners, whose position was considerably
-mitigated so soon as they had made satisfactory confessions in their
-examination before the Commission of Inquiry, the queen, after the
-separation, was granted better apartments in the first-floor of the
-fortress, and was allowed to take the air on the ramparts. That Colonel
-Keith was permitted to visit the queen was looked on as a further
-concession, and that the envoy frequently took advantage of this
-permission, may surely be regarded as a further and important proof how
-greatly he was convinced of her innocence.
-
-When her Majesty was informed of the circumstances connected with the
-tragical death of the two prisoners, she said to Fräulein Mösting, her
-maid of honour,
-
-"Unhappy men! they have paid dearly for their attachment to the king, and
-their zeal for my service."
-
-No thought of self, it will be noticed: Caroline Matilda entirely forgot
-the humiliation to which she had been exposed by Struensee's dastardly
-confession, and only evinced sincere compassion for his undeserved and
-barbarous fate. But she was ever thus: from the first moment to the last,
-she sacrificed herself for others. Of this, the following anecdote will
-serve as an affecting proof:—--
-
-The queen, having so fatally experienced the vicissitudes of human
-grandeur, was not so deeply affected by her own disasters as to overlook
-the sufferings and misery of some state prisoners, doomed to perpetual
-exile in the Castle of Kronborg. Her Majesty's liberal beneficence was
-never more conspicuous than in this period of affliction and distress.
-She sent daily from her table two dishes to these forsaken objects of
-compassion, and out of a scanty allowance, she sent, weekly, a small sum
-to be distributed among them. The governor having requested her Majesty
-to withdraw her bounty from an officer who had been closely confined for
-some years past in a remote turret, debarred from all human intercourse,
-on suspicion of a treasonable correspondence with the agent of a northern
-power, who had enlisted, with the assistance of the prisoner, several
-Danish subjects for his master's service, the queen merely replied with
-the following line of Voltaire:--
-
- "Il suffit qu'il soit homme et qu'il soit malheureux."[35]
-
-On one occasion, Caroline Matilda, conversing on the early commencement
-of her misfortunes, observed that, since she was born to suffer, she
-found some consolation in being marked out so soon by the hand of
-adversity. "I may possibly live," said her Majesty, "to see Denmark
-disabused with respect to my conduct: whereas my poor mother, one of the
-best women that ever existed, died while the load of obloquy lay heavy
-upon her, and went to the grave without the pleasure of a vindicated
-character."[36]
-
-Early in March, the charges against Caroline Matilda had been forwarded
-to London, and were there submitted to the opinions of the first lawyers,
-who, though consulted separately, all declared that the evidence brought
-forward was so far from being legal conviction, that it scarce amounted
-to a bare presumption of guilt: and they affirmed that they did not give
-credit to any of the facts as lawyers, but even found themselves obliged
-to disbelieve them as men. Upon this the court of St. James insisted
-that no sentence should be passed on her Danish Majesty, as the evidence
-against her was only presumptive, and very inconclusive.
-
-A strong fleet was now fitted out, and universally supposed to be
-destined for the Baltic; still the most prudent thought, or at least
-hoped, that the fleet was only intended to intimidate the Danes, but
-would not sail, as the king of Prussia would certainly march an army
-immediately to Hanover, and then a new war would be kindled in the north.
-On the 22nd, counter orders, for suspending the preparations, were sent
-to Portsmouth. Horace Walpole, the omniscient, shall tell us what was the
-generally accepted version of the affair:--
-
-"The king, as Lord Hertford told me, had certainly ordered the fleet to
-sail; and a near relation of Lord North told me that the latter had not
-been acquainted with that intention. Lord Mansfield, therefore, who had
-now got the king's ear, or Lord Sandwich, First Lord of the Admiralty,
-must have been consulted. The latter, though I should think he would
-not approve it, was capable of flattering the king's wishes: Lord
-Mansfield assuredly would. The destination was changed on the arrival of
-a courier from Denmark, who brought word that the queen was repudiated,
-and, I suppose, a promise that her life should be spared: for, though
-the Danes had thirty ships and the best seamen, next to ours, and though
-we were sending but ten against them, the governing party were alarmed,
-probably from not being sure their nation was with them. The queen had
-confessed her intrigue with Struensee, and signed that confession. When
-the counsellor, who was to defend her, went to receive her orders, she
-laughed, and told him the story was true."
-
-In this we have a favourable specimen of Walpole's talent as an
-embroiderer of history. It is very evident that he had heard the facts
-floating about society; but his additions to them were evidently pure
-inventions. He shall give us one bit more of gossip, which may or may not
-have been true, although there appears to be evidence in its favour in
-the strange conduct of George III. toward his sister:--
-
-"They gave her (Caroline Matilda) the title of Countess of Aalborg, and
-condemned her to be shut up in the castle of that name. The King of
-England had certainly known her story two years before. A clerk in the
-secretary's office having opened a letter that came with the account,
-told me that he had seen it before the secretaries gave it to the king.
-It was now believed that this intelligence had occasioned the Princess
-of Wales to make her extraordinary journey to Germany, where she saw
-her daughter, though to no purpose. Princess Amelia told Lord Hertford,
-on the 26th, that when the King of Denmark was in England, observing
-how coldly he spoke of his wife, she asked him why he did not like her.
-He answered, 'Mais elle est si blonde!' The princess added, that Queen
-Matilda had a very high spirit, and that she believed the Danes would
-consent to let her go to Hanover. 'But she will not be let go thither,'
-added the princess, meaning that the queen's brother, Prince Charles of
-Mecklenburg, commanded there, 'or to Zell, but she will not go thither
-(another of the queen's brothers was there); perhaps she _may_ go to
-Lüneburg."[37]
-
-It is very probable, too, that the temper of the British nation, which
-had undergone a complete revulsion on the announcement of the fleet
-sailing, had something to do with its suspension. At any rate, we read in
-the _General Evening Post_ for April 30, the following painful account:--
-
-"Nothing, surely, is a greater impeachment of our laws, and more, of
-our lawgivers and magistrates, than the unrestrained licentiousness
-daily exhibited by the common people in this metropolis. Yesterday, in
-some parts of the city, men were crying about printed papers containing
-the most scandalous, ruinous, and impudent reflections on the Queen of
-Denmark. The worst prostitute that ever Covent Garden produced could not
-have had more gross abuse bestowed on her."
-
-But Sir R. M. Keith had been working hard in the meanwhile, and on the
-receipt of his letters of recall and news of the menaces of England in
-equipping a fleet, the regency gave in at once, promised to repay the
-queen's dowry, allow her five thousand a-year, and let her go to Hanover,
-beyond Jordan, anywhere, so long as they could only be rid of her. In
-reply to the despatch in which Sir R. M. Keith announced his success, he
-received the following official letter:--
-
-
-LORD SUFFOLK TO SIR R. M. KEITH.
-
- _St. James's, May_ 1, 1772.
-
- SIR,
-
-Your despatches by King the messenger have been already acknowledged;
-those by Pearson were received on Wednesday afternoon, and I now answer
-both together.
-
-His Majesty's entire approbation of your conduct continues to the last
-moment of your success, and his satisfaction has in no part of it been
-more complete than in the manner in which you have stated, urged,
-and obtained the liberty of his sister. The care you have taken to
-distinguish between a claim of right and the subjects of negotiation,
-and to prevent the mixture of stipulations with a demand, is perfectly
-agreeable to your instructions.
-
-The national object of procuring the liberty of a daughter of England
-confined in Denmark, after her connection with Denmark was dissolved, is
-now obtained. For this alone an armament was prepared, and therefore,
-as soon as the acquiescence of the court of Copenhagen was known, the
-preparations were suspended, that the mercantile and marine interests
-of this kingdom might be affected no longer than was necessary by the
-expectation of a war.
-
-Instead of a hostile armament, two frigates and a sloop of war are now
-ordered to Elsinore. One of these is already in the Downs--the others
-will repair thither immediately; and, so soon as the wind permits, they
-will proceed to their destination. I enclose to you an account of them,
-which you may transmit to Monsieur Ostein (Von der Osten) ministerially,
-referring at the same time to the assurance of these pacific proceedings.
-
-The compliance of the Danish court with his Majesty's demand is still
-a compliance. Their continuing, unasked, the title of queen, and other
-concessions, and the attainment of the national object accompanying
-each other, his Majesty would think it improper to interrupt the
-national intercourse from any personal or domestic consideration. You
-will therefore inform Mr. Ostein that his Majesty intends to leave a
-minister at the court of Copenhagen, the explanation you may give of this
-suspension of former directions, and his determination, being left to
-your own discretion.[38]
-
-It was with feelings of pride that the British envoy passed through the
-vaulted entrance of "Hamlet's Castle," to carry to an afflicted and
-injured princess the welcome proofs of fraternal affection and liberty
-restored. The feeling was reciprocal, for when Keith brought the order
-for Caroline Matilda's enlargement, which he had obtained by his spirited
-conduct, she was so surprised by the unexpected intelligence, that she
-burst into a flood of tears, embraced him in a transport of joy, and
-called him her deliverer.[39]
-
-The queen from this time forth was more constantly than ever on the
-ramparts watching for the arrival of the British flotilla. The squadron,
-consisting of the _Southampton_, Captain McBride, the _Seaford_, Captain
-Davis, and the _Cruizer_, Captain Cummings, left England on May 22, and
-anchored off Elsinore on the 27th. In the meanwhile Caroline Matilda
-wrote her brother a most affecting letter, asserting her innocence of
-all the criminal accusations against her in the strongest manner, and
-declaring that the strictness of her future life should fully refute
-the slander of her enemies. She at the same time expressed a wish to be
-allowed to return to England, but left her fate in his Majesty's hands.
-A consultation had been held at Buckingham House on the subject, but it
-was found too expensive, and it was finally settled that Caroline Matilda
-was to take up her residence at Celle, in Hanover, George III. allowing
-her £8,000 a year for the support of her dignity.
-
-Very touching, too, is it to read that the queen at this time wore
-nothing but deep mourning; and one of her ladies asking her why she
-affected such a semblance of sorrow, she replied--
-
-"It is a debt I owe to my murdered reputation."
-
-Sir Robert Murray Keith supplies an interesting anecdote of the queen in
-a letter to his sister:--
-
-"Here I am, thank my stars, upon the utmost verge of Denmark. My ships
-are not yet arrived, but a few days may conclude the whole affair; and
-the weather is mild and agreeable. I return to Copenhagen this evening,
-but only for a day or two, to wind up my affairs, and give my parting
-advice to the little secretary, in whose success as _chargé d'affaires_
-I take a particular interest. I am just returned from her Majesty, who
-is, Heaven be praised, in perfect health, notwithstanding the danger she
-has run of catching the measles from the young princess, whom she never
-quitted during her illness. A more tender mother than this queen has
-never been born in the world."
-
-Caroline Matilda was at dinner when the imperial salute of the English
-frigate and the castle guns informed her Majesty of Captain McBride's
-arrival. This gallant officer met Sir R. Keith on shore, who, after a
-mutual exchange of compliments, introduced the captain to her Majesty,
-by whom he was most graciously received as a man destined to convey her
-safe to her brother's electoral dominions; far from the reach of the
-personal shafts of her enemies, and that land which had been the dismal
-scene of her unparalleled misfortunes and humiliations. When the captain
-had notified his commission, and said that he should await her Majesty's
-time and pleasure, she exclaimed in the anguish of her heart, "Ah! my
-dear children," and immediately retired. It was not for an insensible
-monarch on a throne, on which she seemed to have been seated merely to
-be the butt of envy, malice, and perfidy, that her Majesty grieved:
-the excruciating idea of being parted from her dear children, and the
-uncertainty of their fate, summoned up all the feelings of a tender
-mother. She begged to see her son before he was torn for ever from her
-bosom: but all her Majesty's entreaties were unsuccessful. Juliana
-Maria envied her the comfort of the most wretched--that of a parent
-sympathising in mutual grief and fondness with children snatched from her
-embrace by unnatural authority.
-
-A deputation of noblemen having been appointed by the queen dowager to
-observe the queen after her enlargement till her departure, under the
-fallacious show of respect for the royal personage so lately injured and
-degraded--when they were admitted to Caroline Matilda's presence, and
-wished her in her Majesty's name a happy voyage, she answered--
-
-"The time will come when the king will know that he has been deceived and
-betrayed; calumny may impose for a time on weak and credulous minds, but
-truth always prevails in the end. All my care and anxiety are now for the
-royal infants, my children."[40]
-
-On May 30, a lady belonging to the court went to Kronborg in one of the
-king's coaches to remove the young Princess Louisa Augusta, and conduct
-her royal highness to Christiansborg Palace. Hence the last moments which
-the feeling queen spent in Denmark were the most painful of all: she was
-obliged to part from her only consolation, her only blessing, her beloved
-daughter: she was forced to leave her dear child among her enemies. For
-a long time she bedewed the infant with hot tears--for a long time she
-pressed it to her heart. She strove to tear herself away; but the looks,
-the smiles, the endearing movements of the infant, were so many fetters
-to hold the affectionate mother back. At last she called up all her
-resolution, took her once more in her arms, with the impetuous ardour of
-distracted love imprinted on the lips of the child the farewell kiss,
-and, delivering it to the lady-in-waiting, shrieked, "Away, away, I now
-possess nothing here!"[41]
-
-As the governor had behaved to the queen so as to merit her Majesty's
-confidence and esteem, she entrusted him with a letter for the king,
-which he promised faithfully to deliver into his Majesty's own hands. It
-must have been very moving, as the king was observed to shed tears on
-reading it.[42]
-
-At six in the evening of May 30, Caroline Matilda proceeded in a royal
-Danish boat on board the English frigate. Her suite consisted of Colonel
-Keith, who would accompany her to Göhrde, and of Count Holstein zu
-Ledreborg, his wife, Lady-in-waiting von Mösting, and Page of the Chamber
-von Raben, who were ordered to convey her Majesty as far as Stade, and
-then return by land. When the anchor was apeak, the fortress, and the
-Danish guardship in the Sound, gave a salute of twenty-seven guns.
-
-The queen remained on deck, her eyes immovably directed toward the
-fortress of Kronborg, which contained her child, who had so long been her
-only source of comfort, until darkness intercepted the view. The vessel
-having made but little way during the night, at daybreak she observed
-with fond satisfaction that the fortress was still visible, and could not
-be persuaded to enter the cabin so long as she could obtain the faintest
-glimpse of the battlements.
-
-Among Sir R. M. Keith's papers was found the following copy of verses,
-whose title speaks for itself. Unfortunately, there is no positive proof
-that they were written by the queen herself, beyond the care that Sir
-Robert took of them:--
-
-
-WRITTEN AT SEA BY THE QUEEN OF DENMARK,
-
-ON HER PASSAGE TO STADE, 1772.
-
- At length, from sceptred care and deadly state,
- From galling censure and ill-omened hate,
- From the vain grandeur where I lately shone,
- From Cronsberg's prison and from Denmark's throne,
- I go!
- Here, fatal greatness! thy delusion ends!
- A humbler lot thy closing scene attends.
- Denmark, farewell! a long, a last adieu!
- Thy lessening prospect now recedes from view;
- No lingering look an ill-starred crown deplores,
- Well pleased, I quit thy sanguinary shores!
- Thy shores, where victims doomed to state and me,
- Fell helpless Brandt and murdered Struensee!
- Thy shores where--ah! in adverse hour I came,
- To me the grave of happiness and fame!
- Alas! how different then my vessel lay;
- What crowds of flatterers hastened to obey!
- What numbers flew to hail the rising sun,
- How few now bend to that whose course is run!
- By fate deprived of fortune's fleeting train,
- Now, "all the oblig'd desert and all the vain."
- But conscious worth, that censure can control,
- Shall 'gainst the charges arm my steady soul--
- Shall teach the guiltless mind alike to bear
- The smiles of pleasure or the frowns of care.
- Denmark, farewell; for thee no sighs depart,
- But love maternal rends my bleeding heart.
- Oh! Cronsberg's tower, where my poor infant lies,
- Why, why, so soon recede you from my eyes?
- Yet, stay--ah! me, nor hope nor prayer prevails--
- For ever exiled hence, Matilda sails.
- Keith! formed to smooth the path affection treads,
- And dry the tears that friendless sorrow sheds,
- Oh! generous Keith, protect their helpless state,
- And save my infants from impending fate!
- Far, far from deadly pomp each thought remove,
- And, as to me, their guardian angel prove!
- Yes, Julia, _now_ superior force prevails,
- And all my boasted resolution fails!
-
-Before taking leave of Kronborg, I may be permitted to insert an anecdote
-related by my grandfather in his "Travels in the North." When he visited
-Kronborg, in 1774, a poor fettered slave came up and addressed him in
-French. Mr. Wraxall then commenced a conversation with him, and asked him
-if he were here when Queen Matilda was in confinement.
-
-"Ah! Monsieur," the prisoner replied, "I saw her every day. I had the
-honour to turn the spit for her Majesty's dinner. She even promised to
-endeavour to obtain me my liberty. I assure you," he added warmly, "that
-she was the most amiable princess in the world."
-
-Whether the man said this because he believed it would please an
-Englishman, or whether it was the genuine effusion of respectful
-gratitude, my grandfather was unable to say, but could not resist the
-compliment to an English and injured queen.
-
-By a royal resolution of March 18, 1773, all the documents connected
-with the dissolution of the marriage of Queen Caroline Matilda were
-made into four separate packets, and one of them, which contained
-the orders, protocols, and examinations, was deposited in the secret
-archives: the second, containing the perfect acts with the votes of all
-the commissioners, and a copy of the examination of the witnesses, was
-entrusted for safe keeping to the governor of Glückstadt: the third,
-consisting of a copy of the original articles and the examinations, was
-kept at the Norwegian fortress of Bergenhuus, in an iron chest, in a room
-the keys of which were held by the commandant and the viceroy: and the
-fourth packet, which only contained a copy of the articles, but not of
-the depositions, was placed in the archives of the Danish Chancery. This
-division of the documents also serves as a proof, how every possible care
-was taken that the queen's posterity should not hereafter find the whole
-of the documents at any one place.
-
-The queen did not reach Stade till June 5, where she was received with
-all the respect due to crowned heads. The Hanoverian Privy Councillor
-von Bodenhausen, and the Land Marshal Chamberlain von Bülow, pulled on
-board the flag-ship to welcome the queen. At the landing-place, where the
-ladies and gentlemen selected to attend on her Majesty were awaiting her,
-the Danish escort took leave. The queen gave Count Holstein a diamond
-solitaire as a souvenir, and entrusted him with a gold snuff-box for the
-wife of General von Hauch, commandant of Kronborg.
-
-The new suite of the queen was composed of a grand lady, two
-ladies-in-waiting, one chief chamberlain, a chamberlain, one page of
-the bed-chamber, two pages and a number of servants. After remaining
-for two days at Stade, she travelled with her suite, _viâ_ Harburg,
-to the Château of Göhrde, thirty miles from Stade, where she intended
-to remain till the palace at Celle was restored for her reception. At
-Göhrde, Sir R. Keith took leave of her, and she received a visit from her
-eldest sister, the Hereditary Princess of Brunswick Wolfenbüttel and her
-husband.[43] These near relations, however, also belonged to the princely
-family from which Juliana Maria was descended, and in consequence, were
-rather suspicious friends for Caroline Matilda.
-
-On October 20, the queen made her entrance into Celle, and took up her
-abode in the royal château. This old residence of the former Dukes of
-Lüneburg was at this time a fortified castle surrounded by moats and
-walls. Although the apartments were spacious and habitable, and well
-furnished, the exterior of the castle resembled a prison rather than
-a palace. But the queen soon gained the hearts of all the inhabitants
-by her amiability and resignation, and thus converted the unfriendly
-asylum into an abode of peace and consolation. She frequently attended at
-church, was fond of conversing on religious topics, and gave rich gifts
-to the poor, both with her own hands and through the clergy of the town.
-Treating all gracefully who approached her presence, she more especially
-gave children an opportunity of telling their parents, with delight, that
-they had been spoken to by the queen. If, at night, she fancied she had
-not been so friendly as usual to any one during the day, she reproached
-herself for it. Judging all persons indulgently, she could not endure
-that absent persons should be harshly condemned in her presence, and, in
-truth, she ruled her court, not alone by her rank, but even more through
-the lovingness of her noble heart. But, whenever she was obliged to act
-the queen, she did so, on the other hand, with a dignified demeanour and
-with majesty.
-
-Although Caroline Matilda excelled in all the exercises befitting her
-sex, birth, and station, and danced the first minuet in the Danish court,
-she never again indulged in this polite amusement, of which she had been
-extremely fond, after the masked ball the conclusion of which had been
-so fatal and disgraceful to her Majesty. As one of her pretended crimes
-had been the delight she took in riding, and the uncommon address and
-spirit with which she managed her horse, she also renounced this innocent
-recreation, for fear of giving the least occasion to the blame and malice
-of the censorious and the ignorant. Her Majesty had an exquisite taste
-for music, and devoted much of her time to the harpsichord, accompanied
-by the melodious voice of a lady of her court.
-
-There was in the queen's dress a noble simplicity which exhibited more
-taste than magnificence. As her mind had been cultivated by reading
-the most eminent writers of modern times, she read regularly for two
-hours before dinner with Fräulein Schülenburg, whatever her Majesty
-thought most conducive to her instruction or entertainment, in poetry
-and history, the ladies communicating their observations to each other
-with equal freedom and ingenuity. The queen improved the knowledge she
-had acquired of the German language, and had a selection of the best
-authors of that learned nation. As her manners were the most polished,
-graceful, and endearing, her court became the resort of persons of
-both sexes, celebrated for their love of the fine arts. The contracted
-state of her finances could not restrain the princely magnificence and
-liberal disposition which made her purse ever open to indigent merit and
-distressed virtue. Naturally cheerful and happy in the consciousness of
-her innocence, adored and revered by the circle of a court free from
-cabals and intrigues, even the dark cloud of adversity could not alter
-the sweetness and serenity of her temper. She was surrounded by faithful
-servants, who attended her, not from sordid motives of ambition, but from
-attachment and unfeigned regard.
-
-Peace, content, and harmony dwelt under her Majesty's auspices, and
-her household was like a well-regulated family, superintended by a
-mistress who made her happiness consist in doing good to all those who
-implored her Majesty's compassion and benevolence. Banished with every
-circumstance of indignity from the throne of Denmark, her noble soul
-retained no sentiment of revenge or resentment against the wicked authors
-of her fall, or against the Danish people. Ambition, a passion from which
-she was singularly exempt, never disturbed her peace of mind; and she
-looked back to the diadem which had been torn from her brow with wondrous
-calmness and magnanimity.
-
-It was not the crown Caroline Matilda regretted, for her children alone
-occupied all her care and solicitude; the feelings of the queen were
-absorbed in those of the mother; and if she ever manifested by tears her
-inward grief and perplexity, maternal fondness caused all these fears and
-agitations.[44]
-
-In October of this year Sir R. Keith was requested by Lord Suffolk to
-visit Caroline Matilda, and send in a minute account of her position and
-feelings. How well the ambassador performed his task will be seen from
-his letter.
-
-
-SIR R. M. KEITH TO LORD SUFFOLK.
-
- _Zell_, _November_ 2, 1772.
-
- MY LORD,--
-
-I arrived here on the 31st October, late in the evening, and the next day
-had the honour of delivering the king's letter to her Danish Majesty,
-whom I found in perfect health, and without any remains of pain from her
-late accident. In two very long audiences, which her Majesty was pleased
-to grant me, I endeavoured to execute, with the utmost punctuality,
-his Majesty's command, and shall now lay before your lordship all the
-lights those audiences afforded me, relative to the queen's wishes and
-intentions. I cannot enter upon that subject without previously assuring
-your lordship that the queen received those repeated proofs of his
-Majesty's fraternal affection and friendship, which my orders contained,
-with the warmest expressions of gratitude and sensibility; and that
-nothing could be more frank or explicit than her answers to a great
-number of questions, which she permitted me to ask upon any subject that
-arose.
-
-In regard to Denmark, the queen declares that, in the present situation
-of the court, she has not a wish for any correspondence or connection
-there, beyond what immediately concerns the welfare and education of her
-children. That she has never written a single letter to Denmark since she
-left it, or received one thence. That the only person belonging to that
-kingdom from whom she hears lives in Holstein, and is not connected with
-the court.
-
-The queen having expressed great anxiety with respect to the false
-impressions which may be instilled into the minds of her children,
-particularly regarding herself, I thought it my duty to say that such
-impressions, however cruelly intended, could not, at the tender age
-of her Majesty's children, nor for some years to come, take so deep a
-root as not to be entirely effaced by more candid instructions, and the
-dictates of filial duty, when reason and reflection shall break in upon
-their minds. The queen seemed willing to lay hold of that hope, yet could
-not help bursting into tears, when she mentioned the danger of losing the
-affections of her children.
-
-Her Majesty appears very desirous to communicate directly to her royal
-brother all her views and wishes in the most confidential manner, hoping
-to obtain in return his Majesty's advice and directions, which she
-intends implicitly to follow. She said that, in matters of so private and
-domestic a nature, it would give her much greater pleasure to learn his
-Majesty's intentions upon every point from his own pen, than through the
-channel of any of his electoral servants.
-
-It gave me great satisfaction to find her Majesty in very good spirits,
-and so much pleased with the palace at Zell, the apartments of which are
-very spacious, and handsomely furnished. She wishes to have an apartment
-fitted up in the palace for her sister, the Princess of Brunswick, as she
-thinks that the etiquette of this country does not permit that princess,
-in her visits to Zell, to be lodged out of the palace, without great
-impropriety. Her Majesty said that she intended to write herself to the
-king on this head.
-
-The queen told me that the very enterprising and dangerous part which
-Queen Juliana has acted in Denmark, has created greater astonishment in
-Brunswick (where the abilities and character of that princess are known)
-than, perhaps, in any other city of Europe.
-
-Her Majesty talked to me of several late incidents at the court of
-Denmark, but without appearing to take much concern in them. She
-mentioned, with a smile, some of the paltry things which had been sent
-as a part of her baggage from Denmark, adding, that this new instance
-of their meanness had not surprised her. But the Princess of Brunswick,
-who happened to be present when the baggage was opened, expressed her
-indignation at the treatment in such strong terms, that she (the queen)
-could not help taking notice of it in her letters to the king.
-
-She let me understand that a small collection of English books would be
-very agreeable to her, leaving the choice of them entirely to his Majesty.
-
-Her Majesty more than once expressed how much she considered herself
-obliged to the king's ministers, for the zeal they had shown in the whole
-of the late unhappy transactions relating to Denmark and to herself.
-She is particularly sensible to the great share your lordship had in
-all those affairs, and has commanded me to convey to your lordship her
-acknowledgments for that constant attention to her honour and interests,
-which she is persuaded the king will look upon as an additional mark of
-your lordship's dutiful attachment to his royal person and family.
-
-It only remains that I should beg your forgiveness for the great length
-to which I have swelled this letter. The only excuse I can offer arises
-from my ardent desire to excuse the king's orders with the utmost
-possible precision.
-
- I am, &c., &c.,
- R. M. KEITH.[45]
-
- * * * * *
-
-At home, Caroline Matilda appeared to have dropped out of memory with
-her landing at Stade. Her name is never found in the journals of the
-time. Grub-street alone took possession of her memory. In those days
-many literary scoundrels earned a precarious livelihood by deliberately
-forging pamphlets on topics of interest at the moment, and thought
-nothing of trying to enhance their veracity by assuming names and titles
-to which they had not the slightest claim. One of these hungry gentry
-received a severe discomfiture, and must have felt ashamed, if he could
-feel shame, from honest Reverdil, in the July number of the _Monthly
-Review_. Reverdil's letter, written in English, is tremendously to the
-point. The lie, with a circumstance, bore the title of--"The real Views
-and Political System of the late Revolution of Copenhagen. By Christian
-Adolphus Rothes, formerly Councillor of Conference, Secretary of the
-Cabinet to his Majesty Christiern (_sic_) VII., and Great Assessor of the
-Supreme Council at Altona."
-
-To which Reverdil quietly makes answer:--
-
-1. As I am pretty well acquainted with the Danish service, I can assure
-you that there is not in Denmark, Norway, or any of the Danish dominions,
-such a man as Mr. Christian Adolphus Rothes, in any employment whatever.
-
-2. The dignity of Councillor of Conference being merely titular, there is
-no _formerly_ Councillor.
-
-3. The present king, Christian VII., has had three secretaries of the
-cabinet: the first is now in London (himself); the second, who followed
-his master on his voyage, is in the Court of Chancery at Copenhagen; the
-third was beheaded on April 28.
-
-4. There is no supreme council at Altona; that town, being no capital,
-hath but a corporation, and no other council. In that corporation there
-is no assessor, great or little.
-
-To this crushing reply Reverdil adds that every circumstance in the book
-is absolutely false, and grounded on facts and a state of things that
-never existed. For instance, the conduct of the queen dowager in the
-king's council is very circumstantially described; but she never sat in
-the king's council.[46]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 34: De Flaux: "Du Danemarc."]
-
-[Footnote 35: "Memoirs of an Unfortunate Queen," p. 94.]
-
-[Footnote 36: _General Evening Post_, May 14.]
-
-[Footnote 37: "Walpole's Journal of the Reign of George III.," vol. i.
-pp. 89-91.]
-
-[Footnote 38: Sir R. M. Keith's "Memoirs," vol. i. p. 287.]
-
-[Footnote 39: Coxe's "Travels," vol. v. p. 113.]
-
-[Footnote 40: "Memoirs of an Unfortunate Queen," p. 98.]
-
-[Footnote 41: "Authentische Aufklärungen," p. 252.]
-
-[Footnote 42: The following interesting account, which I have found
-in a pamphlet published under the title of "Sittliche Frage," was not
-sufficiently authenticated to be embodied in my text. Still I do not
-think it should be passed over, as it affords an idea of the sentiments
-of the queen's party.
-
-Keith laid before the king the letter of separation for his signature,
-which the king was about to sign without reading. "No, no, your Majesty,"
-the envoy said, "read it first. It concerns you. It is the separation
-between yourself and your consort, which the court of England solicits
-for the reasons given." The king cried in confusion, "What! I am to lose
-my wife? State it even in writing? No, I cannot. I love and long for
-her again. Where are Struensee and Brandt? I long for them too." "Your
-Majesty," Keith replied, "they have been quartered, your Majesty signed
-their sentences yourself, and as it is also wished to condemn the queen
-to death, my court demands her back." The king became inconsolable. He
-asked for the queen and his two counts, and dismissed the envoy.
-
-That England imposed weighty points on the Danish court, and demanded
-all possible satisfaction for the trick played the queen regnant, is
-evident from the following facts:--The queen is still called Queen of
-Denmark, even by the Danish court; her children by the king are brought
-up royally, and called the crown prince of the Danish kingdom and the
-king's daughter. When she set out from Kronborg for Celle, all royal
-honours were granted (which could not have been the case had the fabulous
-intercourse been true), and a pension of 30,000 rix-dollars is to be paid
-her annually.
-
-The king now lives very sadly, and his days pass away in melancholy. He
-still exclaims, "My wife, my wife! she has been torn from me. I ask for
-her again. My ministers, my Struensee and Brandt, where are they? They
-have been condemned to death. They have passed over into eternity, and I
-am left desolate."]
-
-[Footnote 43: They write from Hanover that the Hereditary Princess of
-Brunswick has been at Goerde, accompanied, contrary to expectation, by
-her husband, which is looked upon as a convincing proof that a perfect
-harmony subsists between these two illustrious personages. They stayed
-four days with Queen Caroline Matilda of Denmark, who was overjoyed to
-see her sister. It is since reported that the queen may possibly soon
-make a tour to Brunswick.--_Annual Register_ for 1772.]
-
-[Footnote 44: I am indebted for this account to the "Memoirs of an
-Unfortunate Queen," and it the more confirms my opinion that the book was
-written by some one immediately about her Majesty's person.]
-
-[Footnote 45: "Memoirs of Sir R. M. Keith," vol. i., p. 304.]
-
-[Footnote 46: I have, perhaps, dwelt more fully on this subject than
-it deserves; but I have also suffered from this iniquitous system. My
-agent in Germany wrote me some months ago that he had made an invaluable
-_trouvaille_--no less than an apology for Caroline Matilda, written by
-herself. Of course, I at once secured it; but was rather disappointed to
-find that it was translated from the English. On reading, I found many
-discrepancies, but did not give up all hope of being able to make use of
-the pamphlet. I had the British Museum searched for the original, but in
-vain; and I began to think that the alleged translation was only intended
-to add value to a document which might have been drawn up by a German
-from expressions which had fallen from the queen. Imagine my disgust
-when, as the reward of all my trouble, I found in the list of pamphlets
-in the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for 1772, the following:--
-
-"The Queen of Denmark's own Account of the late Revolution in Denmark:
-Written while her Majesty was a Prisoner in the Castle of Cronenburgh,
-and now first published from the Original Manuscript sent to a noble
-Earl." 8vo., 1s. 6d. Wheble.
-
-The publisher and the title were quite sufficient to convince me that the
-pamphlet issued from the great _officina_ of Grub Street.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE SECRET AGENT.
-
- THE COURT AT CELLE--MR. WRAXALL--PRESENTATION TO THE
- QUEEN--HAMBURG--THE DANISH NOBILITY--THE PROPOSITION--THE
- CREDENTIALS--RETURN TO CELLE--BARON VON SECKENDORF--THE QUEEN'S
- ACCEPTANCE--ANOTHER VISIT TO CELLE--THE INTERVIEW IN THE JARDIN
- FRANCOIS--CAROLINE MATILDA'S AGREEMENT--THE INN IN THE WOOD--BARON
- VON BULOW--A STRANGE ADVENTURE--ARRIVAL IN ENGLAND.
-
-
-There is but little information to be derived about the life of Caroline
-Matilda during the year 1773. All we know is, that she continued to
-devote her life to charity and literary pursuits. Being endowed with a
-rare desire for learning and a splendid memory, she soon became versed in
-the beauties of German literature. Every evening before supper she had
-either German works read to her or read them herself. "The Death of Abel"
-moved her to tears, and Gellert was another of her favourite poets. She
-knew many of his hymns by heart, and was fondest of the one beginning "I
-ne'er will seek to injure him, who seeks to injure me." She arranged a
-small hand library in a turret room hung with green damask, where she
-liked most to sit, and amused herself in turn with music and reading.
-Although she was a first-rate musician, she continued to take lessons in
-the art; but only cared for serious and tragical compositions, and might
-frequently be heard confiding to the instrument the grief that agitated
-her sorrowing heart.
-
-In order to distract her thoughts, a theatre was arranged in the palace.
-On January, 1773, Schröder's celebrated company of comedians came to
-Celle, and gave their first performance on the court stage, a spacious
-box having been railed off in the pit for the queen, the court, and
-the nobility. The queen attended nearly every performance, and the
-court chamberlain carefully obeyed the instructions he had received
-from London, only to allow amusing performances to take place, so
-that Holberg's comedies were frequently played, but never tragedies,
-or even serious dramas. That this precaution was necessary, was seen
-on the performance of the play "Appearances are Deceptive," in which
-the appearance of some children on the stage produced so violent an
-impression on the queen, that she at once quitted the playhouse, and, in
-spite of the rough breeze, was obliged to walk about for a long time in
-the gardens ere she could regain her self-possession. Afterwards, the
-court at times acted plays, in order to provide a slight amusement for
-their beloved queen.
-
-An idea of Caroline Matilda's mode of life will be best formed, however,
-from a perusal of the following letter to her sister, written in the
-summer of 1773:--
-
- MADAM AND DEAR SISTER,
-
- Thanks to Heaven for having made me sensible of the futility and
- delusion of all worldly pomp and stately nothingness. Believe me
- when I tell you that I have not once wished to be again an enthroned
- queen. Were my dear children restored to me, I should think, if
- there is on this earth perfect happiness, I might enjoy it in a
- private station with them; but the Supreme Disposer of all events
- has decreed that my peace of mind should be continually disturbed
- by what I feel on this cruel and unnatural separation. You are a
- tender mother, and I appeal to your own fondness. Pray give my love
- to the dear Augusta[47] and all her brothers; now that she is in her
- seventh year, she is, I dare say, an agreeable, chatty companion. As
- for Charles, he is, I understand, like his father, born a warrior:
- nothing but drums, swords, and horses can please his martial
- inclination. George, Augustus, and William equally contribute to your
- comfort and amusement. Tell them I have some little presents I shall
- send them the first opportunity.
-
- You desire to know how I vary my occupation and amusements in this
- residence. I get up between seven and eight o'clock; take a walk
- in the garden if the weather permits; give my instructions to the
- gardener for the day; observe his men at work with that contented
- mind which is a perpetual feast; return to my castle for breakfast;
- dress myself from ten to eleven; appear in my little circle at
- twelve; retire to my apartment about one; read, and take an airing
- till dinner; walk again about an hour in the garden with the ladies
- of my retinue; drink tea, play upon the harpsichord, sometimes a
- little party at quadrille before supper; and, am commonly in bed
- before twelve. Every Monday, I receive petitions from real objects
- of compassion, and delight in relieving their necessities according
- to my power; and thus, every week passes in a regular rotation
- of rational conversation, _lectures amusantes et instructives_,
- musical entertainments, walks, and a little curious needlework. I
- see everybody happy around me, and vie with each other in proofs of
- zeal and affection for my person. Now, I can truly say, I cultivate
- friendship and philosophy, which are strangers to the throne. I
- expect to see you soon, according to your promise; this visit will
- add greatly to the comfort of your most affectionate sister,
-
- CAROLINE MATILDA.
-
-But all these efforts were impotent to dispel the expression of gnawing
-sorrow, which was imprinted on the countenance of the queen, and was
-spread over her whole manner. Toward the middle of 1774, a great
-pleasure, however, was caused the queen, by the receipt of a portrait of
-her son, the crown prince Frederick, which was sent her from Copenhagen.
-Shortly after she had received the picture, her grande maîtresse, Madame
-d'Ompteda, entered the room, because she had heard the queen speaking
-loudly, and was much surprised at finding her alone. With tears in her
-eyes, but with the sweet smile which, even in sorrowful moments, played
-round her mouth, she said to the grand mistress:
-
-"You cannot account for hearing me speaking loudly and yet not finding
-any one with me? Well, do you know with whom I was conversing? It was
-with this dear picture."
-
-And she then produced the portrait of the youthful prince.
-
-"And now that you have surprised me," the queen continued, "you shall
-also know what I was saying to the picture. I employed the words which
-you a few days ago placed in the mouth of a daughter who had found her
-lost father again, except that I have altered them as follows:
-
- Eh! qui donc comme moi gouterait la douceur
- De t'appeler mon fils, d'être chère a ton cœur!
- Toi, qu'on arrache aux bras d'une mère sensible,
- Qui ne pleure que toi, dans ce destin terrible."[48]
-
-On September 18, 1774, Mr. N. W. Wraxall, junior, arrived at Celle. This
-gentleman had, at an early age, obtained a profitable employment in the
-East Indies, and had even attained some dignity; he, however, threw up
-his post for motives which may be made known hereafter but do not belong
-here, and returned to England. He was very ambitious, and that ambition
-had been fostered by the fact that, having in his youth ransacked the
-muniments of Bristol, he had discovered that one of his ancestors was
-bailiff of that city in the thirteenth century; but the difficulty
-was, to what object would he turn that ambition: he was unknown and
-friendless, while, at the same time, the _res angusta domi_ warned him
-to be up and stirring. There was but one way of acquiring fame and
-popularity: in those days, authorship was more respected, as being rarer,
-than it is among ourselves. Mr. Wraxall, therefore, determined first to
-make a tour, and then print an account of it, and, for this purpose,
-resolved to visit a but little known part of Europe, and thus add novelty
-to his descriptions. With this purpose he set out for the North, ran
-through Denmark, a portion of Sweden and Russia, and, on his homeward
-route, thought there would be no harm in going a little out of his way to
-visit the Queen of Denmark: he had learned something about her sad fate
-while in Copenhagen, and this had excited a wish to know more, literary
-capital being left out of the question.
-
-On September 18, then, Mr. Wraxall waited on Baron Seckendorf,
-chamberlain to the queen, who presented strangers. The "Private Journal"
-shall tell us how he fared:--
-
-"I went, at half-past one, to the castle of Zell. Monsieur Seckendorf
-introduced me to the grand maître of her Highness the Princess of
-Brunswick. The princess herself entered in about a quarter of an hour:
-she gave me her hand to kiss, and began conversation with me directly;
-it was interrupted by the queen's entrance, to whom I was presented,
-with the same ceremony. Her Majesty and the princess kept me in constant
-talk before and after dinner; we talked of Denmark, of Prince Frederick,
-his intended marriage, &c. 'He was a child,' said she (the queen),
-'unknown while I was there.' Hirschholm, she said, was her favourite
-palace. 'But, tell me,' said the princess, 'about the queen-mother:
-she's my aunt, but no matter: say what you will, you may be free--and
-for the king, how is he?' I very frankly expressed my sentiments. The
-queen asked me a thousand questions about the court of Russia, Sweden,
-my travels, &c. The queen asked me, also, about her children, the prince
-in particular. I told her how they dressed him now: I assured her I
-had been taken for a spy in Copenhagen. Her Majesty related to me Mr.
-Morris's affair with Miss Calvert. She was very gay, and seemed in no
-way a prey to melancholy. She was very fat, for so young a woman. She
-asked me my age. I told her. 'You are, then,' said she, 'exactly as old
-as I am; we were born in the same year.' Her features are pretty, and
-her teeth very small, even, and white. She resembles his Majesty (George
-III.) infinitely in face: but the princess said, not so strongly as she.
-I don't think so, and told her royal highness so. Her Majesty appealed
-to one of her maids of honour, who agreed in opinion with me. The queen
-was dressed in a Barré coloured gown, or at least an orange red, so very
-nearly resembling it that I could not distinguish the difference. I asked
-her how many languages she spoke. 'Five,' she said, 'Danish, English,
-French, German, and Italian.' The princess is much thinner in face, but
-not a great deal less in her person: she wants the Queen of Denmark's
-teeth, but has a very good complexion. She asked me about the Duchess of
-Glo'ster, if I had seen her, if I knew her. 'She is a very fine woman,'
-she added, 'even now.' Mrs. C---- was mentioned. 'She was a prodigious
-favourite,' I remarked, 'of the Duke of York.' She replied, with a smile,
-'For a moment.' She did me the honour to ask me to take Brunswick in my
-way next summer, or whenever I visited Germany again. She said she might,
-and should, have mistaken me for a Frenchman. 'You don't take that for
-a compliment, do you?' the queen observed. 'Indeed, no! I was too proud
-of my country.' Macaronies formed a part of our conversation. ''Tis all
-over now,' I said, 'the word is quite extinct in England.' 'But, tell
-me,' said her Majesty, 'tell me ingenuously, were you not a bit of a one,
-while it lasted?' I assured her not. I took my leave soon after dinner.
-
-"Tuesday, Sept. 20.--'Tis a very pleasant, delightful walk round the
-ramparts, of a full English mile. The gardens, likewise, near the town
-are very pleasant and well kept. The streets of Zell are for the most
-part wide enough, and well paved, but the buildings are very old and very
-miserable. The fortifications are merely nominal, of no sort of strength.
-The castle stands detached from the town; it is a square building,
-surrounded by a broad, wet ditch. There were formerly round towers at
-the corners, but they have been pulled down. It was built by one of the
-ancient dukes of Zell; within it is a quadrangle. About ten o'clock I
-went to the Hôtel de Ville, where at this time the shops of the merchants
-who come to the fair of Zell are held. Her Majesty the Queen, and her
-sister the princess, were there. I had the honour to talk with them near
-an hour; we conversed in English most familiarly on fifty subjects--the
-Grand Duke of Russia, the empress, the peace between Russia and Turkey,
-my travels, Dantzig, formed the chief articles. I showed her Majesty my
-medals of the Empress of Russia and some other things. She was dressed
-quite à l'Anglaise: a white bonnet, a pale pink nightgown, a gauze
-handkerchief, a little locket on her bosom. Her face is very handsome:
-they are his Majesty's features, but all softened and harmonized. Pity
-she is so large in her person. The princess was quite English all over: a
-black hat over her eyes, and a common nightgown with a black apron."
-
-Little anticipating that he should see the Queen of Denmark so soon
-again, Mr. Wraxall proceeded leisurely through Hanover, which he says
-may be truly described as "a hungry electorate," to Verden and Bremen.
-On Sept. 27 he reached Hamburg, and dined with Mr. Hanbury, the English
-consul, on the following day. Among the company present were Baron von
-Schimmelmann and his lady, Baroness von Bülow, "a very elegant woman,"
-and M. le Texier, who had been treasurer to Christian VII. during the
-memorable tour. On the next night Mr. Wraxall was gratified at the Opera
-with a sight of the celebrated, or rather notorious, Countess Holstein,
-of whom he says:--
-
-"I examined her through my glass. She is doubtless pretty, though not in
-my opinion so divinely fair as fame says. Her history at Hirschholm is
-well known. There was no gallantry, I thought, marked in her features,
-though 'tis said she certainly has that quality in her constitution. I
-thought of the unhappy Brandt as I looked at her."
-
-At this time the city of Altona, only half a mile from Hamburg, was
-crowded with the adherents and partisans of the queen, many of them being
-of the first families in Denmark. Hamburg offered more amusements than
-Altona, and they were therefore constantly to be found in the houses of
-the opulent citizens. Baron von Bülow, master of the horse to the Queen
-of Denmark, who was arrested at the time of the palace revolution, and
-eventually exiled to Altona, was among the number. They had already
-conceived the plan of effecting a counter revolution, and of restoring
-Queen Matilda, an enterprise to which they were urged by many motives.
-
-The new ministry in Denmark was already growing unpopular from its
-weakness, languor, and incapacity. It was understood that the king
-ardently desired the return of his consort. The engaging qualities,
-fortitude, and talents of that princess, rendered more interesting by
-adversity, had awakened the attachment of the Danes. A numerous and
-powerful party in the capital and throughout the nation anxiously desired
-her restoration.
-
-It was indispensable, in the first instance, previous to any attempt
-on the part of the exiled nobility, to ascertain with precision the
-sentiments of the queen herself. It was important for them to know
-whether she was willing to return to Copenhagen to resume the sovereign
-authority, which the king was incapable of exercising, and to co-operate
-with her friends toward her re-establishment. But the attempt to open
-any communication with the queen was equally dangerous and difficult.
-Though Celle was only eighty English miles distant from Hamburg and
-Altona, still, as the northern bank of the Elbe was in, or close to the
-Danish territory, the journey to and from Celle was extremely perilous.
-The latter court, as well as Altona, was full of spies and emissaries,
-maintained by the party possessing the authority at Copenhagen. Such were
-their suspicions, and so great was their vigilance, that no person could
-have passed and re-passed between those places without being watched.
-These impediments had hitherto prevented the queen's adherents from
-venturing to send any of their own body to lay their projects before her
-Majesty; nor did they appear to have found any other person to whom they
-could confide the execution of so momentous a commission. They were still
-under this embarrassment when chance threw Mr. Wraxall in their way.
-
-Having supped at the house of Mr. Jerome Matthiesen, where several of the
-Danish nobility were invited, Mr. Wraxall was led to talk about Denmark,
-from which country he had so recently returned. He expressed, with the
-warmth natural to a young man and an Englishman, his respect for Queen
-Caroline Matilda, his concern for her sufferings, and his detestation
-of the proceedings of her enemies. These sentiments, delivered without
-reserve or disguise, impressed the persons present that he might be
-induced to undertake the commission of repairing to Celle, negotiating
-with the queen, and taking an active part in their intended enterprise
-for her restoration.
-
-Two or three of the principal persons concerned having met on the
-following day, agreed to sound Mr. Wraxall's dispositions, and if they
-found them such as they had reason to suppose, they determined to confide
-their project to him. Mr. le Texier, brother-in-law of Mr. Matthiesen,
-was selected to execute this task. From the nature of his employment at
-the Danish court, this gentleman necessarily had an intimate knowledge
-of all the political intrigues as well as the secret history of the
-Danish court. At the revolution, he had been sent to Altona. This
-gentleman cultivated Mr. Wraxall's friendship with marked assiduity,
-visited him frequently, and turned the conversation on the affairs of
-Denmark. In order to gain Mr. Wraxall's confidence, he unfolded to him
-the concealed causes and springs alluded to. He inveighed against the
-mal-administration of the Dowager Queen Juliana and her son Prince
-Frederick; lamented the misfortunes of Queen Matilda, and expressed his
-wishes for her restoration.
-
-On October 3, 1774, Le Texier called again on Mr. Wraxall, and being
-together alone, he asked him, after some rather mysterious and
-preparatory conversation, "if he would be ready, and if he were disposed,
-to serve the Queen of Denmark?"[49]
-
-Mr. Wraxall immediately answered in the affirmative; and though he was
-on the point of returning to England, assured his visitor that he was
-ready to devote his labour, and risk his life, if necessary, in such a
-cause. Le Texier expressed his strong satisfaction at the reply; conjured
-Mr. Wraxall to be silent on everything that had passed, and undertook,
-without delay, to take measures for introducing Mr. Wraxall to the
-persons at whose request he had sounded him. Mr. le Texier then left his
-new ally, in order, as he said, to make his report to his friends, which
-they were expecting with anxiety and impatience.
-
-On October 5, Mr. le Texier brought to Mr. Wraxall's lodgings the eldest
-son of Baron von Schimmelmann, and left them together. The baron, after
-exacting a solemn promise of secrecy, disclosed, not without marks of
-great agitation and apprehension, a project which had been formed for
-restoring the Queen of Denmark. He reminded his hearer that his life,
-his fortune (one of the greatest in reversion of any in Denmark), were
-entrusted to a stranger, as well as those of all the persons engaged in
-the undertaking. They then entered upon business; and the baron divulged
-the plans and the means by which it might be effected. At a second
-interview on October 7, Baron von Schimmelmann informed Mr. Wraxall
-that, as he was on the point of setting out for Copenhagen, in order
-to arrange many circumstances preparatory to, and indispensable for,
-carrying out this plan, the latter would receive his further instructions
-from Baron von Bülow.
-
-After several interviews with this nobleman, it was finally arranged that
-Mr. Wraxall should set out for Celle with all practicable despatch. But
-points of material consequence must previously be adopted. Among them,
-the most important were the agent's credentials and despatches. It was
-dangerous to commit anything to paper, as he might be stopped, searched,
-and discovered on the road, which, in more than one place, ran through
-the dominions of Denmark. On the other hand, it was indispensable to
-convince the queen that he was invested with powers to treat with her, on
-the part of the noblemen exiled to Altona, as well as other persons in
-various parts of the Danish territories. To obviate these difficulties,
-the following expedients were determined on:--
-
-Baron von Bülow delivered to Mr. Wraxall in lieu of credentials a seal,
-with which, when in Queen Matilda's family, he was accustomed to seal
-those private or confidential communications that he often, from the
-nature of his office, had occasion to make to her. He assured Mr. Wraxall
-that, so soon as her Majesty should see it, she would have no doubt of
-his coming from the baron, and would have faith in what he was empowered
-to impart. This seal was to be produced in the event of Caroline Matilda
-assenting to the plan.
-
-The plan was, that a numerous and powerful party was disposed to restore
-her to the throne, and that they had invested Mr. Wraxall, as their agent
-and representative, with powers to treat with her. They were ready and
-willing to incur all the dangers or hazard annexed to such an enterprise,
-provided she, on her part, agreed to three conditions:--
-
-_First._ That she assured them of her willingness to return to Denmark,
-and to assume the reins of government, which the king was incapacitated
-to direct in person.
-
-_Secondly._ That she engaged to co-operate with, and to assist her
-adherents in every way and by every mode in her power.
-
-_Thirdly._ That she would endeavour to induce the King of Great Britain,
-her brother, to extend his protection and assistance toward the success
-of the enterprise.
-
-As for obvious reasons it would have been imprudent and hazardous to
-commit these propositions to paper, it was left to Mr. Wraxall to draw
-up a letter to the queen as soon as he arrived at Celle. It was likewise
-settled that, in order more effectually to evade suspicion or enquiry,
-he should, on leaving Celle, proceed to Hanover, as if on his way to
-Holland, and thence return by cross-roads to Hamburg. In case her
-Majesty assented to the three propositions made her, Mr. Wraxall was
-authorized to name Baron von Bülow, and young Baron von Schimmelmann, as
-the two avowed chiefs of the proposed counter-revolution. No other names
-were entrusted to him, as these two were judged sufficient in this early
-stage of the business; eight days were calculated as adequate for the
-purposes of the mission, and a spot was fixed on in the city of Hamburg
-where Mr. Wraxall, on his return, should meet Baron von Bülow at a
-certain hour.
-
-Thus authorized and instructed, the agent set out from Hamburg on the
-evening of October 8, 1774, travelled all night, and reached Celle on
-the ensuing evening. He learned immediately, to his great regret, that
-the Hereditary Princess of Brunswick was then in the castle, on a visit
-to her sister, the queen. Her presence augmented the difficulties of his
-errand, and the Danish nobility had warned him to be on his guard with
-respect to her. They dreaded lest the queen, from motives of affection
-and confidence, might communicate to her the nature or purpose of his
-errand. They were equally afraid of her suspecting or discovering it.
-These apprehensions were founded on the circumstance that the queen
-dowager of Denmark, Juliana Maria, was sister to the then reigning Duke
-of Brunswick, and aunt to the hereditary prince.
-
-One great and important arrangement yet remained to be made ere Mr.
-Wraxall could advance further,--the mode of delivering his despatches to
-the queen. It was hardly practicable to present a letter to her, except
-in public; and even to do that, a pretext was necessary, which might
-have, at least, an air of plausibility. Mr. Wraxall, while at Hamburg,
-had accidentally heard Mr. Mathias, the British minister, say that he
-might have occasion to write to her Majesty at Celle on the subject of
-a company of comedians, who were accustomed to repair thither annually
-in the autumn, to play for the amusement of the queen. Mr. Wraxall,
-therefore, determined to say that he was the bearer of such a letter from
-Mr. Mathias, of which he had taken charge on his way back to England,
-through Hanover and Holland. He was well aware that he should have the
-honour of an invitation to dine at her Majesty's table, and as no better
-mode of communicating his errand to her offered itself, he resolved to
-give the letter into the queen's hand in the drawing-room, when he should
-be presented to her before dinner.
-
-Having formed this resolution, Mr. Wraxall sat down on the night of his
-arrival in Celle and drew up a despatch, addressed to her Majesty, in
-which he stated every circumstance relating to his mission. He entered
-into the requisite detail, only reserving the names of the noblemen who
-had sent him, until he should have the honour of being admitted to a
-private interview with the queen. He stated the conditions demanded
-of her, and concluded by entreating her to favour him with as quick
-and explicit an answer as the nature of the subject would admit. He
-especially requested her Majesty to take some occasion of re-delivering
-his letter to him, for two reasons: one, that it might be unsafe for such
-a document to remain in her hands; the other, that the contents of it
-would be the best testimony to the persons for whom he was acting that he
-had accurately conceived and faithfully executed the purpose for which he
-was sent.
-
-Conscious, nevertheless, that such a communication, made to the queen at
-a moment when she was totally unprepared for it, before witnesses and in
-the presence of the Hereditary Princess of Brunswick, might disconcert
-and agitate her, Mr. Wraxall felt the necessity of guarding against so
-dangerous an accident as far as possible. Hence he wrote on the first
-page of the letter the following words:--
-
-"As the contents of the subsequent letter are of a nature which involve
-in them your Majesty's dearest interests, and even your crown and
-dignity, it is my duty earnestly to supplicate you, that you will be
-pleased on no consideration to peruse them at the present moment; but
-to read them when alone. I am likewise bound to entreat you that, as
-you regard the safety and welfare of those who are most devoted to your
-service, you will endeavour not to betray any agitation or emotion in
-your countenance or manner; and, above all, that you will observe the
-strictest precaution to prevent her Royal Highness the Princess of
-Brunswick from entertaining any suspicion."
-
-These necessary and preparatory precautions having been taken, Mr.
-Wraxall called next morning on Baron von Seckendorf, the queen's
-chamberlain. Having mentioned that he had a letter for her Majesty from
-the English minister at Hamburg relative, as he understood, to the
-comedians who were accustomed to visit Celle in that season, the baron
-waited on the queen to inform her of the fact. Mr. Wraxall received an
-invitation to dine at court in consequence, and went at two o'clock to
-the castle. When the queen and the Princess of Brunswick came together
-out of their own apartments into the drawing-room, where the few persons
-who composed the court were assembled, her Majesty, advancing toward Mr.
-Wraxall, said:
-
-"I am glad to see you here again: I understand that you have a letter for
-me from Mr. Mathias?"
-
-Mr. Wraxall presented it, and the queen withdrew a few steps to a window
-to read it. At the same moment the princess addressed Mr. Wraxall, and he
-contrived to detain her in conversation while the queen was employed with
-the letter. He noticed her Majesty hastily put it in her pocket, while
-her face betrayed the agitation of her mind in the most visible manner.
-Fortunately, about that minute dinner was announced, and the company
-followed the queen into the eating-room.
-
-At table, Caroline Matilda recovered herself, and conversed with her
-usual freedom and gaiety. The queen and princess were seated in two state
-chairs, separated nearly five feet from each other. When the dessert
-was brought, the queen, unable any longer to restrain her curiosity and
-impatience, took the letter from her pocket, and, placing it in her lap,
-perused it from the beginning to the end. From time to time she raised
-her eyes, and took part in the conversation. The distance at which she
-was from the Princess of Brunswick rendered it impossible for the letter
-to be overlooked. After taking coffee, the two princesses withdrew, and
-Mr. Wraxall returned to the inn where he lodged.
-
-In about three hours Baron von Seckendorf waited on him, and informed
-him that her Majesty had sent him in the quality of her confidential
-agent: that she had perused with great attention the letter, the contents
-of which she had communicated to him, and had chosen him from among
-the persons composing her court to conduct the business on her part.
-He added, that the queen would, with the utmost readiness, grant Mr.
-Wraxall that same night the audience he desired, if the presence of the
-princess her sister, who never quitted her for a moment, did not render
-it dangerous and impossible. She fully felt the necessity of caution, and
-the suspicions which even Mr. Wraxall's stay at Celle might occasion.
-Under these circumstances, she wished and enjoined Mr. Wraxall to deliver
-his credentials to Baron von Seckendorf, and confide to him the names
-of the noblemen from whom he came, as well as every other particular not
-contained in the letter.
-
-Thus authorized, and after receiving from Baron von Seckendorf his most
-solemn promises of fidelity and secrecy, Mr. Wraxall delivered to him
-Baron von Bülow's ring, and acquainted him with everything necessary to
-be laid before the queen. On the following morning the baron returned
-with the queen's answer, which Mr. Wraxall at once committed to paper in
-his presence. It was to the following effect:--
-
-That her Majesty, being under the immediate protection, and depending
-on the king her brother, could not consent to any proposition involving
-her future destiny and interests, without obtaining his consent and
-approbation. That, if she only consulted her own tranquillity and
-happiness, she would never desire to revisit Copenhagen, where she had
-been so unworthily treated. But that the duties of a mother, and a
-queen, being superior to every other sentiment, impelled her not only to
-forgive these outrages, but to resume her station in Denmark. That, as
-far, therefore, as depended on herself, she agreed to the propositions
-made by the Danish nobility, provided it should appear to her, on further
-information, that they were sufficiently powerful to effect the intended
-counter-revolution. That she desired to be more fully informed at Mr.
-Wraxall's next visit of the names of the principal persons concerned,
-and the means. Lastly, that she would write in the most pressing and
-strenuous manner to his Britannic Majesty, whenever it should be judged
-proper so to do, requesting of him to lend his aid and assistance toward
-effecting her restoration.
-
-The queen, at the same time, returned Mr. Wraxall Baron Bülow's seal,
-which she had recognised, and the letter which he had addressed to
-herself. In conformity with a request Mr. Wraxall had made, the queen had
-subscribed on the first page of the letter the initials of her name C. M.
-She likewise inclosed it in a cover, addressed in her own handwriting to
-Baron von Bülow, and sealed with one of her private seals.
-
-Baron von Seckendorf enjoined Mr. Wraxall from the queen to return as
-soon as possible to Celle, where she hoped to be able to admit him to an
-audience. She likewise desired that he would then give, on being stopped
-at the gates, a French name, which she suggested, as by that means,
-on seeing the report of all strangers who arrived at Celle, which was
-brought to her every morning, she should be apprised of his return. It
-was settled that on Mr. Wraxall's next visit to Celle he should take care
-to arrive in the night, go round the city, and lodge at a little obscure
-inn, called the "Sandkrug," in one of the suburbs.
-
-Having received this satisfactory answer from her Majesty, Mr. Wraxall
-left Celle immediately and proceeded to Hanover, where he remained two
-days. He then crossed a large portion of the Electorate to Harburg,
-and reached Hamburg on the evening of October 15, 1774. On the morning
-of the 17th he repaired to the place when Baron von Bülow had arranged
-to meet him. The latter affected not to notice him, and turning, Mr.
-Wraxall followed him through a number of streets, till they arrived on
-the ramparts of the city. There, upon a retired bastion, Mr. Wraxall
-delivered the baron the letter, whose seal and address he immediately
-recognised as those of the queen, saying, "Oui, bon, je reconnais bien
-cette écriture." Mr. Wraxall then related to him all the circumstances
-of his journey, the mode he employed to deliver his letter to the queen,
-and the subsequent interview with Baron von Seckendorf. The baron
-approved highly of all that had been done; promised to communicate the
-particulars, and the queen's reply to his associates; and requested Mr.
-Wraxall to hold himself in readiness to return to Celle.
-
-During the next six days the couple contrived to meet several times,
-though in the meanwhile the baron made excursions into Holstein, in order
-to lay before his friends the state of the business, and to concert the
-most judicious means for carrying it on to the desired completion. On
-October 23, Mr. Wraxall received from him his instructions for his second
-journey to Celle. They were, as before, only verbal, and the agent was
-empowered to commit them to paper when he should arrive there, observing
-the same precautions in receiving them back. They were to the following
-effect:--
-
-"That the Danish nobility were grateful for, and perfectly satisfied
-with, the answer made by her Majesty to their proposals, and that they
-should proceed, in consequence, to concert measures for executing at a
-proper time the intended revolution in her favour. That Baron von Bülow,
-in addition to his own name, and that of young Baron von Schimmelmann,
-was empowered to vouch for Count von Laurvig, his father-in-law, the
-viceroy of Norway, who was to secure that kingdom and its capital,
-Christiania, for the queen. That old Baron von Schimmelmann, though he
-refused to take any active part in the enterprise, or to risk by any
-overt act his safety and fortune, was sincerely attached to the cause.
-That the governor of Glückstadt, one of the most important places and
-fortresses in Holstein, was disposed to aid the queen. That Rendsburg,
-the key of the duchy of Schleswig, would open its gates, as the party had
-secret adherents in the garrison, who would declare themselves, when it
-should prove necessary.
-
-"That their friends were numerous and powerful in the army, the navy,
-the guards, in the metropolis, and even about the person of the king
-himself. But, that they besought her Majesty to repose on the honour
-and assurances given by Baron von Bülow, as representing the party,
-and entreated her not to insist on the disclosure of their names--a
-disclosure which could be of little or no advantage or gratification
-to her, and which might be fatal to them. That they unanimously and
-earnestly requested her to write to the King of England immediately, and
-confide the letter to their agent, urging the indispensable necessity of
-his sending a minister to the court of Copenhagen, where there was then
-only a resident, and authorizing such minister to declare, at the time
-when the counter-revolution was being effected, that the King of Great
-Britain was acquainted with it, approved of it, and would maintain it
-with all his power.
-
-"That, as considerable expenses must necessarily be incurred in
-conducting and executing a project of such magnitude and importance, they
-hoped that the King of Great Britain, if he approved of the attempt to
-restore his sister, would be graciously pleased to assist the persons
-engaged in her cause with some immediate pecuniary assistance. They
-besought the queen to recommend this object to her brother. That during
-the winter they would perform everything for striking the blow, and
-would, if the answer from England were favourable, proceed to execute it
-as soon in the ensuing spring as the two Belts should be free from ice,
-and the communication open between the island of Seeland and the mainland
-of Jütland.
-
-"That they hoped her Majesty would be pleased to communicate to Baron von
-Bülow the tenor of her letter to the King of England, as on his reply,
-in a great measure, depended the progress and success of the enterprise.
-Baron von Bülow particularly enjoined Mr. Wraxall to ask the queen
-whether she would consent to quit Celle and repair to Altona in disguise,
-if such a step should at a future time be thought expedient or necessary."
-
-Previous to Mr. Wraxall's departure from Hamburg, he agreed on a meeting
-with Baron von Bülow, on October 28, at a posthouse in the wood of
-Zährendorf, a solitary hamlet nearly equi-distant from Celle and Altona.
-It was settled, that on leaving Celle, Mr. Wraxall should repair to
-Zährendorf, _en route_ to Holland, and that the baron, disguised as a
-dealer in goods, should go to the same posthouse, without any attendant.
-As two travellers, it would be easy to meet and to pass some hours
-together, in so unfrequented a place, during the night.
-
-This matter adjusted, Mr. Wraxall set out on October 23rd, but, in
-order to elude suspicion from passing the same road so frequently, he
-took the Lüneburg road. Between three and four o'clock in the morning
-of the 26th he reached the gates of Celle, and, after making use of
-the name suggested by the queen, drove round to the little inn in the
-suburbs. Baron von Seckendorf having set out on that very morning to pay
-a visit to Hanover, Mr. Wraxall was obliged to send an express to him,
-acquainting him with his arrival, and requesting his immediate return.
-After which, Mr. Wraxall remained concealed in the inn the whole day, and
-employed himself in drawing up his despatch to her Majesty.
-
-Early on the following morning the baron entered Mr. Wraxall's room,
-and informed him, to his no small satisfaction, that the Princess of
-Brunswick was not then in Celle. Mr. Wraxall delivered his letters for
-the queen, which the baron went immediately to the castle to deliver.
-About four hours after he returned, and desired Mr. Wraxall to go without
-the loss of a moment to the Jardin François, a large garden without the
-city belonging to the Elector of Hanover, where her Majesty would go
-to meet him. He had not arrived there more than ten minutes when the
-queen drove up in her coach. She sent away the carriage and all her
-attendants, except one lady, who remained the whole time. The interview
-lasted about an hour, during the greater part of which they walked in
-one of the private vistas of the garden. Toward the end of it, the queen
-took Mr. Wraxall into a pavilion where a dessert of fruit was laid, and
-he then withdrew by her Majesty's permission.[50] The substance of the
-conversation was of so important a nature that I feel bound to quote it
-_in extenso_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having attentively perused the letter which I had written to her in the
-name and by order of the Danish nobility, she was perfectly satisfied
-with it in every particular. That the persons named as engaged in the
-cause were sufficient to inspire confidence, and that, relying in a
-special manner on the attachment, zeal, and talents of Baron von Bülow,
-she would dispense with his divulging the names of any more of his
-associates. That in compliance equally with their desire and with her
-own wishes, she would, without loss of time, write to her brother. That,
-if the time permitted, she would readily give in a copy of her intended
-letter to be shown Baron von Bülow for his satisfaction, and that of his
-friends; but that, as my interview with him in the wood of Zährendorf was
-to take place on the following day, and could not be postponed, she must
-of necessity delay writing the letter. That she would, therefore, send
-it by the royal Hanoverian courier, who would set out for London in two
-days, a conveyance, the expedition and safety of which might be relied on.
-
-That, by so doing, his Britannic Majesty would not only be apprised
-of my intended arrival, but also of my errand, and, as she hoped, be
-disposed to give me a prompt and favourable reply. That Baron von Bülow
-might trust to her for writing with energy and earnestness. That she
-would press her brother to send a minister to Copenhagen without delay,
-and would, in a peculiar manner, urge the necessity of advancing to the
-party engaged in her restoration a sum of money. That she thought Baron
-von Bülow must know her well enough to be convinced that she was ready
-to repair to her friends in any disguise that could be pointed out; but
-she was persuaded the king her brother would never permit it. Still, she
-added, could I come, or did I come disguised, nobody would know me, as I
-am much altered since I was in Denmark.
-
-Her Majesty entered on the state of her own finances, and lamented to me
-that the limited nature of her income, as well as some debts which she
-had contracted in Holland, rendered it impossible for her to contribute
-herself toward a cause in which she was so deeply interested. That she
-had not any jewels, the Danes having taken from her everything of that
-kind on her quitting Denmark. She was pleased to express her regret at
-not having it in her power to give me any testimony of her approbation,
-but she assured me of her future protection and recommendation to the
-King of Great Britain. "You must," she said, "go very quietly to work
-with my brother; if we manage with address, he will favour the attempt;
-but it will be tacitly, not openly."
-
-Her Majesty gave me very minute instructions for my conduct, in case I
-should have the honour to be admitted by the king to an audience in
-London. She moreover charged me with some private and confidential things
-relative to her sister, the Princess of Brunswick, which she enjoined me,
-on no consideration, to impart to any one, except to the king himself,
-and not even to him, unless I should see an opening to do it with a
-prospect of good.
-
-On the mode and channel by which I should approach his Britannic Majesty,
-she told me she had reflected seriously, and, after mature deliberation,
-had determined on the following course:--That by the Hanoverian courier
-she would write to Lord Suffolk, then secretary of state for the northern
-department, and whose conduct toward her at the time of the revolution in
-Denmark, she said, merited her utmost regard. That she would only say in
-her letter to him, that "a gentleman, Mr. Wraxall, would shortly wait on
-him, charged, on her part, with a very secret and important commission.
-That she requested him to give credit to everything communicated to him
-by Mr. Wraxall, and, above all, to aid and accelerate by every means in
-his power the object of that commission."
-
-As, however, it might be, she conceived, more grateful to the king,
-her brother, that a negotiation so delicate and so peculiar should be
-transacted through a private, rather than through a public, channel; she
-likewise determined to write, by the Hanoverian courier, to the Baron
-von Lichtenstein. That nobleman, who occupied the post of marshal of the
-court of Hanover, was, she said, then on a visit to England. He had the
-honour to be much distinguished by the king, and he had given many proofs
-of his devotion to her interests; she, therefore, would write to him to
-the same effect as to Lord Suffolk, leaving me at liberty, according
-to my discretion, to apply to either on my arrival in London, but
-preferring, as far as regarded her own predilection, the medium of Lord
-Suffolk. She enjoined me, further, to write to her after I had met Baron
-von Bülow, and likewise from England, only observing, in both cases, the
-precaution of enclosing my letters, under cover, to Baron von Seckendorf.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the evening, Mr. Wraxall called on Baron von Seckendorf, from
-whom be received a minute of the proposed letter to the King of England,
-sent by the queen, which he would communicate to Baron von Bülow. At
-ten o'clock at night, Mr. Wraxall started for Zährendorf, which place
-he reached in the ensuing afternoon. A short time before nightfall, the
-baron arrived, dressed as a tradesman, in an open post-waggon. The couple
-passed more than eight hours together. Mr. Wraxall gave the baron the
-documents; the latter approved of every measure taken, and authorized
-Mr. Wraxall to assure the queen so by letter, as well as to renew to
-her, in the name of the party, every possible protestation of zeal and
-adherence. He also begged Mr. Wraxall to hasten back from England as soon
-as he could, and to be assured of the gratitude of those persons in whose
-service he was engaged.[51]
-
-About one in the morning the baron and Mr. Wraxall parted. Previous
-to the separation, the latter received a cypher for the future
-correspondence, which it was agreed should be carried on under cover
-to Mr. le Texier, as less likely to excite suspicion, and that all Mr.
-Wraxall's letters should be addressed to Mr. Matthiesen, at Hamburg.
-The baron then returned to Altona, by the same conveyance which had
-brought him, and the next morning Mr. Wraxall started for England _viâ_
-Osnabrück. In the latter city he had a trifling adventure, which seems
-extracted from Casanova's Memoirs. I will give it in his own words:--
-
-"I walked over the town, and returned to dinner at four. At about six
-my servant announced a "gentleman," who would do himself the honour of
-speaking to me. He came in, sat down, and stayed an hour. He requested
-me to sup with him and Monsieur le Comte de Marazzani and his lady. I
-excused myself on account of fatigue. He spoke English, French, Russian,
-Italian, Latin: he was young, apparently of my own age. Finding I would
-not accept his invitation, he took leave, first telling me he was the
-Baron de Stampe, a German nobleman. I was, I must own, a little surprised
-at his visit and manner of introducing himself--'twas odd!
-
-"_Tuesday_, _November_ 1.--I went, at about nine, to visit the count,
-countess, and baron. 'Twas a miserable apartment I was shown into. Madame
-la Comtesse was a little woman, very young, pretty in face, and her
-complexion fair. I kissed her hand, and must avow she had a very fine
-hand. They pressed me to stay dinner, or at least to remain in Osnabrück
-till two or three o'clock, after which time they would, if necessary,
-submit to losing me. I saw at once the deception. She squeezed my hand,
-and added a thousand pressing instances to induce me to stay. I pleaded
-urgent business. The count insisted on accompanying me to the inn, and
-would not be refused. When we arrived, he walked in, told me in a few
-words that he just then was in need of a little money, that his letters
-of credit were not arrived, that his servant had stolen seventy guineas
-and his lady's gold watch; that, therefore, he must request me to lend
-him a few ducats. I pitied him, and, had my fortunes been sufficient,
-would not have hesitated an instant to have _given_ him what he asked.
-But I could not, for I had not even enough to permit me diminishing my
-stock, and most frankly told him so. He reasoned the point, pressed,
-requested, but 'twas impossible to comply, so he very politely took
-leave, promising to visit me in England. I might, I am convinced, have
-received the payment from Madame la Comtesse--_there_ was the temptation,
-but with such adventurers was too dangerous. They might have served me a
-worse trick than Don Raphael and Lamela did by poor Gil Blas, and I might
-have had more reason to remember the Countess Marazzani than he had Doña
-Camilla. 'Twas a droll adventure: doubtless their intention was to have
-won my money by cards or love."
-
-On November 13, Mr. Wraxall embarked from Helvoetsluys, and arrived at
-Harwich on the following day. To quote his own words: "This day shall
-ever be sacred in my calendar. I had now finished my tour through the
-northern kingdoms, and was once more in my native country, after being
-absent seven months and three days, from the 10th of April last. I
-returned thanks to the protecting gods who had carried me, unhurt,
-through so many barbarous nations and Polar regions."
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 47: Eldest sister of H.R.H. Caroline, Princess of Wales.]
-
-[Footnote 48: I found this anecdote carefully preserved among my
-grandfather's papers. The person who wrote it down for him, added, "Tout
-cœur capable de sentiment, pourra imaginer combien dans la situation
-de la jeune Reine, si digne d'un meilleur sort, des scènes pareilles
-devoient être attendrissantes, et à quel point on devoit être touché
-et pénétré d'admiration, en voyant que ce n'étoit pas le Faste, les
-grandeurs, ce trône, l'objet de l'ambition, même des plus grands heros:
-mais l'éloignement de sa famille royale, et ses retours sur la situation
-de celle ci, qui étoient la source de cette douleur et de ces larmes
-d'autant plus amères qu'elle les cachait avec le plus grand soin." This
-opinion my readers will assuredly endorse.]
-
-[Footnote 49: My narrative is made up from the "Private Journal" already
-mentioned, and a MS. entitled an "Historical Narrative of the Attempt to
-Restore the Queen." In the former, my grandfather gives the following
-account of the proposition:--"A momentary astonishment covered me, but
-it neither altered my cheek nor faltered on my tongue. I felt in the
-most unbounded degree where it might lead. I was conscious where it must
-lead. I felt myself born for the achievement, and I ardently embraced it.
-'Yes,' _I_ said in reply, 'I am the man you seek; give me the commission;
-I am ready in a day, an hour, a minute. My life, my labour,--dispose of
-them as your own. Enthusiasm I shall not want in such a cause so noble,
-so honourable to me.' 'It is well,' he said. 'I am satisfied; wait till
-this evening, or, at latest, to-morrow. You shall see and talk with this
-person. At the Comédie Française we meet this night. Adieu.'"]
-
-[Footnote 50: In the "Private Journal" I find: "We conversed most
-closely, most familiarly, most unreservedly, more than an hour. Her
-graciousness and goodness knew no bounds. She described (as to an equal)
-the king, and her sister, the Princess of Brunswick, especially the
-last. Her dress was very simple and plain. It could scarce be more so."
-From the minutes of this conversation, I also find that the queen told
-my grandfather that three emissaries had reached her from Copenhagen.
-The first was a Dane of the name of Guldenstern, about a year and a half
-previously; the second mentioned the name of Count Holstein; he was a
-musician, and named some of the bourgeoisie, whom she had never heard of.
-The third came about a year before, but his communication was nothing.]
-
-[Footnote 51: The "Private Journal" adds:--"Toward eleven at night, as
-we had finished business, our discourse took another turn, and fell on
-the Danish affairs. The baron gave me a most interesting and masterly
-account of Struensee's administration, his character, and his history.
-He explained the manner in which he acquired his Majesty's graces, and
-how he kept possession of them. He gave me the relation of the plot
-for massacring them all at the "_Bœuf roti_," and how they escaped it.
-He passed to the fatal night when the two counts were arrested, and
-the wonderful incident of the tea-party, which Madame de Schimmelmann
-broke off by her refusal. He ended with his own arrest and honorary
-exile. 'Twas a relation to listen to; and I devoured his words. They are
-inerasable from my memory."]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-'TWIXT THE CUP AND THE LIP.
-
- BARON VON LICHTENSTEIN--THE KING'S INSTRUCTIONS--THE ANSWER
- FROM HAMBURG--THE FOUR ARTICLES--A TERRIBLE JOURNEY--ARRIVAL
- AT CELLE--INTERVIEW WITH THE QUEEN--BARON VON SECKENDORF--THE
- ANSWER FROM COPENHAGEN--THE APPEAL TO GEORGE III.--THE
- COUNTER-REVOLUTION--ANOTHER VISIT TO CELLE--THE LAST INTERVIEW--THE
- QUEEN'S GRATITUDE--RETURN TO LONDON--WAITING FOR THE ANSWER--A SUDDEN
- BLOW.
-
-
-As the queen, in her instructions to Mr. Wraxall at Celle, had left it
-entirely at his option, on his arrival in London, to wait either on
-Lord Suffolk or Baron von Lichtenstein, though expressing a degree of
-preference for the former, he went, on November 15, to Lord Suffolk's
-residence in Downing Street. Being admitted, a private secretary
-requested Mr. Wraxall to inform him of the nature of his business: Lord
-Suffolk not only being confined to his bed-chamber by gout, but unable,
-from the violence of his disorder, to see any one. Mr. Wraxall informed
-him, in answer, that as his business was of a nature which could only be
-communicated to Lord Suffolk in person, he would call again in a day or
-two, by which time his lordship might be able to see him.
-
-Conceiving it, however, injudicious to lose a moment that could be
-avoided in opening the object of his mission, Mr. Wraxall went directly
-to the lodgings of Baron von Lichtenstein, in Chidleigh Court, Pall Mall.
-The baron was at home, and so soon as the agent acquainted him with
-his name, he expressed his satisfaction at Mr. Wraxall's arrival; he
-produced the queen's letter announcing the intended visitor, and assured
-the latter that it would be as much his wish as he felt it his duty to
-comply with the Queen of Denmark's commands. He added, that so soon as
-Mr. Wraxall should have put him in possession of the necessary facts, he
-would endeavour to find an occasion for laying the whole matter before
-the king.
-
-Mr. Wraxall informed the baron of his having been at Lord Suffolk's
-house, but that he had not seen his lordship on account of his
-indisposition. The baron entreated him not to call again on Lord Suffolk
-till he should have seen his Majesty, and taken his pleasure on that
-point, which he promised to do, as far as depended on himself, without
-delay. In a long and confidential conversation, Mr. Wraxall laid before
-the baron the proposals made to the queen by the Danish nobility, her
-answer, and the objects intended to be effected by his present errand to
-George III. The baron reiterated his assurances of co-operating toward
-their success, and fixed a day for Mr. Wraxall coming again to him, to
-know how he had proceeded in the business.
-
-Three days afterwards, the two gentlemen had a second interview, when
-the baron stated that he had conversed with his Majesty at the queen's
-house on the matter; that he had to communicate to Mr. Wraxall, in the
-first place, the king's positive injunctions not to mention the object of
-his journey and negotiations to Lord Suffolk, but to consider him (Baron
-von Lichtenstein) as the sole medium through which all matters relative
-thereto were to pass to the king. His Majesty had received the queen his
-sister's letters by the Hanoverian courier, and would maturely consider
-their contents before he should give any answer to them. To prevent any
-reflections on the part of the court of Copenhagen at his having seen and
-conversed with an agent of the Danish nobility and the queen, in case
-that the present attempt were either discovered or found unsuccessful,
-the king judged it fit not to admit Mr. Wraxall to a personal interview.
-It was therefore his pleasure that Mr. Wraxall should communicate to him
-on paper, through Baron von Lichtenstein, every circumstance touching the
-business; explaining the causes and reasons which had induced the exiled
-nobility at Altona to confide to his honour so secret and delicate a
-matter.
-
-His Majesty also desired to know from Mr. Wraxall the names of the
-principal persons concerned in the enterprise, and the precise time,
-mode, and place, when and by which they proposed to accomplish the
-queen's restoration. Baron von Lichtenstein added, that his Majesty
-manifested favourable dispositions, but would give no opinion till he was
-enabled to judge of the means possessed by the queen's adherents to carry
-their proposals into effect.
-
-Thus commanded, Mr. Wraxall sat down and drew up a statement of the
-whole transaction, going into every point suggested by the king. In
-so doing, he pointed out, to the best of his judgment or information,
-the manner in which the queen's adherents had laid their plan for the
-counter-revolution. Mr. Wraxall, however, was compelled to avow his
-ignorance of many parts of their future plan, either as having never
-been entrusted to him, or as being in their own nature incapable of
-arrangement till the time of their accomplishment approached. Mr. Wraxall
-transmitted this paper to the king through Baron von Lichtenstein.
-
-On October 5, Mr. Wraxall received the king's answer to the propositions,
-which the baron communicated to him. It was verbal, and to the following
-effect:--
-
-"His Majesty, relying on the means possessed by the Danish nobility
-attached to the queen his sister to effect her restoration, and having
-thoroughly considered their plans, consented to and approved of the
-intended attempt in her favour. But the existing treaties between the two
-courts of Copenhagen and St. James's did not allow him to lend any direct
-assistance toward its execution. He, therefore, would not advance any
-money at present, though he would not object to guarantee the restitution
-of the sums necessarily expended in his sister's restoration, after the
-completion of the enterprise. Finally, he should not be induced by any
-entreaties of the queen, or by the applications of the Danish nobility,
-to affix his signature to a paper promising aid, or even expressing his
-approbation of the attempt itself."[52]
-
-By Baron von Lichtenstein's advice, Mr. Wraxall transmitted on the
-following day this answer of the king to Baron von Bülow, in cypher:
-desiring directions for his future conduct. Mr. Wraxall also communicated
-it to the queen and to Baron von Seckendorf. From the latter, he received
-an answer on January 3, 1775, expressing the queen's satisfaction at the
-king's consent, though she regretted the qualifications which accompanied
-it.
-
-In consequence of Baron von Bülow's absence from Hamburg, and other
-impediments, Mr. Wraxall did not receive his answer till January 20,
-1775: it was very short, and in cypher. The baron conjured Mr. Wraxall
-not to lose a moment in returning to Hamburg with the king's approbation
-of their conduct, authenticated in whatever way might be practicable.
-He added, that his friends were busied in preparing everything for the
-expected blow, and that their anticipations of success were sanguine.[53]
-This letter Mr. Wraxall communicated at once to Baron von Lichtenstein,
-and its contents were laid before the king.
-
-On January 23, Baron von Lichtenstein informed Mr. Wraxall that the king
-would despatch him, in a few days, to Celle and Hamburg, adding, that he
-had reason to believe his Majesty intended to empower him (Lichtenstein)
-to sign certain articles, of which Mr. Wraxall should be the bearer,
-and which would, in a great measure, satisfy the Danish nobility. It
-was not till February 2 that Mr. Wraxall received his final orders and
-despatches; they were delivered to him by the baron, and consisted of a
-letter from the king to his sister, together with a paper containing four
-articles. The baron drew these up in Mr. Wraxall's presence; after which
-he affixed his seal and signature to them, as representing the King of
-Great Britain. The articles were to the following effect:--
-
-_First._ His Britannic Majesty gives his consent and approval to the plan
-concerted by the adherents of his sister, the Queen of Denmark, for
-restoring her to the throne.
-
-_Secondly._ His Britannic Majesty insists that, in the execution of it,
-no blood be spilled, nor any measures of severity exercised toward the
-present administration in Denmark, except such as are indispensable to
-maintain the counter-revolution.
-
-_Thirdly._ His Britannic Majesty guarantees the repayment of all the
-money advanced or expended in the necessary prosecution of the Queen of
-Denmark's revolution.
-
-_Fourthly._ His Britannic Majesty will authorize and empower his Resident
-at the court of Copenhagen to declare, in the most public manner, so
-soon as the revolution in favour of the queen is accomplished, that the
-King of Great Britain approves of it, and will maintain it against all
-opposition.
-
-Baron von Lichtenstein, when he had placed in Mr. Wraxall's hands these
-articles, which the latter saw him seal up, and place in a cover without
-an address, signified to him his Majesty's pleasure that he should set
-out on the following day for Celle. After delivering his letter to the
-queen, and the articles, signed in his name, for her perusal, Mr. Wraxall
-would receive the latter back from the queen, and proceed with them to
-the Danish nobility at Hamburg.
-
-Accordingly, on the afternoon of February 3, 1775, Mr. Wraxall left
-London, embarked at Harwich, and landed at Helvoetsluys on the evening
-of the 6th. Passing through Holland by Utrecht and Deventer, he arrived
-on Sunday morning, the 12th, at daybreak, at the bank of the little
-river Dinckel, which divides the provinces of Over-Yssel from the circle
-of Westphalia. From this point, the "Private Journal" shall speak for
-itself, until the traveller arrives at Celle:--
-
- * * * * *
-
-_February_ 12_th._--I arrived at the house near the bank of the Dinckel
-as day broke: here I found the royal courier, who came over in the same
-packet with me from England. He had arrived here on Friday morning, but
-the waters were so deep that he had not dared to attempt the passage,
-with two carts laden with boxes and coffers. The inn was misery itself:
-oxen, pigs, men, and women all together. The courier assured me, that if
-he had not provided himself with provisions very amply, he should have
-been almost starved, nothing being procurable from the people. When I
-had drunk my chocolate, we walked forward half a quarter of a mile, to
-reconnoitre the spot, and see if it was practicable to pass over. After
-a long debate, the landlord of the house offered, for a few stivers, to
-mount one of the four horses, and endeavour to conduct us through it.
-In consequence of this resolution, they raised my trunks, by putting
-straw and turf under them to move them five feet from the surface of the
-ground, to prevent the water from spoiling my clothes. They would have
-persuaded me to get up behind the carriage, as, in case it overturned,
-I might then have easily disengaged myself; but, notwithstanding, I got
-in: as to my clothes and linen, I trusted them cheerfully to fortune,
-and only reserved the letter with which I was charged, which I carried
-in my bosom, resolved that it should not perish, except with myself. We
-drove off about noon from the inn. When we came to the place, the two
-fore horses plunged in; the water was as high as their backs, how much
-deeper it might be I cannot pretend to say, as they immediately swam:
-the carriage floated likewise, and the horses drew it about twelve or
-fourteen paces in this manner, when we touched ground, and all the danger
-was over. Had there been a very violent stream or had not the horses done
-their part, the chaise must have inevitably been overturned--nothing
-could have saved it.
-
-* * * * * * Continuing my route from Bentheim,
-I got in the evening at about eight o'clock to
-Rheine. The roads were terrible, and I trembled
-continually for my own and my servant's safety. The
-moon, however, was our protection, and under her
-auspices and guidance we arrived safe. We passed
-through another small river, which was swollen with
-the rains to the breadth of three or four hundred
-paces. Happily, however, the depth was not above
-three or four feet, and we got through without any
-accident. The country all round us was deluged
-with water, and scarce appeared like land. Rheine
-is a small town belonging to the bishopric of Münster,
-not fortified, though surrounded with old walls.
-The postmaster appeared to be an obliging man, and
-the horses being ready, I set out at about ten o'clock
-at night. I had not driven more than a mile from the
-place when the carriage overturned; my servant's
-hand was cut by the glasses, which broke in pieces,
-but I escaped unhurt. The horses stood still, without
-attempting to drag the chaise, which, had they done,
-the consequences to us must have been very fatal, as
-some minutes elapsed ere we could get out at the
-windows.
-
-I despatched my servant back to the town for assistance, and the
-postilion to a neighbouring village on the same errand, while I remained
-alone with the carriage. My servant returned first, after an hour's
-absence, with an old man, the postmaster not choosing, or not being
-willing, to afford him any more help. We waited, therefore, for the
-postilion, who came at length, to our great joy, with four villagers,
-by whose endeavours we raised the carriage up once more, and returned
-to Rheine about midnight. I am most fully of opinion that the postilion
-did it purposely, and probably by his master's orders. The postmaster's
-behaviour justified this conjecture: he neither blamed the man, nor
-promised me any satisfaction; he only told me I had better forget it,
-and go to bed in his house. I did so, for what other course could I
-take in a country where I spoke the language very imperfectly, and in
-which I was absolutely at their mercy? To proceed without glasses at
-this season of the year, in the night, was not agreeable; and even if I
-would, the postmaster said he could give me no other postilion till the
-next morning, and to set out with the same would have been madness. I
-was tempted to severely chastise the driver myself, but the consequences
-which might have ensued deterred me. So I lay down in a miserable
-apartment, as large as an Egyptian hall, where the winds whistled in
-every corner. I made my servant lie in the same room, and held my pistols
-ready, but all was very tranquil during the night. Why the landlord
-should wish to overset my carriage, unless to make me return, and get a
-couple of guilders for my lodging, I do not know, but I am convinced it
-was a concerted affair.
-
-_February_ 13_th._--The morning began most inauspiciously. It rained very
-hard, and blew with equal violence. I thought of the poor courier, who
-would be prevented by it from passing the Dinckel. I set out once more
-at eight o'clock from Rheine in this dismal weather and without glasses,
-not any being procurable at the place. It was, indeed, a terrifying view
-on all sides, and resembled a deluge or inundation. I recommended myself
-to God, and comforted myself by the thought that I undertook the journey
-in the service of my royal mistress. That I was not repeatedly overturned
-was almost a miracle; and had I been so in the great pieces of standing
-water through which I passed, the consequences might have been of the
-worst sort. I crossed the little river Aá, which was likewise swollen
-by the rain to a considerable size. I got at one o'clock to Ippenburen;
-from this place I had only eighteen miles to Osnabrück, but the road
-was so horribly bad that all I had yet seen sunk before it. A peasant
-who accompanied us on foot about four miles from Ippenburen supported
-the carriage at different places with his hands, or we must have been
-overset. The torrents of rain which had fallen made the highway so soft
-that the wheels sank up to the axletrees at every step. There were
-great holes made in the middle of the road large enough to take a man
-and horse. In other places it was so rough, I expected each moment that
-the axletrees, wheels, or brancards must go to pieces. We crossed two
-very dangerous waters by moonlight, in one of which a single inch more
-on one side must have precipitated us into a river, where we should, I
-think, have been both inevitably drowned. How we escaped and got safe to
-Osnabrück I do not know. In the bitterness of my heart, tired with such
-incessantly-repeated dangers and vexations, I cursed the errand, and
-swore that I would never again undertake a journey through Westphalia
-in the winter, let the inducement be what it would; but this was only
-momentary, and _now_ I am ready, at my sovereign's command, to return
-through all if it should be necessary. 'Twas near ten o'clock at night
-when I reached Osnabrück, to my no small comfort. I was fatigued and
-sore with the continued shaking of the carriage; I wanted glasses to my
-chaise; I wanted repose; so I determined to stay the night.
-
-The landlord of the inn, after congratulating me on my safe arrival,
-implored me not to attempt to pass the river Weser at Stolzenau, which
-is the straight road to Hanover, but rather to go round ten miles by
-Minden, where there is a bridge across it. He showed me a letter he had
-just received from there, which said that the Weser was swollen to a
-prodigious size; that twenty-two dead bodies had been taken up at the
-bridge, floating on the water; that the danger of passing in a boat was
-extreme, and the inundation beyond any ever remembered. This induced me,
-though reluctantly, to take his advice as the safest, or at least the
-most certain in every point of view.
-
-About one o'clock in the afternoon I left Osnabrück, and arrived at
-Boomele, which is fifteen miles distant, at six. The road was, if
-possible, yet worse than all I had hitherto seen or passed, but of a
-different kind, in some measure. There were no dangerous waters or
-rivers; but such numbers of stones, and of so prodigious a size, that
-it appeared astonishing in the highest degree that the carriage was not
-totally demolished by them. I started at eight for Diepenau, which is
-twenty English miles, but did not arrive there till half-past five the
-next morning. I had here occasion for all my courage to support me.
-The postmaster obliged me to take six horses, and they were indeed
-most necessary. The country was all covered with water like a lake; and
-I passed through a horse-pond, where I expected every instant to be
-overset, and in which the horses were almost up to their shoulders. At
-length we came to two vast hollows, not less than four-and-twenty feet
-deep, and in which a great quantity of water had collected. Here I got
-out, as did my servant. The postilions carried us on their shoulders
-through it, the carriage followed, but I never expected to see it come
-out, at least, without being broken to pieces. It did get through,
-notwithstanding, to my astonishment; yet, at many other places I dreaded
-every instant to be overturned at the hazard of my life. Still, I
-proceeded, encouraged by the moon, which shone very brightly, and was
-indeed my protectress amid so many and so repeated dangers. Yet the
-continued anxiety of mind which prevented me from closing my eyes, and
-the violent exercise of the body in such horrid roads--if roads they
-could with propriety be called--at length wearied and fatigued me beyond
-belief. I wished to be at the end of my journey. I wished I had never
-undertaken it; I almost lost that animating principle, that enthusiasm
-and hope, which had borne me up and made me with joy devote myself to
-every untoward accident. In a word, I felt that I could brave death, but
-not mental and corporeal agitation unusually continued. But what could I
-do? I had passed the Rubicon.
-
-_Wednesday, February_ 15_th._--In this frame of mind, after waiting from
-five till three for horses at Diepenau, I again got into the carriage;
-where to go, however, I really knew not. There were only three roads
-to choose. If I went to Minden, which was only ten miles distant, I
-could indeed get there and pass the Weser by the bridge; but then they
-were unanimously agreed that the road from Minden to Hanover was not
-practicable, or to be attempted. I would have gone north to Nienburg, and
-have passed the Weser by _that_ bridge, but it was impossible; the Weser
-had inundated the road, overflowed the bridge, left holes big enough to
-hold a house in the highway; and there were at this time more than two
-hundred carts belonging to the peasants which could not get out of the
-town. The last resource was to go on straight to Stolzenau, and attempt,
-at all events, to cross by boat to Leese on the eastern side. I embraced
-this last proposal in consequence of the courier's advice, and followed
-his waggons. While I was meditating on so many vexatious circumstances,
-and going slowly along the pavé in the village of Diepenau, unsuspicious
-at that moment of any immediate accident or danger, the postilion turned
-the carriage short round a corner and flung it into a deep ditch. By a
-good fortune, however, which never totally abandoned me, the chaise just
-being in equilibrium, and a peasant running up came just at the instant
-it was tumbling over, and supported it with the greatest difficulty with
-his hands till more assistance arrived.
-
-I must own, I thought myself lost, and do assuredly believe that, if the
-chaise had fallen over, the violence must have broken it in pieces, and
-both myself and my valet would in all probability have been cut most
-miserably, or been possibly killed on the spot. I jumped out of the
-carriage the instant I could. I drew my hanger, and, in the transports of
-my resentment, I should most assuredly have made the postilion remember,
-as long as he lived, his carelessness; but the fellow was gone far beyond
-my reach long even before I could get out. The villagers helped out
-the chaise, and happily no material injury was done it. This provoking
-accident filled up the measure of my vexations. To have my life and
-limbs every moment in extreme danger--to suffer by roads, by villany, by
-heedlessness, by water, by a train of obstacles which increased instead
-of diminishing--the river Weser before me, and yet to be passed--I lost
-all patience, I believe I shed tears of anger and sorrow. "In the name
-of Heaven!" I said to myself, "am I destined to perish in one of these
-confounded ditches? And is this message, for which I so eagerly wished,
-to be the last I shall ever carry?"
-
-I trembled as I once more entered the carriage, which I began to think
-was no other than my coffin. Another postilion mounted, and I fairly
-told him that if he overset me I would put him to death on the spot,
-whatever consequences might ensue. I abandoned myself to fortune; worn
-and oppressed by such continued exertions, my senses sank under it, and
-though in momentary expectation of being again overturned, I yet fell
-asleep for a few minutes. I arrived safe, notwithstanding, at Stolzenau,
-and walked down, accompanied by the courier, to view the Weser. What
-a sight! it was more than a mile and a half wide, and ran with vast
-rapidity. The meadows, the very hedges all under water, and extending
-quite to the village of Leese on the other side. I was determined, if I
-died, to attempt the passage. I agreed instantly with some boatmen to
-take me and my carriage over in a boat. They would not go that night, but
-agreed to carry me to-morrow morning at six o'clock. So I shall see some
-end to my misadventures. I write this from Stolzenau. The courier left
-all his waggons, for it was totally impossible to get them over in any
-manner, and went away with his letters only to Hanover in a small boat.
-I wrote to Baron von Seckendorf by him, telling him where I was, and my
-resolution, my fixed determination, at all events, to cross to-morrow,
-for I preferred anything to remaining in a vile inn, in a horrid village,
-with the Weser in full view. At this moment my mind has somewhat
-recovered, and I am calm and tranquil--yet some termination I will see to
-these cursed disasters. And now for some rest. Sleep will, I doubt not,
-be the kindest friend and restorer to me in nature.
-
-_February_ 16.--Why should I quarrel so with fortune? why complain,
-when as yet she smiles upon me? True, the roads are terrible, and the
-dangers numerous beyond belief; but am I not already past the worst, and
-hastening to a queen? This reflection ought to be alone sufficient in
-every situation.
-
-I got into my carriage, which was placed in a little boat, at about
-seven in the morning, and, leaving Stolzenau, in about an hour and a
-half I reached the opposite dry land, and set my foot again on shore. I
-passed through meadows and fields, where the tops of the hedges and the
-trees began to appear above the surface of the water for nearly a mile,
-perhaps more. The inundation was amazingly extensive, and reminded me of
-Deucalion's deluge. It cost me, I think, about a ducat to cross over from
-Stolzenau. The water reached to about a quarter of a mile from Leese,
-where the post is situate. I proceeded, as soon as I had drunk my coffee,
-for Hanover, and got to Hazelberg, which is twelve miles from Leese, at
-about three in the afternoon. The weather was beautiful, but the road
-tremendous. I know not by what continued series of fortunate chances
-we were not upset. I continued my journey, and arrived safe at Hanover
-at about ten at night. This part of the Electorate, from the Weser to
-Hanover, is the most beautiful I have seen, and finely cultivated; but
-of all the roads conceivable, none ever, I believe, exceeded this in
-badness. I drove in continual danger of my life, and, really, several
-times, in the deep waters through which I passed, prepared myself for
-instant death.
-
-_February_ 17.--I left Hanover about noon, and took the road for Zell.
-I do not believe the whole distance is more than twenty-two or three
-English miles, though it is called five German ones. I arrived at Engsen,
-which is exactly half way, as night set in. The road was still the same;
-it was not worse, but one can hardly say it was better. I waited for
-the moon to rise, and then proceeded for Zell. I arrived there at ten
-o'clock, but that I ever did arrive is wonderful. One half of the road
-from Engsen, which is five miles, lay almost entirely through water, and
-in many places so deep, so wide, and so long, as might have inspired
-terror in the boldest heart; but my near approach to the place of my
-destination gave me courage, and supported me through everything. Once,
-though, we were just lost in the water. The carriage balanced, and the
-balance was in our favour. I thought of William Rufus crossing into
-Normandy, and the boatmen. "Rascals," said he, "did you ever know a king
-drowned?" "Was ever," I thought, "young man drowned in sight of his
-port?" I drove to the same inn where I had been concealed before, and
-gave the same name to the guard.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the following morning, Mr. Wraxall acquainted Baron von Seckendorf
-with his arrival. The latter received the agent with the warmest marks
-of joy and gladness, informed him that her Majesty, who was apprised of
-his arrival by the name given at the gates, expected him with impatience,
-and that she had already taken measures to admit him to an audience that
-same afternoon. "When you hear the palace clock strike four," the baron
-said, "set out from the inn, on foot, for the castle. Mantel, the queen's
-valet, will wait to receive you, and conduct you to her."
-
-Mr. Wraxall delivered to the baron the despatches for her Majesty, and
-went at the appointed hour to the palace. Mantel was waiting, and carried
-him round the great court through a number of apartments to a room, where
-he was left alone. At one end of it was a staircase communicating with
-the queen's chamber. In a minute afterwards, Caroline Matilda came in,
-and her reception of her agent was most gracious. The account of the
-interview shall be told from the "Journal:"--
-
-"We conversed till about ten minutes past six, entirely alone, and in
-the most unreserved, undisguised manner. Her Majesty made me the recital
-of her reign, of the revolution, of her own conduct on that fatal night
-when she lost her crown. I listened in silence and astonishment. What
-an avowal, what a recapitulation did she not make me! Her words are
-for ever graven on my heart. I could repeat her story almost verbatim.
-I know what scarce any other man on earth _can_ know. I must own, her
-unreserve, her goodness, her minute detail of circumstances the most
-concealed in their nature, my situation quite alone with her, superadded
-to some consciousness still more affecting, made me more than once forget
-I was talking to a queen. She was dressed in a brown silk Polonaise,
-trimmed with green silk. Her hair powdered. A locket on her bosom.
-Her under-lip is too large, but her teeth are fine, and that family
-violence in speaking becomes her. Her nose is finely shaped, and her
-eyes are eloquent. She is thinner in the face than she was last October.
-She showed me his Majesty's letters to her, and permitted me to carry
-an extract from one away with me. She was obliged to leave me soon
-after six, which, otherwise, she seemed in no way inclined to do. Her
-talents are very good, and in mimicry she excels. Her specimen of Prince
-Frederick of Denmark was excellent. She went, and I remained ten minutes
-alone. The valet came again and conducted me to a distant chamber of the
-palace, where the baron attended my coming. We conversed together till
-near eight, then I returned home. The baron himself conducted me to a
-private staircase, by which I descended into the great court, and thence,
-under cover of the night, got home undiscovered. This was _one_ of the
-singular days of my life!"
-
-Mr. Wraxall passed nearly the whole of the next day with Baron von
-Seckendorf, who returned him the articles from the queen, enclosed in a
-cover addressed by herself to Baron von Bülow, and sealed with her own
-cypher. She also transmitted to him assurances calculated to confirm the
-zeal of her adherents. Mr. Wraxall proceeded toward Hamburg on the same
-night, though the country between it and Celle was almost everywhere
-under water. Crossing the Elbe, he arrived at Hamburg on the evening of
-February 21, 1775, after a hazardous and fatiguing journey.
-
-On the following day he wrote to Baron von Bülow, by means of Monsieur
-le Texier, informing him of his return. The baron came to Mr. Wraxall on
-February 23, about noon, and expressed great joy at his safe arrival.
-The agent then delivered the papers containing the articles to the
-baron, who perused them many times with the deepest attention. Of the
-two first articles he expressed the highest approbation. He regretted
-that the King of England would not advance any pecuniary assistance
-toward accomplishing his sister's restoration. But he lamented much more
-that the fourth article only stipulated or promised, on the part of his
-Britannic Majesty, to avow the revolution _after it should be effected_,
-instead of making that avowal _during the time that it should be actually
-executing_.
-
-"We must, however," the baron exclaimed, "transmit the articles to our
-associates at Copenhagen, and receive their reply. That alone can enable
-us to form our determination respecting the line to be pursued."
-
-The baron then asked Mr. Wraxall if he should be willing to undertake
-the commission of carrying the articles to Copenhagen, which he assured
-him he would do at an hour's warning. After thanking the agent for so
-unequivocal a proof of his attachment to the cause, and admonishing him
-to be on his guard, as they were surrounded by spies, the baron left,
-promising to return on the next day.
-
-When they met on the 24th, the baron informed Mr. Wraxall that, having
-maturely reflected on the proposition he had made the latter of going to
-Copenhagen, and having consulted two of his friends upon it, they were
-unanimously of opinion not to hazard such an experiment. Mr. Wraxall
-being known in that capital, his return to it must, in the present
-state of affairs, excite inquiry, and might expose the enterprise
-itself to discovery or suspicion. They had, therefore, already selected
-for that commission a gentleman attached to the cause, who would set
-out immediately. He would return with all possible despatch, but, as
-the passage of the two Belts was always uncertain in winter, it might
-probably require two, or even three, weeks to receive an answer. During
-this time the baron requested Mr. Wraxall, in the name of the party, to
-remain quietly in Hamburg.
-
-On March 14, Baron von Bülow came to Mr. Wraxall and informed him that
-the expected answer from Copenhagen had arrived. "It is," he said,
-"exactly such as I predicted and anticipated. Our friends had hoped that
-his Britannic Majesty would have authorised his Resident to have come
-forward _at the time that they were effecting_ the counter-revolution;
-and that, as representing the king his sovereign, he would, in that
-critical and decisive moment, have been empowered openly to avow and
-justify it. This is the only request they make. They know that they are
-powerful enough to _accomplish_ the queen's recall, but to maintain it
-may be their difficulty."
-
-After a little further conversation, the baron added:
-
-"At the instant when the queen dowager and her son, Prince Frederick,
-are put under confinement in their own apartments, when the principal
-ministers are arrested, and the King of Denmark's order obtained for
-Queen Matilda's immediate return to Copenhagen, all eyes will be turned
-upon the conduct of the British Resident. If he shuts the gates of
-his hôtel, and remains a silent or a passive spectator of so great a
-change, men will naturally conceive that his court and his master are
-unacquainted with, if not adverse to, the enterprise itself. It is even
-possible that, encouraged by such inaction on the part of the English
-representative, the adherents of the queen dowager may attempt, while
-the counter-revolution is yet scarcely completed, to overturn it, or to
-excite the populace of Copenhagen to insurrection. We may be the victims
-of the King of England's reserve.
-
-"But if, on the contrary, while Queen Matilda's friends are achieving the
-counter-revolution, the English Resident goes to the palace, avows his
-master's approbation of it, and adds, that every attempt to overturn
-it, or to impede his sister's recall, will excite the resentment of his
-Britannic Majesty, who will support it, if necessary, by force: all ranks
-of men will remain in profound submission. The party is, therefore,
-determined to draw up a letter to the above effect, addressed to the King
-of England in their joint names, and to limit their requests to this
-single point. That granted, they are ready, without delay, to proceed to
-action."
-
-Before they parted, it was settled that Baron von Bülow should draw up
-the letter in question, and that as soon as matters were arranged Mr.
-Wraxall should return once more to Celle, and thence to England.
-
-As George III. had made choice of Baron von Lichtenstein as the medium
-through which all immediate communications to him on the subject of the
-queen his sister should pass, it was highly important to apprise the
-baron of this intention. Mr. Wraxall accordingly wrote to him on the
-same day by the post, expressing in very few words that, on account of
-some circumstances which had arisen, he would probably see Mr. Wraxall
-again in London early in the ensuing month. The writer added, that if,
-unfortunately, the baron should have quitted England before his return,
-he relied on his leaving accurate directions in writing how to proceed in
-the affair. Mr. Wraxall also wrote to Baron von Seckendorf, apprising him
-that he might be expected again in Celle in a few days.
-
-On March 20, Baron von Bülow delivered Mr. Wraxall the letter for the
-King of Great Britain. It was not signed by him or by any of the party,
-on account of the danger incurred by such a signature. But it expressed
-in very strong terms the united entreaties of the queen's adherents on
-the single point already stated. This letter Mr. Wraxall was empowered to
-deliver to the queen on his arrival at Celle, to request her to peruse
-it, and afterwards to enclose it in a letter from herself to her brother,
-supporting every argument contained in it by her entreaties. Mr. Wraxall
-was, as on the two previous occasions, to draw up a letter to the queen,
-and his further instructions for her were to the following effect:--
-
-"To assure her Majesty, on the part of the Danish nobility engaged in
-her cause, that they were unremittingly occupied in concerting measures
-for her restoration. That they were so numerous and powerful a body,
-possessed of such means, and inspired by motives so strong, as to render
-their success almost infallible. That the consent of the King of Great
-Britain to the only request preferred by them would, indeed, accelerate,
-as his refusal might retard, the accomplishment of the projected
-enterprise, but that nothing could prevent its ultimate execution. That
-even a discovery of the design would not frustrate it; and that, if the
-executioner should strike off ten heads or twenty, a number sufficient
-would still survive to seat her on the throne. That the plan, when ripe,
-would be carried into execution in the following manner:--
-
-"On the day fixed, certain of them would repair to the palace, obtain
-access to the king, and either induce or compel him to affix his name to
-an instrument ready drawn up for the purpose. The instrument would simply
-contain an order to the queen dowager to retire to her own apartment
-till his further pleasure was known; and to Prince Frederick, to remove
-to one of the palaces, probably that of Frederiksborg, about twenty
-miles from Copenhagen. That at the same time, by virtue of a similar
-order, the ministers would be dismissed or arrested; and a messenger
-sent off to invite the queen to return, without an instant's delay, to
-Denmark, to resume her proper rank and authority. That their measures
-would be so well concerted and so rapidly executed as to produce the
-counter-revolution in the space of one or two hours.
-
-"That they trusted, therefore, she, on her part, would repair with all
-possible expedition to Copenhagen. That a proper escort, becoming her
-dignity, should be formed, to accompany her from Altona through the
-Danish territories, and that they calculated she might, with despatch,
-reach Copenhagen in four days from the time of her quitting Celle, if
-no extraordinary impediment arose in her passing the two Belts. That
-her presence in the capital of Denmark would animate the courage of
-her adherents, cover her enemies with consternation, and complete the
-counter-revolution. Lastly, that though they could not yet name the
-precise time when they hoped to proceed to action, which must in a
-certain degree depend on the answer of his Britannic Majesty to their
-present request, yet, that for many and urgent reasons, they neither
-could nor would long defer the blow."
-
-Having received the above-mentioned letter from Baron von Bülow, and
-general directions for his conduct, Mr. Wraxall again set out from
-Hamburg on March 21, 1775, and reached Celle on the following night, at
-ten o'clock. He gave the same name to the sentinel at the gates, and
-drove to the same obscure inn, as on former occasions. Next morning he
-went to Baron von Seckendorf to inform him of his arrival. The baron
-entreated him to remain concealed as much as possible, and not to stir
-out by day, as the Princess of Brunswick was then on a visit to the
-queen. But, he added, that her Majesty was determined to see Mr. Wraxall,
-at all events, previous to his departure, as she had various matters to
-impart to him of a confidential nature.
-
-On Mr. Wraxall's return to the inn, Mantel, the queen's valet, came to
-him. Mr. Wraxall gave him, in consequence of the order he brought, the
-letter of the Danish nobility to George III., and also a letter from
-himself, addressed to the queen, containing the heads of the instructions
-with which he was charged. It was afterwards fixed, between Baron von
-Seckendorf and Mr. Wraxall, that, on Saturday morning, March 25, as soon
-as the hereditary princess had returned to Brunswick, Mr. Wraxall should
-be brought to the castle, where the queen would be ready to receive him.
-But, after mature deliberation, the baron thought that it would be safer
-for him to repair to the castle during the night before the princess
-left Celle. The circumstance of her then being at Celle was favourable,
-because no one would be tempted to suppose that the queen could venture
-on so hazardous an experiment when her sister was under the same roof. It
-was therefore agreed, that precisely at eight o'clock on the evening of
-the 24th, Mr. Wraxall should wrap himself in his great-coat, and proceed
-to the entrance of the drawbridge over the great moat of the castle,
-where Mantel should punctually meet him, and conduct him to the queen.
-The circumstances of this last interview are so interesting, that I shall
-allow Mr. Wraxall to speak in the first person.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I set off about a quarter of an hour before eight for the inn. The
-darkness of the night was accompanied by a tempest of wind and rain. When
-I got to the spot, no valet appeared, and directly afterwards the guard
-was relieved. I was therefore compelled to hide myself as well as I could
-while the whole guard passed close to me. The rain was so heavy, and the
-darkness such, that fortunately I was not discovered. I waited in this
-unpleasant predicament a full quarter of an hour, anxious and impatient
-to the greatest degree. At length Mantel came. He said not a word to me,
-but, wrapping his cloak all over me, and covering me with his umbrella,
-he led me in silence over the drawbridge, under the arch, into the square
-court of the castle.
-
-We went up a private staircase, and he conducted me along the great
-gallery or corridor into the queen's library. Two candles were burning,
-and the book-cases were thrown open, as it was uncertain at what hour
-the queen could come to me. Mantel left me, but returned in less than
-a quarter of an hour with a note from Baron von Seckendorf, to the
-following effect:--
-
-"Un mot pour vous, mon très cher, tout va bien. On espère même que
-la princesse se retirera à neuf heures; alors sa Majesté pourra vous
-parler jusqu'a onze heures, à son aise. Vouz pouvez lui dire tout ce
-que vous avez sur le cœur. Le mauvais temps, m'annonce l'impossibilité
-de me trouver demain matin au rendezvous: ainsi, ayez la grace, étant
-d'ailleurs destiné d'être mouillé, de passer à huit heures chez moi.
-Ordonnez les chevaux à neuf, et partez sous la garde de Dieu. Bon soir.
-Je retourne le chiffre dont j'ai pris copie. Rapportez-moi demain tout ce
-que vous avez de papiers ou d'ailleurs. Vous verrez la reine précisement
-à neuf heures."
-
-I had scarcely perused the note when I heard the queen's footstep on the
-staircase. A moment afterwards she entered the room. She was charmingly
-dressed, though without diamonds; she had on a crimson satin sack, and
-her hair dressed. I drew a chair, and entreated her to allow me to stand
-and receive her commands, while she was seated, but she declined it, and
-we both stood the whole time. Our interview lasted about two hours. It
-was a quarter past eleven when I asked her Majesty if I should retire,
-and she signified her pleasure that I should. She approved of the letter
-drawn up by the Danish nobility to the King of Great Britain, as well as
-the request contained in it, which she confessed to be natural and just,
-though she doubted his Britannic Majesty's consent to it.
-
-"I will, however," she added, "write to my brother the letter requested
-before I go to bed to-night, enforcing, as far as I am able, the petition
-of the nobility. You shall receive it from Baron Seckendorf to-morrow
-morning, and at the same time that of the Danish nobility shall be
-returned to you."
-
-Her Majesty ordered me to assure Baron von Bülow by letter that "she
-was satisfied with all I had communicated to her on his part, and that
-she should be ready on the shortest notice to mount on horseback in
-men's clothes, in order more expeditiously to reach Copenhagen: there to
-encounter every difficulty with her friends."
-
-Her Majesty was gracious enough to express to me the strongest assurances
-of her protection. She was pleased to say:
-
-"I lament that I have no means left me of proving to you at this time my
-satisfaction. You have run every hazard in order to serve me. I will,
-whatever may be the event of the present attempt, recommend you to the
-king, my brother. He can, and will, I have no doubt, recompense you
-properly. Meanwhile, write to me freely and unreservedly from England on
-every point, and rely on my recollection of your services."
-
-When the queen was about to withdraw, she opened the door, but held it
-a few minutes in her hand, as if she had something to say: she then
-retired. I little thought her death was so near, and that I should
-never see her again. In a short time afterwards, Mantel came to me,
-and wrapping me up in his cloak as before, conducted me by a private
-staircase out of one of the postern gates of the castle. It was quite
-dark, and he therefore showed me the way through the suburbs to the inn.
-When I got there, it was midnight.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the following morning, Mr. Wraxall waited on Baron von Seckendorf. The
-latter delivered to him the two letters, one from the Danish nobility,
-and one from the queen to George III. They were under separate covers,
-but both were sealed and addressed by herself. Mr. Wraxall received
-orders from her Majesty, concerning what he had written on March 14
-from Hamburg, namely, to deliver the letters on his arrival in London to
-Baron von Lichtenstein, if he was still there, and in case of his having
-quitted England, he would follow the instructions which might be left by
-him respecting the mode of conveying the despatches to the king.
-
-Baron von Seckendorf, at the same time, communicated to Mr. Wraxall,
-by the queen's command, a message with which she had charged him. It
-contained the most gracious assurances of her favour and protection,
-"as due," she was pleased to say, "to his zeal, exertions, and
-disinterestedness."
-
-Mr. Wraxall left Celle immediately afterwards, and took the road to
-Osnabrück and Holland. From Rotterdam he wrote to Baron von Bülow, as
-well as to Mr. le Texier, informing them of all that had happened at
-Celle, and of his being on his way to England. On April 1, he embarked at
-Helvoetsluys, and reached London on the morning of the 5th.
-
-On the next day, Mr. Wraxall called at Baron von Lichtenstein's lodgings,
-but, to his great mortification, learned that the baron had left England
-ten days previously. He left behind him, however, the following letter
-for the Queen of Denmark's agent:--
-
- J'ai reçu, monsieur, la lettre que vous m'avez fait l'honneur
- de m'écrire en date du 14 de Mars. Je suis très faché que mes
- occupations, et mon emploi à Hannovre, ne me permettent pas de
- m'arréter ici jusqu'au temps de votre retour, pour avoir la
- satisfaction d'apprendre le succès de votre voyage, n'en ayant pas
- eu, comme vous vous imaginez, des nouvelles par la personne en
- question. En attendant, j'ai donné l'avis de votre arrivée prochaine.
- Vous trouverez çi joint l'adresse de la personne à laquelle _on_
- veut que vous remettiez vos lettres, dont vous pourriez être chargé.
- Je dois vous dire de n'être pas surpris, se vous ne recevez point
- de réponse. _On_ l'adressera à moi. Des raisons que vous savez,
- c'est à dire qu'on ne donnera rien d'écrit de sa main touchant cette
- affaire, ne permettent pas d'agir autrement. Si _on_ ne change pas
- de sentiment, et si _on_ ne vous fait pas dire par celui auquel
- vous donnerez vos lettres, d'attendre ici, je ne vois pas d'autre
- expédient que de retourner dans une quinzaine de jours et de venir me
- trouver à Hannovre, où je compte d'être infailliblement vers la fin
- du mois d'Avril. J'ai l'honneur d'être avec la considération la plus
- distinguée,
-
- Monsieur,
- Votre très humble et
- Très obéissant serviteur,
- N. L.
-
- A Londres, ce 24 Mars, 1775.
-
-Adresse de la personne à laquelle Mr. Wr. remettra ses lettres,
-
- MONSIEUR DE HINÜUBER,
- Jermain Street, St. James's.
-
-In obedience to this order, Mr. Wraxall waited upon Mr. Hinüber on the
-next morning. The latter received him with great politeness, and informed
-him that he had the king's directions to take from Mr. Wraxall, and
-forward immediately in a sealed-up box to the queen's house, whatever
-letters Mr. Wraxall might give him. Mr. Wraxall, in consequence,
-delivered to Monsieur de Hinüber two packets: one from the Queen of
-Denmark, and another from the Danish nobility. To these he added a letter
-addressed by himself to his Majesty. In the last, he thought it his duty
-to request the king, in the name of all the adherents of his sister, to
-admit him to an audience, as the only person who could, from his perfect
-knowledge of the plan and the persons, satisfy any inquiries, or explain
-any secret matters relative to the enterprise itself.
-
-Mr. Wraxall also wrote to the queen, Baron von Seckendorf, and Baron
-von Bülow, acquainting them with his arrival and his Majesty's orders.
-During a fortnight, he waited in expectation that the king might possibly
-signify to him his commands. But having received no communication, Mr.
-Wraxall wrote, on April 21, to Baron von Bülow and Monsieur le Texier,
-informing them how matters stood. He particularly requested to be told in
-what manner he should act: whether they wished him to remain in London,
-or return by Hanover and Celle to Hamburg. By the same post, he addressed
-a letter to her Majesty at Celle, stating fully to her the facts which
-he had communicated to the Danish nobility.
-
-It was not till May 10 that Mr. Wraxall received an answer from the
-Danish nobility. The letter was written by Le Texier in his own name
-and that of Von Bülow. It was to the effect that the baron's absence
-from Altona had occasioned the delay of some days in replying to Mr.
-Wraxall's last despatch; but that, the baron being then returned,
-they had maturely considered it together. They greatly regretted the
-king's not having admitted their agent to an audience, as well as his
-silence on the important point requested. The state of affairs at
-Copenhagen was extremely critical; but till the return of young Baron
-von Schimmelmann, whom they expected impatiently and daily, they were
-in a degree unacquainted with the person, condition, or intentions of
-their associates. The instant they were enabled to give Mr. Wraxall any
-information on the subject, he should hear again. In the meanwhile, they
-besought him, in the joint names of all the party, to remain quiet where
-he was, and not to set out from London, either for Celle or Hamburg,
-unless by his Majesty's positive directions.
-
-In pursuance of this letter, Mr. Wraxall waited for further information,
-and held himself in readiness, if it should be thought necessary, to
-return to Germany, or to renew his application to George III. through Mr.
-de Hinüber, if the Danish nobility should instruct him to do so; but
-Providence had decreed that their efforts should be rendered vain. While
-the measures concerted to restore the queen to the throne of Denmark
-appeared to be near their accomplishment, she was no more. The melancholy
-intelligence did not reach London till May 19, and it need hardly be
-said that the news of so unexpected and lamentable an event produced a
-terrible effect on her zealous agent.
-
-On May 25, Mr. Wraxall received a letter from Baron von Seckendorf, which
-I shall transcribe here, as it contains a singular and material fact,
-that George III. had given, through Baron von Lichtenstein, an answer
-to the request made him by the Danish nobility; but that, as the king's
-letter arrived at Hanover when Caroline Matilda was either dying or dead,
-the packet was returned to him unopened:--
-
- MON TRES CHER AMI,
-
- La mort également douleureuse et rapide de mon incomparable
- maîtresse, renverse tout d'un coup l'édifice de notre prospérité. Que
- nous sommes malheureux, et que sa perte est grande pour nos amis.
- Lepy (Baron von Bülow) a été incessamment informé par moi de cette
- triste catastrophe. Le paquet dont se trouvait chargé le courier, a
- été renvoyé, sans être décacheté au Sieur Abel (the King of England)
- par Alis (Lichtenstein) et j'ignore entièrement ce qu'auroit été la
- résolution qu'il comptait donner aux amis de Montpelier (Copenhagen).
-
-
- Alis m'a promis de faire en sorte que toutes les dépenses faites
- par eux et par vous, seroient remboursées par Abel, le plutôt que
- possible. Et sitôt que j'aurai des nouvelles sûres à cet égard, vous
- en serez instruit. En attendant, je vous prie de dire ceci à Lepy. Il
- est juste que personne ne perde son argent.
-
- Que deviendrons nous à cette heure, mon très cher ami? Resterez vous
- à Londres, oui ferez vous le voyage que vos parents avaient projetté?
- Puis-je me flatter de vous revoir jamais? Grand Dieu! quelle
- désolation en si peu de momens! Je ne pourrai jamais me remettre de
- ce coup. Vôtre dernière lettre parvint encore à la chère défuncte.
-
- Adieu, mon très cher ami! Je ne cesserai de ma vie de vous aimer
- et de conserver la mémoire de votre attachement sincère pour la
- precieuse Agujari (Queen of Denmark).
-
- Tout à vous,
- BROCARD.[54]
-
- Ce 16ᵐᵉ May, 1775.
-
-From Baron von Bülow, Mr. Wraxall received a letter, in June, announcing
-to him the same event; it was dated May 22nd, and I shall extract the
-first part of it here, as it proves another very important circumstance,
-that the enterprise would have been carried out whether George III. had
-given the required promise or not:--
-
- MONSIEUR,
-
- La nouvelle la plus malheureuse du monde m'avait mis dans un tel état
- d'anéantissement, qu'il n'a été jusqu' ici pas possible de vous dire
- un mot.
-
- Occupé avec Grenier (Schimmelmann) à deliberer sur les moyens les
- plus prompts pour exécuter le plan, et rempli de nouvelles espérances
- non équivoques fixant, pour ainsi dire, malgré le silence opiniâtre
- d'Abel, le _jour_, le _moment_ tant désiré, je reçois une lettre de
- Brocard. Je l'ouvre avec précipitation, dans l'idée d'y trouver les
- choses les plus agréables: mais, au contraire, la première ligne
- annonce l'arrêt du Destin le plus cruel. Je ne dirai rien de ce que
- je sentis dans un moment aussi inattendu, puisque je suis sûr que
- vous vous en faites une idée exacte, par la situation dans laquelle
- vous vous serez trouvé vous même, en apprenant notre malheur.
-
- C'en est donc fait de notre bonheur! il s'est enfui pour toujours.
- Nous n'avons pas dû être heureux. Nous n'avons pas dû le rendre les
- autres. Il ne nous reste aucun espoir. Nous rentrons dans le néant
- dont nous voulions sortir! Mais que ce Fantome de bonheur envolé ne
- nous emporte pas votre amitié et attachement. Comptez jusqu'à la fin
- des mes forces, sur le mien. Mes amis vous assurent la même chose.
- Nous vous devons trop pour devenir ingrat. Tout ce qui dépendra de
- nous, pour vous le temoigner, ne sera jamais négligé. Parlez et
- disposez de ce qu'il y a en notre pouvoir.
-
-Thus terminated, seemingly at the point of fruition, an enterprise in
-which some of the first nobility of Denmark, Norway, and Holstein, were
-engaged, and to which George III. had given his consent.[55]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 52: George III., it must be borne in mind, considered his
-public duties as superior to private feelings. In 1775, he, though
-overwhelmed with grief at his sister's death, obtained from Christian
-VII. a decree that the Danes were to give no sort of assistance to the
-American rebels.]
-
-[Footnote 53: The admirers of cryptography will find a specimen of the
-baron's letters in the Appendix. To the same dreary limbo I have also
-consigned my grandfather's letters to his father relating to this affair,
-solely through a fear that I might be charged with giving him undue
-prominence in a work purporting to be the life of Caroline Matilda.]
-
-[Footnote 54: Seckendorf.]
-
-[Footnote 55: Baron von Bülow and his friends nobly kept their word,
-and constantly urged George III., through Lichtenstein, to reward my
-grandfather for his great exertions on behalf of Caroline Matilda. It was
-not, however, till 1781, or when Mr. Wraxall had a seat in the House of
-Commons, and a useful vote, that Lord North brought up the subject. My
-grandfather then received 1,000 guineas for his services, and the promise
-of a seat at the Board of Green Cloth. The promise was not kept; for what
-reason he shall tell us himself:--
-
-"In November, 1783, on the meeting of Parliament, the memorable East
-India Bill was introduced by Mr. Fox. Upon the first division that took
-place on the bill, I quitted Lord North, notwithstanding the motives I
-had to adhere to him; rather choosing to abandon my expectations, however
-near their accomplishment, than give my support to a measure which I
-considered to be pregnant with mischief to the country and constitution.
-I joined Mr. Pitt in opposition, and was one of the one hundred and
-twenty members who formed the minority on that evening against a majority
-of two hundred and twenty-nine in favour of the bill."]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-DEATH OF CAROLINE MATILDA.
-
- THE TYPHUS FEVER--DEATH OF THE PAGE--THE QUEEN'S VISIT--SYMPTOMS
- OF ILLNESS--DR. ZIMMERMANN--PASTOR LEHZEN--CAROLINE MATILDA'S
- GOODNESS OF HEART--HER DEATH--THE FUNERAL--GENERAL GRIEF--THE
- MONUMENTS--LETTER TO GEORGE III.--PROOFS OF CAROLINE MATILDA'S
- INNOCENCE--THE QUEEN'S CHARACTER.
-
-
-We have seen that in the early part of 1775 the queen of Denmark appeared
-the picture of blooming health. Her _entourage_, and all who were of the
-same age with her, consequently felt the most confident expectations that
-they would long enjoy her pleasant and gracious society. But the news
-from Altona, the hope of a justification in the sight of the world, and
-of a reunion with her children, and at the same time apprehensions as to
-the decisive result of Mr. Wraxall's mission to her obstinate brother,
-kept her in a constant state of excitement, while she was obliged to
-place a restraint on the feelings that disturbed her mind, in order not
-to arouse any suspicion among her suite, or with her ever-watching
-sister. Therefore, it was not surprising that her constitution, thus
-rendered susceptible to external dangers, met a catastrophe half way,
-which destroyed all the hopes of her friends about the apparently
-blooming princess enjoying a long life.
-
-A dangerous scarlet fever had spread over the neighbourhood after the
-severe and tempestuous winter, and one of the queen's young pages was
-attacked by it, and died in a few days. When he was dead, and laid in his
-coffin for interment, her Majesty expressed a great desire to see him.
-The ladies opposed this wish, and requested her not to do it. She still
-persisted in her resolution, and went down to the apartment in which he
-lay. Mantel, the queen's valet, had purposely locked the door and taken
-the key, and when Caroline Matilda asked him for it, he answered her that
-it could not be found. After several vain endeavours, therefore, she
-went up-stairs again. Mantel carried in the tea to her Majesty. In a few
-minutes the queen suddenly got up, and before any of her ladies could
-stop or prevent her, she ran down to the chamber where the corpse lay.
-Unfortunately, the door was then open. She stepped in, and stayed about
-a minute--not more--looking at it. She expressed no particular horror or
-emotion, more than was natural on looking at such an object.[56]
-
-This took place on May 2nd, 1775. On the next morning the queen
-complained to her bed-chamber woman that the image of the dead page had
-appeared to her all through the night, and filled her with terror.[57]
-Still she slightly recovered herself, although a little girl of four
-years of age, Sophie von Benningsen, whom she had adopted when left an
-orphan, and as some consolation for the loss of her own daughter, had
-also been attacked by the disease, and filled her with fresh alarm. She
-went as usual to the Jardin François, but felt unwell, and evidently had
-the seeds of infection within her, for, on the third day after the visit
-to the chamber of death, she was unable to ascend the stairs leading to
-her apartments without the help of her lady-in-waiting.
-
-"I must force myself to seem less tired than I really am," she said to
-her companion, "so that my good Omptéda (the grand maîtresse), who did
-not like my driving out, may not scold me."
-
-She complained of sore-throat and chill, but sat down to dinner with
-her court, though she was unable to eat anything. When the card-tables
-were placed in the evening, the queen felt too indisposed to play. The
-ladies proposed her having a sofa, and looking on at them; but Mantel
-then presumed to speak, and advised her Majesty going immediately to bed.
-The queen consented, and ordered her women to undress her. The illness,
-however, made such alarming progress, that the grande maîtresse on the
-next morning called in Dr. von Leyser, the physician in ordinary.
-
-"You have twice," the queen said to the physician, "extricated me from a
-dangerous indisposition since the month of October; but this exceeds your
-skill: I know I am not within the help of medicine."
-
-Leyser affected cheerfulness; but at once requested that Dr. Zimmermann,
-a very celebrated physician at Hanover, might be called in.
-
-In the meanwhile the queen's condition grew worse every moment, and she
-requested to see Magister Lehzen, the pastor of the city church. The
-latter at once arrived, and, in the ante-chamber, was informed by Dr.
-Zimmermann of the great danger that menaced the queen's life. When he was
-shown into the bed-room, the queen said to him, in a weak voice:
-
-"You did not imagine me so ill as you find me."
-
-Lehzen assured Caroline Matilda how greatly he lamented it, and tried to
-console the exalted sufferer with the consoling words of faith, read her
-spiritual hymns, more especially Gellert's beautiful canticle, "Ne'er
-will I seek to injure him;" and concluded with a prayer on the text of
-St. Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians:--
-
-"Unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask
-or think."
-
-The worthy clergyman returned in the afternoon, and again in the
-evening, and found the queen, in spite of her indescribably violent
-illness, rather more calm; and when he returned to the castle on the next
-morning, he found that Superintendent General Jacob had already been with
-the patient, and the two physicians were still with her. On the faces
-of the physicians he fancied he could read a certain calmness, and, in
-fact, the patient was better, as she herself said. It was the usual lucid
-interval which takes place before departure from life, the harbinger
-of imminent death, dressed in the garb of mercy for the friends of the
-departing.
-
-The queen employed these last moments in the exercise of a good deed.
-She requested the clergyman to write a few words for her to her brother,
-which would show that she had not forgotten her attendants, but
-recommended them to the King of England. She tried to dictate the words
-to him, but her tongue was already refusing to obey her, and she left it
-to the pastor to write what he thought proper. When he had finished, she
-took the paper in her hand, but returned it to him again immediately,
-that he might read it to her and seal it before her eyes. The letter was
-then handed by the queen to Director von Marenholz, whom she had ever
-deeply respected, for transmission to the king.
-
-Toward evening the condition of the queen had evidently grown so serious,
-that her dissolution might be apprehended at any moment. She was told
-that the whole city was alarmed about her, and that even the Jewish
-community had offered up prayers for her.
-
-"How this sympathy alleviates my sufferings!" the queen answered, in a
-weak voice; and the clergyman offered up a prayer in words which her eyes
-confirmed as her own.
-
-Then she inquired after the condition of Sophie von Benningsen; and
-when the physician gave her the assurance that the child was out of all
-danger, she breathed the words, "Then I die soothed," and fell asleep not
-to wake again.
-
-Pastor Lehzen, who was present at the queen's death, describes it in the
-following words:--
-
-"My office has often enabled me to witness the last hours of my
-fellow-mortals, but I never remember so easy a dissolution, in which
-death loses all its terrors. The expression of the Scriptures was
-literally true in this case: she fell asleep like a tired wayfarer."
-
-Caroline Matilda died on May 11, 1775, at 10 minutes past 11 P.M., at the
-age of twenty-three years, nine months, and twenty days.
-
-As was very natural in those days, the queen's sudden death aroused
-suspicions of poison. Mr. Wraxall, however, who asked Mantel about the
-circumstances, gives us the following account, which may be regarded as
-authentic:--
-
- I desired to know if there was the shadow of reason to suspect poison
- or any unnatural means.
-
- "Sir," said he, "God only knows, but I think not. The inhabitants of
- Zell are all as firmly persuaded of her having been poisoned, as if
- they had seen her swallow it. They accuse an Italian of it, though
- the man had not been near the queen's person for near or quite a year
- before. He had been in the service of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, and
- being recommended as an Intendant, was brought here from Vienna.
- He was a profligate, unprincipled man. He brought with him a very
- pretty young woman whom he called his daughter, but was in reality
- his mistress. While he stayed here, he contracted a number of debts,
- and being unable to discharge them, went off with his mistress to
- Brunswick and Berlin. He has not been heard of since. The prejudiced
- people accuse him of having been gained by the Danish court, and of
- having administered a slow poison to the queen before his departure,
- but I am really not inclined to believe this suspicion."
-
-To this statement Mr. Wraxall adds: "Among the many princes and crowned
-heads whom the ignorant and misjudging multitude have supposed to be
-dispatched by poison, none seems to have less foundation for such an
-apprehension than the Queen of Denmark. She was exactly a subject for
-an inflammatory or malignant distemper. She had already had repeated
-attacks of the same nature, though not so violent as the last. It was
-in the beginning of May, and the weather remarkably hot. The queen was
-accustomed to use great exercise, and probably overheated herself. She
-was young, large, and of a plethoric habit of body. When all these
-circumstances are considered, who can wonder at the nature of her
-disorder and death? Nothing so likely or natural."
-
-Owing to the mortification that at once set in, it was found absolutely
-necessary to deposit the body in the vault of the Dukes of Celle until
-the King of England had arranged the funeral ceremonies. This was done
-at midnight, on May 13, with great order and decorum by Grand Maréchal
-von Lichtenstein. At the sermons in the church, the whole congregation,
-from the highest to the lowest, burst into tears. The queen's affability
-and gentleness had gained her the hearts of even the lowest people, who
-offered up heart-felt prayers for their _lieben und guten Königinn_. Her
-Majesty's remains, accompanied by sixteen captains, were carried in a
-hearse, drawn by six horses, and attended by a double guard of soldiers,
-to the royal vault. The burial expenses, amounting to £3,000, though the
-funeral was quite private, were defrayed, by order, out of George III.'s
-privy purse.[58]
-
-A general mourning was appointed in England, and on May 24 a committee
-of the Lords, with staves, and also a committee of the House of Commons,
-who were of the privy council, waited on his Majesty at St. James's, with
-their address of condolence on the Queen of Denmark's death. To which
-George III. replied: that "he returned his thanks to that House for the
-concern they have expressed for the great loss which has happened to his
-family by the death of his sister, the Queen of Denmark." The king also
-recommended the succession of the late queen, for the advantage of her
-children, to the care of the Regency of Hanover, and Baron von Seckendorf
-was consequently entrusted with its administration.
-
-The British court sent a formal notification of the death of Queen
-Caroline Matilda to Copenhagen. It arrived on a day when a court ball
-was appointed, and the vengeance of old Juliana Maria went so far, that,
-careless of decency, she did not even order the ball to be put off.
-The usual ceremonial, however, had to be observed--for instance, the
-ordinary court mourning of four weeks--as for foreign reigning princes
-and princesses, and the children of the deceased were placed in deep
-mourning. It is nevertheless certain that this foolhardy behaviour on the
-part of the Danish usurpers proved most offensive at the court of St.
-James's, and heightened the aversion George III. felt for the Danes.
-
-The unfortunate queen, however, was all the more regretted in the
-land of her exile, and in the widest circles. The two Chambers of the
-principality of Lüneburg, immediately after the death of this consoler
-of all the poor and suffering in Celle, applied to her brother with a
-request that they might be allowed to erect a monument to the deceased
-queen, in that Jardin François of which she had been so fond, so that
-there might be at this spot a memorial of the universal devotion with
-which the great and noble qualities of the late Queen of Denmark were
-revered among them, and to give remotest posterity an opportunity of
-honouring, with silent emotion, the memory and reputation of the best and
-most amiable of queens.
-
-George III. expressed his thanks for this offer, and we can easily
-understand how welcome to him was this public proof of the veneration and
-love which were felt for his sister, who had been so cruelly hurled from
-her throne.
-
-After receiving the king's assent, the Chambers of Lüneburg had the
-monument erected by Professor Oeser, of Leipzig, and to the present day
-it is an ornament of the Jardin François, which travellers gaze on with
-sympathy and regret.
-
-The governor of Celle, a prince of Mecklenburg Strelitz, also had a
-monument erected in memory of Caroline Matilda in his English garden, and
-it is well known that the Danish poets Baggesen and Oehlenschläger have
-erected permanent memorials to her in their works.
-
-Some years ago, the following letter was discovered in the secret
-archives of Hanover.[59] It was probably written by Caroline Matilda in
-the first days of her illness, when she had a presentiment of her death.
-When she was first attacked, she had said to her faithful valet--"Mantel,
-I am very ill, and fully believe I shall die."
-
- SIRE,
-
- In the most solemn hour of my life, I turn to you, my royal brother,
- to express my heart's thanks for all the kindness you have shown me
- during my whole life, and especially in my misfortune.
-
- I die willingly, for nothing holds me back--neither my youth, nor
- the pleasures which might await me, near or remote. How could life
- possess any charms for me, who am separated from all those I love--my
- husband, my children, and my relatives? I, who am myself a queen and
- of royal blood, have lived the most wretched life, and stand before
- the world an example that neither crown nor sceptre affords any
- protection against misfortune!
-
- But I die innocent--I write this with a trembling hand, and feeling
- death imminent--I am innocent! Oh, that it might please the Almighty
- to convince the world after my death, that I did not deserve any
- of the frightful accusations, by which the calumnies of my enemies
- stained my character, wounded my heart, traduced my honour, and
- trampled on my dignity!
-
- Sire! believe your dying sister, a queen, and even more, a Christian,
- who would gaze with terror on the other world, if her last confession
- were a falsehood. I die willingly: for the unhappy bless the tomb.
-
- But more than all else, and even than death, it pains me that not one
- of all those whom I loved in life, is standing by my dying bed, to
- grant me a last consolation by a pressure of the hand, or a glance of
- compassion, and to close my eyes in death.
-
- Still, I am not alone: God, the sole witness of my innocence, is
- looking down on my bed of agony, which causes me such sufferings. My
- guardian angel is hovering over me, and will soon guide me to the
- spot, where I shall be able to pray for my friends, and also for my
- persecutors.
-
- Farewell, then, my royal brother! May Heaven bless you, my
- husband--my children--England--Denmark--and the whole world! Permit
- my corpse to rest in the grave of my ancestors, and now the last,
- unspeakably long farewell from your unfortunate
-
- CAROLINE MATILDA.
-
- We have further and valuable testimony to the unstained memory of
- Queen Caroline Matilda in the following extract from Falckenskjold's
- "Memoirs:"--
-
- In 1780, I had an opportunity at Hanover of forming the acquaintance
- of M. Roques, pastor of the French Protestant Church in Celle. One
- day, I spoke to him about Queen Caroline Matilda:--
-
- "I was summoned almost daily by that princess," he said to me,
- "either to read or converse with her, and most frequently to obtain
- information relative to the poor of my parish. I visited her more
- constantly during the last days of her life, and I was near her a
- little before she drew her last breath. Although very weak, she
- retained her presence of mind. After I had recited the prayers for
- the dying, she said to me, in a voice which seemed to become more
- animated:
-
- "_M. Roques, I am about to appear before_ GOD: _I protest that I
- am innocent of the crimes imputed against me, and that I was never
- faithless to my husband_."
-
- M. Roques added, that the queen had never spoken to him, even indirectly,
- of the accusations brought against her.
-
- I wrote down on the same day (March 7, 1780) what M. Roques said to me,
- as coming from a man distinguished by his integrity of character.
-
-Such is everything that can be learned of the death of Caroline Matilda.
-Sacrificed in the first bloom of youth, and decked with the fillets of
-misery, she was sent, an inexperienced victim, to become the bride of
-a man who was a compound of insanity and brutality. In less than seven
-years she experienced all the honours, but also all the wretchedness,
-which a royal throne can offer. Then she died in the flower of life in
-exile, the victim of the most scandalous conspiracy.
-
-Several descriptions of Caroline Matilda were written at the period of
-her death in England--among others, one in the "Annual Register," by my
-grandfather. From among them I have selected the one I consider the best,
-which first appeared in the "Universal Magazine" for May, 1775:--
-
- * * * * *
-
-The virtues of this unfortunate princess were many of them concealed with
-as much art as if they had been her reproach. She had a ready and quick
-apprehension, a lively and strong imagination, with a large compass of
-thought. She excelled in an uncommon turn for conversation, assisted by
-a natural vivacity, and very peculiar talents for mirth and humour. She
-loved a repartee, was happy in making one herself, and bearing it from
-others. And as this talent was rendered not only inoffensive, but amiable
-by the greatest good-nature and cheerfulness of disposition, she was
-the life of the company, and the delight of all that had the honour to
-approach her. And though it generally requires much care and resolution
-to govern any extraordinary degree of life and spirit, she had no pains
-of that sort to overcome, having been blessed with a natural serenity and
-calmness of mind that was inexpressible, and is hardly ever accompanied
-with such uncommon share of vivacity; but in her it had so much the
-ascendant, that it was invariably the same, and constantly remained with
-her through the whole course of her misfortunes, so that she had reason
-to express her thankfulness to God, as she often did, that he had given
-her a temper which enabled her to support herself under the load of
-injuries she sustained.
-
-Her gentleness of nature showed itself in every instance, both in public
-and private, and inclined her to study all the ways of making herself
-agreeable, and of suiting her discourse to the persons with whom she
-conversed. But though her general manner of receiving company in public
-was very obliging and gracious, she knew how to distinguish persons of
-real merit, and had an effectual way of making those for whom she had any
-particular regard fully sensible of the distinction she made. The same
-softness of behaviour, and the same command of herself that appeared in
-the drawing-room, went along with her into her private apartments, and
-delighted every one that was about her, down to her meanest attendant.
-
-Her generosity was extended in the most impartial manner to persons of
-different sects and parties; but her principal regards were paid to such
-as were in the greatest distress, to those who were under the disability
-of receiving a maintenance from the public, as well as to the widows
-and children of clergymen and officers whose families, by their deaths,
-were reduced at once from a state of plenty to a want of the common
-necessaries of life.
-
-In these acts of benevolence she avoided all appearance of show and
-ostentation so much, that many persons who subsisted by her bounty were
-really ignorant of their benefactor. She conversed in private with
-persons of all the different turns of genius in the whole compass of arts
-and sciences; and with a few whom she honoured with a more particular
-regard, she entered into all the freedoms of private and familiar life,
-and showed that she could let herself down from her dignity as if she had
-never possessed it, and could resume it again as if she had never parted
-with it.
-
-It was this affability, however, that enabled her enemies to ruin her.
-Perfectly innocent, and even virtuous in her conduct, her levity and
-good humour threw her off her guard, and made her less circumspect than
-her situation required. She conformed with difficulty to the strict
-ceremonial which was observed at the court of Copenhagen; a vanity,
-inseparable from the youthful part of the female sex, made her pleased
-to see the influence of her beauty on all around her, and she indulged
-herself in an easy familiarity with persons who were more remarkable for
-their knowledge and abilities than the greatness of their rank. Wicked
-instruments were planted by her unrelenting enemy the queen dowager,
-who put a malignant interpretation on all the harmless liberties taken
-by this amiable princess; and, paying no regard either to truth or
-humanity in the calumnies which they suggested, insinuated the most cruel
-suspicions into the king's ear, and took the most criminal methods to
-destroy her character with the public.
-
-To these infernal machinations the amiable Matilda fell a sacrifice,
-in the bloom of youth and beauty, and the zenith of power. After her
-retirement to Zell she was often heard to wish for death, which the
-innocence of her life, as well as the misfortunes to which she had been
-exposed, rendered a most welcome guest; and her last moments passed in
-imploring forgiveness for her enemies, and recommending her children, for
-whose safety she was exceedingly apprehensive, to the protection of the
-Almighty.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 56: Mantel's own words to Mr. Wraxall in 1777. He added,
-however, "I neither believe the body could communicate any infection, nor
-that she stayed long enough, had there been any, to receive it. Whether
-it might have made any deep or injurious impression on her mind, I cannot
-say; but I cannot in any degree attribute her consequent illness and
-death to this accident."]
-
-[Footnote 57: Lehzen's "Die Letzten Stunden der Königinn von Danemark."]
-
-[Footnote 58: It is a strange coincidence that the body of Caroline
-Matilda should be deposited close to that of her unhappy ancestress,
-Sophia Dorothea, whose fate was in so many respects like her own. Both
-have been bespattered for many years by calumny, but Dr. Doran took up
-the cause of Sophia Dorothea, and amply proved her innocence. My only
-hope is that I may have been equally successful in the cause of Caroline
-Matilda.]
-
-[Footnote 59: The authenticity of this letter is incontestable. It has
-reached me through the Duchess of Augustenburg, who was allowed to take a
-copy by the late King of Hanover.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-WHEN ROGUES FALL OUT----.
-
- THE REACTION--THE KING'S WILL--KOLLER-BANNER--RANTZAU'S
- DISMISSAL--PRINCE CHARLES OF HESSE--COURT INTRIGUES--EICKSTEDT'S
- CAREER--BERINGSKJOLD'S CAREER AND DEATH--VON DER OSTEN--THE GULDBERG
- MINISTRY--THE PRINCE REGENT--THE COUP D'ETAT--UNCLE AND NEPHEW--FATE
- OF GULDBERG--DEATH OF JULIANA MARIA.
-
-
-With Struensee fell all his reforms, and "the good old times" returned in
-full force.
-
-The detested cabinet minister had scarce been thrown into prison ere
-the new holders of power hastened to overthrow all the creations of
-the fallen man. As if anxious to give the country and all the persons
-watching their movements a proof of their care for the general welfare,
-they began by establishing justice on its old basis, and restored
-the Commission of Inquiry, who were allowed by the criminal code to
-extort confessions from prisoners with the lash. This care for the due
-administration of justice was soon followed to the satisfaction of
-the pietists and the orthodox clergy by the reintroduction of public
-penance for sexual sins, so that the plebs very soon enjoyed once more
-the edifying spectacle of hot-blooded sinners, male and female, being
-insulted by bigoted priests in temples devoted to the adoration of the
-Almighty. Still, they did not dare to abolish the court and city court
-established by Struensee, because the recognition of this benefit was
-universal. In the same way, a decided error on Struensee's part, and
-which, it might be assumed, the reaction would at once reform--the
-lottery, that plague-spot of the poorer classes--was allowed to exist,
-of course, because it caused a deal of money to flow into the treasury
-"of the dearly-beloved king who so dearly loved his nation," and cash
-was pressingly needed to satisfy the claims of the friends of the new
-government.
-
-The spirit of the usurping party and its adherents was even more plainly
-shown by the restoration of serfdom, so that the holders of estates could
-treat their vassals as they pleased. The general dissatisfaction aroused
-by this measure among the poor servile peasants is depicted by Suhm, who
-once took the field so zealously against Struensee's "godless rule," in
-an anecdote from Jütland.
-
-"Professor John Egede," so Suhm tells us, "saw a man in ragged clothes
-working in a field with some half-naked children to help him, a few years
-after Struensee's fall. 'Will not the extra tax be soon removed?' he
-asked the passing professor. The latter replied that he did not know.
-'Oh! yes, I can quite believe that,' the peasant retorted, 'for you don't
-think about things of that sort in Copenhagen. That was a worthy man who
-gave us the regulations by which the _corvées_ were settled. But that was
-the very reason, I fancy, why they cut his head off. The new regulation
-is only made to torment us poor peasants till we cannot stand it any
-longer.'"
-
-It is notorious that serfdom was not abolished until the regency of the
-Crown Prince Frederick. Under his long reign, which lasted from 1784 to
-1839, nearly all Struensee's reforms, to which a more enlightened age did
-ample justice, and which had obtained general recognition through the
-ideas diffused by the French Revolution, were recalled to life. The task
-was completed, greatly to his credit, by Christian VIII., the grandson of
-Juliana Maria.
-
-All that remains for us now to do, is to show by what means the new
-faction sought to secure its position, and how at last Nemesis revenged
-herself on the principal conspirators.
-
-The usurpers did not consider themselves fully secured by having declared
-the king's sole signature invalid, but they wished to make themselves
-safe in the event of the weak king dying before the prince royal attained
-his majority. For this object, they persuaded the king, after the queen's
-matter had been amicably arranged with the English court, to sign a
-will, a copy of which was handed to the colleges and courts, with orders
-that the document was only to be opened after the king's death, in
-case it took place during the crown prince's minority. As the presumed
-event did not occur, however, the contents of the privy regulation have
-remained a secret. It was generally supposed that the king's testament
-contained an order that Queen Caroline Matilda should be excluded from
-the guardianship of her son, and that the Hereditary Prince Frederick
-should be appointed regent. Other suppositions hinted at still more
-important regulations as to the successor, but it can hardly be believed
-that the king, however imbecile he might be, would have signed such a
-document.
-
-A desire to prevent a possible surprise was certainly the motive for the
-decree that for the future foreign envoys would only be admitted to an
-audience with the king in the presence of the council of state; and yet
-such a custom had been regarded as high treason on the part of Struensee.
-
-The union among the conspirators, however, only lasted a short time after
-the revolution had been carried out, and this was specially evident among
-the military members. Generals Rantzau-Ascheberg and Eickstedt stood at
-the head of two opposite parties.
-
-Rantzau-Ascheberg, Köller-Banner, and Von der Osten, formed a triumvirate
-dangerous to their opponents. As chief aide-de-camp, Köller-Banner
-received apartments in Frederiksberg Palace, where the court resided in
-the summer of 1772. Hence Rantzau also procured rooms in the palace; but,
-as the number of doors and windows annoyed him, he hired lodgings in the
-village adjoining the palace, and Von der Osten removed to the same spot,
-so that the three friends were close neighbours. Rantzau also supported
-in the Generalty College all the propositions that emanated from Köller,
-while he said simultaneously to Eickstedt, who hated Köller:
-
-"Do not suppose that I have any serious understanding with Banner.
-Certainly not. I only pretend to be his partisan, in order that the
-Pomeranian may burn his fingers in the candle."
-
-Von der Osten displayed equal dissimulation in the council of state,
-where he supported and praised everything proposed by Schack Rathlau,
-while in secret calumniating him to the best of his ability.
-
-The other conspirators, consequently, began to entertain doubts about
-their three ambitious and intriguing colleagues, and apprehended that
-they might even meditate evil designs against the queen dowager and
-her son. Suddenly it was announced that Rantzau-Ascheberg, at his own
-request, had been relieved of all his offices, and retired on a pension
-of 8,000 dollars; and it was generally believed that Russia and Prussia
-had insisted on his removal. There may be some truth in this, as the
-Empress Catharine had just ratified the Holstein exchange, and naturally
-expected something in return. In the highest circles, however, all were
-glad at being freed from this dangerous man. Suhm, however, tells us,
-that the decisive cause of Rantzau's dismissal was, that he said about
-a letter written by the hereditary prince to Guldberg, "Yes, it can
-be recognised by the style! But was not Struensee's head cut off for
-the same thing?" Immediately after his retirement from active service,
-Rantzau quitted Copenhagen, and went to his Holstein estates; but, on
-October 16, the restless traitor proceeded to Kragsberg, near Odense,
-in Fühnen, but whether with reactionary purposes remained an enigma. In
-Copenhagen the return of the dangerous man occasioned such alarm among
-his former confederates, that, on November 6, Major von Harboe suddenly
-handed him a royal order to quit the island immediately. Under the
-major's escort he returned to Ascheberg, and directly after went, _viâ_
-Hamburg, to Frankfort, where he cashed a draft of 24,000 florins in
-the assumed name of Juel. He left Frankfort again as quietly as he had
-arrived there, and proceeded to the south of France, where he took up
-his temporary abode at Orange, probably in obedience to royal commands.
-Afterwards he removed to Avignon, where he spent the rest of his days,
-and died there, in 1789, in his seventy-second year, without having once
-revisited his country.
-
-So soon as some order had been introduced in the course of business,
-Köller-Banner, as representative of the infantry, produced in the War
-College projects for the tactical remodelling of the battalions, which,
-however, Eickstedt considered too expensive, and sought to prevent.
-Köller-Banner's plans were on the point of failing, when, in the eleventh
-hour, the government altered their mind, and temporarily assented to his
-plans. Eickstedt felt so insulted by this, that he forwarded a letter to
-the hereditary prince, in which he requested his discharge, and added,
-that he desired no pension. Guldberg naturally undertook to answer this
-request of one of the principal conspirators, and did it in his unctuous
-way, by recalling to the petitioner's mind the Glorious 17th of January,
-and reminding him of the necessity of all the sharers in it hanging
-together. Eickstedt replied to this in his usual coarse way, that he was
-sick and tired of constantly listening to the old chatter of January 17.
-The object of that day had been to secure the king's person, maintain
-the honour of the royal house, and promote the welfare of the country.
-But, if that object could not be attained, it would have been better had
-the events of January 17 never taken place. Such dangerous expressions
-from a powerful member of the conspiracy induced the hereditary prince
-himself to undertake satisfying the dissatisfied man; and he declared to
-the petitioner in writing that the aid of so active and far-sighted a
-man could not be dispensed with in the projected reforms, and hence his
-resignation could not be accepted.
-
-Although Eickstedt had not succeeded in overthrowing Köller-Banner,
-another man completely effected it.
-
-Directly after the revolution, Queen Juliana Maria invited to Copenhagen
-Prince Charles of Hesse and his wife, but the death of one of their
-children prevented the princely couple from reaching the capital until
-October, at the time when the menacing measures of Gustavus III., for
-the conquest of Norway, had aroused great terror among the incapable
-members of the government, and caused the nomination of Prince Charles
-as generalissimo in Norway. Immediately on his arrival the latter was
-received by the queen; and, after a conversation about the dangers with
-which Norway was menaced, was requested to examine Köller-Banner's
-propositions; but, at the same time, was also warned by the crafty queen
-against this dangerous man and Von der Osten. By the prince's advice, a
-committee was appointed, under the presidency of the hereditary prince,
-to investigate Köller-Banner's reforms: the other members being Prince
-Charles, and Generals von Hauch and von Hobe, while the ministers
-also took part in the discussions. This committee rejected nearly all
-Banner's propositions, at which the latter was so offended, that he
-not only forgot all the respect due to the king's brother-in-law, but
-publicly declared that Frederick II. of Prussia would erect a statue to
-him for reforms and ideas like his. When the authorities also learned
-that Köller-Banner, wrapped in his cloak, paid nocturnal visits to the
-French and Swedish envoys, his dismissal from his former posts, and his
-appointment as governor of the fortress of Rendsburg, ensued, while the
-Prince of Brunswick-Bevern was gazetted as commandant of the capital.
-Still the hero of January 17 retained his full pay of 4,400 dollars, in
-order not to offend him too greatly.[60]
-
-Although the general might now be reckoned among the exiles, he had not
-fallen into utter disgrace, for Juliana Maria afterwards took him under
-her protection, and tried to keep him, for the purpose of intimidating
-the violent ministerial opposition. For in July, 1774, he unexpectedly
-received an invitation from her to come at once to Fredensborg, where the
-court was residing at the time; but when the ministers heard of this,
-they were penetrated with fear, and induced the War College to intimate
-to the general that he was to remain at his post in Rendsburg, and send
-an apology to the queen. Although Banner found himself compelled to obey
-on this occasion, on receiving soon after another request from the queen
-to come across, he informed her that he would accede to her wishes, and
-appeared at Fredensborg in the beginning of August. As, however, he was a
-thorn in the eye of the ministers, he soon began quarrelling with them,
-the result of which was, that he was commanded by the Generalty, who
-would not listen to his plans and complaints, to return to his post. This
-induced him to send in his resignation; but it was not accepted. Hence
-he imagined himself indispensable, and took a step by which he hoped
-to overthrow his opponents in the War College. He sent into the privy
-council a rambling plan for a thorough reconstruction of the army; but as
-Eickstedt had anticipated him, and handed in a similar project, Banner's
-was sent back to him unheeded. Infuriated at this, he again forwarded his
-resignation, and dated his request on the eventful day, January 17th,
-1775; but this artful trick did not avail him.
-
-On January 23rd, a royal cabinet letter was sent to the Generalty, to the
-effect that the king, in consideration of the proofs of fidelity, zeal,
-and devotedness, which Lieut.-General von Köller-Banner had furnished,
-felt himself induced to assent to his petition of January 17th in all
-points. He would, however, retain his former pay of 4,400 dollars, of
-which, 2,600 had been granted him for his meritorious services on January
-17th, 1772. Furthermore, he would still remain in the king's service,
-and be always ready to act as a Danish general whenever the king thought
-proper, and as befitted a lieutenant-general; at the same time, he was
-permitted to visit other armies, and take part in foreign campaigns.
-
-Köller-Banner, after this, left the country and went to Vienna and the
-Austrian army, but returned at the beginning of 1777 to Copenhagen, where
-he was again most graciously received by the old queen. Soon afterwards,
-however, he was mixed up in a scandalous affair with the magistracy about
-a child an actress had given birth to. The excitement caused by this
-was so general, that he received his full discharge from the military
-service. But the protection which the hero of January 17th still enjoyed
-was so great, that his 4,400 dollars were left him as a life pension.
-
-When Köller went to take leave of his powerful patroness, Queen Juliana
-Maria, he requested, as a last proof of her favour, that she should
-inform him who it really was who had calumniated him so greatly to her
-and the hereditary prince, and promised, at the same time, to make no
-use of the information. The queen then acknowledged to him that it was
-Admiral von Kaas.
-
-"Is it possible!" Köller-Banner exclaimed, in the utmost surprise. "That
-is the greatest insult that could be offered me! The unworthy wretch--a
-man who has dishonoured the Danish flag--a man whose wickedness is only
-comparable with his stupidity--has been able to overthrow a faithful and
-zealous servant of the royal house by his calumnies! I never could have
-believed that my hostile destiny would prepare such a humiliation for me."
-
-Köller-Banner returned to his native land of Pomerania, but could not
-stand it long there, and selected as his last residence the very city
-where Struensee's memory was honoured. In this city, Altona, the
-conspirator died in 1811, utterly forgotten, and avoided and detested by
-everybody.
-
-The Pomeranian knight of the Dannebrog, Hans Henry von Eickstedt, held
-his ground the longest. In 1773, this utterly ignorant soldier was
-entrusted with the supervision of the education of the crown prince by
-a royal letter, which was at the same time a grand panegyric of the
-nominee. The king, we read in it, had appointed him chief governor
-of his beloved son, because he could trust to the general's faithful
-devotedness, Danish heart, and judicious care. But this selection was
-so bad a one, that the excellent son of Caroline Matilda frequently
-complained loudly in his maturer years that he had been purposely kept
-from learning anything. It was the design of the queen and Guldberg to
-keep the crown prince a minor as long as possible, and the best means for
-this unscrupulous object were certainly to allow the heir to the throne
-to grow up in ignorance, to imbue him with an immoderate preference
-for everything Danish, and to divert his inclinations to unimportant
-state-matters, such as playing at soldiers. Although the two leaders of
-the conspiracy succeeded in this treacherous design, the country yet had
-the consolation and satisfaction that King Frederick VI. inherited the
-clear natural intellect of his unfortunate mother, and thus made up for
-his deficiency of knowledge, even though his neglected education entailed
-other consequences.
-
-In November, 1783, Eickstedt was given the order of the Elephant; and
-when, in 1784, the education of the crown prince was said to be finished,
-he was appointed his first chamberlain; but on the very next day after
-the crown prince attained the government as regent, Eickstedt received
-from his royal pupil his dismissal as member of the privy council and
-commandant of the Horse Guards, with a pension of 5,000 dollars, which
-was some time after raised to 7,000. This terrible fall so greatly
-insulted the arrogant chamberlain, that he at once left the court and
-retired to his estate of Boltinggaard, in the island of Fühnen, where he
-died in the year 1801, in seclusion, and forgotten by the world.
-
-Beringskjold could not endure the loss of his chamberlain's dignity and
-his banishment to the island of Möen, which I have already described,
-for it was asking this ambitious man to resign half his life. Hence he
-left the island secretly a little while after, and went to Sweden. What
-he undertook there remains a mystery; but it is known that he ordered
-his wife during his absence to send in a petition for his pardon, and
-compensation for the losses he had sustained by being deprived of
-his domain of Nygaard. As no resolution to this effect was issued,
-he, in the following year, requested, through the same intercessor,
-pardon and permission to return to his native land. This request had a
-better result, for he was not only allowed to return to Möen, but the
-chamberlain's key was also restored him. He received a letter from
-the king himself, in which his disobedience was graciously forgiven,
-and he was requested to remain quietly in Möen, or, if he preferred
-it, somewhere in Jütland, Fühnen, or the duchies, and there enjoy his
-guaranteed pension of 2,000 dollars. At the same time, however, he was
-prohibited from travelling again to Sweden, or carrying on a secret
-correspondence with that country, or leaving Denmark at all; and for
-his own good he was recommended not to show himself at Copenhagen,
-or any place where the court was residing. This indulgence toward
-the accomplices of 1772 was further shown in the fact that, in 1780,
-Beringskjold's son, who was a page of the bed-chamber, was appointed a
-conferenz-rath, and the other, who was a captain, a chamberlain. But all
-this but little satisfied the restless father. He next asked leave to
-reside at least in the same island where the court was; and when this was
-granted him, he bought, in a mysterious way, three considerable estates,
-situate in the southern part of Seeland: Rönnebeksholm, Sparresholm, and
-Sortebrödre, and selected the first as his residence. When the court was
-staying at Fredensborg in the summer, he went repeatedly to Elsinore,
-which was only ten miles from the palace, and thence sent letter after
-letter, first to one, then to the other of the persons belonging to the
-king's immediate _entourage_, in order to obtain further favours; but all
-these efforts proved unsuccessful.
-
-When Beringskjold saw himself thus passed over, he formed a plan for
-overthrowing the government, and laid his treacherous scheme before
-a near relative of the royal family; but one of his own sons, the
-chamberlain, betrayed his father's designs.
-
-On June 4, 1781, a royal cabinet order was sent to Bailiff von Bielcke,
-Bürgomaster Wulf, and Regimental Quartermaster Schiött, all of Nestved,
-to seize Chamberlain von Beringskjold, on whom a strong suspicion rested
-of carrying on a very treasonable correspondence, and sequestrate his
-papers. These gentlemen enticed the chamberlain, by a business pretext,
-to the town, read him the king's order, and the bürgomaster at once
-conveyed him under escort to Copenhagen, where he was handed over to the
-commandant of the citadel, who locked him up, and informed him that a
-dollar a day was allowed for his maintenance. In the meanwhile, the two
-other commissioners went to the prisoner's estate, packed up all the
-papers they found there in a trunk, sealed it up, and the quartermaster
-immediately started with it for Fredensborg, where the court was residing
-at the time. Simultaneously with the order of arrest, the postmasters
-of Nestved and Ringstedt received instructions, during the next eight
-days, to stop all letters addressed to Rönnebeksholm, and send them to
-the royal cabinet. A similar order was sent to Bürgomaster thor Straten
-and the postmaster of Flensburg, concerning all letters arriving for, or
-despatched by, a certain Comptroller Wildgaard.
-
-On June 9, Bailiff von Bielcke and his fellow-commissioners were
-instructed to restore to Frau von Beringskjold all the papers not
-retained from the trunk which had been examined at Fredensborg, and to
-give her and her sons, in the king's name, the assurance of his Majesty's
-lasting favour. Frau von Beringskjold was allowed to remain on her
-estate, and was only advised, in all future affairs, to consult with her
-son, Conferenz-rath von Beringskjold.
-
-After a survey of the sequestrated papers had proved the "continued bad
-designs of this man"--such were the royal words about Beringskjold--a
-commission of inquiry was appointed on November 13, 1781. In order that
-this affair which, owing to its nature, demanded the greatest secrecy,
-should be discussed with all due justice, the king selected those men
-as judges of whose insight and integrity he and the whole country were
-convinced, namely, the Justiciary of the Supreme Court, Privy Councillor
-of Conferences von Rosenörn, the Director and Attorney-General of the
-General Chancery, Privy Councillor Carstens, the Minister of Finances,
-Privy Councillor von Stemann, and the Professor of Law, Etats-rath
-Colbjörnsen.
-
-The commissioners were ordered to assemble, after giving a solemn
-pledge of secrecy, and, in accordance with the royal instructions, form
-an opinion, from the papers laid before them, whether Chamberlain von
-Beringskjold had not proved himself one of those restless subjects who
-ought to spend the rest of their lives in imprisonment.
-
-The choice of the commission in itself proved what weight was attached
-to Beringskjold's detected conspiracy. It was a peculiar circumstance,
-too, that secret instructions were given to the Hamburg post-office,
-which led to the tolerably correct supposition, that the person related
-to the royal house was no other than the king's brother-in-law. As early
-as 1773, Juliana Maria had felt alarm about Christian VII.'s sister,
-and was very glad at that time that the latter consented to accompany
-her husband, when appointed generalissimo of Norway, to that distant
-country.[61] At the period when the conspiracy was detected, Prince
-Charles was a highly esteemed volunteer in the Prussian army, so that
-he must naturally have been consulted by letters which must go _viâ_
-Flensburg, after passing through Schleswig and Louisenlund. The result of
-the investigation was, however, carefully kept private, and it is, up to
-the present day, one of the state secrets of the Danish archives.
-
-In the Beringskjold affair, a great number of witnesses was examined who
-had been connected with the prisoner of state, and even persons who had
-dined with him were asked what their host had said about the government
-at dinner. After the witnesses had all been examined, the prisoner's turn
-arrived, and his crimes, among which a conspiracy against the government
-was the chief, were brought before him, and he learned for the first
-time that his own son had denounced him. Beringskjold handed in his
-counter-declaration, and requested, during the trial, the assistance of
-Advocate Colbjörnsen, brother of the commissioner.
-
-Finally, when all the regulations of the law, so far as the peculiar
-nature of the affair allowed it, had been exhausted in the examination,
-the commission sent in, on December 31, 1781, their opinion upon the
-point laid before them by the king, which was to the effect, that
-Chamberlain von Beringskjold was proved to be a restless man, and
-dangerous to the general welfare and public order, and, as such, ought to
-be imprisoned for life under a strict guard, according to the law.
-
-When the king was on the point of confirming the sentence or opinion
-of the commissioners, but at the same time of granting the accused
-a considerable sum for his maintenance, the discovery was made that
-the prisoner, in spite of his strict arrest, had carried on a secret
-correspondence, and undertaken "another attempt at his old wickedness."
-After such "mad disobedience of all royal orders,"--so says the royal
-re-script of February 20, 1782,--all the proofs against the prisoner
-were to be gathered, and laid before the commission for a final judicial
-sentence.
-
-On March 3, the sentence of the commissioners was made known,
-which decreed the highest criminal penalty against Chamberlain von
-Beringskjold, that is, like Struensee and Brandt, loss of honour, life,
-and property.
-
-The king resolved on this that Beringskjold, although he had added more
-than one offence to his original crimes, should be spared the extreme
-penalty, but as a dangerous criminal remain in secure arrest; be degraded
-from his dignity as chamberlain; and be told that, on the slightest
-attempt to renew his designs, he would suffer death. This penalty,
-however, was in no way intended to degrade or humiliate his innocent wife
-or her sons.
-
-On April 9, the convict was informed of the royal pardon, and the
-chamberlain's key taken from him for the second time. He was left in
-the citadel under arrest, but no one was allowed access to him but Dean
-Thybring. For all that, early in May he found means to write a letter
-to his wife, which really reached its destination. In this letter he
-complains of the "incredible godless treatment he had endured;" dropped
-hints about the charges brought against him; and gave instructions for
-further correspondence; stating, in conclusion, that he had already
-written twice, for which purpose paper and pens were given him by special
-orders of the commandant.
-
-When Frau von Beringskjold received this letter, she was so affected by
-its contents, that she was attacked by a mortal disease. In her dying
-moments, however, she handed the letter to Quartermaster Schiött, who at
-once forwarded a copy to Eickstedt, and shortly after, by the general's
-orders, the original to Guldberg.
-
-Beringskjold was now removed to Munkholm, where he took the place of
-Falckenskjold, who had been overthrown by his machinations, and was kept
-in the strictest arrest in the rock fortress. When, two years later, the
-government passed into other hands, Beringskjold fancied that the hour of
-his deliverance had arrived. He therefore hastened to send a petition to
-Copenhagen, in which he requested a revision of his trial, but naturally
-gained no hearing from the son of Caroline Matilda. However, the gentle
-young prince allowed the originator of the conspiracy of 1772 to walk
-about the fortress and pay visits, and his sons were ordered to give him
-a portion of what they had inherited from their mother.
-
-A few years later, Beringskjold obtained his removal to the fortress
-of Bergenhuus, where he remained as a prisoner till 1795, but lived in
-incessant contention with the commandant, Major-General de Mothe, and the
-officers. In the last-named year he obtained the regent's permission to
-end his days in the unfortified town of Stavanger, in Southern Norway,
-where he was placed under the supervision of the bailiff. He lived here
-eight years, and died in 1803, at the great age of upwards of eighty
-years.
-
-Count von der Osten, who became minister of foreign affairs through
-the palace revolution of 1772, did not occupy his post long, but was
-banished to Jütland in 1774, when, on the recommendation of Landgrave
-Charles, Count Bernstorff's nephew, the afterwards so celebrated Peter
-Andreas Bernstorff, was summoned to Denmark, and the foreign affairs
-were entrusted to him. A few years after, however, Von der Osten was
-recalled from his bailiff's post in Aalborg, and appointed president of
-the Supreme Court; a little later, chief president of Copenhagen; and,
-shortly before the downfall of the usurping government, was decorated
-with the order of the Elephant. This participator in the conspiracy also
-attained an age of upwards of eighty years, and died in 1797.
-
-All that is left now is to describe the fate of the fifth principal
-conspirator and actual manager of the palace revolution, Cabinet
-Secretary Guldberg, after whom the misgovernment, from January 17, 1772,
-to April 14, 1784, has been called the Guldberg Ministry.
-
-Always keeping behind the scenes so long as he had any one to fear who
-might contend with him for the supreme power, Guldberg accepted no seat
-in the privy council established immediately after Struensee's fall, but
-temporarily contented himself with his position as cabinet secretary to
-the hereditary prince and intimate adviser of the queen dowager, though
-he at the same time decided everything. But when the younger Bernstorff
-undertook the foreign ministry in 1774, and Guldberg was alarmed at
-the influence of this respected man, he effected his own appointment
-to the hitherto vacant post of privy cabinet secretary to the king,
-which ensued on the birthday of the hereditary prince. In this way,
-the cabinet government, which had been charged as the highest crime
-against Struensee, was re-established, and Guldberg granted official
-interference in all higher affairs of state. External dignities speedily
-followed; for the king, in 1777, raised him to the Danish nobility, with
-precedence from January 29, 1773, the king's birthday, and granted him
-the name of Höegh-Guldberg. In his new post of honour, he very soon made
-Bernstorff tired of his ministerial functions;[62] so that the latter
-sent in his resignation in 1780, and it was accepted. Immediately after,
-Höegh-Guldberg was appointed a privy councillor, and it was at the same
-time published that the king had also selected him as a member of the
-privy council of state.
-
-After three years' working in the dark, the cabinet secretary, who
-occupied Struensee's post, had thus acquired the governmental authority.
-The revolution was ostensibly undertaken with the object of bringing the
-sovereign power again into the hands of the king alone; but as the mental
-condition of Christian VII. did not permit this, Queen Juliana Maria
-assumed Struensee's part, though only indirectly, and through the medium
-of her other self, Guldberg, as her sex did not permit her to preside
-in person over the council of state. For the hereditary prince, who held
-this presidency, was regarded in public as a mere puppet, and, according
-to the testimony of an eye-witness, valet Franz Goos, passed most of
-the sessions in sleeping. Höegh-Guldberg, however, did not carry on so
-aristocratic a rule as Struensee, but cleverly left the current affairs
-of the administration to the several colleges. But the higher affairs of
-state were entrusted entirely to his guidance.
-
-Advancing gently, he contrived, by his defence of the principle of
-nationality, to acquire some degree of respect among his countrymen, and
-in this way concealed his utter want of statesman-like talent. In this
-respect the introduction of what is called the Indigenate law of January
-15, 1776, remains a lasting merit of his, for he was the concipient and
-proposer of this law, even though he asked the advice of the two learned
-brothers Colbjörnsen. By virtue of this law only natives could henceforth
-hold office, though the king could naturalise deserving foreigners. The
-motive for the law was so attractive as to gain its concipient great
-praise. Justice demanded, the introduction said, that natives should eat
-the bread of the country. The experience of all ages had proved that in
-countries where the education of youth was attended to, there was never
-any lack of useful people, if the regent sought them. In this respect,
-the history of the country might be referred to with pleasure, which
-could display men of all classes who had served the country, maintained
-and saved its honour, and, with noble courage, sacrificed themselves for
-their kings.
-
-The consequences of this regulation led to a perfect Danish
-administration in both kingdoms, so that every failing Struensee had
-committed in this respect was removed. If this was just, however, it did
-not compensate for the errors which constantly brought the state nearer
-to ruin in other points, as all Struensee's beneficial arrangements were
-revoked through sheer hatred of him, in so far as too evident proofs
-of their value did not prevent the reactionary party from doing so.
-The final sanction of the exchange of territory, by which the former
-Russian share of Holstein was acquired by Denmark, was not Guldberg, but
-Bernstorff's merit. On the other hand, the former deserves praise for
-having effected the liberation of Falckenskjold.
-
-In the meanwhile, the crown prince grew up; but his education was so
-neglected under the coarse hands of Eickstedt and by the over-learned
-Sporon, that, in truth, he only acquired a decided preference for
-the Danish language, but never even learned to write it correctly.
-Although the kings of Denmark are declared to be capable of governing
-at the commencement of their fourteenth year, the confirmation of the
-crown prince was deferred till his seventeenth year, and was only then
-performed in the palace chapel on April 4, 1784,[63] because it could
-not be delayed any longer. To this was joined the entrance of the crown
-prince into the council of state, but the precaution was taken of
-appointing, on April 6, Minister of Finance von Stemann and Secretary of
-State Höegh-Guldberg, state ministers and members of the privy council,
-so that these faithful adherents of the queen might check any possible
-influence of the young crown prince. But the reckoning had been made
-without the host.
-
-The crown prince, who was endowed with sound sense and a strong will, had
-already formed his resolution. As early as autumn, 1781, he had suffered
-an insult from Guldberg, which he never forgot. He had expressed himself
-in terms of dissatisfaction about the cabinet orders re-introduced by
-Guldberg, which had been regarded as a crime in Struensee. Guldberg
-observed to him, in reply, that the cabinet orders were the sole sign of
-the sovereignty, as without them there would soon be as many kings as
-there were colleges in the land, and then told him, through the tutor
-Sporon, that, were it not for the cabinet decrees, he, the prince, would
-himself be not worth more than the cat of Slangerup. The brutal Eickstedt
-even forced the prince to make Guldberg an apology in writing. From this
-moment, the crown prince formed the fixed resolution to render himself
-independent, ere long, both of Guldberg and the other holders of the
-power.
-
-After carrying on a secret correspondence with Bernstorff, who had
-retired to his estate of Borstel, near Hamburg, and receiving his ready
-assurance that he would resume his ministerial functions in the event
-of a change of government, the knowledge of the queen's ambitious plans
-induced the prince to confide in other trustworthy opponents of the
-Guldberg ministry, especially Privy Councillors Schack Rathlau and
-Stampe, General Huth, and Count Reventlow, and arrange with them the
-execution of his plan.
-
-Thus arrived April 14, 1784, on which day the crown prince was to enter
-the council of state. When the members assembled, and the king had taken
-his presidential seat,[64] the two excellencies, Höegh-Guldberg and Von
-Stemann, appointed ministers of state on April 7, and Count Rosencrone,
-who had been granted a vote in the privy council, advanced, in order to
-hand to the king the formulary of the oath, signed by themselves; but the
-crown prince prevented them, and calmly requested them to desist until
-his Majesty had most graciously permitted him to make a proposition. As
-all remained silent in expectation, the crown prince produced a paper,
-and read from it that he gratefully recognised the favour shown him
-by the king, in his appointment as member of the privy council, but
-requested his father to dissolve the cabinet, by which the intention
-expressed in the declaration of February 13, 1772, would be fulfilled.
-He also begged that two hitherto pensioned men--Privy Councilors von
-Rosenkrantz and Von Bernstorff--might be recalled to the council of
-state; and, further, Lieutenant-General von Huth and Privy Councillor
-Stampe be appointed councillors of state.
-
-After reading this proposal, the crown prince laid the paper for
-signature before the king, who at once seized a pen, in order to fulfil
-his son's wish; but the hereditary prince tried to prevent him, by saying
-that the king must not be allowed to act with precipitation. Christian
-did not allow himself to be checked by this objection, and tried to
-complete his signature; but ere he could manage it, the pen fell from his
-fingers. The crown prince handed it to him again directly, and the king
-not merely completed his signature, but added his sanction, on his son
-saying, "Will not my gracious father show me the affection of writing
-'approved,' here?" When this was done, the hereditary prince attempted
-to seize the paper; but the crown prince was too quick for him, and
-put it in his pocket. Startled by this scene, the king hurried to his
-apartment, whither the hereditary prince followed him with equal speed
-and shot the bolt, so that the crown prince could not gain access to his
-father. Embittered by this, the heir to the throne turned to the four
-privy councillors, Moltke, Höegh-Guldberg, Stemann, and Rosencrone, with
-the declaration that the king no longer required their services, and at
-the same time announced the dismissal of the Supreme Marshal von Schack,
-Conferenz-rath Jacobi, and Cabinet Secretary Sporon; and added, that the
-first of them must not show himself before the king again.
-
-After this, the crown prince retired in order to reach his father by
-another route, but found that also barred against him. He was about to
-have the door opened by force, when his companion, Marshal von Bülow,
-contrived to appease him, and immediately after the door opened, and the
-hereditary prince appeared, leading the king by the hand, and trying,
-as it seemed against his wish, to conduct him to the queen. The crown
-prince leaped forward, seized the king's other hand, and most earnestly
-begged him to return to his apartment, and feel convinced that nothing
-should be done without his gracious sanction, and only that be effected
-which would prove to the advantage of the subjects and the country. As
-the weak king was more inclined to respond to his son's wishes than go
-with the hereditary prince, the latter so greatly lost his self-command
-as to seize hold of the crown prince's collar and try to tear him away
-from the king by force. But the son held his father so tightly with the
-left hand, and used his right so energetically against the hereditary
-prince, that the uncle was soon obliged to yield, especially when the
-crown prince laid his hand on his sword for the purpose of driving him
-back. The crown prince's page of the bed-chamber, Von Mösting, afterwards
-so well known as minister of finances, ran up, however, and ere the
-hereditary prince knew what was being done to him, he found himself at
-the other end of the corridor. The terrified king took advantage of
-this moment to fly to his apartment, and thus the victory of the palace
-revolution of April 14, 1784, was decided. For, if the hereditary prince
-had succeeded in carrying the king to his step-mother, the recently
-approved ordinance would certainly have been revoked, and the humiliating
-announcement which the queen had made to the crown prince just before he
-entered the privy council, that henceforth Guldberg would report to him
-the king's orders, would have become a truth.
-
-We can imagine into what a fury Juliana Maria was thrown when her
-beloved son told her of what had occurred in the council of state, and
-the treatment he had undergone. She raved, wished to go to the king
-even if it cost her life, called Count Reventlow, who threw himself at
-her feet and implored her to be calm, a traitor, and said to the crown
-prince that he was a treacherous gentleman, who always had honey in his
-lips but poison in his heart, and that it was his intention to kill
-his father. The hereditary prince, however, had so thoroughly lost all
-courage for further resistance, that he wished himself dead. If we take
-into consideration the energy of the intriguing lady, and the nimbus of
-sovereignty which had surrounded her for twelve years, we must applaud
-the precaution that the artillery under General Huth, and the palace
-guard, were held in readiness, in case any further resistance should be
-offered to the downfall of the late government, or the refusal of the
-king to sign the order, had rendered the proclamation of the crown prince
-as regent, which had been fully decided on, necessary. Still, all ended
-with the fury and passion of the deposed Juliana Maria, and she had
-rendered herself so odious to the nation, that the change of government
-was greeted with universal joy, and the crown prince everywhere received
-with applause. But the fury of the angry lady also became appeased when
-the crown prince threatened serious measures and arrest.
-
-In the meanwhile, the king's commands had been sent to the colleges
-and courts, and Bernstorff invited by the crown prince to return
-immediately.[65] Early in May, the future foreign minister and president
-of the German Chancery arrived in Copenhagen. His practised diplomatic
-pen communicated to foreign courts the overthrow of the Guldberg
-ministry, and of the rule of Juliana Maria, with the postscript that
-the government firm would still remain that of Christian VII., but the
-government of the crown prince as regent had commenced on April 14, 1784.
-
-Höegh-Guldberg was called on to pacify the old queen, and the regent
-considered the deposed secretary of state's merit in effecting this so
-great, that he contented himself with sending this concoctor of the
-conspiracy against his mother, into the usual banishment in Jütland,
-as bailiff of Aarhuus. The sudden removal from dignities held so long,
-and from the sovereign authority, demanded resignation. The God-fearing
-Höegh-Guldberg displayed it, at least externally, and retained his post
-up to the year 1802, when he was dismissed, and retired to the fine
-estate of Hald, near Viborg, which he had purchased, and where he died in
-1806. He did not venture to present an order on the Treasury for 100,000
-dollars given him as a reward by the queen dowager, possibly because,
-as a judge of Struensee, he felt his conscience prick him too strongly;
-and when, after his death, his sons had the courage to bring forward
-this claim on the government, the crown prince laughingly referred their
-impudent demands to the Greek Calends.
-
-The enlightened statesman, Bernstorff, who afterwards acquired
-world-renown by his decree of neutrality, was, from this time forth up
-to his death in 1797, the adviser of the young, inexperienced, and,
-unfortunately, poorly-educated crown prince. As such, he opposed
-all odious measures in a reactionary sense, and it was to this mild
-conduct that the queen dowager and Prince Frederick owed their security
-as members of the royal house, though they were entirely excluded
-from all participation in affairs of state. When the fire of 1794
-completely destroyed the splendid Christiansborg Palace, these two
-royal conspirators against Struensee and Caroline Matilda were left
-without a roof in the capital, and were obliged to seek shelter with
-private persons until their future abode was prepared for them in the
-Amalienborg Palace. Here, mother and son lived quietly till their death:
-the former, engaged with penances, for which her crimes against her own
-daughter-in-law and an innocent minister were sufficient reason; the
-latter, more honourably, in promoting the arts and sciences, for which
-the appanage of 12,000 dollars, granted him on the exchange of territory
-for resigning the coadjutorship of the principality of Lübeck, afforded
-him the means. By his consort, a princess of Mecklenburg, he had two
-sons and two daughters; of the latter, the youngest, the grandmother
-of ALEXANDRA, PRINCESS OF WALES, is, in spite of her great age, still
-remarkable for her beauty and grace.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 60: "Mémoires de mon Temps."]
-
-[Footnote 61: "Mémoires de mon Temps."]
-
-[Footnote 62: "Frederick II. of Prussia had, by means of his cousin the
-queen dowager, gradually acquired an almost absolute sway in the cabinet
-of Denmark, and directed the foreign affairs in subserviency to the views
-of the French court, and in opposition to the interests of England. Count
-Bernstorff being the only person in the Danish ministry who ventured in
-any degree to oppose the French and Prussian policy, his dismissal was
-resolved on in the cabinets of Versailles and Berlin; and his conduct
-with regard to the armed neutrality offered an opportunity to effect
-their purpose."--_Coxe's Travels_, vol. v.]
-
-[Footnote 63: "The examination continued above an hour, and the prince
-replied in a very sensible manner, sufficiently proving, from the
-readiness and perspicuity of his answers, that the reports of his
-incapacity were unfounded. He spoke in a loud, clear, manly voice, with a
-dignity and propriety which astonished the assembly; and when he repeated
-the oath, by which he swore to continue true to the Established Church,
-he did it in so feeling a manner as absolutely to draw tears from the
-eyes of many who were present."--_Coxe's Travels_, vol. v.]
-
-[Footnote 64: During the early part of Juliana's regency--a French
-tourist tells us--the king, in one of his lucid intervals, signed a state
-paper in the following terms:--"Christian VII., by the grace of God, King
-of Denmark, &c., in company with Juliana Maria and others, by grace of
-the devil."]
-
-[Footnote 65: The only foreigner who is supposed to have had any
-knowledge of the transaction, was Mr. Elliot, who had left Berlin to come
-to Copenhagen, in the capacity of British envoy: and the king of Great
-Britain was the first sovereign to whom the prince-royal communicated his
-success.--_Coxe's Travels_, vol. v.]
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX A.
-
- (_Extracts from the Correspondence of_ Mr. N. W. WRAXALL, Jun., _with
- his Father, relative to the Restoration of_ CAROLINE MATILDA).
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 1.
-
- LONDON, ADELPHI, _Saturday Night, Jan._ 21_st_, 1775.
-
-I shall now endeavour to give my dearest father some idea of my present
-views and plans. I have, after much time, labour, and trouble, deciphered
-the letter pretty well. The Danish nobility wish impatiently my return,
-and implore me not to delay it a day which I can prevent. They wait
-in eager expectation of my arrival, with his Majesty's compliance and
-support, to strike the blow, or lose all in the attempt. I went with
-this letter to the Baron de Lichtenstein. He received himself a letter
-yesterday from the queen, which orders him to give me another £100 from
-her own moneys here, and superadded to these two sources, his Majesty
-has promised to give an order on his Hanoverian Treasury, in case of
-necessity, to supply me still further. So you see _they_ are all now in
-earnest. I went to the merchant to-day, on whom my bill (received from
-the Danish nobility yesterday) was drawn, and he gave me instantly a
-bank note for £100 sterling, which I now have in my pocket book. How much
-longer I shall stay in this kingdom I cannot say, nor can the Baron de
-L---- say with any more certainty than myself. It absolutely and fully
-depends on his Majesty's orders and pleasure. The baron will see him next
-Tuesday morning (it is impossible sooner, two councils being held Sunday
-and Monday at the queen's palace on American affairs), and communicate to
-him my letter received from the Danish nobility. I shall write a number
-of queries likewise for _Him_ on Monday, though I should not be surprised
-if _He_ sees me before my departure. The baron thinks that I shall not
-be sent away before the 6th or 7th of next month, when his Majesty will
-have had time to give his full, clear, and mature reply, and some letters
-are expected from Copenhagen, which will give a little light how to act.
-I shall be glad if I am delayed yet some 2 or 3 weeks, as the spring
-opens, and winter will begin to retire every day. 'Tis terrible to cross
-Westphalia and Hanover at this season of the year; but that is nothing.
-
-I presume you will now begin to imagine my scheme less romantic, and
-my views more probable, than they have hitherto appeared; but believe
-me, my dearest sir, on my honour, I am no more elated now than I was
-depressed 12 days ago, when things had a very dubious, uncertain aspect.
-If I return, and if the queen should be reinstated, I may, and I think,
-must be rewarded in some way--honorary, or otherwise; but I depend on
-nothing, and hold it as loose as ever I did; yet I now hope and believe
-I shall go back to Zell, Hamburgh, and perhaps Copenhagen; but still I
-can positively assert nothing till I have _His_ reply and commands for my
-departure.
-
-Though I have this hundred pounds now in my possession, yet I consider
-it a sacred deposit, not to be touched or infringed on till I begin my
-journey from hence, or the expenses immediately necessary to it. Even my
-own interest would lead me to be very scrupulous and honourable on this
-point. My reward is not yet come: it is to come, perhaps, bye-and-bye.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 2.
-
- _Jan._ 23rd, 1775.
-
-And now respecting the grand affair. I conversed two hours with the baron
-this morning. He hopes to see his Majesty to-morrow evening, or Wednesday
-morning. I then shall know his ultimate pleasure and commands. The baron
-has, however, requested me to write in cypher to the Danish nobility
-to-morrow, that "I have received their money: that, according to all
-appearances and probability I shall leave London on my return about the
-first day or week in February, and shall take the direct road to Zell,
-and thence to Hamburgh." He likewise writes the same to Her to-morrow.
-I have drawn up a paper of articles to be presented to his Majesty by
-the baron when he obtains audience, which will contain his reply and
-argument. In my own opinion, I own, it seems as far as human foresight
-can now determine, that I shall be sent away in the course of next week:
-but nothing is sure, nothing to be depended on, till his Majesty's answer
-and orders are known. Then, I've demanded four days or five, to be
-ready and prepare my little affairs. A carriage I must buy in Rotterdam
-or Utrecht, as no carriage can pass by the packet from hence. I've a
-servant in readiness, whom I can engage the minute I've my despatch or
-orders to be gone. 'Tis very probable I shall be sent on from Hamburgh
-to Copenhagen, to give notice then to the party of his Majesty's full
-consent. Then business will begin. God grant it may be successful! If we
-are, I may then presume to hope and think I shan't be forgotten.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 3.
-
- _Jan._ 31, 1775.
-
-I went to the baron. He was with the king last night, but the queen being
-constantly at their elbow, he could not say one word to _Him_ respecting
-audience. The king said: "venez Mercredi à onze heures." So, to-morrow
-morning, at 11, he will see Him. I asked him if I might not, as 'twould
-be very agreeable to me in many respects, stay till Monday next; he said
-"I _might_ do it: but he must request me not to stay beyond Friday, if it
-could be avoided by acquiescence, as the Danish nobility, and the queen
-of Denmark, would expect me impatiently according to my promise, and I
-should not fail to execute it, if to be done. Besides, I am sure," said
-he, "the king won't delay for an hour, and will expect you to begone
-before next Monday. Pray be ready! I hope to send you word to-morrow
-evening all is done. So try, if you can, to be ready for Friday." I was
-obliged, therefore, to submit, and expect surely to be gone next Friday
-afternoon, though then I shall be confoundedly hurried and driven.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 4.
-
- _Feb._ 2, 1775.
-
-I am just returned from the baron's: I have received my ultimate
-despatches: a letter from his Majesty to her Majesty the queen, and
-lastly, the articles to which the king consents. All therefore is done,
-finished completely. The baron wished me joy, bade me farewell, wished
-me a very happy journey, and all success! I must, 'tis his Majesty's
-pleasure, begone to-morrow night for Harwich, and must be at Harwich by
-or before 3 in the afternoon, as the packet sails (unless the wind is
-directly contrary) Saturday evening.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 5.
-
- ZELL, _Feb._ 19, 1775.
-
-Indeed, my dearest father, neither you nor I had any idea of the
-tremendous roads through which I have passed, the continued and wondrous
-chain of dangers, amid which I have as yet escaped unhurt. Imagination
-cannot paint anything more horrid than the roads of Westphalia, of
-Holland (beyond Utrecht), of Hanover, to the gates of Zell. But let me
-continue my recital from Osnabrück. I quitted that city last Monday at
-noon, and got to Diepenau by miracle almost next morning at daybreak. I
-would willingly have gone round to Minden, or to Nienburg, two cities
-situate on the river Weser, and at each of which there are bridges across
-it--but this was impracticable. The river was so amazingly swelled by
-the deluges of rain as to exceed all belief, and absolutely to cut off
-all communication, in or out, with these two places. I had, therefore,
-no partie left, but that of going on straight to Stolzenau, putting my
-carriage into a boat, and crossing over at all events. I did so, and
-succeeded. I arrived safe on the English bank of the Weser, Thursday
-morning, after navigating more than a mile through fields and meadows,
-the hedges of which only began to appear above water. It put me in mind
-of Deucalion's deluge. Thence I had only 40 miles to Hanover. What
-signifies it to repeat to you that I expected a hundred and a hundred
-times to be lost! That I passed deep pieces of standing water, half a
-mile in length! That several times I believed myself gone, and thought
-never to see Zell alive! Here I am notwithstanding, unhurt, undismayed,
-and ready to meet these dangers, if commanded, all again! Nor think that
-I am unmindful of, or ungrateful to that Being, who protects the race
-of man, and preserves us in every situation! I am not so wanting in the
-noblest feeling of the human bosom; but as I feel, so I express myself
-about it in very different language from you. I got here Friday night
-by the kind assistance of the moon, without which 'twould indeed have
-been an absolute impossibility ever to have got here in the mire; since
-'twould be neither more nor less than madness and frenzy to attempt to
-travel during a dark night. You may depend on it, my dear sir, I am not
-desired to do this, and never shall, till the roads mend. As to the
-rest, I know your parental anxiety will be all awake for me, and will
-make you tremble for my preservation; but fear nothing. I have a noble
-presentiment which never quits me, of future elevation! Some protecting
-genius shelters me from danger, and averts every fatal accident from me.
-I have no doubt I shall return to you bye-and-bye,--I cannot promise you
-a richer man, but I can promise you, a wiser man. What passed last night
-I cannot now mention to you. I may not trust to this uncertain, dangerous
-conveyance. It is enough to say that all goes more than well, that I am
-approved by my queen, that I am promised to share in the future happy
-prospects, if we can realise them. That be my endeavour! I have devoted
-myself to the enterprise. I have passed the Rubicon, and won't retreat.
-If ever virtuous glory had power to animate a young man's bosom, it ought
-to do so in mine!
-
-This night, or rather early in the morning, by moonlight, I begin my
-journey. It is only about 80 English miles; but I don't expect to reach
-Hamburgh before Wednesday noon, as I shall only travel during that part
-of the night when the moon lights me on the way. You may depend, my
-dearest father, that I will indeed take every care of my safety possible.
-They implore me here to do so. _She_ has laid her commands on me to be
-careful of myself, for _Her_ sake. What more forcible motives can I have?
-I half think I shall go on to Copenhagen; but 'tis dangerous, and that
-point's not settled yet. At Hamburgh I shall know all. Hitherto, all
-success attends us: nor do I doubt that it will attend us to the end.
-"'Tis not in mortals to command success:" we must do our utmost, and
-leave the rest to fate.
-
-And now, my best, kindest, dearest father, I bid you and my mother
-farewell! I am just going to set out for Hamburgh. Pray let me hear of
-her story from you: 'twill be very inspiriting to a poor traveller, amid
-the horrid roads of Westphalia and Lower Saxony.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 6.
-
- HAMBURGH, _Feb._ 23, 1775.
-
-I have received no money yet in repayment of the £100 I spent last
-autumn; but _She_ has not only promised me, in the fullest terms, that
-sum, but superior marks of her bounty, if all goes well. We must have
-patience, my dear father: time will do more for us than anything else.
-Hanbury wonders what the deuce has brought me here. I told him I came by
-Osnabrück and Bremen, and said not a word of Zell or Hanover. "You're a
-wicked fellow," he said to me. "You've done some mischief: some man's
-wife, now, or some lady or other. You had better be candid, and tell me,
-for your father will, I am sure, bye-and-bye." 'Twas just the pretext I
-intended to screen myself with. So I told him that a little affair of
-gallantry, harmless enough, had induced me just now to travel, and that
-my intentions were for Berlin. _That_ has satisfied him.
-
-Now, to continue my narrative. I wrote you from Zell. I left it on Sunday
-at midnight, and arrived, though through a thousand hair-breadth escapes,
-at this place, the day before yesterday. The country is an ocean. I
-passed through towns so completely environed, as to resemble an island,
-amid a vast lake or sea. Guess, then, what the roads must be. Surely, I
-am protected from any harm in an extraordinary manner. I passed through
-waters so deep, so long, so broad, that 'twas not in human nature to be
-quite unmoved. I passed the Elbe very safely, about 20 miles higher up
-than Hamburgh. 'Tis very, very happy, sir, yet here; for the rains have
-begun afresh, and 'twill be impossible to travel for some time in these
-countries. Here are not less than a dozen gentlemen now in Hamburgh, who
-do not dare, though pressed by their affairs, to set out for Holland
-and France. All the danger which threatened us, is, however, over: aye,
-I believe I shan't quit this city this four weeks or more, and then
-the spring will have mended the face of things. I have seen the Danish
-nobleman to whom I am sent. To-morrow we shall have a long interview.
-Then, as I can write with more certainty, I'll finish this letter.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Feb._ 24.
-
-At present, my dear sir, I am a little more in the light than I was
-yesterday. I shall not assuredly be sent to Copenhagen, but remain here
-at least 14 or 16 days, as a messenger is sent with what I brought. What
-will be done in consequence I can't yet say; and if I could, cannot
-communicate to you by this conveyance. Some few weeks are requisite to
-ripen matters. I am promised on all hands to have my fortune made if we
-succeed: but, as Hamlet says, there's the rub! Meanwhile, they supply
-me with money for all my expenses; so, at the worst, I am taken off
-your hands for the present. Even that is somewhat, you must allow. My
-expectations are neither languid nor sanguine. If they succeed, _She_
-neither can nor will forget me. If they fail, _She_ won't have it in her
-power. That's exactly the case! So, I repeat, patience! The post which
-ought to have arrived to-day from England is not come. No wonder, when
-the rains continue, and all the country is deluged with water. I am happy
-to find I shall have 15 days' respite from such perilous journeys.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 7.
-
- LONDON, 7_th April_, 1775.
-
-As the Baron de Lichtenstein had left orders for me to wait on the
-Hanoverian Envoy with what letters I might have for his Majesty, I waited
-on him this morning. He received me with distinguished politeness. I gave
-him three letters; one from the queen, one from the Danish nobility,
-and a third from myself; all addressed to the king. He said he had
-received his orders to forward them instantly to the queen's palace to
-his Majesty, which he would not delay one moment. So, I suppose, in the
-course of 4 or 6 days I shall receive some orders or message from _Him_.
-'Tis a most delicate and difficult affair in which they have engaged me;
-but, as I exactly and minutely know my instructions, and the genius of
-the party, I fear nothing; but, on the contrary, am conscious of being
-able so to act, as to approve myself to those who have honoured me by so
-noble a deputation. As soon as I know anything, I shan't fail to inform
-you; but I shan't be surprised if I should be sent back again to Germany
-in less than 12 or 14 days. Yet I know nothing, and can draw no certain
-inferences at present. All depends on his Majesty's replies and pleasure.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 8.
-
- JERMYN STREET, _April_ 11, 1775.
-
-I would willingly give you a little light into the exact situation I am
-in, and the views I have at this time. The nobility who sent me back
-this second time to represent their requests, and notify their desires
-to his Majesty, all men of the highest rank and eminence in Denmark and
-Holstein, but being at present in a species of exile, unpensioned and
-unofficed, were by no means capable of raising a large sum of money, or
-supplying me with anything beyond the "de quoi vivre." They only give me
-600 ducats, or near £300 per an.:--I mean, after that proportion, during
-my stay in England as their agent or envoy. It is not from them--I mean
-strictly, and in their own persons--that my reward must ultimately come.
-It is from her Majesty the queen. If she returns to her kingdom, she
-can highly honour and reward me, herself. If she does not, she can yet
-recommend me so powerfully to her brother, that I shall be at least in
-some manner or way taken care of. I do not account the money they give
-me to procure bread and wine, while employed in their immediate service,
-as in the minutest degree rewarding me. Neither do _they_ esteem it so.
-Fond as I am of travelling, I am not desirous of repassing the circle
-of Westphalia, at the continual hazard of my life and limbs; nor would
-I do it in any cause less honourable, less noble, than that of seeing a
-young and charming princess, whose graciousness and condescension have
-attached me more to her, than any hopes of interest or even ambition.
-Whether his Majesty rejects or consents to their request, alters not in
-any degree the intentions of the party. His consent will accelerate the
-blow; his refusal may retard, but cannot, never will change the design.
-They ordered me to tell _Her_ Majesty--and I did tell her so--that if
-the executioner should strike off ten heads, or if the plague should
-destroy as many more--enough would still remain alive to reseat her on
-the throne, and doubted not to effect it. The time when cannot be fixed.
-It must depend on many circumstances.
-
-Her Majesty has written to the king, particularly requesting him, as the
-nobility are poor, and cannot allow me much, to make me some genteel
-present while in England--not as any reward to me, but to lighten their
-burden. Whether he will, however, comply with this request, I very much
-question. If I hear nothing in 8 or 10 days, I shall write to her Majesty
-and the nobility, and request them to send more minute and precise
-commands how to proceed. But surely I shall hear from the king in some
-way or other within that time; at least, I can't but apprehend so.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 9.
-
-_April_ 10, 1775.
-
-I sent the three letters to his Majesty last Friday. I've yet heard
-nothing in answer. If I hear nothing in ten days from this time, I shall
-then write to two of the nobility, and likewise to the queen (for she
-expressly and personally enjoined me to write to Herself, and to address
-all my letters immediately to her). This gracious and condescending
-permission I won't fail to profit by. If his Majesty sees me, and gives
-me a favourable answer to the request made him, I think, I believe, and
-imagine, he will send me instantly back with it to Zell and Hamburgh.
-Nay, the Queen has even requested him in her letter, in that case, to
-honour me with some employ, or charge me with some ostensible message
-or commission, to hide my real and actual errand. Her Majesty, in the
-last interview I had with her at midnight, in an apartment of the castle
-of Zell, where I was brought disguised, was most graciously pleased to
-assure me that it was not only on account of my services that she would
-endeavour to reward me, but that she was even _personally_ attached to
-a man who would have rushed on certain death, to have had the glory of
-sacrificing his life at such a shrine.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 10.
-
- COCOA TREE, PALL MALL, _April_ 14, 1775.
-
-I have finished my packet for Germany to the nobility, but I don't write
-to her Majesty till Tuesday next, as 'tis not impossible I may hear from
-his Majesty in or within that time. My motive for not quitting town
-before next Sunday se'nnight is, that I would wait a decent, proper time,
-in expectation of an answer, message, or order from the king, who may
-be hindered by business, &c., and who would, doubtless, think me very
-inattentive to the queen's concerns, and my so important commission, if
-I ran away in a week after my arrival to visit my friends, regardless of
-him or his reply. Even if I hear not a word, direct or indirect, yet,
-when I leave London, I shall put into the Hanoverian Envoy's hand a few
-lines, which, if his Majesty should send for me, or ask after me, during
-my absence, he will, in that case, send or deliver to his Majesty. What I
-shall say will be to this purport:--
-
-Sir,--Not having received any message from your Majesty, and not
-having seen my father or friends these eighteen months, and not being
-immediately wanted in London on account of my commission, I have presumed
-to leave town; but am ready at a moment's notice, and the signification
-of your Majesty's pleasure, to be again in London with all possible
-expedition.
-
-This I shall give myself to the Hanoverian Envoy, and request him to give
-me a line to Bristol, the instant he receives any message respecting
-me from his Majesty, as, if wanted, I will, and shall hold myself in
-readiness, to return to town without delay. This conduct will, I think,
-obviate any censure or disapproval.
-
-My stay, as I said yesterday, won't, I believe, exceed, if it reaches,
-three weeks, as I expect within that time from my quitting London,
-answers to my letters to Hamburgh and Zell, which will require my return
-to town. I may even have letters sooner, so important as to keep me
-here, or necessitate me, if at Bristol, to return directly; but I think
-I shall have none sent; though, truly, I can't say. It depends on the
-course of events in Denmark and Germany.
-
-I think the king won't see me first or last, as envoy from the queen and
-nobility; but I hope, that is, I half hope, that he'll, notwithstanding,
-pay some sort of attention to her Majesty's recommendation of me, and
-somehow or other, perhaps serve me, or employ me, or reward me--but yet I
-doubt much even of that. If my fortune depended on the queen's goodness
-and gratitude (for I have served her, and will with my life, if she bid
-me), my life upon it, she would not leave me unprovided for. But she can
-do nothing. Even if she should be restored, yet 'tis the king of England
-must employ me. I neither could nor would profit by the Danish Majesty's
-service. But we must leave all that to time. I expect nothing, nothing at
-all; but I may have great things done for me. The latter won't give me
-one moment's pain, the former not an hour's exultation. I have told you I
-am in _omnia paratus_. Death or a ribbon are to me the same.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 11.
-
- JERMYN STREET, _May_ 19, 1775.
-
-Imagine, my dear father, the shock I have received on hearing this
-moment, on my arrival here, that the Queen of Denmark is dead. I am wrapt
-in horror, sorrow, and consternation. I went to St. James's Coffee House,
-where Lord Hertford confirmed to me the sad news. A purple fever carried
-her off. The courier arrived yesterday, late at night. His Majesty is
-said to be much hurt by this so unexpected a blow. No doubt remains of
-its unhappy authenticity. As to me, indeed, I feel as I ought, the loss I
-sustain by her Majesty's death. I was even attached to her, and interest
-conspires in the nobler emotions to make me weep at the funeral of so
-young, so amiable, so unhappy a queen. What will be the consequences
-to me I can't say exactly. That she should die at this critical time,
-at the very moment, when she would, no doubt, have recommended me so
-strongly to the king, is one of those events which may overcome a temper
-more steady and uniform than mine.
-
-No wonder now that I have no answer to the long letter which I addressed
-to her three or four weeks ago, and which she graciously assured me at
-my departure from Zell, she would certainly answer. My head sinks for a
-moment under this very unexpected stroke; but it is really sorrow, more
-than the mean consideration of self loss, that bend it down. True, I
-have lost my patroness, my royal mistress; but, I have a hundred times
-told you, that no accidents of fortune can permanently stagger me. I
-am prepared to live or die; to be prosperous, or to stem the tide of
-adversity--yet, I confess it lies heavy at my heart. I must have done.
-
-To-morrow I'll write more, be assured. Don't you be hurt, my dear father
-at this news! Fear not for me. I can't be depressed. His Majesty may yet
-patronise me; nay, I fear not that he will do it. My spirit is unbroken,
-and ten times defeated I shall rally, and conquer in the end.
-
-Good night! I weep for the poor departed queen. Little did I think this,
-when she so kindly bade me adieu, not two months since, in her library
-at midnight. I remember her parting words, her look. She held the door a
-moment in her hand before she went out. But I did not see, I did not know
-that death followed her step, and shut the door for ever between her and
-me.
-
-P.S.--Lord Lumley (Lord Harborough's son) told me 'tis believed the queen
-was poisoned.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 12.
-
-I have this very moment received a mournful letter from Baron de
-Seckendorf, from Zell. I join my tears to his, on the loss of our royal
-mistress, the gracious and amiable deceased queen. He says, the Baron
-de Lichtenstein pledges himself that I shall be at least reimbursed
-my expenses from his Majesty here. He mentions no circumstances of her
-Majesty, the queen's death. He was too much oppressed with sorrow. Depend
-on it, that in the end some notice from the throne will be taken of me.
-It must be so, I think.
-
-No letter yet from the poor, miserable, thunderstruck nobility at
-Hamburgh.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 13.
-
- LONDON, _May_ 26, 1775.
-
-I have written, finished, sealed up, and put in the post this evening,
-three very particular and minute letters. One to the Baron de
-Lichtenstein, requesting him to recommend me to his Majesty, which I know
-he will do, and which will be almost as effectual as the deceased queen's
-recommendation. A second to Baron de Seckendorf, answering his letter
-to me, and desiring him to strengthen my request made to Lichtenstein.
-This, I know likewise, he'll do most cheerfully. I have also desired
-him to send me the particulars of her Majesty's illness and death. The
-third letter, and longest, is to the Danish nobility at Hamburgh. You may
-almost divine its general meaning and contents. I condole with them on
-our horrid loss in the dear departed queen: inform them I have written to
-Lichtenstein, to the end that he may do his utmost, and what she would
-have done, if she had only lived a few days longer, with his Britannic
-Majesty. I offer them my further offices, if they have anything to employ
-me in. I request the continuance of their friendship, and to hear from
-them soon. This is, in general terms, the substance of my letter.
-
-I allow, my dear father, that I am generally too sanguine in my
-expectations, too enthusiastic and lively in my ideas and descriptions;
-but yet remember I predict it--something must, and will yet be done
-effectual for me, by the Danish nobility and Baron de Lichtenstein. They
-are all conscious of and acquainted with my services; feeling satisfied
-of my zeal, capacity, and address, and extremely desirous of procuring
-me some reward, some sort of recompense for my dangers, fatigues, and
-endeavours. The Baron de Lichtenstein managed the whole affair, knows me,
-esteems me: knows her Majesty the queen's intentions of serving me with
-her brother: and, superadded to all this, he is vastly beloved by the
-king, who showed him a thousand marks of goodness when in England.
-
-Attend the answer to their letters: they will come in three or four
-weeks. I cannot, indeed, answer for his Majesty's conduct in consequence
-of their recommendations; nor could I, even if the queen had recommended
-me: but I think I may rely on their warm endeavours to procure me some
-notice or reward from his Majesty; though what may be, whether greater or
-smaller, must depend on his gracious pleasure.
-
-Undoubtedly, my dear sir, when I reflect on the so unexpected, so sudden,
-so critical death, of the poor, amiable, unhappy queen, I am covered with
-amazement, and own it is a lesson _never to depend on anything_. Could
-anything not actually done be surer? A young, gay, healthy woman, who had
-every appearance of long life, snatched away in four days, and buried ere
-we imagined she was ill. Probably, if I live to a hundred years, I shall
-never meet with another, so wondrous, so extraordinary an adventure,
-which is so incredible in its own nature, that I know not what to say to
-it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-No. 14.
-
- LONDON, _May_ 30, 1775.
-
-I have received, my very dear father, a long and mournful letter from
-the Baron de Bülow himself. You will see from it how ready the nobility
-are to do any and every thing to conduce to my interests: how sensible
-they are of my zeal, capacity, and unwearied fidelity in the execution
-of their commands. I have already named the service, the only service,
-they can do me. I mean that of requesting Baron de Lichtenstein to write
-very strenuously in my favour to his Majesty. I shall reply to-morrow
-or next day to this letter, and condole with them on our common, heavy,
-and irreparable loss, in the dear, departed queen, and reiterate to
-them my urgent request of being recommended to his Majesty, as the only
-recompense I desire or ask. There is no shadow of doubt that they will
-do their part. There is no doubt in nature of Lichtenstein's doing his;
-but as to what notice our royal master may be pleased to take of their
-recommendation, or how far he may be graciously disposed to extend his
-favour or notice to this, I cannot presume or pretend to say, but must
-leave to futurity to determine. That I shall be reimbursed seems clear;
-but that's nothing. I aspire much beyond any pecuniary reward. Even if
-his Majesty should not _now_ extend his munificence or protection to me,
-yet I am at least known to him by character and reputation. I have served
-without any reward his royal sister--I have claims--and some future time
-may give me opportunity to renew or make them good.
-
-[It may be added that the Danish nobility wrote a letter to George III.,
-in which they formally renounced and refused all repayment of the sums
-disbursed in the cause of the queen's restoration: which repayment was
-expressly stipulated by his Britannic Majesty, in the third article of
-the conditions which Mr. Wraxall carried over to Germany in February,
-1775. They only asked that their agent might be honourably rewarded and
-employed. But it was all of no avail.]
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX B.
-
-
-The first letter of the word is marked by that which is above, excepting
-in the case that it be lined under, when it signifies nothing (in itself).
-
-The second letter--count back from the letter you have written to that
-you would write, and mark the number or cypher.
-
-One writes likewise in the syllables and words; letters of the upper
-range with a line under, which _then_ marks nothing in itself; but you
-must begin from that to count the number following, which deciphers the
-true letter.
-
-Every letter which is not _lined_--(so)--marks that which is under.
-
-One writes at the end of every word one of those letters which signify
-nothing; and sometimes in the middle of a word put two of them, to render
-the cypher more difficult.
-
- 2 2 2
- l + 13 u + 1 b c ÷ 3 ÷ 2. p ÷ 11. + 13. φ ÷ 17 + 8 a
-
- + 2 ÷ 12 ×
-
- * * * * *
-
- 0 l ÷ 8 u l + 3 b p 3 a 1 + 3 ÷ z + 17 g 9 ÷ 7 + 4. ÿ i
-
- 1 c 1 + 15 + 3 x o z ÷ 6 + 14 φ ÷ z ÷ 1 z + 13 b. i 1 e l
-
- ÿ 6 c l c z zz o z p 1 s i l + 1 + 1z ÷ 4 ÷ 4 ÷ 4 f + 3 a l +
- ¯
- 3 x c 1 c z + 4 + ll ÷ 2 + 7 ÷ 5 + 10 k. n + z ÷ 1 g p 3
- ¯
- p l r ÷ l y x + 3 + z x c l + 14 g e l ÷ 7 ÷ 8 y p 3 a 1 +
-
- 3 + 10 ÷ l i z d + z h p l 9 + 5 + lz b a z + 4 + 10 x o
-
- 1 d + z g r + 5 ÷ z g 9 ÷ 7 u z ÷ z ÷ z h u l ÷ 5 + 8 +
- ¯ ¯¯¯
- 8 m ÷ 3 k r p 1 p 3 + 4 + 9 + 8 ÷ 4 + 8. o z ÷ 10 b r h g
- ¯
- + z ÷ 1z + l3 c l + 8 + 6 a l + 3 s f e l ÿ 9 1 + 7 + 6 ÷
- ¯
- z b c z ÷ z ÷ 3 0 3 + z + l + g + 1z d + z o 3 g e 1 i z c
-
- l h o z ÷ 6 f + 5 φ p 3 ÷ 1z : i 1 c l : d m ÷ 7 + l z i_ l +
-
- 2
- 9 ÷ 6 ÷ z k. c l + 6 φ d + z b i z c l + 13 + 1 y. a y e 1 c 1
-
- + 8 k (d + 10 + l ÷ 6 ÷ 4) y a z + 4 o 1 + z y u 1 ÷ 5 +
-
- 19 y x ÷ l x. d + z d ÷ z m ÷ 7 + 1z ÷ 6 ÷ z + lz h d +
- ¯
- l0 ÷ l + 6 ÷ z ÷ 1z. y o z + 3 + 3 ÷ 8 ÷ z o 1 + 4 p l.
-
- o z k d + 5 ÷ z + l3, + l0 + z e l + 3 y a z a z p z + l0
- ¯
- ÷ 11 y f y o 3 f ÷ l + 6 g n ÷ lz + 16 ÷ l + 4 + l0 g p
-
- 1 g o z p l g i l + l3 ÷ 3 ÷ 5 + 10 ÷ l4 x r ÷ l 0 3 + z
- ¯¯¯
- ÷ 3 x a z + 4 c l h d + z + 6 + 9 o l s p l g l ÷ 6 + l9 +
-
- 8 m g c l. 9 s x y e l b o 3 b s + l ÷ l4 ÷ z + 6 k o z a l ÷
-
- l g o 3 ÷ 4 ÷ z φ m ÷ 3. y (z k) d + l l n n ÷ 7 x i z f e 1 o
- ¯
- 3 o 1 ÷ z + 6 + l + 3 ÷ 8 + 5 ÷ l + 5 6 d i z + l n a l
- ¯¯¯
- + 7 ÷ 4 + 8 s a z + 4 o l + z y. z + l0 ÷ 7 ÷ l9 ÷ z u
-
- l ÷ 5 p z + l φ + 3 ÷ 5 c z y. r ÷ l + 6 ÷ 3 x o z c l o 3
- ¯¯¯
- b u l + 1l + 9 + 8 k + 9 d + 1 t z + 1. 9 s f + z + 6 ÷ z
- ¯
- y i z + l + 6 o 3. p l ÷ 5 ÷ 7 ÷ 1 + 5 g r + z ÷ lz + 1 c
-
- 1 p 3 ÷ lz g i l c l. 9 x ÷ 7 h + 6 ÷ z h c l + 8 + 8 ÷ 7 f
-
- + 6 + lz x s + l ÷ 4 + 9 ÷ 1 ÷ 5 c z x c z ÷ z ÷ 3 r y o
- ¯
- z + 4 a 1 + 3 k s + 5 ÷ z ÷ 3 + l b r ÷ l0 + l5. g p l +
- ¯
- z φ + l7 ÷ z d + z k n s o l g r p l p 3 y o z ÷ l0. r + z i 3
- ¯¯¯
- + 5 n o 1 ÷ 4 + lz c l k r ÷ 1 + 4 + l p l + 4. o z p l x
- ¯
- p 3 ÷ lz ÷ z c l i z + 7 + 4 ÷ l0 + 5 ÷ l x i l + l x +
-
- 6 ÷ 10 o z ÷ 6 + 14 φ ÷ z ÷ l z y i l c l. d m p l. + lz ÷
-
- 6 ÷ z g o z ÷ 6. 9 ÷ l6 + 1z ÷ 8 c z p l a l + 9 ÷ 6 g o l
-
- s + 6 p 3 a z + 4 ÷ l5 h 9 s e l ÷ z k p l f ÷ 3 s ÷ 9 o 3 x
- ¯ ¯
- u l + 3 + l4 + 7 h x r ÷ l + 6 p 3 y g ÷ 7 a z + 3 ÷ z
-
- ÷ 1 z g i l + 1 n + 3 ÷ l4 p 3 c z. d + z + 14. a z + 4 + 6
- ¯ ¯
- + lz ÷ 9 s p l r c l e l ÷ 5 + z ÷ lz o 3 o 3 + 3 o z + 3 o 3
- ¯¯¯ ¯¯¯
- + z ÷ z h o 3 + 1z + lz c l o 3. x o l d o l s 9 + l8 + 6 +
-
- 23 g c l d + 14 h y ÷ 8 9 ÷ l i l + l o 3 p 1 + 4 + l4 a l
- ¯ ¯¯¯
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-
- + z c l i z i 1 p 3 + 13. p l o l f e l c z ÷ l4 o 3 f h a z e l
-
- c l x o 3 o l o z h + z ÷ 8 b 9 ÷ l6 e l ÷ l h i z f e l o 3 h
-
- o 3 f e l c z c 1 i z o l p 3 c. l i z g p 3 o l c 1 i z k g o z p l u
-
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-
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-
- ÷ 4 x p l 9 l c z p 3 c 1. i l o l o 3 d p 3 c l c z o l f i z x o l
-
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-
- 9 f + 6 ÷ z c l c z x o z p l 4 l s ÷ l i z ÷ 8 s d ÷ z ÷ 6
-
- ÷ z ÷ l3 s o 3 o l h φ ÷ 8 9 f ÷ 5 + g h o z o 1 c l e z i l
-
- c l i z x i 1 f e l ÷ l + 1l p 3 g e l i z. n + z n ÷ 7 i z c z
-
- b g p l i 1 o l c l e l x p 1 p 3 p 3 o l 9 + 9 y p l e l r o z e l
-
- c z s + a 5. b o z c l i l o l f x i l + l x o l ÷ i z + 8 o l c l
-
- p 3.
-
-
- 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 1 1 2 3 2 1 2 2 3 2 3 2 4 2 3 4 2 5 4
- p a d i c u l m o p o n i t r a p o c e q u e f i t a r a n t i m a t
- a b c d e f g h i k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z a b c d e f g h i k
-
- 1 5 6 3 4 3 3 1 4 5 3 2 6. 2 6 3 7 4 2 3 7.
- b i x a n t e r v o k o m b o. s i c i n d i o.
- l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z. a b c d e f g h.
-
- g. h. v. w. y. z.
-
- |N. W.----|
-
- Lettre deux fois lignée ne signifié rien.
-
-
- The K. of England Mr. Garrick.
-
- The Queen C. Matilda Mrs. Yates.
-
- Lichtenstein
- Mr. Lug--n--st--n Mr. Woodward.
-
- Seckendorf
- Mr. S--k--d--rf Mr. Beard.
-
- Dieden
- Bn. D--d--n Mr. Powel.
-
- Bülow
- Bn. B--l--w Mr. Holland.
-
- Schimmelmann
- Bn. S--m--l--n Mr. Foote.
-
- Ld. North Mr. Mattocks.
-
- Mr. Delaval Mr. Shutter.
-
- Ahlefeldt
- Ct. A--f--t Mr. Reddish.
-
- Ld. Simpelton Mr. Clarck.
-
- Texier Mdle. Louise Bonneval.
-
- Bulow Anne Moulin.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX C.
-
-(_Correspondence of M. le Texier_).
-
-
-No. 1.
-
- DEAR SIR,
-
-Having had nothing material to communicate to you since your departure
-from hence, I would not trouble you with my letters till I did hear from
-you, in consequence of our agreement, and now I find myself honoured with
-your's of the 22nd November and 5th December; both which, for reason
-of the early frost, and constant easterly wind, I did not receive but
-lately, and at a short distance from one another. I congratulate you very
-heartily upon the shortness of your passage, and happy arrival in London,
-and beg you'll accept of my sincere thanks for the friendly expressions
-of your letters, and the intelligence you are so obliging to impart to
-me. I make not the least doubt but you'll be able to employ your time a
-great deal better, and enjoy quite other pleasures in that great world,
-where you must almost be lost in, than you did in our little trading
-town of Hambro'. The inclosed letters which you transmitted to me, have
-been deliver'd according to your direction. You'll certainly hear from
-Mr. Holland directly. Mr. and Mrs. Matthiessen and their family, have
-often enquired for you, are verry glad of the intelligence I gave them
-from you, and that they may expect to see you, perhaps, in a short time,
-back again in those quarters, and do return their best compliments to
-you. I am glad to hear that Garrick approves of the new play that is
-intended to be performed; but cannot help wondering at the same time of
-his backwardness of concurring more effectually in its execution; but
-this may perhaps comme in time, when he has more particularly digested
-the plan, and seen the first actors in motion. You don't tell me of
-having seen him yourself: this is, however, what I could have wished,
-as you are by far better able than Woodward to give him a clear idea of
-the whole, and remove such objection as he could have to it. I have not
-yet heard from Beard, tho' I suppose, he must be in correspondence with
-Holland. As to Foote, I had no letters from him, and none did I expect;
-as we agreed, before his departure, that he should not write, but when
-circumstances did absolutely require it. Do you think that Shutter will
-have orders to advance the performance of this play on the stage he is at
-this time engaged on, or that Garrick will, perhaps, chose somebody else
-for having the management of it there. I cannot tell you anything more on
-this subject till things are come to maturity. Meanwhile, if you hear of
-something which you think will be worth transmitting, I'll be obliged to
-you for the communication of it. Our German plays are interrupted till
-the beginning of February, and the Cristmass vacancies won't allow the
-balls at the Boselhoff till the latter end of this month. Last week I
-heard at a verry grand concert the famous violin player, Lolly, who is,
-perhaps, the greatest virtuoso on that instrument at present in Europe.
-It is said he'll visit Engeland, where, I dare say, he'll be as much
-admired as in the other places he has been. You don't tell me how you
-deal with pleasures and amusements; for my part, my dear friend, I catch
-as much of the sweets of life as time and circumstances will alow. You
-must take up with this dish of broken English as it is, and excuse the
-inaccuracies of it, provided only you are able to understand it. Let me
-hear from you, and believe me, at all events, your devoted humble servant
-and friend.
-
- _From Mons. T----r, written from Hamburgh,
- about the beginning of January_, 1775.
-
-
-No. 2.
-
- MY DEAR FRIEND,
-
-I have received consecutively, and very safely, four of your letters. The
-first from Z----, the second from Rotterdam, and the two last ones, from
-yᵉ 14th and 21st instant, from London, which give me a circumstantial
-account of your journey, and your transactions after your arrival at
-the last mention'd place. I should have answer'd them by the post of
-last Friday, if it had not been for the absence of Holland, who having
-been down to his estates for about 12 days, and beeing only return'd
-yesterday, it was only this morning I could communicate to him the
-contents of your last two letters. He is extremely satisfied; as, indeed,
-he ought to be, of the activity, the zeal, skil, and affection, with
-which you embrac'd and acted in the cause of Mrs. Yates, and pitty's
-only that all the trouble you have taken, and our endeavours, cannot
-prevail on Garrick's obstinacy to act his part in the _manner_ the
-other actors desire it, in the new intended play, which may possibly be
-deficient in succes, in case he should persist in his refusal. As we
-have no intelligence as yet from Woodward or Beard (which we expect,
-however, every moment), we can form no judgment about his intentions,
-and therefore we are as little able to give you a cathegorical answer
-upon your question, whether we can make any further use of your services,
-or not? and, besides having no true account of the state of affairs
-from the stage where the play is to be acted. If the comedians have not
-been interrupted, if they know their parts, if the stage is adapted, if
-the machinery's are readdy, &c., of which I doubt very much. You must
-remember that at your departure things did not look very bright, and
-that we were in apprehension of some disagreable news. Tho' we don't
-know the circumstances of what has happened there, and tho' the pot is
-not entirely _crack'd_, or has not _boil'd over_, as a certain person
-express'd itself, something must, however, have been the matter, and
-discomposed for the present the arrangements that were made, as _Mr.
-Reddish_, and two others of the first actors, have left the playhouse,
-and undertook a journey during this summer to the south of Germany,
-till the suspicions that probably have been raised are dissipated, and
-the difficulty's they met with have been removed, which we hope will be
-towards the winter, when they will all meet again on the stage to make a
-fresh rehearsal, of which the success may be less doubtfull, if Garrick
-will second them as he ought. But be the case what it will, we expect
-every day, and certainly in the course of next weak, ours and your good
-friend, _Mr. Foote_, who will certainly relieve us of our anxiety, clear
-our doubts, and lead us in the way to give you a clear and positive
-decision. Till then, my dear, good friend, you must be quiet, and remain
-where you are without taking any resolution (exept on Garrick's immediate
-orders). This is what Holland entreats you to mind till he has explained
-himself with Foote, which, as you see, will be very soon, assuring you
-upon his honour, that his first business will be to settle with him in
-what manner to employ you, and then to give you immediate and positive
-resolution if you are to continue in the same station, and send you a
-draught at the same time; or in case you were at present of no use for
-to bring the play on the stage, to entreat Mrs. Yates (who is already
-acquainted with your ability's), in the strongest terms to recommand
-you to her friend, Mr. Garrick. This, my dear friend, is all I can, and
-am commissioned to say to you upon this account. I hope my next will be
-more satisfactory to you; meanwhile be assured that Holland, as well as
-myself, we have the highest and best grounded esteem for your noble and
-disinterested way of thinking, and whatever be the event, we shall always
-congratulate ourself of having made your acquaintance, and cemented your
-friendship.
-
-Holland begs to be excused in not writing to you himself, as he is
-extremely fatigued of his journey, and troubled with a vast deal of
-business which he found at his return; he begs you'll be so good to
-secure for him the chariot you have bespoke, for which he'll send you
-the draught you require. I am extremely satisfied with the manner in
-which you communicate to me what intelligence you give us, and which I
-understand perfectly. I wish mine were as intelligible to you, which
-however I doubt of. Be so good, my dear friend, to continue in the
-same way, but observe at the same time, when you make the cover to Mr.
-Matthiessen, to lay a small bit of paper between the seal of my letters
-and Matthiessen cover, as one of them stuck so fast to it that it was
-tore to pieces in the opening of it, but happily there remained just so
-much of the seal that it could not be opened.
-
-I'll be oblig'd to you for the books; my mother, brothers, sister, and
-her children, make their best compliments to you, and wish you health and
-pleasure. So do I do likewyse, my dear friend; farewell, and remember
-your devoted friend and servant.
-
-By my next you shall have more, and perhaps a little tit-tat, which time
-won't allow at present.
-
-_The_ 2_nd of May_, 1775.
-
-
-No. 3.
-
- MY DEAR FRIEND,
-
-I received in due time your favour of yᵉ 13th of June, which was soon
-followed by that of yᵉ second of the same month, accompanying a parcel
-of silk, and four books, three of which I delivered according to your
-orders, and kept the fourth to myself, as you desir'd me. Be so good
-to receive my most gratefull acknowledgement for this mark of your
-friendship. I have not yet found time sufficient to go through it with
-due attention, but I'll reserve the perusal of it for those hours which
-free from business I can devote to friendship, and shall look upon it as
-a conversation which cannot but afford me a great deal of pleasure, as
-anything that comes from the author will always be dear to me. When I
-deliver'd the silk to Holland, I communicated to him the contents of your
-first of the 13th of June; he join'd with me in his commendations with
-regard to your noble and disinterested way of thinking, and acknowledged
-the justness of your expectations with respect to Garrick. He assures
-you of the continuation of his friendship and esteem, and desir'd me to
-tell you that he made repeated applications to _Beard_, for insisting
-with _Woodward_ to recommand you to Garrick's remembrance; so that I
-don't doubt but you'll have heard by this time of something beeing done
-for you, the news of which will be most heartily wellcome to me, you may
-be assured. Foote has left this place some time ago; but he is soon to
-return, in order to be married to a young and amiable lady, one of the
-first family's of this country. He jointly with _Holland_, is in hopes
-that you have burnt all the letters and papers which you have received
-from the latter one, as well as from Miss Bonneval, respecting the
-unhappy affair that was the object of your correspondence; and they beg
-that you'll be so kind to confirm them in these hopes, for their future
-quiet and tranquillity. I expect, my dear friend, not only to receive of
-your letters, before you leave England, but even during your new intended
-travels, when you'll be at leisure, and your thaughts will bring you back
-to this place, where you have undoubtedly left a great many friends, some
-of which are strongly attach'd to you, and more particularly Bonneval's
-family. They all of them beg that you'll accept of their best compliments
-and hearty wishes for your wellfare.
-
-It is with astonishment and sorrow I have read in the several papers the
-account of the bloody scene exhibited in America. Is it possible that
-the spirit of _rebellion_ (for as far as I am able to judge I cannot
-call it _liberty_) has raised their madness so far as to make them run
-blindly to their destruction? for what will be the consequence of all
-this? a shocking bloodshed between children of the same mother, a total
-destruction of their property, and the utter ruin of all commerce and
-trade in those parts of the world, while a storm is preparing at this
-side of the water, which may perhaps strike a fatal blow to Old England,
-without being able to prevent it. What would become of Brittain's
-grandeur, if this great Spanish Armada was intended on your coasts, or on
-some of your American settlements? This opinion gains generally ground
-here, and few people think this undertaking to be only for the barbarian
-coast. But what is still more astonishing, is the spirit of division
-that prevails in the metropolis, and the outrageous conduct of part of
-its citisents; nothing remains but they should likewise take up arms, in
-order to render the scene compleat. I pitty with all my heart those who
-are at the helm; and from my peaceable hermitage (which you have seen),
-when stretched upon my sopha, I cannot help smiling at the reading of
-your brilliant regattas and sommer diversions, amidst all those clamours,
-and while half of the nation is under arms, or preparing themselves to be
-so. But enough of this. _Comment vont les plaisirs_, and _les amours_? I
-wish you success in both. God bless you, my dear sir; remember him who is
-very cordialy your devoted humble friend and servant.
-
-_July the_ 18_th. N.B._ 1775.
-
-
-No. 4.
-
- MY DEAR SIR,
-
-It was not but yesterday I receiv'd your's of yᵉ 21st July, as we had
-then two mails due from England, and much about the same time, or a
-little after you have dispatch'd it, my last (which was wrote about the
-middle of the same month) must have come to your hands, if it did come at
-all, for I cannot account for its delay, having desired my sister to have
-it put in the Post Office. I gave you an account in it of the several
-applications Holland had made on your behalf to Beard, relative to
-Woodward's putting Garrick in mind of you; the assurances we had got from
-Beard of his having acted according to his promiss, and the ignorance
-we then were in of its success. I have only the time to acquaint you
-now, that I saw Holland this morning, who told me of Beard mentioning
-in a letter he had lately receiv'd, that he hoped to have in a few days
-something to communicate to him about you. That he, Holland, is expecting
-this intelligence with the greatest impatience, and that as soon as he
-shall have received it, he will immediately do himself the pleasure of
-writing to you, in order to acquaint you of it. But, my dear sir, how
-are we to act in directing our letters to you? as I see it is your
-intention to set out from England after the 14th of this month. At all
-events I'll direct what I have to send to you at the direction you left
-me at your departure, and which I make use of now, in the supposition
-that you'll leave such orders that anything will be transmitted to you.
-I have likewise to acknowledge the favour of your former, including
-a column of the newspapers, for the communication of which I am most
-sincerely oblig'd to you. I find this account wrote with elegance, and
-that warm interest the subject requir'd, and don't doubt it will answer
-the intention it was design'd with. You see, my dearest friend, that our
-ignorance is the sole cause of our silence, and thus I hope you'll be
-persuaded to pardon it, and not adscribe it to ingratitude and oblivion,
-which are sentiments that will never find entrance in our breast; but,
-on the contrary, be assured that we wish nothing with more ardor then to
-see you happy, and to see you rewarded, as you deserve it, by someboddy
-else, it beeing not in our power to effect it, but by our repeated
-intercessions, which I still hope will have their effect. I must finish
-here, in order not to miss the time of the post office. Thus farewell,
-and remember him who is with the sincerest affection your devoted friend
-and servant.
-
-_August the_ 4_th_, 1775.
-
-
-No. 5.
-
- _July the_ 16_th_, 1776.
-
-Not only, my dearest friend, several little excursions in the country,
-but also our friend Holland's absence, who did return only since a couple
-of days, have prevented my answering immediately the very kind letter
-which you favour'd me with on the 18th of January. It gave me an uncommon
-pleasure to hear of you, after so long a silence, which I could very well
-account for, as I knew that you was again on a visit on the Continent.
-I understand that you did not follow your first plan of crossing the
-Pirrenean mountains, and going to the south of Spain, for else you would
-have received a letter which I directed to you at Madrid, _a la poste
-restante_, in September last, as we did agree. If it be lost, there is
-no great news in it, as it contain'd nothing material. It was only _une
-lettre d'amitié_, and an enquiry after your health, with a short account
-of our doing here in the usual stile.
-
-I give you my most sincere thanks for the sentiments of friendship and
-affection which you honour me with; be assured of the most hearty return,
-not only from me, but likewise from our friends Holland and Foote, and
-of the gratefull sense we do all retain of your noble and generous
-behaviour. Believe me, dear sir, that it gives us the greatest pain and
-sorrow to hear that nothing has been done as yet on your behalf from
-Garrick's side, notwithstanding Beard's strong recommendations thro'
-Woodward's channel. Beard expresses his astounishment at it as well as
-Holland, and we are entirely at a loss how to account for Garrick's
-neglect, in not making you a return so justly deserved, and which
-can come from _him_ only. I do not doubt a moment of Woodward having
-made all possible applications, and in that supposition, the critical
-circumstances of Garrick's own affairs, and the hurry and perplexity he
-has been in, can alone account for his behaviour. Holland desires that
-you will be assured of his esteem, of his attachment and friendship
-for you, and how much he wishes to convince you of those sentiments,
-nothing will be able to efface them out of his heart; and the same I dare
-answer for Foote, whom we have not seen since last summer, but who is
-expected here at the beginning of August. As all the hopes of renewing
-a theatrical entertainement are entirely dropt, you may easily imagin
-that Beard and Holland do but seldom correspond together, and yet only on
-friendly terms.
-
-I wish that the presenting the prints may open the way of helping you to
-Garrick's remembrance, and if means could be found out of being presented
-to him yourself, this, I dare say, would be of more effect.
-
-I paid for the hire of the carriage at Utrecht according to your desire.
-Caillé had an opportunity to send hither a person of his acquaintance,
-to whom I paid the money, and who gave me a receipt for it, so that this
-point is settled.
-
-I was extremely welcome to my mother and brother, and likewyse to Mr.
-M----'s family, with the news of having received a letter from you. They
-were greatly rejoiced at hearing you were well, and safe return from
-your late excursion. They beg you'll accept of the return of their best
-compliments, and hearty sallutation to you. Mrs. S---- had the misfortune
-of loosing again two childern last winter, but three weeks ago she was
-brought to bed of a boy; this does partly make up the former loss.
-However, her constitution is much hurt, and she enjoys but very little
-health.--I would be much obliged to you, if at your leisure moments you
-would favour me with a short account of your late excursion, and how you
-was pleased in that tour; for such an attentive traveller as you are, I
-dare say nothing will have escaped your inspection. I must acknowledge
-to you that I am tired with the sedentary life I lead here, and the
-insignificant business I am employ'd in; and between you and me I have
-made application of beeing sent to England; in how far I shall be able
-to succeed in this attempt I cannot tel, however, I have some hopes. How
-happy should I be if I could have the pleasure of meeting you in England,
-and embracing him whom I esteem and love with all my heart. This, my dear
-sir, you may be assured of from your affectionate and most devoted friend
-and servant.
-
-_From Mons. Le T---- to N. W. W._
-
-
-No. 6.
-
- _Sept. yᵉ_ 5th_, 1776.
-
-You must pardon me, my dear friend, if I deferred returning an immediate
-answer to your kind letter of yᵉ 30th July. Holland's absence, and Foote
-not being at that time arrived, put it out of my power to give you a
-satisfactory one, before I had seen either of them. They are both here
-now, and have retain'd for you the same sentiments of friendship and
-esteem which you have impress'd them with at the beginning of our mutual
-acquaintance. They acknowledge the justice of your claim on their warmest
-interest and recommendation on your behalf. They were even beforehand in
-offering to renew them, and to do anything in their power which might be
-of further service to you; but they cannot help beeing surprised that
-all their wishes and join'd endeavours with Beard, have hitherto been
-unsuccessfull on that subject. How is it possible that Garrick, who
-makes pretention on feeling and sentiments, can be regardless to the
-services you intended him, and in which you have so effectually been
-employed? This strange behaviour is above their conception. However, as
-they are willing to account for this, more than seeming, neglect, on
-behalf of the hurry of business, and the many vexations he has labour'd
-under this year past, they hope that repeated application will be of
-better effect. Foote, you will remember, has never been in any direct
-intercourse with Beard or Woodward. But Holland not only accepted writing
-again in the strongest terms, but told me that having had some time ago a
-_rendez-vous_ with _Beard_, you took up great part of their conversation,
-in which he dwelt upon the absolute necessity that something ought to be
-done for you, and that they both would write to Woodward on that subject;
-so that you may be sure, my dear friend, if their goodwill can have any
-effect, and their recommendation any weight upon Garrick, you cannot,
-with the help of your friends in England, fail of being successful in
-your attempt to get a place, the intelligence of which will give me,
-as you may easily guess, the most complete satisfaction; and so I am
-positive it would also to Foote and Holland, who, I can assure you, do
-lament at each time that I do mention you to them, their incapacity of
-serving you according to their heart's desire, and do constantly express
-in the most distinguished expression, their high esteem for your personal
-quality's and noble way of thinking, and their perfect gratitude for your
-behaviour in general. Those sentiments they will certainly never part
-with; and they beg that you will do them the favour to continue that
-friendship for them, of which you have given them such uncontestable
-proofs; and give me leave, my dear friend, to join my request to theirs,
-that I may retain the same share in your remembrance.
-
-Mr. and Mrs. M----, and their family, are highly pleased, as well as my
-mother and brother, to hear of you; they desire that you'll be so good to
-accept of their best compliments. Mr. Mathias is very much obliged to you
-for your kind remembrance, wishes you a great deal of good, and gives his
-best salutes to you.
-
-I will be vastly obliged to you for the new production of your pen, which
-you are so good to promiss me. I wait for them with impatience, as they
-will in a manner make me amends for our separation, and let me enjoy your
-company, at least, in idea.
-
-I have but little hopes remaining of beeing successful in my application
-for a change in my situation. Tho' I do not give them up entirely for the
-future, I cannot flatter myself for the present of being so happy to make
-a trip to Albion, unless some unexpected events would open the way for it.
-
-I perceive that the last disagreable news from the North American
-Continent, have but little influence on the uninterrupted pleasures of
-your town. However, the success of the present civil war cannot fail of
-drawing the most serious consequences at their issue, and of bringing on
-a prodigious change in a great many fortunes. Well! but let them fight
-and quarrel as long as they please, I won't much trouble my head about
-it; but I will ever be ready to convince you that I am sincerely,
-
- My dear Sir,
- Your devoted friend and well-wisher.
-
-
-No. 7.
-
-I can now very easily account, my dear friend, for Beard's silence with
-regard to your last letter. His absence from his ordinary place of abode,
-is undoubtedly the only reason of your having been without any news from
-him since the latter end of June. He has made a tour to Saxony, where he
-intended staying two or three months, but would be back towards the end
-of this month; this is what I could learn from our friend Holland, who
-has likewise been a very long time without his letters (their litterary
-intercourse being now almost dropt). He thinks your letter cannot be
-lost, but supposes it has been left at Z----, or only been sent of
-late to him on his tour; so that you will have receiv'd now, or will
-probably in a short time, the answer you expected; meanwhile you may, my
-dear sir, make yourself very easy about the fate of your letter, which
-certainly cannot be lost. Surprising it is that all applications made
-on your behalf have hitherto been without effect; nevertheless, I am of
-opinion you must not give up the hope of success; a favourable moment
-will probably come, and Woodward will no doubt sease it to remind Garrick
-of your services. I cannot help having some apprehensions with regard
-to your intention, which you communicate to me in your last letter, of
-putting in order the anecdotes relative to Mrs. Yates, in a kind of
-memoirs; not, my dear sir, that I have the least doubt of your prudence
-and discretion; but you must know how easily an unforeseen accident may
-happen which can occasion the los of such a paper, which falling in
-other hands would certainly be published to the world, and what would
-be the consequence for those who have had any share in its contents? at
-least you will, no doubt, keep their names to yourself, and interwow the
-whole in such a manner, that it must remain untelligible to all those
-who are no knowing ones. I leave this to your caution, and we all depend
-upon your known prudence. Both Holland and Foote, who is return'd about
-a fortnight ago, where his business does call him in the winter time,
-desire that you'll be assured of their everlasting friendship and esteem.
-
-All your acquaintances here present their best compliments to you. There
-is since a couple of days a general rumor here of an approaching war.
-This will to all appearances occasion some more activity in trade, as
-well as in polliticks. Adieu, my dear friend; I wish you health and
-pleasure, and beg you will believe me very sincerly and faithfully, yours.
-
-_Nov. yᵉ_ 12_th_, 1776.
-
-
-No. 8.
-
-Yours, my dear friend, of yᵉ 26th Nov. and 5th Dec., arrived at one
-and the same day, as we had three English mails due, owing to the east
-wind that has constantly blown this long while; and as I have desired,
-once for all, that any letter which comes from you should remain at my
-mother's house till I come to fetch it in person; they were not delivered
-to me till the day before yesterday, so that you must not be surprised at
-having received no immediate answer to them.
-
-So agreeable your letters have hitherto been to me, so very deeply
-has the last one affected me. The intelligence you give me, and which
-accounts at the same time for the presentation of the memoirs in question
-to Garrick, has afflicted me beyond expression. You cannot, you must not
-doubt, my dearest friend, of the part I take in the most minutest thing
-that may interest your wellfare. How should I not feel for your concerns?
-but at the same time how great are you in my Eeyes, how great must you be
-in the Eeyes of those who are acquainted with your principles, with the
-motives that do lead you in this occasion? Be assured that if anything
-could add to the esteem which you have commanded from me, from Holland
-and Foote, it would be the disclosure you have now made. I do conceive
-how it could have hurt your pride with narrow-minded souls; but with
-us it cannot. Men of honour and feeling, like you, are much above the
-caprices of fortune, and I am assured that its inconsistencies cannot
-in any degree affect their way of thinking. We have too many proofs of
-your strickt honour, disinterestedness, and even self-denial, to harbour
-the least doubt of any change of sentiment on your side. Not indeed, be
-easy on that account. Far from disapproving your plan, I would be the
-first to advise it; so does Holland, so would Foote. Happy we would be
-if we had interest enough with Garrick to contribute to its success. You
-know, my dear friend, how deeply we are obliged to you, and how much we
-have wished to convince you of our gratitude; but, at the same time how
-unsuccessfull all our endeavours and applications have been. I approve
-much of your letting Woodward know of your intended plan; he must, and
-certainly will back it by his interest, and I hope that this will do at
-least. We have almost lost sight of him, and so likewise of Beard; I
-don't even know with certitude if he is returned, tho' I suppose he must
-be so at this time. Holland, who is very sickly, and has been so the
-whole winter, has not received any letters from him since his departure.
-Foote is return to the capital, as I told you, and will not visit our
-quarters before next summer.
-
-Do believe me, my dear friend, that I don't mind any loss of time or
-expence in our intercourse. I wish to hear from you; your letters are
-always wellcome to me, and give me a particular satisfaction. This will
-reach you by the new direction you have given me, and at the same time
-you'll receive two lines by the former way in order to acquaint you of
-it. Let me know by your first which of the two I shall keep for the
-future. All your friends here return their best compliments to you, and
-wish you well. So does he who is very sincerely and affectionately yours.
-
-_The_ 25_th Dec._, 1776.
-
-
-No. 9.
-
- MY DEAR SIR,
-
-It is a long time since I had any of your letters, and it will be near
-the same that I did not do myself the pleasure of writing to you. What is
-become of you since, and what has been the success of your application
-with Garrick? Those, my dear sir, are natural questions from the part of
-him that interests himself so warmly for you as I do. It would afford
-me the greatest pleasure if you could see the accomplishment of your
-desires. Mine did not succeed according to the hopes I had form'd. I
-have been obliged to relinquish the idea of beeing employed at London,
-having lately been nominated to the post of Resident at Dantzig, where
-I expect to be setled towards the end of this year; but first I'll
-be obliged to go to C----, and intend setting out next week thither.
-So, my dear friend, that if you do me the pleasure of giving me some
-news of your welfare, you wil be so good to direct them, during the
-remainder of this year, at our old direction, where I have given orders
-that your letters should be kept til my return. You'll however observe
-not to mention anything of the old topic in them, for fear of their
-miscarrying, and when I shal have reach'd my new destination, I'll give
-you another direction for the future, for I should be glad to cultivate
-our correspondence, and the friendship which has subsisted between us.
-Be assured, my dear friend, that where ever my fate may dispose of me,
-I shall desire the continuance of it, for him that is for ever with a
-sincere esteem, your devoted friend and servant.
-
-_The_ 16_th of Aug._, 1777.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX TO VOL. III.
-
-HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL.
-
-
-A.
-
- Aalborg, castle of, 145;
- Caroline Matilda, designated the countess of, imprisoned there, _ib._
-
- Aboe, lieutenant, groundless charges brought against, 107;
- biographical notices of, _ib._;
- how disposed of, 110, 112;
- his death, 112.
-
- Alexandra, Princess of Wales, the great grand-daughter of Prince
- Frederick of Denmark, 290.
-
- Altona, Mr. Wraxall's visit to, 176;
- crowded with the partisans of Queen Matilda, _ib._
-
- Ancher, Kofod, one of the commissioners who passed sentence on
- Struensee and Count Brandt, 61, 67;
- mercifully disposed, 104.
-
- Arnholdt, bailiff of Bramstedt, 31.
-
- Arnim, Herr von, minister of the King of Prussia, intercedes on
- behalf of Justiz-rath Struensee, 120.
-
- APPENDIX, containing extracts from the correspondence of Mr. Wraxall
- with his father, relative to the restoration of Caroline Matilda,
- 291 _et seq._
-
-
-B.
-
- Bang, counsellor, defends Count Brandt, 14.
-
- Berger, professor, employed in incommoding his Majesty, 2;
- groundless charges brought against, 109;
- how disposed of, 111, 112.
-
- Beringskjold, his political career, 271, 272;
- his conspiracy, and arrest, 273;
- his trial and imprisonment, 277, 278;
- his death, 278.
-
- Beringskjold, Frau von, her death, 277.
-
- Berkentin, Frau von, chief gouvernante to the prince royal, and the
- early patroness of Struensee, 78.
-
- Bernstorff, Peter Andreas, foreign affairs entrusted to, 279;
- privy councillor, 285, 288.
-
- Bodenhausen, von, the Hanoverian privy councillor, receives Queen
- Matilda at Stade, 157.
-
- Braëm, G. A., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, 61;
- and Count Brandt, 67.
-
- Bramstedt, bailiwick of, solicited by Count Brandt, 31;
- described, 32, _note_.
-
- Brandt, count Enevold, indictment of, 1;
- retrospect of his career and conduct, 3 _et seq._;
- his position at court, 3;
- the different charges against, 4, 8, 11;
- his assault on the king, 5;
- his presuming manners, 7;
- broke the fidelity due to his sovereign by being an accomplice
- with Struensee and the queen, 8;
- his neglect of duty, 9, 10;
- his joining Struensee in robbing the royal treasury, 11;
- injustice of the charges against, 14;
- defended by Counsellor Bang, _ib._;
- the different charges rebutted, 16 _et seq._;
- his character not affected by Struensee's forgery, 26;
- his Quixotism, 27;
- his letter to the judges, and petition to the king, 28;
- pleads his youth and eccentricity, 30;
- makes a modest request, 31;
- his punishment predetermined, 32;
- sentence on, promulgated, _ib._;
- the intimate friend of Struensee, 43;
- a close attendant on the king, _ib._;
- delivery of the sentence upon him, 62;
- the charges against him recapitulated, 63 _et seq._;
- his behaviour to the king, 63;
- assists Struensee in producing a misunderstanding, 64;
- obtains large sums from the royal treasury, _ib._;
- his assault and battery on the king, 65, 66;
- high treason thus committed, 67;
- his sentence, degradation from the dignity of count, and all
- other honours, his body to be quartered and exposed on the
- wheel, &c., 67;
- royal confirmation of the sentence, 67, 68;
- injustice of the sentence, and groundlessness of the charges, 68, 69;
- Reverdil's animadversions on the sentence, 69;
- his sentence announced to him by his defender Bang, 74;
- intercession of Owe Guldberg on his behalf, and the unfeeling
- treatment of the Queen Juliana Maria, 75;
- intercession of his mother and sister, 75;
- Struensee's letter to, 80;
- receives from Dean Hee the confirmation of his sentence and the
- day of execution, 83;
- confesses his real sentiments as to his religious belief and moral
- feelings, 13, 84;
- his penitence, 84;
- preparations for his execution, 85;
- his escutcheon broken, 88;
- his execution, 89;
- the body divided into four quarters, _ib._;
- his head exposed on a pole, 94.
-
- Brieghil, the valet, his evidence, 5.
-
- Brunswick, hereditary princess of, 157, _note_;
- her gracious reception of Mr. Wraxall at Celle, 174;
- difficulties created by her presence, 183, 229;
- niece to Queen Juliana Maria of Denmark, 183.
-
- Brunswick Bevern, prince of, appointed commandant of Copenhagen, 267.
-
- Bülow, baron von, receives Queen Matilda at Stade, 157;
- an exile at Altona, 177;
- his ring presented to the queen by Mr. Wraxall as proof of his
- mission, 188;
- his conferences with Wraxall, 190, 223, 224;
- gives instructions to him respecting his proposed visit to the
- queen, 190, 191;
- his letter to George III., 227;
- his letter on the queen's sudden death, 329;
- his despair, 240.
-
- Bülow, baroness von, an elegant woman, 176.
-
- Bülow, marshal von, appeases the crown prince, 286.
-
-
-C.
-
- Cabinet orders issued by Struensee, 51;
- for disbanding the foot-guards, 55, 56.
-
- Caroline Matilda, no longer regarded as Queen of Denmark after the
- dissolution of her marriage, 141;
- all her ties with Denmark broken off, 142;
- her grief at the deaths of Struensee and Count Brandt, 142;
- her generosity of mind, 142, 143;
- the charges against her submitted to English lawyers, who declared
- them unsubstantiated by evidence, 144;
- the English court insisted that no sentence should be passed on
- her, and fitted out a strong fleet, _ib._;
- Walpole's version of the affair, _ib._;
- his gossip respecting her, 145, 146;
- title of "Countess of Aalborg" conferred on her, 145;
- temper of the English with regard to, 146;
- Sir R. M. Keith's active interference on her behalf, 147;
- concessions of the Danish ministry, 147;
- order of release presented to her by Keith, 149;
- arrival of a squadron to take her away, 149, 150;
- writes an affecting letter to her brother, _ib._;
- resolved that she should take up her residence at Celle in
- Hanover, and be allowed £8,000 a-year, 150;
- interesting anecdote of, _ib._;
- her affection for her children, 151, 152;
- leaves a letter for the king, 153;
- his grief at her departure, _ib._, _note_;
- her suite, 153, 154;
- her farewell to Denmark, 154;
- the documents connected with the dissolution of her marriage
- deposited in the secret archives, 156;
- her arrival at Stade, and her joyous reception, 157;
- her presents, _ib._;
- her new suite, _ib._;
- arrives at Celle, and takes up her abode in the royal chateau, 158;
- her amiability and charitable disposition, _ib._;
- her reading and studious pursuits, 159;
- the happiness of her home, 160;
- her great interest in her children, 162;
- her conversations with Colonel Keith, 162 _et seq._;
- Grub-street attacks on, exposed by Reverdil, 165, 166;
- her course of life at Celle, 167 _et seq._;
- her literary taste, 167, 168;
- her court theatricals, 168;
- her letter to her sister detailing her course of life at Celle, 169;
- her great pleasure at receiving the portrait of her son, 170, 171;
- Mr. Wraxall's introduction to, 173;
- her gracious reception of him, and confiding affability, 173, 174;
- again visited by Mr. Wraxall, who communicates a project, with
- certain conditions, for restoring her to the throne of Denmark,
- 182, 186-9 (_see_ WRAXALL);
- instructions respecting the project, 191;
- her important conversations with Wraxall, and plans laid down for
- further proceedings, 195 _et seq._, 221, 232;
- her sudden death, 238, 302 (_see_ APPENDIX);
- details of her illness, death, and funeral, 242-9;
- suspected of having been poisoned, 248;
- general mourning for in England, 250;
- monuments erected to her memory, 251;
- letter to her brother, written during her illness, and published
- after her death, 252;
- evidences of her innocence and purity of mind, 254, 255;
- Mr. Wraxall's portraiture of her virtues and character, 255-8;
- correspondence of Mr. Wraxall with his father relative to her
- restoration, 291 _et seq._ (_see_ APPENDIX).
-
- Carstens, A. G., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, 61;
- and Count Brandt, 67.
-
- Celle, Queen Matilda's residence at, 158;
- her course of life at, 160 _et seq._;
- Mr. Wraxall's frequent visits and interviews with the queen, 174,
- 180, 186, 190, 195 _et seq._, 221, 230-3.
-
- Christian VII., Count Brandt's assault on, 5, 19;
- his profuse presents to Struensee and Count Brandt, 45;
- his power as sovereign, 50, _note_;
- confirms the atrocious sentences passed upon Struensee and Count
- Brandt, 67, 68;
- his court festivities and revolting apathy, 76, 77;
- grants a free pardon to Colonel Falckenskjold, and releases him
- from the fortress of Munkholm, 136;
- receives a letter from his wife previous to her departure for
- Hanover, 153;
- his expressions of affection for her, 153;
- at the instigation of the crown prince he dismisses his ministers,
- and appoints a new cabinet, 285, 286;
- drawn into personal collision with the hereditary prince, but the
- _coup d'état_ is accomplished, 287.
-
- Colin, Major, appointed commandant of the fortress Munkholm, 135.
-
- Colleges, impediments of the, 37;
- dismissal of the, 11.
-
- Commission of Inquiry, the members of, who tried and sentenced
- Struensee, 61;
- allot rewards to the persons employed in convicting the
- prisoners, 95, _note_;
- their proceedings against the minor prisoners of state, and charges
- brought against them, 104 _et seq._
-
- Copenhagen, bitterness at, against Struensee and his cabinet
- orders, 58;
- its suburban grounds, 85.
-
- Council, duties of the, 35;
- abolition of the, 36.
-
- Council of Thirty-two, established by Struensee, 41.
-
- Counter-revolution projected by the Danish exiles, 177.
-
- Court festivities, 76;
- exhibit a revolting exhibition of apathy and want of sympathy, 76.
-
- Crown prince of Denmark, begins to assume power, 283;
- his examination, 283;
- his determined spirit, 284;
- of age to enter the council of state, 284;
- spirited interference with the court forms of proceeding, 284;
- effects the overthrow of the ministry by a _coup d'état_, 285, 286;
- proclamation of, as regent, 288, 289;
- Count Bernstorff, the enlightened statesman, his adviser, 289.
-
- Cypher writing, adopted by Mr. Wraxall, 307;
- key to the fictitious names, 312 (APPENDIX).
-
-
-D.
-
- Danish chancery, 38.
-
- Danish language, Struensee's ignorance of the, 38;
- frequently perverted in translation, _ib._
-
- DENMARK, the constitution of, gives the king absolute power, 40, NOTE;
- feeling of the nation at Struensee's conduct, 42;
- state trials, and execution of the ministers Counts Struensee and
- Brandt, 89, 93;
- Caroline Matilda's farewell to, 154, 155;
- counter-revolution in, proposed, 177;
- the new ministry growing unpopular, _ib._;
- plan for effecting the counter-revolution in, 225;
- terminated only by the death of the queen, 241, (_see_ CAROLINE
- MATILDA, and WRAXALL);
- retrospective view of, 259 _et seq._;
- political reaction in, 259;
- all the reforms of Struensee's government abolished, and the
- abuses of "the good old times" restored, 260 _et seq._;
- triumvirate in the government, 262;
- disunion among the conspirators, 263;
- fate of the ministers, 264 _et seq._;
- the indigenate law of, 281;
- the crown prince enters the council of state, 284;
- effects the overthrow of ministry by a _coup d'état_, 285, 286;
- the counter-revolution completely effected, 287.
-
-
-E.
-
- Egede, Professor J., anecdote told by, 260.
-
- Eickstedt, Hans Henry von, his political career, 270;
- his sudden dismissal, 271;
- retires to the island of Fühnen, where he dies, _ib._
-
- Elliot, Mr., British envoy at Copenhagen, 288, _note_.
-
- England sends a squadron for the release of Caroline Matilda, 149.
-
- Exiles of Denmark, their project for effecting a
- counter-revolution, 177.
-
-
-F.
-
- Falckenskjold, his notes on the trial of Struensee, 47, 48, 50,
- 54, 55, 64, 101;
- decided that he should be the victim of judicial vengeance for his
- admiration of Struensee, 104;
- his detection of the quarter-master's roguery, 106;
- groundless charges against, 116-119;
- sentenced to be imprisoned for life in the fortress of Munkholm, 124;
- account of his voyage to Munkholm, 125;
- his description of the fortress, 126, 127;
- his treatment, 128 _et seq._;
- his solace and recreation, 130 _et seq._;
- his disposition to misanthropy, 130;
- increased severity in his treatment, 133;
- wretchedness of his domicile, 134;
- insulted by the commandant, _ib._;
- receives a royal pardon, and an order for his release, 136;
- conditions of his release, 137;
- allowed to take ship for Holland, 139;
- fixes his domicile at Montpellier, _ib._;
- receives permission to retire to the Pays de Vaud, _ib._;
- the court of Petersburg proposes to him the post of chief of the
- staff in the army, but the court of Copenhagen refuses its
- assent, 139, 140;
- in 1788 he visits Copenhagen, 140;
- the Danish government recalls him, and confers on him the rank and
- pay of a major-general, 140;
- ends his days in comfort, and dies at the advanced age of
- eighty-two, _ib._;
- his evidence of Queen Matilda's innocence and purity of mind, 254.
-
- Foot-guards, disbandment of the, 55.
-
- Forgery, charge of against Count Brandt rebutted, 26.
-
- Frederick II. of Denmark, gradually acquires absolute sway, 280,
- _note_.
-
- Frederick, prince of Denmark, the marriage festival of, 133;
- his contests with the crown prince, and overthrow of his party,
- 284, 285;
- driven into obscurity, 290;
- marries a princess of Mecklenburg, _ib._;
- his youngest daughter the grandmother of Alexandra, present princess
- of Wales, _ib._
-
- Fusilier guards disbanded, 54.
-
-
-G.
-
- Gähler, Frau von, charges brought against her, 105;
- how disposed of, 110.
-
- Gähler, general von, groundless charges brought against, 113 _et seq._;
- his principal crime that of interfering with everything without
- possessing requisite knowledge, 115;
- how disposed of, 123;
- his death, 124.
-
- Gallows Hill, where the skulls and bones of Counts Struensee and Brandt
- were exposed, 94.
-
- George III., Mr. Wraxall's communications with, 204 _et seq._;
- his instructions respecting his sister, the queen of Denmark, and
- the Danish nobles, 205;
- his assent to the project for restoring the queen under certain
- conditions, 207, 208;
- letter of the Danish nobility to, 229.
-
- German language encouraged by Struensee, 38.
-
- Göhrde, chateau of, 157;
- arrival of the queen at, and also of her sister, the hereditary
- princess of Brunswick, 157 _et note_.
-
- Griffenfeldt, count von, imprisoned in the fortress of Munkholm, 133;
- notices of, _ib._;
- his death, _ib._
-
- Guards, disbandment of the, by Struensee, 54.
-
- Guldberg, O., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, 61;
- and Count Brandt, 67;
- his intrigues against Struensee, 101;
- draws up Falckenskjold's pardon and release, 136, 137;
- becomes cabinet secretary, 279;
- his ministry, _ib._;
- honours conferred upon him, 280;
- receives the name of Höegh-Guldberg, _ib._;
- opposed by the crown prince, 284;
- his overthrow, 285, 289;
- his death, 289.
-
-
-H.
-
- Hanbury, Mr., English consul at Hamburgh, 176;
- invites Mr. Wraxall to dinner, _ib._
-
- Hansen, admiral, unfounded charges brought against, 106;
- how disposed of, 110, 112;
- his death, 112.
-
- Hauch, general, first deputy of the College of War, 136.
-
- Hee, Rev. Dr., the chaplain of Count Brandt, 83;
- attends Brandt to the scaffold, 88;
- rewards allotted to, 95 _et note_.
-
- Hesse, Prince Charles of, invited to Copenhagen, 266.
-
- Hesselberg, colonel von, charges brought against, 105;
- biographical notices of, 106;
- how disposed of, 111;
- his death, 112.
-
- Holck, count, his alleged freedom with the king, 5.
-
- Holstein, count, presented with a diamond solitaire by the queen, 157.
-
- Holstein, countess, her personal appearance, 176.
-
- Horse-guards, corps of, disbanded, 54.
-
- Huth, lieutenant-general von, councilor of state, 285.
-
-
-I.
-
- Indigenate law of Denmark, 281.
-
-
-J.
-
- Juell-Wind, J. K., one of the commissioners who sentenced
- Struensee, 61;
- and Count Brandt, 67.
-
- Juliana Maria, the dowager queen, her vengeance satiated in witnessing
- the execution of Counts Struensee and Brandt, 94, 95;
- her presents to the chaplains who attended the unhappy victims,
- 95, _note_;
- Suhm's account of her avenging spirit, 96;
- her unnatural feelings, 151;
- her heartless conduct after the death of Queen Matilda, 250;
- her absolute sway, 280, 281;
- her fury at the overthrow of the Guldberg ministry, and at the
- insulting treatment of her son by the crown prince, 287, 288;
- her power at an end, 289;
- driven into obscurity, 290.
-
-
-K.
-
- Keith, colonel Sir R. M., his visits to the Queen of Denmark, 142;
- his active interference on the queen's behalf, 147;
- Lord Suffolk's letter to, _ib._;
- his anecdote of the queen, 150;
- accompanies her to the chateau Göhrde, and then takes leave of
- her, 157;
- his letter to Lord Suffolk, 161;
- his interview with the queen, _ib._
-
- Köller-Banner, one of the triumvirate in the government of
- Denmark, 262;
- his projects for remodelling the army, 265;
- his plans examined, and rejected, 266;
- his dissatisfaction, and dismissal, 267;
- appointed governor of the fortress of Rendburg, _ib._;
- royal concessions made to him, 268;
- receives his discharge from the military service and retires to
- Altona, where he dies, 270.
-
- Kronsborg, anecdote of the fettered slave of, 155.
-
-
-L.
-
- Lehzen, pastor, 245;
- his account of the queen's death, 247.
-
- Leyser, Dr. von, 245.
-
- _Lex Regia_, a law by which all government decrees, letters and
- documents, shall be signed by the king, 52.
-
- Lichtenstein, baron von, Mr. Wraxall's interviews with respecting
- the Queen of Denmark, 203, 204;
- communicates the king's views and intentions, 204 _et seq._;
- Mr. Wraxall's satisfactory interview with.
-
- Louisa Augusta, princess, separated from her mother, 152.
-
-
-M.
-
- McBride, captain, arrives at Copenhagen, 150;
- introduced to Caroline Matilda, 151.
-
- Magistracy, abolition of the, 41.
-
- Mantel, the queen's valet, 221.
-
- Mathias, British minister at Hamburg, 184, 186.
-
- Mattheson, Mr. Wraxall's letters to be addressed to, 199.
-
- Matthiesen, Jerome, Mr. Wraxall and several Danish nobility sup
- with, 178.
-
- Moranti, the negro boy, his evidence, 5.
-
- Mösting, von, minister of finances, 287.
-
- Munkholm, fortress of, 124;
- Colonel Falckenskjold sentenced to imprisonment for life there,
- _ib._;
- history of his abode there, 125 _et seq._;
- voyage to, 125, 126;
- description of the fort, 126;
- a monastery of Benedictines founded here by Canute the Great,
- _ib. note_;
- demoralised state of the soldiery, 128;
- Lieutenant-General von der Osten the commandant, _ib._;
- officers of, 129;
- the garrison chaplain, 132;
- a fresh commandant of the fortress, Major Colin, 135;
- imprisonment of Beringskjold, the political foe of
- Falckenskjold, 278.
-
- Münter, Dr., peruses the sentence against Struensee with trembling, 73;
- his communications with Struensee, 73 _et seq._;
- his opinions on Struensee's conduct, 79;
- his kindness to Struensee, 83;
- attends him to the scaffold, 90-3;
- rewards allotted to, 95 _et note_.
-
-
-N.
-
- Norwegian coast, the, 131.
-
-
-O.
-
- Ortwed, Etats-rath, the king's bailiff, 88.
-
- Osnabrück, strange adventure at, 199.
-
- Osten, lieutenant-general von der, commandant of Munkholm, 128;
- his brutal character, 129;
- brings a pardon to Colonel Falckenskjold, 138.
-
- Osten, count von der, one of the triumvirate in the government of
- Denmark, 262;
- banished to Jütland, 278;
- his subsequent appointment, 279;
- his death, _ib._
-
-
-P.
-
- Prince Royal, Struensee's letter to his governess, 78.
-
-
-Q.
-
- Queen Dowager (_see_ JULIANA MARIA.)
-
-
-R.
-
- Rantzau, count von, his blackness of soul, 76;
- Struensee's letter to, 81, 82;
- no hostile feelings entertained against, 81;
- one of the triumvirate in the government of Denmark, 263;
- suddenly removed from his office, _ib._;
- ordered to quit the country, 264;
- settles at Avignon, _ib._;
- his death, _ib._
-
- Reforms, by Struensee, 39 _et seq._
-
- Reverdil's animadversions on Count Brandt's trial and sentence, 69;
- exposes the Grub Street libellers, 165.
-
- Roques, M., pastor of the French Protestant Church at Celle, 254;
- his testimony to the queen's innocence and purity of mind, _ib._
-
- Rosencrone, count, opposed by the crown prince, 284, 285.
-
- Rosenkranz, von, privy councillor, 285.
-
- Rothes, Christian Adolphus, an anonymous libeller, 165.
-
- Royal prerogative, 53.
-
-
-S.
-
- St. Germain, count de, sentiment of, 135.
-
- "Sandkrug," the suburban inn of Celle, 189.
-
- Scarlet fever, prevalence of, in the neighbourhood of Celle, 243;
- the queen's illness and death caused by, 244 _et seq._
-
- Schack, supreme marshal von, dismissed, and expelled from the
- court by the crown prince, 286.
-
- Scheel, the valet, his evidence, 5.
-
- Schimmelmann, baron von, and his lady, 176;
- their son introduced to Mr. Wraxall, 180;
- his revolutionary project, 181.
-
- Schmidt, J. C. E., one of the commissioners who sentenced
- Struensee, 61, and Count Brandt, 67.
-
- Seckendorf, baron, chamberlain to the queen Matilda, 173;
- Mr. Wraxall's interview with, 186;
- acts as the confidential agent between the queen and Mr. Wraxall,
- 188, 198;
- his warm reception of Mr. Wraxall, 221;
- his note, 231;
- Wraxall's interview with, 233;
- delivers important letters to him, _ib._;
- his letter respecting the queen's sudden death, 238.
-
- Seeland dragoons, reform in the regiment of, 54 _note_;
- ordered to the court and city, 59.
-
- Serfdom, restoration of, in Denmark, 261;
- its subsequent abolition, _ib._
-
- Sevel, professor F. C., one of the commissioners who sentenced
- Struensee and Count Brandt, 61, 67;
- acted as inquisitor, 116;
- his insulting treatment of Colonel Falckenskjold, 116, 125.
-
- Small-pox, ravages of the, 77.
-
- Sporon, tutor of the crown prince, 282, 283.
-
- Stade, the queen's arrival at, 157.
-
- Stampe, H., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee,
- 61, and Count Brandt, 67.
-
- Stampe, baron de, an odd adventure with, 200.
-
- Stampe, privy councillor, 285.
-
- Stemann, von, minister of finance, 283;
- his overthrow, 285.
-
- Struensee, count Fred., his robbery of the royal treasury, 11;
- assisted by Count Brandt in all his crimes, 12;
- sentence on, 33;
- the charges against him recapitulated, 34 _et seq._;
- his general conduct and designs, 34;
- abolishes the council, 36;
- his impediments of the colleges, 37;
- his ignorance of the Danish language, 38;
- his important reforms 39;
- his despotism, 40;
- his dismissal of the ministry, 41;
- his establishment of the Council of Thirty-two, _ib._;
- his avarice and selfishness, 46;
- his salaries, _ib. note_;
- excludes all from the throne, excepting his intimate friends
- and relations, 43;
- his selfishness, 44;
- the large presents received from his Majesty, 45;
- his embezzlements, 47, 48;
- his ambition not less than his avidity, 49;
- his "moderation," _ib._;
- his assumed authority, 50;
- his cabinet orders, 51;
- his disregard of the _Lex Regia_, 52;
- contravenes the royal prerogative, 53;
- his disbandment of the guards, 54, 55;
- his cabinet extracts, 56;
- his despotic administration, 60;
- committed the crime of high treason in an eminent degree, 61;
- his sentence, degradation from the dignity of count and all other
- honours, his body to be quartered, &c., _ib._;
- royal assent given to the sentence, 62;
- his sentence announced to him by Commissioner Uldall, 71;
- his fortitude, 72;
- his deep concern for Count Brandt, _ib._;
- his doubts and ruminations, 73;
- his letter to his parents, 74;
- his conversations with Münter, 77, 78, 79;
- his letter to Frau von Berkentin, chief gouvernante to the
- prince royal, 78;
- his letter to Chamberlain Christian Brandt, 80;
- his letter to Count Rantzau, 81;
- his farewell to his brother Justiz-rath Struensee, 83;
- his procession to the place of execution, 86, 87;
- his hopes of salvation, 90;
- his behaviour, 91;
- his execution and horrible death, 93;
- his head exposed on a pole, 94;
- his skull eventually stolen by four English sailors, 94 _note_;
- his character, 96 _et seq._;
- in prosperity not a hero, in misfortune cowardly and worthless, 96;
- of the romantic episodes of his life, 96;
- his acquirements, 97;
- his enlightened despotism, 98;
- remarks on his administration, 99;
- his mistaken policy, 100;
- after his fall behaved like a coward and a traitor, 100;
- Baron Seckendorf's account of his administration and the plots
- against his life, 199 _note_.
-
- Struensee, Justiz-rath, his intercommunication with his brother, 83;
- charges brought against him, 120;
- his high character, 121;
- his honorable conduct while in Prussia, 122;
- honored with the distinguished favor of Prince Henry of
- Prussia, _ib._;
- released from prison, 124;
- becomes minister of state in Prussia and ennobled in 1789, 124.
-
- Sturtz, councillor, groundless charges brought against, 107;
- biographical notices of, _ib._;
- how disposed of, 110, 112;
- dies of grief, 112.
-
- Suffolk, lord, his letter to Sir R. M. Keith respecting queen
- Matilda, 147;
- Keith's letter to, 161; Wraxall's fruitless visit to, 202, 203.
-
- Suhm, the historian, 95;
- his anecdote of the dowager queen's avenging spirit, 96.
-
-
-T.
-
- Texier, M. le, treasurer to Christian VII., 176;
- proposes to Mr. Wraxall a project for restoring the Queen of
- Denmark, 179, 180;
- letters to be addressed to, 199.
-
- Thirty-two, council of the, 41.
-
- Torp, the valet, his evidence, 5.
-
- Traventhal league, 113.
-
- "Trésor," the, reserved by Struensee as a special cabinet treasury,
- 46, 47.
-
- Trondhjem, garrison of, 127, 128;
- (_see_ MUNKHOLM).
-
-
-U.
-
- Uldall, commissioner, announces to Struensee the sentence passed
- upon him, 71.
-
-
-V.
-
- Vardohuus, a small fort built by Christian IV., 129.
-
-
-W.
-
- Walpole, Horace, his version of the sailing of the British fleet, 144;
- his gossip respecting Queen Caroline Matilda, 145.
-
- Warnstedt, count, his alleged freedoms with the king, 5.
-
- Willebrandt, Etats-rath, groundless charges brought against, 108;
- how he was disposed of, 111, 112.
-
- Wiwet, Fiscal General, his charges against Count Brandt, 1.
-
- Wraxall, Mr. N. W., anecdote related by, 155;
- his visit to Celle, 172;
- biographical notices of _ib._;
- his introduction to Queen Matilda and the Princess of Brunswick, and
- his gracious reception, 173;
- his varied conversations with the queen, 174, 175;
- proceeds to Hamburg, 176;
- dines with the English consul, _ib._;
- the distinguished company he meets with, _ib._;
- his sentiments in favour of the queen, 178;
- receives a proposal for undertaking her restoration to the throne of
- Denmark, accepts the offer, and proceeds to Celle as an agent of
- the conspiracy, 180 _et seq._;
- his communications with the queen, 186-9;
- his second visit to the queen, with full instructions, 190-4;
- his important conversations with the queen, and his plans laid down
- for future proceedings, 195 _et seq._;
- meets with a strange adventure, 199;
- his return to England, 201;
- his arrival in London, and introduction to Baron von Lichtenstein,
- 203;
- his communications with the king respecting the Queen of Denmark,
- and the plans of her exiled nobility for her restoration, 204 _et
- seq._;
- receives the king's answer to his propositions, 205;
- the articles in favour of the revolution assented to by the
- king, 207, 208;
- leaves England for Celle, 208;
- account of his journey and its dangers, 209 _et seq._;
- his arrival at Celle, 220;
- his interesting interview with the queen, 221, 222;
- his departure from Celle, and arrival at Hamburg, 223;
- delivers his despatches, _ib._;
- again visits the queen with letters from baron Bülow, 229;
- his interesting interview with the queen, 230-3;
- his interview with Baron von Seckendorf, 233;
- his departure from Celle, and arrival in London, 234;
- delivers his letters to M. Hinüber, 236;
- the difficulties he has to encounter, 236, 237;
- receives intelligence of the death of the Queen of Denmark, 238;
- the termination of his enterprise, 241;
- through the interest of Lord North he receives 1,000 guineas for
- his services, and the promise of a seat at the Board of Green
- Cloth, 241, _note_;
- the promise never fulfilled on account of his adverse vote in
- Parliament, _ib._;
- extracts from his correspondence with his father, relative to
- the restoration of Caroline Matilda, 291 _et seq._, (APPENDIX);
- his remuneration for his outlay and services withheld, 306, 321;
- sample of his cypher writing, 307-312, (APPENDIX.)
-
-
-Z.
-
- Zell, (see CELLE), the castle of, 175.
-
- Zimmermann, Dr., 245.
-
-
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-READER, _Nov._ 14, 1863.--"It will command the attention of every
-thinking German. Mr. Wilberforce's interesting volume embraces nearly the
-whole range of Munich life, political, social, and artistic. 'Social Life
-in Munich' is entirely free from the scandalous anecdotes by which town
-travels are so often disfigured. Written throughout in a pleasing lively
-strain, it is evidently the work of a keen observer, who benefits the
-Germans whilst he amuses his own countrymen."
-
-GUARDIAN, _Dec._ 2, 1863.--"Mr. Wilberforce has written a clever and
-characteristic account of this famous city of art."
-
-SATURDAY REVIEW, _Dec._ 26, 1863.--"A very able volume. Mr. Wilberforce
-is a very pleasant and agreeable writer, whose opinion is worth hearing
-on the subject of modern art, which enters largely into the matter of his
-discourse."
-
-EDINBURGH COURANT, _Nov._ 14, 1863.--"We welcome this agreeable and
-instructive book."
-
-
-SIR EVERARD'S DAUGHTER.
-
-A NEW NOVEL.
-
-BY JOHN CORDY JEAFFRESON,
-
-Author of "Live it Down," &c.
-
-Second Edition, post 8vo, 10s. 6d.
-
-ATHENÆUM, _July_ 11, 1863.--"It is, perhaps, the most remarkable work of
-fiction that Mr. Jeaffreson has written."
-
-BELL'S MESSENGER, _July_ 18, 1863.--"Compared with many of Mr.
-Jeaffreson's larger literary productions, this tale is but a sketch; yet
-as such it shows the hand of a master, and proves that had he been at the
-pains to have elaborated his subject upon a broader canvas, it would have
-been not only one of the most successful specimens he has ever prepared,
-but one of the most remarkable, for a long time past, given to the public
-by any other modern novelist."
-
-
-
-
-13 Waterloo Place, S. W.
-
-
-THE IONIAN ISLANDS
-
-In the Year 1863.
-
-BY PROFESSOR D. T. ANSTED, M.A., F.R.S.
-
-8vo, cloth, with Maps and Cuts, 16s.
-
-SATURDAY REVIEW, _Dec._ 5, 1863.--"What Mr. Ansted saw in the Ionian
-Islands he saw well, and under good auspices, and has noted down
-carefully."
-
-NONCONFORMIST, _Dec._ 18, 1863.--"Professor Ansted's volume furnishes
-interesting information on all points on which information might fairly
-be looked for in such a work. His narrative is throughout light and
-agreeable reading."
-
-ATHENÆUM, _Dec._ 21, 1863.--"Through these Islands Professor Ansted has
-accomplished a pleasant run, the incidents of which are as pleasantly
-narrated. What Professor Ansted effected in his volume on the Channel
-Islands for that insular group in our own seas, he has accomplished as
-successfully for these Isles of Greece in the work which we now make over
-to its assured public."
-
-THE PRESS, _Jan._ 22, 1864.--"Highly interesting on account of the great
-variety of information it contains, and not less highly commendable
-for the impartiality with which the various data for judging of the
-expediency of the transfer of the Islands to the kingdom of Greece are
-placed before the reader."
-
-
-TRAVELS IN MEXICO,
-
-SOUTH AMERICA, &c., &c.
-
-BY G. T. VIGNE, ESQ.,
-
-Author of "A Personal Visit to Ghuzni and Affghanistan," and "Travels in
-Kashmir, Ladak," &c.
-
-With Illustrations, 2 vols. post 8vo, 21s.
-
-OBSERVER, _Nov._ 15, 1863.--"The author seems to have travelled over
-a great part of South America, and to have visited all the principal
-towns and places worth seeing, and his observations, which are made with
-cleverness and intelligence, are characterized by remarkable freshness of
-feeling, an unaffected style, and a conscientious truthfulness."
-
-SPECTATOR, _Nov._ 28, 1863.--"While in Nicaragua the Filibusters were
-attracting the attention of Europe, and his (Mr. Vigne's) sketch of
-the fortunes of General Walker up to his execution forms an episode of
-considerable interest. The special charm in Mr. Vigne's work is the
-keenness of his observations as a naturalist in the country in which,
-above all others, nature seems to have revelled in strange and fantastic
-creations. Without attempting set descriptions of external scenery or
-natural phenomena, he manages, by the fidelity and freshness of style, to
-convey to the mind of the reader the pervading atmosphere of the scene
-and circumstances with rare felicity."
-
-READER, _Jan._ 16, 1864.--"We can recommend this work as a pleasantly
-written narrative of travel in a most interesting and little known
-region."
-
-
-
-
-Wm. H. Allen & Co.
-
-
-VICTOR HUGO;
-
-A LIFE RELATED BY ONE WHO HAS WITNESSED IT.
-
-INCLUDING
-
-An Original Drama, in Three Acts,
-
-ENTITLED
-
-"INEZ DE CASTRO."
-
-FROM THE FRENCH.
-
-Two Vols. post 8vo, £1 1s.
-
-Contents:
-
- La Vendée.
- Marriage.
- Campaign of the Rhine.
- Fra Diavolo.
- Journey into Italy.
- Arrest of Lahorie.
- Meeting with Napoleon.
- Coucha the Monk.
- Story of General Louis Hugo.
- El Empecinado.
- An Idyll at Bayonne.
- Masserano Palace.
- College of the Noble.
- France Invaded.
- Bourbons.
- The Hundred Days.
- The Foolish Things Master Hugo did before he was fully fledged.
- First Introduction to the Academy.
- A Word for Chateaubriand.
- Death of the Mother.
- Lamennais becomes Victor Hugo's Confessor.
- A Wedding.
- A Visit to Blois.
- Coronation of Charles X.
- Visit to Lamartine.
- M. Victor Hugo's Recital.
- Letter from Lamennais.
- Cromwell.
- Amy Robsart.
- The Scaffold.
- The Consequences of "The Last Day of a Convict."
- Ernani.
- Notre Dame de Paris.
- Marion de Lorme.
- Lucrezia Borgia.
- Marie Tudor.
- La Esmeralda.
- Fête at Versailles.
-
- * * * * *
-
-ATHENÆUM, _June_ 27, 1863.--"The story of such a life as M. Victor Hugo,
-told by a witness, can hardly fail to be a tale which will make Europe
-sit still to listen."
-
-PRESS, _July_ 25, 1863.--"These volumes contain a wonderful wealth of
-anecdote, and we predict that they will be read with great avidity."
-
-LONDON REVIEW, _July_ 25, 1863.--"We have said enough, we hope, to show
-our readers that the present volumes will repay perusal. From beginning
-to end we have found them full of lively and interesting gossip, with
-numerous passages which have also an historical value."
-
-STANDARD, _Sept._ 29, 1863.--"This is altogether a very charming little
-book; its contents are so various that no reader can fail to be pleased,
-and the style--light, graceful, and piquant--is the perfection of chatty
-biography."
-
-NONCONFORMIST, _Sept._ 2, 1863.--"A work which is sure to attract much
-attention."
-
-EDINBURGH COURANT, _Sept._ 19, 1863.--"The anecdotes--the pictures--the
-sketches of continental men and women--all of which follow each other
-naturally in the story of the career of a famous Frenchman, make this
-life as instructive as it is amusing to British readers."
-
-
-
-
-13 Waterloo Place, S. W.
-
-
-_In One handsome 8vo volume_, _with_ 72 _Illustrations on Wood by_
-VIZETELLY, LOUDAN, NICHOLLS, _and_ HART, _also with a Map_, _price_ _£_1
-6_s_.
-
-THE CHANNEL ISLANDS:
-
-CONTAINING
-
-Part I.--PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY.
-
-The Channe and Channel Islands--Alderney, Ortach, and the
-Casquets--Island and Coast of Guernsey--Islands and Rocks near
-Guernsey--Jersey and adjacent Rocks--Chaussey Archipelago and the
-Minquiers--Climate, Meteorology, and Sanitary Condition.
-
-
-Part II.--NATURAL HISTORY.
-
-Vegetable productions natural to the Islands--Animals in the Islands
-and adjacent Seas--Geology and Mineralogy, Ancient Formations--Modern
-Destruction and Renovation--Fauna and Flora, considered in reference to
-their Physical Geography and Geology.
-
-
-Part III.--CIVIL HISTORY.
-
-Pagan and Legendary Period--German Period--Norman Conquest to beginning
-of Civil Wars--Civil Wars--Accession of William the Third to present
-Time--Antiquities and Archæology--Language and Literature.
-
-
-Part IV.--ECONOMICS and TRADE.
-
-Agriculture--Horticulture--Trade, Commerce, and
-Manufactures--Constitution and Laws--Manners and Customs--Principal
-Public Institutions--Hints to Tourists--Money, Weights, and
-Measures--Statistics.
-
-BY DAVID THOMAS ANSTED, M.A., F.R.S., &c.,
-
-AND
-
-ROBERT GORDON LATHAM, M.A., M.D., F.R.S.
-
-_The Illustrations drawn on Wood expressly for this Work, by_ PAUL J.
-NAFTEL, _Member of the London Society of Painters in Water Colours_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SATURDAY REVIEW, _April_ 4, 1863.--"This is a really valuable work. A
-book which will long remain the standard authority on its subject. No one
-who has been to the Channel Islands, or who purposes going there, will be
-insensible of its value."
-
-ATHENÆUM, _Nov._ 16, 1862.--"It is the produce of many hands, and every
-hand a good one. Nearly everything which a man can desire to know about
-Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Sark, about their history, geography, and
-natural history, Professor Ansted and Dr. Latham have contrived to tell."
-
-SPECTATOR, _Jan._ 24, 1863.--"We are quite sure that to all classes of
-readers this work will prove exceedingly interesting, while scientific
-men will acknowledge that it leaves no room for any future history of the
-Islands."
-
-LONDON REVIEW, _Jan._ 17, 1863.--"We can safely say that no one can visit
-the Channel Islands without finding much to interest and inform in the
-work before us."
-
-OBSERVER, _Nov._ 30, 1862.--"As gems of art, these illustrations have
-rarely been equalled, and certainly have never been surpassed. They are
-alone sufficient to confer a lasting popularity and permanent value.
-The volume however, possesses an intrinsic worth irrespective of all
-its graces of adornment, which will not fail to command it the hearty
-approbation of every reader."
-
-
-
-
-Wm. H. Allen & Co.
-
-
-SECOND EDITION.
-
-AN INQUIRY INTO THE THEORIES OF HISTORY, CHANCE, LAW, WILL;
-
-With SPECIAL REFERENCE to the PRINCIPLES of POSITIVE PHILOSOPHY.
-
-BY WILLIAM ADAM.
-
-8vo, cloth, 15s.
-
-WESTMINSTER REVIEW.--"The 'Inquiry into the Theories of History,'
-although anonymous, is a first-rate book. Its object is to reconcile
-Theism with the scientific conception of law, and from that
-reconciliation to deduce a true theory of history. The book contains a
-most able and effectual vindication of Theism, and of a rational, as
-opposed to irrational, Positivism."
-
-CORNHILL MAGAZINE.--"Written with remarkable ability, and, considering
-its polemical spirit, with excellent temper. The style is always
-animated, and at times felicitous. The volume gives ample proof
-of metaphysical acuteness. One good service it will certainly
-effect--namely, that of fastening the attention of its readers on the
-great fundamental problems of historical science."
-
-SPECTATOR.--"The whole book bears the evident mark of maturity of
-thought. The third chapter is full of thoughtful and able argument, in
-which the positions, not only of Comte, but often of Mill, are powerfully
-and successfully assailed."
-
-ATHENÆUM.--"The book now under notice is no doubt heavy and massive,
-but no competent critic will be prepared to pronounce it dull. It is
-exceedingly calm and candid, clear-sighted, and ingenious in an eminent
-degree. It is well thought and weightily written. We have not come across
-a book of the present day for a considerable while so far removed from
-the common run of writing and of thinking as this one is. This author
-manifests that originality which always goes to the centre of a question,
-whether well or ill conceived, and takes sundry important and fresh views
-of the entire problem before turning aside from the contemplation of it.
-Be the writer who he may, he has the credit, at least, of producing a
-highly original work."
-
-
-THE POLISH CAPTIVITY:
-
-An ACCOUNT of the PRESENT POSITION and PROSPECTS of the POLES in the
-KINGDOM of POLAND,
-
-AND IN THE POLISH PROVINCES OF AUSTRIA, PRUSSIA, AND RUSSIA.
-
-BY SUTHERLAND EDWARDS.
-
-Two Volumes, 8vo, with Chromo-Lithographic Illustrations, 26s.
-
-TIMES, _April_ 2, 1863.--"A highly opportune production."
-
-SPECTATOR, _March_ 28, 1863.--"The 'Polish Captivity' is full of light
-but suggestive sketches, _pièces justificatives_ of historic value,
-national songs and stories, descriptions of Polish towns, Polish
-notabilities, and Polish women, and is, besides, a book an English lady
-might read with twice the ease of Mr. Trollope's latest novel."
-
-ATHENÆUM, _March_ 21, 1863.--"Mr. Edwards' book will be read with deep
-interest. It is well written, and the narratives are well constructed."
-
-LONDON REVIEW, _March_ 28, 1863.--"The book in which Mr. Sutherland
-Edwards has depicted the 'Polish Captivity' would have been valuable at
-any time, but the opportuneness of its arrival so enhances its merits,
-that it is certain to command a greater than ordinary success."
-
-
-
-
-13 Waterloo Place, S. W.
-
-
-SECOND EDITION.
-
-THE RUSSIANS AT HOME:
-
-UNPOLITICAL SKETCHES.
-
-Showing what Newspapers they read; what Theatres they frequent; and how
-they eat, drink, and enjoy themselves; with other matter relating chiefly
-to Literature, Music, and to Places of Historical and Religious Interest
-in and about Moscow.
-
-BY SUTHERLAND EDWARDS, ESQ.
-
-Second Edition, in post 8vo, with Illustrations, price 10s. 6d.
-
-EDINBURGH EVENING COURANT.--"It is a book that we can seriously
-recommend, not only to those who are desirous of abundant and reliable
-information respecting the social economy of the Russian people, but to
-those who seek an entertaining volume, that may be perused in any part
-with both profit and amusement."
-
-GLOBE.--"This book is full of useful information and sensible comment on
-a people and country which are very little known in England, even among
-the cultivated and travelling classes."
-
-ILLUSTRATED TIMES.--"The book may be recommended as embodying a large
-amount of varied information concerning Russia in the pleasantest
-possible form. Every page has the advantage of being readable, and is
-always fresh in what it has to say and in the manner of saying it."
-
-SPECTATOR.--"This is not only one of the most amusing books that we have
-read for a long time, but also the best and most reliable account of
-Russian life and manners which has hitherto been given to the public."
-
-
-SECOND EDITION.
-
-THE HISTORY OF THE OPERA,
-
-From Monteverde to Donizetti.
-
-BY SUTHERLAND EDWARDS, ESQ.
-
-2 vols. post 8vo, 21s.
-
-THE TIMES.--"The new history of the lyrical drama with which Mr.
-Sutherland Edwards favours the public, has three qualities to recommend
-it. In the first place, it contains, for its size, a very complete
-account of the progress of an art, which now, beyond all others, occupies
-the attention of the civilized world; in the second place, it is one of
-those treasures of amusing anecdote that may be taken up and laid down at
-a moment's notice; in the third place, it abounds with the observations
-of a shrewd and independent thinker, who has seen much, read much, and
-travelled much, and who approaches his subject less as a professed
-musician than as one of those cultivated men who take a position between
-the artist and the multitude, and who, after all, constitute the
-body upon whom the general appreciation of every art depends.... The
-anecdotes, which we have given in illustration of an extremely short
-and inglorious period of operatic history, occupy but very few pages in
-Mr. Edwards' book; and, when we inform our readers that his two volumes
-are replete with matter of the same kind, they will easily judge of the
-amount of entertainment to be derived from his labours. So abundant is
-his material, that he might, if he had pleased, have filled a dozen
-quartos; and, as he himself confesses, he found the task of omission
-heavier than that of collection. Let us add, that he has omitted well,
-and that he has seasoned a pleasant and instructive history with the very
-concentrated essence of agreeable gossip."
-
-HERALD.--"Mr. Edwards has here produced a work which ought to command
-a great sale, if its merits and the great number of opera-goers may be
-considered. Completely master of his subject, and possessing a ready
-and pleasing pen, Mr. Edwards in these volumes gives us an exceedingly
-interesting history of operatic performances."
-
-SUN.--"We commend these light and pleasant volumes to all lovers
-of musical and dramatic art, assuring them they will find ample
-entertainment in their animated pages."
-
-
-
-
-Wm. H. Allen & Co.
-
-
-SECOND EDITION.
-
-LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIRS:
-
-Autobiography, Diaries, and Correspondence.
-
-INCLUDING
-
-LETTERS FROM
-
- KING JEROME,
- MADAME PATTERSON BONAPARTE,
- THE DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE,
- DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE,
- DUKE OF LEINSTER,
- MARQUIS WELLESLEY,
- MARQUIS OF ANGLESEY,
- MARQUIS OF ABERCORN,
- MARCHIONESS OF ABERCORN,
- THE EARL OF ABERDEEN,
- THE EARL OF CARLISLE,
- LORD MELBOURNE,
- LADY CAROLINE LAMB,
- LORD CLONCURRY,
- LADY STANLEY,
- LORD DARNLEY,
- THE COUNTESS OF CORK AND ORRERY,
- LADY LEITRIM,
- LORD DUNCANNON,
- LORD MACAULAY,
- LORD ERSKINE,
- JOSEPH HUME,
- DANIEL O'CONNELL,
- SHEIL,
- E. JENNER,
- LA FAYETTE,
- BYRON,
- COUNTESS GUICCIOLI,
- MOORE,
- DOUGLAS JERROLD,
- SIR E. BULWER LYTTON,
- THOMAS CAMPBELL,
- MRS. HEMANS,
- REV. SIDNEY SMITH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-OBSERVER.--"Full of pleasant memoirs and piquant reading."
-
-DAILY TELEGRAPH.--"The book that tells the story of Lady Morgan's life
-will always be of value for its pictures of a state of society which,
-with much of its good, and more of its evil, has passed away for ever."
-
-DAILY NEWS.--"Surveying, as they do, considerably more than half the last
-hundred years, and touching upon some of the most instructive events of
-that period, these volumes, it need hardly be said, are most interesting.
-Princes, dukes, and nobles, authors, artists, and _literati_ of every
-profession, crowd the pages of the work."
-
-MANCHESTER EXAMINER.--"One of the most pleasant books of its class with
-which we are acquainted."
-
-In Two Volumes, 8vo, price 26s.
-
-With a Portrait of LADY MORGAN, by Sir Thomas Lawrence, and a Portrait of
-SIR CHARLES MORGAN.
-
-
-THE NATIONALITIES OF EUROPE.
-
-BY DR. R. G. LATHAM.
-
-Two Vols. 8vo, 32s.
-
-OBSERVER.--"The mass of facts gathered from all quarters and crowded
-together in the pages of these volumes is something wonderful."
-
-
-
-
-13 Waterloo Place, S. W.
-
-
-THIRD EDITION.
-
-HISTORY OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE
-
-IN INDIA.
-
-BY EDWARD THORNTON, ESQ.
-
-Containing a copious Glossary of Indian Terms, and a complete
-Chronological Index of Events, to aid the aspirant for Public
-Examinations.
-
-One Vol. 8vo, with Map, price 16s.
-
-THE TIMES.--"Mr. Thornton is master of a style of great perspicuity and
-vigour, always interesting, and frequently rising into eloquence. His
-power of painting character and of bringing before the eye of the reader
-the events which he relates, is remarkable; and if the knowledge of India
-can be made popular, we should say his is the pen to effect it."
-
-GLOBE.--"Mr. Thornton's history is comprehensive in its plan, clear and
-forcible in its style, and impartial in its tone."
-
-EDINBURGH EVENING COURANT.--"The writer evinces diligence and research
-into original authorities; his style is easy, and the intrinsic interest
-of the important events of Indian history is thus increased by a popular
-and amusing narrative."
-
-PATRIOT.--"The style of the work is free, rapid, and spirited, and bears
-marks of a thorough familiarity with the subject. Every Englishman ought
-to be acquainted with the history of the British Empire in India, and we
-therefore cordially recommend this work to our readers."
-
-The LIBRARY EDITION in Six Vols. may be had, £2 8s.
-
-
-A GAZETTEER OF INDIA,
-
-Compiled chiefly from the Records at the India Office,
-
-WITH NOTES, MARGINAL REFERENCES, AND MAP.
-
-BY EDWARD THORNTON, ESQ.
-
-*⁎* The chief objects in view in compiling this Gazetteer are:--
-
- 1st. To fix the relative position of the various cities, towns, and
- villages, with as much precision as possible, and to exhibit with the
- greatest practicable brevity all that is known respecting them; and,
-
- 2ndly. To note the various countries, provinces, or territorial
- divisions, and to describe the physical characteristics of each,
- together with their statistical, social, and political circumstances.
-
-To these are added minute descriptions of the principal rivers and
-chains of mountains; thus presenting to the reader, within a brief
-compass, a mass of information which cannot otherwise be obtained, except
-from a multiplicity of volumes and manuscript records. The work, in
-short, may be regarded as an epitome of all that has been written and
-published respecting the territories under the government or political
-superintendence of the British power in India.
-
-In Four Vols. 8vo, with Map, price £2 16s.
-
-
-
-
-Wm. H. Allen & Co.
-
-
-FOURTH EDITION.
-
-AUTOBIOGRAPHY
-
-OF
-
-MISS CORNELIA KNIGHT,
-
-Lady-Companion to the Princess Charlotte of Wales,
-
-WITH EXTRACTS FROM HER JOURNALS AND ANECDOTE BOOKS.
-
-In Two Vols. 8vo, with Portrait of the PRINCESS CHARLOTTE of WALES, price
-26s.
-
-TIMES.--"Why we should turn to these volumes as among the most
-interesting of the recent season will be sufficiently evident as we
-indicate their contents."
-
-MORNING STAR, _July_ 22, 1861.--"Emphatically a readable book is
-this autobiography. Indeed, having once opened it, the reader cannot
-easily lay it aside until he has got through the whole. Not the least
-interesting part is the collection of miscellaneous anecdotes of persons
-and events which are clustered together as a sort of appendix at the
-close. It is a book fit to be read, but fit also for something better
-than a casual reading; worthy of a higher repute than an evanescent
-popularity, merely founded upon the great names it introduces, and the
-amusing scraps of gossip it contains."
-
-ATHENÆUM, _June_ 8, 1861.--"Of the popularity of these volumes, on
-account of their historical as well as gossiping merits, there can be no
-doubt whatever."
-
-
-THE REPUBLIC OF FOOLS:
-
-BEING
-
-THE HISTORY OF THE STATE AND PEOPLE OF ABDERA, IN THRACE.
-
-TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN OF C. M. VON WIELAND,
-
-BY THE REV. H. CHRISTMAS.
-
-In Two Volumes, post 8vo, cloth, price 18s.
-
-OBSERVER.--"As a prose satire, the History of the Abderites yields only
-in breadth of humour and pungency of wit to Dean Swift's immortal Travels
-of Captain Lemuel Gulliver; and of works of that class, we know of none
-in any language that can compare with either of the two."
-
-LONDON REVIEW.--"Here is enjoyment for many a Christmas to come, for
-many thousands of English boys, and many thousands of English men and
-women. Unfortunately for the world, Pisistratus Caxton departed this
-life without having made any contribution towards the great history of
-human folly, save, indeed, by the records of his own. Mr. Christmas has
-given us something even better in his translation of Wieland's Abderites;
-and in the simplest, most racy, and vernacular English, has enriched
-our literature with another character of the family dear to mankind, of
-the Quixotes, Gullivers and other human foils of human self-love and
-vanity. If the addition to our shelves of a book to delight the young
-and instruct the old, overflowing with wit, fun, drollery inexpressible,
-wisdom, depth and knowledge, is an achievement deserving of national
-thanks, we undertake to convey our share to Mr. Christmas, fearing only
-lest we should not have thanked him sufficiently."
-
-MORNING HERALD.--"There is, indeed, about it, nothing of the stiffness
-of a translation; and the work reads with all the ease and freedom of an
-original composition."
-
-
-
-
-13 Waterloo Place, S. W.
-
-
-THE HISTORY OF CHESS,
-
-From the Time of the Early Invention of the Game in India till the Period
-of its Establishment in Western and Central Europe.
-
-BY DUNCAN FORBES, LL.D.
-
-8vo, 15s.
-
-HERALD.--"This volume will be a welcome addition to the library of every
-lover of the noble game of chess. Our author makes a stout fight for the
-Hindoos as the inventors of the game, and adduces many cogent proofs
-in support of his opinion. He shows how the game is played in other
-countries, how it has been modified both in the names of the pieces and
-the names of the game by the peculiarities of the country or the national
-temperament of the inhabitants; and then traces the steps by which it
-has arrived at its present place of honour in civilized and intellectual
-Europe. The book is, therefore, full of curious lore, that lean on other
-and higher subjects than chess-playing, for it involves dissertations
-on ethnology, comparative etymology, the dispersion and settlement of
-nations, and the manners and customs of different countries, to a degree
-that would not be at all anticipated by a person who contented himself
-by reading the title-page. All this information is given, not in any
-dry, repulsive, or even technical style, but freshly, clearly, and in an
-animated manner--the style that would naturally be adopted by a gentleman
-and man of the world."
-
-
-THE ARMIES OF THE GREAT POWERS.
-
-BY LASCELLES WRAXALL.
-
-Post 8vo, 10s. 6d.
-
-*⁎* "The object of this work is to furnish a correct and detailed account
-of the amount and nature of the forces belonging to the Great Powers.
-At a glance may be perceived the strength of the respective armies, and
-characteristics of their troops, their drill, discipline, and uniform.
-Although Mr. Wraxall treats more especially of the Armies of France,
-Austria, England, Russia, and Prussia, he has not omitted those of
-Sardinia, Turkey, and Anglo-India. The value of such a manual can hardly
-be over-estimated at the present moment."
-
-SATURDAY REVIEW.--"To all whose interest in the noble art of national
-self-defence is as real as it should be, a compilation like Mr. Wraxall's
-has considerable value."
-
-
-SIN: ITS CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES.
-
-AN ATTEMPT TO INVESTIGATE THE ORIGIN, NATURE, EXTENT, AND RESULTS OF
-MORAL EVIL.
-
-A Series of Lent Lectures.
-
-BY THE REV. HENRY CHRISTMAS, M.A., F.R.S.
-
-Post 8vo, cloth, price 5s.
-
-CIVIL SERVICE GAZETTE.--"These lectures are learned, eloquent, and
-earnest, and though they approach the 'limits of religious thought,'
-they do not transgress those limits; and they present the reader with a
-comprehensive review, based upon revelation, of the nature, extent, and
-consequences of moral evil or sin, both in this world and the world to
-come."
-
-
-
-
-Wm. H. Allen & Co.
-
-
-HUNGARY AND TRANSYLVANIA
-
-In 1862.
-
-BY PROFESSOR D. T. ANSTED, M.A., F.R.S., &c.
-
-ATHENÆUM, _June_ 16, 1862.--"Professor Ansted's descriptions are written
-with a neatness attesting the accuracy of a scientific observer's eyes.
-His volume is one of both value and entertainment: a book calculated to
-turn the thoughts of tourists down the Danube."
-
-DAILY NEWS, _Sept._ 8, 1862.--"We have read many books on Hungary, but
-not one which, in so brief a compass and on so many different aspects of
-the land and its inhabitants, conveys an equal amount of information in
-so satisfactory a style."
-
-
-MEMORABLE EVENTS OF MODERN HISTORY.
-
-BY J. G. EDGAR.
-
-In One closely-printed post 8vo volume, with Illustrations, price 6s. 6d.
-
-*⁎* A volume narrating the History of the Principal Events of Modern
-Europe, and calculated to serve at once as an educational book, as a
-reading book, and a book of reference.
-
-PRESS, _Feb._ 2, 1862.--"Mr. Edgar is always pure, elegant, and vigorous.
-He seems to have received from nature, what men vainly strive to acquire
-from art, the power of writing narrative easily, clearly, and forcibly.
-Goldsmith possessed this faculty, and Southey undoubtedly possessed it;
-and we know of few contemporary writers in the English language who
-possess it to an equal degree with Mr. Edgar. The book is a capital one,
-and fully up to the higher level of educational literature, of which the
-rising generation has the benefit. We confidently recommend it to the
-public, and wish it, for their sakes, all the success which it deserves."
-
-OBSERVER, _Feb._ 23, 1862.--"A most acceptable and useful present for the
-youth of both sexes."
-
-
-THE SCIENCE OF HOME LIFE:
-
-CONTAINING
-
- Heat in its Relation to Things in General.
-
- On the Physical Relations of the Atmosphere as affected by Heat,
- Moisture, and Pressure.
-
- The Atmosphere in Relation to Vegetable and Animal Life.
-
- On Coal and Coal-Gas.
-
- On Flame, and the Chemistry of a Candle.
-
- The Physical and Chemical Properties of Water.
-
- On Soap, with some Account of Bleaching and Disinfecting Agents.
-
- Glass, China, and Earthenware.
-
- The Noble Metals.
-
- The Base Metals.
-
- On Fermentation and Fermented Liquors.
-
- The Breakfast Table.
-
- The Dinner Table.
-
- Ourselves in Relation to the External World.
-
-In 8vo, with numerous Illustrations, 6s.
-
-
-
-
-13 Waterloo Place, S. W.
-
-
-A COURSE
-
-OF
-
-ELEMENTARY MATHEMATICS,
-
-FOR THE USE OF CANDIDATES FOR ADMISSION INTO EITHER OF THE MILITARY
-COLLEGES; OF APPLICANTS FOR APPOINTMENTS IN THE HOME OR INDIAN CIVIL
-SERVICE; AND OF MATHEMATICAL STUDENTS GENERALLY.
-
-BY PROFESSOR J. R. YOUNG.
-
-In One closely-printed Volume, 8vo, pp. 648, price 12s.
-
-ATHENÆUM, _March_ 9, 1861.--"In the work before us he has digested a
-complete Elementary Course by aid of his long experience as a teacher
-and a writer; and he has produced a very useful book.... Mr. Young has
-not allowed his own taste to rule the distribution, but has adjusted his
-parts with the skill of a veteran."
-
-THE LONDON REVIEW, _April_ 6, 1861.--"Mr. Young is well known as the
-author of undoubtedly the best treatise on the 'Theory of Equations'
-which is to be found in our language--a treatise distinguished by
-originality of thought, great learning, and admirable perspicuity. Nor
-are these qualities wanting in the work which we are reviewing....
-Considering the difficulty of the task which Mr. Young has undertaken
-to discharge, and the extent of useful knowledge he has succeeded in
-imparting accurately and lucidly in so small a compass, we can without
-hesitation commend this work to the public as by far the best elementary
-course of mathematics in our language."
-
-
-ANOTHER BLOW FOR LIFE.
-
-BY GEORGE GODWIN, ESQ., F.R.S.,
-
-Author of "London Shadows, Town Swamps, and Social Bridges," Editor of
-"The Builder," &c., &c.
-
-ASSISTED BY JOHN BROWN.
-
-WITH FORTY-ONE ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-In fcap. 4to, cloth.
-
-OBSERVER, _Jan._ 3, 1864.--"This book should be studied by all who have
-a grain of kindly feeling towards their poorer neighbours, and every one
-should strive to find some means of alleviating the misery it points out.
-The illustrations with which the book is liberally supplied will go far
-to make the subject better understood."
-
-BELL'S MESSENGER, _Jan._ 16, 1864.--"'Another Blow for Life' is a great
-and good book, and does honour to its author's head and heart."
-
-THE READER, _Jan._ 9, 1864.--"The author deserves honour for the
-persevering and indomitable energy with which he has faithfully
-chronicled all those material dilapidations and filth which are the
-inevitable concomitants of moral decadence, and we hope his book will
-fall into the thankful hands of every thinking man and escape the too
-frequent fate of books chronicling disagreeable truths which come
-unpleasantly, 'between the wind and our nobility.'"
-
-
-
-
-Wm. H. Allen & Co.
-
-
-THIRD EDITION.
-
-ILLUSTRATED HORSE DOCTOR:
-
-Being an Accurate and Detailed Account, accompanied by more than 400
-Pictorial Representations, characteristic of the various Diseases to
-which the Equine Race are subjected; together with the latest Mode of
-Treatment, and all the Requisite Prescriptions written in Plain English.
-
-BY EDWARD MAYHEW, M.R.C.V.S.,
-
-Author of "The Illustrated Horse Management."
-
-In 8vo, price 18s. 6d., cloth.
-
-_Mr. Mayhew's_ ILLUSTRATED HORSE DOCTOR, _and his companion volume_, THE
-ILLUSTRATED HORSE MANAGEMENT, _should be in the possession of all who
-keep horses_.
-
-CONTENTS:
-
- THE BRAIN AND NERVOUS SYSTEM.--Phrenitis; Abscess within the brain;
- Staggers; Sleepy Staggers and Mad Staggers; Megrims; Hydrophobia;
- Tetanus; Stringhalt; Partial Paralysis; Gutta Serena.
-
- THE EYES.--Simple Ophthalmia; Specific Ophthalmia; Cataract; Fungoid
- Tumours within the substance of the Eye; Lacerated Eyelid; Impediment
- in the Lachrymal Duct.
-
- THE MOUTH.--Excoriated Angles of the Mouth; Parrot Mouth; Lampas;
- Injuries to the Jaw; Aphtha; Lacerated Tongue; Teeth; Scald Mouth.
-
- THE NOSTRILS.--Cold; Nasal Polypus; Nasal Gleet; Highblowing and
- Wheezing.
-
- THE THROAT.--Sore Throat; Cough; Laryngitis; Roaring; Choking;
- Rupture and Stricture of the Œsophagus; Bronchocele.
-
- THE CHEST AND ITS CONTENTS.--Congestion in the Field; Congestion
- in the Stable; Bronchitis, or Inflammation of the Air Passages;
- Pneumonia, or Inflammation of the Lungs; Pleurisy; Hydrothorax;
- Disease of the Heart.
-
- THE STOMACH, LIVER, &C.--Spasm of the Diaphragm; Acute Gastritis;
- Chronic Gastritis; Bots; Chronic Hepatitis; Crib-biting.
-
- THE ABDOMEN.--Enteritis; Acute Dysentery; Chronic Dysentery; Acites,
- or Dropsy of the Abdomen; Influenza; Abdominal Injuries; Worms;
- Spasmodic Colic, Fret, Gripes; Windy Colic.
-
- THE URINARY ORGANS.--Nephritis, or Inflammation of the Kidneys;
- Cystitis, or Inflammation of the Bladder; Spasm of the Urethra;
- Calculi; Hæmaturia, or Bloody Urine; Diabetes Insipidus, or Profuse
- Staling; Albuminous Urine.
-
- THE SKIN.--Mange; Prurigo; Ringworm; Surfeit; Hide-bound; Lice;
- Larva in the Skin; Warts; Tumours; Swollen Legs; Sitfast; Grease;
- Mallenders and Sallenders; Cracked Heels.
-
- SPECIFIC DISEASES.--Broken Wind; Mellanosis; Water Farcy; Purpura
- Hæmorrhagica; Strangles; Glanders.
-
- LIMBS.--Osseous Deposits; Spavin; Splint; Ringbone; Strain of the
- Flexor Tendon; Clap of the Back Sinews; Sprain of the Back Sinews;
- Breaking Down; Curb; Occult Spavin; Rheumatism; Windgalls; Bog
- Spavin; Thoroughpin; Capped Knee; Capped Hock; Capped Elbow; Luxation
- of the Patella; Blood Spavin.
-
- THE FEET.--Lameness; Pumice Foot; Sandcrack; False Quarter; Seedy
- Toe; Tread and Over-reach; Corns; Quittor; Canker; Thrush; Ossified
- Cartilages; Acute Laminitis, or Fever in the Feet; Sub-Acute
- Laminitis; Navicular Disease.
-
- INJURIES.--Poll Evil; Fistulous Withers; Fistulous Parotid Duct;
- Phlebitis, or Inflammation of the Vein; Broken Knees; Open Synovial
- Cavities; Open Synovial Joints; Wounds.
-
- OPERATIONS.--Tracheotomy; Periosteotomy; Neurotomy; Division of the
- tendons; Quittor.
-
-
-CRITICAL NOTICES.
-
-FIELD, _July_ 28, 1863.--"The book contains nearly 600 pages of valuable
-matter, which reflects great credit on its author, and, owing to its
-practical details, the result of deep scientific research, deserves
-a place in the library of medical, veterinary, and non-professional
-readers."
-
-ATHENÆUM, _August_ 4, 1860.--"Mr. Mayhew has written several works on
-the diseases, with details of the anatomy, of animals. His accuracy is
-great. The chapters are well arranged. Each speaks of the diseases of one
-part of the equine frame. The illustrations to these are excellent. The
-operations are accurately described; not the slightest useful hint is
-forgotten; while to render this portion more intelligible, diagrams of
-the parts to be operated on, with views of the instruments, are generally
-given; and the prescriptions, as stated in the title-page, are made out
-in English. The causes, symptoms, and treatment of diseases are briefly
-recorded in a summary, forming an appendix. We conclude by commending Mr.
-Mayhew's book, especially to every possessor of the most useful of the
-'servants of man.'"
-
-ILLUSTRATED NEWS.--"The great mass of the illustrations are wonderfully
-faithful, and they are so varied and interesting that we would undertake
-to get rid of the most confirmed bore that ever pressed heavily on
-mankind for a good two hours by only handing him the book, and directing
-his attention to them. It is a well-known fact that grooms only remember
-the names of four or five diseases, and are sadly indiscriminate in
-their knowledge of symptoms. This book furnishes at once the bane and
-the antidote, as the drawings show the horse not only suffering from
-every kind of disease, but in the different stages of it, while the
-alphabetical summary at the end gives the cause, symptoms, and treatment
-of each."
-
-GLOBE.--"Every gentleman who possesses or cares for horses, would do well
-to keep this book in his house."
-
-ERA.--"We advisedly say that 'The Illustrated Horse Doctor' is the very
-best book of the kind which we know; and what gives it an especial charm
-is, that the author so thoroughly sympathises with the noble animal which
-he describes. Without pretending to go into any analysis of this valuable
-work, we at once pronounce it as scientific, yet intelligible; informing,
-yet highly amusing; acceptable to the profound horse-doctor, yet the work
-of all others for the bookshelves in every gentleman's sanctum."
-
-ARMY AND NAVY GAZETTE.--"Mr. Mayhew's volume will, we imagine, meet with
-a hearty welcome. It is just such a good practical work on the Veterinary
-Art as most of us horse-using (and not unfrequently, we fear, abusing)
-Englishmen have long felt the need of.--We must not conclude our remarks
-without commenting on the numerous wood-cuts with which the volume is
-embellished. It is truly, as it professes to be, an '_Illustrated Horse
-Doctor_.'"
-
-ILLUSTRATED TIMES.--"Many years ago the writer of these lines was
-incidentally 'read up' in horse literature, and a good deal in the way
-of sporting people. His reading and observation in that way have been
-very pleasantly recalled by this _model_ book. We need not waste words
-about this admirable volume--manual, we were going to say, but it is
-more of an armful than a handful. It is quite beyond praise of ours in
-its completeness and general excellence, concerned as it is our lot to
-be with the study instead of the steed. But we showed it to a friend of
-ours (living at Horsely-down), who spends his mornings at Tattersall's
-and his afternoons at the Alhambra, and his evenings at Astley's, and
-his criticism was conveyed in these emphatic words. 'Sir,' said he (his
-name is Ryder), 'it is the Buchan's Domestic Medicine of the stable; the
-mantle of Bucephalus has fallen upon Mr. Mayhew.' Every way the work is
-interesting, and it is beautifully got up; the paper and print being the
-best we have seen for some time."
-
-
-TEA CULTIVATION,
-
-COTTON AND OTHER AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENTS IN INDIA.
-
-BY W. NASSAU LEES, LL.D.
-
-In 8vo, price 8s. 6d.
-
-
-
-
-Wm. H. Allen & Co.
-
-
-The Illustrated
-
-HORSE MANAGEMENT,
-
-CONTAINING
-
-DESCRIPTIVE REMARKS UPON ANATOMY, MEDICINE, SHOEING, TEETH, FOOD, VICES,
-STABLES;
-
-LIKEWISE
-
-A PLAIN ACCOUNT OF THE SITUATION, NATURE, AND VALUE OF THE VARIOUS POINTS;
-
-TOGETHER WITH
-
-COMMENTS ON GROOMS, DEALERS, BREEDERS, BREAKERS, AND TRAINERS;
-
-ALSO ON CARRIAGES AND HARNESS.
-
-Embellished with more than 400 Engravings from Original Designs made
-expressly for this Work.
-
-BY EDWARD MAYHEW, M.R.C.V.S.,
-
-Author of "The Illustrated Horse Doctor," and other works.
-
-In One Volume 8vo, pp. 612.
-
-CONTENTS:
-
- THE BODY of the horse anatomically considered.
-
- PHYSIC.--The mode of administering it, and minor operations.
-
- SHOEING.--Its origin, its uses, and its varieties.
-
- THE TEETH.--Their natural growth, and the abuses to which they are
- liable.
-
- FOOD.--The fittest time for feeding, and the kind of food which the
- horse naturally consumes.
-
- THE EVILS which are occasioned by modern stables.
-
- THE FAULTS inseparable from most present erections which are used as
- stables.
-
- THE SO-CALLED "INCAPACITATING VICES," which are the results of injury
- or of disease.
-
- STABLES as they should be.
-
- GROOMS.--Their prejudices, their injuries, and their duties.
-
- HORSE DEALERS.--Who they are; their mode of dealing; their profits;
- their morality, and their secrets.
-
- POINTS.--Their relative importance, and where to look for their
- development.
-
- BREEDING.--Its inconsistencies and its disappointments.
-
- BREAKING AND TRAINING.--Their errors and their results.
-
- CARRIAGES.--Their cost; their make; their excellences and their
- management.
-
- SADDLERY, HARNESS, AND STABLE SUNDRIES.--Of what these consist; their
- application and their preservation.
-
-_Mr. Mayhew's_ ILLUSTRATED HORSE DOCTOR, _and his companion volume_, THE
-ILLUSTRATED HORSE MANAGEMENT, _should be in the possession of all who
-keep horses_.
-
-CRITICAL NOTICES.
-
-ATHENÆUM, _Feb._ 20, 1864.--"Mr. Mayhew thoroughly comprehends the
-matter, and all masters of studs--we may say, every owner of a single
-pony or ass--will derive much profit and an equal amount of pleasure by
-perusing this volume; for the book is not only distinguished by common
-sense, but by its power of amusing. We never met with a volume which more
-honestly and efficiently carried out the promise made on its title-page.
-A large amount of English life, ways, manners, morals, dodges and doings
-is described by Mr. Mayhew, as well as more serious matter connected with
-the question which he so ably handles."
-
-STANDARD, _Jan._ 27, 1864.--"It is, perhaps, the most perfect work yet
-published upon the management of horses. Everywhere Mr. Mayhew writes
-ably and readably, and with neither fear nor favour; his observations
-always commend themselves to one's understanding, and he hits fairly
-many blots in our present system of management. The engravings are
-exceedingly well executed, and they illustrate the text actually as well
-as nominally."
-
-OBSERVER, _Jan._ 10, 1864.--"Mr. Mayhew is already favourably known to
-a large number of persons interested in the management of horses by a
-former work, with the title of the 'Illustrated Horse Doctor,' and the
-volume under notice will certainly add considerably to his reputation for
-extensive knowledge and thorough acquaintance with the subject with which
-he professes to deal. Mr. Mayhew also has some very useful remarks on the
-situation, nature and value of the various points to be looked for by
-the purchaser of a horse, and this useful information is supplemented by
-some very excellent and truthful remarks upon grooms, dealers, breeders,
-breakers and trainers, the whole forming a most valuable work for
-guidance and reference, and displaying in every page an earnest desire
-to improve the condition and treatment of one of the noblest and most
-serviceable animals provided for the use of man."
-
-SPECTATOR, _Feb._ 6, 1864.--"No horseman who can afford to buy it will
-regret the purchase of Mr. Mayhew's 'Illustrated Horse Management.'"
-
-BELL'S MESSENGER.--"There can be no question that Mr. Mayhew is the
-most competent man of the day for the task which he has undertaken, and
-we must add most satisfactorily accomplished. 'The Illustrated Horse
-Management' may be fitly termed an encyclopædia of all that relates
-to the horse, and the several uses to which it can be applied. We,
-therefore, earnestly recommend this handsome volume to our readers, with
-the conviction that every one who cares for his horse can profitably and
-pleasurably consult its well-stored pages."
-
-SUN, _Jan._ 19, 1864.--"We have read Mr. Mayhew's book with all the
-attention which it so eminently merits, and we have no hesitation in
-asserting that it is the most comprehensive and instructive work on the
-subject of horse management which we have ever had the luck to meet with.
-The 'Illustrated Horse Management' is a work which should find a place
-in the library of every country gentleman, for the most experienced may
-derive benefit from its perusal."
-
-NONCONFORMIST, _March_ 9, 1864.--"Grooms hate their masters to be too
-knowing, but whoever shall quietly study this book, and make it his guide
-for a few weeks in the observation and control of his own stable, will
-not afterwards feel himself to be dependent on his servants. Mr. Mayhew
-writes clearly, forcibly, and delightfully, and we earnestly recommend
-his book to every one who is the owner of even a pony for his children's
-use, while those who have extensive stables should read and read again
-every paragraph of its closely packed contents."
-
-GLOBE, _Feb._ 22, 1864.--"Mr. Mayhew writes on a subject of which he
-is master; and his new book is a work of care, experience and general
-enlightenment, as concerns the management of horses."
-
-ECONOMIST, _March_ 5, 1864.--"The 'Illustrated Horse Management,' by
-Edward Mayhew, is really a very useful book to all who are concerned
-with horses, either for pleasure or profit. To English farmers, who may
-be induced to breed horses, the various points of management which are
-insisted on by Mr. Mayhew in ample detail have a money value."
-
-
-
-
-Wm. H. Allen & Co., 13 Waterloo Place, S. W.
-
-
-THE HORSES OF THE SAHARA,
-
-And the Manners of the Desert.
-
-BY E. DAUMAS,
-
-General of the Division Commanding at Bordeaux, Senator, &c., &c.
-
-WITH COMMENTARIES BY THE EMIR ABD-EL-KADER (Authorized Edition).
-
-In 8vo, cloth, price 10s. 6d., by post 11s. 2d.
-
-CONTENTS:
-
- =Part I.=
-
- SOURCES OF INFORMATION.
-
- Remarks by the Emir Abd-el-Kader.--Treatise on the Horse.
-
- ON THE ORIGIN OF THE ARAB HORSE.--Four great epochs; Creation of the
- horse; Change of coat; Moral qualities of the thorough-bred.
-
- THE BARB.--Oneness of the race; Letter from M. Lesseps on the
- Alexandria races; Weight carried by African horses.
-
- Traditional love of the horse; Arab proverbs.
-
- Superiority of the horses of the Sahara.
-
- BREEDS.--Incontestable purity of the Saharene Barb; Endurance of the
- Arab; Two varieties of the horse.
-
- THE SIRE AND THE DAM.--Mare and foal; Influence of the sire; Purity
- of race.
-
- REARING AND BREAKING IN.--Early training; Elementary Exercises; Names.
-
- DIET.--Camel's and ewe's milk; Dates; Green food; Repose and fat
- injurious to a horse.
-
- GROOMING, HYGIENE, PROPORTIONS.--Selection of food and water; How to
- foretell the size and character of a horse; Ingenious measurements.
-
- COATS.--Variety of colours; White spots; Tufts; Favourite coats;
- Objectionable coats.
-
- ON CHOOSING AND PURCHASING HORSES.
-
- SHOEING.--Farriers; their privileges and tools; Cold shoeing.
-
- THE HARNESS.--The Arab saddle; Advantages of the Arab system.
-
- MAXIMS OF THE ARAB CAVALIER.--Endurance; Making the horse a study.
-
- Horse-racing among the Arabs.
-
- ABD-EL-KADER ON THE ARAB HORSE.--Examples of endurance; Reasons for
- early training; High price of mares; Identity of the Arab and the
- Barb; General instructions; Draught horses.
-
- THE WAR HORSE.--His form and qualities.
-
- =Part II.--The Manners of the Desert.=
-
- The Arab horse derives his character from his Arab master.
-
- THE SAHARA, BY ABD-EL-KADER.
-
- THE RAZZIA.--Three kinds of razzia: the Tehha, the Khrotefa, the
- Terbigue; Episodes; Popular chaunt; The combat; Circumstantial
- details.
-
- THE KHRIANIA, OR THEFT.--Horse, camel, and sheep stealing;
- Superstitions.
-
- WAR BETWEEN DESERT TRIBES.--Motives; Proclamation of war; Summoning
- allies; Departure; Amorous intrigues; Thefts; Scouts; Preliminaries
- of peace; Saharene diplomacy; Conclusion of peace; Hostilities; The
- eve of battle; Challenges; War cries; The Battle; Defeat; Victory;
- Anecdotes.
-
- Lamentations of an Arab warrior.
-
- USAGES OF WAR.--Distribution of the plunder; The chief; Loan of a
- horse; Female spectators of the battle.
-
- The horse of noble race.
-
- OSTRICH HUNTING.--On horseback; Details of the excursion; From an
- ambush; Habits of the ostrich.
-
- GAZELLE HUNTING.--THE GREYHOUND.
-
- HAWKING.
-
- THE CHACE, BY ABD-EL-KADER.--The gazelle; The hyæna; The panther; The
- lion; modes of hunting.
-
- THE CAMEL.--Management, Diet, &c.
-
- THE SHEEP.--Immense flocks; Their usefulness in the Sahara.
-
- LIFE IN THE DESERT.--The villager; The master of the tent; Sobriety;
- Runners; Inventory of a wealthy Arab's fortune; His occupations;
- Armourers; Legislation; Women's employment; Hospitality; Mendicants;
- Sorcerers; Magic; Religion.
-
- THE ARAB ARISTOCRACY.--The thorny shrub and the date-tree; The
- Sherifs; The marabouts and the _djouad_; A great tent; The
- _vendetta_; Examples; Blood money; _Lex talionis_; Birth, education,
- and marriage; Polygamy; An Arab interior; Amusements; Death; Funeral
- rites.
-
- * * * * *
-
-OBSERVER, _May_ 3, 1863.--"There is not a page in this book from which
-we may not gather useful hints or valuable information respecting the
-nature, habits and management of horses."
-
-EDINBURGH COURANT.--"We have rarely read a work giving a more picturesque
-and, at the same time, practical account of the manners and customs of a
-people, than this book on the Arabs and their horses."
-
- +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Transcriber Notes: |
- | |
- | P. 109. 'prfoessional men.', changed 'prfoessional' to |
- | 'professional'. |
- | Changed all instances of 'negociation' to 'negotiation'. |
- | P. 313. Changed 'verry' to 'very', in 'I congratulate you very'. |
- | P. 318. Changed 'shokking' and 'childern' to 'shocking' and |
- | 'children', in 'a shocking bloodshed between children'. |
- | P. 320. Changed 'scilence' to 'silence', in 'so long a silence'. |
- | P. 324. Added 'a' to 'wishes you a great deal of good'. |
- | P. 325. Changed 'monts' to 'months', in 'two or three months'. |
- | P. 329. Index: Arnim, Her, changed 'Her' to 'Herr'. |
- | P. 334. Index: Schack, added 'from' to 'and expelled from the |
- | court'. |
- | Index: Struensee, his important reforms--added page number '39'. |
- | Add 18: 'Breakinig and training', changed 'Breakinig' to |
- | 'Breaking'. |
- | Corrected various punctuation. |
- +--------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Times of Her Majesty Caroline
-Matilda, Vol. 3 (of 3), by Sir C. F. Lachelles Wraxall
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Life and Times of Her Majesty Caroline Matilda, Vol. 3 (of 3)
- Queen of Denmark and Norway etc.
-
-Author: Sir C. F. Lachelles Wraxall
-
-Release Date: August 17, 2017 [EBook #55369]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HER MAJESTY CAROLINE MATILDA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jane Robins and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h1><span class="small80">LIFE AND TIMES</span><br />
-
-<span class="small50">OF</span><br />
-
-<span class="small70">HER MAJESTY</span><br />
-
-CAROLINE MATILDA.</h1>
-
-
-<p class="p6">QUEEN OF DENMARK AND NORWAY,</p>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>AND</strong></p>
-
-<p class="p4">SISTER OF H. M. GEORGE III. OF ENGLAND,</p>
-
-<p class="p5">FROM FAMILY DOCUMENTS AND PRIVATE STATE ARCHIVES.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>BY</strong></p>
-
-<p class="p4">S<span class="smcap">IR</span> C. F. LASCELLES WRAXALL, B<span class="smcap">ART.</span></p>
-
-<p class="p5">IN THREE VOLUMES.</p>
-
-<p class="p4">VOL. III.</p>
-
-<p class="p5">LONDON:<br />
-W<span class="smcap">M.</span> H. ALLEN &amp; CO., 13, WATERLOO PLACE, S.W.<br />
-1864.</p>
-
-<p class="center">[<em>All Rights reserved.</em>]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center">LEWIS AND SON, PRINTERS, SWAN BUILDINGS, MOORGATE STREET.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>CONTENTS OF VOL. III.</h2>
-
-<p class="centre">&mdash;&mdash;&#9830;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<div class="add">
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">THE TRIAL OF COUNT BRANDT.<br />
-<span class="rightline">PAGE</span><br /></p>
-
-<p class="p8">The Indictment&mdash;Brandt at Court&mdash;The Assault on the King&mdash;The
-King's Deposition&mdash;The Queen and Struensee&mdash;Duty of
-a Good Citizen&mdash;The Confidant&mdash;The Alleged Forgery&mdash;The
-Sentence Proposed&mdash;The Defence&mdash;The King at Home&mdash;Duties
-of the Favourite&mdash;A Man of Courage&mdash;The Royal Gift&mdash;Brandt's
-Letter to his Judges&mdash;A Modest Request&mdash;Hurried
-Proceedings <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">THE TWO COUNTS.</p>
-
-<p class="p8">Struensee's Sentence&mdash;His General Conduct&mdash;The Maître des Requêtes&mdash;The
-German Language&mdash;Struensee's Despotism&mdash;The
-Council of the Thirty-two&mdash;The Cabinet Minister&mdash;The King's
-Presents&mdash;Struensee's Precautions&mdash;His Downfall&mdash;The Sentence
-Approved&mdash;Count Brandt&mdash;His Assault on the King&mdash;His
-Behaviour&mdash;The Royal Assent <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">THE EXECUTION.</p>
-
-<p class="p8">Confirmation of the Sentence&mdash;Struensee's Correspondence&mdash;Rantzau's
-Treachery&mdash;An Unfeeling Court&mdash;Struensee's Penitence&mdash;The
-Scaffold&mdash;April 28&mdash;Execution of Brandt&mdash;Horrible
-Details&mdash;Death of Struensee&mdash;His Character&mdash;Enlightened
-Despotism&mdash;The First Servant of the State&mdash;The Queen
-Dowager <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">THE HIGH COMMISSION.</p>
-
-<p class="p8">The Ten Prisoners&mdash;The Report&mdash;Lt.-Colonel von Hesselberg&mdash;Etats-rath
-Willebrandt&mdash;Professor Berger&mdash;Unjust Sentences&mdash;Von
-Gähler&mdash;Falckenskjold and Struensee&mdash;Serious Crimes&mdash;The
-Sentence&mdash;The Royal Approval&mdash;The Fortress of Munkholm&mdash;The
-Commandant&mdash;Resignation&mdash;The Order of Release&mdash;Curious
-Conditions&mdash;Death of Falckenskjold <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">DEPARTURE OF THE QUEEN.</p>
-
-<p class="p8">The British Fleet&mdash;Spirited Conduct of Keith&mdash;The Order of Release&mdash;The
-Prisoner Louisa Augusta&mdash;The Departure&mdash;The
-Landing at Stade&mdash;The Stay at Göhrde&mdash;Arrival in Celle&mdash;The
-Queen's Court&mdash;A Happy Family&mdash;Keith's Mission&mdash;Literary
-Pirates&mdash;Reverdil to the Rescue <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_141">141</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">THE SECRET AGENT.</p>
-
-<p class="p8">The Court at Celle&mdash;Mr. Wraxall&mdash;Presentation to the Queen&mdash;Hamburg&mdash;The
-Danish Nobility&mdash;The Proposition&mdash;The Credentials&mdash;Return
-to Celle&mdash;Baron von Seckendorf&mdash;The
-Queen's Acceptance&mdash;Another Visit to Celle&mdash;The Interview
-in the Jardin François&mdash;Caroline Matilda's Agreement&mdash;The
-Inn in the Wood&mdash;Baron von Bülow&mdash;A Strange Adventure&mdash;Arrival
-in England <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">'TWIXT THE CUP AND THE LIP.</p>
-
-<p class="p8">Baron von Lichtenstein&mdash;The King's Instructions&mdash;The Arrival
-from Hamburg&mdash;The Four Articles&mdash;A Terrible Journey&mdash;Arrival
-at Celle&mdash;Interview with the Queen&mdash;Baron von Seckendorf&mdash;The
-Answer from Copenhagen&mdash;The Appeal to George
-III.&mdash;The Counter-Revolution&mdash;Another Visit to Celle&mdash;The
-Last Interview&mdash;The Queen's Gratitude&mdash;Return to London&mdash;Waiting
-for the Answer&mdash;A Sudden Blow <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_202">202</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">DEATH OF CAROLINE MATILDA.</p>
-
-<p class="p8">The Typhus Fever&mdash;Death of the Page&mdash;The Queen's Visit&mdash;Symptoms
-of Illness&mdash;Dr. Zimmermann&mdash;Pastor Lehzen&mdash;Caroline
-Matilda's Goodness of Heart&mdash;Her Death&mdash;The Funeral&mdash;General
-Grief&mdash;The Monuments&mdash;Letter to George III.&mdash;Proofs
-of Caroline Matilda's Innocence&mdash;The Queen's Character <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_242">242</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></p>
-
-<p class="centre">WHEN ROGUES FALL OUT&mdash;&mdash;.</p>
-
-<p class="p8">The Reaction&mdash;The King's Will&mdash;Köller-Banner&mdash;Rantzau's Dismissal&mdash;Prince
-Charles of Hesse&mdash;Court Intrigues&mdash;Eickstedt's
-Career&mdash;Beringskjold's Career and Death&mdash;Von der
-Osten&mdash;The Guldberg Ministry&mdash;The Prince Regent&mdash;The
-Coup d'État&mdash;Uncle and Nephew&mdash;Fate of Guldberg&mdash;Death
-of Juliana Maria <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p8"><span class="p6a">A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span> A.</span> <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_291">291</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p8"><span class="p6a">A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span> B.</span> <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_307">307</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p8"><span class="p6a">A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span> C.</span> <span class="rightline"><a href="#Page_313">313</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p4"><a href="#INDEX_TO_VOL_III">INDEX TO VOL. III</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p7"><span class="small80">LIFE AND TIMES</span><br />
-
-<span class="small50">OF</span><br />
-
-CAROLINE MATILDA.</p>
-
-<p class="centre">&mdash;&mdash;&#9830;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">THE TRIAL OF COUNT BRANDT.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">THE INDICTMENT&mdash;BRANDT AT COURT&mdash;THE ASSAULT ON THE
-KING&mdash;THE KING'S DEPOSITION&mdash;THE QUEEN AND STRUENSEE&mdash;DUTY
-OF A GOOD CITIZEN&mdash;THE CONFIDANT&mdash;THE ALLEGED
-FORGERY&mdash;THE SENTENCE PROPOSED&mdash;THE DEFENCE&mdash;THE
-KING AT HOME&mdash;DUTIES OF THE FAVOURITE&mdash;A MAN OF COURAGE&mdash;THE
-ROYAL GIFT&mdash;BRANDT'S LETTER TO HIS JUDGES&mdash;A
-MODEST REQUEST&mdash;HURRIED PROCEEDINGS.</span></p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>On the same day that the Fiscal General Wiwet handed
-in his indictment of Struensee, he delivered to the commission
-his charges against Count Brandt, which were
-to the following effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="p5">T<span class="smcap">HE</span> I<span class="smcap">NDICTMENT OF</span> C<span class="smcap">OUNT</span> B<span class="smcap">RANDT</span>.</p>
-
-<p>As concerns the second principal prisoner, Count
-Enevold Brandt, we cannot say of him that he undertook<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-something which he did not understand, but he
-has committed actions in which he ought not to have
-allowed himself to be used.</p>
-
-<p>I have already most submissively stated how he,
-after being dismissed from court, again returned to it;
-that it took place through the intercession of Count
-Struensee, who required a person in whom he could
-trust, who was bound to him, and who would neither
-betray Struensee's enterprises, nor allow other persons
-to betray them. It was his function, therefore, to pay
-attention to everything that his royal Majesty undertook,
-in word and in deed, and to prevent any one
-having access to the king who did not belong to the
-party.</p>
-
-<p>The attendance of the valets was for this purpose
-shortened. On the other hand, the king was to receive
-every morning the visit of a doctor, who gave
-him powders, although there was nothing the matter
-with his Majesty, and, as valet Torp stated, lit. F.,
-p. 52, his Majesty was just as healthy as he had been
-before, and demanded no attendance from a doctor.</p>
-
-<p>This doctor, Professor Berger, who, as the chosen
-instrument of Counts Struensee and Brandt, there
-can be no doubt indulged in thoughts about great
-posts of honour to be acquired in Denmark, allowed
-himself to be employed in incommoding his Majesty
-every morning. The two other physicians in ordinary,
-Etats-rath von Berger and Piper, could not be induced
-to do such useless things; and hence we see
-that Professor Berger did not go solely on account of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-his Majesty's health, but in order that the morning
-hour might be spent with him, the confidant of the
-counts.</p>
-
-<p>It is not easy to understand how Count Brandt, of
-whom it must be confessed that he possessed common
-sense, and might have been useful to the king and
-country as a native, allowed himself to be persuaded
-to become a promoter of the Struensian undertakings.
-Nor is it possible to discover what could induce him,
-as a person of rank and family, to deny that <em>hauteur</em>
-which is generally observed toward people of low
-origin, unless it was caused by an unbounded desire
-for honours and wealth, and that he consequently behaved
-like those who consort with, and are the accomplices
-of, thieves.</p>
-
-<p>If Count Brandt, as he says and writes, wished to
-leave the court and go on his travels, if only an income
-of 1,000 dollars were allowed him, because he
-saw that his remaining would do him no good, why
-did he remain? Why did he not say to his Majesty
-that he did not wish to stay at court any longer?
-What Count Brandt alleges, therefore, is only a subterfuge;
-and what he states in his memorials to Count
-Struensee is not earnestness, but merely threats against
-Count Struensee, who must effect that which Count
-Brandt desired to attain, as is visible from the fact
-that Count Struensee appears to have employed soothing
-language. For if Count Brandt regarded his position
-at court as a Hell (his own expression), he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-at liberty to get rid of it by sending in his resignation.
-But it was not meant seriously. Hence he is not to
-be excused for accepting a post of which himself says:&mdash;"Mais
-je le force de vivre avec moi et pour comble
-de disgrâce je suis encore obligé à le (the king) traiter
-durement, à ce qu'il l'appelle pour qu'il ne devient
-insolent vis-à-vis de la Reine, et si cela arrive par
-hazard j'en porte la faute: cela tout seul est un Enfer."
-In this position with his royal Majesty he has proved
-himself guilty of the following capital crimes:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">I.</p>
-
-<p>After free consideration and consultation he went in
-to the king his master, and then challenged, abused,
-attacked, beat, and bit his Majesty. This is certainly
-unheard of, and, I must say of this deed, "animus
-meminisse horret luctuque refugit." But it happened
-so, and Count Brandt's own confession and the statements
-of the witnesses confirm it.</p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt confessed before the commission that
-he&mdash;after his royal Majesty one day at breakfast had
-said something which he, Count Brandt, considered insulting,
-and his Majesty had thrown a lemon at him&mdash;consulted
-with Count Struensee on the matter, who
-advised him to go to the king and demand satisfaction.
-In consequence of this, after laying a riding-whip
-previously in a pianoforte standing in the king's ante-chamber,
-in order to threaten the king with it, he went
-into the king's cabinet, challenged, assaulted, and maltreated
-him. (<em>V.</em> his confession, lit. F., pp. 309 and 322.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This confession is confirmed by his Majesty's own
-declaration to valet Schleel, who, on the morning after
-the assault, came to his Majesty, and saw that the
-king's neck was scratched; by the statements of valet
-Brieghil, page of the bed-chamber Schack, valet Torp,
-and also by the evidence of the negro boy Moranti.
-From all this it is indisputably fully proved that
-Count Brandt laid hands on his Majesty in order to
-insult him&mdash;an awful deed, as King David says in the
-second book of Samuel, chap, i., vv. 14, 15, 16:
-"How wast thou not afraid to stretch forth thine
-hand to destroy the Lord's anointed? * * * * Thy
-blood be on thine own head."</p>
-
-<p>It is true that Count Brandt has tried to excuse this
-audacious deed, partly by the assurance that such
-things were frequently done to his Majesty by Count
-Holck and Warnstedt, partly by asserting that his
-royal Majesty has forgiven him this crime. But even
-if, as regards the first apology, we were to assume
-for a moment that such audacious deeds were really
-done by Count Holck and Von Warnstedt, this cannot
-exculpate Count Brandt, who was not justified
-in acting thus because another before him had committed
-these crimes and escaped punishment. And as
-regards the second excuse, his royal Majesty never
-forgave him his crime, for the witnesses I have mentioned
-declare, that after this occurrence his Majesty
-could not endure Count Brandt, and was afraid of
-being attacked by him; that his Majesty locked his
-door on the following night, which was not usually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-the case, and thus revealed that his Majesty had not
-forgiven Count Brandt the offence, and also that his
-Majesty ordered page Schack<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> to denounce Count
-Brandt's treatment of him to this commission, which
-would not have happened had the offence been
-pardoned. Although such conduct toward a king can
-never meet with an apology, still, if the assault had
-been made at the moment when Count Brandt considered
-himself insulted, and if it might appear that
-he had undertaken it in an outburst of excitement, a
-good deal might still be said against it. But in this
-case, where he goes in to his king after reflection, and
-in cold blood, orders out the persons present, so that
-there may be no witnesses of the improper deed, locks
-the door, in order that no one may afford assistance,
-seizes the king round the neck, threatens him with
-death; and when he at length lets him loose, after
-the king has spoken soothingly, threatens him that
-another time he shall not get off so cheaply; and, in
-addition, abuses the king, as himself is obliged to
-confess&mdash;nothing can be brought forward as the
-slightest excuse for him; he is a child of death, and
-one of the greatest criminals that ever trod the earth.
-He has acted against his oath, which commands him
-to risk his life and blood for his king and the defence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-of his life; but exactly contrary to this oath he attacks
-his king, and in such a way that the latter suffers a
-loss of blood.</p>
-
-<p>It is of no avail in his excuse that he alleges his
-royal Majesty assaulted him first, unless this occurred
-at a time when his Majesty was angry with him, and
-he merely defended himself, which is human; but still
-could not be permitted to any subject against his king.
-But that he goes in to the king at a time when he had
-no duties to perform, and only in order to say harsh
-things to the king; that he goes in to terrify the king;
-that he abuses him; that he defies the king,&mdash;all this
-leaves him no other mode of escape but his statement,
-that the king assaulted him first. But, in my opinion,
-every man who suffers such treatment in his own house
-has the right to regale a man with a cudgel who
-comes into his room for the purpose of prostituting
-him, and how much more so a king. If his Majesty
-had killed him, Count Brandt, on the spot, it would
-have been his well-merited reward, and could have
-been answered before God and man.</p>
-
-<p>As concerns Count Brandt's general behaviour toward
-his royal Majesty; for instance, his going in to
-the king in his <em>peignoir</em>, remaining with his Majesty
-with his hat on, or entering the king's room while
-playing the flute, this is really such conduct as no
-master would put up with from his servant, much less
-a king from his subject.</p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt, it is true, apologises for all this by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-saying that his Majesty would have it so, and that
-the same thing was done in the time of earlier servants
-in an even more indifferent way. But the former is
-only a proof of his Majesty's gentleness and kindness,
-which do not like to express what a man ought to say
-to himself, and the latter gives him no right; for must
-I be a churl because my predecessor was one? In
-this matter I could mention several instances of bad
-conduct on the part of Count Brandt in treating his
-royal Majesty contemptuously. But as the great
-crime swallows up all the rest, it is unnecessary to
-mention them here, and so make the trial longer.
-<em>Crimine ab uno discimus omnia.</em></p>
-
-<p>I will, therefore, now proceed to Count Brandt's
-second capital offence.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">II.</p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt has broken the fidelity which he
-owed to the king his master by virtue of the oath he
-took to his Majesty, by being an accomplice in the
-improper intercourse and intimacy which Count Struensee
-had acquired with the person to whom he certainly
-owed reverence and affection, but no tenderness.
-Count Brandt confesses this, and that Count Struensee
-confided it to him is proved by his, Brandt's, own confession,
-lit. a, pp. 40 and 41. It is true that Count
-Struensee, in his declaration, lit. a, p. 50, will not
-quite admit Count Brandt's statement; but no doubt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-can be possible when we remember that Count Brandt
-was placed about his Majesty to prevent other persons
-having access to the king, in order that Count Struensee
-might have the better opportunity to play his
-part. What could induce Count Struensee to share
-the booty with him, and to allow him to rise in
-honour equally with himself, unless it were done to
-render him, Brandt, faithful, silent, and attentive?</p>
-
-<p>That Count Brandt was cognizant of this illicit familiarity
-is furthermore shown by Count Struensee's
-reply to Count Brandt's letter, in which we read: "Je
-n'ai partagé avec personne la confiance que je vous ai
-donné: vous êtes le seul qui possède mes secrets, et à
-qui je m'explique sur tous les objets sans reserve."
-Count Brandt, generally as a subject, and specially as
-a royal official, Danish count and chamberlain, was
-commanded by the law to promote the king's welfare
-and prevent his detriment by his utmost efforts.
-Hence two duties were offered him: either to reveal
-the affair to the king, or to observe to the guilty party
-that such things must not be allowed; to oppose such
-a disgusting life, and threaten to reveal it to the king.
-I fancy I can hear a sincere friend of the king and of
-the honour of the royal family speaking thus to Count
-Struensee: "Audacious traitor and most impudent of
-the human race! you who ought to recognise and
-honour the supremacy and majesty, turn back from
-your impudence, and know that I, even through my
-birth, am bound to avert everything that entails the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-dishonour of the house of the king and his family."
-I believe that such language would have had more
-effect than all the memoirs. But, unhappily, money
-flowed, which Count Brandt needed; and hence he
-did not dare say, "May you be damned with your
-money!" I certainly see that I may be answered:
-"Why did not others do so? Why did the Fiscal
-General himself neglect it?" But to this it may be
-answered: "No one knew so much about it as Count
-Brandt. No one was so near the king as he; he kept
-every one away from the king, for the purpose that
-his royal Majesty might learn nothing about it from
-one or the other." But it was his duty, as he was
-always about the king, and was accurately acquainted
-with everything. If he were, on the contrary, to object
-that such matters did not concern him, although
-he is forced to confess having warned Count Struensee
-of what happened to them both on January 17, still
-he could have learned from Councillor of Chancery
-Blechinberg and his wife, and Mesdames Schiötte and
-Buch, what his duty was, and what he ought to have
-done. But as he not only omitted to do this, but did
-everything that lay in his power to prevent the affair
-reaching the king, and as Count Struensee has been
-found guilty in this matter of an assault on the king's
-supremacy, Count Brandt must be regarded as an accomplice,
-and punished in accordance with the paragraph
-of the law 6&mdash;4&mdash;14.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">III.</p>
-
-<p>In the same way as Count Brandt displayed faithlessness
-toward his king in the previous point, he
-furthermore showed it in the following affair, by
-joining Count Struensee in robbing the royal treasury
-of various sums of money.</p>
-
-<p>It is an easy matter for a person who is daily with
-his king, and in such a manner that no one else can
-reach him, to grow rich. But such an enterprise cannot
-be so easily excused, even if there be the king's
-assent to it, for the king's favour must be as little
-abused in money matters as in other things. To
-pocket a sum of 60,000 dollars for so short a period
-of service, because he annoyed the king, and waited
-on him, not to his comfort, but to his vexation and
-that of others, seems to denote audacity and impudence
-as well as slight reflection. To appropriate so
-large a sum in so short a time, while the land was
-sunk in debt, and seventy thousand human beings
-must contribute to it from their poverty, and save it
-out of their food, was not a wise action on the part
-of a man who wished to be regarded as a patriot. But
-his royal Majesty did not give Count Brandt any such
-sum; but Count Struensee procured it for him by converting
-6,000 dollars into 60,000.</p>
-
-<p>I produce here the questions laid before Count
-Brandt in respect to this matter, and his answers.
-From these we learn that Count Brandt declares he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-first received 10,000 dollars and afterwards 60,000,
-although he alleges it was only 50,000, and lastly, at
-the new year, in addition to 300 dollars, 3,000 more.</p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt is obliged himself to confess that there
-appears to him something strange and very suspicious
-in the document in which credit is taken for the 60,000
-dollars, and which I have discussed more amply in the
-indictment of Count Struensee. Count Brandt does
-not deny having received the money, and that he gave
-no receipt for it, but thanked the king for it, though
-without mentioning the amount. If we now take into
-consideration what I said about this in my accusation
-against Count Struensee, not the slightest doubt can
-exist that Count Brandt was an accomplice in this
-audacious deed, and therefore was guilty of the crime
-of forgery.</p>
-
-<p>These are the principal crimes of Count Brandt as
-regards his own person. In addition, he took part in all
-the crimes which Count Struensee committed; he had
-confidants and instruments to set in work everything
-that Count Struensee wished, instead of acting in accordance
-with his oath and his duty, and avoiding those
-things which he knew would have evil results. I may be
-permitted to regard it as superfluous to enter more fully
-into these matters, as they are well known to the exalted
-commission, and I have sufficient proofs for my
-proposed sentence, which I most submissively offer for
-decision in the following terms:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"That Count Chamberlain Enevold Brandt, who has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-not only forgotten the most submissive veneration
-which he owed to the king his master, but also had
-the audacity to go into the king's cabinet, and then
-not only address his supreme royal Majesty in bad
-language, but also to commit the most audacious and
-unheard-of deed of laying hands on his lord the king,
-the anointed of God, as an insult to his royal Majesty,
-as well as behaved in many points unfaithfully
-to his Majesty, and consented to many things against
-his better knowledge, although his royal Majesty had
-shown him great favour,&mdash;be condemned by virtue of
-the paragraphs of the law 6&mdash;4&mdash;1&mdash;14, to forfeit his
-dignity as count and his office of chamberlain as well
-as his honour, life and estate; that after his coat of
-arms has been broken by the executioner, his right
-hand shall be cut off while alive, the body quartered
-and exposed on the wheel, his head and hands affixed
-to a pole, his fortune confiscated to the king, and his
-heirs, should he possess any, lose their rank and name."</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><em>April</em> 21, 1772. <span class="rightlinea">F. W. W<span class="smcap">IWET</span>.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As regards Brandt's confession of a knowledge of
-the familiarity between the queen and Struensee, it is
-probable that Brandt was persuaded that his life depended
-on what he might say about the <em>liaison</em>. What
-other motive could he have had for making such a confession?
-If Brandt had merely declared, like Berger
-and others, that he had suspicions on the subject, it
-would have been of no use. Something positive being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-required, he declared that he was informed of it. How
-could he be so? Was it by Struensee, who concealed
-nothing from him?</p>
-
-<p>But Struensee, instead of acknowledging this confidence,
-absolutely denied it, and no confrontation was
-ventured. Again, if Brandt's declaration was correct,
-why did Struensee repulse it so loudly? It appears
-indisputable that he did so because it was false.</p>
-
-<p>And the position in which Brandt placed himself by
-yielding to the solicitations of the commissioners was
-very probably the cause of his ruin. The mysteries
-of this trial must be buried with him. Without this
-motive, what interest could there have been in destroying
-a man like Brandt? Was there a shadow of justice
-in condemning him to death for things which
-were quite common with the king?</p>
-
-<p>Two days after this wretched indictment, which was
-merely handed in to the commission as a matter of
-form, the defence was delivered by Advocate Bang to
-the same judges, and was to the following effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">B<span class="smcap">ANG'S</span> D<span class="smcap">EFENCE OF</span> C<span class="smcap">OUNT</span> B<span class="smcap">RANDT</span>.</p>
-
-<p>By the most gracious commands of his royal
-Majesty, of March 23, which are attached to this
-under lit. <span class="smcap">A</span>, I shall lay before this high commission
-Count Brandt's defence&mdash;not the defence of the
-actions of which he is accused, but his defence in so
-far as the accusations are incorrect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It must reasonably insult Count Brandt to find that
-he whom his Majesty, through his own special favour,
-and as a reward for his faithful services to his king
-and master, raised to the rank of Count, selected for
-his daily intimate society, and honoured with many
-superfluous proofs of favour and confidence,&mdash;that he,
-I say, should see himself condemned to lose his dignity
-of count, his honour, life, and fortune, and have his
-body ill-treated by the executioner. But, according
-to his own declaration, made to me, his defender,
-neither his death, his disgrace, nor his torture, will be
-so painful to him as the sole idea that he has failed in
-the most submissive reverence, willingness, devotion,
-and fidelity, which his duty to his king and benefactor
-commanded, and by which he would have descended
-below humanity, and, so to speak, have borrowed a
-model of his actions from the evil spirits. If his
-conscience reproached him on these points, the bodily
-punishments would be no torture as compared with
-this grief; but he has, with a calm conscience, and
-unassailed by its gnawings, listened to the charges
-brought against him, and requested me to bring
-forward the following in his defence:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5"><em>Ad Præliminaria.</em></p>
-
-<p>The Fiscal General accuses Count Brandt (<em>a</em>) that
-by Count Struensee's regulation, and in <em>liaison</em> with
-him, he was employed at court after his foreign tour,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-so that Count Struensee might have in him a man in
-whom he could trust, who would neither betray his
-designs, nor allow any one else to reveal them; (<em>b</em>)
-that Count Brandt kept people from the king who did
-not belong to the party; (<em>c</em>) that he shortened the
-attendance of the valets on the king's person, and,
-instead of it, arranged that Professor Berger, contrary
-to the king's wish, should wait on his Majesty
-in the mornings for the purpose of giving him powders,
-which were innocent, however; and (<em>d</em>) that he
-compelled the king to live with him, and treated him
-harshly.</p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt has never regarded it as a crime to
-have allowed himself to be recommended to his
-Majesty by the man to whom the king granted his
-favour and confidence. What he attained through
-Struensee's recommendation was only a continuation
-of what Privy Councillors Saldern and Bernstorff had
-begun. The aforesaid post was neither given him to
-keep things secret, nor to conceal from the king
-things which, according to the Fiscal General's
-opinion, his Majesty must not be allowed to know.
-As it is not specially mentioned what the things were
-which must be concealed from the king, while the
-counsel only appears to refer to that which is alleged
-under the third chief point, I will reserve my special
-reply to it, and here content myself with offering a
-general denial to the general statement. I do not
-know what sort of party it was of which the Fiscal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-General speaks when he says that Count Brandt prevented
-persons having access to the king who were
-not useful to the party. He probably supposes a
-party which was opposed to the king or the welfare of
-the country; but as he does not state of what persons
-the assumed party was composed, the nature of their
-actions, what designs they entertained, or by what
-means they were to be realised, I am here dispensed
-from the obligation of answering this specially, and
-can content myself with the remark that there was no
-such party hostile to the king and country so far as
-came to Count Brandt's knowledge. He certainly
-had the permission to be near the king's person, but
-had neither the power nor the wish to keep any one
-away from his Majesty; and the Fiscal General has
-not been able to mention a single person of sufficient
-dignity to have access to the king, and who was refused
-it by Count Brandt. I must remark here that
-the king was lord and master, and had merely to
-command by a sign who was to come and who to go,
-and how long each was to remain, in which Count
-Brandt never opposed the king's will.</p>
-
-<p>Had the king wished that the valets should remain
-longer with his Majesty, Count Brandt would not
-have prevented him; and this charge can the less be
-brought against him, as it can be seen from valet
-Schleel's evidence, how it had been ordered long
-before that not the valet, but Von Warnstedt, who
-formerly occupied Count Brandt's post, should dress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-and undress the king; and after Count Brandt, the
-black boys were ordered to perform this duty.
-Equally little can Professor Berger's morning visits be
-brought as a charge against Count Brandt, even if
-they had had evil consequences; while, on the contrary,
-the powders which the king took did not impair
-his health. Berger paid these visits so long as the
-king was willing to accept them; but when his Majesty
-no longer desired them, Berger kept away.</p>
-
-<p>The words in Count Brandt's letter to Count
-Struensee, which the Fiscal General treats as a crime,
-have been so fully explained by Count Brandt's reply
-to questions 92 and 93, p. 120 of the examination,
-that I have nothing to add but refer to it, and this
-explanation deprives that passage in the letter of all
-the harshness which might otherwise be found in it.
-With what right Count Brandt could be accused of
-having an understanding with Count Struensee, and
-of striving to sustain him, is proved by his explanation
-to questions 64, 65, and 68 of the examination,
-in which he gives a full account how he had resolved
-to overthrow Count Struensee, from the time when he
-perceived the encroachments of the latter; that he consulted
-with Count von der Osten about this operation,
-by which Count Struensee was to be placed under
-arrest at Kronborg&mdash;a proposal which was not carried
-into effect, solely through an earlier, riper, and more
-successful interruption. As regards this disposition,
-the count has appealed to the testimony of Privy
-Councillor von der Osten, and I am convinced that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-this statement of Count Brandt has been imparted to
-his excellency, who has not disavowed it. Count
-Brandt's letter to Struensee, and the answer of the
-latter, which have been produced by the Fiscal
-General, prove how little desire Count Brandt had to
-enter into Count Struensee's views; that his whole
-conduct and thought was to surrender the post which
-he occupied, and to be allowed to quit the court.
-There is further evidence of this in the fact that when
-Count Struensee offered him the ministerial post of
-Privy Councillor von der Osten, he refused it, and
-preferred retirement from court to this pleasant office.
-All this destroys the charges which the Fiscal General
-has alleged in the preliminary part of his indictment
-of Count Brandt.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5"><em>Ad possum 1mum.</em></p>
-
-<p>"According to the Fiscal General, Count Brandt,
-of his free will, and after due reflection, went in to his
-master the king and challenged, abused, attacked, and
-bit him."</p>
-
-<p>If Count Brandt performed this execrable deed in
-the way the Fiscal General represents it, his righteous
-king would not have hesitated a moment to have had
-him thrown into fetters, and given him his well-merited
-reward&mdash;the hardest death. His Majesty, however
-after this event is stated to have occurred, namely, at
-the end of September, for several months admitted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-him to his presence as before, and granted him his
-most gracious daily intercourse, which satisfactorily
-proves that his royal Majesty did not regard the aforesaid
-occurrence as criminal.</p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt, for his part, equally little regarded
-it as audacious, either when the affair occurred, or
-afterwards. For, just as he described it, in its full
-details, in presence of the commission, when nothing
-could induce him to do so but the innocence which,
-according to his opinion, lay in the whole affair, if the
-circumstances connected with it were taken into consideration
-in the same way, his open confession proves
-the confidence he placed in his innocence, as the affair
-could not be proved by witnesses; and the man who
-knows himself to be innocent is never criminal. This
-confession of Count Brandt, therefore, must, as the
-sole existing proof in the affair, be registered as credible,
-just as well in those passages where it speaks
-for his acquittal as where it serves to testify against
-him.</p>
-
-<p>From this deposition, which perfectly agrees with
-Count Struensee's statement before the commission
-on March 21, we see what in this strange affair speaks
-in Count Brandt's defence. We must, therefore,
-regard in the first instance the peculiar circumstance
-that his Majesty the King, for the sake of enjoying the
-pleasures of private intercourse, as people of equal
-rank carry it on together&mdash;although the "sweetness"
-of such intercourse usually shuns thrones&mdash;commanded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-that the man whom he selected as his intimate
-should not consort with him as the king, but as his
-equal, or as one friend with the other. If Count
-Brandt, through submissive respect, addressed him
-differently, the king answered sarcastically, "Most
-submissive knave," in order to remind him of the
-commands which had been given, that Count Brandt
-in daily intercourse should forget he was the king,
-just as one of his Majesty's ancestors, of most revered
-memory used to act, and at times remarked, "Now
-the king is not at home;" and, again, when the free
-conversation was to have an end, "The king is at home
-again now."<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> But his present Majesty never would
-be at home, so to speak, for the man he had admitted
-to his intimacy, but demanded equality.</p>
-
-<p>From those men selected for his constant society,
-the king demanded what is understood by the term
-<em>un homme fait</em>, that they should be smart fellows, and
-before all, have their heart in the right place, of which
-they must furnish a proof if he desired it, and he
-could not on any terms endure cowards, because such
-disgusted his heroic nature. As now his Majesty had
-seen no proof of this good quality from Count Brandt,
-not even after many inducements had been given,
-because Count Brandt always held back, his Majesty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-most effectually forced them from him by threatening
-to cudgel him in the presence of the queen, Struensee,
-and other persons. Count Brandt, who regarded
-this as a real sign of the king's disfavour, fell
-into a state of desperation about it, until he was informed
-by Struensee, who had spoken with the king
-on the subject, that his Majesty's wishes and most
-gracious intentions were only directed to obtain a
-proof of Brandt's courage. It was for this reason that
-Count Brandt one evening, without feeling the slightest
-anger, went into the king, and, after ordering out
-the lad, who was not to witness the sport, stated to
-the king that he had been told by Count Struensee
-that his Majesty wished him to prove himself a man
-of courage, and to do so against the king. His Majesty,
-far from being offended at such a scene on the part of
-Count Brandt, "admitted" him, in accordance with
-his given order, at once to a fight, and the king himself
-made the first five or six attacks. This would
-have assuredly taken a very different course if the
-king had regarded it as an insult. On this occasion,
-his Majesty involuntarily thrust a finger into Count
-Brandt's mouth, which the latter quite as innocently
-seized with his teeth. The defence followed the attack:
-the king demanded of Count Brandt, <em>presta te
-virum</em>. Upon this Count Brandt seized the king by
-the coat, thrust him against the wall, and thus proved
-that he was stronger than the king; and with this the
-whole affair ended.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt persistently denies having beaten the
-king, or audaciously raised his hand against his Majesty;
-he only proved himself to be strong and brave,
-without seriousness or passion, by his Majesty's commands.
-His Majesty's own most gracious conduct to
-Count Brandt also proves that everything passed off
-without anger and annoyance, as his Majesty showed
-the count the signal favour of kissing him on the spot,
-and requesting him to remain and kill the time with
-conversation, which Count Brandt did by the king's
-orders, and all of which points to the disposition of
-their minds, and proves that they were not excited, as
-is also confirmed by Count Struensee's statement in
-the examination of March 21, that Count Brandt,
-when he went in to the king, was not at all irritated,
-but perfectly calm. After this time his Majesty also
-promoted him to be <em>grand maître de la garderobe</em>,
-and carried on his confidential intercourse with him
-for several months as before, all of which speaks for
-the nature of this affair. In Count Brandt's heart
-reigned no bitterness against the king, and no contempt:
-trembling from veneration, he performed the
-action which he would have regarded as audacious,
-had it not been for the king's command. It is true
-that Count Brandt, a few days previously, laid a riding
-whip upon a pianoforte standing in the king's ante-chamber,
-but only did so thoughtlessly, which he
-afterwards regretted, and as ill-deeds consist in actions
-carried out but not in inconsiderate designs, this occur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>rence
-cannot be reckoned as a crime on the part of
-Count Brandt.</p>
-
-<p>If Count Brandt employed some expressions against
-the king which, according to the strict letter, would
-be highly criminal, he only employed them in the tone
-of all the rest, and consequently only in jest. I pass
-over the statements of the witnesses examined, as
-these people neither heard nor saw the occurrence,
-but only testify what they heard said about it. On
-the other hand, the declaration which his Majesty laid
-before the commission, through his page of the chamber
-Schack, is of the extremest importance. I read
-it to Count Brandt, and he has requested me to make
-the following explanation about it:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"He did not remember this 'passage' in the way
-that it flowed from the page's lips: he considers himself
-too insignificant to contradict a declaration which
-emanated from the king his master, and only emboldens
-himself in dust and fetters to mention, that if
-his Majesty were most graciously disposed to take this
-affair seriously, as the declaration made by page of the
-chamber Schack appears to intimate, he regards himself
-as lost, and will not from this moment attempt
-any further justification, but will at once throw himself
-at his Majesty's feet, and seek his salvation in the
-king's clemency; but in the most submissive confidence
-in his Majesty's mercy, he would venture most humbly
-to remind him of the circumstances already mentioned."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As concerns the charge which the Fiscal General
-derives from the fact that Count Brandt at times went
-to the king playing the flute, and with his hat on his
-head, and also in his <em>peignoir</em>, Count Brandt acknowledges
-that this did occur when he returned from the
-chase and was heated, but that it was not done through
-contempt of the king, but because his Majesty preferred
-such conduct, and never evinced any anger at
-it. He also dared to appear before the king in his
-<em>peignoir</em>, which consisted of a cloth surtout, because it
-was his Majesty's wish that he should come in the
-dress he was wearing when the king summoned him.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5"><em>Ad passum</em> 2<em>dum</em>.</p>
-
-<p>"That Count Brandt did not reveal to the king the
-improper intercourse which is said to have taken place
-between the queen and Struensee, by which he has
-rendered himself guilty of the punishment which the
-law dictates for this in 6&mdash;4&mdash;14."</p>
-
-<p>Although Count Brandt felt morally convinced of
-this improper intercourse between the queen and Count
-Struensee, still he possessed no juridical proof of it,
-much less such proofs as he could at once have produced
-in his defence against the denial of the guilty
-parties. And what might Count Brandt have reasonably
-expected if he had alleged such a crime against a
-reigning queen, who at that time possessed the king's
-heart, which would have disturbed the king, shamed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-the queen, and dishonoured the royal house? In that
-case, 6&mdash;4&mdash;1 of the law would have been proper for
-him, even if he could have proved his denunciation instantly.
-If, for his own part, he could have proved this
-crime with his life, he would, probably, not have spared
-his life. Things, however, under the circumstances,
-remained as they were. Count Brandt would have
-been a ruined man, without amending the business;
-and if such a sort of silence were a neck-breaking
-crime, only few persons in the country would retain
-their heads.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5"><em>Ad passum</em> 3<em>tium</em>.</p>
-
-<p>"That Count Brandt has been guilty of the crime
-of forgery."</p>
-
-<p>Whatever forgery Count Struensee may have committed,
-it does not affect Count Brandt. Even if
-Count Struensee may have converted the sum of 6,000
-dollars, approved by the king into 60,000, Count
-Brandt knows nothing about it. Count Brandt has
-not acknowledged this, and it has not been proved
-against him, nor did he receive 60,000 dollars all at
-once; but, on one occasion, 10,000 dollars, for which
-the king's note is still in existence; and the other
-50,000 dollars were paid him by Baron Schimmelmann,
-and, according to Count Struensee's statement,
-were a present to him from the king. Count Brandt
-thanked the king for this, who answered him, "It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-but fair he should give him a <em>douceur</em>, as he was always
-with him." Count Brandt never asked for this sum,
-and if it was given him by the king, he could not refuse
-it, the less so as, through his daily intercourse with
-the royal family, he was compelled to play high, in
-which he lost considerable sums. Count Brandt even
-declared on this occasion that if the king were indisposed
-to grant such large sums, he was ready to give
-the money back.</p>
-
-<p>From all this I believe I have proved that the
-crimes alleged against Count Brandt are exaggerated.
-I must therefore most submissively request that Count
-Enevold Brandt may be acquitted from the accusation
-of the Fiscal General.</p>
-
-<p>In all the rest he submits himself to the clemency
-of his most gracious king.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="rightlinea">O. L. B<span class="smcap">ANG</span>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<em>April</em> 23, 1772.<br />
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>So little did Brandt comprehend the danger of his
-position, that he sent to the judges the following letter,
-in which, as Reverdil justly remarks, the Don Quixotism,
-levity, and inconsequence of his character are displayed
-in a manner which would be ridiculous under
-any other circumstances:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">C<span class="smcap">OUNT</span> B<span class="smcap">RANDT'S</span> P<span class="smcap">ETITION</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="center">"<em>Pro Memoriâ.</em>"</p>
-
-<p>I send you, my judges, a letter to his Majesty,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> and
-leave it to you, when you have read it and this pro
-memoriâ, whether you will then think proper to have
-it delivered to the king or not. What I now write to
-you is in the same manner no document which I wish
-to be placed with the rest, or to be regarded as if it belonged
-to my trial.</p>
-
-<p>The letter to the king is rather badly written, but
-the pens given me were very bad. I beg the king's
-forgiveness, as I now know that in all cases, none excepted,
-it is the duty of a subject to humiliate himself
-before his monarch. Previously a flashing sword
-would not have brought me to do so.</p>
-
-<p>My letter could be more imploring and submissive,
-but I did not believe that this would please his Majesty.
-I employ the expression which the king so
-frequently used: "That no one knew so much about
-his affairs as I did." This he was accustomed to say
-to me when he was in a good temper, and I hope thus
-to recall his thoughts. He often added, that no one bore
-such a resemblance to him as myself; but I have
-omitted this expression, as the words would be too<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-bold. I should prefer that this letter should be read
-to the king at a favourable moment, than that he
-should read it first himself.</p>
-
-<p>I find it natural that a double doubt will arise with
-you, my judges, and with all to whom you may show
-this letter:</p>
-
-<p>(1) Does Brandt deserve, from the nature of the
-affair, that the king should pardon him fully? and</p>
-
-<p>(2) What more does he want?</p>
-
-<p>With the same frankness with which I have explained
-myself during the whole of my trial, I can
-assert, that you would at once feel the heartiest compassion,
-if it were feasible to bring my affair entirely
-to light, partly by summoning fresh witnesses, partly
-by cross-examining those who have been heard: but I
-do not wish this, even though it might cost me life and
-liberty. I will only mention a few slight but important
-circumstances, which might induce you to believe
-that I must feel a bitterness against the king:</p>
-
-<p>(1) That I am said to have bitten the king's finger.
-My statement proves that I did not hear of it till afterwards.
-Consequently, it was not done <em>animo nocendi</em>,
-but was a natural movement for a man to close his
-mouth when his tongue was caught hold of, and as
-soon as I perceived it, I asked for pardon. The king
-tapped me on the cheek, and said: "It does not hurt."</p>
-
-<p>(2) I myself mentioned that I laid a riding whip
-on the pianoforte, with the intention of taking it in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-with me to the king: but could that have been known
-without my frankness? and woe to us, if every thought
-were to be punished!</p>
-
-<p>(3) On this occasion I employed improper language
-to the king, although not that of which I am accused:
-but in the melancholy alternative of displaying
-my courage either in words or deeds, I chose the
-former.</p>
-
-<p>(4) An important circumstance, which rendered a
-proof of such courage rather necessary, was that the
-king often said: "If I was certain you were a coward,
-I would post myself behind the door and kill you."</p>
-
-<p>(5) But why was the king so angry? Solely because,
-from that time, I was more serious and submissive than
-before, which I did to render the king more reserved,
-but which had the effect that he supposed I disliked
-him; and a temper, which has been once rendered captious,
-soon places the worst construction upon everything.</p>
-
-<p>(6) I declare before God, who knows my heart,
-that a similar scene never occurred before or afterwards.
-The king once threw his glove in my face:
-I stooped, picked it up, and said: "Why do you do
-that? I am really not cross with you;" and with this
-he was satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>(7) That I never regarded this occurrence as anything
-but a joke, the result of youth and eccentricity,
-is seen from the fact that when the commission began
-sitting, I was not aware of my offence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In this way I believe I have answered all doubts.
-I am quite ready to die, and to endure all the punishments
-that are imposed upon me. It is God's chastening
-hand, which I have deserved: but I consider it
-my duty to speak this once.</p>
-
-<p>His Majesty was angry with me: hence, I was imprisoned;
-hence, I was put in fetters. I can offer no
-objection to this: I kiss the hand that smites me, but
-the hand which smites me can also let loose and forgive,
-in the same way as Henri IV. frequently forgave
-much greater offences. Even should you consider
-that this is too great mercy, and if you wish that
-I should humiliate myself, personally, before his Majesty,
-I should not regard such a thing at all as
-a disgrace.</p>
-
-<p>Oh! my judges, if you would only see what my
-situation with the king was! and would you could feel
-as greatly, but forget quite as quickly, what my present
-position is! Your eyes would assuredly shed tears,
-and your hearts would be moved by the sincerest
-compassion! I commend my cause to the hands of
-God, and beg you for what I have no occasion to beg,
-namely, to follow your own convictions: with that I
-shall be perfectly satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>In the letter to his Majesty, I have begged to be
-allowed to pass my days in peace, and by that I mean
-a bailiwick in a remote province. I do not know
-whether such a post is vacant, of which I might entertain
-hopes, but I know that Bailiff Arnholdt, of Bram<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>stedt<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
-(in Holstein) has long wished himself away
-from there, and that this post is one of the worst.
-Further my wishes do not extend, and what right
-could I have to ask!</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="rightlinea">B<span class="smcap">RANDT</span>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<em>Frederikshaven, April</em> 14, 1772.<br />
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The drama of the great trial rapidly approached the
-catastrophe after the charges against Struensee and
-Brandt were delivered to the commissioners on
-April 21. Struensee's defence followed on the 22nd;
-the Fiscal General's reply and Brandt's defence on
-the 23rd; and so early as the 25th the sentences were
-promulgated. In Brandt's trial a reply was not even
-considered necessary, for the accuser had announced
-this to be superfluous in his sentence, <em>ab uno discimus
-omnia</em>. But the orders from the highest quarters
-were for the greatest possible speed, and the length of
-the sentence proves that it had been drawn up beforehand.
-That two human lives were at stake, was only
-so far taken into consideration as it was necessary
-to prove two judicial murders justifiable by every
-resource of sophistry; but how little the venal judges
-succeeded in doing so, will be seen from a perusal of
-the memorable documents which are here published
-for the first time without any abbreviation.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">THE TWO COUNTS.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">STRUENSEE'S SENTENCE&mdash;HIS GENERAL CONDUCT&mdash;THE MAITRE
-DES REQUETES&mdash;THE GERMAN LANGUAGE&mdash;STRUENSEE'S
-DESPOTISM&mdash;THE COUNCIL OF THE THIRTY-TWO&mdash;THE
-CABINET MINISTER&mdash;THE KING'S PRESENTS&mdash;STRUENSEE'S
-PRECAUTIONS&mdash;HIS DOWNFALL&mdash;THE SENTENCE APPROVED&mdash;COUNT
-BRANDT&mdash;HIS ASSAULT ON THE KING&mdash;HIS BEHAVIOUR&mdash;THE
-ROYAL ASSENT</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p class="p5">STRUENSEE'S SENTENCE.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-
-<p>Apart from the fact that Count John Frederick
-Struensee has already been convicted, and has himself
-confessed that he has committed a terrible crime,
-which involves in an eminent degree an assault on
-the king's supremacy, or the crime of high treason, and
-according to the law (especially art. 1 of cap. iv. of
-book vi.) deserves the severe penalty of death; it is
-sufficiently notorious and proven that his whole
-conduct and management during the time when he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-had a share in the administration of the affairs was a
-chain, which, on one side, was composed of vain and
-audacious impetuosity; on the other, of tricks and
-intrigues, all of which operated to secure him the whole
-power and authority to the exclusion of others. At
-the same time he boldly employed all the measures
-which appeared to be useful in attaining his ends,
-without in the slightest degree reflecting whether
-they were permitted or not, and how far they
-accorded with the form of government and the constitution,
-the genius of the nation and the regulations
-and laws, both civil and fundamental, or were in
-strict opposition to them.</p>
-
-<p>His great design was partly to become privy
-cabinet minister, with the extraordinary and unparalleled
-authority which he filched in the last month of
-July, partly to exclude all the subjects from their
-king, and the king from them; partly to exercise at
-court and over his Majesty such an unbridled power
-as has been seen with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>In order to attain this end, he strove, during his
-Majesty's foreign journey, to gain his most gracious
-favour by proved care for the king's health and
-pleasure. When his Majesty returned, Struensee
-behaved quietly, and seemed to think of nothing less
-than the attachment of charges and honours, although
-his ambition and his love of power desired them.</p>
-
-<p>He lived at court, amused himself, demanded no
-increase of his salary, and seemed to satisfy himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-with peace and voluptuousness; but in secret he
-zealously strove to lay the foundation on which he
-intended to raise his proud fortune.</p>
-
-<p>It was not his business to learn the language of the
-country, to study the position and true interest of the
-kingdom, and to learn its civil laws and constitution.
-This was the way which he ought to have chosen;
-but about all these things he was, and remained, in the
-deepest ignorance. Instead of this, he preferred to
-establish the principles which his Majesty should
-follow in the government, so that he might use them
-in concealing his infamous propositions behind them,
-and as he had every reason to apprehend that either
-faithfully minded men might reveal his designs, or
-that the king himself should detect them; in order to
-prevent the former effect, he calumniated without
-distinction all those who had the honour of being
-allowed to approach the monarch, and in order to
-secure the latter, he strove to acquire a powerful
-protection, and to have in the king's neighbourhood
-so close, constant, and trustworthy a friend, that it was
-rendered almost impossible for his Majesty to penetrate
-this man's ways and designs.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had he got his machine in perfect readiness
-in the year 1770 than he at once set it in motion.</p>
-
-<p>Since the sovereignty our kings have had a council,
-composed of men who were experienced in the laws
-and customs of the country, and had studied the true
-state-system and real interests of the land, while, at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-the same time, they knew the rules which were applicable
-in cases that occurred.</p>
-
-<p>It was their office to attend the king, as often as
-matters of importance were to be laid before him, in
-order to afford his Majesty the necessary explanations
-about everything he wished to know, so that he might
-give his decision.</p>
-
-<p>These men, however, as members of the council,
-had no vote, no expedition, no secretaries; for everything
-depended on the king's will, and everything was
-carried into effect by the departments concerned.</p>
-
-<p>This traditional and so natural council Struensee
-and his adherents<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> wished to have entirely abolished
-and quashed, for this man apprehended that if such a
-council existed, and even if it were composed of his
-own friends, the time would arrive when it would
-oppose his injurious propositions, and reveal them to
-the king, as he could not exclude them (the members)
-from speaking with his Majesty, and representing to
-him what was best for him and the land.</p>
-
-<p>For this end Struensee had previously calumniated
-the ministry by all sorts of insinuations, and even
-depicted in the blackest colours those of their actions
-which were evidently to the advantage of the king
-and the state.</p>
-
-<p>His Majesty the king, who heartily loves his people,
-only desires honest officials, and jealously holds to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-sovereign power, now lost his confidence in the
-council, wished to appoint other men to it, and to give
-it a different constitution; but Struensee, by false statements,
-and the most cunning tricks, laid such obstacles
-in the king's way that the council gradually ceased to
-meet, and was finally solemnly abolished by a decree
-of December 27, 1770.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, he became <em>maître des requêtes</em>,
-and as it was his plan that only he should have the
-right to speak to the king about the affairs, and that
-all other persons should be excluded from doing so,
-it appeared to him that the remaining colleges might
-still lay some impediments in his way.</p>
-
-<p>In order to prevent this, he represented to his
-Majesty the King, who wished to be thoroughly acquainted
-with the affairs sent in from the colleges for
-his most gracious decision, that nothing would be more
-useful for this object than for the colleges to be ordered
-to deliver their written requests in a portfolio, so that
-the king might be allowed the requisite time to read
-through the memoirs and reflect.</p>
-
-<p>By this brilliant, and apparently so useful advice,
-this man gained his object of also "excluding" the
-colleges from the king.</p>
-
-<p>He soon seizes the portfolios, and thus becomes the
-sole master to lay matters before the king at his pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>If the colleges wished to produce further reasons
-for the king's better information, they must apply to
-Struensee, and thus he alone became what the council
-and the colleges together had formerly been.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Under the pretext of a more rapid expedition of
-various matters, and in order to display the royal
-authority in its right supremacy, he issued cabinet
-decrees, which were carried out without the colleges
-concerned being informed of them,&mdash;a conduct which
-necessarily produced the greatest confusion, and which
-a man dared, who was neither acquainted with the
-country nor its laws, its condition nor its language.
-But this did not trouble him at all, so long as he could
-grasp all the respect and all the power.</p>
-
-<p>This ignorance of Count Struensee in everything,
-which every minister in Denmark must know, and his
-extremely slight efforts to obtain a knowledge of it,
-entailed innumerable disadvantages, both generally and
-for private persons.</p>
-
-<p>In the colleges, which were formerly accustomed to
-send in their reports in Danish, a special official had
-to be appointed to translate them into German, so that
-Count Struensee might read them in this language.
-The Danish Chancery, the only college which continued
-to report in Danish, had only too often opportunity
-for learning that these representations were not
-read at all, as only an extract of the proposition, which,
-by command, was inserted in what was called the
-Rotulus, was translated into German and seen by
-Count Struensee, after which the resolution ensued in
-the German language, and was again translated into
-Danish in the Chancery. It could not fail but that
-the resolution often proved equivocal, incomprehen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>sible,
-and but little adapted to the affair, of which the
-man who represented it to his Majesty had only rarely
-a correct idea.</p>
-
-<p>Private persons who wished to send in petitions to
-the cabinet, and had drawn them up in the Danish
-language, ran about to find a German translator, as
-they were of the possibly not incorrect opinion that
-their memorial, if such was only in Danish, would not
-be read, while these cheap translations often turned
-out so, that it was impossible to discern what was the
-real object of the petition.</p>
-
-<p>Count Struensee's ignorance of the organization of
-the colleges, his unwillingness to instruct himself
-about it, and his exertions to reform the entire old state
-constitution, and to increase the number of his adherents
-by appointing persons everywhere, and to the
-highest offices, who owed their fortune to him&mdash;all
-this led him to lay hands on one college after the
-other. And as he would not and could not work
-himself, he employed other men in carrying out the
-important reforms, several of whom afterwards confessed
-that they had no knowledge of the advantages
-and defects of the former organization of these colleges,
-nor attempted to acquire it, as they were only
-ordered to draw up a plan of the new arrangements
-after a certain predetermined date.</p>
-
-<p>After Count Struensee had drawn all power and
-authority into his own hands by removing the privy
-council, by weakening and reconstituting, and by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-exclusion of verbal reports, it was not long ere his
-Majesty's subjects perceived the effects of his, Struensee's,
-despotic principles and ideas.</p>
-
-<p>As a consequence of the before-mentioned paternal
-and mild government, to which people had been long
-accustomed in Denmark, and which had to some
-extent acquired a traditional right, every one who
-had obtained a royal appointment considered himself
-justified in believing that he should retain it so long as
-he behaved himself properly and attended to his duties,
-and therefore ran no risk of losing his post against
-his will, so long as he was not declared unworthy of
-it through a judicial sentence on account of malversation,
-errors, or negligence. These moderate principles,
-which characterised the mildness of the government,
-and had many excellent results, were not at all
-to Count Struensee's taste, who did not wish to be in
-the least degree impeded when the object was to ruin
-people, and imbue others with terror.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason it was heard frequently, nay, almost
-daily, that first one, then the other, royal official was
-removed by a cabinet order, without their learning
-what error they had committed, or in what their
-offence consisted.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Several persons also lost their posts without any
-royal resolution on the subject being imparted to
-them, and without knowing anything of it, till they
-learned that their office had been given to another
-man by a cabinet order. This conduct was even extended
-to the dismissal of entire colleges.</p>
-
-<p>The entire magistracy, consisting of from eighteen
-to twenty, or even more persons, was abolished, and
-a new magistracy was appointed by a cabinet order
-addressed on April 3, 1771, to the president, who had
-been appointed to this post only a few days previously,
-and also by a cabinet decree, and who contented himself
-with informing the previous members of the magistracy
-by letter that they were dismissed, and the new
-ones that they were to assemble at the town-hall
-without the deposed members learning what offence
-they had committed, or why they were discharged.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the magistracy, there was another
-college or public assembly in Copenhagen, namely, the
-so-called thirty-two men, as, owing to the bravery and
-fidelity so solemnly displayed by the Copenhageners
-during the siege, and on the establishment of the
-sovereignty,<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> it was conceded among the privileges
-granted to the citizens on June 24, 1664, that they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-should be allowed to elect thirty-two of the best and
-most respected citizens, who would, with the magistracy,
-consult about the welfare of the city, and its
-revenues and out-goings. In these privileges access to
-his Majesty's person was also granted to the city
-deputies and the magistracy.</p>
-
-<p>This assembly, which was regarded as the highest of
-these privileges, and had had many good results, and,
-moreover, did not cost the king or city a farthing, was
-also dissolved by the aforesaid cabinet order, by virtue
-of which the chief president informed the men that
-they were no longer permitted to meet, and ordered
-the council-hall to be closed. This, and many other
-instances of a similar nature, which all proved that
-nothing was sacred to this equally incautious and absolute
-man, and that he was as great an enemy of all
-sense and mildness as he was of order and good morals,
-produced a striking effect upon the nation, which
-fancied itself suddenly removed under an "Oriental
-climate."</p>
-
-<p>Some lamented and sighed, others expressed their
-amazement or bitterness in one way or the other. But
-all were agreed that his Majesty's mild and paternal
-heart for his subjects was still the same, if their complaints
-and sighs could only penetrate to the throne,
-and the real posture of the affair be represented to his
-Majesty.</p>
-
-<p>This, however, seemed quite impossible, owing to
-the precautions which Count Struensee had taken in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-this respect. He had placed his intimate friend, Count
-Brandt, near the king,<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> and as he, in accordance with
-the well-known proverb, <em>nulla amicitia nisi inter bonos</em>,
-was not fully convinced of the duration of this friendship,
-he sought to insure its permanence by a mutual
-interest, and, as will be shown presently, at the expense
-of his Majesty and the royal treasury.</p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt, who was always about the king, confirmed
-him in everything that Count Struensee alleged
-or insinuated, and prevented everybody from having
-an opportunity to convince his Majesty of the opposite
-truth.</p>
-
-<p>There was no council, and, so to speak, no minister.
-No one succeeded in speaking alone with the king, save
-those persons of whose devotion Count Struensee considered
-himself assured and if it ever happened, it was
-only for moments which admitted of no detailed explanation
-or discussion. All the rest were held aloof
-from his Majesty, which was even extended to his
-Majesty's own most exalted relatives and his nearest
-family, toward whom the king had formerly displayed
-special tenderness and affection. But from the time
-when Count Struensee had usurped the administration
-of the court and of the whole country, the latter never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-had an opportunity of conversing alone with the king,
-as they would not have omitted to represent to his
-Majesty the good of his subjects and their grief, of
-which these exalted personages afterwards, when the
-opportunity was offered, have given incontrovertible
-proofs, which can never be sufficiently praised and recognised.</p>
-
-<p>It could not fail but that Count Struensee should
-render himself odious to all, through such despotic,
-arbitrary, and unreasonable conduct.</p>
-
-<p>His emissaries, and the adherents whom he still possessed,
-tried, even though they did not dare to justify
-or excuse his undertakings, at least to boast of his asserted
-disinterestedness, and to spread far and wide that
-he was satisfied with his moderate salary, without asking
-either money or honours for himself or his friends.
-How far this met with belief may be left an open
-question. But it is certain that Count Struensee took
-very carefully-devised measures to conceal his selfishness
-at that time, and so long as it lasted. But it
-was afterwards seen only too plainly that he was an
-extremely interested and selfish man, of whom it may
-be justly said that he pillaged his Majesty's treasury.</p>
-
-<p>He had a very respectable and considerable salary,
-which ought to have been sufficient, as he had everything
-free at court down to the very banquets he gave.
-He knew, and often enough proclaimed, in what a bad
-state the public treasury and his Majesty's were from
-former times.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>For all that, after the council was dissolved, and
-he had become <em>maître des requêtes</em>, he allowed hardly
-three months to pass ere he, by an abuse of his Majesty's
-good heart, demanded and received from his most
-gracious lord a present of 10,000 dollars for himself, and
-a similar sum for his friend Count Brandt. It might be
-supposed that so considerable a present for these two
-persons, of whom one was <em>maître des requêtes</em>, and the
-other <em>directeur des spectacles</em>, and who both had only held
-these offices for a short time, would have satisfied their
-greediness for a while. But, instead of this, we find
-that it grew and increased, for Count Struensee, after
-receiving the above mentioned present in February or
-March, again received in May, or at the end of two or
-three months, from his Majesty 50,000 or 60,000 dollars,
-and Count Brandt the same sum, so that these
-two persons, in the short time of three or four months,
-cost his Majesty, in addition to their regular salary,
-140,000 dollars, or at least 120,000&mdash;for which of these
-two sums is the correct one cannot as yet be stated
-with certainty, owing to the confusion prevailing in
-Count Struensee's accounts&mdash;and this in addition to
-the presents which before and after this date they procured
-for their good friends: such as Justiz-rath Struensee
-4,000 dollars, Countess Holstein 3,000, Chamberlain
-Falckenskjold 3,500 or more, and so on.</p>
-
-<p>That Count Struensee's irresponsible selfishness was
-duly considered and intended, is seen from the artificial
-machinery which he formed, solely that he might be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-able to take these sums without any one detecting
-it.</p>
-
-<p>For this purpose, he first proposed the abolition of
-what was called the "Trésor"&mdash;which consisted of a
-sum of money laid by for unforeseen expenses, and
-that it should be paid into the public treasury. As
-the Trésor, however, must pass through the cabinet on
-its way to the public exchequer, he proposed to his
-Majesty to reserve 250,000 dollars of the same, in order
-to form a special cabinet treasury which would stand
-under his control.</p>
-
-<p>In this way Count Struensee obtained a good opportunity
-for receiving considerable sums, without any one
-being acquainted with the fact.</p>
-
-<p>He behaved in such a way with this treasury, that
-after it was established in April, 1771, and at that time
-consisted of 250,000 dollars, at the end of May only
-118,000 dollars remained of the original contents,
-although the king had no other out-goings but these
-presents.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining 118,000 dollars would have gone by
-degrees the same road as the others if Struensee had
-been allowed sufficient time.</p>
-
-<p>Count Struensee's disgraceful avarice and selfishness
-are thus rendered so evident, that those persons
-who proclaimed him as disinterested must fairly confess
-that they knew him badly, and were not properly informed.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But this is not sufficient. There is the very
-strongest presumption that Count Struensee in this
-traffic committed an impudent, disgraceful, and highly
-criminal fraud. When the account found among
-Count Struensee's papers, and approved by his Majesty,
-of the income and expenditure of the special treasury
-for the months of April and May, was laid before his
-Majesty, as it was considered suspicious, the king at
-once declared that he perfectly well remembered
-having at that time given 10,000 dollars to the queen,
-6,000 to Count Brandt, and other 6,000 to Count
-Struensee, but no more. Just as these sums amount
-to 22,000 dollars, it is on an inspection of the document
-as clear as the sun that the addition was in the
-first instance 22,000 dollars, but the first figure two was
-converted into a three&mdash;a change which is so visible that
-it is at once noticed&mdash;and that a one was afterwards
-added, for which there was no other room but in front
-of the line drawn underneath, which is quite contrary
-to the practice in the other accounts, and in this very
-one on the preceding page, where the in-comings are
-calculated. Hence, then, the said sum of 22,000
-dollars became 132,000, which is proved by the fact
-that the two sums of 6,000 dollars for Struensee and
-Brandt were converted into 60,000 by the addition of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-cipher, and 2,000 dollars were added for Falckenskjold.
-This last sum seems to have been added, in order not
-to be obliged to convert the second two into a cipher
-in the sum of 22,000 dollars, which had become
-130,000.</p>
-
-<p>These suppositions, the real strength of which only
-that man can comprehend who has the document in question
-before him, is also confirmed by other concurrent
-circumstances&mdash;as, for instance, that the account for
-April and May is written by Struensee himself, while
-the other extracts and calculations are written by the
-secretary of the cabinet, which probably occurred
-because Count Struensee wished no one to be cognizant
-of the embezzlement effected by him, and further by
-the fact that, from this time, Count Struensee laid no
-account of the treasury before the king until the end
-of October, although in June there was an out-going
-of 2,000 dollars, which were given to Justiz-rath Struensee.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-
-<p>This negligence or omission appears to have taken
-place purposely, so that his Majesty, after so long an
-interval, might not thoroughly remember the real
-state of the treasury. To this must be added his
-Majesty's own alleged and very natural conjecture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-that it cannot be credited that he gave Counts Struensee
-and Brandt 50,000 or 60,000 dollars apiece, while he
-only made the queen a present of 10,000.</p>
-
-<p>Count Struensee, who is obliged to confess the
-selfishness of having requested this money of the king,
-will not, however, acknowledge this embezzlement, but
-asserts that his Majesty at that time, on his request,
-gave him 50,000 dollars, and Count Brandt the same
-sum, and that, as the 10,000 dollars previously given
-had not been taken to account, they were included in
-this amount. On the document being produced before
-the commission, however, he was obliged to allow that
-all the facts concurred against him to arouse such a
-presumption, which he had no evidence to refute,
-while at the same time, he regretted his want of accuracy
-and his negligence.</p>
-
-<p>That Count Struensee's ambition was not less than
-his avidity, and that his "moderation," as regards
-honours and titles, was in no way inferior to that for
-money and resources, is equally self-evident.</p>
-
-<p>Within two years he made such progress as others
-of greater nobility and higher merit hardly make in
-thirty years and more. According to the position
-which he occupied, he could not fail to stand in great
-honour both at court and in the city. But all this was
-not enough for him.</p>
-
-<p>Through constant persuasion he brought it about
-that his Majesty appointed him on July 14, 1771,
-privy cabinet minister, which design he contrived to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-conceal up to the last moment, even from his most
-intimate friends, just as he, and Chamberlain Brandt
-were a few days later raised to the rank of counts.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
-
-<p>Although as privy cabinet minister he regarded
-himself as the first private person in the whole kingdom,
-still, the title and the authority he had hitherto
-possessed did not suffice him; but he wished to have
-prerogatives connected with them which were not at
-all seemly for a subject, and involved a portion of the
-sovereign authority which belonged to the king alone.</p>
-
-<p>Count Struensee had already seized on all the power,
-and as those persons who were about the king spoke
-in Struensee's behalf, and his Majesty thus only heard
-praises of his minister, it was perfectly natural that he
-should have a certain liking for him, and as he was
-nearly the only person who discussed the affairs with
-his Majesty, it could not fail that the latter should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-consent to everything he proposed. Thus he had
-everything that he could crave; but this was not
-sufficient to satisfy his immoderate ambition, as the
-colleges refused to obey unless they saw the king's
-signature.</p>
-
-<p>This did not suit Struensee, and there are grounds
-for believing that it did not agree with his secret
-designs, and his wish that his signature should be
-worth as much as the king's, and that the persons
-concerned should obey both signatures.</p>
-
-<p>This he attained by the royal order projected by
-himself, which was issued to the colleges on July 15,
-1771, with reference to his office as privy cabinet
-minister, and was afterwards published by them; for
-in the first article of this cabinet order the decrees
-signed by Struensee, and provided with the cabinet
-seal, were placed perfectly parallel with those signed
-by his Majesty himself, and countersigned by Struensee,
-and in the fourth article it is expressly ordered
-that everybody should execute the cabinet orders
-issued and expedited by Struensee. It is true that
-this article seems to contain a certain limitation, where
-it states, "so far as no royal regulation or resolution
-speaks to the contrary;" but what follows on this may
-be rather regarded as an extension, for, instead of
-stating, as might be expected, that in such a case
-execution was to be deferred until a royal resolution
-was issued, it continues, "in which case, the fact is to
-be immediately reported to the cabinet," so that if any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-one thought it his duty to remonstrate against Struensee
-or his order, he would have to apply to Struensee
-himself; and if the minister then commanded him to
-obey his first order and carry it out, he must do so.
-This is what Count Struensee intended and practiced.
-In this way, however, he filched a portion of the
-sovereignty, and, from what had previously happened,
-it might be concluded that he intended to exercise it
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>As Struensee acknowledges having read the <em>Lex
-Regia</em>, and as he as minister must have been fully
-acquainted with its contents, he must have known
-that article 7 resolves "that all government decrees,
-letters, and documents shall be signed by the king
-himself." But the article of the royal law most applicable
-here is the 26th, in which the most revered king
-and first autocrat, Frederick III., appears to have had
-a species of presentiment that a Struensee might one
-day arise in Denmark, because it is stated in it how injurious
-it is when the mildness and kindness of kings
-and masters are so abused that their power and authority
-are cut away in an almost imperceptible manner,
-and for this reason it is recommended to, and impressed
-on, the kings of Denmark zealously to watch over their
-sovereignty and autocracy in order to keep it uninjured;
-and the conclusion is, that if any one should dare to
-desire or appropriate anything which might in any way
-be prejudicial to the sovereign authority and monarchical
-power of the king, everything of the sort shall be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-regarded as null and void, and those who have not
-hesitated to acquire such a thing, or tried to do so,
-shall be punished as insulters of majesty, because they
-have committed the greatest crime against the supremacy
-of the royal autocracy.</p>
-
-<p>Count Struensee could have read his sentence here,
-if he had not committed another and equally coarse
-offense against the king's highness, apart from the fact
-that he was not only an accomplice and adviser, but
-also an inciter of the assault made on his Majesty's
-person by his intimate friend Count Brandt.</p>
-
-<p>The way in which Count Struensee exercised the
-power and authority entrusted to him as privy cabinet
-minister does not excuse him, but, on the contrary, incriminates
-him in the highest degree, because it is a
-further proof that he regarded the welfare, honour,
-life, and property of his Majesty's subjects as purely
-dependent on his discretion.</p>
-
-<p>He revoked, by cabinet orders drawn up by himself,
-and under his hand, former royal resolutions, of whose
-existence he was cognizant.</p>
-
-<p>In the most important affairs he issued orders
-without his Majesty's knowledge, and he partly neglected
-the extracts from cabinet decrees imposed upon
-him as a duty by the resolution of July 15, which he
-was to lay before the king every week, or drew them
-up in such a way that it was impossible to discover the
-nature of the orders, or the effect they were intended
-to produce.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the direction of the privy treasury was entrusted
-to him&mdash;for he wished to direct all the treasuries&mdash;he
-thought proper to give the cashier fresh
-instructions from his hand; and when the cashier represented
-to him that he held a royal instruction which
-could only be revoked by another royal resolution, he
-gave him an answer which contained a species of reprimand,
-and ordered him to obey the order and instruction
-given by him, Struensee.</p>
-
-<p>The pretty corps of Horse Guards, which was composed
-exclusively of Danes and Norwegians, and consequently
-did not please Count Struensee&mdash;or, as it
-only consisted of two squadrons, was not very expensive&mdash;was
-disbanded in February, 1771, by Count
-Struensee's proposition, and in accordance with his
-wish, but against the opinion of the college.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Fusilier Guards still remained. They consisted
-of five companies, and were composed of none but
-clever and trustworthy men, to whom the guard of
-the royal palace, and before the apartments of the
-royal house, could be safely entrusted; but they possessed
-a "quality" which prevented Struensee from
-being able to place confidence in them,&mdash;they were
-nearly all Danes and Norwegians.</p>
-
-<p>He had long resolved on the reduction of this corps,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-and spoken with several persons about it, most of
-whom, however, dissuaded him. At length he carried
-it through, and without his Majesty's knowledge (as
-the king himself has declared)<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> issued, on December
-21, 1771, a cabinet order to the Generalty and Commissariat
-College, by which the five companies of Foot
-Guards were to be transformed into five companies of
-grenadiers, and one company of them be attached to
-each of the five regiments quartered in Copenhagen.</p>
-
-<p>He allowed December 21, 22, and 23 to pass without
-telling his Majesty anything about it, although
-Struensee, on the 23rd, procured the Generalty the
-royal approbation of the said order of the 21st, because
-this college required a royal resolution, and refused
-without it to execute the cabinet order, as it considered
-the affair of too great importance, and foresaw
-the consequences that would result from it.</p>
-
-<p>As, however, the Guards on December 24 declared
-that their capitulation must be kept, and that it was
-contrary to it to make them serve in other regiments,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-Struensee found himself compelled to lay the whole
-matter before his Majesty, and advised that force
-should be employed, and the Guards compelled to
-obey. However, a royal order was issued on December
-24, by which those guards who would not
-serve as grenadiers were granted their discharge.</p>
-
-<p>The result of this operation of Count Struensee's
-therefore was, that his Majesty lost from his military
-service several hundred brave, faithful, and trustworthy
-men, who were all natives. Count Struensee's improper
-and treacherous conduct in this affair is at
-once seen on comparing the protocol kept about the
-cabinet orders, with the weekly extract from them,
-which was laid before his Majesty.</p>
-
-<p>In the protocol we find the said order of December
-21, under No. 709, quoted with the correct date.
-After this, several other cabinet orders were drawn
-up, to No. 733, on December 22, 23, and 24; but
-the second cabinet order of December 24 is not found
-among them, but a space is left open at the very end,
-in order to book it afterwards. But in the extract
-from the cabinet orders expedited from December 18
-to 25, which was drawn up on December 31, and
-afterwards laid before his Majesty, we find these two
-orders of December 21 and 24 quoted together at the
-end, under the numbers 22 and 23, just as if they had
-been expedited at the same time and under the same
-date, while, on the contrary, the cabinet orders issued
-from December 22 to 23 are omitted from this extract.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-From this a general idea of the completeness and trustworthiness
-of these extracts may be formed.</p>
-
-<p>This protocol further proves how Count Struensee&mdash;although
-he had long before sufficiently provided that
-no one should bring before the king either verbally or
-in writing anything that might injure him, Struensee&mdash;found
-himself obliged, at the time when the guards
-were dismissed, to take just precautions. For under
-date of December 23 he expedited two cabinet orders,
-one to (the Danish chief postmaster) Etats-rath Waitz,
-in Hamburg, that the packets for his Majesty sent by
-post should be addressed to the cabinet, the other to
-Court-Intendant Wegener, by which all letters and
-parcels sent to the king, and letters and portfolios that
-came in from Copenhagen, should not be delivered in
-the king's ante-chamber, but in the cabinet. One of
-these orders, though they immediately concerned the
-king, was entirely omitted in the above-mentioned
-extract, while the other was quoted imperfectly, so
-that his Majesty was not at all informed of these regulations.</p>
-
-<p>Just as Count Struensee more and more evinced
-his distrust of the nation, so the reciprocal hatred of
-the nation against him increased more and more (and
-was expressed), in various ways. Thus, in the summer
-of 1771, various pasquinades were in circulation,
-and although their contents and style sufficiently
-proved that they emanated from the common
-people, still they all displayed the strongest attach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>ment
-to his Majesty's person, and a readiness to sacrifice
-life and blood for him, while the bitterness had
-no other object but the privy cabinet minister and his
-adherents.</p>
-
-<p>This, and the fact that a few sailors and others who
-believed themselves insulted, went out to Hirschholm
-in order to lay their complaints before his Majesty
-himself, caused Count Struensee such terror, that he
-made preparations and was on the point of taking
-flight and running away.</p>
-
-<p>As he, however&mdash;probably by the advice of his
-friends&mdash;desisted from this design, it seemed as if he,
-on the other hand, prepared to maintain himself in
-his post, and against everybody, in every possible
-way. This gave cause to various hitherto unknown
-measures.</p>
-
-<p>When their Majesties came to town, at which times
-Count Struensee always accompanied them, they were
-surrounded by an unusual escort; wherever they stopped
-in town, at the palace or in the theatre, double
-sentries were posted, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Such a course increased the bitterness of the nation,
-and especially of the Copenhageners, against Count
-Struensee in more than one respect. They saw in it
-a proof that he persuaded his Majesty to believe there
-were among the inhabitants people who entertained
-bad designs against his Majesty and the royal house.
-They were confirmed in their suspicion that Count
-Struensee entertained other, more extensive, ambi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>tious,
-and, at the same time, most audacious and criminal
-designs.</p>
-
-<p>It must also be confessed that much of what happened
-during this summer, but more especially in
-autumn, must confirm them in this belief, and produce
-a strong presumption of it, as he has himself
-been obliged to confess that several of his measures
-were intended to maintain himself in every way in the
-situation he occupied.</p>
-
-<p>As already stated, the Horse Guards were disbanded.</p>
-
-<p>As, however, Count Struensee, who always lived in
-fear, wished to have some cavalry in the vicinity of
-the court, an exercising troop was formed. But, ere
-long, he learned that both the officers and men of this
-corps were natives, so that they were not at all the
-sort he wanted, whence his confidence in them was
-lost, and this troop was also disbanded in the autumn.</p>
-
-<p>He then ordered the Seeland Dragoons to the court
-and the city, but they have given incontrovertible testimony
-that they were no better disposed toward him
-than the preceding dragoons.</p>
-
-<p>He now obtained a resolution that two of the regiments
-lying in garrison here should be removed to
-other towns in the spring. But, instead of letting this
-fall on the two youngest regiments, as the rule was,
-he wished&mdash;for reasons known to himself, and which
-it is not difficult to conjecture&mdash;that they should be
-his Majesty the King's, and his brother the Prince
-Frederick's, regiments, contrary to the opinion of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-Generalty, and without informing his royal highness,
-the colonel of the latter regiment, or asking his assent
-to it. Furthermore, he managed to have a new commandant
-of Copenhagen appointed, in whom he believed
-he could place full confidence.</p>
-
-<p>But what heightened the distrust most, and excited
-the inhabitants of Copenhagen, was the following last-discovered
-circumstance, that, according to Struensee's
-instructions to the commandant, cannon, with cartridges
-and the proper complement of men, were held
-in readiness at the arsenal, so that they could be used
-at the first signal,&mdash;a regulation which was also concealed
-from his Majesty.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-<p>The king and the royal house, as well as the whole
-nation, must at last lose all patience when they were
-compelled to see, in addition to all the rest, how audaciously
-he behaved in the harsh and extraordinary
-education which he dared to give to the crown prince,
-and by which his royal highness ran the greatest risk
-of losing his health and life.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, then, the bitterness was raised to the highest
-pitch, and must have had the most dangerous consequences,
-when a fortunate end was put to the widely-extended
-designs and despotic administration of this
-vain, thoughtless, arbitrary, and ambitious man.</p>
-
-<p>As it is clear, therefore, that Count Struensee, in
-more than one way and in more than one respect, has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-both himself committed the crime of high treason in
-an eminent degree, as well as participated in similar
-crimes with others; and that, further, his whole administration
-was a chain of violence and selfishness, which
-he ever sought to attain in a disgraceful and criminal
-manner; and that he also displayed contempt of religion,
-morality, and good manners, not only by word
-and deed, but also through public regulations, the following
-sentence is passed on him, according to the
-words of article 1 of chapter iv. of the 6th book of the
-Danish law:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Count John Frederick Struensee shall, as a well-deserved
-punishment for himself and an example and
-warning for others of the same mind, have forfeited
-honour, life, and property, and be degraded from his
-dignity of count, and all other honours which have
-been conferred on him, and his noble coat of arms be
-broken by the executioner: John Frederick Struensee's
-right hand shall be cut off while he is alive, and then
-his head, his body quartered and exposed on the
-wheel, but his head and hand shall be stuck upon a
-pole.</p>
-
-<p>The commission at the Christiansborg Palace, April
-25, 1772.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
- <li>J. K. J<span class="smcap">UELL</span>-W<span class="smcap">IND</span>.</li>
- <li>H. S<span class="smcap">TAMPE</span>. L<span class="smcap">UXDORPH</span>.</li>
- <li>K<span class="smcap">OFOD</span> A<span class="smcap">NCHER</span>.</li>
- <li>F. C. S<span class="smcap">EVEL</span>.</li>
- <li>G. A. B<span class="smcap">RAËM</span>.</li>
- <li>A. G. C<span class="smcap">ARSTENS</span>.</li>
- <li>J. C. E. S<span class="smcap">CHMIDT</span>.</li>
- <li>O. G<span class="smcap">ULDBERG</span>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Two days after this barbarous sentence was passed,
-it received the full royal confirmation in the following
-words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><em>We hereby approve, in all points, the sentence passed
-by the Commission of Inquiry appointed by us at our
-Palace of Christiansborg, which declares John Frederick
-Struensee, on account of his crimen læsæ Majestatis,
-in more than one point to have forfeited honour, life,
-and property; he shall be degraded from his dignity of
-count, and all the other dignities conferred on him; his
-coat of arms shall also be broken by the executioner; his
-right hand shall be cut off while he is alive, and then his
-head, his body quartered and exposed on a wheel, but
-his head and hand stuck on a pole. To which those
-whom it concerns will pay most submissive attention.</em></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Given at our Palace of Christiansborg, this April 27,
-1772.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="mleft10">CHRISTIAN.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">O. T<span class="smcap">HOTT</span>.<br />
-L<span class="smcap">UXDORPH</span>. <span class="mleft1">A. S<span class="smcap">CHUMACHER</span>.</span><br />
-D<span class="smcap">ONS</span>. <span class="mleft1">H<span class="smcap">OYER</span>.</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">C<span class="smcap">OUNT</span> B<span class="smcap">RANDT'S</span> S<span class="smcap">ENTENCE</span>.</p>
-
-<p>By Count Brandt's own confession, the declaration
-of the ex-cabinet minister John Frederick Struensee,
-and various circumstances, it has been already proved
-that Count Enevold Brandt was not only Struensee's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-good friend, but also his intimate, whom he (Struensee)
-entrusted with his greatest secrets.</p>
-
-<p>In consideration of the gracious intimacy in which
-he stood with his Majesty the King, it would have been
-his duty, therefore, to prevent all the things which,
-according to his own declaration when examined, he
-disapproved, and must have recognised in Struensee's
-life, sentiments, and undertakings, as foolish, audacious,
-and detrimental both for the king and the government
-and the country.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of this, he, as a criminal subject and unworthy
-confidential servant of the king, made common
-cause with Struensee, continually remained his
-confidant, and sought to sustain him.</p>
-
-<p>He allowed himself to be employed by Struensee
-in keeping everybody from the king, so that nothing
-should be revealed to his Majesty about Struensee's
-criminal conduct, and the share himself had in it.</p>
-
-<p>To the great concern of all his fellow-subjects he
-behaved haughtily, and not with the due respect to
-his king, both in private and in the sight of all men.</p>
-
-<p>He did not show the submissive reverence to the
-king which every subject owes him, and expresses voluntary
-from his heart on every occasion in word and
-deed, but he rather opposed the king, in order to
-maintain Struensee's favour, and acquire an extravagant
-fortune and special advantages for himself.</p>
-
-<p>The memoirs exchanged between him and Struensee
-furnish a proof of his unreasonable pretension, and that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-he was conscious of his reprehensible behaviour toward
-the king. From this cause he should have altered his
-conduct, or sooner have resigned a post which was repulsive
-to him, and for which he did not consider himself
-equal. But no, he did not wish to oppose his patron
-and protector, who, for his own purposes, desired to
-keep him, Brandt, about the king's person, while, on the
-other hand, Count Brandt expected greater fortunes in
-service and pecuniary affairs from him, Struensee.</p>
-
-<p>As <em>directeur des spectacles</em>, he assisted Struensee in
-producing a misunderstanding in the royal family by
-contriving that a separate box should be given Prince
-Frederick in the playhouse, so that his royal highness
-should not be in the king's box, and thus have an opportunity
-for revealing to his Majesty, Brandt and his
-intimate friend's most culpable conduct.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
-
-<p>He obtained through Struensee in a short period
-60,000 dollars from the royal treasury, although he
-must have known, or at least could not have doubted,
-that he had not earned them by his services or general
-conduct.</p>
-
-<p>When he thanked his Majesty for this large sum, he
-did not mention the amount which Struensee had procured
-him, because he knew that the matter was not
-all right, and Struensee had forbidden his doing so,
-lest his Majesty might thus be informed of that which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-the approved extract, found among Struensee's papers,
-has since revealed to his Majesty and every other person
-who sees the extract.</p>
-
-<p>Count Brandt has been guilty of all this criminality,
-although his conscience must reveal to him at every
-moment that he was acting as an unfaithful subject,
-and against the duty and the bond imposed on him by
-the king's gracious familiarity, and in defiance of the
-warnings which the two letters from an anonymous
-writer found in Brandt's pocket-book so impressively
-and clearly contained, by reminding him of his duties,
-and advising him what he should do if he did not wish
-to risk his head.</p>
-
-<p>He only allowed himself to be ruled and guided by
-his arrogance, fortune-hunting, and avarice.</p>
-
-<p>But though the things mentioned appear so criminal,
-they cannot be compared with the crime of laying
-hands on the exalted person of his Majesty the King,
-which Count Enevold Brandt has himself clearly and
-regularly confessed in his examination before the commission,
-and as it has been proved and confirmed by
-several witnesses. For this crime may be regarded
-as if Count Brandt wished to hazard the king's death,
-because the result of such an assault cannot be foreseen,
-and an unlucky blow on a tender part has frequently
-caused death.</p>
-
-<p>He was angry with the king, and demanded satisfaction
-of his master, whose well-deserved admonition
-he ought to have accepted in penitence for his previous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-conduct, and have withdrawn himself from his
-(the king's) countenance, in order not to irritate him
-more.</p>
-
-<p>On the contrary, he consulted with his intimate
-friend Struensee how and when he should assault the
-king, and reflected what sort of weapon he should
-employ, and held it in readiness; but after more
-mature reflection, made no use of it.</p>
-
-<p>After he had been warned by Struensee that the
-king was now alone, and the right time had arrived,
-he goes with reflection, and a firm determination to
-avenge himself, in to the king, orders out the two lads
-in attendance, and bolts the door, so that no one may
-come in to oppose his resolution or to prevent his design,
-and forces his Majesty the King, by language
-and assault, to offer resistance.</p>
-
-<p>While doing so, he wounds his Majesty in the neck,
-bites his finger, and at the same time insults his benefactor
-and king by audacious words and expressions
-of such a nature that everybody must feel horrified
-at repeating them.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that Count Brandt has urged, in his excuse,
-that his Majesty has pardoned him for this
-occurrence, yet, even were it so, it can only be supposed
-that his Majesty wished to overlook so great an
-insult for a time. Count Brandt, however, has produced
-no proof of this, and his Majesty alone is in a
-position to judge how far this indulgence should
-extend.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This most atrocious and audacious undertaking of
-Count Brandt cannot be regarded otherwise than as an
-open attack on the king's person, and the greatest
-crime of high treason, which deserves the punishment
-attached to such a crime in art. 1, 4th chapter of
-the 6th book of the Danish law.</p>
-
-<p>We, therefore, consider ourselves justified in condemning
-Count Brandt, and passing the following
-sentence:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Count Enevold Brandt shall have forfeited honour,
-life, and property, and be degraded from his dignity
-of count, and all the other honours conferred on him;
-his coat of arms shall be broken by the executioner
-on the scaffold; his right hand cut off while he is
-still alive; then the head; his body quartered and
-exposed on the wheel; but his head and hand stuck
-on a pole.</p>
-
-<p>The Commission at the Christiansborg Palace, this
-25th April, 1772.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
- <li>J. K. J<span class="smcap">UELL</span>-W<span class="smcap">IND</span>.</li>
- <li>H. S<span class="smcap">TAMPE</span>. L<span class="smcap">UXDORPH</span>.</li>
- <li>K<span class="smcap">OFOD</span> A<span class="smcap">NCHER</span>.</li>
- <li>F. E. S<span class="smcap">EVEL</span>.</li>
- <li>G. A. B<span class="smcap">RAËM</span>.</li>
- <li>A. G. C<span class="smcap">ARSTENS</span>.</li>
- <li>J. E. E. S<span class="smcap">CHMIDT</span>.</li>
- <li>O. G<span class="smcap">ULDBERG</span>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The royal confirmation of the sentence was to the
-following effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><em>We hereby approve in all points the sentence passed
-by the Commission of Inquiry appointed by us at the</em><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-<em>Christiansborg Palace, which declares that Enevold
-Brandt, for his most atrocious and audacious design
-and assault on our own person, shall have forfeited
-honour, life, and property, and that he shall be degraded
-from his dignity as count, and all the other honours
-conferred on him; that his coat of arms shall be broken
-by the executioner on the scaffold; after that his right
-hand be cut off while he is alive; and then his head;
-and that the body shall be quartered and exposed on the
-wheel; but the head and hand stuck on a pole. Whereupon
-those whom it concerns are ordered to act accordingly.</em></p>
-
-<p>Given at our Palace of Christiansborg, this April
-27, 1772.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="mleft10">CHRISTIAN.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">O. T<span class="smcap">HOTT</span>.<br />
-L<span class="smcap">UXDORPH</span>. <span class="mleft1">A. S<span class="smcap">CHUMACHER</span>.</span><br />
-D<span class="smcap">ONS</span>. <span class="mleft1">H<span class="smcap">OYER</span>.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>These sentences are certainly among the rarest
-documents which the annals of justice contain. Struensee
-was convicted of a single crime; Brandt was
-innocent. In the sentence, Struensee's crime is not
-stated, and the whole document is a disgustingly long
-narrative of undecided actions, not one of which would
-offer grounds for a sentence of death. Reverdil,
-usually so cool and impartial, cannot restrain his feelings
-when he writes about these atrocious verdicts:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"The sentences were minuted by Wiwet. They
-were inserted in the newspapers; among others, the
-<em>Leyden Gazette</em>. They seem expressly drawn up
-to dishonour the king, the judges, and the country.
-The crimes proved are confounded in them with presumptions,
-offences with imprudences, faults peculiar
-to favourites with those in which, as they were
-covered by the king's authority, the culpability falls
-on him. In the fear of not charging enough, intentions
-and passions are taken into account. In the
-sentence passed on Brandt, after describing the scene
-of fisticuffs, which so strongly revealed the king's
-imbecility, they were not ashamed to add: 'Count
-Brandt has certainly alleged in his defence that the
-king had pardoned him; but even supposing that the
-fact was proved, it could not be understood otherwise
-than that his Majesty was kind enough to suffer so
-great an extremity for a time. After all, the culprit
-has proved nothing in this respect, and his Majesty is
-the sole judge of the extent he gives to his own indulgence.'
-When this extraordinary document was
-read to the man whom it concerned, he said very
-justly in his way, that its author deserved a hundred
-lashes with a stirrup-leather."</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising to find that the authenticity of
-the sentences was not believed when they were published
-in foreign countries. Thus we read in the
-<em>Annales Belgiques</em> for May, 1772:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"A sentence ought to state the facts simply, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-declare the penalty which is pronounced against the
-man who has been guilty of them. Care should be
-taken to avoid mixing up in it reasonings and epithets
-which denote in the judge a disposition for vengeance
-or any passion: now this pamphlet, which is offered us
-under the title of a sentence, displays from one end to
-the other such marked characters of a violent prejudice
-against the condemned, that this in itself would be
-sufficient to render it suspicious. It forms a tissue of
-vague imputations which can be easily destroyed."</p>
-
-<p>But the dominant faction did not trouble itself
-about what might be said: sentence had been passed,
-and the next matter of importance was to have it
-executed before any revulsion took place in public
-opinion.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">THE EXECUTION.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">CONFIRMATION OF THE SENTENCE&mdash;STRUENSEE'S CORRESPONDENCE&mdash;RANTZAU'S
-TREACHERY&mdash;AN UNFEELING COURT&mdash;STRUENSEE'S
-PENITENCE&mdash;THE SCAFFOLD&mdash;APRIL 28&mdash;EXECUTION
-OF BRANDT&mdash;HORRIBLE DETAILS&mdash;DEATH OF STRUENSEE&mdash;HIS
-CHARACTER&mdash;ENLIGHTENED DESPOTISM&mdash;THE FIRST
-SERVANT OF THE STATE&mdash;THE QUEEN DOWAGER</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>On the same day that the sentences were signed by the
-Commissioners, Uldall, the counsel, went to Struensee,
-in order to inform him of the termination of the trial.</p>
-
-<p>When the advocate entered the cell, he said to the
-unhappy victim of a conspiracy:</p>
-
-<p>"Good count, I bring you bad news."</p>
-
-<p>And with these scant words he drew a copy of the
-approved sentence out of his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Calmly and silently the man condemned to such a
-cruel death perused the sentence, but not the slightest
-alteration took place in his countenance. Then, he
-handed the ominous paper to Dr. Münter, who happened
-to be with him at the time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>While the latter was trembling as he read the sentence,
-Struensee began to talk with composure with his
-counsel, and asked if all the points of his accusation had
-been regarded in passing his sentence, especially that
-about the education of the crown prince; to which
-Uldall answered in the affirmative. Struensee added,
-that he must confess that, if he had had children of his
-own, he would not have reared them in any other way.</p>
-
-<p>"And what will Brandt's fate be?" he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"His sentence is exactly the same as yours," Uldall
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>"And could his counsel do nothing to save him?"
-Struensee went on to ask.</p>
-
-<p>"He said everything that could be urged in his
-favour, but Count Brandt has too much laid to his
-charge."</p>
-
-<p>This information caused Struensee greater emotion
-than the news of his own fate. But he soon regained
-his composure, and added a few words about a petition
-to the king for mercy, although he at the same time
-expressed his conviction, that even this last step would
-meet with no success.</p>
-
-<p>When Struensee and Münter were left alone again,
-the man who was now Death's own assured his friend
-that his impending punishment did not terrify him.
-He had thought that he might be broken on the wheel,
-and was already considering whether he could suffer
-this kind of death with patience.</p>
-
-<p>"If I have deserved such a death," he then added,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-"my infamy would not be removed, though those disgraceful
-circumstances were not annexed to it. And
-if I had not deserved it, which I cannot assert, sensible
-people would do me justice, and I should gain in point
-of honour. And upon the whole, what is honour or
-infamy in this world to me? My judges had the law
-before them, and therefore they could not decide otherwise.
-I confess my crime is great: I have violated
-the majesty of the king. Many things I might not
-have done if I had been sufficiently acquainted with
-the law,&mdash;But why did I neglect it?"</p>
-
-<p>These words, uttered by Struensee so shortly before
-his death, seemed to reveal a doubt of his perfect innocence.
-Perhaps, however, this uncertainty was rather
-produced by his conversion to the Christian religion,
-by the recollection of past errors, and by the effect of
-a long and painful imprisonment; while the imminent
-and awful close of his life might also have produced
-impressions on him which made him fancy himself
-guiltier than he really was. Or was it the voice of his
-conscience at the remembrance of the ruin which he
-had brought on his young queen, which spoke out of
-his soul, though he dared not clothe it in language?</p>
-
-<p>My readers will remember how much this unhappy
-man was affected by a letter which he received from
-his father, at the time when he still maintained his
-irreligious principles. He now delivered to Dr. Münter
-a letter for his parents, leaving him the option
-whether he would send it at once, or after the execu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>tion.
-Münter chose the latter course, as he knew Struensee's
-death was very near at hand, and he wished to
-save them the anxiety of expecting the melancholy
-news of it. The letter was to the following effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Your letters have increased my pain; but I have
-found in them that love which you always expressed
-for me. The memory of all the sorrow I have caused
-you, by living contrary to your good advice, and the
-great affliction my imprisonment and death must give
-you, grieve me the more, since, enlightened by truth,
-I see clearly the injury I have done. With the most
-sincere repentance I implore your pardon and forgiveness.
-I owe my present situation to my belief
-in the doctrine and redemption of Christ. Your
-prayers and your good example have contributed much
-toward it. Be assured that your son has found the
-great good, which you believe to be the only true one.
-Look upon his misfortune as the means which made
-him obtain it. All impressions which my fate could
-make or give will be weakened by this, as it has
-effaced them with me. I recommend myself to your
-further intercession before God. I pray incessantly
-to Christ, my Redeemer, that he may enable you to
-bear your present calamities. I owe the same to His
-assistance. My love to my brothers and sisters.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Brandt also received from his defender, Bang, a copy
-of the sentence passed on him, and, like Struensee,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-sent in a petition for mercy. It was reported that he
-would be pardoned. For Owe Guldberg, the most influential
-of the judges at Christiansborg Palace, had
-thrown himself at the feet of Queen Juliana Maria,
-who now held the authority in her hands, and implored
-a mitigation of the punishment. But the
-queen dowager absolutely refused to listen to him,
-not even when Guldberg earnestly implored that at
-least Brandt's life might be saved. Crushed by such
-harshness, and bitterly undeceived as to the extent of
-his influence, he returned to his apartments, threw
-himself on the bed, refused to take food, and passed
-several days in apathetic reflection.</p>
-
-<p>Brandt's mother and brother asked permission to
-come to court to implore the king's clemency, and,
-being unable to obtain it, they wrote to the queen
-dowager and to Prince Frederick. The answers they
-received were full of compliments, but gave them no
-hope. It was said, however, that in the council, when
-the question of confirming the sentence was discussed,
-there were voices for mercy; but that Counts von
-Rantzau and Von der Osten absolutely opposed any
-being shown. The honour of the king should have
-demanded that Brandt's life should be spared, in order
-to conceal from the world what had passed between
-them, but the king had an extreme repugnance to
-this; the mere name of the ex-favourite made him
-tremble and turn pale. He positively declared that
-he would not save Brandt unless Struensee were also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-spared, and the ministry considered it necessary to
-immolate one of the victims, so as not to let the other
-escape. The two sentences were consequently confirmed
-without the slightest display of clemency.</p>
-
-<p>Count von Rantzau more particularly displayed a
-sustained hardness and fearful blackness of soul. He,
-doubtless, believed that by closing all access to
-clemency, by forcing to the scaffold two intimate
-friends, one of whom had been his benefactor, he
-should purge himself of the suspicion of complicity,
-and that by sheer hypocrisy he should cause his connection
-with the condemned men to be forgotten.
-At any other time, instead of sitting in the council
-and determining the fate of the culprits, he would
-have himself been the object of a severe sentence; instead
-of being spared for having betrayed the favourites,
-there would have been an additional charge against
-him, that of anticipating the royal commands to arrest
-them; hence, being well aware that, in spite of his
-dignities, he was marked, both as a restless and unbelieving
-man, he was more assiduous than any one
-in his attendance at the court chapel, and joined in
-singing hymns, which must have possessed all the charm
-of novelty for him.<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<p>How little feeling that most miserable of monarchs,
-Christian, really had in the whole matter, is seen by a
-perusal of the Danish journals at the time. The
-amusements of the court offer a most revolting exhibition
-of apathy and want of sympathy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On April 23, there was a masked ball, <em>en domino</em>,
-at which the king, the queen dowager, and their suite
-were present; on the 24th, instead of the play, a concert
-at the Danish theatre, where the royal family were
-present; on the 25th, the sentence on Counts Struensee
-and Brandt was pronounced in open court; in the
-evening, the opera of <em>Adrien en Syrie</em> was performed.
-The small-pox continuing its ravages, on the 26th,
-Sunday, profane amusements were interdicted by the
-new government. On the 27th, the king dined with
-his court at Charlottenlund, and returned to town at
-7 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>; he signed the sentences, and proceeded to the
-Italian Opera. On the 28th, the day of the execution,
-there was a grand concert at court. Well may a
-writer in the <em>Annales Belgiques</em> for May, 1772,
-remark:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"If the king has unfortunately reached such a stage
-of unfeelingness, what praise does not Caroline Matilda
-deserve for having succeeded in captivating him so
-greatly that up to the present it was not even suspected
-that he possessed such a disposition?"</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, Dr. Münter had informed
-Struensee, on April 26th, of the promulgation of the
-sentences, and that they would be carried into effect
-two days after. Struensee listened to him patiently,
-and then remarked, as to the circumstances which
-were to throw infamy upon his death&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I am far above all this, and I hope my friend
-Brandt may be the same. Here in this world&mdash;since
-I am on the point of leaving it&mdash;neither honour nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-infamy can affect me any more. It is equally the
-same to me after death, whether my body putrifies
-under ground or in the open air; whether it serves to
-feed the worms or the birds. God will know very
-well how to preserve those particles of my body which,
-on the day of resurrection, are to constitute my future
-glorified body. It is not my all which is to be laid on
-the wheel. Thank God! I know now very well that
-this dust is not my whole being."</p>
-
-<p>After this they conversed quietly about various
-matters concerning Struensee's administration. The
-decision whether his government had been politically
-bad he left to posterity, and many times repeated his
-assurance that he was not conscious of any wrong intentions.
-When Dr. Münter left him, Struensee handed
-him the following letter for Frau von Berkentin at
-Pinneberg. This was the patroness who, as chief
-gouvernante to the prince royal, had recommended
-Struensee as physician in ordinary for the king's foreign
-tour:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>I make use of the first moments which permit me
-to write to you. Business, duties, and my late connexions
-have perhaps lessened in me the remembrance
-of my former friends, but they have been not able to
-obliterate their memory entirely. My present leisure
-has revived it. If my silence has aroused suspicion as
-to my former sentiments, I beg pardon of all those
-who are entitled to my gratitude, and of you, gracious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-lady, in particular. This however, is not the only
-advantage which the change of my fate has produced.
-I owe my knowledge of truth to it; it has procured
-me a happiness of which I had no further expectation,
-as I had already lost sight of it. I entreat you to
-consider my misfortunes in no other light but that of
-religion. I gain more by them than I can ever lose;
-and I feel and assure you of this with conviction, ease,
-and joy of heart. I beg you to repeat what I now
-write in the house of Count Ahlefeldt and at Rantzau.
-I am under great obligations to these two families, and
-it has grieved me far more to have drawn with me into
-misfortune persons who are related to them.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>On the following day, April 27, Struensee also referred
-to his administration, and assured Münter again,
-most sacredly, that he had not falsified the accounts
-about the presents made by the king to him and
-Brandt. Münter's remarks on this subject are worthy
-quotation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"It is difficult to dismiss every suspicion on this
-head against Struensee; and if he were guilty, of how
-little value would be his conversion! It has made me
-uneasy, frequently, and even now, still, after his death.
-All manner of appearances, his own confession that he
-could not free himself from all suspicion, and many
-other evidences, are against him. However, on the
-other side, it makes me easy that he confessed greater
-and more punishable crimes without constraint, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-denied this with a firmness, calmness of mind and
-confidence, which, inexplicable as the matter remains,
-makes it difficult to believe him guilty."</p>
-
-<p>Struensee then handed to Münter the following letter
-to Chamberlain Christian Brandt, which he desired
-him to get delivered:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Permit me to bewail with you and with the gracious
-lady your mother, the fate of our dear Enevold. Do
-not think me unworthy of sharing your grief with
-you, though, accidentally, I have been the cause of it.
-You know how much I love him. He was the man
-of all the world who possessed the largest share of my
-friendship. His misfortunes cause me the greatest
-anxiety, and my own have been on his account most
-painful to me. He has shared my prosperity with
-me, and I trust that we shall now together enjoy that
-happiness which our Redeemer has promised us. I
-do not know anything wherewith I could comfort you.
-You are acquainted with religion. In that I found
-a refuge to comfort me on account of my misfortune.
-I pray to God that he may at this very moment let
-you feel all its power. I shall not cease to entertain
-a most lively sense of gratitude toward all those persons
-who are dear to me at Rantzau. I am wholly
-yours, &amp;c.<br />
-<span class="rightlinea">April 27, 1772.</span><br /></p>
-
-<p class="clear">P.S.&mdash;I have been in hopes, and still flatter myself,
-that the sentence of my friend will be mitigated.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To Münter, Struensee declared that Brandt's sentence
-of death could not be signed with a good conscience;
-for, he said, he could not regard the action
-for which his friend's life was forfeited as a crime, and
-he, Struensee, did not repent having taken part in it.
-On the other hand, he reproached Brandt, because in
-his intercourse with the king he neglected the reverence
-he owed him, which had also been the reason
-why he attracted the king's displeasure on himself.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the letters written by Struensee, the one he
-addressed to Count von Rantzau is assuredly the
-most remarkable. Instead of the reproaches with
-which he might have justly overwhelmed him, he
-wrote in the following forgiving spirit:<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>This, Sir (Dr. Münter), is what I have begged you
-to say in my behalf to Count von Rantzau. I never
-entertained any feeling contrary to what his friendship
-had a right to expect. Though convinced long ago that
-he was acting against me, I did not venture to remove
-him from Copenhagen. The facilities I possessed for
-doing so, the solicitations addressed to me, and very
-powerful reasons not affecting me personally, could not
-induce me to do so. The Russian affairs will inform
-him of the measures taken against him, of which he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-is probably ignorant, as I never spoke to him about
-them in detail. I had conceived that his attachment
-to his master caused him to find the conduct of his
-friend blamable, but it did not enter my mind that he
-was capable of engaging any one to render his friend
-as unfortunate as possible. Still, convinced by experience,
-I have understood that the vivacity of zeal,
-circumstances, the persuasion of the peril with which
-the king was believed to be menaced, might stifle
-every other feeling. I have retained no bitterness
-against the count. Having been since enlightened by
-religion, I have preserved all the feelings of a personal
-attachment for him which, through various signs, his
-memory will, doubtless, bring before his eyes. I offer
-up vows for his prosperity. It is not in my power to
-give him stronger proofs than by ardently wishing
-that he may find the happiness which the truth of religion
-has taught me to know. I would desire the
-count, on this point, to remember, by analogy, his
-prejudices against medicine, and how he removed them
-by reading "Zimmermann," and by experiencing the
-good effects of the medicines I administered to him at
-Glückstadt. May these few words efface everything
-that the count nourishes against me in his mind! You
-will deliver this note to him, Sir, when no further motives
-are in existence which may make him attribute
-this step of mine to any other object.<br />
-<span class="rightlinea">S<span class="smcap">TRUENSEE</span>.</span><br /></p>
-
-<p class="clear">P.S. Having altered my mind, I have the honour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-to address this note directly to the count, instead of
-entrusting it to Dr. Münter.</p>
-
-<p>This 27th April, 1722. <span class="rightlinea">S.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p class="clear">Struensee did not wish to take a personal farewell
-of his brother, Justiz-rath Struensee, because he was
-afraid that this might produce a scene which would be
-too affecting for both of them. He therefore begged
-Münter to do so for him. He entreated his brother's
-pardon for drawing him into his misfortunes, but
-hoped and was certain that his affairs would turn out
-well. He also assured him that he was leaving the
-world with true brotherly affection for him. He also
-wished his brother to be told of the sentiments in
-which he died. This commission Dr. Münter discharged
-on the same evening, and carried back the
-answer of the much afflicted brother.</p>
-
-<p>Brandt also received on April 27, from his chaplain,
-Dean Hee, the news of the confirmation of his sentence
-and the day of execution, which he heard unconcerned,
-and said that he readily submitted to the
-will of God.</p>
-
-<p>A report had been spread that Brandt had spoken
-recklessly while in prison, and sung merry songs.
-Hence the dean made a proposition to him, which he
-left to him to accept or not, that he should make a
-declaration of what his real sentiments were, in the
-presence of witnesses. He readily complied with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-proposal, and Hee went to the commandant, who
-came with four officers, in whose presence Brandt
-declared that he was ready to die, and was not afraid
-of it; he likewise confessed before the omniscient God,
-that he had without hypocrisy sought for God's mercy;
-he likewise confessed, as he had done before, that he
-had acted very inconsiderately, that his levity had
-been very great, and that he, on this account, acknowledged
-God's mercy in suffering him to die, lest he
-should be drawn away again from religion. He said,
-he knew very well that the same levity of temper had
-induced him, in the beginning of his imprisonment, to
-talk in a manner he was now ashamed of, though he
-was sure in his conscience that many untruths were
-invented, and propagated among the people, but he
-forgave those who had been guilty of such a thing.
-Now, he wished that the gentlemen present would
-bear testimony to what he should say. He acknowledged
-himself a great sinner before God: a sinner
-who had gone astray, but was brought back by Christ.
-He then begged the commandant and the other officers
-to forgive him, if, by his levity, he had offended
-any one of them, and wished that God's mercy in
-Christ might always attend them as the greatest blessing.
-He said all this with such a readiness, and in
-such moving terms, that all who were present were
-affected by it, and every one of them wished that God
-would preserve him in this situation of mind to the
-last.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, the town council, the police, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-military authorities, were making preparations for the
-execution. Copenhagen is surrounded on the land
-side, next the three suburbs, by three large fields bordered
-by neat <em>allées</em>, which are used as exercising
-grounds for the garrison, and for public festivities. On
-the easternmost of these fields, situated on the Sound,
-a scaffold, 8 yards long and broad, and 27 feet in
-height, was erected; and on the gallows hill, a mile
-distant, and situated in the western suburb, two poles
-were planted, both of which were surrounded by four
-wheel-posts. It took some trouble to complete this
-job, because no artisans consented to undertake it. It
-was not until other workmen were persuaded that a
-pleasure-house was to be built on the field that the
-scaffold was completed. No wheelwright was willing
-either to supply the wheels; so that the eight carriage
-wheels required had to be begged from friends of the
-court party.</p>
-
-<p>When dawn broke on the 28th of April, 1772, a day
-which inflicted an eternal stain on the history of Denmark,
-the troops, consisting of 4,400 sailors belonging
-to the vessels in ordinary, and armed with pikes, 1,200
-infantry, 300 dragoons, and, strange to say, the corps
-of military cadets, marched through the gates, in order
-to form a large circle round the stage of blood on the
-Osterfeld, keep back the eager countless mob, and be
-ready for any eventualities. General von Eickstedt,
-town commandant, had the supreme command of all
-the troops.</p>
-
-<p>The two gates of the citadel were also kept shut till<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-the departure of the criminals; and the posts had been
-doubled in order to keep off the pressure of the crowd,
-who also congregated eagerly here.</p>
-
-<p>The two clergymen went at an early hour to the
-condemned men, and found them both calm and easy
-in mind. When Münter entered, Struensee was fully
-dressed, and lying on a couch. He was reading Schlegel's
-sermons on Christ's Passion, and a religious conversation
-began between the two, during which Münter
-looked very often toward the cell door with a fearful
-expectation; but the count not once.</p>
-
-<p>At length the officer on duty came in and requested
-Münter to step into the coach, and precede Struensee
-to the place of execution. Münter was greatly moved,
-but Struensee, as if it did not concern himself the
-least, comforted him by saying:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Make yourself easy, my dear friend, by considering
-the happiness I am going to enter into, and with the
-consciousness that God has made you a means for procuring
-it for me."</p>
-
-<p>Soon after, the two delinquents were requested to
-get into their coaches, Brandt going on first. The
-latter, after praying fervently, had had his chains, which
-were fixed in the wall, taken off, and he put on the
-clothes in which he intended to appear on the scaffold.
-He then drank a dish of coffee and ate something, walking
-up and down the room, which he had not been
-able to do before. As often as Dr. Hee asked him how
-he found himself, he said that he was not afraid of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-dying. He afterwards asked Hee whether he had seen
-anybody executed before, and how far he was to lay
-his body bare for the execution.</p>
-
-<p>Struensee was dressed in a blue cut velvet coat
-with silver buttons; Brandt in a green court dress
-richly embroidered with gold, and both had costly fur
-pelisses thrown over them, but, as if in mockery, still
-had a chain on their hand and foot. This gay attire
-had been given them in order to remind the populace
-that the dizzy fall from the greatest power to the
-scaffold was the just punishment of their unparalleled
-crimes. By the side of each of the prisoners sat an
-officer, and opposite to them two sergeants. The two
-coaches were surrounded by 200 infantry soldiers with
-fixed bayonets, and an equal number of dragoons with
-drawn sabres. The procession was opened by a third
-coach, in which the Fiscal General and the king's
-bailiff were seated, and, facing them, the latter's deputy,
-holding two tin shields, on which the arms of
-the two counts were painted.</p>
-
-<p>Half-past eight was striking from the tower of the
-citadel when the three coaches began their progress to
-the scaffold, where they were expected by upwards of
-30,000 persons.</p>
-
-<p>When the procession reached the spot, the Fiscal
-General and the king's bailiff with his assistant first
-mounted the scaffold, on which the executioner and
-his aids were awaiting their victims. They were followed
-by Brandt; his features were so unchanged, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-his bearing was so perfectly calm, that it was generally
-supposed that a hope of mercy was aroused in his
-mind at this supreme moment. Dean Hee mounted
-the scaffold stairs immediately after him, and it was
-not till they reached the top that the prisoner's fetters
-were removed. Even here he assured Hee that his
-mind was composed, and that he was not afraid of
-death. The dean, however, continued to encourage
-him, and concluded with the words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Son, be of good cheer, for thy sins are forgiven
-thee."</p>
-
-<p>To which Brandt replied:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; they are all cast into the depths of the
-sea."</p>
-
-<p>The king's bailiff, Etats-rath Ortwed, now read the
-sentence; and when he had finished, the executioner
-advanced to receive the count's coat of arms. He
-asked Brandt whether it was his escutcheon, to which
-the other replied by a nod; he then swung it in the
-air, and broke it with the words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"This is not done in vain, but as a just punishment."</p>
-
-<p>After the clergyman had read Brandt those things
-from the ritual which are usual on such occasions, Hee
-asked him whether, in addition to his other sins, he
-repented of his great crime of high treason? Brandt
-answered in the affirmative, and then added:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I pray God, the king, and the country, for forgiveness,
-and only wish that God may bless the king and
-the whole land for the sake of Christ's blood."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After these words the clergyman gave him the benediction,
-and, taking him by the hand, delivered him
-over to justice. When the executioner approached
-to assist Brandt in undressing, the latter said to him
-with firmness, though not without mildness, "Stand
-off, and do not presume to touch me!" He quickly
-let his pelisse fall, took off his hat, and himself removed
-his coat and waistcoat. After previously
-feeling in all the pockets, which he doubtless did out
-of habit, he also began to bare the right arm, from
-which the hand was to be cut off, but the executioner
-now advanced, and helped him to bare the whole arm
-as well as his neck.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> After this, Brandt knelt down,
-and laid his head on one block and his hand on another.
-When the victim had thus offered himself for
-the execution of the sentence, the clergyman reminded
-him of the posture of the Saviour in the garden of
-Gethsemane, with his face on the ground, to which
-Brandt, lying on the block, replied in a loud voice:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The blood of Christ intercedeth for me."</p>
-
-<p>Hee stepped back, and while he was saying, "O
-Christ, in Thee I live, in Thee I die! Oh! thou
-Lamb of God, that takest away the sins of the world,
-be merciful!" the execution was over. Brandt did
-not die as a hypocrite, but at the same time displayed
-no defiance.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after, the executioner's aids advanced,
-stripped the body, and then divided it into four
-quarters with an axe. Each quarter was let down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-separately by a rope into a cart standing below, and
-the vessels with the entrails were also placed in it.
-Lastly, the head was held up, shown to the spectators,
-and then let down into the cart, together with the
-hand. After which the scaffold was strown with fresh
-sand, in readiness for Struensee.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
-
-<p>During this awful tragedy Struensee sat in his
-coach, which was standing near the scaffold. When
-Brandt went up, Münter ordered the coach to be
-turned in such a way that they might not witness
-Brandt's execution. But Struensee's eyes had already
-found his unfortunate friend, and hence he
-said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I have seen him already."</p>
-
-<p>After some further exhortation, Münter said to the
-prisoner:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Christ prayed for his murderers even on the
-cross. May I rely upon your leaving the world with
-the same sentiments of love toward those whom you
-might have reason to think your enemies?"</p>
-
-<p>"In the first place," Struensee replied, "I hope
-that there is no one who has a personal hatred against
-me; but that those who have promoted my misfortunes,
-have done it with the intention of doing good.
-Secondly, I look upon myself already as a citizen of
-another world, and consider that I am obliged to entertain
-sentiments conformable with this dignity; and I
-am sure that if I were to see those who might perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-be my enemies here in the bliss of that world which I
-hope to enter into, it would give me the highest satisfaction.
-I pray to God that if my enemies hereafter
-repent of their behaviour toward me, this repentance
-may induce them to look out for that salvation which I
-confidently promise myself through the mercy of God."</p>
-
-<p>Struensee, during this conversation, suffered no
-other change than that he appeared very pale, and
-thinking and speaking evidently cost him more trouble
-than they had done earlier in the morning. Still he
-retained perfect composure, and saluted some of those
-around the coach by raising his hat, or by friendly
-glances. From the motion of the spectators, Dr.
-Münter, though he could not see the scaffold, guessed
-that Struensee's turn to ascend it had arrived, and
-that, with Brandt's death, all hope of a pardon had
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>When summoned by name, Struensee stepped out
-of the coach, and went, led by Münter, with dignity
-though humbly, through the ranks of favoured spectators,
-and bowed to them also. With difficulty he
-ascended the fifteen steps leading to the scaffold.
-When they reached the top, Münter spoke very concisely,
-and in a low voice, upon the words, "He that
-believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he
-live." After this the sentence of the Commission of
-Inquiry and the royal confirmation were read to
-Struensee, and the king's own signature was shown
-him. Then came the breaking of the coat of arms,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-after which Struensee's chains were taken off. The
-clergyman once again went up to Struensee, and asked
-him various questions.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you very truly sorry for all those actions by
-which you have offended God and man?"</p>
-
-<p>"You know my late sentiments on this point,"
-Struensee replied, "and I assure you they are this
-very moment just the same."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you trust in the redemption of Christ as the
-only ground of your being pardoned before God?"</p>
-
-<p>"I know no other means of receiving God's mercy,
-and I trust in this alone."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you leave this world without hatred or malice
-against any person whatever?"</p>
-
-<p>"I hope nobody hates me personally; and as for
-the rest, you know my sentiments on this head; they
-are the same as I told you before."</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Münter then laid his hand upon Struensee's
-head, and said with deep emotion, before he delivered
-him up to justice:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Then go in peace whither God calls you! His
-grace be with you!"</p>
-
-<p>Struensee then took off his fur pelisse, removed his
-hat, and tried to undress himself, but his strength
-failed him in doing so, and he was obliged to ask the
-executioner's help. After this he produced a white
-handkerchief to bind his eyes with, but the executioner
-said that it was not necessary, and then assisted him
-in removing his shirt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Struensee then walked with hesitating steps the
-few yards leading to the block, which still reeked with
-the blood of his dearest friend; a stronger mind than
-Struensee ever possessed might have been unhinged by
-the dreadful scene before his eyes. He knelt down,
-but had great difficulty in placing himself in the
-proper position. As the executioner raised the axe to
-cut off his right hand, Münter began slowly pronouncing
-the words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Remember Jesus Christ crucified, who died, but
-is risen again."</p>
-
-<p>The first blow fell, and with it, Struensee was
-attacked by violent convulsions, the result of which
-was, that the second blow intended to behead the poor
-wretch, failed. He sprang up convulsively, but the
-assistant seized him by the hair, and pulled him down
-on the block by force; even when the head was
-removed, a portion of the chin was left behind.</p>
-
-<p>The same horrors were committed on his poor corpse
-as on Brandt's, but I have no heart to dwell on them:
-let us rather agree with the poet in saying,</p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i0">"Excidat illa dies ævo: nec postera credant</div>
- <div class="i0">Sæcula: nos certé taceamus et obruta multa</div>
- <div class="i0">Nocte tegi nostræ patiamur crimina gentis."</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The mangled remains, after they had been thrown
-into the cart, were conveyed all through the city to
-the field at the other extremity, where they were to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-left to moulder or be devoured by the fowls of the air.
-For each, four stout balks were, at equal distances,
-driven into the earth; a taller pole was fixed in the
-centre; the entrails, &amp;c., were buried in a hole dug
-at the foot of the central pole; on the top the head
-was fixed, the pole being forced up inside the skull,
-through which a spike was driven to make it fast;
-the hand was nailed on a piece of board, placed transversely
-below the head; a cart wheel was fixed
-horizontally on the top of each of the four posts or
-pillars, on which a quarter of the body was exposed,
-made fast to the wheel by iron chains.</p>
-
-<p>The countless crowd, whose curiosity was now fully
-satisfied, returned to the city, shaken by the scenes
-they had witnessed, and the deep impression produced
-by the awful drama could be noticed for a long time.
-Convicts had to be employed on the next day in
-removing the scaffold, as no honest man would have a
-hand in it; but Gallows Hill preserved its decorations
-for some years, and even in 1775, Mr. Coxe saw
-Struensee's and Brandt's skulls and bones there.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> All
-this was done to satiate the vengeance of the queen
-dowager. With a telescope in her hand, Juliana Maria
-had witnessed the whole execution from the tower of
-the Christiansborg, and when the turn arrived for
-the special object of her hatred, Struensee, she rubbed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-her hands joyously, and exclaimed, "Now comes the
-fat one."<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
-
-<p>But the queen did not neglect to observe decorum
-even in this affair, and hence, soon after the execution,
-sent for Dr. Münter, in order to hear all the details
-of the judicial murder from this immediate witness of
-the fearful scene. When he had ended his report, the
-queen burst into tears; but, as our Danish authority
-remarks, "it is notorious that a crocodile can weep."
-Then she said to Münter&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I feel sorry for the unhappy man. I have examined
-myself whether in all I have done against him
-I have acted through any feeling of personal enmity;
-but my conscience acquits me of it."</p>
-
-<p>After this, the queen dowager gave Dr. Münter a
-snuff-box of rock crystal, while a similar gift in porcelain
-was forwarded to Dean Hee.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<p>But the historian, Suhm, who was attached to the
-court, and was one of the most zealous enemies of
-Struensee, tells us how far we are justified in believing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-the queen dowager's statement. As the queen
-occupied the upper floor of Christiansborg Palace,
-whence a view of the Gallows Hill was obtained,
-Chamberlain Suhm asked her some years later, why
-her Majesty, who had so many splendid palaces at her
-service, inhabited these unpretending rooms, and received
-the answer:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"And yet these rooms are dearer to me than all
-my most splendid apartments; for from these windows
-I saw my bitterest foe exposed on the wheel."</p>
-
-<p>Such was the end of a man whose miserable story is
-indubitably one of the most romantic episodes of his
-century; and it only required a Danish Walter Scott, in
-order to make of it an historical romance of the first
-class. For such a work the matter is fully sufficient.
-But for the same reason all efforts must fail to convert
-Struensee into the hero of a tragedy. Many poets, some
-of them in the first flight, have undertaken this ungrateful
-task, but have not attained any success worth mentioning.
-The reason can easily be found. Struensee
-was no hero; not even an original: he possessed no distinct
-character, but was merely a type of his age, and
-in spite of his undeniable talents, he was an ordinary
-adventurer after all. Fortune is as much the touchstone
-of minds as misfortune is. It subjected this man
-to a trial, and he came out of it badly. Arrogant and
-unbridled in fortune, he proved himself in misfortune
-despondent, cowardly, and even worthless. The fortune
-which he at first did not turn to a bad use, brought a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-king's sceptre into his hand, and he allowed it to be
-shamefully torn from him by people far inferior to him
-in intellect. A queen, young and beautiful as a May
-morning, supported him, and he betrayed her. He
-had felt a pride in being an avowed free-thinker, and he
-died with wailing and gnashing of teeth, as a penitent
-sinner. No, he was not a tragic hero. Even the genius
-of a Shakspere would have failed in rendering him one.</p>
-
-<p>It is a fact worthy of attention that Struensee possessed
-none of the qualities which generally presuppose
-success at court. He was not an amiable man, in the
-conventional sense of the term. The English envoy,
-Gunning, who was not ill-disposed toward him, expressly
-stated, in a despatch of April, 1770, that Struensee
-did not at all display in his conversation the
-liveliness and pleasantry by which other men pave the
-way to fortune. "His mode of behaving and expressing
-himself is dry and even unpleasant, so that it was a
-subject of general surprise how he contrived to acquire
-such unbounded influence over the king and queen."
-Further, the envoy allows the favourite "no inconsiderable
-acquirements," but denies him all statesman-like
-ability and political tact. At the same time he
-was deficient in sufficient insight into Danish affairs.
-He was tolerably free from vanity, but not from an
-immoderate self-confidence, which not unfrequently
-degenerated into "impudence." The envoy, however,
-supplies us with the key to the enigma of Struensee's
-sudden elevation, when he mentions that he was "bold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-and enterprising," and such a man is sure to make his
-way among women.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<p>Still, in spite of Struensee's deficiency and all his
-mistakes, so much justice must be done him as to
-allow that he desired the welfare of the state. He
-originally possessed a not ignoble mind, which was
-lowered and degraded by his fabulous elevation and
-sudden fall. Being formed of much softer and more
-worthless stuff than the metal out of which great, or
-even second-rate statesmen are composed, he could
-not endure either fortune or misfortune. An idealist,
-trained in the school of enlightened despotism, he did
-not understand that a nation must be raised from the
-bottom to the top. This was the mistake of the age.
-The reasons of state of a Frederick the Great or a
-Joseph II. were, after all, only an improvement of the
-breed. We have all due respect for those enlightened
-despots who have so far freed themselves from the
-swaddling-clothes of the Byzantine ideas about the divine
-right of kings, as to wish themselves to be merely
-regarded as the first servants of the state; but, at the
-same time, we are inclined to say with old Wieland,
-"May Heaven protect us from the luck of being obliged
-to live under the sceptre or stick of such first servants
-of the state." Struensee acted on the principle that,
-in order to make nations progress, nothing further was
-required than to realise by edicts the principles of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-French philosophers and German illuminati. After
-the fashion of many other world-betterers of the age,
-he did not know or reflect that it is far more difficult
-to lead the unjudging masses to what is good, than to
-what is bad; that the most absurd prejudices of the
-plebs must be humoured far more than the noblest
-human privileges; that the coarse diplomacy of pot-house
-demagogues is sufficient to make the ignorant
-mob throw away the diamonds of truth and eagerly
-clutch at the <em>strass</em> of falsehood and absurdity; and
-that, lastly, the people in all times are most willing, at
-the desire of their enemies, to hate, persecute, stone,
-and crucify their friends.</p>
-
-<p>It is possible, even probable, that, if Struensee had
-held the power longer, he would have passed from the
-experimentalising stage to really beneficial results.
-The beginning of his display of power was not so bad.
-Denmark had long sighed under the brutal dictatorship
-which the envoys of Russia exercised. Struensee
-broke this yoke, and did it so cleverly, that the ambitious
-czarina in Petersburg was obliged to give way,
-whether she liked it or not. The management of the
-foreign policy by Struensee least of all deserves blame,
-because it was based on the sensible principle that
-Denmark must live in peace and amity with all
-states, but not be subject to any one of them. The
-same praise cannot be afforded to Struensee's home
-administration. The tendency generally was good and
-reasonable here, but the execution left much, very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-much, to be desired. We find everywhere hasty attempts,
-but no thorough carrying through. A despotic
-theorising, which was followed by no energetic practice,
-and the most correct designs destroyed and confused
-by the interference of personal interests, sympathies,
-and antipathies, characterised the administration.</p>
-
-<p>Struensee's great fault was that he did not, and
-would not, understand that in statesman-like calculations,
-not abstract ideas but men are the figures employed
-in reckoning&mdash;men with all their weaknesses,
-follies, prejudices, and passions. Through mistaking
-this great fact, he contrived to embitter all classes of
-the nation. He offended the nobles without winning
-the peasants; he made the officers, soldiers, and sailors
-his enemies, without making the citizens his friends.
-And he did this among a people whose education was
-behindhand, and to whom he was an object of hatred,
-from the fact of his being a foreigner.</p>
-
-<p>After his fall, which every one but himself had foreseen&mdash;and
-we may fairly say that he signed his own
-death-warrant by the maniacal cabinet decree which
-placed all the authority in his hands&mdash;Struensee
-behaved like a miserable coward and traitor. It has
-been said that his judges, or, more correctly, executioners,
-terrified the ruined man by a menace of the
-torture, and, at the same time, deluded him by the
-idea that his sole chance of salvation was in compromising
-Caroline Matilda most deeply. But, for all
-this, a man would never do, and only a weakling and
-coward would do what he did, when he confessed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-on February 21, that he had been the queen's lover.
-From this moment he could only lay claim to a feeling
-of contempt. It would not even excuse him were it
-true, as has been alleged, that a pretended confession
-of Caroline Matilda's guilt was shown him.</p>
-
-<p>Still the means employed to get rid of the favourites
-were most reprehensible. It is true that the queen
-dowager and Prince Frederick had a right to feel
-irritated at having no credit at a court where a
-Struensee domineered, and that they wished to remove
-him and his partisans. We can understand that Queen
-Juliana Maria, who had no experience of business, and
-Prince Frederick, who had scarce emerged from boyhood,
-should not suspect the extremities to which
-Guldberg's faction would lead them; and it may be
-true that it was owing to their generosity that the
-children of Caroline Matilda were not deprived of
-their rights. Nor can we positively condemn Guldberg
-for wishing to tear from Struensee powers which
-Struensee had torn from others. Perhaps Guldberg
-possessed more capacity, or a better claim to hold the
-power than he. But, as to the means employed in
-gaining the object, we cannot help agreeing with
-Falckenskjold when he says:</p>
-
-<p>"To make Struensee perish in order to seize on his
-office, was not this purchasing it very dearly? and
-especially to add the punishment of the unfortunate
-Brandt to that of Struensee, and to assail the liberties
-and fortunes of so many persons who were innocent of
-the ambition of these two men. And, in order to give<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-a legal appearance to these proscriptions, they do not
-hesitate to abuse whatever is most sacred in human
-laws; they convert private intrigues into judicial proceedings;
-they employ calumnious libels as authentic
-documents and sentences; they raise the veil and expose
-to the public the domestic secrets of the king's
-house! They do not fear violently to break the happy
-union of the king with his consort; to render doubtful
-the rights of the issue of that union, by compromising
-the future tranquillity of the state; and, lastly, to cast
-on a young queen the affront of a mortal stain, and to
-condemn her to expire in a lengthened agony!</p>
-
-<p>"Was the post of a principal minister of the King of
-Denmark so important, or desirable at such a price?"</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">THE HIGH COMMISSION.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">THE TEN PRISONERS&mdash;THE REPORT&mdash;LIEUT.-COLONEL VON HESSELBERG&mdash;ETATS-RATH
-WILLEBRANDT&mdash;PROFESSOR BERGER&mdash;UNJUST
-SENTENCES&mdash;VON GAHLER&mdash;FALCKENSKJOLD AND
-STRUENSEE&mdash;SERIOUS CRIMES&mdash;THE SENTENCE&mdash;THE ROYAL
-APPROVAL&mdash;THE FORTRESS OF MUNKHOLM&mdash;THE COMMANDANT&mdash;RESIGNATION&mdash;THE
-ORDER OF RELEASE&mdash;CURIOUS CONDITIONS&mdash;DEATH
-OF FALCKENSKJOLD</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>After the execution of the two counts, the turn came
-for the other ten prisoners of state to be disposed of.
-In order to justify in the sight of Europe the sanguinary
-treatment of the two principal victims, these
-prisoners must also appear in the light of state
-criminals, although no actual offence could be proved
-against a single one of them. Although the grounds
-for their sentences are of the most paltry description,
-it is easy to discover in them that, after the removal of
-their real enemies, the dominant faction wished to
-affect a display of mercy, probably through fear of
-public opinion, which was beginning to be loudly expressed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-both at home and abroad, about the cruel fate
-of the two counts.</p>
-
-<p>The court believed it necessary to lay before the
-nation in print the sentences of Counts Struensee and
-Brandt, and with them a list of the crimes for which
-they were tried. This measure, however, had the contrary
-effect to what was expected. Nothing was seen
-in this sentence but a desire to prove the counts
-guilty, and a long series of absurd conclusions, by which
-it was sought to attain this object: the sentence on Count
-Brandt, more especially, revolted every one, and the
-general dissatisfaction was unmistakable.<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> Hence, although
-it was proposed in the council to lop off one
-or two more heads, one of the judges, Kofod Ancher,
-thought it was time to say to the king, as was said
-to Augustus, <em>siste carnifex</em>. It was therefore decided
-that the only victim of judicial vengeance should be
-Falckenskjold, who had dared to be an honest admirer
-of Struensee, and was really at the same time an enlightened
-statesman and politician.</p>
-
-<p>On April 21 a royal command was sent to the commissioners
-to hand in an accurate representation of the
-offences of all the other persons arrested on January 17,
-and more especially those who had been guilty of
-minor crimes. This order was executed in a "most
-humble" report, dated May 5. The poor wretches
-had been allowed to pass all this time in prison, suffering
-from the most painful uncertainty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Frau von Gähler was placed at the head of the list
-as the least guilty sinner. She had attracted suspicion&mdash;so
-it was stated in the report&mdash;by her intercourse
-with Struensee, by an uninterrupted correspondence
-during the Holstein progress with her husband in
-Copenhagen, by her being selected to be constantly in
-attendance on the queen, by her and her husband's
-decoration with the queen's Order of Matilda; and
-lastly, by the rumour that important papers had been
-entrusted to her care. As, however, the closest investigation
-had not produced a tittle of proof against her,
-and her correspondence with her husband proved to be
-of the most innocent nature, while other ladies who
-stood under no suspicion had enjoyed equal favour at
-court, the commission had discovered nothing that
-could be brought as a charge against her.</p>
-
-<p>A similar declaration was issued by the commission
-in the matter of Lieutenant-Colonel von Hesselberg.
-This officer who&mdash;on account of the acquirements he
-had gained on foreign service, and the intelligence displayed
-by him while holding an appointment at the
-Academy of Military Cadets, had been proposed by
-Falckenskjold as lieutenant-colonel of the king's regiment,
-because the latter wished to have an efficient
-representative, while he went on diplomatic business to
-Russia&mdash;had received orders to have an eye on Struensee's
-youngest brother, who was appointed to his
-regiment. Such was the state crime brought against
-this man of honour by the exalted commissioners.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As an example of the condition of the Danish army
-at that day, the circumstances connected with Hesselberg's
-appointment will be perused with interest.
-When Falckenskjold, shortly after his arrival from
-Russia, was appointed colonel of the king's regiment,
-the quartermaster delivered to him an account of the
-state of the regimental chest, according to which there
-ought to be 25,000 dollars in it. Falckenskjold replied,
-that he would take over the chest after a committee
-of inquiry had sat. The quartermaster objected
-that this was displaying an unusual suspicion,
-but Falckenskjold stuck to his text, and lo and behold!
-there were but 95 dollars in the chest. On his
-threatening to report the affair, 5,000 dollars were produced,
-and the quartermaster bolted. A close investigation
-proved that the missing sum had been stolen by
-frauds, in which the officers were mixed up, and
-Falckenskjold was at last obliged to let the matter
-drop, but for this very reason selected Hesselberg,
-in whom he could trust, as his second in command.</p>
-
-<p>The third ill-used man, against whom the commission
-could not produce a <em>scintilla</em> of evidence either,
-was Rear-Admiral Hansen. He had first formed Struensee's
-acquaintance when he received orders to join
-the Algerine Committee, and afterwards assumed a
-special command in the expedition. He had never
-spoken on any matters but those connected with the
-navy to Struensee, and yet was kept for months in
-prison as a dangerous criminal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Equally little could be alleged against Councillor of
-Legation Sturtz. His connection with Struensee had
-never possessed an intimate character, which was proved
-by the fact, that he had remained attached to Bernstorff.
-The sole reason for his lengthened residence
-at Hirschholm, in the summer of 1771, was, that he,
-as a clever amateur in portrait-painting, had received
-a commission to take the likeness of the queen and
-prince royal, and the diamond ring presented to him
-by the queen for his bride, was only an acknowledgment
-given him for these works of art, which are still
-in existence, and said to be excellent likenesses. Nor
-was anything in the slightest degree incriminating
-found among his papers.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Aboe, of the navy, was the next prisoner
-declared to be innocent. When a cadet he had formed
-the acquaintance of Brandt, and became intimate with
-him, partly on account of the pecuniary assistance the
-latter gave him, partly to be recommended to Chamberlain
-Struensee, through whose application he obtained
-the interim post of master of the crews at the
-navy docks, and of adjutant to the Algerine expedition.
-In the latter capacity he frequently waited on
-Struensee, and handed in some pretended ameliorations
-in the administration of the navy, which, however,
-only proved his ignorance. He had no further
-connection with Struensee, and was, indeed, offended
-with the cabinet minister, because the latter did not
-sufficiently recognise his merits.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The examination had thus proved that five innocent
-persons had been kept in a state of torturing uncertainty
-as to their fate, and in cruel imprisonment
-for four months and a half, while their relatives were
-exposed to public contumely.</p>
-
-<p>Of Etats-rath Willebrandt it was alleged that he had
-been so simple and bold as to wish to reform the Admiralty
-College, without having gained a proper insight
-of the administration of the navy, much less of the
-difference in the business of the department during
-peace and war, as he had solely obeyed the order
-given him to establish the Admiralty College after the
-pattern of that of the Generalty. The commissioners,
-it is true, declared that it was not within their competence
-to judge the value of a plan which in any case had
-been approved by his Majesty, and for this reason did
-not dare to express dissatisfaction with it. Still they
-thought themselves at liberty to state that which the
-result proved, that a portion of the plan, owing to
-Willebrandt's ignorance, produced irregularity and inconveniences,
-which could only be prevented by alterations
-and fresh expenses for the king's treasury.
-After this, an allusion was made to the affair with the
-enrolled sailors, who marched on Hirschholm in 1771.
-Willebrandt's offence, therefore&mdash;the report went on
-to say&mdash;consisted in his having undertaken to reform
-things of which he had no thorough knowledge, and
-he thus produced scenes which might easily have
-had dangerous consequences. It was not mentioned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-in the report, however, that the king had given him
-this order, that Count Haxthausen took part in it,
-and that both, when they drew up the plan, expressly
-requested that the new scheme might be previously
-examined by <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'prfoessional'">professional</ins> men.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Berger, the physician in ordinary, also
-appeared to the commission to have committed an
-offence. It was true that all the medicines found in
-his house proved to be innocuous; there was no proof
-that the steel cure attempted on his Majesty was
-improper; in the matter of the rearing of the crown
-prince he had not agreed in all points with Struensee,
-but rather had been the cause that warmer clothing
-and better food were granted his royal highness toward
-the close: it was also true that he expressed his anger
-at Struensee having acquired a power which he considered
-prejudicial to the nation; but he had given
-serious offence by concurring with Struensee, and
-giving his advice and propositions in reforms of which
-he probably knew nothing, more especially in things
-which did not concern his trade as physician, or the
-<em>res literariæ</em> generally. As a proof of this, it was alleged
-that he had proposed some persons to fill the
-places of the dismissed members of the magistracy,
-and that Struensee requested him to mention a person
-who would be suitable for the chief post in the navy
-yards. Still the commission would not venture to
-judge of the use or disadvantage of such propositions,
-as the papers found on the accused and the other pri<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>soners,
-on which their argument must be founded,
-contained no information about them.</p>
-
-<p>This was everything that could be brought against
-a professional man, who, in spite of his zealous attention
-to the king's health, and his well-earned reputation,
-was dragged to the fortress, and, like a murderer,
-prohibited the use of knife and fork, and was
-not allowed to shave himself, or sleep on his own
-mattress.</p>
-
-<p>If the conduct of the commission had hitherto retained
-a varnish of justice, the royal resolution, minuted
-by Councillor of Conference Schumacher, and
-issued on May 18, was a strange proof of tyranny,
-which smote truth on the face with open falsehoods.
-For it was stated in this resolution, that the persons
-who had been guilty of the "smallest crimes" should
-be punished in the following way:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Frau von Gähler would be set at liberty, but must
-refrain from appearing at court so long as her husband's
-affair was not concluded.</p>
-
-<p>Rear-Admiral Hansen and Lieutenant Aboe would
-be discharged from arrest, and report themselves to
-the Admiralty College, where they would learn the
-king's commands with respect to them.</p>
-
-<p>Legations-rath Sturtz would also be released from
-arrest, and ordered to proceed to Holstein. He would
-retain his pension of 500 dollars, which had been
-granted him by the royal resolution of January 26,
-but must expend it away from the court.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Etats-rath Willebrandt, after being discharged,
-would proceed to one of the small towns in Seeland,
-where an annual pension of 300 dollars would be paid
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Berger, lastly, after being set at liberty,
-would go to Aalborg, in northern Jütland, where a
-pension of 300 dollars would be paid him, until a post
-of provincial surgeon became vacant in Jütland.</p>
-
-<p>These decisions the commissioners made known to
-the persons concerned with the solemn warning that,
-after the king had pardoned them this time, through
-special mercy, for their incautious, thoughtless, and
-criminal conduct, they must be very careful not to give
-rise to greater suspicion by word or writing, as, in
-that case, they would be subjected to a further examination,
-and might expect the king's most serious displeasure.</p>
-
-<p>The sovereign lord over the life and death of his subjects
-was consequently of a different opinion from the
-commissioners, who had found the accused guilty of
-no offence. But it was considered desirable to get rid
-of those persons most hated, and, in order to convict
-them, it was requisite to accuse them of offences at the
-expense of truth.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant-Colonel von Hesselberg, who was referred
-to the Commissariat College, learnt there that the king
-had appointed him Commander of the 2nd National
-Battalion of Schleswig-Holstein. This distinguished
-officer afterwards became colonel of an infantry regiment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-in Norway, where he died in 1808, a lieutenant-general,
-and commandant of the fortress of Bergenhuus.</p>
-
-<p>Rear-Admiral Hansen was informed by the Admiralty
-that he had forfeited his post as deputy of the
-latter college, but would continue to serve the state.
-He died a few years after the catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Aboe, who also learnt his future fate
-from the Admiralty, received orders to pass two years
-abroad, but retained his commission and pay. Eventually,
-he left the service with the rank of captain, set
-up as a merchant in Copenhagen, failed, made voyages
-to the East Indies, and died after many hard adventures
-in Copenhagen.</p>
-
-<p>The three exiles, Legations-rath Sturtz, Etats-rath
-Willebrandt, and Professor Berger, in obedience to the
-royal commands, quitted the capital, and proceeded to
-their several destinations. When Falckenskjold was
-recalled from Switzerland by the crown prince in 1788,
-he found Willebrandt still in exile: Berger was a practising
-physician at Kiel, but Sturtz had died of grief.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
-
-<p>The public of Copenhagen were astonished at this
-mild treatment of persons who had been kept in such
-close arrest. Much worse had been anticipated. But
-three state criminals still remained in prison, and what
-had been spared their associates, who were punished
-for having been proved innocent, could be done to them.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant-General von Gähler, Colonel and Chamberlain
-von Falckenskjold, and Justiz-rath Struensee,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-were still awaiting their sentence. But on May 10
-an order had been issued to the commission to lay before
-the king a full report of the crimes of these men,
-for his Majesty's most gracious consideration and resolution.
-In obedience with this command, the commission
-sent in its report on May 30.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to Gähler, it was alleged that he was
-mixed up both in the Traventhal league and the abolition
-of the council. It was true that he had denied
-both, but, on the first point, the letters found at his
-house contradicted him. As regards the council, he
-had not, as his duty ordered, sufficiently represented
-the value of the council in his answers to the questions
-laid before him for explanation on Sept. 24, 1770,
-and there were even strong reasons for conjecturing
-that he proposed and promoted the abolition of the
-council, because he was Struensee's principal adviser
-about this time. In the same way he had recommended
-to his friend Struensee, the abolition of the verbal
-reports of the colleges. By this, the general had
-helped to conceal Struensee's audacious conduct from
-the king, and given him, Struensee, opportunity for
-filching all the power and authority. It was allowed
-that Von Gähler, by his propositions, had no intention
-of sustaining Struensee in his situation and promoting
-his autocracy. Still, he ought, and must have noticed
-Struensee's boundless ambition, when he perceived
-that the latter "wished to apply the practice of his
-profession to the state, and began by amputating from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-it so important a limb as the council was." General
-von Gähler ought the less to have attempted to promote
-Struensee's views, as he was not adapted either
-by nature or Providence to regulate or remodel a
-state. He ought not to have furnished Struensee
-with projects, all the consequences of which he could
-not foresee. More especially, he ought not to have
-advised the suppression of verbal reports, but to have
-always opposed it. But he appeared to have been possessed
-by a mania for reformation. As a proof, it might
-be mentioned that he proposed the reform for which
-was introduced into Norway by the regulation of
-January 14, 1771, that lands, after ten years' tenure,
-should become freehold, which no man of perspicuity
-could have advised.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> The commission found a second
-instance in the reform of the two Chanceries, although
-the division of business, according to provinces, had
-had the best results.</p>
-
-<p>Before all, however, Von Gähler wished to remodel
-the navy. It was quite incredible what tricks he
-employed to get it into his hands, and the commission
-reports that the misfortune which befel the Algerine
-expedition gave Von Gähler the desired opportunity
-for effecting it. Herr von Gähler's crime, therefore,
-principally consisted in the fact, that he interfered in
-everything, and wished to reform all the regulations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-of the state, without possessing the requisite knowledge
-and insight, without knowing the advantages or
-defects of what existed, and without sufficiently pondering
-over the consequences of his propositions. The
-commission, however, could find no excuse in the circumstance
-that Von Gähler's proposed reforms only
-consisted of ideas and thoughts, whose trial by experiments
-injured nobody, because most of the affairs
-in which he interfered in no way concerned him, and
-the trouble he took in order to obtain a justification
-for doing so, proved a greater offence; for he had
-applied to Struensee, a man who was even more ignorant
-than himself in such things, and blindly followed
-everything that was proposed to him, especially when
-such propositions suggested radical changes. The
-commission, however, would not omit mentioning that
-the general, since May, 1771, had possessed no special
-influence over Struensee, because he had joined the
-opposition against the reduction of the Horse Guards,
-and besides, he had not commended himself to the
-cabinet minister, by representing to him how little the
-power he had appropriated agreed with the royal law.
-Lastly, the general also displayed firmness when the
-Foot Guards were disbanded; he had likewise resisted
-the removal of the two regiments, and in the Generalty
-represented to Chamberlain von Falckenskjold
-how improper it was to propose the regiment of the
-hereditary prince for such a dislocation, without first
-asking whether this would be agreeable to the prince.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The second of the criminal three was Colonel and
-Chamberlain von Falckenskjold. According to the
-opinion of the commission, he was the man who, next
-to Brandt, stood in the closest intimacy with Struensee.
-Perhaps, however, Falckenskjold's notorious
-dislike of the hereditary prince, and his bold and
-manly behaviour in the presence of the commission,
-had their share in prejudicing his judges against him,
-so that they, through personal hatred, behaved in the
-most unscrupulous way toward a man of honour.
-Professor Sevel acted as inquisitor, and seemed to find
-a pleasure in insulting the fallen friend of Struensee
-by all sorts of cruel questions. We can form an idea
-of this man's moral value on seeing that Sevel, in his
-examination, so far forgot what he owed to himself as
-a judge, as to express his regret that Struensee had
-not been murdered by the sailors. In their report,
-the commissioners first made Falckenskjold's intimacy
-with Struensee a capital offence, and asserted that he
-had sought to maintain this intimacy so eagerly, because
-he and Brandt had received the greatest benefactions
-from Struensee. The latter not only conferred
-on him offices and honorary posts, but also
-gave him money out of the royal treasury.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, Falckenskjold, although on May 2, 1771, he
-had received from the cabinet treasury, in payment of
-his travelling expenses to Petersburg, the usual sum
-of 400 dollars, obtained on the 19th of the same
-month 2,000 dollars more, under the same excuse,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-from the private treasury, and, after his return, or in
-a period of three months, a further sum of 3,500 dollars.
-Of these amounts, Struensee paid him 1,000
-dollars under the false allegation that Falckenskjold
-had spent them on the journey from his private means,
-while the 2,000 dollars were paid him without the
-king's cognizance. How he had earned these presents,
-neither he nor Struensee would have been able
-to specify, and the assertion that the king had promised
-to pay Von Falckenskjold's debts by degrees,
-was only an empty pretext, for the latter had deposited
-2,000 dollars with the minister of finances, and
-therefore could only have had debts to the amount of
-400 dollars; and moreover, he never expressed the
-proper thanks to his Majesty for such large gifts in
-money. The commission consequently assumed that
-Struensee desired to acquire Falckenskjold's gratitude,
-and declared in their report that they had
-strong grounds for believing that it had been arranged
-between the couple, that Struensee should
-be supported under all circumstances, and guarded
-against any possible surprise, on which Falckenskjold's
-own fortunes also depended.</p>
-
-<p>In understanding with Struensee, he proposed the
-abolition of the Chevalier guard, and no other had been
-more busy than Falckenskjold in setting at work the
-cabinet order of December 21. If any event occurred,
-and Struensee believed himself in danger, Falckenskjold
-was immediately at hand; he had not merely proved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-his devotedness to Struensee in this way, but also, for
-the sake of pleasing the minister, had neglected the
-reverence due to the hereditary prince, and in this
-had gone so far that he had furnished proofs of it in
-the presence of the entire public. Two facts had
-convinced the commission of this daring sentiment of
-Falckenskjold, which was based on affection for Struensee,
-namely, the removal of the prince's regiment,
-and more especially the occurrence on the walls. The
-latter event, the commission represented as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1771, the prince was, one day,
-riding along the walls at the moment when Colonel
-Falckenskjold was "exercising" his band, composed of
-hautboists and fifers; the colonel blocked the road, and
-marched straight upon the prince. Both majors of
-the regiment called his attention to the fact, that the
-prince was coming toward them; but Falckenskjold
-let his men march on. A groom of the prince's now
-rode up, and requested room for his royal highness to
-pass. The adjutant reported it to the colonel, and
-asked whether the band should not leave off playing,
-and room be made for the prince? but Falckenskjold
-answered: "No, not even if the good God were to
-come along Himself." He allowed the band to continue
-playing, and the prince, in order to pass, was
-compelled to ride close to the parapet.</p>
-
-<p>Falckenskjold alleged, in his excuse, that he had
-orders to let the band play in public places, especially
-when the king came past, and for this reason there would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-have been an impropriety in his stopping the band on
-the arrival of the prince. The colonel also observed
-that, in France, where he had served a long time, an
-officer was rarely on guard without hearing the sentinel
-shout, "<em>Aux armes! le bon Dieu arrive!</em>" when
-the Catholic priests passed with the host, and hence it
-had grown into a habit to confirm a negative by saying,
-"No, I would not do it, even if <em>le bon Dieu</em> were
-to come." The commission, however, considered that
-this sort of defence contradicted itself, and the colonel
-ought certainly to have made way for the prince.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Falckenskjold's crime, consequently, consisted
-in his having sold himself to Struensee, in having
-always had an understanding with him, in having advised
-the reduction of both Guards, in having expressed
-himself for Struensee's conservation, in having given
-proofs, on every occasion, how anxious he was that
-Struensee should escape a surprise, and lastly, in having
-tried, for the sake of pleasing Struensee, to cause
-annoyance to his Royal Highness Prince Frederick,
-and, for this object, having been so audacious as to
-neglect the respect due to his royal highness. Without
-dwelling on Falckenskjold's numerous and high services
-to the king and country, the commission concluded
-their report with the disgraceful statement, that they
-could not refrain from seeing in Colonel and Chamberlain
-von Falckenskjold a foolhardy, detrimental,
-and the more dangerous man, because he would do
-anything for money.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The third and last upon whom the commission had
-to express an opinion was Justiz-rath Struensee. As he
-had only been released from his chains by special favour,
-after his brother's execution, it might have been expected
-that the commission would depict him as a great
-criminal. It was quite different, however, though
-through no love of truth and justice on the part of the
-Inquisition, but in consequence of commands from
-higher quarters. For Frederick II. of Prussia, who
-had kept Struensee's place, as professor at Liegnitz,
-open for him, while he went to try his luck, allowed
-his minister, Herr von Arnim, whose tutor Struensee
-had been, to employ his master's name in claiming him.<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
-
-<p>The report on this prisoner of state, after opening
-with the statement that Justiz-rath Struensee, though
-he only possessed a theoretical knowledge of the laws
-and constitution of Denmark, readily accepted a seat as
-deputy in the Financial Department, and had the special
-inspection of the Mint, the Bank, and the course
-of Exchange&mdash;in the hope of obtaining a better knowledge
-of these branches of the administration by industry
-and work&mdash;acknowledged his irreproachable
-conduct in the latter respect, and added the remark,
-that the commission could express this with the greater
-confidence, as the College of Finances, at their request,
-had had the matter examined by an authority on the
-subject. As concerned his functions as deputy of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-finances generally, however, the commission must blame
-Justiz-rath Struensee for a tendency to foolhardy boasting
-about services which he had not rendered, and arbitrariness
-in financial matters, as he wrote to a friend
-that all the others in the Financial College understood
-nothing, and eventually strove to become <em>Contrôleur
-Général des Finances</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Although, as regarded his official administration
-as deputy, there were no positive proofs that he had
-abused his charge to the injury of the king and country
-for his own interest, yet there was a tolerably strong
-presumption that, with the help of his brother and his
-office, he wished to render all the subjects in Denmark
-tributary to a few Brandenburg partners, who
-were to hold the salt and tobacco monopolies, in
-exchange for profits promised to him and his brother.
-As regards the salt-farming, the commission allowed
-that the Justiz-rath had accepted no benefit for himself,
-but annually paid over to the king the 10,000
-dollars intended for himself. In the matter of the
-tobacco-farming, however, some suspicion clung to
-him that he, contrary to his brother's advice, accepted
-the two shares offered him to promote the affair.
-But although, in spite of all Justiz-rath Struensee's
-allegations to the contrary, the strongest presumptions
-existed against him and his integrity, the commissioners
-felt themselves bound to state that it was
-not his intention to deprive the Danish tobacco-planters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-and spinners of their livelihood, as the farming proposition
-was not carried into effect.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
-
-<p>However&mdash;thus runs the forced conclusion of the
-report:&mdash;the reports as to the Justiz-rath's former
-life in Prussia are generally satisfactory, and he is
-honoured with the distinguished favour of Prince
-Henry, the brother of Frederick II., who takes a
-lively interest in him, and considers him incapable of
-any serious crime. Besides, no traces had been found
-that the Justiz-rath had intrigued with his brother,
-and just as few that he had interfered in things that
-did not concern him. Finally, it could not be alleged
-as an offence that he received 4,000 dollars from the
-private treasury, under the title of gratifications, because
-the first 2,000 were given him with the king's
-assent, and there was no evidence of his being aware
-that the other 2,000 were paid him without the cognizance
-of the king.</p>
-
-<p>After the commissioners, probably with a heavy
-heart, had closed their report in so mild a way, there
-followed, on June 12, 1772, a royal resolution, containing
-his Majesty's "will and commands" respecting
-the crimes of Lieutenant-General von Gähler, Colonel
-and Chamberlain von Falckenskjold, and Justiz-rath
-and Deputy of Finances Struensee. The king had
-learned from the report of the commissioners that&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Von Gähler generally undertook to remodel and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-reform the whole arrangements of the state, though he
-possessed no vocation or knowledge for it; further, that
-Von Falckenskjold devoted himself entirely to
-Struensee, was joined with him in a portion of his
-injurious enterprises, and declared himself in favour
-of his conservation, and on all occasions furnished
-proof of this, and displayed a further audacious mode
-of behaviour; and that, lastly,</p>
-
-<p>Strong presumptions existed against Justiz-rath
-Struensee and his honest performance of his duties,
-and that he had not fully consulted with the other
-persons concerned on matters that came before the
-College of Finances.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason, the commission would make known
-to Lieutenant-General von Gähler, that, on account of
-his thoughtless and improper undertaking, he was dismissed
-from the king's service, had forfeited the royal
-favour granted him in the decree of March 26, 1767,<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a>
-and must at once select a spot in the Danish monarchy&mdash;Seeland,
-Fühnen, and Schleswig excepted&mdash;where
-he would permanently reside, and commence
-his journey to it immediately after leaving the castle.
-At the same time, the commission would seriously
-warn him, under threats of the royal displeasure, not
-to speak or to write about public affairs, as his Majesty,
-through special clemency, granted him a pension
-of 500 dollars, and the same to his wife.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The commission would demand of Colonel von
-Falckenskjold the chamberlain's key and the Russian
-order, and announce to him that, in consequence of
-his audacious and detrimental behaviour, he would be
-conveyed to the fortress of Munkholm, and be imprisoned
-there for life, half a dollar a day being allowed
-him from the treasury for his support.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, the commission would announce to Justiz-rath
-Struensee that, as he had caused his arrest by
-his own suspicious behaviour, he was now released
-from it, but he must leave the country at once,
-after making a promise, on oath, to reveal neither in
-writing nor verbally anything he knew about the
-Danish state affairs, and neither to write nor to speak
-about the events which had lately occurred in Copenhagen,
-and he would also begin his journey immediately
-he was released from the castle.</p>
-
-<p>The fate of the three men was very different. Poor
-Von Gähler died in exile; Justiz-rath Struensee became
-Minister of State in Prussia, where he acquired a considerable
-fortune; he was ennobled in 1789 by the
-same court of Copenhagen which had his brother's
-escutcheon broken by the executioner.<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
-
-<p>As for the third person, he shall tell us his story
-himself, as it throws such an extraordinary light on
-the treatment of state prisoners at a period within a
-hundred years of our own.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">F<span class="smcap">ALCKENSKJOLD'S</span> A<span class="smcap">BODE AT</span> M<span class="smcap">UNKHOLM</span>.</p>
-
-<p>On June 12, 1772, Sevel, accompanied by the
-commandant of the marines and several officers,
-entered my prison and told me that the king stripped
-me of all my offices and the military order of Russia,
-and that I should be transported to a rock and be
-detained there for the rest of my days.</p>
-
-<p>The crowd of people who entered with Sevel had so
-deafened me, that a portion of what he said escaped
-me.</p>
-
-<p>I begged him to repeat how long I was to remain
-in detention.</p>
-
-<p><em>For your whole life</em>, he replied, with a grin which I
-fancy I can still see.</p>
-
-<p>The commission had doubtless made a report. I
-requested the communication of it&mdash;it was refused me.
-I was promised a copy of my examination, but was
-unable to obtain it.</p>
-
-<p>Thus I was deprived of every document that might
-one day be useful in proving my innocence.</p>
-
-<p>On June 26, I was taken on board a merchant
-vessel the Admiralty had freighted in order to go to
-Munkholm, my place of destination; a sergeant and
-four grenadiers of Prince Frederick's regiment, chosen
-by Eickstedt, were ordered to guard me on board the
-vessel; two grenadiers with drawn sabres were to
-watch me and prevent me from speaking.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I have since learned that the sergeant commanding
-this guard, had a promise of being made lieutenant if
-he could induce me to take any step which would
-cause me to be landed at Munkholm in chains. But
-the skipper had declared to the Admiralty that he
-would not allow any one but himself to give orders,
-and that if he required the guard, he would summon it.</p>
-
-<p>This worthy man contrived to make himself respected,
-and to protect me from ill treatment.</p>
-
-<p>The vessel touched at Christiansund, where a part
-of its cargo was to be delivered. A custom-house
-clerk came on board and wanted to speak with me.
-He wished to insult me, as he had been dismissed in
-1763 from his rank of lieutenant; observe, that I
-had no part in military affairs till 1771. I heard his
-conversation on this subject with the master, who
-saved me this annoyance.</p>
-
-<p>The vessel arrived at Munkholm on August 4th,
-and I parted, not without regret, from this honest
-skipper, who had so generously protected me.</p>
-
-<p>The fort of Munkholm is situated on a barren rock
-four hundred paces in circumference, in the middle of
-the sea, half a league from Trondhjem,<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> toward the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-64° of northern latitude. During the winter it is
-covered with an almost continual fog; the snow hardly
-remains there eight days in succession; but it freezes
-there from the beginning of September, and snow falls
-in the month of June.</p>
-
-<p>The only inhabitants of this place consisted of a
-detachment of the garrison of Trondhjem, the fort
-commandant, the officers under him, and the prisoners
-guarded there.</p>
-
-<p>I was lodged in a low room a little above the
-ground-floor. Its planks and walls were damp, and
-the snow fell into it in a fine rain when it thawed.
-Under the window was a cistern of stagnant water;
-this lodging, which was also surrounded by the quarters
-of the soldiers and the prisoners, whose cries
-stunned me, was assuredly not good; but I was alone
-in it, had plenty of books, enjoyed the liberty of
-walking on the ramparts when I pleased, and I felt
-much less unhappy than in Copenhagen; everything
-is relative.</p>
-
-<p>I had been warned that the water of the fort was
-unhealthy, and produced gravel. I asked if I could
-have any other, and they offered me spirits, the
-beverage <em>par excellence</em> at this spot, but it was worse
-for me than bad water.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I could not procure good bread; old bread, partly
-spoiled, was purchased for the prisoners, which cost
-12 per cent. less than the ordinary bread. Though
-the government had confiscated 8,000 crowns belonging
-to me, it only allowed me half-a-crown a day for
-my subsistence.</p>
-
-<p>A battalion of the Delmenhorst regiment was in
-garrison at Trondhjem; I had served in this regiment,
-and found at Munkholm soldiers of a company I had
-formerly commanded. They formed a plan for carrying
-me off and deserting, but not having been able to
-communicate their plan to me, they deserted without
-me, and tried to reach Sweden overland; a detachment,
-sent in pursuit, caught them and brought them
-back.</p>
-
-<p>The solders, generally, were in a profound state of
-wretchedness and demoralisation; the spirits and
-herrings on which they lived diffused a frightful
-stench, and I had a difficulty in protecting myself
-against their uncleanliness.</p>
-
-<p>Everything here depended on Lieut.-General von
-der Osten, grand bailiff and governor of Trondhjem:
-he was said to be fond of presents, and did not hesitate
-to ask them, and I had none to offer him. The commandant
-of Munkholm, on my arrival, had been a
-servant and woodcutter to a Copenhagen tradesman.
-He was first a gunner, then non-commissioned officer
-in the militia, afterwards a spy, captain of a company
-of guides, inspector of an hospital, and, lastly,
-commandant of Munkholm. This man, who was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-extremely brutal and coarse, was frequently intoxicated;
-he called himself an atheist, believed himself
-an engineer, astronomer, tactician, and decided on
-everything without allowing an answer; he declaimed
-a great deal, though I could not learn why, against
-Counts von Bernstorff and St. Germain.</p>
-
-<p>A poor author, a very pious man, who was placed
-here because he had the simplicity to believe in the
-freedom of the press, had become, on account of his
-devotion, odious to the commandant, who used to beat
-him. He also treated very badly another person who
-had held a post at court, although the latter made him
-presents.</p>
-
-<p>The other officers were given up to the most disgusting
-intoxication.</p>
-
-<p>I took great care to avoid these gentlemen, and
-only spoke to them when I could not help it. I do
-not believe it would have been very difficult for me
-to escape from this fortress, and, perhaps, Guldberg
-offered me the means by proposing to me a retreat at
-Vardohuus,<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> under the polar circle. But, I said to
-myself, what should I go so far to seek? more injustice
-and persecution!</p>
-
-<p>What had been done to me gave me a sort of
-disgust for human society. I had wished to render
-myself illustrious by arms&mdash;the perusal of the lives of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-celebrated warriors had inflamed my imagination at
-an early age. I aspired to become one day the rival
-of the Löwendahls and the Münnichs. My studies,
-my reflections, were all directed to this object. On
-emerging from childhood I took up arms and sought
-combats&mdash;I followed this career successfully. I was
-summoned to aid in the reformation of my country
-and the amelioration of its condition. I quit with
-regret the mode of life I had chosen and loved; I
-arrive, I consecrate my efforts, all my thoughts to this
-new task, and persecution, exile and contumely are
-my reward! No, I will not take a single step to
-return to society; I was never a man of pleasures,
-though not at all insensible to the enjoyments designated
-by that name; I shall, doubtless, learn to forget
-them. Society has rejected me; they refuse to allow
-me any part in its joys and honours, and I have been
-relegated to this rock. Well, then, let us perform our
-task apart, let us work to render this state supportable,
-and to depend on others as little as possible.</p>
-
-<p>I daily confirmed myself in these thoughts&mdash;a
-favourite and habitual subject of my reveries&mdash;and
-this has decided the rest of my life.</p>
-
-<p>I should be satisfied if I had a healthy lodging, good
-water, and if I were not obliged to speak to the people
-who surround me.</p>
-
-<p>The taste for study is a great resource for me. I
-read a great deal with a pen in my hand; on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-margin of my books I note my souvenirs, my reflections,
-and trace the details of the campaigns I have
-been through, and develope the considerations I had
-sketched about the military condition of Denmark. I
-still like to occupy myself with society as a simple
-spectator, though I have no desire to act a part in it.
-I like to dream awake while walking. The ramparts
-are the ordinary scene of my promenades.</p>
-
-<p>Thence, when the weather is fine, I perceive the
-mountainous coasts of the mainland, the rocks, the
-valleys, the forests, the habitations, which form varied
-scenes, the islets and shoals with which the coast is
-studded. Sometimes I discern in the distance a vessel
-which is, perhaps, bringing me books; more frequently
-I watch the departure of the fishermen's boats, or else
-see them return, uttering shouts of joy and triumph,
-with the booty they have gained by so much fatigue
-and boldness in the dangerous Northern Seas.</p>
-
-<p>I also take pleasure in contemplating the fury of the
-waves raised by storms, and which break against the
-rock on which I am a captive.</p>
-
-<p>In the months of July and August the coast of Norway
-offers an aspect of magnificent vegetation; the navigation
-is active; clouds of birds appear to animate
-the rocks that border the shore; the sky is pure, and
-the view enjoyed from Munkholm is enchanting. The
-nights, especially, have a peculiar charm; the air has
-something unctuous and <em>suave</em>, which seems to soften<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-my melancholy reveries; the nights at this period are
-a species of twilight, for at midnight it is clear enough
-to read even the finest type.</p>
-
-<p>I have found in an external staircase a spot which
-has grown my favourite asylum, even when winter has
-commenced. There I am sheltered against the north
-winds; there, and in the company of my books, wrapped
-up in an old bearskin coat, I feel less a prisoner than
-elsewhere; though the eyes of the sentry plunge into
-the spot, my presence in it could not be suspected.</p>
-
-<p>Since the commencement of my stay on the island,
-I have regulated the employment of my time. I rise
-in summer at daybreak, and in winter at eight o'clock.
-I employ the first hour of the day in pious meditations;
-I then occupy myself with readings that require some
-mental effort; a short walk precedes my dinner; I take
-a longer walk after the meal. Reading the newspapers,
-romances, or theatrical pieces, generally ends
-my evenings. The days on which the public papers
-arrive are holidays with me. The fort chaplain pays
-me a visit now and then: the one who held this office
-on my arrival has been removed to Bergen. His conversation
-caused me pleasure, and that of his successor
-pleases me no less; I have found them both enlightened,
-charitable, disposed to relieve me by consolatory
-discourses, and by procuring me books. The Danish
-clergy, generally, are distinguished from the rest of
-the nation by their virtues and information.</p>
-
-<p>When the weather is bad, I walk in a large room in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-the tower of the fortress; this room served as a lodging
-for Count von Griffenfeldt. He was the son of a
-wine-merchant, and rose by his merit to the place of
-grand chancellor of the kingdom and the dignity of
-count. He governed the state wisely; if he had retained
-the power, he would have prevented the wars
-that ruined Denmark under Christian V. His enemies
-had him condemned to the punishment which the unhappy
-Struensee underwent; but on the scaffold itself
-the penalty of death, which had been too hasty, was
-commuted, as if by mercy, into a confinement on this
-rock, where he prolonged his wretchedness for nineteen
-years, and died of the gravel.</p>
-
-<p>"Such," I said to myself, "is the fate which menaces
-me; but I shall not wait so long for it, for I believe
-that I can already feel the same malady."</p>
-
-<p>In October, 1774, the marriage festival of Prince
-Frederick was celebrated, and at this very period a
-despatch arrived for the commandant of Munkholm.
-He was recommended greater severity with his prisoners,
-and especially with me. This letter of General
-Hauch's was certainly not written with the intention
-of my seeing it, but it was shown me by the commandant.
-His attentions to me did not escape my
-notice; he, doubtless, wished to make me feel them;
-what did he expect from me?</p>
-
-<p>On March 1, 1775, a lodging was assigned me in
-another house, which had just been finished. I was
-given two rooms, but did not gain by the change.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-The other buildings of the fort, and in particular the
-one I had inhabited, were sheltered by the ramparts,
-while the new house, built in the angle of a lofty rock,
-was exposed to the north, east, and west winds. The
-beams that formed the walls did not join, any more
-than the planks of the floor; under my lodging a cellar
-seemed to breathe an icy blast through the openings
-in the flooring. The stove intended to heat the room
-could not protect me from the cold; yet its effect was
-sufficient when the snow fell to dissolve it into rain
-in the apartment; and it is in such a habitation, under
-the 64° of northern latitude, that I write this description,
-which is not exaggerated.</p>
-
-<p>In November, 1775, I was attacked by an hemorrhoidal
-colic, which caused me such pain as to draw
-shrieks from me. The surgeon who attended me evidently
-thought my condition desperate. The pain
-grew less, however; I needed rest, and begged the
-sentry not to let any one enter. I was beginning to
-sleep, when the commandant arrived; he entered in
-defiance of my orders, woke me, and said that as I was
-on the point of death, I ought to make haste, and leave
-a will in his favour; I evaded this by answering him
-that I did not intend dying yet. He assured me again
-that I must believe him, because he was commandant:
-I made no answer, and he went off growling, and soon
-after made a frightful disturbance, alleging that an
-attempt was going to be made to carry me off, and
-that a boat had been noticed in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Early in 1776, the commandant of Munkholm was
-removed, and Major Colin took his place.</p>
-
-<p>This new commandant, two days after his arrival,
-sent me a bottle of good water, bread, and fresh
-butter; this procured me the best meal I had yet
-had. Under this commandant I enjoyed great tranquility
-and greater ease. I relieved myself by writing
-these memoirs, and I fancied that I felt less
-resentment at the evil that had been done me, in
-proportion as I wrote the narrative of it.</p>
-
-<p>It is certain that fate has been very contrary to me.
-I joined to the passion of arms a taste for meditation,
-study, and retirement. I eagerly desired to acquire
-glory, but an independence would have been sufficient
-for me: I could not hope for either now.</p>
-
-<p>Some one once said to Count de St. Germain, that
-it was surprising he should resolve to quit the service
-of France, when he had 60,000 livres a year from the
-king's bounty; he answered, that 100 crowns a year
-composed his whole patrimony, but he would sooner
-live on that than endure affronts.</p>
-
-<p>This answer struck me, and I resolved to save all I
-could, so as to acquire an independence. I possessed,
-in 1771, 8,000 crowns, which I had entrusted to
-Schimmelmann, while awaiting the opportunity to sink
-them in an annuity. If I did not succeed in a military
-career, I hoped with this resource to procure
-a retreat in an agreeable country, and in a warm
-climate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Now, my money is lost, I have no longer a career
-to follow, and I am a prisoner for life on a rock in
-64° of northern latitude: but how great was my
-folly in leaving the service of Russia to come to
-Denmark!</p>
-
-<p>I was making these sad reflections when, on September
-25, 1776, I was informed by a note from
-Lieutenant-General von der Osten, grand bailiff and
-commandant of Trondhjem, that I should receive a
-visit from him. I had not recovered from the surprise
-this note caused me, when Von der Osten himself
-appeared, followed by the commandant, a surgeon,
-and his valet. He hurriedly entered my room,
-shouting, <em>Pardon, pardon, in the king's name!</em> He
-held in his hand a portfolio full of papers, among
-which were&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. An order for my release, addressed to General
-Hauch, in his quality of first deputy of the College of
-War: this order was signed by the king, and countersigned
-by Guldberg, under date, Frederiksborg, August
-21, 1776.</p>
-
-<p>2. An order to the same effect, addressed to the
-commandant of Munkholm.</p>
-
-<p>3. An instruction referring to the engagement I
-was to sign and seal before obtaining my release.</p>
-
-<p>These three documents were to the effect that his
-Majesty, on the intercession of his Royal Highness
-Prince Frederick, his beloved brother, consented to
-pardon me by liberating me from the captivity in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-which I was at Munkholm, upon the following conditions:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>I. That I should leave Trondhjem by sea, to proceed
-to the northern coast of France, and thence directly
-and immediately either to Provence or Languedoc,
-at my choice.</p>
-
-<p>II. That I would pledge myself never to return to
-Copenhagen, or the king's states.</p>
-
-<p>III. That I would not leave the country to which
-I was sent without the king's permission, and that
-I would not make frequent journeys.</p>
-
-<p>IV. That I would not approach the town of Orange
-(where Rantzau had taken up his abode).</p>
-
-<p>V. That I would not enter the service of any foreign
-power.</p>
-
-<p>VI. That I would not act, write, or speak in any
-way against the king or the royal family.</p>
-
-<p>VII. That I would take no part in affairs of state.</p>
-
-<p>If there was no vessel ready for me to embark,
-I was allowed to remain at Trondhjem; but I must
-not leave the town without the governor's permission,
-or go further than a league from it. The king granted
-me for my journey 800 crowns of the money which
-had belonged to me, and hopes were held out of a
-pension.</p>
-
-<p>The instruction concerning my engagement was
-very long. Guldberg, who had drawn it up, had
-interlarded it with a good many religious motives: he
-even alluded to the efficaciousness of Christ's blood;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-but, after all, it was probably to him that I owed the
-amelioration in my fate.</p>
-
-<p>General von der Osten added to the conditions
-various articles, by which he hoped to pay court to
-the minister.</p>
-
-<p>I signed what was asked, and though I felt perfectly
-well the value of an engagement imposed on a
-man who had not been legally convicted of any crime,
-I resolved to observe it. When this act was regularly
-drawn up, the general, in order to give the circumstance
-greater <em>éclat</em>, had me bled by his surgeon-major,
-after which he proposed to me a bottle of red
-wine to restore my senses.</p>
-
-<p>I excused myself by observing that I did not drink,
-and offered him a liqueur, of which I possessed two
-bottles.</p>
-
-<p>"I could carry them off," he said, after examining
-them; "but this commission must be worth more than
-that."</p>
-
-<p>This was giving me to understand that he reckoned
-on a goodly portion of my 800 crowns. It may be supposed
-that my intentions on this point did not at all
-accord with his.</p>
-
-<p>There was no vessel at Trondhjem destined for
-France, and I could not expect one for a long time,
-as from the beginning of September till the end of
-April the sea is very stormy in these latitudes, and
-hence I should have to wait eight full months before I
-could depart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In this situation I wrote to the court to offer my
-thanks for the mercy shown me, and to obtain permission
-to proceed to my destination by land. In the
-meanwhile I remained at Munkholm, hoping to be less
-exposed there to the importunities of the general.
-The court of Copenhagen rejected my request, but
-allowed me to take ship for Holland.</p>
-
-<p>Three vessels were preparing to sail for Amsterdam,
-one of which belonged to Trondhjem, and General von
-der Osten wished me to take passage in it; but I gave
-the preference to a Danish ship.</p>
-
-<p>The general offered me the services of his valet, to
-prepare a gold-laced coat; but this offer did not tempt
-me. I set out with my bearskin pelisse, which composed
-my wardrobe. I also carried off my 800 crowns,
-without leaving one for the general.</p>
-
-<p>The three vessels bound for Amsterdam set sail
-from Trondhjem on October 16; two perished: the
-one I was on board reached Christiansund, where we
-remained till February 16. After a stormy navigation,
-we reached Amsterdam on March 10.</p>
-
-<p>On April 12, 1777, I arrived at Montpellier, where
-I fixed my domicile.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In 1780, Falckenskjold received permission to retire
-to the Pays de Vaud, where his friend Reverdil
-invited him, and he established his home at Lausanne.
-In 1787, the court of Petersburg proposed to him to
-re-enter its service; he was offered the post of chief of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-the staff in the army intended to act against the Turks.
-But, finding himself bound by the engagements he had
-made, he replied, that he could not accept the offer
-without the formal consent of the court of Copenhagen;
-and this court refused its assent, under the
-pretext that it needed his services. At the same
-time, it permitted Falckenskjold to return to Copenhagen,
-and seemed disposed to revoke his order of
-banishment.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1788 he went to Copenhagen, but
-his reception there was such that he longed to return
-to his retreat at Lausanne. He obtained permission to
-go back, and, having recovered a portion of his property,
-which the state had seized, he invested it in
-annuities in the French funds. In the same year,
-war having broken out between Denmark and Sweden,
-the Danish government recalled Falckenskjold, conferring
-on him the rank and pay of a major-general;
-but when he was going to set out he learned that
-peace was signed, and he was saved the journey.</p>
-
-<p>His pay and savings enabled him to live comfortably,
-with such friends as Gibbon and Reverdil; and
-he kept his health till the last two years of his life,
-when he was attacked by a gouty rheumatism, the
-seeds of which he had contracted in his Munkholm
-prison. He died on September 30, 1820, at the age
-of eighty-two years and a few months.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">DEPARTURE OF THE QUEEN.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">THE BRITISH FLEET&mdash;SPIRITED CONDUCT OF KEITH&mdash;THE ORDER
-OF RELEASE&mdash;THE PRINCESS LOUISA AUGUSTA&mdash;THE DEPARTURE&mdash;THE
-LANDING AT STADE&mdash;THE STAY AT GOHRDE&mdash;ARRIVAL
-IN CELLE&mdash;THE QUEEN'S COURT&mdash;A HAPPY FAMILY&mdash;KEITH'S
-MISSION&mdash;LITERARY PIRATES&mdash;REVERDIL TO THE
-RESCUE</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>We have seen that the sentence of the court, decreeing
-a dissolution of the marriage, was announced to Caroline
-Matilda. From this moment she was no longer regarded
-as queen, and all her ties with Denmark were
-broken off with her marriage. After her condemnation,
-the ambassadors of the foreign powers were convoked
-at the Christiansborg Palace. They proceeded thither
-in mourning, and heard from the grand-master that,
-as the king no longer had a consort, there was no
-longer a queen. The name of Caroline Matilda was
-from this moment effaced from the public prayers.
-She became a stranger to the country over which she
-had reigned.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As was the case with the other prisoners, whose
-position was considerably mitigated so soon as they
-had made satisfactory confessions in their examination
-before the Commission of Inquiry, the queen, after
-the separation, was granted better apartments in the
-first-floor of the fortress, and was allowed to take the
-air on the ramparts. That Colonel Keith was permitted
-to visit the queen was looked on as a further
-concession, and that the envoy frequently took advantage
-of this permission, may surely be regarded as
-a further and important proof how greatly he was
-convinced of her innocence.</p>
-
-<p>When her Majesty was informed of the circumstances
-connected with the tragical death of the two prisoners,
-she said to Fräulein Mösting, her maid of honour,</p>
-
-<p>"Unhappy men! they have paid dearly for their attachment
-to the king, and their zeal for my service."</p>
-
-<p>No thought of self, it will be noticed: Caroline
-Matilda entirely forgot the humiliation to which she
-had been exposed by Struensee's dastardly confession,
-and only evinced sincere compassion for his undeserved
-and barbarous fate. But she was ever thus: from the
-first moment to the last, she sacrificed herself for others.
-Of this, the following anecdote will serve as an affecting
-proof:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The queen, having so fatally experienced the vicissitudes
-of human grandeur, was not so deeply affected
-by her own disasters as to overlook the sufferings and
-misery of some state prisoners, doomed to perpetual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-exile in the Castle of Kronborg. Her Majesty's liberal
-beneficence was never more conspicuous than in this
-period of affliction and distress. She sent daily from
-her table two dishes to these forsaken objects of compassion,
-and out of a scanty allowance, she sent, weekly,
-a small sum to be distributed among them. The
-governor having requested her Majesty to withdraw
-her bounty from an officer who had been closely confined
-for some years past in a remote turret, debarred
-from all human intercourse, on suspicion of a treasonable
-correspondence with the agent of a northern power,
-who had enlisted, with the assistance of the prisoner,
-several Danish subjects for his master's service, the
-queen merely replied with the following line of Voltaire:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"Il suffit qu'il soit homme et qu'il soit malheureux."<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a></p>
-
-<p>On one occasion, Caroline Matilda, conversing on the
-early commencement of her misfortunes, observed that,
-since she was born to suffer, she found some consolation
-in being marked out so soon by the hand of adversity.
-"I may possibly live," said her Majesty, "to see
-Denmark disabused with respect to my conduct:
-whereas my poor mother, one of the best women that
-ever existed, died while the load of obloquy lay heavy
-upon her, and went to the grave without the pleasure
-of a vindicated character."<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Early in March, the charges against Caroline Matilda
-had been forwarded to London, and were there
-submitted to the opinions of the first lawyers, who,
-though consulted separately, all declared that the evidence
-brought forward was so far from being legal conviction,
-that it scarce amounted to a bare presumption
-of guilt: and they affirmed that they did not give credit
-to any of the facts as lawyers, but even found themselves
-obliged to disbelieve them as men. Upon this the
-court of St. James insisted that no sentence should be
-passed on her Danish Majesty, as the evidence against
-her was only presumptive, and very inconclusive.</p>
-
-<p>A strong fleet was now fitted out, and universally
-supposed to be destined for the Baltic; still the most
-prudent thought, or at least hoped, that the fleet was
-only intended to intimidate the Danes, but would not
-sail, as the king of Prussia would certainly march an
-army immediately to Hanover, and then a new war
-would be kindled in the north. On the 22nd, counter
-orders, for suspending the preparations, were sent to
-Portsmouth. Horace Walpole, the omniscient, shall
-tell us what was the generally accepted version of the
-affair:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The king, as Lord Hertford told me, had certainly
-ordered the fleet to sail; and a near relation of Lord
-North told me that the latter had not been acquainted
-with that intention. Lord Mansfield, therefore, who
-had now got the king's ear, or Lord Sandwich, First
-Lord of the Admiralty, must have been consulted.
-The latter, though I should think he would not ap<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>prove
-it, was capable of flattering the king's wishes:
-Lord Mansfield assuredly would. The destination was
-changed on the arrival of a courier from Denmark, who
-brought word that the queen was repudiated, and, I
-suppose, a promise that her life should be spared: for,
-though the Danes had thirty ships and the best seamen,
-next to ours, and though we were sending but
-ten against them, the governing party were alarmed,
-probably from not being sure their nation was with
-them. The queen had confessed her intrigue with
-Struensee, and signed that confession. When the
-counsellor, who was to defend her, went to receive her
-orders, she laughed, and told him the story was true."</p>
-
-<p>In this we have a favourable specimen of Walpole's
-talent as an embroiderer of history. It is very evident
-that he had heard the facts floating about society; but
-his additions to them were evidently pure inventions.
-He shall give us one bit more of gossip, which may or
-may not have been true, although there appears to be
-evidence in its favour in the strange conduct of George
-III. toward his sister:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"They gave her (Caroline Matilda) the title of
-Countess of Aalborg, and condemned her to be shut
-up in the castle of that name. The King of England
-had certainly known her story two years before. A
-clerk in the secretary's office having opened a letter
-that came with the account, told me that he had seen
-it before the secretaries gave it to the king. It was
-now believed that this intelligence had occasioned the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-Princess of Wales to make her extraordinary journey
-to Germany, where she saw her daughter, though to
-no purpose. Princess Amelia told Lord Hertford, on
-the 26th, that when the King of Denmark was in
-England, observing how coldly he spoke of his wife,
-she asked him why he did not like her. He answered,
-'Mais elle est si blonde!' The princess added, that
-Queen Matilda had a very high spirit, and that she believed
-the Danes would consent to let her go to Hanover.
-'But she will not be let go thither,' added the princess,
-meaning that the queen's brother, Prince Charles
-of Mecklenburg, commanded there, 'or to Zell, but
-she will not go thither (another of the queen's
-brothers was there); perhaps she <em>may</em> go to Lüneburg."<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is very probable, too, that the temper of the
-British nation, which had undergone a complete revulsion
-on the announcement of the fleet sailing, had
-something to do with its suspension. At any rate,
-we read in the <em>General Evening Post</em> for April 30, the
-following painful account:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing, surely, is a greater impeachment of our
-laws, and more, of our lawgivers and magistrates,
-than the unrestrained licentiousness daily exhibited
-by the common people in this metropolis. Yesterday,
-in some parts of the city, men were crying about
-printed papers containing the most scandalous, ruinous,
-and impudent reflections on the Queen of Denmark.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-The worst prostitute that ever Covent Garden
-produced could not have had more gross abuse
-bestowed on her."</p>
-
-<p>But Sir R. M. Keith had been working hard in the
-meanwhile, and on the receipt of his letters of recall
-and news of the menaces of England in equipping a
-fleet, the regency gave in at once, promised to repay
-the queen's dowry, allow her five thousand a-year, and
-let her go to Hanover, beyond Jordan, anywhere, so
-long as they could only be rid of her. In reply to
-the despatch in which Sir R. M. Keith announced his
-success, he received the following official letter:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">L<span class="smcap">ORD</span> S<span class="smcap">UFFOLK TO</span> S<span class="smcap">IR</span> R. M. K<span class="smcap">EITH</span>.<br />
-
-<span class="mleft8"><em>St. James's, May</em> 1, 1772.</span></p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">IR</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Your despatches by King the messenger have
-been already acknowledged; those by Pearson were
-received on Wednesday afternoon, and I now answer
-both together.</p>
-
-<p>His Majesty's entire approbation of your conduct
-continues to the last moment of your success, and his
-satisfaction has in no part of it been more complete
-than in the manner in which you have stated, urged,
-and obtained the liberty of his sister. The care you
-have taken to distinguish between a claim of right
-and the subjects of negotiation, and to prevent the
-mixture of stipulations with a demand, is perfectly
-agreeable to your instructions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The national object of procuring the liberty of a
-daughter of England confined in Denmark, after her
-connection with Denmark was dissolved, is now obtained.
-For this alone an armament was prepared,
-and therefore, as soon as the acquiescence of the court
-of Copenhagen was known, the preparations were
-suspended, that the mercantile and marine interests
-of this kingdom might be affected no longer than was
-necessary by the expectation of a war.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of a hostile armament, two frigates and a
-sloop of war are now ordered to Elsinore. One of
-these is already in the Downs&mdash;the others will repair
-thither immediately; and, so soon as the wind permits,
-they will proceed to their destination. I enclose
-to you an account of them, which you may transmit
-to Monsieur Ostein (Von der Osten) ministerially,
-referring at the same time to the assurance of these
-pacific proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>The compliance of the Danish court with his Majesty's
-demand is still a compliance. Their continuing,
-unasked, the title of queen, and other concessions,
-and the attainment of the national object accompanying
-each other, his Majesty would think it improper
-to interrupt the national intercourse from any personal
-or domestic consideration. You will therefore inform
-Mr. Ostein that his Majesty intends to leave a minister
-at the court of Copenhagen, the explanation you
-may give of this suspension of former directions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-and his determination, being left to your own discretion.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
-
-<p>It was with feelings of pride that the British envoy
-passed through the vaulted entrance of "Hamlet's
-Castle," to carry to an afflicted and injured princess
-the welcome proofs of fraternal affection and liberty
-restored. The feeling was reciprocal, for when Keith
-brought the order for Caroline Matilda's enlargement,
-which he had obtained by his spirited conduct, she
-was so surprised by the unexpected intelligence, that
-she burst into a flood of tears, embraced him in a
-transport of joy, and called him her deliverer.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p>
-
-<p>The queen from this time forth was more constantly
-than ever on the ramparts watching for the arrival
-of the British flotilla. The squadron, consisting of
-the <em>Southampton</em>, Captain McBride, the <em>Seaford</em>, Captain
-Davis, and the <em>Cruizer</em>, Captain Cummings, left
-England on May 22, and anchored off Elsinore on
-the 27th. In the meanwhile Caroline Matilda wrote
-her brother a most affecting letter, asserting her innocence
-of all the criminal accusations against her in the
-strongest manner, and declaring that the strictness of
-her future life should fully refute the slander of her
-enemies. She at the same time expressed a wish to
-be allowed to return to England, but left her fate in
-his Majesty's hands. A consultation had been held at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-Buckingham House on the subject, but it was found
-too expensive, and it was finally settled that Caroline
-Matilda was to take up her residence at Celle, in
-Hanover, George III. allowing her £8,000 a year for
-the support of her dignity.</p>
-
-<p>Very touching, too, is it to read that the queen at
-this time wore nothing but deep mourning; and one
-of her ladies asking her why she affected such a semblance
-of sorrow, she replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"It is a debt I owe to my murdered reputation."</p>
-
-<p>Sir Robert Murray Keith supplies an interesting
-anecdote of the queen in a letter to his sister:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Here I am, thank my stars, upon the utmost verge
-of Denmark. My ships are not yet arrived, but a few
-days may conclude the whole affair; and the weather
-is mild and agreeable. I return to Copenhagen this
-evening, but only for a day or two, to wind up my
-affairs, and give my parting advice to the little secretary,
-in whose success as <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">chargé d'affaires</i> I take a
-particular interest. I am just returned from her
-Majesty, who is, Heaven be praised, in perfect health,
-notwithstanding the danger she has run of catching
-the measles from the young princess, whom she never
-quitted during her illness. A more tender mother
-than this queen has never been born in the world."</p>
-
-<p>Caroline Matilda was at dinner when the imperial
-salute of the English frigate and the castle guns informed
-her Majesty of Captain McBride's arrival.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-This gallant officer met Sir R. Keith on shore, who,
-after a mutual exchange of compliments, introduced
-the captain to her Majesty, by whom he was most
-graciously received as a man destined to convey her
-safe to her brother's electoral dominions; far from the
-reach of the personal shafts of her enemies, and that
-land which had been the dismal scene of her unparalleled
-misfortunes and humiliations. When the
-captain had notified his commission, and said that he
-should await her Majesty's time and pleasure, she
-exclaimed in the anguish of her heart, "Ah! my
-dear children," and immediately retired. It was not
-for an insensible monarch on a throne, on which she
-seemed to have been seated merely to be the butt of
-envy, malice, and perfidy, that her Majesty grieved:
-the excruciating idea of being parted from her dear
-children, and the uncertainty of their fate, summoned
-up all the feelings of a tender mother. She begged
-to see her son before he was torn for ever from her
-bosom: but all her Majesty's entreaties were unsuccessful.
-Juliana Maria envied her the comfort of the
-most wretched&mdash;that of a parent sympathising in mutual
-grief and fondness with children snatched from
-her embrace by unnatural authority.</p>
-
-<p>A deputation of noblemen having been appointed
-by the queen dowager to observe the queen after her
-enlargement till her departure, under the fallacious
-show of respect for the royal personage so lately<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-injured and degraded&mdash;when they were admitted to
-Caroline Matilda's presence, and wished her in her
-Majesty's name a happy voyage, she answered&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The time will come when the king will know
-that he has been deceived and betrayed; calumny may
-impose for a time on weak and credulous minds, but
-truth always prevails in the end. All my care and
-anxiety are now for the royal infants, my children."<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
-
-<p>On May 30, a lady belonging to the court went
-to Kronborg in one of the king's coaches to remove
-the young Princess Louisa Augusta, and conduct her
-royal highness to Christiansborg Palace. Hence the
-last moments which the feeling queen spent in Denmark
-were the most painful of all: she was obliged to
-part from her only consolation, her only blessing, her
-beloved daughter: she was forced to leave her dear
-child among her enemies. For a long time she bedewed
-the infant with hot tears&mdash;for a long time she
-pressed it to her heart. She strove to tear herself
-away; but the looks, the smiles, the endearing movements
-of the infant, were so many fetters to hold the
-affectionate mother back. At last she called up all
-her resolution, took her once more in her arms, with
-the impetuous ardour of distracted love imprinted on
-the lips of the child the farewell kiss, and, delivering it
-to the lady-in-waiting, shrieked, "Away, away, I now
-possess nothing here!"<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As the governor had behaved to the queen so as to
-merit her Majesty's confidence and esteem, she entrusted
-him with a letter for the king, which he promised
-faithfully to deliver into his Majesty's own
-hands. It must have been very moving, as the king
-was observed to shed tears on reading it.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
-
-<p>At six in the evening of May 30, Caroline Matilda
-proceeded in a royal Danish boat on board the English
-frigate. Her suite consisted of Colonel Keith, who
-would accompany her to Göhrde, and of Count Holstein<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-zu Ledreborg, his wife, Lady-in-waiting von
-Mösting, and Page of the Chamber von Raben, who
-were ordered to convey her Majesty as far as Stade,
-and then return by land. When the anchor was
-apeak, the fortress, and the Danish guardship in the
-Sound, gave a salute of twenty-seven guns.</p>
-
-<p>The queen remained on deck, her eyes immovably
-directed toward the fortress of Kronborg, which contained
-her child, who had so long been her only source
-of comfort, until darkness intercepted the view. The
-vessel having made but little way during the night,
-at daybreak she observed with fond satisfaction that
-the fortress was still visible, and could not be persuaded
-to enter the cabin so long as she could obtain
-the faintest glimpse of the battlements.</p>
-
-<p>Among Sir R. M. Keith's papers was found the
-following copy of verses, whose title speaks for itself.
-Unfortunately, there is no positive proof that they
-were written by the queen herself, beyond the care
-that Sir Robert took of them:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">WRITTEN AT SEA BY THE QUEEN OF DENMARK,<br />
-
-<span class="small70">ON HER PASSAGE TO STADE, 1772.</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i0">At length, from sceptred care and deadly state,</div>
- <div class="i0">From galling censure and ill-omened hate,</div>
- <div class="i0">From the vain grandeur where I lately shone,</div>
- <div class="i0">From Cronsberg's prison and from Denmark's throne,</div>
- <div class="i0">I go!</div>
- <div class="i3">Here, fatal greatness! thy delusion ends!</div>
- <div class="i0">A humbler lot thy closing scene attends.</div>
- <div class="i0">Denmark, farewell! a long, a last adieu!</div>
- <div class="i0">Thy lessening prospect now recedes from view;</div>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
- <div class="i0">No lingering look an ill-starred crown deplores,</div>
- <div class="i0">Well pleased, I quit thy sanguinary shores!</div>
- <div class="i0">Thy shores, where victims doomed to state and me,</div>
- <div class="i0">Fell helpless Brandt and murdered Struensee!</div>
- <div class="i0">Thy shores where&mdash;ah! in adverse hour I came,</div>
- <div class="i0">To me the grave of happiness and fame!</div>
- <div class="i0">Alas! how different then my vessel lay;</div>
- <div class="i0">What crowds of flatterers hastened to obey!</div>
- <div class="i0">What numbers flew to hail the rising sun,</div>
- <div class="i0">How few now bend to that whose course is run!</div>
- <div class="i0">By fate deprived of fortune's fleeting train,</div>
- <div class="i0">Now, "all the oblig'd desert and all the vain."</div>
- <div class="i0">But conscious worth, that censure can control,</div>
- <div class="i0">Shall 'gainst the charges arm my steady soul&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i0">Shall teach the guiltless mind alike to bear</div>
- <div class="i0">The smiles of pleasure or the frowns of care.</div>
- <div class="i0">Denmark, farewell; for thee no sighs depart,</div>
- <div class="i0">But love maternal rends my bleeding heart.</div>
- <div class="i0">Oh! Cronsberg's tower, where my poor infant lies,</div>
- <div class="i0">Why, why, so soon recede you from my eyes?</div>
- <div class="i0">Yet, stay&mdash;ah! me, nor hope nor prayer prevails&mdash;</div>
- <div class="i0">For ever exiled hence, Matilda sails.</div>
- <div class="i0">Keith! formed to smooth the path affection treads,</div>
- <div class="i0">And dry the tears that friendless sorrow sheds,</div>
- <div class="i0">Oh! generous Keith, protect their helpless state,</div>
- <div class="i0">And save my infants from impending fate!</div>
- <div class="i0">Far, far from deadly pomp each thought remove,</div>
- <div class="i0">And, as to me, their guardian angel prove!</div>
- <div class="i0">Yes, Julia, <em>now</em> superior force prevails,</div>
- <div class="i0">And all my boasted resolution fails!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Before taking leave of Kronborg, I may be permitted
-to insert an anecdote related by my grandfather in his
-"Travels in the North." When he visited Kronborg,
-in 1774, a poor fettered slave came up and addressed
-him in French. Mr. Wraxall then commenced a conversation
-with him, and asked him if he were here
-when Queen Matilda was in confinement.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! Monsieur," the prisoner replied, "I saw her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-every day. I had the honour to turn the spit for her
-Majesty's dinner. She even promised to endeavour
-to obtain me my liberty. I assure you," he added
-warmly, "that she was the most amiable princess in
-the world."</p>
-
-<p>Whether the man said this because he believed it
-would please an Englishman, or whether it was the
-genuine effusion of respectful gratitude, my grandfather
-was unable to say, but could not resist the compliment
-to an English and injured queen.</p>
-
-<p>By a royal resolution of March 18, 1773, all the
-documents connected with the dissolution of the marriage
-of Queen Caroline Matilda were made into four
-separate packets, and one of them, which contained the
-orders, protocols, and examinations, was deposited in
-the secret archives: the second, containing the perfect
-acts with the votes of all the commissioners, and a copy
-of the examination of the witnesses, was entrusted for
-safe keeping to the governor of Glückstadt: the third,
-consisting of a copy of the original articles and the
-examinations, was kept at the Norwegian fortress of
-Bergenhuus, in an iron chest, in a room the keys of
-which were held by the commandant and the viceroy:
-and the fourth packet, which only contained a copy of
-the articles, but not of the depositions, was placed in
-the archives of the Danish Chancery. This division
-of the documents also serves as a proof, how every
-possible care was taken that the queen's posterity
-should not hereafter find the whole of the documents
-at any one place.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The queen did not reach Stade till June 5, where
-she was received with all the respect due to crowned
-heads. The Hanoverian Privy Councillor von Bodenhausen,
-and the Land Marshal Chamberlain von Bülow,
-pulled on board the flag-ship to welcome the queen.
-At the landing-place, where the ladies and gentlemen
-selected to attend on her Majesty were awaiting her,
-the Danish escort took leave. The queen gave Count
-Holstein a diamond solitaire as a souvenir, and entrusted
-him with a gold snuff-box for the wife of General
-von Hauch, commandant of Kronborg.</p>
-
-<p>The new suite of the queen was composed of a
-grand lady, two ladies-in-waiting, one chief chamberlain,
-a chamberlain, one page of the bed-chamber, two
-pages and a number of servants. After remaining for
-two days at Stade, she travelled with her suite, <em>viâ</em>
-Harburg, to the Château of Göhrde, thirty miles from
-Stade, where she intended to remain till the palace at
-Celle was restored for her reception. At Göhrde,
-Sir R. Keith took leave of her, and she received a
-visit from her eldest sister, the Hereditary Princess of
-Brunswick Wolfenbüttel and her husband.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> These
-near relations, however, also belonged to the princely
-family from which Juliana Maria was descended, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-in consequence, were rather suspicious friends for
-Caroline Matilda.</p>
-
-<p>On October 20, the queen made her entrance into
-Celle, and took up her abode in the royal château.
-This old residence of the former Dukes of Lüneburg
-was at this time a fortified castle surrounded by moats
-and walls. Although the apartments were spacious
-and habitable, and well furnished, the exterior of the
-castle resembled a prison rather than a palace. But
-the queen soon gained the hearts of all the inhabitants
-by her amiability and resignation, and thus converted
-the unfriendly asylum into an abode of peace and consolation.
-She frequently attended at church, was fond
-of conversing on religious topics, and gave rich gifts to
-the poor, both with her own hands and through the
-clergy of the town. Treating all gracefully who
-approached her presence, she more especially gave
-children an opportunity of telling their parents, with
-delight, that they had been spoken to by the queen.
-If, at night, she fancied she had not been so friendly
-as usual to any one during the day, she reproached
-herself for it. Judging all persons indulgently, she
-could not endure that absent persons should be harshly
-condemned in her presence, and, in truth, she ruled her
-court, not alone by her rank, but even more through the
-lovingness of her noble heart. But, whenever she was
-obliged to act the queen, she did so, on the other hand,
-with a dignified demeanour and with majesty.</p>
-
-<p>Although Caroline Matilda excelled in all the exer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>cises
-befitting her sex, birth, and station, and danced
-the first minuet in the Danish court, she never again
-indulged in this polite amusement, of which she had
-been extremely fond, after the masked ball the conclusion
-of which had been so fatal and disgraceful to
-her Majesty. As one of her pretended crimes had
-been the delight she took in riding, and the uncommon
-address and spirit with which she managed her horse,
-she also renounced this innocent recreation, for fear of
-giving the least occasion to the blame and malice of
-the censorious and the ignorant. Her Majesty had an
-exquisite taste for music, and devoted much of her
-time to the harpsichord, accompanied by the melodious
-voice of a lady of her court.</p>
-
-<p>There was in the queen's dress a noble simplicity
-which exhibited more taste than magnificence. As
-her mind had been cultivated by reading the most
-eminent writers of modern times, she read regularly for
-two hours before dinner with Fräulein Schülenburg,
-whatever her Majesty thought most conducive to her
-instruction or entertainment, in poetry and history,
-the ladies communicating their observations to each
-other with equal freedom and ingenuity. The queen
-improved the knowledge she had acquired of the
-German language, and had a selection of the best
-authors of that learned nation. As her manners were
-the most polished, graceful, and endearing, her court
-became the resort of persons of both sexes, celebrated
-for their love of the fine arts. The contracted state<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-of her finances could not restrain the princely magnificence
-and liberal disposition which made her purse
-ever open to indigent merit and distressed virtue.
-Naturally cheerful and happy in the consciousness of
-her innocence, adored and revered by the circle of a
-court free from cabals and intrigues, even the dark
-cloud of adversity could not alter the sweetness and
-serenity of her temper. She was surrounded by
-faithful servants, who attended her, not from sordid
-motives of ambition, but from attachment and unfeigned
-regard.</p>
-
-<p>Peace, content, and harmony dwelt under her Majesty's
-auspices, and her household was like a well-regulated
-family, superintended by a mistress who
-made her happiness consist in doing good to all those
-who implored her Majesty's compassion and benevolence.
-Banished with every circumstance of indignity
-from the throne of Denmark, her noble soul retained
-no sentiment of revenge or resentment against
-the wicked authors of her fall, or against the Danish
-people. Ambition, a passion from which she was singularly
-exempt, never disturbed her peace of mind;
-and she looked back to the diadem which had been
-torn from her brow with wondrous calmness and magnanimity.</p>
-
-<p>It was not the crown Caroline Matilda regretted,
-for her children alone occupied all her care and solicitude;
-the feelings of the queen were absorbed in
-those of the mother; and if she ever manifested by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-tears her inward grief and perplexity, maternal fondness
-caused all these fears and agitations.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
-
-<p>In October of this year Sir R. Keith was requested
-by Lord Suffolk to visit Caroline Matilda, and send in
-a minute account of her position and feelings. How
-well the ambassador performed his task will be seen
-from his letter.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">S<span class="smcap">IR</span> R. M. K<span class="smcap">EITH TO</span> L<span class="smcap">ORD</span> S<span class="smcap">UFFOLK</span>.<br />
-
-<span class="mleft10"><em>Zell</em>, <em>November</em> 2, 1772.</span></p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">Y</span> L<span class="smcap">ORD</span>,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>I arrived here on the 31st October, late in the
-evening, and the next day had the honour of delivering
-the king's letter to her Danish Majesty, whom I
-found in perfect health, and without any remains of
-pain from her late accident. In two very long audiences,
-which her Majesty was pleased to grant me, I
-endeavoured to execute, with the utmost punctuality,
-his Majesty's command, and shall now lay before your
-lordship all the lights those audiences afforded me,
-relative to the queen's wishes and intentions. I cannot
-enter upon that subject without previously assuring
-your lordship that the queen received those repeated
-proofs of his Majesty's fraternal affection and friendship,
-which my orders contained, with the warmest
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>expressions of gratitude and sensibility; and that nothing
-could be more frank or explicit than her answers
-to a great number of questions, which she permitted
-me to ask upon any subject that arose.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to Denmark, the queen declares that, in
-the present situation of the court, she has not a wish
-for any correspondence or connection there, beyond
-what immediately concerns the welfare and education
-of her children. That she has never written a single
-letter to Denmark since she left it, or received one
-thence. That the only person belonging to that kingdom
-from whom she hears lives in Holstein, and is not
-connected with the court.</p>
-
-<p>The queen having expressed great anxiety with
-respect to the false impressions which may be instilled
-into the minds of her children, particularly regarding
-herself, I thought it my duty to say that
-such impressions, however cruelly intended, could not,
-at the tender age of her Majesty's children, nor for
-some years to come, take so deep a root as not to be
-entirely effaced by more candid instructions, and the
-dictates of filial duty, when reason and reflection shall
-break in upon their minds. The queen seemed willing
-to lay hold of that hope, yet could not help bursting
-into tears, when she mentioned the danger of losing
-the affections of her children.</p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty appears very desirous to communicate
-directly to her royal brother all her views and wishes
-in the most confidential manner, hoping to obtain in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-return his Majesty's advice and directions, which she
-intends implicitly to follow. She said that, in matters
-of so private and domestic a nature, it would give her
-much greater pleasure to learn his Majesty's intentions
-upon every point from his own pen, than through
-the channel of any of his electoral servants.</p>
-
-<p>It gave me great satisfaction to find her Majesty in
-very good spirits, and so much pleased with the palace
-at Zell, the apartments of which are very spacious, and
-handsomely furnished. She wishes to have an apartment
-fitted up in the palace for her sister, the Princess
-of Brunswick, as she thinks that the etiquette of
-this country does not permit that princess, in her visits
-to Zell, to be lodged out of the palace, without great
-impropriety. Her Majesty said that she intended to
-write herself to the king on this head.</p>
-
-<p>The queen told me that the very enterprising and
-dangerous part which Queen Juliana has acted in
-Denmark, has created greater astonishment in Brunswick
-(where the abilities and character of that princess
-are known) than, perhaps, in any other city of
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty talked to me of several late incidents at
-the court of Denmark, but without appearing to take
-much concern in them. She mentioned, with a smile,
-some of the paltry things which had been sent as a part
-of her baggage from Denmark, adding, that this new
-instance of their meanness had not surprised her.
-But the Princess of Brunswick, who happened to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-present when the baggage was opened, expressed her
-indignation at the treatment in such strong terms,
-that she (the queen) could not help taking notice of
-it in her letters to the king.</p>
-
-<p>She let me understand that a small collection of
-English books would be very agreeable to her, leaving
-the choice of them entirely to his Majesty.</p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty more than once expressed how much
-she considered herself obliged to the king's ministers,
-for the zeal they had shown in the whole of the late
-unhappy transactions relating to Denmark and to herself.
-She is particularly sensible to the great share
-your lordship had in all those affairs, and has commanded
-me to convey to your lordship her acknowledgments
-for that constant attention to her honour
-and interests, which she is persuaded the king will
-look upon as an additional mark of your lordship's
-dutiful attachment to his royal person and family.</p>
-
-<p>It only remains that I should beg your forgiveness
-for the great length to which I have swelled this
-letter. The only excuse I can offer arises from my
-ardent desire to excuse the king's orders with the
-utmost possible precision.</p>
-
-<p class="center">I am, &amp;c., &amp;c.,<br />
-<span class="mleft8">R. M.</span> K<span class="smcap">EITH</span>.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At home, Caroline Matilda appeared to have dropped
-out of memory with her landing at Stade. Her name
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>is never found in the journals of the time. Grub-street
-alone took possession of her memory. In those
-days many literary scoundrels earned a precarious
-livelihood by deliberately forging pamphlets on topics
-of interest at the moment, and thought nothing of
-trying to enhance their veracity by assuming names
-and titles to which they had not the slightest claim.
-One of these hungry gentry received a severe discomfiture,
-and must have felt ashamed, if he could feel
-shame, from honest Reverdil, in the July number of
-the <cite>Monthly Review</cite>. Reverdil's letter, written in
-English, is tremendously to the point. The lie, with
-a circumstance, bore the title of&mdash;"The real Views and
-Political System of the late Revolution of Copenhagen.
-By Christian Adolphus Rothes, formerly Councillor
-of Conference, Secretary of the Cabinet to his Majesty
-Christiern (<em>sic</em>) VII., and Great Assessor of the Supreme
-Council at Altona."</p>
-
-<p>To which Reverdil quietly makes answer:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. As I am pretty well acquainted with the Danish
-service, I can assure you that there is not in Denmark,
-Norway, or any of the Danish dominions, such a man
-as Mr. Christian Adolphus Rothes, in any employment
-whatever.</p>
-
-<p>2. The dignity of Councillor of Conference being
-merely titular, there is no <em>formerly</em> Councillor.</p>
-
-<p>3. The present king, Christian VII., has had three
-secretaries of the cabinet: the first is now in London
-(himself); the second, who followed his master on his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-voyage, is in the Court of Chancery at Copenhagen;
-the third was beheaded on April 28.</p>
-
-<p>4. There is no supreme council at Altona; that
-town, being no capital, hath but a corporation, and no
-other council. In that corporation there is no assessor,
-great or little.</p>
-
-<p>To this crushing reply Reverdil adds that every circumstance
-in the book is absolutely false, and grounded
-on facts and a state of things that never existed. For
-instance, the conduct of the queen dowager in the
-king's council is very circumstantially described; but
-she never sat in the king's council.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">THE SECRET AGENT.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">THE COURT AT CELLE&mdash;MR. WRAXALL&mdash;PRESENTATION TO THE
-QUEEN&mdash;HAMBURG&mdash;THE DANISH NOBILITY&mdash;THE PROPOSITION&mdash;THE
-CREDENTIALS&mdash;RETURN TO CELLE&mdash;BARON VON
-SECKENDORF&mdash;THE QUEEN'S ACCEPTANCE&mdash;ANOTHER VISIT
-TO CELLE&mdash;THE INTERVIEW IN THE JARDIN FRANCOIS&mdash;CAROLINE
-MATILDA'S AGREEMENT&mdash;THE INN IN THE WOOD&mdash;BARON
-VON BULOW&mdash;A STRANGE ADVENTURE&mdash;ARRIVAL IN
-ENGLAND</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>There is but little information to be derived about the
-life of Caroline Matilda during the year 1773. All we
-know is, that she continued to devote her life to charity
-and literary pursuits. Being endowed with a rare desire
-for learning and a splendid memory, she soon became
-versed in the beauties of German literature.
-Every evening before supper she had either German
-works read to her or read them herself. "The Death
-of Abel" moved her to tears, and Gellert was another
-of her favourite poets. She knew many of his hymns
-by heart, and was fondest of the one beginning "I ne'er
-will seek to injure him, who seeks to injure me." She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-arranged a small hand library in a turret room hung
-with green damask, where she liked most to sit, and
-amused herself in turn with music and reading. Although
-she was a first-rate musician, she continued to
-take lessons in the art; but only cared for serious and
-tragical compositions, and might frequently be heard
-confiding to the instrument the grief that agitated her
-sorrowing heart.</p>
-
-<p>In order to distract her thoughts, a theatre was arranged
-in the palace. On January, 1773, Schröder's
-celebrated company of comedians came to Celle, and
-gave their first performance on the court stage, a spacious
-box having been railed off in the pit for the
-queen, the court, and the nobility. The queen attended
-nearly every performance, and the court chamberlain
-carefully obeyed the instructions he had received from
-London, only to allow amusing performances to take
-place, so that Holberg's comedies were frequently
-played, but never tragedies, or even serious dramas.
-That this precaution was necessary, was seen on the
-performance of the play "Appearances are Deceptive,"
-in which the appearance of some children on the stage
-produced so violent an impression on the queen, that
-she at once quitted the playhouse, and, in spite of the
-rough breeze, was obliged to walk about for a long time
-in the gardens ere she could regain her self-possession.
-Afterwards, the court at times acted plays, in order to
-provide a slight amusement for their beloved queen.</p>
-
-<p>An idea of Caroline Matilda's mode of life will be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-best formed, however, from a perusal of the following
-letter to her sister, written in the summer of 1773:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ADAM AND DEAR</span> S<span class="smcap">ISTER</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Thanks to Heaven for having made me sensible of
-the futility and delusion of all worldly pomp and stately
-nothingness. Believe me when I tell you that I have
-not once wished to be again an enthroned queen. Were
-my dear children restored to me, I should think, if
-there is on this earth perfect happiness, I might enjoy
-it in a private station with them; but the Supreme
-Disposer of all events has decreed that my peace of
-mind should be continually disturbed by what I feel on
-this cruel and unnatural separation. You are a tender
-mother, and I appeal to your own fondness. Pray
-give my love to the dear Augusta<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> and all her brothers;
-now that she is in her seventh year, she is, I dare say,
-an agreeable, chatty companion. As for Charles, he
-is, I understand, like his father, born a warrior: nothing
-but drums, swords, and horses can please his
-martial inclination. George, Augustus, and William
-equally contribute to your comfort and amusement.
-Tell them I have some little presents I shall send
-them the first opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>You desire to know how I vary my occupation and
-amusements in this residence. I get up between
-seven and eight o'clock; take a walk in the garden if
-the weather permits; give my instructions to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-gardener for the day; observe his men at work with
-that contented mind which is a perpetual feast; return
-to my castle for breakfast; dress myself from ten to
-eleven; appear in my little circle at twelve; retire to
-my apartment about one; read, and take an airing till
-dinner; walk again about an hour in the garden with
-the ladies of my retinue; drink tea, play upon the
-harpsichord, sometimes a little party at quadrille
-before supper; and, am commonly in bed before
-twelve. Every Monday, I receive petitions from real
-objects of compassion, and delight in relieving their
-necessities according to my power; and thus, every
-week passes in a regular rotation of rational conversation,
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">lectures amusantes et instructives</i>, musical entertainments,
-walks, and a little curious needlework. I
-see everybody happy around me, and vie with each
-other in proofs of zeal and affection for my person.
-Now, I can truly say, I cultivate friendship and
-philosophy, which are strangers to the throne. I
-expect to see you soon, according to your promise;
-this visit will add greatly to the comfort of your most
-affectionate sister,</p>
-
-<p>C<span class="smcap">AROLINE</span> M<span class="smcap">ATILDA</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>But all these efforts were impotent to dispel the
-expression of gnawing sorrow, which was imprinted
-on the countenance of the queen, and was spread over
-her whole manner. Toward the middle of 1774, a
-great pleasure, however, was caused the queen, by the
-receipt of a portrait of her son, the crown prince<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-Frederick, which was sent her from Copenhagen.
-Shortly after she had received the picture, her grande
-maîtresse, Madame d'Ompteda, entered the room,
-because she had heard the queen speaking loudly, and
-was much surprised at finding her alone. With tears
-in her eyes, but with the sweet smile which, even in
-sorrowful moments, played round her mouth, she said
-to the grand mistress:</p>
-
-<p>"You cannot account for hearing me speaking
-loudly and yet not finding any one with me? Well,
-do you know with whom I was conversing? It was
-with this dear picture."</p>
-
-<p>And she then produced the portrait of the youthful
-prince.</p>
-
-<p>"And now that you have surprised me," the queen
-continued, "you shall also know what I was saying
-to the picture. I employed the words which you a
-few days ago placed in the mouth of a daughter who
-had found her lost father again, except that I have
-altered them as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i0">Eh! qui donc comme moi gouterait la douceur</div>
- <div class="i0">De t'appeler mon fils, d'être chère a ton c&oelig;ur!</div>
- <div class="i0">Toi, qu'on arrache aux bras d'une mère sensible,</div>
- <div class="i0">Qui ne pleure que toi, dans ce destin terrible."<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On September 18, 1774, Mr. N. W. Wraxall, junior,
-arrived at Celle. This gentleman had, at an early age,
-obtained a profitable employment in the East Indies,
-and had even attained some dignity; he, however,
-threw up his post for motives which may be made
-known hereafter but do not belong here, and returned
-to England. He was very ambitious, and that ambition
-had been fostered by the fact that, having in his
-youth ransacked the muniments of Bristol, he had
-discovered that one of his ancestors was bailiff of that
-city in the thirteenth century; but the difficulty was, to
-what object would he turn that ambition: he was unknown
-and friendless, while, at the same time, the <em>res
-angusta domi</em> warned him to be up and stirring. There
-was but one way of acquiring fame and popularity: in
-those days, authorship was more respected, as being
-rarer, than it is among ourselves. Mr. Wraxall, therefore,
-determined first to make a tour, and then print
-an account of it, and, for this purpose, resolved to
-visit a but little known part of Europe, and thus add
-novelty to his descriptions. With this purpose he set
-out for the North, ran through Denmark, a portion
-of Sweden and Russia, and, on his homeward route,
-thought there would be no harm in going a little out
-of his way to visit the Queen of Denmark: he had
-learned something about her sad fate while in Copenhagen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-and this had excited a wish to know more,
-literary capital being left out of the question.</p>
-
-<p>On September 18, then, Mr. Wraxall waited on
-Baron Seckendorf, chamberlain to the queen, who presented
-strangers. The "Private Journal" shall tell us
-how he fared:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I went, at half-past one, to the castle of Zell.
-Monsieur Seckendorf introduced me to the grand
-maître of her Highness the Princess of Brunswick. The
-princess herself entered in about a quarter of an hour:
-she gave me her hand to kiss, and began conversation
-with me directly; it was interrupted by the queen's
-entrance, to whom I was presented, with the same
-ceremony. Her Majesty and the princess kept me in
-constant talk before and after dinner; we talked of
-Denmark, of Prince Frederick, his intended marriage,
-&amp;c. 'He was a child,' said she (the queen), 'unknown
-while I was there.' Hirschholm, she said, was
-her favourite palace. 'But, tell me,' said the princess,
-'about the queen-mother: she's my aunt, but no matter:
-say what you will, you may be free&mdash;and for the
-king, how is he?' I very frankly expressed my sentiments.
-The queen asked me a thousand questions
-about the court of Russia, Sweden, my travels, &amp;c.
-The queen asked me, also, about her children, the
-prince in particular. I told her how they dressed him
-now: I assured her I had been taken for a spy in Copenhagen.
-Her Majesty related to me Mr. Morris's affair
-with Miss Calvert. She was very gay, and seemed in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-no way a prey to melancholy. She was very fat, for so
-young a woman. She asked me my age. I told her.
-'You are, then,' said she, 'exactly as old as I am;
-we were born in the same year.' Her features are
-pretty, and her teeth very small, even, and white. She
-resembles his Majesty (George III.) infinitely in face:
-but the princess said, not so strongly as she. I don't
-think so, and told her royal highness so. Her Majesty
-appealed to one of her maids of honour, who agreed in
-opinion with me. The queen was dressed in a Barré
-coloured gown, or at least an orange red, so very nearly
-resembling it that I could not distinguish the difference.
-I asked her how many languages she spoke.
-'Five,' she said, 'Danish, English, French, German,
-and Italian.' The princess is much thinner in face,
-but not a great deal less in her person: she wants the
-Queen of Denmark's teeth, but has a very good complexion.
-She asked me about the Duchess of Glo'ster,
-if I had seen her, if I knew her. 'She is a very fine
-woman,' she added, 'even now.' Mrs. C&mdash;&mdash; was
-mentioned. 'She was a prodigious favourite,' I remarked,
-'of the Duke of York.' She replied, with a
-smile, 'For a moment.' She did me the honour to ask
-me to take Brunswick in my way next summer, or
-whenever I visited Germany again. She said she might,
-and should, have mistaken me for a Frenchman. 'You
-don't take that for a compliment, do you?' the queen
-observed. 'Indeed, no! I was too proud of my country.'
-Macaronies formed a part of our conversation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-''Tis all over now,' I said, 'the word is quite extinct
-in England.' 'But, tell me,' said her Majesty, 'tell
-me ingenuously, were you not a bit of a one, while it
-lasted?' I assured her not. I took my leave soon
-after dinner.</p>
-
-<p>"Tuesday, Sept. 20.&mdash;'Tis a very pleasant, delightful
-walk round the ramparts, of a full English mile.
-The gardens, likewise, near the town are very pleasant
-and well kept. The streets of Zell are for the most
-part wide enough, and well paved, but the buildings
-are very old and very miserable. The fortifications are
-merely nominal, of no sort of strength. The castle
-stands detached from the town; it is a square building,
-surrounded by a broad, wet ditch. There were
-formerly round towers at the corners, but they have
-been pulled down. It was built by one of the ancient
-dukes of Zell; within it is a quadrangle. About ten
-o'clock I went to the Hôtel de Ville, where at this
-time the shops of the merchants who come to the fair
-of Zell are held. Her Majesty the Queen, and her
-sister the princess, were there. I had the honour to
-talk with them near an hour; we conversed in English
-most familiarly on fifty subjects&mdash;the Grand Duke
-of Russia, the empress, the peace between Russia and
-Turkey, my travels, Dantzig, formed the chief articles.
-I showed her Majesty my medals of the Empress
-of Russia and some other things. She was
-dressed quite à l'Anglaise: a white bonnet, a pale
-pink nightgown, a gauze handkerchief, a little locket<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-on her bosom. Her face is very handsome: they are
-his Majesty's features, but all softened and harmonized.
-Pity she is so large in her person. The princess was
-quite English all over: a black hat over her eyes, and
-a common nightgown with a black apron."</p>
-
-<p>Little anticipating that he should see the Queen of
-Denmark so soon again, Mr. Wraxall proceeded
-leisurely through Hanover, which he says may be
-truly described as "a hungry electorate," to Verden
-and Bremen. On Sept. 27 he reached Hamburg, and
-dined with Mr. Hanbury, the English consul, on the
-following day. Among the company present were
-Baron von Schimmelmann and his lady, Baroness von
-Bülow, "a very elegant woman," and M. le Texier,
-who had been treasurer to Christian VII. during the
-memorable tour. On the next night Mr. Wraxall
-was gratified at the Opera with a sight of the celebrated,
-or rather notorious, Countess Holstein, of
-whom he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I examined her through my glass. She is doubtless
-pretty, though not in my opinion so divinely fair
-as fame says. Her history at Hirschholm is well
-known. There was no gallantry, I thought, marked
-in her features, though 'tis said she certainly has that
-quality in her constitution. I thought of the unhappy
-Brandt as I looked at her."</p>
-
-<p>At this time the city of Altona, only half a mile
-from Hamburg, was crowded with the adherents and
-partisans of the queen, many of them being of the
-first families in Denmark. Hamburg offered more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-amusements than Altona, and they were therefore
-constantly to be found in the houses of the opulent
-citizens. Baron von Bülow, master of the horse to the
-Queen of Denmark, who was arrested at the time of
-the palace revolution, and eventually exiled to Altona,
-was among the number. They had already conceived
-the plan of effecting a counter revolution, and of
-restoring Queen Matilda, an enterprise to which they
-were urged by many motives.</p>
-
-<p>The new ministry in Denmark was already growing
-unpopular from its weakness, languor, and incapacity.
-It was understood that the king ardently desired the
-return of his consort. The engaging qualities, fortitude,
-and talents of that princess, rendered more interesting
-by adversity, had awakened the attachment
-of the Danes. A numerous and powerful party in
-the capital and throughout the nation anxiously desired
-her restoration.</p>
-
-<p>It was indispensable, in the first instance, previous
-to any attempt on the part of the exiled nobility, to
-ascertain with precision the sentiments of the queen
-herself. It was important for them to know whether
-she was willing to return to Copenhagen to resume
-the sovereign authority, which the king was incapable
-of exercising, and to co-operate with her friends toward
-her re-establishment. But the attempt to open
-any communication with the queen was equally dangerous
-and difficult. Though Celle was only eighty
-English miles distant from Hamburg and Altona,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-still, as the northern bank of the Elbe was in, or close
-to the Danish territory, the journey to and from Celle
-was extremely perilous. The latter court, as well as
-Altona, was full of spies and emissaries, maintained
-by the party possessing the authority at Copenhagen.
-Such were their suspicions, and so great was their
-vigilance, that no person could have passed and re-passed
-between those places without being watched.
-These impediments had hitherto prevented the queen's
-adherents from venturing to send any of their own
-body to lay their projects before her Majesty; nor did
-they appear to have found any other person to whom
-they could confide the execution of so momentous a
-commission. They were still under this embarrassment
-when chance threw Mr. Wraxall in their way.</p>
-
-<p>Having supped at the house of Mr. Jerome Matthiesen,
-where several of the Danish nobility were invited,
-Mr. Wraxall was led to talk about Denmark, from
-which country he had so recently returned. He expressed,
-with the warmth natural to a young man and
-an Englishman, his respect for Queen Caroline Matilda,
-his concern for her sufferings, and his detestation of
-the proceedings of her enemies. These sentiments,
-delivered without reserve or disguise, impressed the
-persons present that he might be induced to undertake
-the commission of repairing to Celle, negotiating
-with the queen, and taking an active part in their intended
-enterprise for her restoration.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three of the principal persons concerned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-having met on the following day, agreed to sound Mr.
-Wraxall's dispositions, and if they found them such
-as they had reason to suppose, they determined to
-confide their project to him. Mr. le Texier, brother-in-law
-of Mr. Matthiesen, was selected to execute this
-task. From the nature of his employment at the Danish
-court, this gentleman necessarily had an intimate
-knowledge of all the political intrigues as well as the
-secret history of the Danish court. At the revolution,
-he had been sent to Altona. This gentleman cultivated
-Mr. Wraxall's friendship with marked assiduity,
-visited him frequently, and turned the conversation on
-the affairs of Denmark. In order to gain Mr. Wraxall's
-confidence, he unfolded to him the concealed causes
-and springs alluded to. He inveighed against the mal-administration
-of the Dowager Queen Juliana and her
-son Prince Frederick; lamented the misfortunes of
-Queen Matilda, and expressed his wishes for her restoration.</p>
-
-<p>On October 3, 1774, Le Texier called again on Mr.
-Wraxall, and being together alone, he asked him, after
-some rather mysterious and preparatory conversation,
-"if he would be ready, and if he were disposed, to
-serve the Queen of Denmark?"<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wraxall immediately answered in the affirmative;
-and though he was on the point of returning to
-England, assured his visitor that he was ready to devote
-his labour, and risk his life, if necessary, in such
-a cause. Le Texier expressed his strong satisfaction
-at the reply; conjured Mr. Wraxall to be silent on
-everything that had passed, and undertook, without
-delay, to take measures for introducing Mr. Wraxall
-to the persons at whose request he had sounded him.
-Mr. le Texier then left his new ally, in order, as he
-said, to make his report to his friends, which they were
-expecting with anxiety and impatience.</p>
-
-<p>On October 5, Mr. le Texier brought to Mr. Wraxall's
-lodgings the eldest son of Baron von Schimmelmann,
-and left them together. The baron, after exacting a
-solemn promise of secrecy, disclosed, not without marks
-of great agitation and apprehension, a project which had
-been formed for restoring the Queen of Denmark. He
-reminded his hearer that his life, his fortune (one of
-the greatest in reversion of any in Denmark), were
-entrusted to a stranger, as well as those of all the persons
-engaged in the undertaking. They then entered
-upon business; and the baron divulged the plans and
-the means by which it might be effected. At a second<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-interview on October 7, Baron von Schimmelmann informed
-Mr. Wraxall that, as he was on the point of
-setting out for Copenhagen, in order to arrange many
-circumstances preparatory to, and indispensable for,
-carrying out this plan, the latter would receive his
-further instructions from Baron von Bülow.</p>
-
-<p>After several interviews with this nobleman, it was
-finally arranged that Mr. Wraxall should set out for
-Celle with all practicable despatch. But points of
-material consequence must previously be adopted.
-Among them, the most important were the agent's
-credentials and despatches. It was dangerous to
-commit anything to paper, as he might be stopped,
-searched, and discovered on the road, which, in more
-than one place, ran through the dominions of Denmark.
-On the other hand, it was indispensable to
-convince the queen that he was invested with powers
-to treat with her, on the part of the noblemen exiled
-to Altona, as well as other persons in various parts of
-the Danish territories. To obviate these difficulties,
-the following expedients were determined on:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Baron von Bülow delivered to Mr. Wraxall in lieu
-of credentials a seal, with which, when in Queen
-Matilda's family, he was accustomed to seal those
-private or confidential communications that he often,
-from the nature of his office, had occasion to make to
-her. He assured Mr. Wraxall that, so soon as her
-Majesty should see it, she would have no doubt of his
-coming from the baron, and would have faith in what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-he was empowered to impart. This seal was to be
-produced in the event of Caroline Matilda assenting
-to the plan.</p>
-
-<p>The plan was, that a numerous and powerful party
-was disposed to restore her to the throne, and that
-they had invested Mr. Wraxall, as their agent and
-representative, with powers to treat with her. They
-were ready and willing to incur all the dangers or
-hazard annexed to such an enterprise, provided she,
-on her part, agreed to three conditions:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><em>First.</em> That she assured them of her willingness
-to return to Denmark, and to assume the reins of
-government, which the king was incapacitated to
-direct in person.</p>
-
-<p><em>Secondly.</em> That she engaged to co-operate with, and
-to assist her adherents in every way and by every
-mode in her power.</p>
-
-<p><em>Thirdly.</em> That she would endeavour to induce the
-King of Great Britain, her brother, to extend his protection
-and assistance toward the success of the enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>As for obvious reasons it would have been imprudent
-and hazardous to commit these propositions to
-paper, it was left to Mr. Wraxall to draw up a letter
-to the queen as soon as he arrived at Celle. It
-was likewise settled that, in order more effectually to
-evade suspicion or enquiry, he should, on leaving
-Celle, proceed to Hanover, as if on his way to Holland,
-and thence return by cross-roads to Hamburg. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-case her Majesty assented to the three propositions
-made her, Mr. Wraxall was authorized to name
-Baron von Bülow, and young Baron von Schimmelmann,
-as the two avowed chiefs of the proposed
-counter-revolution. No other names were entrusted
-to him, as these two were judged sufficient in this
-early stage of the business; eight days were calculated
-as adequate for the purposes of the mission, and a
-spot was fixed on in the city of Hamburg where Mr.
-Wraxall, on his return, should meet Baron von Bülow
-at a certain hour.</p>
-
-<p>Thus authorized and instructed, the agent set out
-from Hamburg on the evening of October 8, 1774,
-travelled all night, and reached Celle on the ensuing
-evening. He learned immediately, to his great regret,
-that the Hereditary Princess of Brunswick was
-then in the castle, on a visit to her sister, the queen.
-Her presence augmented the difficulties of his errand,
-and the Danish nobility had warned him to be on his
-guard with respect to her. They dreaded lest the
-queen, from motives of affection and confidence, might
-communicate to her the nature or purpose of his
-errand. They were equally afraid of her suspecting
-or discovering it. These apprehensions were founded
-on the circumstance that the queen dowager of Denmark,
-Juliana Maria, was sister to the then reigning
-Duke of Brunswick, and aunt to the hereditary
-prince.</p>
-
-<p>One great and important arrangement yet remained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-to be made ere Mr. Wraxall could advance further,&mdash;the
-mode of delivering his despatches to the queen.
-It was hardly practicable to present a letter to her,
-except in public; and even to do that, a pretext was
-necessary, which might have, at least, an air of
-plausibility. Mr. Wraxall, while at Hamburg, had
-accidentally heard Mr. Mathias, the British minister,
-say that he might have occasion to write to her
-Majesty at Celle on the subject of a company of
-comedians, who were accustomed to repair thither
-annually in the autumn, to play for the amusement
-of the queen. Mr. Wraxall, therefore, determined
-to say that he was the bearer of such a letter from
-Mr. Mathias, of which he had taken charge on his
-way back to England, through Hanover and Holland.
-He was well aware that he should have the honour
-of an invitation to dine at her Majesty's table, and
-as no better mode of communicating his errand to
-her offered itself, he resolved to give the letter into
-the queen's hand in the drawing-room, when he
-should be presented to her before dinner.</p>
-
-<p>Having formed this resolution, Mr. Wraxall sat
-down on the night of his arrival in Celle and drew up
-a despatch, addressed to her Majesty, in which he
-stated every circumstance relating to his mission.
-He entered into the requisite detail, only reserving the
-names of the noblemen who had sent him, until he
-should have the honour of being admitted to a private
-interview with the queen. He stated the conditions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-demanded of her, and concluded by entreating her to
-favour him with as quick and explicit an answer as
-the nature of the subject would admit. He especially
-requested her Majesty to take some occasion of re-delivering
-his letter to him, for two reasons: one, that it
-might be unsafe for such a document to remain in her
-hands; the other, that the contents of it would be the
-best testimony to the persons for whom he was acting
-that he had accurately conceived and faithfully executed
-the purpose for which he was sent.</p>
-
-<p>Conscious, nevertheless, that such a communication,
-made to the queen at a moment when she was totally
-unprepared for it, before witnesses and in the presence
-of the Hereditary Princess of Brunswick, might disconcert
-and agitate her, Mr. Wraxall felt the necessity
-of guarding against so dangerous an accident as
-far as possible. Hence he wrote on the first page of
-the letter the following words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"As the contents of the subsequent letter are of a nature
-which involve in them your Majesty's dearest interests,
-and even your crown and dignity, it is my duty
-earnestly to supplicate you, that you will be pleased on
-no consideration to peruse them at the present moment;
-but to read them when alone. I am likewise bound
-to entreat you that, as you regard the safety and welfare
-of those who are most devoted to your service,
-you will endeavour not to betray any agitation or emotion
-in your countenance or manner; and, above all,
-that you will observe the strictest precaution to pre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>vent
-her Royal Highness the Princess of Brunswick
-from entertaining any suspicion."</p>
-
-<p>These necessary and preparatory precautions having
-been taken, Mr. Wraxall called next morning on
-Baron von Seckendorf, the queen's chamberlain. Having
-mentioned that he had a letter for her Majesty
-from the English minister at Hamburg relative, as he
-understood, to the comedians who were accustomed to
-visit Celle in that season, the baron waited on the
-queen to inform her of the fact. Mr. Wraxall received
-an invitation to dine at court in consequence, and went
-at two o'clock to the castle. When the queen and
-the Princess of Brunswick came together out of their
-own apartments into the drawing-room, where the few
-persons who composed the court were assembled, her
-Majesty, advancing toward Mr. Wraxall, said:</p>
-
-<p>"I am glad to see you here again: I understand that
-you have a letter for me from Mr. Mathias?"</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wraxall presented it, and the queen withdrew
-a few steps to a window to read it. At the same moment
-the princess addressed Mr. Wraxall, and he contrived
-to detain her in conversation while the queen
-was employed with the letter. He noticed her Majesty
-hastily put it in her pocket, while her face betrayed
-the agitation of her mind in the most visible manner.
-Fortunately, about that minute dinner was announced,
-and the company followed the queen into the eating-room.</p>
-
-<p>At table, Caroline Matilda recovered herself, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-conversed with her usual freedom and gaiety. The
-queen and princess were seated in two state chairs,
-separated nearly five feet from each other. When the
-dessert was brought, the queen, unable any longer to
-restrain her curiosity and impatience, took the letter
-from her pocket, and, placing it in her lap, perused it
-from the beginning to the end. From time to time
-she raised her eyes, and took part in the conversation.
-The distance at which she was from the Princess of
-Brunswick rendered it impossible for the letter to be
-overlooked. After taking coffee, the two princesses
-withdrew, and Mr. Wraxall returned to the inn where
-he lodged.</p>
-
-<p>In about three hours Baron von Seckendorf waited
-on him, and informed him that her Majesty had sent
-him in the quality of her confidential agent: that she
-had perused with great attention the letter, the contents
-of which she had communicated to him, and had
-chosen him from among the persons composing her
-court to conduct the business on her part. He added,
-that the queen would, with the utmost readiness, grant
-Mr. Wraxall that same night the audience he desired,
-if the presence of the princess her sister, who never
-quitted her for a moment, did not render it dangerous
-and impossible. She fully felt the necessity of caution,
-and the suspicions which even Mr. Wraxall's stay at
-Celle might occasion. Under these circumstances, she
-wished and enjoined Mr. Wraxall to deliver his credentials
-to Baron von Seckendorf, and confide to him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-the names of the noblemen from whom he came, as
-well as every other particular not contained in the
-letter.</p>
-
-<p>Thus authorized, and after receiving from Baron
-von Seckendorf his most solemn promises of fidelity
-and secrecy, Mr. Wraxall delivered to him Baron von
-Bülow's ring, and acquainted him with everything
-necessary to be laid before the queen. On the following
-morning the baron returned with the queen's
-answer, which Mr. Wraxall at once committed to
-paper in his presence. It was to the following
-effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>That her Majesty, being under the immediate protection,
-and depending on the king her brother, could
-not consent to any proposition involving her future
-destiny and interests, without obtaining his consent
-and approbation. That, if she only consulted her own
-tranquillity and happiness, she would never desire to
-revisit Copenhagen, where she had been so unworthily
-treated. But that the duties of a mother, and a queen,
-being superior to every other sentiment, impelled her
-not only to forgive these outrages, but to resume her
-station in Denmark. That, as far, therefore, as depended
-on herself, she agreed to the propositions made
-by the Danish nobility, provided it should appear to
-her, on further information, that they were sufficiently
-powerful to effect the intended counter-revolution.
-That she desired to be more fully informed at
-Mr. Wraxall's next visit of the names of the principal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-persons concerned, and the means. Lastly, that she
-would write in the most pressing and strenuous manner
-to his Britannic Majesty, whenever it should be
-judged proper so to do, requesting of him to lend his
-aid and assistance toward effecting her restoration.</p>
-
-<p>The queen, at the same time, returned Mr. Wraxall
-Baron Bülow's seal, which she had recognised, and
-the letter which he had addressed to herself. In conformity
-with a request Mr. Wraxall had made, the
-queen had subscribed on the first page of the letter
-the initials of her name C. M. She likewise inclosed
-it in a cover, addressed in her own handwriting to
-Baron von Bülow, and sealed with one of her private
-seals.</p>
-
-<p>Baron von Seckendorf enjoined Mr. Wraxall from
-the queen to return as soon as possible to Celle, where
-she hoped to be able to admit him to an audience.
-She likewise desired that he would then give, on being
-stopped at the gates, a French name, which she suggested,
-as by that means, on seeing the report of all
-strangers who arrived at Celle, which was brought
-to her every morning, she should be apprised of his
-return. It was settled that on Mr. Wraxall's next
-visit to Celle he should take care to arrive in the night,
-go round the city, and lodge at a little obscure inn,
-called the "Sandkrug," in one of the suburbs.</p>
-
-<p>Having received this satisfactory answer from her
-Majesty, Mr. Wraxall left Celle immediately and proceeded
-to Hanover, where he remained two days. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-then crossed a large portion of the Electorate to Harburg,
-and reached Hamburg on the evening of October
-15, 1774. On the morning of the 17th he repaired to
-the place when Baron von Bülow had arranged to meet
-him. The latter affected not to notice him, and turning,
-Mr. Wraxall followed him through a number of
-streets, till they arrived on the ramparts of the city.
-There, upon a retired bastion, Mr. Wraxall delivered
-the baron the letter, whose seal and address he immediately
-recognised as those of the queen, saying,
-"Oui, bon, je reconnais bien cette écriture." Mr.
-Wraxall then related to him all the circumstances of
-his journey, the mode he employed to deliver his letter
-to the queen, and the subsequent interview with Baron
-von Seckendorf. The baron approved highly of all
-that had been done; promised to communicate the
-particulars, and the queen's reply to his associates;
-and requested Mr. Wraxall to hold himself in readiness
-to return to Celle.</p>
-
-<p>During the next six days the couple contrived to
-meet several times, though in the meanwhile the baron
-made excursions into Holstein, in order to lay before
-his friends the state of the business, and to concert the
-most judicious means for carrying it on to the desired
-completion. On October 23, Mr. Wraxall received
-from him his instructions for his second journey to
-Celle. They were, as before, only verbal, and the
-agent was empowered to commit them to paper when
-he should arrive there, observing the same precautions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-in receiving them back. They were to the following
-effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"That the Danish nobility were grateful for, and
-perfectly satisfied with, the answer made by her
-Majesty to their proposals, and that they should proceed,
-in consequence, to concert measures for executing
-at a proper time the intended revolution in her
-favour. That Baron von Bülow, in addition to his
-own name, and that of young Baron von Schimmelmann,
-was empowered to vouch for Count von Laurvig,
-his father-in-law, the viceroy of Norway, who was to
-secure that kingdom and its capital, Christiania, for
-the queen. That old Baron von Schimmelmann,
-though he refused to take any active part in the enterprise,
-or to risk by any overt act his safety and
-fortune, was sincerely attached to the cause. That
-the governor of Glückstadt, one of the most important
-places and fortresses in Holstein, was disposed to aid
-the queen. That Rendsburg, the key of the duchy
-of Schleswig, would open its gates, as the party had
-secret adherents in the garrison, who would declare
-themselves, when it should prove necessary.</p>
-
-<p>"That their friends were numerous and powerful in
-the army, the navy, the guards, in the metropolis, and
-even about the person of the king himself. But, that
-they besought her Majesty to repose on the honour
-and assurances given by Baron von Bülow, as representing
-the party, and entreated her not to insist on
-the disclosure of their names&mdash;a disclosure which could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-be of little or no advantage or gratification to her, and
-which might be fatal to them. That they unanimously
-and earnestly requested her to write to the King
-of England immediately, and confide the letter to their
-agent, urging the indispensable necessity of his sending
-a minister to the court of Copenhagen, where there
-was then only a resident, and authorizing such
-minister to declare, at the time when the counter-revolution
-was being effected, that the King of Great
-Britain was acquainted with it, approved of it, and
-would maintain it with all his power.</p>
-
-<p>"That, as considerable expenses must necessarily be
-incurred in conducting and executing a project of
-such magnitude and importance, they hoped that the
-King of Great Britain, if he approved of the attempt
-to restore his sister, would be graciously pleased to
-assist the persons engaged in her cause with some
-immediate pecuniary assistance. They besought the
-queen to recommend this object to her brother. That
-during the winter they would perform everything for
-striking the blow, and would, if the answer from England
-were favourable, proceed to execute it as soon in
-the ensuing spring as the two Belts should be free
-from ice, and the communication open between the
-island of Seeland and the mainland of Jütland.</p>
-
-<p>"That they hoped her Majesty would be pleased to
-communicate to Baron von Bülow the tenor of her
-letter to the King of England, as on his reply, in a
-great measure, depended the progress and success of
-the enterprise. Baron von Bülow particularly enjoined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-Mr. Wraxall to ask the queen whether she
-would consent to quit Celle and repair to Altona in
-disguise, if such a step should at a future time be
-thought expedient or necessary."</p>
-
-<p>Previous to Mr. Wraxall's departure from Hamburg,
-he agreed on a meeting with Baron von Bülow,
-on October 28, at a posthouse in the wood of Zährendorf,
-a solitary hamlet nearly equi-distant from Celle
-and Altona. It was settled, that on leaving Celle, Mr.
-Wraxall should repair to Zährendorf, <em>en route</em> to
-Holland, and that the baron, disguised as a dealer in
-goods, should go to the same posthouse, without any
-attendant. As two travellers, it would be easy to
-meet and to pass some hours together, in so unfrequented
-a place, during the night.</p>
-
-<p>This matter adjusted, Mr. Wraxall set out on
-October 23rd, but, in order to elude suspicion from
-passing the same road so frequently, he took the
-Lüneburg road. Between three and four o'clock in the
-morning of the 26th he reached the gates of Celle,
-and, after making use of the name suggested by the
-queen, drove round to the little inn in the suburbs.
-Baron von Seckendorf having set out on that very morning
-to pay a visit to Hanover, Mr. Wraxall was obliged
-to send an express to him, acquainting him with his
-arrival, and requesting his immediate return. After
-which, Mr. Wraxall remained concealed in the inn the
-whole day, and employed himself in drawing up his
-despatch to her Majesty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Early on the following morning the baron entered
-Mr. Wraxall's room, and informed him, to his no small
-satisfaction, that the Princess of Brunswick was not
-then in Celle. Mr. Wraxall delivered his letters for
-the queen, which the baron went immediately to
-the castle to deliver. About four hours after he returned,
-and desired Mr. Wraxall to go without the
-loss of a moment to the Jardin François, a large garden
-without the city belonging to the Elector of Hanover,
-where her Majesty would go to meet him. He had
-not arrived there more than ten minutes when the
-queen drove up in her coach. She sent away the
-carriage and all her attendants, except one lady, who
-remained the whole time. The interview lasted about
-an hour, during the greater part of which they
-walked in one of the private vistas of the garden.
-Toward the end of it, the queen took Mr. Wraxall
-into a pavilion where a dessert of fruit was laid, and
-he then withdrew by her Majesty's permission.<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> The
-substance of the conversation was of so important a
-nature that I feel bound to quote it <em>in extenso</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Having attentively perused the letter which I had
-written to her in the name and by order of the Danish
-nobility, she was perfectly satisfied with it in every
-particular. That the persons named as engaged in
-the cause were sufficient to inspire confidence, and
-that, relying in a special manner on the attachment,
-zeal, and talents of Baron von Bülow, she would dispense
-with his divulging the names of any more of
-his associates. That in compliance equally with their
-desire and with her own wishes, she would, without loss
-of time, write to her brother. That, if the time permitted,
-she would readily give in a copy of her intended
-letter to be shown Baron von Bülow for his satisfaction,
-and that of his friends; but that, as my interview
-with him in the wood of Zährendorf was to take place
-on the following day, and could not be postponed, she
-must of necessity delay writing the letter. That she
-would, therefore, send it by the royal Hanoverian
-courier, who would set out for London in two days,
-a conveyance, the expedition and safety of which might
-be relied on.</p>
-
-<p>That, by so doing, his Britannic Majesty would not
-only be apprised of my intended arrival, but also of
-my errand, and, as she hoped, be disposed to give
-me a prompt and favourable reply. That Baron von
-Bülow might trust to her for writing with energy and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-earnestness. That she would press her brother to
-send a minister to Copenhagen without delay, and
-would, in a peculiar manner, urge the necessity of
-advancing to the party engaged in her restoration a
-sum of money. That she thought Baron von Bülow
-must know her well enough to be convinced that she
-was ready to repair to her friends in any disguise that
-could be pointed out; but she was persuaded the king
-her brother would never permit it. Still, she added,
-could I come, or did I come disguised, nobody would
-know me, as I am much altered since I was in Denmark.</p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty entered on the state of her own finances,
-and lamented to me that the limited nature of her income,
-as well as some debts which she had contracted
-in Holland, rendered it impossible for her to contribute
-herself toward a cause in which she was so deeply interested.
-That she had not any jewels, the Danes
-having taken from her everything of that kind on her
-quitting Denmark. She was pleased to express her
-regret at not having it in her power to give me any
-testimony of her approbation, but she assured me of
-her future protection and recommendation to the King
-of Great Britain. "You must," she said, "go very
-quietly to work with my brother; if we manage with
-address, he will favour the attempt; but it will be
-tacitly, not openly."</p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty gave me very minute instructions for
-my conduct, in case I should have the honour to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-admitted by the king to an audience in London. She
-moreover charged me with some private and confidential
-things relative to her sister, the Princess of
-Brunswick, which she enjoined me, on no consideration,
-to impart to any one, except to the king himself,
-and not even to him, unless I should see an opening to
-do it with a prospect of good.</p>
-
-<p>On the mode and channel by which I should approach
-his Britannic Majesty, she told me she had
-reflected seriously, and, after mature deliberation, had
-determined on the following course:&mdash;That by the
-Hanoverian courier she would write to Lord Suffolk,
-then secretary of state for the northern department,
-and whose conduct toward her at the time of the revolution
-in Denmark, she said, merited her utmost regard.
-That she would only say in her letter to him, that "a
-gentleman, Mr. Wraxall, would shortly wait on him,
-charged, on her part, with a very secret and important
-commission. That she requested him to give credit
-to everything communicated to him by Mr. Wraxall,
-and, above all, to aid and accelerate by every means
-in his power the object of that commission."</p>
-
-<p>As, however, it might be, she conceived, more grateful
-to the king, her brother, that a negotiation so delicate
-and so peculiar should be transacted through a private,
-rather than through a public, channel; she likewise
-determined to write, by the Hanoverian courier,
-to the Baron von Lichtenstein. That nobleman, who
-occupied the post of marshal of the court of Hanover,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-was, she said, then on a visit to England. He had
-the honour to be much distinguished by the king, and
-he had given many proofs of his devotion to her interests;
-she, therefore, would write to him to the
-same effect as to Lord Suffolk, leaving me at liberty,
-according to my discretion, to apply to either on my
-arrival in London, but preferring, as far as regarded
-her own predilection, the medium of Lord Suffolk.
-She enjoined me, further, to write to her after I had
-met Baron von Bülow, and likewise from England,
-only observing, in both cases, the precaution of enclosing
-my letters, under cover, to Baron von Seckendorf.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>During the evening, Mr. Wraxall called on Baron
-von Seckendorf, from whom be received a minute of
-the proposed letter to the King of England, sent by
-the queen, which he would communicate to Baron
-von Bülow. At ten o'clock at night, Mr. Wraxall
-started for Zährendorf, which place he reached in the
-ensuing afternoon. A short time before nightfall, the
-baron arrived, dressed as a tradesman, in an open
-post-waggon. The couple passed more than eight
-hours together. Mr. Wraxall gave the baron the
-documents; the latter approved of every measure
-taken, and authorized Mr. Wraxall to assure the
-queen so by letter, as well as to renew to her, in
-the name of the party, every possible protestation of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-zeal and adherence. He also begged Mr. Wraxall to
-hasten back from England as soon as he could, and to
-be assured of the gratitude of those persons in whose
-service he was engaged.<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a></p>
-
-<p>About one in the morning the baron and Mr.
-Wraxall parted. Previous to the separation, the latter
-received a cypher for the future correspondence,
-which it was agreed should be carried on under cover
-to Mr. le Texier, as less likely to excite suspicion,
-and that all Mr. Wraxall's letters should be addressed
-to Mr. Matthiesen, at Hamburg. The baron then returned
-to Altona, by the same conveyance which had
-brought him, and the next morning Mr. Wraxall
-started for England <em>viâ</em> Osnabrück. In the latter city
-he had a trifling adventure, which seems extracted
-from Casanova's Memoirs. I will give it in his own
-words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I walked over the town, and returned to dinner
-at four. At about six my servant announced a "gentleman,"
-who would do himself the honour of speaking
-to me. He came in, sat down, and stayed an hour.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>He requested me to sup with him and Monsieur le
-Comte de Marazzani and his lady. I excused myself
-on account of fatigue. He spoke English, French,
-Russian, Italian, Latin: he was young, apparently of
-my own age. Finding I would not accept his invitation,
-he took leave, first telling me he was the Baron
-de Stampe, a German nobleman. I was, I must own,
-a little surprised at his visit and manner of introducing
-himself&mdash;'twas odd!</p>
-
-<p>"<em>Tuesday</em>, <em>November</em> 1.&mdash;I went, at about nine, to
-visit the count, countess, and baron. 'Twas a miserable
-apartment I was shown into. Madame la Comtesse
-was a little woman, very young, pretty in face, and her
-complexion fair. I kissed her hand, and must avow
-she had a very fine hand. They pressed me to stay
-dinner, or at least to remain in Osnabrück till two or
-three o'clock, after which time they would, if necessary,
-submit to losing me. I saw at once the deception.
-She squeezed my hand, and added a thousand
-pressing instances to induce me to stay. I pleaded
-urgent business. The count insisted on accompanying
-me to the inn, and would not be refused. When we
-arrived, he walked in, told me in a few words that he
-just then was in need of a little money, that his letters
-of credit were not arrived, that his servant had stolen
-seventy guineas and his lady's gold watch; that, therefore,
-he must request me to lend him a few ducats.
-I pitied him, and, had my fortunes been sufficient,
-would not have hesitated an instant to have <em>given</em> him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-what he asked. But I could not, for I had not even
-enough to permit me diminishing my stock, and most
-frankly told him so. He reasoned the point, pressed,
-requested, but 'twas impossible to comply, so he very
-politely took leave, promising to visit me in England.
-I might, I am convinced, have received the payment
-from Madame la Comtesse&mdash;<em>there</em> was the temptation,
-but with such adventurers was too dangerous. They
-might have served me a worse trick than Don Raphael
-and Lamela did by poor Gil Blas, and I might have
-had more reason to remember the Countess Marazzani
-than he had Doña Camilla. 'Twas a droll adventure:
-doubtless their intention was to have won my money
-by cards or love."</p>
-
-<p>On November 13, Mr. Wraxall embarked from
-Helvoetsluys, and arrived at Harwich on the following
-day. To quote his own words: "This day shall ever
-be sacred in my calendar. I had now finished my
-tour through the northern kingdoms, and was once
-more in my native country, after being absent seven
-months and three days, from the 10th of April last.
-I returned thanks to the protecting gods who had
-carried me, unhurt, through so many barbarous nations
-and Polar regions."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">'TWIXT THE CUP AND THE LIP.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">BARON VON LICHTENSTEIN&mdash;THE KING'S INSTRUCTIONS&mdash;THE
-ANSWER FROM HAMBURG&mdash;THE FOUR ARTICLES&mdash;A TERRIBLE
-JOURNEY&mdash;ARRIVAL AT CELLE&mdash;INTERVIEW WITH THE
-QUEEN&mdash;BARON VON SECKENDORF&mdash;THE ANSWER FROM COPENHAGEN&mdash;THE
-APPEAL TO GEORGE III.&mdash;THE COUNTER-REVOLUTION&mdash;ANOTHER
-VISIT TO CELLE&mdash;THE LAST INTERVIEW&mdash;THE
-QUEEN'S GRATITUDE&mdash;RETURN TO LONDON&mdash;WAITING
-FOR THE ANSWER&mdash;A SUDDEN BLOW</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>As the queen, in her instructions to Mr. Wraxall at
-Celle, had left it entirely at his option, on his arrival
-in London, to wait either on Lord Suffolk or Baron
-von Lichtenstein, though expressing a degree of preference
-for the former, he went, on November 15, to
-Lord Suffolk's residence in Downing Street. Being
-admitted, a private secretary requested Mr. Wraxall
-to inform him of the nature of his business: Lord
-Suffolk not only being confined to his bed-chamber by
-gout, but unable, from the violence of his disorder, to
-see any one. Mr. Wraxall informed him, in answer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-that as his business was of a nature which could only
-be communicated to Lord Suffolk in person, he would
-call again in a day or two, by which time his lordship
-might be able to see him.</p>
-
-<p>Conceiving it, however, injudicious to lose a moment
-that could be avoided in opening the object of his mission,
-Mr. Wraxall went directly to the lodgings of
-Baron von Lichtenstein, in Chidleigh Court, Pall Mall.
-The baron was at home, and so soon as the agent acquainted
-him with his name, he expressed his satisfaction
-at Mr. Wraxall's arrival; he produced the queen's
-letter announcing the intended visitor, and assured the
-latter that it would be as much his wish as he felt
-it his duty to comply with the Queen of Denmark's
-commands. He added, that so soon as Mr. Wraxall
-should have put him in possession of the necessary
-facts, he would endeavour to find an occasion for
-laying the whole matter before the king.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wraxall informed the baron of his having
-been at Lord Suffolk's house, but that he had not seen
-his lordship on account of his indisposition. The baron
-entreated him not to call again on Lord Suffolk till
-he should have seen his Majesty, and taken his pleasure
-on that point, which he promised to do, as far as
-depended on himself, without delay. In a long and
-confidential conversation, Mr. Wraxall laid before the
-baron the proposals made to the queen by the Danish
-nobility, her answer, and the objects intended to be
-effected by his present errand to George III. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-baron reiterated his assurances of co-operating toward
-their success, and fixed a day for Mr. Wraxall coming
-again to him, to know how he had proceeded in the
-business.</p>
-
-<p>Three days afterwards, the two gentlemen had a
-second interview, when the baron stated that he had
-conversed with his Majesty at the queen's house on the
-matter; that he had to communicate to Mr. Wraxall,
-in the first place, the king's positive injunctions not
-to mention the object of his journey and negotiations
-to Lord Suffolk, but to consider him (Baron von
-Lichtenstein) as the sole medium through which all
-matters relative thereto were to pass to the king. His
-Majesty had received the queen his sister's letters by
-the Hanoverian courier, and would maturely consider
-their contents before he should give any answer to
-them. To prevent any reflections on the part of the
-court of Copenhagen at his having seen and conversed
-with an agent of the Danish nobility and the queen,
-in case that the present attempt were either discovered
-or found unsuccessful, the king judged it fit not
-to admit Mr. Wraxall to a personal interview. It
-was therefore his pleasure that Mr. Wraxall should
-communicate to him on paper, through Baron von
-Lichtenstein, every circumstance touching the business;
-explaining the causes and reasons which had
-induced the exiled nobility at Altona to confide to his
-honour so secret and delicate a matter.</p>
-
-<p>His Majesty also desired to know from Mr. Wraxall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-the names of the principal persons concerned in the
-enterprise, and the precise time, mode, and place, when
-and by which they proposed to accomplish the queen's
-restoration. Baron von Lichtenstein added, that his
-Majesty manifested favourable dispositions, but would
-give no opinion till he was enabled to judge of the
-means possessed by the queen's adherents to carry
-their proposals into effect.</p>
-
-<p>Thus commanded, Mr. Wraxall sat down and drew
-up a statement of the whole transaction, going into
-every point suggested by the king. In so doing, he
-pointed out, to the best of his judgment or information,
-the manner in which the queen's adherents had
-laid their plan for the counter-revolution. Mr. Wraxall,
-however, was compelled to avow his ignorance
-of many parts of their future plan, either as having
-never been entrusted to him, or as being in their
-own nature incapable of arrangement till the time
-of their accomplishment approached. Mr. Wraxall
-transmitted this paper to the king through Baron
-von Lichtenstein.</p>
-
-<p>On October 5, Mr. Wraxall received the king's
-answer to the propositions, which the baron communicated
-to him. It was verbal, and to the following
-effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"His Majesty, relying on the means possessed by
-the Danish nobility attached to the queen his sister
-to effect her restoration, and having thoroughly considered
-their plans, consented to and approved of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-intended attempt in her favour. But the existing
-treaties between the two courts of Copenhagen and
-St. James's did not allow him to lend any direct assistance
-toward its execution. He, therefore, would
-not advance any money at present, though he would
-not object to guarantee the restitution of the sums
-necessarily expended in his sister's restoration, after
-the completion of the enterprise. Finally, he should
-not be induced by any entreaties of the queen, or by
-the applications of the Danish nobility, to affix his
-signature to a paper promising aid, or even expressing
-his approbation of the attempt itself."<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a></p>
-
-<p>By Baron von Lichtenstein's advice, Mr. Wraxall
-transmitted on the following day this answer of the
-king to Baron von Bülow, in cypher: desiring directions
-for his future conduct. Mr. Wraxall also communicated
-it to the queen and to Baron von Seckendorf.
-From the latter, he received an answer on
-January 3, 1775, expressing the queen's satisfaction
-at the king's consent, though she regretted the qualifications
-which accompanied it.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of Baron von Bülow's absence from
-Hamburg, and other impediments, Mr. Wraxall did
-not receive his answer till January 20, 1775: it was
-very short, and in cypher. The baron conjured Mr.
-Wraxall not to lose a moment in returning to Hamburg<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-with the king's approbation of their conduct,
-authenticated in whatever way might be practicable.
-He added, that his friends were busied in preparing
-everything for the expected blow, and that their anticipations
-of success were sanguine.<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> This letter
-Mr. Wraxall communicated at once to Baron von
-Lichtenstein, and its contents were laid before the
-king.</p>
-
-<p>On January 23, Baron von Lichtenstein informed
-Mr. Wraxall that the king would despatch him, in a
-few days, to Celle and Hamburg, adding, that he had
-reason to believe his Majesty intended to empower him
-(Lichtenstein) to sign certain articles, of which Mr.
-Wraxall should be the bearer, and which would, in a
-great measure, satisfy the Danish nobility. It was not
-till February 2 that Mr. Wraxall received his final
-orders and despatches; they were delivered to him by
-the baron, and consisted of a letter from the king to
-his sister, together with a paper containing four articles.
-The baron drew these up in Mr. Wraxall's presence;
-after which he affixed his seal and signature to them,
-as representing the King of Great Britain. The articles
-were to the following effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><em>First.</em> His Britannic Majesty gives his consent and
-approval to the plan concerted by the adherents of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-sister, the Queen of Denmark, for restoring her to the
-throne.</p>
-
-<p><em>Secondly.</em> His Britannic Majesty insists that, in
-the execution of it, no blood be spilled, nor any measures
-of severity exercised toward the present administration
-in Denmark, except such as are indispensable to
-maintain the counter-revolution.</p>
-
-<p><em>Thirdly.</em> His Britannic Majesty guarantees the repayment
-of all the money advanced or expended in the
-necessary prosecution of the Queen of Denmark's revolution.</p>
-
-<p><em>Fourthly.</em> His Britannic Majesty will authorize and
-empower his Resident at the court of Copenhagen to
-declare, in the most public manner, so soon as the revolution
-in favour of the queen is accomplished, that
-the King of Great Britain approves of it, and will maintain
-it against all opposition.</p>
-
-<p>Baron von Lichtenstein, when he had placed in Mr.
-Wraxall's hands these articles, which the latter saw him
-seal up, and place in a cover without an address, signified
-to him his Majesty's pleasure that he should set
-out on the following day for Celle. After delivering
-his letter to the queen, and the articles, signed in his
-name, for her perusal, Mr. Wraxall would receive the
-latter back from the queen, and proceed with them to
-the Danish nobility at Hamburg.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, on the afternoon of February 3, 1775,
-Mr. Wraxall left London, embarked at Harwich, and
-landed at Helvoetsluys on the evening of the 6th.
-Passing through Holland by Utrecht and Deventer, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-arrived on Sunday morning, the 12th, at daybreak, at
-the bank of the little river Dinckel, which divides the
-provinces of Over-Yssel from the circle of Westphalia.
-From this point, the "Private Journal" shall speak for
-itself, until the traveller arrives at Celle:&mdash;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><em>February</em> 12<em>th.</em>&mdash;I arrived at the house near the
-bank of the Dinckel as day broke: here I found the
-royal courier, who came over in the same packet with
-me from England. He had arrived here on Friday
-morning, but the waters were so deep that he had not
-dared to attempt the passage, with two carts laden
-with boxes and coffers. The inn was misery itself:
-oxen, pigs, men, and women all together. The courier
-assured me, that if he had not provided himself with
-provisions very amply, he should have been almost
-starved, nothing being procurable from the people.
-When I had drunk my chocolate, we walked forward
-half a quarter of a mile, to reconnoitre the spot, and
-see if it was practicable to pass over. After a long
-debate, the landlord of the house offered, for a few
-stivers, to mount one of the four horses, and endeavour
-to conduct us through it. In consequence of this resolution,
-they raised my trunks, by putting straw and
-turf under them to move them five feet from the surface
-of the ground, to prevent the water from spoiling
-my clothes. They would have persuaded me to get
-up behind the carriage, as, in case it overturned, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-might then have easily disengaged myself; but, notwithstanding,
-I got in: as to my clothes and linen, I
-trusted them cheerfully to fortune, and only reserved
-the letter with which I was charged, which I carried
-in my bosom, resolved that it should not perish, except
-with myself. We drove off about noon from the inn.
-When we came to the place, the two fore horses plunged
-in; the water was as high as their backs, how much
-deeper it might be I cannot pretend to say, as they
-immediately swam: the carriage floated likewise, and
-the horses drew it about twelve or fourteen paces in
-this manner, when we touched ground, and all the
-danger was over. Had there been a very violent stream
-or had not the horses done their part, the chaise must
-have inevitably been overturned&mdash;nothing could have
-saved it.</p>
-
-<p>* * * * * * Continuing my route from Bentheim,
-I got in the evening at about eight o'clock to
-Rheine. The roads were terrible, and I trembled
-continually for my own and my servant's safety. The
-moon, however, was our protection, and under her
-auspices and guidance we arrived safe. We passed
-through another small river, which was swollen with
-the rains to the breadth of three or four hundred
-paces. Happily, however, the depth was not above
-three or four feet, and we got through without any
-accident. The country all round us was deluged
-with water, and scarce appeared like land. Rheine
-is a small town belonging to the bishopric of Münster,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-not fortified, though surrounded with old walls.
-The postmaster appeared to be an obliging man, and
-the horses being ready, I set out at about ten o'clock
-at night. I had not driven more than a mile from the
-place when the carriage overturned; my servant's
-hand was cut by the glasses, which broke in pieces,
-but I escaped unhurt. The horses stood still, without
-attempting to drag the chaise, which, had they done,
-the consequences to us must have been very fatal, as
-some minutes elapsed ere we could get out at the
-windows.</p>
-
-<p>I despatched my servant back to the town for
-assistance, and the postilion to a neighbouring village
-on the same errand, while I remained alone with the
-carriage. My servant returned first, after an hour's
-absence, with an old man, the postmaster not choosing,
-or not being willing, to afford him any more help.
-We waited, therefore, for the postilion, who came at
-length, to our great joy, with four villagers, by whose
-endeavours we raised the carriage up once more, and
-returned to Rheine about midnight. I am most fully
-of opinion that the postilion did it purposely, and
-probably by his master's orders. The postmaster's
-behaviour justified this conjecture: he neither blamed
-the man, nor promised me any satisfaction; he only
-told me I had better forget it, and go to bed in his
-house. I did so, for what other course could I take
-in a country where I spoke the language very imperfectly,
-and in which I was absolutely at their mercy?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-To proceed without glasses at this season of the year,
-in the night, was not agreeable; and even if I would,
-the postmaster said he could give me no other postilion
-till the next morning, and to set out with the
-same would have been madness. I was tempted to
-severely chastise the driver myself, but the consequences
-which might have ensued deterred me. So I
-lay down in a miserable apartment, as large as an Egyptian
-hall, where the winds whistled in every corner. I
-made my servant lie in the same room, and held my
-pistols ready, but all was very tranquil during the
-night. Why the landlord should wish to overset my
-carriage, unless to make me return, and get a couple
-of guilders for my lodging, I do not know, but I am
-convinced it was a concerted affair.</p>
-
-<p><em>February</em> 13<em>th.</em>&mdash;The morning began most inauspiciously.
-It rained very hard, and blew with equal
-violence. I thought of the poor courier, who would
-be prevented by it from passing the Dinckel. I set
-out once more at eight o'clock from Rheine in this
-dismal weather and without glasses, not any being
-procurable at the place. It was, indeed, a terrifying
-view on all sides, and resembled a deluge or inundation.
-I recommended myself to God, and comforted
-myself by the thought that I undertook the
-journey in the service of my royal mistress. That I
-was not repeatedly overturned was almost a miracle;
-and had I been so in the great pieces of standing
-water through which I passed, the consequences might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-have been of the worst sort. I crossed the little
-river Aá, which was likewise swollen by the rain to a
-considerable size. I got at one o'clock to Ippenburen;
-from this place I had only eighteen miles to Osnabrück,
-but the road was so horribly bad that all I had
-yet seen sunk before it. A peasant who accompanied
-us on foot about four miles from Ippenburen supported
-the carriage at different places with his hands,
-or we must have been overset. The torrents of rain
-which had fallen made the highway so soft that the
-wheels sank up to the axletrees at every step. There
-were great holes made in the middle of the road large
-enough to take a man and horse. In other places it
-was so rough, I expected each moment that the axletrees,
-wheels, or brancards must go to pieces. We
-crossed two very dangerous waters by moonlight, in
-one of which a single inch more on one side must have
-precipitated us into a river, where we should, I
-think, have been both inevitably drowned. How we
-escaped and got safe to Osnabrück I do not know.
-In the bitterness of my heart, tired with such incessantly-repeated
-dangers and vexations, I cursed the
-errand, and swore that I would never again undertake
-a journey through Westphalia in the winter, let the
-inducement be what it would; but this was only
-momentary, and <em>now</em> I am ready, at my sovereign's
-command, to return through all if it should be necessary.
-'Twas near ten o'clock at night when I reached
-Osnabrück, to my no small comfort. I was fatigued<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-and sore with the continued shaking of the carriage;
-I wanted glasses to my chaise; I wanted repose; so I
-determined to stay the night.</p>
-
-<p>The landlord of the inn, after congratulating me on
-my safe arrival, implored me not to attempt to pass
-the river Weser at Stolzenau, which is the straight
-road to Hanover, but rather to go round ten miles by
-Minden, where there is a bridge across it. He showed
-me a letter he had just received from there, which
-said that the Weser was swollen to a prodigious size;
-that twenty-two dead bodies had been taken up at the
-bridge, floating on the water; that the danger of
-passing in a boat was extreme, and the inundation
-beyond any ever remembered. This induced me,
-though reluctantly, to take his advice as the safest, or
-at least the most certain in every point of view.</p>
-
-<p>About one o'clock in the afternoon I left Osnabrück,
-and arrived at Boomele, which is fifteen miles distant,
-at six. The road was, if possible, yet worse than all
-I had hitherto seen or passed, but of a different kind,
-in some measure. There were no dangerous waters or
-rivers; but such numbers of stones, and of so prodigious
-a size, that it appeared astonishing in the
-highest degree that the carriage was not totally
-demolished by them. I started at eight for Diepenau,
-which is twenty English miles, but did not arrive there
-till half-past five the next morning. I had here
-occasion for all my courage to support me. The postmaster
-obliged me to take six horses, and they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-indeed most necessary. The country was all covered
-with water like a lake; and I passed through a horse-pond,
-where I expected every instant to be overset,
-and in which the horses were almost up to their
-shoulders. At length we came to two vast hollows,
-not less than four-and-twenty feet deep, and in which
-a great quantity of water had collected. Here I got
-out, as did my servant. The postilions carried us on
-their shoulders through it, the carriage followed, but
-I never expected to see it come out, at least, without
-being broken to pieces. It did get through, notwithstanding,
-to my astonishment; yet, at many other
-places I dreaded every instant to be overturned at the
-hazard of my life. Still, I proceeded, encouraged by
-the moon, which shone very brightly, and was indeed
-my protectress amid so many and so repeated dangers.
-Yet the continued anxiety of mind which prevented
-me from closing my eyes, and the violent exercise of
-the body in such horrid roads&mdash;if roads they could
-with propriety be called&mdash;at length wearied and
-fatigued me beyond belief. I wished to be at the end
-of my journey. I wished I had never undertaken
-it; I almost lost that animating principle, that enthusiasm
-and hope, which had borne me up and
-made me with joy devote myself to every untoward
-accident. In a word, I felt that I could brave death,
-but not mental and corporeal agitation unusually
-continued. But what could I do? I had passed the
-Rubicon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><em>Wednesday, February</em> 15<em>th.</em>&mdash;In this frame of
-mind, after waiting from five till three for horses at
-Diepenau, I again got into the carriage; where to go,
-however, I really knew not. There were only three
-roads to choose. If I went to Minden, which was
-only ten miles distant, I could indeed get there and
-pass the Weser by the bridge; but then they were
-unanimously agreed that the road from Minden to
-Hanover was not practicable, or to be attempted. I
-would have gone north to Nienburg, and have passed
-the Weser by <em>that</em> bridge, but it was impossible; the
-Weser had inundated the road, overflowed the bridge,
-left holes big enough to hold a house in the highway;
-and there were at this time more than two hundred
-carts belonging to the peasants which could not get
-out of the town. The last resource was to go on
-straight to Stolzenau, and attempt, at all events, to
-cross by boat to Leese on the eastern side. I
-embraced this last proposal in consequence of the
-courier's advice, and followed his waggons. While I
-was meditating on so many vexatious circumstances,
-and going slowly along the pavé in the village of
-Diepenau, unsuspicious at that moment of any
-immediate accident or danger, the postilion turned
-the carriage short round a corner and flung it into
-a deep ditch. By a good fortune, however, which
-never totally abandoned me, the chaise just being in
-equilibrium, and a peasant running up came just at
-the instant it was tumbling over, and supported it with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-the greatest difficulty with his hands till more
-assistance arrived.</p>
-
-<p>I must own, I thought myself lost, and do assuredly
-believe that, if the chaise had fallen over, the violence
-must have broken it in pieces, and both myself and
-my valet would in all probability have been cut most
-miserably, or been possibly killed on the spot. I
-jumped out of the carriage the instant I could. I
-drew my hanger, and, in the transports of my resentment,
-I should most assuredly have made the postilion
-remember, as long as he lived, his carelessness; but
-the fellow was gone far beyond my reach long even
-before I could get out. The villagers helped out the
-chaise, and happily no material injury was done it.
-This provoking accident filled up the measure of my
-vexations. To have my life and limbs every moment
-in extreme danger&mdash;to suffer by roads, by villany, by
-heedlessness, by water, by a train of obstacles which
-increased instead of diminishing&mdash;the river Weser
-before me, and yet to be passed&mdash;I lost all patience,
-I believe I shed tears of anger and sorrow. "In the
-name of Heaven!" I said to myself, "am I destined to
-perish in one of these confounded ditches? And is this
-message, for which I so eagerly wished, to be the last
-I shall ever carry?"</p>
-
-<p>I trembled as I once more entered the carriage,
-which I began to think was no other than my coffin.
-Another postilion mounted, and I fairly told him that
-if he overset me I would put him to death on the spot,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-whatever consequences might ensue. I abandoned
-myself to fortune; worn and oppressed by such continued
-exertions, my senses sank under it, and though
-in momentary expectation of being again overturned,
-I yet fell asleep for a few minutes. I arrived safe, notwithstanding,
-at Stolzenau, and walked down, accompanied
-by the courier, to view the Weser. What a
-sight! it was more than a mile and a half wide, and
-ran with vast rapidity. The meadows, the very hedges
-all under water, and extending quite to the village of
-Leese on the other side. I was determined, if I died,
-to attempt the passage. I agreed instantly with some
-boatmen to take me and my carriage over in a boat.
-They would not go that night, but agreed to carry me
-to-morrow morning at six o'clock. So I shall see some
-end to my misadventures. I write this from Stolzenau.
-The courier left all his waggons, for it was totally impossible
-to get them over in any manner, and went
-away with his letters only to Hanover in a small boat.
-I wrote to Baron von Seckendorf by him, telling him
-where I was, and my resolution, my fixed determination,
-at all events, to cross to-morrow, for I preferred
-anything to remaining in a vile inn, in a horrid village,
-with the Weser in full view. At this moment
-my mind has somewhat recovered, and I am calm
-and tranquil&mdash;yet some termination I will see to
-these cursed disasters. And now for some rest. Sleep
-will, I doubt not, be the kindest friend and restorer
-to me in nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><em>February</em> 16.&mdash;Why should I quarrel so with fortune?
-why complain, when as yet she smiles upon me?
-True, the roads are terrible, and the dangers numerous
-beyond belief; but am I not already past the worst,
-and hastening to a queen? This reflection ought to be
-alone sufficient in every situation.</p>
-
-<p>I got into my carriage, which was placed in a little
-boat, at about seven in the morning, and, leaving Stolzenau,
-in about an hour and a half I reached the opposite
-dry land, and set my foot again on shore. I passed
-through meadows and fields, where the tops of the
-hedges and the trees began to appear above the surface
-of the water for nearly a mile, perhaps more. The
-inundation was amazingly extensive, and reminded me
-of Deucalion's deluge. It cost me, I think, about a
-ducat to cross over from Stolzenau. The water reached
-to about a quarter of a mile from Leese, where the
-post is situate. I proceeded, as soon as I had drunk
-my coffee, for Hanover, and got to Hazelberg, which
-is twelve miles from Leese, at about three in the afternoon.
-The weather was beautiful, but the road tremendous.
-I know not by what continued series of
-fortunate chances we were not upset. I continued my
-journey, and arrived safe at Hanover at about ten at
-night. This part of the Electorate, from the Weser to
-Hanover, is the most beautiful I have seen, and finely
-cultivated; but of all the roads conceivable, none ever,
-I believe, exceeded this in badness. I drove in continual
-danger of my life, and, really, several times, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-the deep waters through which I passed, prepared myself
-for instant death.</p>
-
-<p><em>February</em> 17.&mdash;I left Hanover about noon, and took
-the road for Zell. I do not believe the whole distance
-is more than twenty-two or three English miles, though
-it is called five German ones. I arrived at Engsen,
-which is exactly half way, as night set in. The road
-was still the same; it was not worse, but one can
-hardly say it was better. I waited for the moon to
-rise, and then proceeded for Zell. I arrived there at
-ten o'clock, but that I ever did arrive is wonderful.
-One half of the road from Engsen, which is five miles,
-lay almost entirely through water, and in many places
-so deep, so wide, and so long, as might have inspired
-terror in the boldest heart; but my near approach to
-the place of my destination gave me courage, and supported
-me through everything. Once, though, we
-were just lost in the water. The carriage balanced,
-and the balance was in our favour. I thought of William
-Rufus crossing into Normandy, and the boatmen.
-"Rascals," said he, "did you ever know a king
-drowned?" "Was ever," I thought, "young man
-drowned in sight of his port?" I drove to the same
-inn where I had been concealed before, and gave the
-same name to the guard.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the following morning, Mr. Wraxall acquainted
-Baron von Seckendorf with his arrival. The latter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-received the agent with the warmest marks of joy and
-gladness, informed him that her Majesty, who was
-apprised of his arrival by the name given at the gates,
-expected him with impatience, and that she had already
-taken measures to admit him to an audience that same
-afternoon. "When you hear the palace clock strike
-four," the baron said, "set out from the inn, on foot,
-for the castle. Mantel, the queen's valet, will wait to
-receive you, and conduct you to her."</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wraxall delivered to the baron the despatches
-for her Majesty, and went at the appointed hour to
-the palace. Mantel was waiting, and carried him
-round the great court through a number of apartments
-to a room, where he was left alone. At one
-end of it was a staircase communicating with the
-queen's chamber. In a minute afterwards, Caroline
-Matilda came in, and her reception of her agent was
-most gracious. The account of the interview shall
-be told from the "Journal:"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"We conversed till about ten minutes past six,
-entirely alone, and in the most unreserved, undisguised
-manner. Her Majesty made me the recital of
-her reign, of the revolution, of her own conduct on
-that fatal night when she lost her crown. I listened
-in silence and astonishment. What an avowal, what
-a recapitulation did she not make me! Her words are
-for ever graven on my heart. I could repeat her story
-almost verbatim. I know what scarce any other man
-on earth <em>can</em> know. I must own, her unreserve, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-goodness, her minute detail of circumstances the most
-concealed in their nature, my situation quite alone with
-her, superadded to some consciousness still more affecting,
-made me more than once forget I was talking to
-a queen. She was dressed in a brown silk Polonaise,
-trimmed with green silk. Her hair powdered. A
-locket on her bosom. Her under-lip is too large, but
-her teeth are fine, and that family violence in speaking
-becomes her. Her nose is finely shaped, and her eyes are
-eloquent. She is thinner in the face than she was last
-October. She showed me his Majesty's letters to her,
-and permitted me to carry an extract from one away
-with me. She was obliged to leave me soon after six,
-which, otherwise, she seemed in no way inclined to
-do. Her talents are very good, and in mimicry she
-excels. Her specimen of Prince Frederick of Denmark
-was excellent. She went, and I remained ten
-minutes alone. The valet came again and conducted
-me to a distant chamber of the palace, where the baron
-attended my coming. We conversed together till near
-eight, then I returned home. The baron himself conducted
-me to a private staircase, by which I descended
-into the great court, and thence, under cover of the
-night, got home undiscovered. This was <em>one</em> of the
-singular days of my life!"</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wraxall passed nearly the whole of the next
-day with Baron von Seckendorf, who returned him
-the articles from the queen, enclosed in a cover
-addressed by herself to Baron von Bülow, and sealed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-with her own cypher. She also transmitted to him
-assurances calculated to confirm the zeal of her adherents.
-Mr. Wraxall proceeded toward Hamburg
-on the same night, though the country between it and
-Celle was almost everywhere under water. Crossing
-the Elbe, he arrived at Hamburg on the evening of
-February 21, 1775, after a hazardous and fatiguing
-journey.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day he wrote to Baron von Bülow,
-by means of Monsieur le Texier, informing him of his
-return. The baron came to Mr. Wraxall on February
-23, about noon, and expressed great joy at his
-safe arrival. The agent then delivered the papers
-containing the articles to the baron, who perused them
-many times with the deepest attention. Of the two
-first articles he expressed the highest approbation.
-He regretted that the King of England would not
-advance any pecuniary assistance toward accomplishing
-his sister's restoration. But he lamented much more
-that the fourth article only stipulated or promised, on
-the part of his Britannic Majesty, to avow the revolution
-<em>after it should be effected</em>, instead of making that
-avowal <em>during the time that it should be actually executing</em>.</p>
-
-<p>"We must, however," the baron exclaimed, "transmit
-the articles to our associates at Copenhagen, and
-receive their reply. That alone can enable us to form
-our determination respecting the line to be pursued."</p>
-
-<p>The baron then asked Mr. Wraxall if he should be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-willing to undertake the commission of carrying the
-articles to Copenhagen, which he assured him he
-would do at an hour's warning. After thanking the
-agent for so unequivocal a proof of his attachment to
-the cause, and admonishing him to be on his guard,
-as they were surrounded by spies, the baron left, promising
-to return on the next day.</p>
-
-<p>When they met on the 24th, the baron informed Mr.
-Wraxall that, having maturely reflected on the proposition
-he had made the latter of going to Copenhagen,
-and having consulted two of his friends upon it, they
-were unanimously of opinion not to hazard such an
-experiment. Mr. Wraxall being known in that capital,
-his return to it must, in the present state of affairs,
-excite inquiry, and might expose the enterprise itself
-to discovery or suspicion. They had, therefore,
-already selected for that commission a gentleman
-attached to the cause, who would set out immediately.
-He would return with all possible despatch, but, as
-the passage of the two Belts was always uncertain in
-winter, it might probably require two, or even three,
-weeks to receive an answer. During this time the
-baron requested Mr. Wraxall, in the name of the
-party, to remain quietly in Hamburg.</p>
-
-<p>On March 14, Baron von Bülow came to Mr.
-Wraxall and informed him that the expected answer
-from Copenhagen had arrived. "It is," he said,
-"exactly such as I predicted and anticipated. Our
-friends had hoped that his Britannic Majesty would
-have authorised his Resident to have come forward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-<em>at the time that they were effecting</em> the counter-revolution;
-and that, as representing the king his sovereign, he
-would, in that critical and decisive moment, have been
-empowered openly to avow and justify it. This is the
-only request they make. They know that they are
-powerful enough to <em>accomplish</em> the queen's recall,
-but to maintain it may be their difficulty."</p>
-
-<p>After a little further conversation, the baron added:</p>
-
-<p>"At the instant when the queen dowager and her
-son, Prince Frederick, are put under confinement in
-their own apartments, when the principal ministers
-are arrested, and the King of Denmark's order obtained
-for Queen Matilda's immediate return to Copenhagen,
-all eyes will be turned upon the conduct
-of the British Resident. If he shuts the gates of his
-hôtel, and remains a silent or a passive spectator of so
-great a change, men will naturally conceive that his
-court and his master are unacquainted with, if not
-adverse to, the enterprise itself. It is even possible
-that, encouraged by such inaction on the part of the
-English representative, the adherents of the queen
-dowager may attempt, while the counter-revolution is
-yet scarcely completed, to overturn it, or to excite the
-populace of Copenhagen to insurrection. We may be
-the victims of the King of England's reserve.</p>
-
-<p>"But if, on the contrary, while Queen Matilda's
-friends are achieving the counter-revolution, the English
-Resident goes to the palace, avows his master's approbation
-of it, and adds, that every attempt to overturn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-it, or to impede his sister's recall, will excite the
-resentment of his Britannic Majesty, who will support
-it, if necessary, by force: all ranks of men will remain
-in profound submission. The party is, therefore, determined
-to draw up a letter to the above effect, addressed
-to the King of England in their joint names,
-and to limit their requests to this single point. That
-granted, they are ready, without delay, to proceed to
-action."</p>
-
-<p>Before they parted, it was settled that Baron von
-Bülow should draw up the letter in question, and that
-as soon as matters were arranged Mr. Wraxall should
-return once more to Celle, and thence to England.</p>
-
-<p>As George III. had made choice of Baron von
-Lichtenstein as the medium through which all immediate
-communications to him on the subject of the
-queen his sister should pass, it was highly important
-to apprise the baron of this intention. Mr. Wraxall
-accordingly wrote to him on the same day by the post,
-expressing in very few words that, on account of some
-circumstances which had arisen, he would probably see
-Mr. Wraxall again in London early in the ensuing
-month. The writer added, that if, unfortunately, the
-baron should have quitted England before his return,
-he relied on his leaving accurate directions in writing
-how to proceed in the affair. Mr. Wraxall also wrote
-to Baron von Seckendorf, apprising him that he might
-be expected again in Celle in a few days.</p>
-
-<p>On March 20, Baron von Bülow delivered Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-Wraxall the letter for the King of Great Britain. It
-was not signed by him or by any of the party, on
-account of the danger incurred by such a signature.
-But it expressed in very strong terms the united entreaties
-of the queen's adherents on the single point
-already stated. This letter Mr. Wraxall was empowered
-to deliver to the queen on his arrival at Celle,
-to request her to peruse it, and afterwards to enclose
-it in a letter from herself to her brother, supporting
-every argument contained in it by her entreaties.
-Mr. Wraxall was, as on the two previous occasions, to
-draw up a letter to the queen, and his further instructions
-for her were to the following effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"To assure her Majesty, on the part of the Danish
-nobility engaged in her cause, that they were unremittingly
-occupied in concerting measures for her
-restoration. That they were so numerous and powerful
-a body, possessed of such means, and inspired by
-motives so strong, as to render their success almost infallible.
-That the consent of the King of Great Britain
-to the only request preferred by them would, indeed,
-accelerate, as his refusal might retard, the accomplishment
-of the projected enterprise, but that nothing
-could prevent its ultimate execution. That even a
-discovery of the design would not frustrate it; and
-that, if the executioner should strike off ten heads or
-twenty, a number sufficient would still survive to seat
-her on the throne. That the plan, when ripe, would
-be carried into execution in the following manner:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"On the day fixed, certain of them would repair
-to the palace, obtain access to the king, and either induce
-or compel him to affix his name to an instrument
-ready drawn up for the purpose. The instrument
-would simply contain an order to the queen dowager
-to retire to her own apartment till his further pleasure
-was known; and to Prince Frederick, to remove to
-one of the palaces, probably that of Frederiksborg,
-about twenty miles from Copenhagen. That at the
-same time, by virtue of a similar order, the ministers
-would be dismissed or arrested; and a messenger sent
-off to invite the queen to return, without an instant's
-delay, to Denmark, to resume her proper rank and
-authority. That their measures would be so well
-concerted and so rapidly executed as to produce the
-counter-revolution in the space of one or two hours.</p>
-
-<p>"That they trusted, therefore, she, on her part,
-would repair with all possible expedition to Copenhagen.
-That a proper escort, becoming her dignity,
-should be formed, to accompany her from Altona
-through the Danish territories, and that they calculated
-she might, with despatch, reach Copenhagen in four
-days from the time of her quitting Celle, if no extraordinary
-impediment arose in her passing the two
-Belts. That her presence in the capital of Denmark
-would animate the courage of her adherents, cover
-her enemies with consternation, and complete the
-counter-revolution. Lastly, that though they could
-not yet name the precise time when they hoped to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-proceed to action, which must in a certain degree depend
-on the answer of his Britannic Majesty to their
-present request, yet, that for many and urgent reasons,
-they neither could nor would long defer the
-blow."</p>
-
-<p>Having received the above-mentioned letter from
-Baron von Bülow, and general directions for his conduct,
-Mr. Wraxall again set out from Hamburg on
-March 21, 1775, and reached Celle on the following
-night, at ten o'clock. He gave the same name to the
-sentinel at the gates, and drove to the same obscure
-inn, as on former occasions. Next morning he went
-to Baron von Seckendorf to inform him of his arrival.
-The baron entreated him to remain concealed as much
-as possible, and not to stir out by day, as the Princess
-of Brunswick was then on a visit to the queen. But,
-he added, that her Majesty was determined to see Mr.
-Wraxall, at all events, previous to his departure, as
-she had various matters to impart to him of a confidential
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>On Mr. Wraxall's return to the inn, Mantel, the
-queen's valet, came to him. Mr. Wraxall gave him,
-in consequence of the order he brought, the letter of
-the Danish nobility to George III., and also a letter
-from himself, addressed to the queen, containing the
-heads of the instructions with which he was charged.
-It was afterwards fixed, between Baron von Seckendorf
-and Mr. Wraxall, that, on Saturday morning,
-March 25, as soon as the hereditary princess had returned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-to Brunswick, Mr. Wraxall should be brought
-to the castle, where the queen would be ready to
-receive him. But, after mature deliberation, the baron
-thought that it would be safer for him to repair to the
-castle during the night before the princess left Celle.
-The circumstance of her then being at Celle was
-favourable, because no one would be tempted to suppose
-that the queen could venture on so hazardous an
-experiment when her sister was under the same roof.
-It was therefore agreed, that precisely at eight
-o'clock on the evening of the 24th, Mr. Wraxall
-should wrap himself in his great-coat, and proceed to
-the entrance of the drawbridge over the great moat
-of the castle, where Mantel should punctually meet
-him, and conduct him to the queen. The circumstances
-of this last interview are so interesting, that I
-shall allow Mr. Wraxall to speak in the first person.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I set off about a quarter of an hour before eight
-for the inn. The darkness of the night was accompanied
-by a tempest of wind and rain. When I got
-to the spot, no valet appeared, and directly afterwards
-the guard was relieved. I was therefore compelled
-to hide myself as well as I could while the whole
-guard passed close to me. The rain was so heavy,
-and the darkness such, that fortunately I was not
-discovered. I waited in this unpleasant predicament
-a full quarter of an hour, anxious and impatient to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-the greatest degree. At length Mantel came. He
-said not a word to me, but, wrapping his cloak all over
-me, and covering me with his umbrella, he led me in
-silence over the drawbridge, under the arch, into the
-square court of the castle.</p>
-
-<p>We went up a private staircase, and he conducted
-me along the great gallery or corridor into the queen's
-library. Two candles were burning, and the book-cases
-were thrown open, as it was uncertain at what
-hour the queen could come to me. Mantel left me,
-but returned in less than a quarter of an hour with a
-note from Baron von Seckendorf, to the following
-effect:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Un mot pour vous, mon très cher, tout va bien.
-On espère même que la princesse se retirera à neuf
-heures; alors sa Majesté pourra vous parler jusqu'a
-onze heures, à son aise. Vouz pouvez lui dire tout
-ce que vous avez sur le c&oelig;ur. Le mauvais temps,
-m'annonce l'impossibilité de me trouver demain matin
-au rendezvous: ainsi, ayez la grace, étant d'ailleurs
-destiné d'être mouillé, de passer à huit heures chez
-moi. Ordonnez les chevaux à neuf, et partez sous la
-garde de Dieu. Bon soir. Je retourne le chiffre
-dont j'ai pris copie. Rapportez-moi demain tout ce
-que vous avez de papiers ou d'ailleurs. Vous verrez
-la reine précisement à neuf heures."</p>
-
-<p>I had scarcely perused the note when I heard the
-queen's footstep on the staircase. A moment afterwards
-she entered the room. She was charmingly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-dressed, though without diamonds; she had on a crimson
-satin sack, and her hair dressed. I drew a chair,
-and entreated her to allow me to stand and receive
-her commands, while she was seated, but she declined
-it, and we both stood the whole time. Our interview
-lasted about two hours. It was a quarter past eleven
-when I asked her Majesty if I should retire, and she
-signified her pleasure that I should. She approved of
-the letter drawn up by the Danish nobility to the
-King of Great Britain, as well as the request contained
-in it, which she confessed to be natural and
-just, though she doubted his Britannic Majesty's consent
-to it.</p>
-
-<p>"I will, however," she added, "write to my brother
-the letter requested before I go to bed to-night, enforcing,
-as far as I am able, the petition of the nobility.
-You shall receive it from Baron Seckendorf to-morrow
-morning, and at the same time that of the Danish
-nobility shall be returned to you."</p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty ordered me to assure Baron von Bülow
-by letter that "she was satisfied with all I had communicated
-to her on his part, and that she should be
-ready on the shortest notice to mount on horseback in
-men's clothes, in order more expeditiously to reach
-Copenhagen: there to encounter every difficulty with
-her friends."</p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty was gracious enough to express to me
-the strongest assurances of her protection. She was
-pleased to say:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"I lament that I have no means left me of proving
-to you at this time my satisfaction. You have run
-every hazard in order to serve me. I will, whatever
-may be the event of the present attempt, recommend
-you to the king, my brother. He can, and will, I
-have no doubt, recompense you properly. Meanwhile,
-write to me freely and unreservedly from England on
-every point, and rely on my recollection of your services."</p>
-
-<p>When the queen was about to withdraw, she opened
-the door, but held it a few minutes in her hand, as if
-she had something to say: she then retired. I little
-thought her death was so near, and that I should
-never see her again. In a short time afterwards,
-Mantel came to me, and wrapping me up in his cloak
-as before, conducted me by a private staircase out of
-one of the postern gates of the castle. It was quite
-dark, and he therefore showed me the way through
-the suburbs to the inn. When I got there, it was
-midnight.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the following morning, Mr. Wraxall waited on
-Baron von Seckendorf. The latter delivered to him
-the two letters, one from the Danish nobility, and one
-from the queen to George III. They were under
-separate covers, but both were sealed and addressed
-by herself. Mr. Wraxall received orders from her
-Majesty, concerning what he had written on March 14<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-from Hamburg, namely, to deliver the letters on
-his arrival in London to Baron von Lichtenstein, if he
-was still there, and in case of his having quitted England,
-he would follow the instructions which might
-be left by him respecting the mode of conveying the
-despatches to the king.</p>
-
-<p>Baron von Seckendorf, at the same time, communicated
-to Mr. Wraxall, by the queen's command, a
-message with which she had charged him. It contained
-the most gracious assurances of her favour and
-protection, "as due," she was pleased to say, "to his
-zeal, exertions, and disinterestedness."</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wraxall left Celle immediately afterwards, and
-took the road to Osnabrück and Holland. From Rotterdam
-he wrote to Baron von Bülow, as well as to
-Mr. le Texier, informing them of all that had happened
-at Celle, and of his being on his way to England.
-On April 1, he embarked at Helvoetsluys, and reached
-London on the morning of the 5th.</p>
-
-<p>On the next day, Mr. Wraxall called at Baron von
-Lichtenstein's lodgings, but, to his great mortification,
-learned that the baron had left England ten days previously.
-He left behind him, however, the following
-letter for the Queen of Denmark's agent:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>J'ai reçu, monsieur, la lettre que vous m'avez fait
-l'honneur de m'écrire en date du 14 de Mars. Je
-suis très faché que mes occupations, et mon emploi à
-Hannovre, ne me permettent pas de m'arréter ici<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-jusqu'au temps de votre retour, pour avoir la satisfaction
-d'apprendre le succès de votre voyage, n'en ayant
-pas eu, comme vous vous imaginez, des nouvelles par
-la personne en question. En attendant, j'ai donné
-l'avis de votre arrivée prochaine. Vous trouverez
-çi joint l'adresse de la personne à laquelle <em>on</em> veut
-que vous remettiez vos lettres, dont vous pourriez
-être chargé. Je dois vous dire de n'être pas surpris,
-se vous ne recevez point de réponse. <em>On</em> l'adressera
-à moi. Des raisons que vous savez, c'est à dire qu'on
-ne donnera rien d'écrit de sa main touchant cette
-affaire, ne permettent pas d'agir autrement. Si <em>on</em>
-ne change pas de sentiment, et si <em>on</em> ne vous fait
-pas dire par celui auquel vous donnerez vos lettres,
-d'attendre ici, je ne vois pas d'autre expédient que
-de retourner dans une quinzaine de jours et de
-venir me trouver à Hannovre, où je compte d'être
-infailliblement vers la fin du mois d'Avril. J'ai l'honneur
-d'être avec la considération la plus distinguée,<br />
-<br />
-<span class="mleft3">Monsieur,</span><br />
-<span class="mleft6">Votre très humble et</span><br />
-<span class="mleft9">Très obéissant serviteur,</span><br />
-<span class="mleft18">N. L.</span></p>
-
-<p>A Londres, ce 24 Mars, 1775.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Adresse de la personne à laquelle Mr. Wr. remettra
-ses lettres,</p>
-
-<p><span class="mleft5">M</span><span class="smcap">ONSIEUR DE</span> H<span class="smcap">INÜUBER,</span><br />
-<span class="mleft8">Jermain Street, St. James's.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In obedience to this order, Mr. Wraxall waited
-upon Mr. Hinüber on the next morning. The latter
-received him with great politeness, and informed him
-that he had the king's directions to take from Mr.
-Wraxall, and forward immediately in a sealed-up box
-to the queen's house, whatever letters Mr. Wraxall
-might give him. Mr. Wraxall, in consequence, delivered
-to Monsieur de Hinüber two packets: one
-from the Queen of Denmark, and another from the
-Danish nobility. To these he added a letter addressed
-by himself to his Majesty. In the last, he
-thought it his duty to request the king, in the name
-of all the adherents of his sister, to admit him to an
-audience, as the only person who could, from his perfect
-knowledge of the plan and the persons, satisfy
-any inquiries, or explain any secret matters relative to
-the enterprise itself.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wraxall also wrote to the queen, Baron von
-Seckendorf, and Baron von Bülow, acquainting them
-with his arrival and his Majesty's orders. During a
-fortnight, he waited in expectation that the king might
-possibly signify to him his commands. But having
-received no communication, Mr. Wraxall wrote, on
-April 21, to Baron von Bülow and Monsieur le
-Texier, informing them how matters stood. He particularly
-requested to be told in what manner he
-should act: whether they wished him to remain in
-London, or return by Hanover and Celle to Hamburg.
-By the same post, he addressed a letter to her Majesty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-at Celle, stating fully to her the facts which he had
-communicated to the Danish nobility.</p>
-
-<p>It was not till May 10 that Mr. Wraxall received
-an answer from the Danish nobility. The letter was
-written by Le Texier in his own name and that of
-Von Bülow. It was to the effect that the baron's
-absence from Altona had occasioned the delay of some
-days in replying to Mr. Wraxall's last despatch; but
-that, the baron being then returned, they had maturely
-considered it together. They greatly regretted
-the king's not having admitted their agent to an
-audience, as well as his silence on the important
-point requested. The state of affairs at Copenhagen
-was extremely critical; but till the return of young
-Baron von Schimmelmann, whom they expected impatiently
-and daily, they were in a degree unacquainted
-with the person, condition, or intentions of
-their associates. The instant they were enabled to
-give Mr. Wraxall any information on the subject, he
-should hear again. In the meanwhile, they besought
-him, in the joint names of all the party, to remain
-quiet where he was, and not to set out from London,
-either for Celle or Hamburg, unless by his Majesty's
-positive directions.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuance of this letter, Mr. Wraxall waited for
-further information, and held himself in readiness, if it
-should be thought necessary, to return to Germany, or
-to renew his application to George III. through Mr.
-de Hinüber, if the Danish nobility should instruct him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-to do so; but Providence had decreed that their efforts
-should be rendered vain. While the measures concerted
-to restore the queen to the throne of Denmark
-appeared to be near their accomplishment, she was no
-more. The melancholy intelligence did not reach
-London till May 19, and it need hardly be said that the
-news of so unexpected and lamentable an event produced
-a terrible effect on her zealous agent.</p>
-
-<p>On May 25, Mr. Wraxall received a letter from
-Baron von Seckendorf, which I shall transcribe here,
-as it contains a singular and material fact, that George
-III. had given, through Baron von Lichtenstein, an
-answer to the request made him by the Danish nobility;
-but that, as the king's letter arrived at Hanover when
-Caroline Matilda was either dying or dead, the packet
-was returned to him unopened:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ON TRES CHER AMI</span>,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>La mort également douleureuse et rapide de
-mon incomparable maîtresse, renverse tout d'un coup
-l'édifice de notre prospérité. Que nous sommes malheureux,
-et que sa perte est grande pour nos amis.
-Lepy (Baron von Bülow) a été incessamment informé
-par moi de cette triste catastrophe. Le paquet dont se
-trouvait chargé le courier, a été renvoyé, sans être
-décacheté au Sieur Abel (the King of England) par
-Alis (Lichtenstein) et j'ignore entièrement ce qu'auroit
-été la résolution qu'il comptait donner aux amis de
-Montpelier (Copenhagen).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Alis m'a promis de faire en sorte que toutes les
-dépenses faites par eux et par vous, seroient remboursées
-par Abel, le plutôt que possible. Et sitôt
-que j'aurai des nouvelles sûres à cet égard, vous en
-serez instruit. En attendant, je vous prie de dire ceci
-à Lepy. Il est juste que personne ne perde son argent.</p>
-
-<p>Que deviendrons nous à cette heure, mon très cher
-ami? Resterez vous à Londres, oui ferez vous le voyage
-que vos parents avaient projetté? Puis-je me flatter
-de vous revoir jamais? Grand Dieu! quelle désolation
-en si peu de momens! Je ne pourrai jamais me remettre
-de ce coup. Vôtre dernière lettre parvint
-encore à la chère défuncte.</p>
-
-<p>Adieu, mon très cher ami! Je ne cesserai de ma
-vie de vous aimer et de conserver la mémoire de votre
-attachement sincère pour la precieuse Agujari (Queen
-of Denmark).</p>
-
-<p class="center">Tout à vous,<br />
-Ce 16ᵐᵉ May, 1775. <span class="mleft4">B</span><span class="smcap">ROCARD</span>.<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a><br />
-</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>From Baron von Bülow, Mr. Wraxall received a
-letter, in June, announcing to him the same event; it
-was dated May 22nd, and I shall extract the first part
-of it here, as it proves another very important circumstance,
-that the enterprise would have been carried out
-whether George III. had given the required promise
-or not:&mdash;</p>.
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ONSIEUR</span>,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>La nouvelle la plus malheureuse du monde
-m'avait mis dans un tel état d'anéantissement, qu'il
-n'a été jusqu' ici pas possible de vous dire un mot.</p>
-
-<p>Occupé avec Grenier (Schimmelmann) à deliberer
-sur les moyens les plus prompts pour exécuter le plan,
-et rempli de nouvelles espérances non équivoques fixant,
-pour ainsi dire, malgré le silence opiniâtre d'Abel, le
-<em>jour</em>, le <em>moment</em> tant désiré, je reçois une lettre de Brocard.
-Je l'ouvre avec précipitation, dans l'idée d'y
-trouver les choses les plus agréables: mais, au contraire,
-la première ligne annonce l'arrêt du Destin le plus
-cruel. Je ne dirai rien de ce que je sentis dans un
-moment aussi inattendu, puisque je suis sûr que vous
-vous en faites une idée exacte, par la situation dans
-laquelle vous vous serez trouvé vous même, en apprenant
-notre malheur.</p>
-
-<p>C'en est donc fait de notre bonheur! il s'est enfui
-pour toujours. Nous n'avons pas dû être heureux.
-Nous n'avons pas dû le rendre les autres. Il ne nous
-reste aucun espoir. Nous rentrons dans le néant dont
-nous voulions sortir! Mais que ce Fantome de bonheur
-envolé ne nous emporte pas votre amitié et attachement.
-Comptez jusqu'à la fin des mes forces, sur
-le mien. Mes amis vous assurent la même chose.
-Nous vous devons trop pour devenir ingrat. Tout
-ce qui dépendra de nous, pour vous le temoigner, ne
-sera jamais négligé. Parlez et disposez de ce qu'il y
-a en notre pouvoir.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus terminated, seemingly at the point of fruition,
-an enterprise in which some of the first nobility of
-Denmark, Norway, and Holstein, were engaged, and
-to which George III. had given his consent.<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">DEATH OF CAROLINE MATILDA.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">THE TYPHUS FEVER&mdash;DEATH OF THE PAGE&mdash;THE QUEEN'S VISIT&mdash;SYMPTOMS
-OF ILLNESS&mdash;DR. ZIMMERMANN&mdash;PASTOR LEHZEN&mdash;CAROLINE
-MATILDA'S GOODNESS OF HEART&mdash;HER DEATH&mdash;THE
-FUNERAL&mdash;GENERAL GRIEF&mdash;THE MONUMENTS&mdash;LETTER
-TO GEORGE III.&mdash;PROOFS OF CAROLINE MATILDA'S INNOCENCE&mdash;THE
-QUEEN'S CHARACTER</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>We have seen that in the early part of 1775 the queen
-of Denmark appeared the picture of blooming health.
-Her <em>entourage</em>, and all who were of the same age with
-her, consequently felt the most confident expectations
-that they would long enjoy her pleasant and gracious
-society. But the news from Altona, the hope of a justification
-in the sight of the world, and of a reunion
-with her children, and at the same time apprehensions
-as to the decisive result of Mr. Wraxall's mission to
-her obstinate brother, kept her in a constant state of
-excitement, while she was obliged to place a restraint
-on the feelings that disturbed her mind, in order not to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-arouse any suspicion among her suite, or with her ever-watching
-sister. Therefore, it was not surprising that
-her constitution, thus rendered susceptible to external
-dangers, met a catastrophe half way, which destroyed
-all the hopes of her friends about the apparently
-blooming princess enjoying a long life.</p>
-
-<p>A dangerous scarlet fever had spread over the
-neighbourhood after the severe and tempestuous winter,
-and one of the queen's young pages was attacked by
-it, and died in a few days. When he was dead, and
-laid in his coffin for interment, her Majesty expressed
-a great desire to see him. The ladies opposed this
-wish, and requested her not to do it. She still persisted
-in her resolution, and went down to the apartment
-in which he lay. Mantel, the queen's valet,
-had purposely locked the door and taken the key,
-and when Caroline Matilda asked him for it, he answered
-her that it could not be found. After several
-vain endeavours, therefore, she went up-stairs again.
-Mantel carried in the tea to her Majesty. In a few
-minutes the queen suddenly got up, and before any
-of her ladies could stop or prevent her, she ran down
-to the chamber where the corpse lay. Unfortunately,
-the door was then open. She stepped in, and stayed
-about a minute&mdash;not more&mdash;looking at it. She expressed
-no particular horror or emotion, more than
-was natural on looking at such an object.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This took place on May 2nd, 1775. On the next
-morning the queen complained to her bed-chamber woman
-that the image of the dead page had appeared to
-her all through the night, and filled her with terror.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>
-Still she slightly recovered herself, although a little
-girl of four years of age, Sophie von Benningsen,
-whom she had adopted when left an orphan, and as
-some consolation for the loss of her own daughter,
-had also been attacked by the disease, and filled her
-with fresh alarm. She went as usual to the Jardin
-François, but felt unwell, and evidently had the seeds
-of infection within her, for, on the third day after the
-visit to the chamber of death, she was unable to ascend
-the stairs leading to her apartments without the help
-of her lady-in-waiting.</p>
-
-<p>"I must force myself to seem less tired than I really
-am," she said to her companion, "so that my good
-Omptéda (the grand maîtresse), who did not like my
-driving out, may not scold me."</p>
-
-<p>She complained of sore-throat and chill, but sat
-down to dinner with her court, though she was unable
-to eat anything. When the card-tables were placed in
-the evening, the queen felt too indisposed to play.
-The ladies proposed her having a sofa, and looking on
-at them; but Mantel then presumed to speak, and
-advised her Majesty going immediately to bed. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-queen consented, and ordered her women to undress
-her. The illness, however, made such alarming progress,
-that the grande maîtresse on the next morning
-called in Dr. von Leyser, the physician in ordinary.</p>
-
-<p>"You have twice," the queen said to the physician,
-"extricated me from a dangerous indisposition since
-the month of October; but this exceeds your skill: I
-know I am not within the help of medicine."</p>
-
-<p>Leyser affected cheerfulness; but at once requested
-that Dr. Zimmermann, a very celebrated physician at
-Hanover, might be called in.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile the queen's condition grew worse
-every moment, and she requested to see Magister
-Lehzen, the pastor of the city church. The latter at
-once arrived, and, in the ante-chamber, was informed
-by Dr. Zimmermann of the great danger that menaced
-the queen's life. When he was shown into the bed-room,
-the queen said to him, in a weak voice:</p>
-
-<p>"You did not imagine me so ill as you find me."</p>
-
-<p>Lehzen assured Caroline Matilda how greatly he lamented
-it, and tried to console the exalted sufferer
-with the consoling words of faith, read her spiritual
-hymns, more especially Gellert's beautiful canticle,
-"Ne'er will I seek to injure him;" and concluded with
-a prayer on the text of St. Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly
-above all that we ask or think."</p>
-
-<p>The worthy clergyman returned in the afternoon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-and again in the evening, and found the queen, in
-spite of her indescribably violent illness, rather more
-calm; and when he returned to the castle on the next
-morning, he found that Superintendent General Jacob
-had already been with the patient, and the two physicians
-were still with her. On the faces of the physicians
-he fancied he could read a certain calmness, and,
-in fact, the patient was better, as she herself said. It
-was the usual lucid interval which takes place before
-departure from life, the harbinger of imminent death,
-dressed in the garb of mercy for the friends of the
-departing.</p>
-
-<p>The queen employed these last moments in the exercise
-of a good deed. She requested the clergyman
-to write a few words for her to her brother, which
-would show that she had not forgotten her attendants,
-but recommended them to the King of England. She
-tried to dictate the words to him, but her tongue was
-already refusing to obey her, and she left it to the
-pastor to write what he thought proper. When he had
-finished, she took the paper in her hand, but returned
-it to him again immediately, that he might read it
-to her and seal it before her eyes. The letter was
-then handed by the queen to Director von Marenholz,
-whom she had ever deeply respected, for transmission
-to the king.</p>
-
-<p>Toward evening the condition of the queen had evidently
-grown so serious, that her dissolution might be
-apprehended at any moment. She was told that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-whole city was alarmed about her, and that even the
-Jewish community had offered up prayers for her.</p>
-
-<p>"How this sympathy alleviates my sufferings!" the
-queen answered, in a weak voice; and the clergyman
-offered up a prayer in words which her eyes confirmed
-as her own.</p>
-
-<p>Then she inquired after the condition of Sophie von
-Benningsen; and when the physician gave her the
-assurance that the child was out of all danger, she
-breathed the words, "Then I die soothed," and fell
-asleep not to wake again.</p>
-
-<p>Pastor Lehzen, who was present at the queen's
-death, describes it in the following words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"My office has often enabled me to witness the last
-hours of my fellow-mortals, but I never remember so
-easy a dissolution, in which death loses all its terrors.
-The expression of the Scriptures was literally true in
-this case: she fell asleep like a tired wayfarer."</p>
-
-<p>Caroline Matilda died on May 11, 1775, at 10 minutes
-past 11 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>, at the age of twenty-three years, nine
-months, and twenty days.</p>
-
-<p>As was very natural in those days, the queen's sudden
-death aroused suspicions of poison. Mr. Wraxall,
-however, who asked Mantel about the circumstances,
-gives us the following account, which may be regarded
-as authentic:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>I desired to know if there was the shadow of reason
-to suspect poison or any unnatural means.</p>
-
-<p>"Sir," said he, "God only knows, but I think not.
-The inhabitants of Zell are all as firmly persuaded of
-her having been poisoned, as if they had seen her
-swallow it. They accuse an Italian of it, though the
-man had not been near the queen's person for near
-or quite a year before. He had been in the service of
-the Grand Duke of Tuscany, and being recommended
-as an Intendant, was brought here from Vienna. He
-was a profligate, unprincipled man. He brought with
-him a very pretty young woman whom he called his
-daughter, but was in reality his mistress. While he
-stayed here, he contracted a number of debts, and
-being unable to discharge them, went off with his mistress
-to Brunswick and Berlin. He has not been
-heard of since. The prejudiced people accuse him of
-having been gained by the Danish court, and of having
-administered a slow poison to the queen before his
-departure, but I am really not inclined to believe this
-suspicion."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>To this statement Mr. Wraxall adds: "Among the
-many princes and crowned heads whom the ignorant
-and misjudging multitude have supposed to be dispatched
-by poison, none seems to have less foundation
-for such an apprehension than the Queen of Denmark.
-She was exactly a subject for an inflammatory or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-malignant distemper. She had already had repeated
-attacks of the same nature, though not so violent as
-the last. It was in the beginning of May, and the
-weather remarkably hot. The queen was accustomed
-to use great exercise, and probably overheated herself.
-She was young, large, and of a plethoric habit of body.
-When all these circumstances are considered, who can
-wonder at the nature of her disorder and death?
-Nothing so likely or natural."</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the mortification that at once set in, it
-was found absolutely necessary to deposit the body in
-the vault of the Dukes of Celle until the King of England
-had arranged the funeral ceremonies. This was
-done at midnight, on May 13, with great order and
-decorum by Grand Maréchal von Lichtenstein. At
-the sermons in the church, the whole congregation,
-from the highest to the lowest, burst into tears. The
-queen's affability and gentleness had gained her the
-hearts of even the lowest people, who offered up heart-felt
-prayers for their <em>lieben und guten Königinn</em>. Her
-Majesty's remains, accompanied by sixteen captains,
-were carried in a hearse, drawn by six horses, and
-attended by a double guard of soldiers, to the royal
-vault. The burial expenses, amounting to £3,000,
-though the funeral was quite private, were defrayed,
-by order, out of George III.'s privy purse.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A general mourning was appointed in England, and
-on May 24 a committee of the Lords, with staves,
-and also a committee of the House of Commons, who
-were of the privy council, waited on his Majesty at
-St. James's, with their address of condolence on the
-Queen of Denmark's death. To which George III.
-replied: that "he returned his thanks to that House
-for the concern they have expressed for the great loss
-which has happened to his family by the death of his
-sister, the Queen of Denmark." The king also recommended
-the succession of the late queen, for the advantage
-of her children, to the care of the Regency of
-Hanover, and Baron von Seckendorf was consequently
-entrusted with its administration.</p>
-
-<p>The British court sent a formal notification of the
-death of Queen Caroline Matilda to Copenhagen. It
-arrived on a day when a court ball was appointed, and
-the vengeance of old Juliana Maria went so far, that,
-careless of decency, she did not even order the ball to
-be put off. The usual ceremonial, however, had to be
-observed&mdash;for instance, the ordinary court mourning of
-four weeks&mdash;as for foreign reigning princes and princesses,
-and the children of the deceased were placed in
-deep mourning. It is nevertheless certain that this
-foolhardy behaviour on the part of the Danish usurpers
-proved most offensive at the court of St. James's, and
-heightened the aversion George III. felt for the Danes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The unfortunate queen, however, was all the more
-regretted in the land of her exile, and in the widest
-circles. The two Chambers of the principality of
-Lüneburg, immediately after the death of this consoler
-of all the poor and suffering in Celle, applied to her
-brother with a request that they might be allowed to
-erect a monument to the deceased queen, in that Jardin
-François of which she had been so fond, so that
-there might be at this spot a memorial of the universal
-devotion with which the great and noble
-qualities of the late Queen of Denmark were revered
-among them, and to give remotest posterity an opportunity
-of honouring, with silent emotion, the memory
-and reputation of the best and most amiable
-of queens.</p>
-
-<p>George III. expressed his thanks for this offer, and
-we can easily understand how welcome to him was this
-public proof of the veneration and love which were
-felt for his sister, who had been so cruelly hurled
-from her throne.</p>
-
-<p>After receiving the king's assent, the Chambers of
-Lüneburg had the monument erected by Professor
-Oeser, of Leipzig, and to the present day it is an ornament
-of the Jardin François, which travellers gaze on
-with sympathy and regret.</p>
-
-<p>The governor of Celle, a prince of Mecklenburg
-Strelitz, also had a monument erected in memory of
-Caroline Matilda in his English garden, and it is well
-known that the Danish poets Baggesen and Oehlenschläger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-have erected permanent memorials to her in
-their works.</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago, the following letter was discovered
-in the secret archives of Hanover.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> It was probably
-written by Caroline Matilda in the first days of her
-illness, when she had a presentiment of her death.
-When she was first attacked, she had said to her faithful
-valet&mdash;"Mantel, I am very ill, and fully believe
-I shall die."</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">IRE</span>,</p>
-
-<p>In the most solemn hour of my life, I turn to you,
-my royal brother, to express my heart's thanks for all
-the kindness you have shown me during my whole
-life, and especially in my misfortune.</p>
-
-<p>I die willingly, for nothing holds me back&mdash;neither
-my youth, nor the pleasures which might await me,
-near or remote. How could life possess any charms
-for me, who am separated from all those I love&mdash;my
-husband, my children, and my relatives? I, who am
-myself a queen and of royal blood, have lived the most
-wretched life, and stand before the world an example
-that neither crown nor sceptre affords any protection
-against misfortune!</p>
-
-<p>But I die innocent&mdash;I write this with a trembling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-hand, and feeling death imminent&mdash;I am innocent!
-Oh, that it might please the Almighty to convince the
-world after my death, that I did not deserve any of the
-frightful accusations, by which the calumnies of my
-enemies stained my character, wounded my heart,
-traduced my honour, and trampled on my dignity!</p>
-
-<p>Sire! believe your dying sister, a queen, and even
-more, a Christian, who would gaze with terror on the
-other world, if her last confession were a falsehood. I
-die willingly: for the unhappy bless the tomb.</p>
-
-<p>But more than all else, and even than death, it
-pains me that not one of all those whom I loved in life,
-is standing by my dying bed, to grant me a last consolation
-by a pressure of the hand, or a glance of compassion,
-and to close my eyes in death.</p>
-
-<p>Still, I am not alone: God, the sole witness of my
-innocence, is looking down on my bed of agony, which
-causes me such sufferings. My guardian angel is
-hovering over me, and will soon guide me to the spot,
-where I shall be able to pray for my friends, and also
-for my persecutors.</p>
-
-<p>Farewell, then, my royal brother! May Heaven
-bless you, my husband&mdash;my children&mdash;England&mdash;Denmark&mdash;and
-the whole world! Permit my corpse
-to rest in the grave of my ancestors, and now the last,
-unspeakably long farewell from your unfortunate</p>
-
-<p class="center">C<span class="smcap">AROLINE</span> M<span class="smcap">ATILDA</span>.<br /></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>We have further and valuable testimony to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-unstained memory of Queen Caroline Matilda in the
-following extract from Falckenskjold's "Memoirs:"&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>In 1780, I had an opportunity at Hanover of forming
-the acquaintance of M. Roques, pastor of the
-French Protestant Church in Celle. One day, I spoke
-to him about Queen Caroline Matilda:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I was summoned almost daily by that princess,"
-he said to me, "either to read or converse with her,
-and most frequently to obtain information relative to
-the poor of my parish. I visited her more constantly
-during the last days of her life, and I was near her a
-little before she drew her last breath. Although very
-weak, she retained her presence of mind. After I
-had recited the prayers for the dying, she said to me,
-in a voice which seemed to become more animated:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"<em>M. Roques, I am about to appear before</em> G<span class="smcap">OD</span>: <em>I
-protest that I am innocent of the crimes imputed against
-me, and that I was never faithless to my husband</em>."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>M. Roques added, that the queen had never spoken
-to him, even indirectly, of the accusations brought
-against her.</p>
-
-<p>I wrote down on the same day (March 7, 1780)
-what M. Roques said to me, as coming from a man
-distinguished by his integrity of character.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Such is everything that can be learned of the death
-of Caroline Matilda. Sacrificed in the first bloom of
-youth, and decked with the fillets of misery, she was
-sent, an inexperienced victim, to become the bride of
-a man who was a compound of insanity and brutality.
-In less than seven years she experienced all the
-honours, but also all the wretchedness, which a royal
-throne can offer. Then she died in the flower of life
-in exile, the victim of the most scandalous conspiracy.</p>
-
-<p>Several descriptions of Caroline Matilda were written
-at the period of her death in England&mdash;among others,
-one in the "Annual Register," by my grandfather.
-From among them I have selected the one I consider
-the best, which first appeared in the "Universal Magazine"
-for May, 1775:&mdash;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The virtues of this unfortunate princess were many
-of them concealed with as much art as if they had
-been her reproach. She had a ready and quick apprehension,
-a lively and strong imagination, with a
-large compass of thought. She excelled in an uncommon
-turn for conversation, assisted by a natural
-vivacity, and very peculiar talents for mirth and
-humour. She loved a repartee, was happy in making
-one herself, and bearing it from others. And as this
-talent was rendered not only inoffensive, but amiable
-by the greatest good-nature and cheerfulness of disposition,
-she was the life of the company, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-delight of all that had the honour to approach her.
-And though it generally requires much care and resolution
-to govern any extraordinary degree of life and
-spirit, she had no pains of that sort to overcome,
-having been blessed with a natural serenity and calmness
-of mind that was inexpressible, and is hardly
-ever accompanied with such uncommon share of
-vivacity; but in her it had so much the ascendant,
-that it was invariably the same, and constantly remained
-with her through the whole course of her
-misfortunes, so that she had reason to express her
-thankfulness to God, as she often did, that he had
-given her a temper which enabled her to support herself
-under the load of injuries she sustained.</p>
-
-<p>Her gentleness of nature showed itself in every
-instance, both in public and private, and inclined
-her to study all the ways of making herself agreeable,
-and of suiting her discourse to the persons with
-whom she conversed. But though her general manner
-of receiving company in public was very obliging
-and gracious, she knew how to distinguish persons of
-real merit, and had an effectual way of making those
-for whom she had any particular regard fully sensible
-of the distinction she made. The same softness of
-behaviour, and the same command of herself that
-appeared in the drawing-room, went along with her
-into her private apartments, and delighted every one
-that was about her, down to her meanest attendant.</p>
-
-<p>Her generosity was extended in the most impartial
-manner to persons of different sects and parties;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-but her principal regards were paid to such as were
-in the greatest distress, to those who were under the
-disability of receiving a maintenance from the public,
-as well as to the widows and children of clergymen
-and officers whose families, by their deaths, were reduced
-at once from a state of plenty to a want of the
-common necessaries of life.</p>
-
-<p>In these acts of benevolence she avoided all appearance
-of show and ostentation so much, that many
-persons who subsisted by her bounty were really ignorant
-of their benefactor. She conversed in private
-with persons of all the different turns of genius in the
-whole compass of arts and sciences; and with a few
-whom she honoured with a more particular regard,
-she entered into all the freedoms of private and familiar
-life, and showed that she could let herself down
-from her dignity as if she had never possessed it, and
-could resume it again as if she had never parted
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>It was this affability, however, that enabled her
-enemies to ruin her. Perfectly innocent, and even
-virtuous in her conduct, her levity and good humour
-threw her off her guard, and made her less circumspect
-than her situation required. She conformed
-with difficulty to the strict ceremonial which was observed
-at the court of Copenhagen; a vanity, inseparable
-from the youthful part of the female sex, made
-her pleased to see the influence of her beauty on all
-around her, and she indulged herself in an easy familiarity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-with persons who were more remarkable for
-their knowledge and abilities than the greatness of
-their rank. Wicked instruments were planted by her
-unrelenting enemy the queen dowager, who put a
-malignant interpretation on all the harmless liberties
-taken by this amiable princess; and, paying no regard
-either to truth or humanity in the calumnies which
-they suggested, insinuated the most cruel suspicions
-into the king's ear, and took the most criminal methods
-to destroy her character with the public.</p>
-
-<p>To these infernal machinations the amiable Matilda
-fell a sacrifice, in the bloom of youth and beauty,
-and the zenith of power. After her retirement to
-Zell she was often heard to wish for death, which the
-innocence of her life, as well as the misfortunes to
-which she had been exposed, rendered a most welcome
-guest; and her last moments passed in imploring forgiveness
-for her enemies, and recommending her children,
-for whose safety she was exceedingly apprehensive,
-to the protection of the Almighty.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">WHEN ROGUES FALL OUT&mdash;&mdash;.</span></h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">THE REACTION&mdash;THE KING'S WILL&mdash;KOLLER-BANNER&mdash;RANTZAU'S
-DISMISSAL&mdash;PRINCE CHARLES OF HESSE&mdash;COURT INTRIGUES&mdash;EICKSTEDT'S
-CAREER&mdash;BERINGSKJOLD'S CAREER
-AND DEATH&mdash;VON DER OSTEN&mdash;THE GULDBERG MINISTRY&mdash;THE
-PRINCE REGENT&mdash;THE COUP D'ETAT&mdash;UNCLE AND
-NEPHEW&mdash;FATE OF GULDBERG&mdash;DEATH OF JULIANA MARIA</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>With Struensee fell all his reforms, and "the good
-old times" returned in full force.</p>
-
-<p>The detested cabinet minister had scarce been
-thrown into prison ere the new holders of power
-hastened to overthrow all the creations of the fallen
-man. As if anxious to give the country and all the
-persons watching their movements a proof of their
-care for the general welfare, they began by establishing
-justice on its old basis, and restored the Commission
-of Inquiry, who were allowed by the criminal
-code to extort confessions from prisoners with the
-lash. This care for the due administration of justice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-was soon followed to the satisfaction of the pietists
-and the orthodox clergy by the reintroduction of
-public penance for sexual sins, so that the plebs very
-soon enjoyed once more the edifying spectacle of hot-blooded
-sinners, male and female, being insulted by
-bigoted priests in temples devoted to the adoration of
-the Almighty. Still, they did not dare to abolish the
-court and city court established by Struensee, because
-the recognition of this benefit was universal.
-In the same way, a decided error on Struensee's part,
-and which, it might be assumed, the reaction would
-at once reform&mdash;the lottery, that plague-spot of the
-poorer classes&mdash;was allowed to exist, of course, because
-it caused a deal of money to flow into the
-treasury "of the dearly-beloved king who so dearly
-loved his nation," and cash was pressingly needed to
-satisfy the claims of the friends of the new government.</p>
-
-<p>The spirit of the usurping party and its adherents
-was even more plainly shown by the restoration of
-serfdom, so that the holders of estates could treat
-their vassals as they pleased. The general dissatisfaction
-aroused by this measure among the poor servile
-peasants is depicted by Suhm, who once took the
-field so zealously against Struensee's "godless rule,"
-in an anecdote from Jütland.</p>
-
-<p>"Professor John Egede," so Suhm tells us, "saw a
-man in ragged clothes working in a field with some
-half-naked children to help him, a few years after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-Struensee's fall. 'Will not the extra tax be soon
-removed?' he asked the passing professor. The latter
-replied that he did not know. 'Oh! yes, I can quite
-believe that,' the peasant retorted, 'for you don't
-think about things of that sort in Copenhagen. That
-was a worthy man who gave us the regulations by
-which the <em>corvées</em> were settled. But that was the very
-reason, I fancy, why they cut his head off. The new
-regulation is only made to torment us poor peasants
-till we cannot stand it any longer.'"</p>
-
-<p>It is notorious that serfdom was not abolished until
-the regency of the Crown Prince Frederick. Under
-his long reign, which lasted from 1784 to 1839,
-nearly all Struensee's reforms, to which a more enlightened
-age did ample justice, and which had obtained
-general recognition through the ideas diffused
-by the French Revolution, were recalled to life. The
-task was completed, greatly to his credit, by Christian
-VIII., the grandson of Juliana Maria.</p>
-
-<p>All that remains for us now to do, is to show by
-what means the new faction sought to secure its
-position, and how at last Nemesis revenged herself on
-the principal conspirators.</p>
-
-<p>The usurpers did not consider themselves fully
-secured by having declared the king's sole signature
-invalid, but they wished to make themselves safe in
-the event of the weak king dying before the prince
-royal attained his majority. For this object, they persuaded
-the king, after the queen's matter had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-amicably arranged with the English court, to sign a
-will, a copy of which was handed to the colleges and
-courts, with orders that the document was only
-to be opened after the king's death, in case it took
-place during the crown prince's minority. As the
-presumed event did not occur, however, the contents
-of the privy regulation have remained a secret. It
-was generally supposed that the king's testament contained
-an order that Queen Caroline Matilda should
-be excluded from the guardianship of her son, and
-that the Hereditary Prince Frederick should be appointed
-regent. Other suppositions hinted at still
-more important regulations as to the successor, but it
-can hardly be believed that the king, however imbecile
-he might be, would have signed such a document.</p>
-
-<p>A desire to prevent a possible surprise was certainly
-the motive for the decree that for the future
-foreign envoys would only be admitted to an audience
-with the king in the presence of the council of state;
-and yet such a custom had been regarded as high
-treason on the part of Struensee.</p>
-
-<p>The union among the conspirators, however, only
-lasted a short time after the revolution had been
-carried out, and this was specially evident among the
-military members. Generals Rantzau-Ascheberg and
-Eickstedt stood at the head of two opposite parties.</p>
-
-<p>Rantzau-Ascheberg, Köller-Banner, and Von der
-Osten, formed a triumvirate dangerous to their opponents.
-As chief aide-de-camp, Köller-Banner re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>ceived
-apartments in Frederiksberg Palace, where the
-court resided in the summer of 1772. Hence Rantzau
-also procured rooms in the palace; but, as the number
-of doors and windows annoyed him, he hired lodgings
-in the village adjoining the palace, and Von der Osten
-removed to the same spot, so that the three friends
-were close neighbours. Rantzau also supported in the
-Generalty College all the propositions that emanated
-from Köller, while he said simultaneously to Eickstedt,
-who hated Köller:</p>
-
-<p>"Do not suppose that I have any serious understanding
-with Banner. Certainly not. I only pretend
-to be his partisan, in order that the Pomeranian
-may burn his fingers in the candle."</p>
-
-<p>Von der Osten displayed equal dissimulation in the
-council of state, where he supported and praised everything
-proposed by Schack Rathlau, while in secret calumniating
-him to the best of his ability.</p>
-
-<p>The other conspirators, consequently, began to entertain
-doubts about their three ambitious and intriguing
-colleagues, and apprehended that they might even
-meditate evil designs against the queen dowager and
-her son. Suddenly it was announced that Rantzau-Ascheberg,
-at his own request, had been relieved of all
-his offices, and retired on a pension of 8,000 dollars;
-and it was generally believed that Russia and Prussia
-had insisted on his removal. There may be some
-truth in this, as the Empress Catharine had just ratified
-the Holstein exchange, and naturally expected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-something in return. In the highest circles, however,
-all were glad at being freed from this dangerous man.
-Suhm, however, tells us, that the decisive cause of
-Rantzau's dismissal was, that he said about a letter
-written by the hereditary prince to Guldberg, "Yes,
-it can be recognised by the style! But was not
-Struensee's head cut off for the same thing?" Immediately
-after his retirement from active service, Rantzau
-quitted Copenhagen, and went to his Holstein
-estates; but, on October 16, the restless traitor proceeded
-to Kragsberg, near Odense, in Fühnen, but whether
-with reactionary purposes remained an enigma.
-In Copenhagen the return of the dangerous man occasioned
-such alarm among his former confederates,
-that, on November 6, Major von Harboe suddenly
-handed him a royal order to quit the island immediately.
-Under the major's escort he returned to
-Ascheberg, and directly after went, <em>viâ</em> Hamburg,
-to Frankfort, where he cashed a draft of 24,000
-florins in the assumed name of Juel. He left Frankfort
-again as quietly as he had arrived there, and proceeded
-to the south of France, where he took up his
-temporary abode at Orange, probably in obedience to
-royal commands. Afterwards he removed to Avignon,
-where he spent the rest of his days, and died there, in
-1789, in his seventy-second year, without having once
-revisited his country.</p>
-
-<p>So soon as some order had been introduced in the
-course of business, Köller-Banner, as representative of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-the infantry, produced in the War College projects for
-the tactical remodelling of the battalions, which, however,
-Eickstedt considered too expensive, and sought
-to prevent. Köller-Banner's plans were on the point
-of failing, when, in the eleventh hour, the government
-altered their mind, and temporarily assented to his
-plans. Eickstedt felt so insulted by this, that he forwarded
-a letter to the hereditary prince, in which he
-requested his discharge, and added, that he desired no
-pension. Guldberg naturally undertook to answer this
-request of one of the principal conspirators, and did
-it in his unctuous way, by recalling to the petitioner's
-mind the Glorious 17th of January, and reminding
-him of the necessity of all the sharers in it hanging
-together. Eickstedt replied to this in his usual coarse
-way, that he was sick and tired of constantly listening
-to the old chatter of January 17. The object of that
-day had been to secure the king's person, maintain the
-honour of the royal house, and promote the welfare of
-the country. But, if that object could not be attained,
-it would have been better had the events of January
-17 never taken place. Such dangerous expressions
-from a powerful member of the conspiracy induced
-the hereditary prince himself to undertake satisfying
-the dissatisfied man; and he declared to the petitioner
-in writing that the aid of so active and far-sighted
-a man could not be dispensed with in the projected
-reforms, and hence his resignation could not be accepted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Although Eickstedt had not succeeded in overthrowing
-Köller-Banner, another man completely
-effected it.</p>
-
-<p>Directly after the revolution, Queen Juliana Maria
-invited to Copenhagen Prince Charles of Hesse and
-his wife, but the death of one of their children prevented
-the princely couple from reaching the capital
-until October, at the time when the menacing measures
-of Gustavus III., for the conquest of Norway,
-had aroused great terror among the incapable members
-of the government, and caused the nomination
-of Prince Charles as generalissimo in Norway. Immediately
-on his arrival the latter was received by the
-queen; and, after a conversation about the dangers with
-which Norway was menaced, was requested to examine
-Köller-Banner's propositions; but, at the same time,
-was also warned by the crafty queen against this
-dangerous man and Von der Osten. By the prince's
-advice, a committee was appointed, under the presidency
-of the hereditary prince, to investigate Köller-Banner's
-reforms: the other members being Prince Charles, and
-Generals von Hauch and von Hobe, while the ministers
-also took part in the discussions. This committee
-rejected nearly all Banner's propositions, at which the
-latter was so offended, that he not only forgot all the
-respect due to the king's brother-in-law, but publicly
-declared that Frederick II. of Prussia would erect a
-statue to him for reforms and ideas like his. When the
-authorities also learned that Köller-Banner, wrapped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-in his cloak, paid nocturnal visits to the French and
-Swedish envoys, his dismissal from his former posts,
-and his appointment as governor of the fortress of
-Rendsburg, ensued, while the Prince of Brunswick-Bevern
-was gazetted as commandant of the capital.
-Still the hero of January 17 retained his full pay of
-4,400 dollars, in order not to offend him too greatly.<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
-
-<p>Although the general might now be reckoned among
-the exiles, he had not fallen into utter disgrace, for
-Juliana Maria afterwards took him under her protection,
-and tried to keep him, for the purpose of intimidating
-the violent ministerial opposition. For in July, 1774, he
-unexpectedly received an invitation from her to come
-at once to Fredensborg, where the court was residing
-at the time; but when the ministers heard of this,
-they were penetrated with fear, and induced the War
-College to intimate to the general that he was to
-remain at his post in Rendsburg, and send an apology
-to the queen. Although Banner found himself compelled
-to obey on this occasion, on receiving soon after
-another request from the queen to come across, he
-informed her that he would accede to her wishes, and
-appeared at Fredensborg in the beginning of August.
-As, however, he was a thorn in the eye of the
-ministers, he soon began quarrelling with them, the
-result of which was, that he was commanded by the
-Generalty, who would not listen to his plans and complaints,
-to return to his post. This induced him to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-send in his resignation; but it was not accepted.
-Hence he imagined himself indispensable, and took a
-step by which he hoped to overthrow his opponents in
-the War College. He sent into the privy council a
-rambling plan for a thorough reconstruction of the
-army; but as Eickstedt had anticipated him, and
-handed in a similar project, Banner's was sent back to
-him unheeded. Infuriated at this, he again forwarded
-his resignation, and dated his request on the eventful
-day, January 17th, 1775; but this artful trick did
-not avail him.</p>
-
-<p>On January 23rd, a royal cabinet letter was sent to
-the Generalty, to the effect that the king, in consideration
-of the proofs of fidelity, zeal, and devotedness,
-which Lieut.-General von Köller-Banner had furnished,
-felt himself induced to assent to his petition of
-January 17th in all points. He would, however,
-retain his former pay of 4,400 dollars, of which, 2,600
-had been granted him for his meritorious services on
-January 17th, 1772. Furthermore, he would still
-remain in the king's service, and be always ready to
-act as a Danish general whenever the king thought
-proper, and as befitted a lieutenant-general; at the
-same time, he was permitted to visit other armies, and
-take part in foreign campaigns.</p>
-
-<p>Köller-Banner, after this, left the country and went
-to Vienna and the Austrian army, but returned at the
-beginning of 1777 to Copenhagen, where he was again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-most graciously received by the old queen. Soon
-afterwards, however, he was mixed up in a scandalous
-affair with the magistracy about a child an actress had
-given birth to. The excitement caused by this was
-so general, that he received his full discharge from
-the military service. But the protection which the
-hero of January 17th still enjoyed was so great, that
-his 4,400 dollars were left him as a life pension.</p>
-
-<p>When Köller went to take leave of his powerful
-patroness, Queen Juliana Maria, he requested, as a
-last proof of her favour, that she should inform him
-who it really was who had calumniated him so greatly
-to her and the hereditary prince, and promised, at the
-same time, to make no use of the information. The
-queen then acknowledged to him that it was Admiral
-von Kaas.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it possible!" Köller-Banner exclaimed, in the
-utmost surprise. "That is the greatest insult that
-could be offered me! The unworthy wretch&mdash;a man
-who has dishonoured the Danish flag&mdash;a man whose
-wickedness is only comparable with his stupidity&mdash;has
-been able to overthrow a faithful and zealous servant
-of the royal house by his calumnies! I never could
-have believed that my hostile destiny would prepare
-such a humiliation for me."</p>
-
-<p>Köller-Banner returned to his native land of Pomerania,
-but could not stand it long there, and selected
-as his last residence the very city where Struensee's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-memory was honoured. In this city, Altona, the conspirator
-died in 1811, utterly forgotten, and avoided
-and detested by everybody.</p>
-
-<p>The Pomeranian knight of the Dannebrog, Hans
-Henry von Eickstedt, held his ground the longest.
-In 1773, this utterly ignorant soldier was entrusted
-with the supervision of the education of the crown
-prince by a royal letter, which was at the same time a
-grand panegyric of the nominee. The king, we read
-in it, had appointed him chief governor of his beloved
-son, because he could trust to the general's faithful
-devotedness, Danish heart, and judicious care. But
-this selection was so bad a one, that the excellent son
-of Caroline Matilda frequently complained loudly in
-his maturer years that he had been purposely kept
-from learning anything. It was the design of the
-queen and Guldberg to keep the crown prince a
-minor as long as possible, and the best means for this
-unscrupulous object were certainly to allow the heir
-to the throne to grow up in ignorance, to imbue him
-with an immoderate preference for everything Danish,
-and to divert his inclinations to unimportant state-matters,
-such as playing at soldiers. Although the
-two leaders of the conspiracy succeeded in this treacherous
-design, the country yet had the consolation and
-satisfaction that King Frederick VI. inherited the clear
-natural intellect of his unfortunate mother, and thus
-made up for his deficiency of knowledge, even though
-his neglected education entailed other consequences.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In November, 1783, Eickstedt was given the order
-of the Elephant; and when, in 1784, the education of
-the crown prince was said to be finished, he was appointed
-his first chamberlain; but on the very next
-day after the crown prince attained the government
-as regent, Eickstedt received from his royal pupil his
-dismissal as member of the privy council and commandant
-of the Horse Guards, with a pension of 5,000
-dollars, which was some time after raised to 7,000.
-This terrible fall so greatly insulted the arrogant
-chamberlain, that he at once left the court and retired
-to his estate of Boltinggaard, in the island of Fühnen,
-where he died in the year 1801, in seclusion, and forgotten
-by the world.</p>
-
-<p>Beringskjold could not endure the loss of his chamberlain's
-dignity and his banishment to the island of
-Möen, which I have already described, for it was asking
-this ambitious man to resign half his life. Hence
-he left the island secretly a little while after, and went
-to Sweden. What he undertook there remains a mystery;
-but it is known that he ordered his wife during
-his absence to send in a petition for his pardon, and
-compensation for the losses he had sustained by being
-deprived of his domain of Nygaard. As no resolution
-to this effect was issued, he, in the following year, requested,
-through the same intercessor, pardon and permission
-to return to his native land. This request
-had a better result, for he was not only allowed to
-return to Möen, but the chamberlain's key was also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-restored him. He received a letter from the king
-himself, in which his disobedience was graciously forgiven,
-and he was requested to remain quietly in
-Möen, or, if he preferred it, somewhere in Jütland,
-Fühnen, or the duchies, and there enjoy his guaranteed
-pension of 2,000 dollars. At the same time, however,
-he was prohibited from travelling again to Sweden, or
-carrying on a secret correspondence with that country,
-or leaving Denmark at all; and for his own good he
-was recommended not to show himself at Copenhagen,
-or any place where the court was residing. This indulgence
-toward the accomplices of 1772 was further
-shown in the fact that, in 1780, Beringskjold's son,
-who was a page of the bed-chamber, was appointed a
-conferenz-rath, and the other, who was a captain, a
-chamberlain. But all this but little satisfied the restless
-father. He next asked leave to reside at least in
-the same island where the court was; and when this
-was granted him, he bought, in a mysterious way, three
-considerable estates, situate in the southern part of
-Seeland: Rönnebeksholm, Sparresholm, and Sortebrödre,
-and selected the first as his residence. When the
-court was staying at Fredensborg in the summer, he
-went repeatedly to Elsinore, which was only ten miles
-from the palace, and thence sent letter after letter,
-first to one, then to the other of the persons belonging
-to the king's immediate <em>entourage</em>, in order to obtain
-further favours; but all these efforts proved unsuccessful.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When Beringskjold saw himself thus passed over,
-he formed a plan for overthrowing the government,
-and laid his treacherous scheme before a near relative
-of the royal family; but one of his own sons, the chamberlain,
-betrayed his father's designs.</p>
-
-<p>On June 4, 1781, a royal cabinet order was sent to
-Bailiff von Bielcke, Bürgomaster Wulf, and Regimental
-Quartermaster Schiött, all of Nestved, to seize Chamberlain
-von Beringskjold, on whom a strong suspicion
-rested of carrying on a very treasonable correspondence,
-and sequestrate his papers. These gentlemen
-enticed the chamberlain, by a business pretext, to the
-town, read him the king's order, and the bürgomaster
-at once conveyed him under escort to Copenhagen,
-where he was handed over to the commandant of the
-citadel, who locked him up, and informed him that a
-dollar a day was allowed for his maintenance. In the
-meanwhile, the two other commissioners went to the
-prisoner's estate, packed up all the papers they found
-there in a trunk, sealed it up, and the quartermaster
-immediately started with it for Fredensborg, where the
-court was residing at the time. Simultaneously with
-the order of arrest, the postmasters of Nestved and
-Ringstedt received instructions, during the next eight
-days, to stop all letters addressed to Rönnebeksholm,
-and send them to the royal cabinet. A similar order
-was sent to Bürgomaster thor Straten and the postmaster
-of Flensburg, concerning all letters arriving
-for, or despatched by, a certain Comptroller Wildgaard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On June 9, Bailiff von Bielcke and his fellow-commissioners
-were instructed to restore to Frau von
-Beringskjold all the papers not retained from the trunk
-which had been examined at Fredensborg, and to give
-her and her sons, in the king's name, the assurance of
-his Majesty's lasting favour. Frau von Beringskjold
-was allowed to remain on her estate, and was only
-advised, in all future affairs, to consult with her son,
-Conferenz-rath von Beringskjold.</p>
-
-<p>After a survey of the sequestrated papers had proved
-the "continued bad designs of this man"&mdash;such were
-the royal words about Beringskjold&mdash;a commission of
-inquiry was appointed on November 13, 1781. In
-order that this affair which, owing to its nature, demanded
-the greatest secrecy, should be discussed with
-all due justice, the king selected those men as judges
-of whose insight and integrity he and the whole country
-were convinced, namely, the Justiciary of the Supreme
-Court, Privy Councillor of Conferences von
-Rosenörn, the Director and Attorney-General of the
-General Chancery, Privy Councillor Carstens, the
-Minister of Finances, Privy Councillor von Stemann,
-and the Professor of Law, Etats-rath Colbjörnsen.</p>
-
-<p>The commissioners were ordered to assemble, after
-giving a solemn pledge of secrecy, and, in accordance
-with the royal instructions, form an opinion, from the
-papers laid before them, whether Chamberlain von
-Beringskjold had not proved himself one of those restless
-subjects who ought to spend the rest of their lives
-in imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The choice of the commission in itself proved what
-weight was attached to Beringskjold's detected conspiracy.
-It was a peculiar circumstance, too, that
-secret instructions were given to the Hamburg post-office,
-which led to the tolerably correct supposition,
-that the person related to the royal house was no other
-than the king's brother-in-law. As early as 1773,
-Juliana Maria had felt alarm about Christian VII.'s
-sister, and was very glad at that time that the latter
-consented to accompany her husband, when appointed
-generalissimo of Norway, to that distant country.<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> At
-the period when the conspiracy was detected, Prince
-Charles was a highly esteemed volunteer in the Prussian
-army, so that he must naturally have been consulted
-by letters which must go <em>viâ</em> Flensburg, after
-passing through Schleswig and Louisenlund. The result
-of the investigation was, however, carefully kept
-private, and it is, up to the present day, one of the
-state secrets of the Danish archives.</p>
-
-<p>In the Beringskjold affair, a great number of witnesses
-was examined who had been connected with
-the prisoner of state, and even persons who had dined
-with him were asked what their host had said about
-the government at dinner. After the witnesses had
-all been examined, the prisoner's turn arrived, and his
-crimes, among which a conspiracy against the government
-was the chief, were brought before him, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-learned for the first time that his own son had denounced
-him. Beringskjold handed in his counter-declaration,
-and requested, during the trial, the assistance
-of Advocate Colbjörnsen, brother of the commissioner.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, when all the regulations of the law, so far
-as the peculiar nature of the affair allowed it, had been
-exhausted in the examination, the commission sent
-in, on December 31, 1781, their opinion upon the
-point laid before them by the king, which was to the
-effect, that Chamberlain von Beringskjold was proved
-to be a restless man, and dangerous to the general
-welfare and public order, and, as such, ought to be
-imprisoned for life under a strict guard, according to
-the law.</p>
-
-<p>When the king was on the point of confirming the
-sentence or opinion of the commissioners, but at the
-same time of granting the accused a considerable sum
-for his maintenance, the discovery was made that the
-prisoner, in spite of his strict arrest, had carried on a
-secret correspondence, and undertaken "another attempt
-at his old wickedness." After such "mad disobedience
-of all royal orders,"&mdash;so says the royal re-script
-of February 20, 1782,&mdash;all the proofs against the
-prisoner were to be gathered, and laid before the commission
-for a final judicial sentence.</p>
-
-<p>On March 3, the sentence of the commissioners was
-made known, which decreed the highest criminal
-penalty against Chamberlain von Beringskjold, that is,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-like Struensee and Brandt, loss of honour, life, and
-property.</p>
-
-<p>The king resolved on this that Beringskjold, although
-he had added more than one offence to his original
-crimes, should be spared the extreme penalty, but as
-a dangerous criminal remain in secure arrest; be degraded
-from his dignity as chamberlain; and be told
-that, on the slightest attempt to renew his designs, he
-would suffer death. This penalty, however, was in no
-way intended to degrade or humiliate his innocent wife
-or her sons.</p>
-
-<p>On April 9, the convict was informed of the royal
-pardon, and the chamberlain's key taken from him for
-the second time. He was left in the citadel under
-arrest, but no one was allowed access to him but Dean
-Thybring. For all that, early in May he found means
-to write a letter to his wife, which really reached its
-destination. In this letter he complains of the "incredible
-godless treatment he had endured;" dropped
-hints about the charges brought against him; and gave
-instructions for further correspondence; stating, in
-conclusion, that he had already written twice, for
-which purpose paper and pens were given him by
-special orders of the commandant.</p>
-
-<p>When Frau von Beringskjold received this letter, she
-was so affected by its contents, that she was attacked by
-a mortal disease. In her dying moments, however,
-she handed the letter to Quartermaster Schiött, who
-at once forwarded a copy to Eickstedt, and shortly
-after, by the general's orders, the original to Guldberg.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Beringskjold was now removed to Munkholm,
-where he took the place of Falckenskjold, who had
-been overthrown by his machinations, and was kept in
-the strictest arrest in the rock fortress. When, two
-years later, the government passed into other hands,
-Beringskjold fancied that the hour of his deliverance
-had arrived. He therefore hastened to send a petition
-to Copenhagen, in which he requested a revision of his
-trial, but naturally gained no hearing from the son of
-Caroline Matilda. However, the gentle young prince
-allowed the originator of the conspiracy of 1772 to
-walk about the fortress and pay visits, and his sons
-were ordered to give him a portion of what they had
-inherited from their mother.</p>
-
-<p>A few years later, Beringskjold obtained his removal
-to the fortress of Bergenhuus, where he remained as a
-prisoner till 1795, but lived in incessant contention
-with the commandant, Major-General de Mothe, and
-the officers. In the last-named year he obtained the
-regent's permission to end his days in the unfortified
-town of Stavanger, in Southern Norway, where he was
-placed under the supervision of the bailiff. He lived
-here eight years, and died in 1803, at the great age of
-upwards of eighty years.</p>
-
-<p>Count von der Osten, who became minister of foreign
-affairs through the palace revolution of 1772, did not
-occupy his post long, but was banished to Jütland in
-1774, when, on the recommendation of Landgrave
-Charles, Count Bernstorff's nephew, the afterwards so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-celebrated Peter Andreas Bernstorff, was summoned
-to Denmark, and the foreign affairs were entrusted to
-him. A few years after, however, Von der Osten was
-recalled from his bailiff's post in Aalborg, and appointed
-president of the Supreme Court; a little later,
-chief president of Copenhagen; and, shortly before the
-downfall of the usurping government, was decorated
-with the order of the Elephant. This participator in
-the conspiracy also attained an age of upwards of eighty
-years, and died in 1797.</p>
-
-<p>All that is left now is to describe the fate of the
-fifth principal conspirator and actual manager of the
-palace revolution, Cabinet Secretary Guldberg, after
-whom the misgovernment, from January 17, 1772, to
-April 14, 1784, has been called the Guldberg Ministry.</p>
-
-<p>Always keeping behind the scenes so long as he had
-any one to fear who might contend with him for the
-supreme power, Guldberg accepted no seat in the
-privy council established immediately after Struensee's
-fall, but temporarily contented himself with his
-position as cabinet secretary to the hereditary prince
-and intimate adviser of the queen dowager, though
-he at the same time decided everything. But when
-the younger Bernstorff undertook the foreign ministry
-in 1774, and Guldberg was alarmed at the influence
-of this respected man, he effected his own appointment
-to the hitherto vacant post of privy cabinet secretary
-to the king, which ensued on the birthday of the hereditary
-prince. In this way, the cabinet government,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-which had been charged as the highest crime against
-Struensee, was re-established, and Guldberg granted
-official interference in all higher affairs of state. External
-dignities speedily followed; for the king, in
-1777, raised him to the Danish nobility, with precedence
-from January 29, 1773, the king's birthday,
-and granted him the name of Höegh-Guldberg. In
-his new post of honour, he very soon made Bernstorff
-tired of his ministerial functions;<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> so that the
-latter sent in his resignation in 1780, and it was accepted.
-Immediately after, Höegh-Guldberg was appointed
-a privy councillor, and it was at the same time
-published that the king had also selected him as a
-member of the privy council of state.</p>
-
-<p>After three years' working in the dark, the cabinet
-secretary, who occupied Struensee's post, had thus acquired
-the governmental authority. The revolution
-was ostensibly undertaken with the object of bringing
-the sovereign power again into the hands of the king
-alone; but as the mental condition of Christian VII.
-did not permit this, Queen Juliana Maria assumed
-Struensee's part, though only indirectly, and through
-the medium of her other self, Guldberg, as her sex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-did not permit her to preside in person over the
-council of state. For the hereditary prince, who held
-this presidency, was regarded in public as a mere
-puppet, and, according to the testimony of an eye-witness,
-valet Franz Goos, passed most of the sessions in
-sleeping. Höegh-Guldberg, however, did not carry on
-so aristocratic a rule as Struensee, but cleverly left
-the current affairs of the administration to the several
-colleges. But the higher affairs of state were entrusted
-entirely to his guidance.</p>
-
-<p>Advancing gently, he contrived, by his defence of
-the principle of nationality, to acquire some degree of
-respect among his countrymen, and in this way concealed
-his utter want of statesman-like talent. In this
-respect the introduction of what is called the Indigenate
-law of January 15, 1776, remains a lasting merit
-of his, for he was the concipient and proposer of this
-law, even though he asked the advice of the two
-learned brothers Colbjörnsen. By virtue of this law
-only natives could henceforth hold office, though the
-king could naturalise deserving foreigners. The motive
-for the law was so attractive as to gain its concipient
-great praise. Justice demanded, the introduction
-said, that natives should eat the bread of the
-country. The experience of all ages had proved that
-in countries where the education of youth was attended
-to, there was never any lack of useful people, if the
-regent sought them. In this respect, the history of
-the country might be referred to with pleasure, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-could display men of all classes who had served the
-country, maintained and saved its honour, and, with
-noble courage, sacrificed themselves for their kings.</p>
-
-<p>The consequences of this regulation led to a perfect
-Danish administration in both kingdoms, so that every
-failing Struensee had committed in this respect was
-removed. If this was just, however, it did not compensate
-for the errors which constantly brought the
-state nearer to ruin in other points, as all Struensee's
-beneficial arrangements were revoked through sheer
-hatred of him, in so far as too evident proofs of their
-value did not prevent the reactionary party from doing
-so. The final sanction of the exchange of territory,
-by which the former Russian share of Holstein was
-acquired by Denmark, was not Guldberg, but Bernstorff's
-merit. On the other hand, the former deserves
-praise for having effected the liberation of
-Falckenskjold.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, the crown prince grew up; but
-his education was so neglected under the coarse hands
-of Eickstedt and by the over-learned Sporon, that, in
-truth, he only acquired a decided preference for the
-Danish language, but never even learned to write it
-correctly. Although the kings of Denmark are declared
-to be capable of governing at the commencement
-of their fourteenth year, the confirmation of the
-crown prince was deferred till his seventeenth year,
-and was only then performed in the palace chapel on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-April 4, 1784,<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> because it could not be delayed any
-longer. To this was joined the entrance of the crown
-prince into the council of state, but the precaution was
-taken of appointing, on April 6, Minister of Finance
-von Stemann and Secretary of State Höegh-Guldberg,
-state ministers and members of the privy council, so
-that these faithful adherents of the queen might check
-any possible influence of the young crown prince. But
-the reckoning had been made without the host.</p>
-
-<p>The crown prince, who was endowed with sound
-sense and a strong will, had already formed his resolution.
-As early as autumn, 1781, he had suffered an
-insult from Guldberg, which he never forgot. He had
-expressed himself in terms of dissatisfaction about the
-cabinet orders re-introduced by Guldberg, which had
-been regarded as a crime in Struensee. Guldberg
-observed to him, in reply, that the cabinet orders
-were the sole sign of the sovereignty, as without
-them there would soon be as many kings as there
-were colleges in the land, and then told him, through
-the tutor Sporon, that, were it not for the cabinet decrees,
-he, the prince, would himself be not worth more
-than the cat of Slangerup. The brutal Eickstedt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-even forced the prince to make Guldberg an apology
-in writing. From this moment, the crown prince
-formed the fixed resolution to render himself independent,
-ere long, both of Guldberg and the other
-holders of the power.</p>
-
-<p>After carrying on a secret correspondence with
-Bernstorff, who had retired to his estate of Borstel,
-near Hamburg, and receiving his ready assurance
-that he would resume his ministerial functions in
-the event of a change of government, the knowledge
-of the queen's ambitious plans induced the prince to
-confide in other trustworthy opponents of the Guldberg
-ministry, especially Privy Councillors Schack
-Rathlau and Stampe, General Huth, and Count Reventlow,
-and arrange with them the execution of his
-plan.</p>
-
-<p>Thus arrived April 14, 1784, on which day the
-crown prince was to enter the council of state.
-When the members assembled, and the king had
-taken his presidential seat,<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> the two excellencies,
-Höegh-Guldberg and Von Stemann, appointed ministers
-of state on April 7, and Count Rosencrone, who
-had been granted a vote in the privy council, advanced,
-in order to hand to the king the formulary of
-the oath, signed by themselves; but the crown prince
-prevented them, and calmly requested them to desist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-until his Majesty had most graciously permitted him
-to make a proposition. As all remained silent in expectation,
-the crown prince produced a paper, and
-read from it that he gratefully recognised the favour
-shown him by the king, in his appointment as member
-of the privy council, but requested his father to dissolve
-the cabinet, by which the intention expressed in
-the declaration of February 13, 1772, would be fulfilled.
-He also begged that two hitherto pensioned
-men&mdash;Privy Councilors von Rosenkrantz and Von
-Bernstorff&mdash;might be recalled to the council of state;
-and, further, Lieutenant-General von Huth and Privy
-Councillor Stampe be appointed councillors of state.</p>
-
-<p>After reading this proposal, the crown prince laid
-the paper for signature before the king, who at once
-seized a pen, in order to fulfil his son's wish; but the
-hereditary prince tried to prevent him, by saying that
-the king must not be allowed to act with precipitation.
-Christian did not allow himself to be checked by this
-objection, and tried to complete his signature; but
-ere he could manage it, the pen fell from his fingers.
-The crown prince handed it to him again directly, and
-the king not merely completed his signature, but
-added his sanction, on his son saying, "Will not my
-gracious father show me the affection of writing
-'approved,' here?" When this was done, the hereditary
-prince attempted to seize the paper; but the
-crown prince was too quick for him, and put it in his
-pocket. Startled by this scene, the king hurried to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-his apartment, whither the hereditary prince followed
-him with equal speed and shot the bolt, so that the
-crown prince could not gain access to his father.
-Embittered by this, the heir to the throne turned to
-the four privy councillors, Moltke, Höegh-Guldberg,
-Stemann, and Rosencrone, with the declaration that
-the king no longer required their services, and at the
-same time announced the dismissal of the Supreme
-Marshal von Schack, Conferenz-rath Jacobi, and Cabinet
-Secretary Sporon; and added, that the first of them
-must not show himself before the king again.</p>
-
-<p>After this, the crown prince retired in order to reach
-his father by another route, but found that also barred
-against him. He was about to have the door opened
-by force, when his companion, Marshal von Bülow,
-contrived to appease him, and immediately after the
-door opened, and the hereditary prince appeared,
-leading the king by the hand, and trying, as it seemed
-against his wish, to conduct him to the queen. The
-crown prince leaped forward, seized the king's other
-hand, and most earnestly begged him to return to his
-apartment, and feel convinced that nothing should be
-done without his gracious sanction, and only that be
-effected which would prove to the advantage of the
-subjects and the country. As the weak king was
-more inclined to respond to his son's wishes than go
-with the hereditary prince, the latter so greatly lost
-his self-command as to seize hold of the crown prince's
-collar and try to tear him away from the king by force.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-But the son held his father so tightly with the left
-hand, and used his right so energetically against the
-hereditary prince, that the uncle was soon obliged to
-yield, especially when the crown prince laid his hand
-on his sword for the purpose of driving him back.
-The crown prince's page of the bed-chamber, Von
-Mösting, afterwards so well known as minister of
-finances, ran up, however, and ere the hereditary
-prince knew what was being done to him, he found
-himself at the other end of the corridor. The terrified
-king took advantage of this moment to fly to his apartment,
-and thus the victory of the palace revolution of
-April 14, 1784, was decided. For, if the hereditary
-prince had succeeded in carrying the king to his
-step-mother, the recently approved ordinance would
-certainly have been revoked, and the humiliating
-announcement which the queen had made to the crown
-prince just before he entered the privy council, that
-henceforth Guldberg would report to him the king's
-orders, would have become a truth.</p>
-
-<p>We can imagine into what a fury Juliana Maria
-was thrown when her beloved son told her of what
-had occurred in the council of state, and the treatment
-he had undergone. She raved, wished to go to
-the king even if it cost her life, called Count Reventlow,
-who threw himself at her feet and implored her
-to be calm, a traitor, and said to the crown prince
-that he was a treacherous gentleman, who always had
-honey in his lips but poison in his heart, and that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-it was his intention to kill his father. The hereditary
-prince, however, had so thoroughly lost all courage
-for further resistance, that he wished himself dead.
-If we take into consideration the energy of the intriguing
-lady, and the nimbus of sovereignty which
-had surrounded her for twelve years, we must applaud
-the precaution that the artillery under General
-Huth, and the palace guard, were held in readiness,
-in case any further resistance should be offered
-to the downfall of the late government, or the refusal
-of the king to sign the order, had rendered the proclamation
-of the crown prince as regent, which had
-been fully decided on, necessary. Still, all ended
-with the fury and passion of the deposed Juliana
-Maria, and she had rendered herself so odious to the
-nation, that the change of government was greeted
-with universal joy, and the crown prince everywhere
-received with applause. But the fury of the angry lady
-also became appeased when the crown prince threatened
-serious measures and arrest.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, the king's commands had been
-sent to the colleges and courts, and Bernstorff invited
-by the crown prince to return immediately.<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>
-Early in May, the future foreign minister and president
-of the German Chancery arrived in Copenhagen.
-His practised diplomatic pen communicated to foreign<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-courts the overthrow of the Guldberg ministry, and of
-the rule of Juliana Maria, with the postscript that the
-government firm would still remain that of Christian
-VII., but the government of the crown prince as regent
-had commenced on April 14, 1784.</p>
-
-<p>Höegh-Guldberg was called on to pacify the old
-queen, and the regent considered the deposed secretary
-of state's merit in effecting this so great, that he
-contented himself with sending this concoctor of the
-conspiracy against his mother, into the usual banishment
-in Jütland, as bailiff of Aarhuus. The sudden
-removal from dignities held so long, and from the
-sovereign authority, demanded resignation. The God-fearing
-Höegh-Guldberg displayed it, at least externally,
-and retained his post up to the year 1802, when
-he was dismissed, and retired to the fine estate of
-Hald, near Viborg, which he had purchased, and
-where he died in 1806. He did not venture to present
-an order on the Treasury for 100,000 dollars
-given him as a reward by the queen dowager, possibly
-because, as a judge of Struensee, he felt his conscience
-prick him too strongly; and when, after his death, his
-sons had the courage to bring forward this claim on
-the government, the crown prince laughingly referred
-their impudent demands to the Greek Calends.</p>
-
-<p>The enlightened statesman, Bernstorff, who afterwards
-acquired world-renown by his decree of neutrality,
-was, from this time forth up to his death in
-1797, the adviser of the young, inexperienced, and, unfortunately,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-poorly-educated crown prince. As such,
-he opposed all odious measures in a reactionary sense,
-and it was to this mild conduct that the queen dowager
-and Prince Frederick owed their security as
-members of the royal house, though they were entirely
-excluded from all participation in affairs of
-state. When the fire of 1794 completely destroyed
-the splendid Christiansborg Palace, these two royal conspirators
-against Struensee and Caroline Matilda were
-left without a roof in the capital, and were obliged
-to seek shelter with private persons until their future
-abode was prepared for them in the Amalienborg
-Palace. Here, mother and son lived quietly till their
-death: the former, engaged with penances, for which
-her crimes against her own daughter-in-law and an
-innocent minister were sufficient reason; the latter,
-more honourably, in promoting the arts and sciences,
-for which the appanage of 12,000 dollars, granted him
-on the exchange of territory for resigning the coadjutorship
-of the principality of Lübeck, afforded him
-the means. By his consort, a princess of Mecklenburg,
-he had two sons and two daughters; of the
-latter, the youngest, the grandmother of A<span class="smcap">LEXANDRA</span>,
-P<span class="smcap">RINCESS OF</span> W<span class="smcap">ALES</span>, is, in spite of her great age, still
-remarkable for her beauty and grace.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="APPENDIX_A" id="APPENDIX_A"></a>APPENDIX A.</h2>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<em>Extracts from the Correspondence of</em> Mr. N. W. W<span class="smcap">RAXALL</span>,
-Jun., <em>with his Father, relative to the Restoration of</em> C<span class="smcap">AROLINE</span>
-M<span class="smcap">ATILDA</span>).</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="center">L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span>, A<span class="smcap">DELPHI</span>, <em>Saturday Night, Jan.</em> 21<em>st</em>, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I shall now endeavour to give my dearest father some idea of my
-present views and plans. I have, after much time, labour, and
-trouble, deciphered the letter pretty well. The Danish nobility
-wish impatiently my return, and implore me not to delay it a day
-which I can prevent. They wait in eager expectation of my arrival,
-with his Majesty's compliance and support, to strike the blow, or
-lose all in the attempt. I went with this letter to the Baron de
-Lichtenstein. He received himself a letter yesterday from the
-queen, which orders him to give me another £100 from her own
-moneys here, and superadded to these two sources, his Majesty has
-promised to give an order on his Hanoverian Treasury, in case of
-necessity, to supply me still further. So you see <em>they</em> are all now
-in earnest. I went to the merchant to-day, on whom my bill (received
-from the Danish nobility yesterday) was drawn, and he gave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-me instantly a bank note for £100 sterling, which I now have in
-my pocket book. How much longer I shall stay in this kingdom I
-cannot say, nor can the Baron de L&mdash;&mdash; say with any more certainty
-than myself. It absolutely and fully depends on his Majesty's
-orders and pleasure. The baron will see him next Tuesday morning
-(it is impossible sooner, two councils being held Sunday and
-Monday at the queen's palace on American affairs), and communicate
-to him my letter received from the Danish nobility. I shall write a
-number of queries likewise for <em>Him</em> on Monday, though I should
-not be surprised if <em>He</em> sees me before my departure. The baron
-thinks that I shall not be sent away before the 6th or 7th of next
-month, when his Majesty will have had time to give his full, clear,
-and mature reply, and some letters are expected from Copenhagen,
-which will give a little light how to act. I shall be glad if I am
-delayed yet some 2 or 3 weeks, as the spring opens, and winter will
-begin to retire every day. 'Tis terrible to cross Westphalia and
-Hanover at this season of the year; but that is nothing.</p>
-
-<p>I presume you will now begin to imagine my scheme less romantic,
-and my views more probable, than they have hitherto appeared;
-but believe me, my dearest sir, on my honour, I am no more elated
-now than I was depressed 12 days ago, when things had a very dubious,
-uncertain aspect. If I return, and if the queen should be
-reinstated, I may, and I think, must be rewarded in some way&mdash;honorary,
-or otherwise; but I depend on nothing, and hold it as
-loose as ever I did; yet I now hope and believe I shall go back to
-Zell, Hamburgh, and perhaps Copenhagen; but still I can positively
-assert nothing till I have <em>His</em> reply and commands for my
-departure.</p>
-
-<p>Though I have this hundred pounds now in my possession, yet I
-consider it a sacred deposit, not to be touched or infringed on till I
-begin my journey from hence, or the expenses immediately necessary
-to it. Even my own interest would lead me to be very scrupulous
-and honourable on this point. My reward is not yet come: it
-is to come, perhaps, bye-and-bye.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 2.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Jan.</em> 23rd, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>And now respecting the grand affair. I conversed two hours
-with the baron this morning. He hopes to see his Majesty to-morrow
-evening, or Wednesday morning. I then shall know his ultimate
-pleasure and commands. The baron has, however, requested me to
-write in cypher to the Danish nobility to-morrow, that "I have
-received their money: that, according to all appearances and probability
-I shall leave London on my return about the first day or
-week in February, and shall take the direct road to Zell, and thence
-to Hamburgh." He likewise writes the same to Her to-morrow. I
-have drawn up a paper of articles to be presented to his Majesty by
-the baron when he obtains audience, which will contain his reply
-and argument. In my own opinion, I own, it seems as far as human
-foresight can now determine, that I shall be sent away in the course
-of next week: but nothing is sure, nothing to be depended on, till
-his Majesty's answer and orders are known. Then, I've demanded
-four days or five, to be ready and prepare my little affairs. A carriage
-I must buy in Rotterdam or Utrecht, as no carriage can pass
-by the packet from hence. I've a servant in readiness, whom I can
-engage the minute I've my despatch or orders to be gone. 'Tis very
-probable I shall be sent on from Hamburgh to Copenhagen, to give
-notice then to the party of his Majesty's full consent. Then business
-will begin. God grant it may be successful! If we are, I
-may then presume to hope and think I shan't be forgotten.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Jan.</em> 31, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I went to the baron. He was with the king last night, but the
-queen being constantly at their elbow, he could not say one word to
-<em>Him</em> respecting audience. The king said: "venez Mercredi à onze
-heures." So, to-morrow morning, at 11, he will see Him. I asked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-him if I might not, as 'twould be very agreeable to me in many respects,
-stay till Monday next; he said "I <em>might</em> do it: but he
-must request me not to stay beyond Friday, if it could be avoided
-by acquiescence, as the Danish nobility, and the queen of Denmark,
-would expect me impatiently according to my promise, and I should
-not fail to execute it, if to be done. Besides, I am sure," said he,
-"the king won't delay for an hour, and will expect you to begone
-before next Monday. Pray be ready! I hope to send you word
-to-morrow evening all is done. So try, if you can, to be ready for
-Friday." I was obliged, therefore, to submit, and expect surely to
-be gone next Friday afternoon, though then I shall be confoundedly
-hurried and driven.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Feb.</em> 2, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I am just returned from the baron's: I have received my ultimate
-despatches: a letter from his Majesty to her Majesty the queen,
-and lastly, the articles to which the king consents. All therefore is
-done, finished completely. The baron wished me joy, bade me farewell,
-wished me a very happy journey, and all success! I must,
-'tis his Majesty's pleasure, begone to-morrow night for Harwich, and
-must be at Harwich by or before 3 in the afternoon, as the packet
-sails (unless the wind is directly contrary) Saturday evening.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Z<span class="smcap">ELL</span>, <em>Feb.</em> 19, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, my dearest father, neither you nor I had any idea of the
-tremendous roads through which I have passed, the continued and
-wondrous chain of dangers, amid which I have as yet escaped unhurt.
-Imagination cannot paint anything more horrid than the
-roads of Westphalia, of Holland (beyond Utrecht), of Hanover, to
-the gates of Zell. But let me continue my recital from Osnabrück.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-I quitted that city last Monday at noon, and got to Diepenau by
-miracle almost next morning at daybreak. I would willingly have
-gone round to Minden, or to Nienburg, two cities situate on the river
-Weser, and at each of which there are bridges across it&mdash;but this
-was impracticable. The river was so amazingly swelled by the
-deluges of rain as to exceed all belief, and absolutely to cut off all
-communication, in or out, with these two places. I had, therefore,
-no partie left, but that of going on straight to Stolzenau, putting my
-carriage into a boat, and crossing over at all events. I did so, and
-succeeded. I arrived safe on the English bank of the Weser,
-Thursday morning, after navigating more than a mile through fields
-and meadows, the hedges of which only began to appear above water.
-It put me in mind of Deucalion's deluge. Thence I had only 40
-miles to Hanover. What signifies it to repeat to you that I expected
-a hundred and a hundred times to be lost! That I passed deep
-pieces of standing water, half a mile in length! That several times
-I believed myself gone, and thought never to see Zell alive! Here
-I am notwithstanding, unhurt, undismayed, and ready to meet these
-dangers, if commanded, all again! Nor think that I am unmindful
-of, or ungrateful to that Being, who protects the race of man, and
-preserves us in every situation! I am not so wanting in the noblest
-feeling of the human bosom; but as I feel, so I express myself
-about it in very different language from you. I got here Friday
-night by the kind assistance of the moon, without which 'twould
-indeed have been an absolute impossibility ever to have got here in
-the mire; since 'twould be neither more nor less than madness and
-frenzy to attempt to travel during a dark night. You may depend
-on it, my dear sir, I am not desired to do this, and never shall, till
-the roads mend. As to the rest, I know your parental anxiety will
-be all awake for me, and will make you tremble for my preservation;
-but fear nothing. I have a noble presentiment which never quits
-me, of future elevation! Some protecting genius shelters me from
-danger, and averts every fatal accident from me. I have no doubt I
-shall return to you bye-and-bye,&mdash;I cannot promise you a richer man,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-but I can promise you, a wiser man. What passed last night I cannot
-now mention to you. I may not trust to this uncertain, dangerous
-conveyance. It is enough to say that all goes more than well,
-that I am approved by my queen, that I am promised to share in
-the future happy prospects, if we can realise them. That be my
-endeavour! I have devoted myself to the enterprise. I have
-passed the Rubicon, and won't retreat. If ever virtuous glory had
-power to animate a young man's bosom, it ought to do so in mine!</p>
-
-<p>This night, or rather early in the morning, by moonlight, I begin
-my journey. It is only about 80 English miles; but I don't expect
-to reach Hamburgh before Wednesday noon, as I shall only travel
-during that part of the night when the moon lights me on the way.
-You may depend, my dearest father, that I will indeed take every
-care of my safety possible. They implore me here to do so. <em>She</em>
-has laid her commands on me to be careful of myself, for <em>Her</em> sake.
-What more forcible motives can I have? I half think I shall go
-on to Copenhagen; but 'tis dangerous, and that point's not settled
-yet. At Hamburgh I shall know all. Hitherto, all success attends
-us: nor do I doubt that it will attend us to the end. "'Tis not in
-mortals to command success:" we must do our utmost, and leave
-the rest to fate.</p>
-
-<p>And now, my best, kindest, dearest father, I bid you and my
-mother farewell! I am just going to set out for Hamburgh. Pray
-let me hear of her story from you: 'twill be very inspiriting to a
-poor traveller, amid the horrid roads of Westphalia and Lower
-Saxony.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="center">H<span class="smcap">AMBURGH</span>, <em>Feb.</em> 23, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I have received no money yet in repayment of the £100 I spent
-last autumn; but <em>She</em> has not only promised me, in the fullest
-terms, that sum, but superior marks of her bounty, if all goes
-well. We must have patience, my dear father: time will do more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-for us than anything else. Hanbury wonders what the deuce has
-brought me here. I told him I came by Osnabrück and Bremen,
-and said not a word of Zell or Hanover. "You're a wicked fellow,"
-he said to me. "You've done some mischief: some man's wife,
-now, or some lady or other. You had better be candid, and tell me,
-for your father will, I am sure, bye-and-bye." 'Twas just the pretext
-I intended to screen myself with. So I told him that a little affair
-of gallantry, harmless enough, had induced me just now to travel,
-and that my intentions were for Berlin. <em>That</em> has satisfied him.</p>
-
-<p>Now, to continue my narrative. I wrote you from Zell. I left
-it on Sunday at midnight, and arrived, though through a thousand
-hair-breadth escapes, at this place, the day before yesterday. The
-country is an ocean. I passed through towns so completely environed,
-as to resemble an island, amid a vast lake or sea. Guess,
-then, what the roads must be. Surely, I am protected from any
-harm in an extraordinary manner. I passed through waters so deep,
-so long, so broad, that 'twas not in human nature to be quite unmoved.
-I passed the Elbe very safely, about 20 miles higher up
-than Hamburgh. 'Tis very, very happy, sir, yet here; for the rains
-have begun afresh, and 'twill be impossible to travel for some time
-in these countries. Here are not less than a dozen gentlemen now
-in Hamburgh, who do not dare, though pressed by their affairs, to
-set out for Holland and France. All the danger which threatened
-us, is, however, over: aye, I believe I shan't quit this city this four
-weeks or more, and then the spring will have mended the face of
-things. I have seen the Danish nobleman to whom I am sent.
-To-morrow we shall have a long interview. Then, as I can write
-with more certainty, I'll finish this letter.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center"><em>Feb.</em> 24.</p>
-
-<p>At present, my dear sir, I am a little more in the light than I was
-yesterday. I shall not assuredly be sent to Copenhagen, but remain
-here at least 14 or 16 days, as a messenger is sent with what I
-brought. What will be done in consequence I can't yet say; and if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-I could, cannot communicate to you by this conveyance. Some few
-weeks are requisite to ripen matters. I am promised on all hands
-to have my fortune made if we succeed: but, as Hamlet says,
-there's the rub! Meanwhile, they supply me with money for all my
-expenses; so, at the worst, I am taken off your hands for the present.
-Even that is somewhat, you must allow. My expectations
-are neither languid nor sanguine. If they succeed, <em>She</em> neither can
-nor will forget me. If they fail, <em>She</em> won't have it in her power.
-That's exactly the case! So, I repeat, patience! The post which
-ought to have arrived to-day from England is not come. No wonder,
-when the rains continue, and all the country is deluged with
-water. I am happy to find I shall have 15 days' respite from such
-perilous journeys.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="center">L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span>, 7<em>th April</em>, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>As the Baron de Lichtenstein had left orders for me to wait on
-the Hanoverian Envoy with what letters I might have for his Majesty,
-I waited on him this morning. He received me with distinguished
-politeness. I gave him three letters; one from the queen,
-one from the Danish nobility, and a third from myself; all addressed
-to the king. He said he had received his orders to forward them
-instantly to the queen's palace to his Majesty, which he would not
-delay one moment. So, I suppose, in the course of 4 or 6 days I
-shall receive some orders or message from <em>Him</em>. 'Tis a most delicate
-and difficult affair in which they have engaged me; but, as I
-exactly and minutely know my instructions, and the genius of the
-party, I fear nothing; but, on the contrary, am conscious of being
-able so to act, as to approve myself to those who have honoured me
-by so noble a deputation. As soon as I know anything, I shan't fail
-to inform you; but I shan't be surprised if I should be sent back
-again to Germany in less than 12 or 14 days. Yet I know nothing,
-and can draw no certain inferences at present. All depends on his
-Majesty's replies and pleasure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="center">J<span class="smcap">ERMYN</span> S<span class="smcap">TREET</span>, <em>April</em> 11, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I would willingly give you a little light into the exact situation I
-am in, and the views I have at this time. The nobility who sent
-me back this second time to represent their requests, and notify
-their desires to his Majesty, all men of the highest rank and eminence
-in Denmark and Holstein, but being at present in a species
-of exile, unpensioned and unofficed, were by no means capable of
-raising a large sum of money, or supplying me with anything beyond
-the "de quoi vivre." They only give me 600 ducats, or near £300
-per an.:&mdash;I mean, after that proportion, during my stay in England
-as their agent or envoy. It is not from them&mdash;I mean strictly, and
-in their own persons&mdash;that my reward must ultimately come. It is
-from her Majesty the queen. If she returns to her kingdom, she
-can highly honour and reward me, herself. If she does not, she can
-yet recommend me so powerfully to her brother, that I shall be at
-least in some manner or way taken care of. I do not account the
-money they give me to procure bread and wine, while employed in
-their immediate service, as in the minutest degree rewarding me.
-Neither do <em>they</em> esteem it so. Fond as I am of travelling, I am not
-desirous of repassing the circle of Westphalia, at the continual
-hazard of my life and limbs; nor would I do it in any cause less
-honourable, less noble, than that of seeing a young and charming
-princess, whose graciousness and condescension have attached me
-more to her, than any hopes of interest or even ambition. Whether
-his Majesty rejects or consents to their request, alters not in any
-degree the intentions of the party. His consent will accelerate the
-blow; his refusal may retard, but cannot, never will change the design.
-They ordered me to tell <em>Her</em> Majesty&mdash;and I did tell her so&mdash;that
-if the executioner should strike off ten heads, or if the plague
-should destroy as many more&mdash;enough would still remain alive to
-reseat her on the throne, and doubted not to effect it. The time
-when cannot be fixed. It must depend on many circumstances.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Her Majesty has written to the king, particularly requesting him,
-as the nobility are poor, and cannot allow me much, to make me
-some genteel present while in England&mdash;not as any reward to me,
-but to lighten their burden. Whether he will, however, comply with
-this request, I very much question. If I hear nothing in 8 or 10
-days, I shall write to her Majesty and the nobility, and request
-them to send more minute and precise commands how to proceed.
-But surely I shall hear from the king in some way or other within
-that time; at least, I can't but apprehend so.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>April</em> 10, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I sent the three letters to his Majesty last Friday. I've yet heard
-nothing in answer. If I hear nothing in ten days from this time, I
-shall then write to two of the nobility, and likewise to the queen
-(for she expressly and personally enjoined me to write to Herself,
-and to address all my letters immediately to her). This gracious
-and condescending permission I won't fail to profit by. If his
-Majesty sees me, and gives me a favourable answer to the request
-made him, I think, I believe, and imagine, he will send me instantly
-back with it to Zell and Hamburgh. Nay, the Queen has even requested
-him in her letter, in that case, to honour me with some employ,
-or charge me with some ostensible message or commission, to
-hide my real and actual errand. Her Majesty, in the last interview
-I had with her at midnight, in an apartment of the castle of Zell,
-where I was brought disguised, was most graciously pleased to
-assure me that it was not only on account of my services that she would
-endeavour to reward me, but that she was even <em>personally</em> attached
-to a man who would have rushed on certain death, to have had the
-glory of sacrificing his life at such a shrine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="center">C<span class="smcap">OCOA</span> T<span class="smcap">REE</span>, P<span class="smcap">ALL</span> M<span class="smcap">ALL</span>, <em>April</em> 14, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I have finished my packet for Germany to the nobility, but I don't
-write to her Majesty till Tuesday next, as 'tis not impossible I may
-hear from his Majesty in or within that time. My motive for not
-quitting town before next Sunday se'nnight is, that I would wait a
-decent, proper time, in expectation of an answer, message, or order
-from the king, who may be hindered by business, &amp;c., and who
-would, doubtless, think me very inattentive to the queen's concerns,
-and my so important commission, if I ran away in a week after my
-arrival to visit my friends, regardless of him or his reply. Even if
-I hear not a word, direct or indirect, yet, when I leave London, I
-shall put into the Hanoverian Envoy's hand a few lines, which, if
-his Majesty should send for me, or ask after me, during my absence,
-he will, in that case, send or deliver to his Majesty. What I shall
-say will be to this purport:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Sir,&mdash;Not having received any message from your Majesty, and
-not having seen my father or friends these eighteen months, and
-not being immediately wanted in London on account of my commission,
-I have presumed to leave town; but am ready at a moment's
-notice, and the signification of your Majesty's pleasure, to be again
-in London with all possible expedition.</p>
-
-<p>This I shall give myself to the Hanoverian Envoy, and request
-him to give me a line to Bristol, the instant he receives any message
-respecting me from his Majesty, as, if wanted, I will, and shall hold
-myself in readiness, to return to town without delay. This conduct
-will, I think, obviate any censure or disapproval.</p>
-
-<p>My stay, as I said yesterday, won't, I believe, exceed, if it reaches,
-three weeks, as I expect within that time from my quitting London,
-answers to my letters to Hamburgh and Zell, which will require my
-return to town. I may even have letters sooner, so important as to
-keep me here, or necessitate me, if at Bristol, to return directly; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-I think I shall have none sent; though, truly, I can't say. It depends
-on the course of events in Denmark and Germany.</p>
-
-<p>I think the king won't see me first or last, as envoy from the
-queen and nobility; but I hope, that is, I half hope, that he'll, notwithstanding,
-pay some sort of attention to her Majesty's recommendation
-of me, and somehow or other, perhaps serve me, or employ
-me, or reward me&mdash;but yet I doubt much even of that. If my
-fortune depended on the queen's goodness and gratitude (for I have
-served her, and will with my life, if she bid me), my life upon it,
-she would not leave me unprovided for. But she can do nothing.
-Even if she should be restored, yet 'tis the king of England must
-employ me. I neither could nor would profit by the Danish Majesty's
-service. But we must leave all that to time. I expect nothing,
-nothing at all; but I may have great things done for me.
-The latter won't give me one moment's pain, the former not an hour's
-exultation. I have told you I am in <em>omnia paratus</em>. Death or a
-ribbon are to me the same.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 11.</p>
-
-<p class="center">J<span class="smcap">ERMYN</span> S<span class="smcap">TREET</span>, <em>May</em> 19, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>Imagine, my dear father, the shock I have received on hearing
-this moment, on my arrival here, that the Queen of Denmark is
-dead. I am wrapt in horror, sorrow, and consternation. I went to
-St. James's Coffee House, where Lord Hertford confirmed to me the
-sad news. A purple fever carried her off. The courier arrived
-yesterday, late at night. His Majesty is said to be much hurt by
-this so unexpected a blow. No doubt remains of its unhappy authenticity.
-As to me, indeed, I feel as I ought, the loss I sustain by
-her Majesty's death. I was even attached to her, and interest conspires
-in the nobler emotions to make me weep at the funeral of so
-young, so amiable, so unhappy a queen. What will be the consequences
-to me I can't say exactly. That she should die at this cri<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>tical
-time, at the very moment, when she would, no doubt, have
-recommended me so strongly to the king, is one of those events
-which may overcome a temper more steady and uniform than mine.</p>
-
-<p>No wonder now that I have no answer to the long letter which I
-addressed to her three or four weeks ago, and which she graciously
-assured me at my departure from Zell, she would certainly answer.
-My head sinks for a moment under this very unexpected stroke; but
-it is really sorrow, more than the mean consideration of self loss,
-that bend it down. True, I have lost my patroness, my royal mistress;
-but, I have a hundred times told you, that no accidents of
-fortune can permanently stagger me. I am prepared to live or die;
-to be prosperous, or to stem the tide of adversity&mdash;yet, I confess it
-lies heavy at my heart. I must have done.</p>
-
-<p>To-morrow I'll write more, be assured. Don't you be hurt, my
-dear father at this news! Fear not for me. I can't be depressed.
-His Majesty may yet patronise me; nay, I fear not that he will do
-it. My spirit is unbroken, and ten times defeated I shall rally, and
-conquer in the end.</p>
-
-<p>Good night! I weep for the poor departed queen. Little did I
-think this, when she so kindly bade me adieu, not two months since,
-in her library at midnight. I remember her parting words, her
-look. She held the door a moment in her hand before she went
-out. But I did not see, I did not know that death followed her
-step, and shut the door for ever between her and me.</p>
-
-<p>P.S.&mdash;Lord Lumley (Lord Harborough's son) told me 'tis believed
-the queen was poisoned.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 12.</p>
-
-<p>I have this very moment received a mournful letter from Baron
-de Seckendorf, from Zell. I join my tears to his, on the loss of
-our royal mistress, the gracious and amiable deceased queen. He
-says, the Baron de Lichtenstein pledges himself that I shall be at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-least reimbursed my expenses from his Majesty here. He mentions
-no circumstances of her Majesty, the queen's death. He was too
-much oppressed with sorrow. Depend on it, that in the end some
-notice from the throne will be taken of me. It must be so, I think.</p>
-
-<p>No letter yet from the poor, miserable, thunderstruck nobility
-at Hamburgh.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 13.</p>
-
-<p class="center">L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span>, <em>May</em> 26, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I have written, finished, sealed up, and put in the post this evening,
-three very particular and minute letters. One to the Baron
-de Lichtenstein, requesting him to recommend me to his Majesty,
-which I know he will do, and which will be almost as effectual as the
-deceased queen's recommendation. A second to Baron de Seckendorf,
-answering his letter to me, and desiring him to strengthen my
-request made to Lichtenstein. This, I know likewise, he'll do most
-cheerfully. I have also desired him to send me the particulars of
-her Majesty's illness and death. The third letter, and longest, is to
-the Danish nobility at Hamburgh. You may almost divine its
-general meaning and contents. I condole with them on our horrid
-loss in the dear departed queen: inform them I have written to
-Lichtenstein, to the end that he may do his utmost, and what she
-would have done, if she had only lived a few days longer, with his
-Britannic Majesty. I offer them my further offices, if they have
-anything to employ me in. I request the continuance of their
-friendship, and to hear from them soon. This is, in general terms,
-the substance of my letter.</p>
-
-<p>I allow, my dear father, that I am generally too sanguine in my
-expectations, too enthusiastic and lively in my ideas and descriptions;
-but yet remember I predict it&mdash;something must, and will yet
-be done effectual for me, by the Danish nobility and Baron de
-Lichtenstein. They are all conscious of and acquainted with my
-services; feeling satisfied of my zeal, capacity, and address, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-extremely desirous of procuring me some reward, some sort of recompense
-for my dangers, fatigues, and endeavours. The Baron de
-Lichtenstein managed the whole affair, knows me, esteems me:
-knows her Majesty the queen's intentions of serving me with her
-brother: and, superadded to all this, he is vastly beloved by the
-king, who showed him a thousand marks of goodness when in England.</p>
-
-<p>Attend the answer to their letters: they will come in three or
-four weeks. I cannot, indeed, answer for his Majesty's conduct in
-consequence of their recommendations; nor could I, even if the
-queen had recommended me: but I think I may rely on their warm
-endeavours to procure me some notice or reward from his Majesty;
-though what may be, whether greater or smaller, must depend on
-his gracious pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly, my dear sir, when I reflect on the so unexpected,
-so sudden, so critical death, of the poor, amiable, unhappy queen, I
-am covered with amazement, and own it is a lesson <em>never to depend
-on anything</em>. Could anything not actually done be surer? A young,
-gay, healthy woman, who had every appearance of long life, snatched
-away in four days, and buried ere we imagined she was ill. Probably,
-if I live to a hundred years, I shall never meet with another,
-so wondrous, so extraordinary an adventure, which is so incredible in
-its own nature, that I know not what to say to it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 14.</p>
-
-<p class="center">L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span>, <em>May</em> 30, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>I have received, my very dear father, a long and mournful letter
-from the Baron de Bülow himself. You will see from it how ready
-the nobility are to do any and every thing to conduce to my interests:
-how sensible they are of my zeal, capacity, and unwearied
-fidelity in the execution of their commands. I have already named
-the service, the only service, they can do me. I mean that of requesting
-Baron de Lichtenstein to write very strenuously in my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-favour to his Majesty. I shall reply to-morrow or next day to this
-letter, and condole with them on our common, heavy, and irreparable
-loss, in the dear, departed queen, and reiterate to them my urgent
-request of being recommended to his Majesty, as the only recompense
-I desire or ask. There is no shadow of doubt that they will
-do their part. There is no doubt in nature of Lichtenstein's doing
-his; but as to what notice our royal master may be pleased to take
-of their recommendation, or how far he may be graciously disposed
-to extend his favour or notice to this, I cannot presume or pretend
-to say, but must leave to futurity to determine. That I shall be
-reimbursed seems clear; but that's nothing. I aspire much beyond
-any pecuniary reward. Even if his Majesty should not <em>now</em> extend
-his munificence or protection to me, yet I am at least known to him
-by character and reputation. I have served without any reward his
-royal sister&mdash;I have claims&mdash;and some future time may give me
-opportunity to renew or make them good.</p>
-
-<p>[It may be added that the Danish nobility wrote a letter to
-George III., in which they formally renounced and refused all repayment
-of the sums disbursed in the cause of the queen's restoration:
-which repayment was expressly stipulated by his Britannic
-Majesty, in the third article of the conditions which Mr. Wraxall
-carried over to Germany in February, 1775. They only asked that
-their agent might be honourably rewarded and employed. But it
-was all of no avail.]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="APPENDIX_B" id="APPENDIX_B"></a>APPENDIX B.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The first letter of the word is marked by that which is above,
-excepting in the case that it be lined under, when it signifies nothing
-(in itself).</p>
-
-<p>The second letter&mdash;count back from the letter you have written
-to that you would write, and mark the number or cypher.</p>
-
-<p>One writes likewise in the syllables and words; letters of the
-upper range with a line under, which <em>then</em> marks nothing in itself;
-but you must begin from that to count the number following, which
-deciphers the true letter.</p>
-
-<p>Every letter which is not <em>lined</em>&mdash;(so)&mdash;marks that which is under.</p>
-
-<p>One writes at the end of every word one of those letters which
-signify nothing; and sometimes in the middle of a word put two
-of them, to render the cypher more difficult.</p>
-
-<p>l<sup>2</sup> + 13 u + 1 b c<sup>2</sup> ÷ 3 ÷ 2. p ÷ 11. + 13. φ ÷ 17 + 8 a<sup>2</sup>
-+ 2 ÷ 12 ×</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>
-0 l ÷ 8 u l + 3 b p 3 a 1 + 3 ÷ z + 17 g 9 ÷ 7 + 4. ÿ i<br />
-1 c 1 + 15 + 3 x o z ÷ 6 + 14 φ ÷ z ÷ 1 z + 13 b. i 1 e l<br />
-ÿ 6 c l c z zz o z p 1 s i l + 1 + 1z ÷ 4 ÷ 4 ÷ 4 f + <u>3 a l</u> +<br />
-3 x c <u>1 c z</u> + 4 + ll ÷ 2 + 7 ÷ 5 + 10 k. n + z ÷ 1 g p 3<br />
-p l r ÷ l y x + 3 + z x c l + 14 g e l ÷ 7 ÷ 8 y p 3 a 1 +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span><br />
-3 + 10 ÷ l i z d + z h p l 9 + 5 + lz b a z + 4 + 10 x o<br />
-1 <u>d</u> + z g r + 5 ÷ z g 9 ÷ 7 <u>u z</u> ÷ z ÷ z h u l ÷ 5 + 8 +<br />
-8 <u>m</u> ÷ 3 k r p 1 p 3 + 4 + 9 + 8 ÷ 4 + 8. o z ÷ 10 b r h g<br />
-+ z ÷ 1z + l3 c l + 8 + 6 <u>a</u> l + 3 s f e l ÿ 9 1 + 7 + 6 ÷<br />
-z b c z ÷ z ÷ 3 0 3 + z + l + g + 1z d + z o 3 g e 1 i z c<br />
-l h o z ÷ 6 f + 5 φ p 3 ÷ 1z : i 1 c l : d m ÷ 7 + l z <u>i</u> l +<br />
-9 ÷ 6 ÷ z k. c l + 6 φ d + z b i z c l + 13 + 1 y. a<sup>2</sup> y e 1 c 1<br />
-+ 8 k (d + 10 + l ÷ 6 ÷ 4) y a z + 4 o 1 + z y u 1 ÷ 5 +<br />
-19 y x ÷ l x. <u>d</u> + z d ÷ z m ÷ 7 + 1z ÷ 6 ÷ z + lz h d +<br />
-l0 ÷ l + 6 ÷ z ÷ 1z. y o z + 3 + 3 ÷ 8 ÷ z o 1 + 4 p l.<br />
-o z k d + 5 ÷ z + l3, + l0 + z e l + 3 y a z a z <u>p</u> z + l0<br />
-÷ 11 y f y o 3 f ÷ l + 6 g n ÷ lz + 16 ÷ l + 4 + l0 g p<br />
-1 g o z p l g i l + l3 ÷ 3 ÷ 5 + 10 ÷ l4 x r ÷ <u>l 0 3</u> + z<br />
-÷ 3 x a z + 4 c l h d + z + 6 + 9 o l s p l g l ÷ 6 + l9 +<br />
-8 m g c l. 9 s x y e l b o 3 b s + l ÷ l4 ÷ z + 6 k o z a l ÷<br />
-l g o 3 ÷ 4 ÷ z φ <u>m</u> ÷ 3. y (z k) d + l l n n ÷ 7 x i z f e 1 o<br />
-3 o 1 ÷ z + 6 + l + 3 ÷ 8 + 5 ÷ l + 5 6 d <u>i z</u> + l n a l<br />
-+ 7 ÷ 4 + 8 s a z + 4 o l + z y. z + l0 ÷ 7 ÷ l9 ÷ z u<br />
-l ÷ 5 <u>p z</u> + l φ + 3 ÷ 5 c z y. r ÷ l + 6 ÷ 3 x o z c l o 3<br />
-b u l + 1l + 9 + 8 k + 9 <u>d</u> + 1 t z + 1. 9 s f + z + 6 ÷ z<br />
-y i z + l + 6 o 3. p l ÷ 5 ÷ 7 ÷ 1 + 5 g r + z ÷ lz + 1 c<br />
-1 p 3 ÷ lz g i l c l. 9 x ÷ 7 h + 6 ÷ z h c l + 8 + 8 ÷ 7 f<br />
-+ 6 + lz x <u>s</u> + l ÷ 4 + 9 ÷ 1 ÷ 5 c z x c z ÷ z ÷ 3 r y o<br />
-z + 4 a 1 + 3 k <u>s</u> + 5 ÷ z ÷ 3 + l b r ÷ l0 + l5. g p l +<br />
-z φ + l7 ÷ z d + z k n s o l g r p l p 3 y o z ÷ l0. r + z <u>i 3</u><br />
-+ 5 n o 1 ÷ 4 + lz c l k r ÷ 1 + 4 + l <u>p</u> l + 4. o z p l x<br />
-p 3 ÷ lz ÷ z c l i z + 7 + 4 ÷ l0 + 5 ÷ l x i l + l x +<br />
-6 ÷ 10 o z ÷ 6 + 14 φ ÷ z ÷ l z y i l c l. d m p l. + lz ÷<br />
-6 ÷ z g o z ÷ 6. 9 ÷ l6 + 1z ÷ 8 c z p l a l + 9 ÷ 6 g o l<br />
-s + 6 p 3 a z + 4 ÷ l5 h 9 s e l ÷ z k p l <u>f</u> ÷ 3 <u>s</u> ÷ 9 o 3 x<br />
-u l + 3 + l4 + 7 h x r ÷ l + 6 p 3 y g ÷ 7 a z + 3 ÷ z<br />
-÷ 1 z g i l + 1 <u>n</u> + 3 ÷ l4 p 3 c z. <u>d</u> + z + 14. a z + 4 + 6<br />
-+ lz ÷ 9 s p l r c l e l ÷ 5 + z ÷ lz o 3 <u>o 3</u> + 3 o z + 3 <u>o 3</u><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span><br />
-+ z ÷ z h o 3 + 1z + lz c l o 3. x o l d o l s 9 + l8 + 6 +<br />
-23 g c l d + 14 h y ÷ 8 9 ÷ l i l + l o 3 <u>p</u> 1 + 4 + l4 <u>a l</u><br />
-+ 3 ÷ 17 g <u>a z</u> + 5 ÷ 7 + l0 + 6 r + 3 h y d + z c z φ ÷<br />
-14 y + 6 c l x c z y h φ p 3 c 1 y d + 1l ÷ z k φ ÷ 7 x i l c 1<br />
-x ÷ z ÷ 14 ÷ 19 ÷ 1 e l ÷ 8 ÷ 7. k h g o z p l y p 3 <u>p</u> l +<br />
-4 r ÷ 1 ÷ l d <u>a</u> l + 3. i l e 1 g p 3 f o l h <u>p z</u> ÷ 5 f + 4 +<br />
-l b ÷ 1 ÷ 9 + 4 1 + 13 o z ÷ z ÷ 4 + lz <u>u</u> l ÷ l g f + l<br />
-g φ ÷ 8 g d + ll ÷ z + 3 p 3 <u>o 3</u> ÷ 13 i z i l. h r + z ÷ 8<br />
-÷ 4 + 8 ÿ p l ÿ + z + z x ÷ z <u>n</u> + z i z o 3 ÷ 13 i z c z c 1<br />
-n <u>i z</u> ÷ 8 i z c z y a z c l o l x + 4 ÷ 8. p 3 ÷ lz o 3 φ ÷ 13<br />
-n a l o z c l y r p l ÷ 8 g n + 14 o z h p l g e l ÷ 7 p 3 ÷<br />
-lz + 1 + l4 ÷ <u>z g h f ÷ 1 h φ p 1 h a l + 3 o 3 ÷ 4 ÷ 5<br />
-+ 4 x</u> i l c l g o 3 f i z. d + 10 ÷ 1 + 5 + 1z + 8 + 6 +<br />
-l1 + 7 c l + 8 + 6. c 1 + l4 x ÷ 15 + l + l3 p 1 r c 1 p.<br />
-3 ÷ 5 ÷ 3 + g s x y φ ÷ g + 5 ÷ l g r f e 1 p 3 h u l p l o<br />
-1 + 8 ÷ lz g e 1 ÷ 7 ÷ 8 g p 3 t l 9 f o z + g ÷ 1 ÷ 10 +<br />
-5 ÷ l i l p l i z o 3 h e 1 ÷ 7 x ÷ 1z ÷ 6 ÷ l ÷ z ÷ lz g<br />
-r ÷ 14 ÷ z ÷ 6 h g n p l o 1 o 3 d + z f + 4 + l h ÷ l ÷<br />
-4 i z x o 3 ÷ 4 + 6 ÷ l ÷ 10 <u>u l</u> ÷ l + 8 h a z e l f i z h o<br />
-z e l o l g i l + l n ÷ l l i z i l c l y t 1 + 8. o z p l. y <u>u l</u><br />
-÷ 5 + 8 + g + 8 + 1z + 6. a z + 4 ÷ 6 ÷ 5 + 7 + 4 ÷<br />
-6 ÷ 1 x φ ÷ 8 x + 6 + g o l x ÷ 8 ÷ z + 6 x r p 1 + l7 y<br />
-÷ l4 + l n <u>i 3</u> ÷ l f ÷ 1 i l + l y ÷ l + zz p 3 f ÷ z ÷<br />
-4 i z + 6 y d c l o z p l x i l f o l c z h r ÷ l + 6 ÷ 3 + z<br />
-p 1 + 1z + 6 h 4 l p l o l p 3 c 1 x + l0 + z3 ÷ lz n a l o<br />
-z <u>m</u> ÷ 3 <u>a z</u> + l h a z + 4 <u>d</u> + z g + 6 c 1 g p 3 ÷ 3 <u>o z</u> ÷<br />
-z h i z ÷ 8. 9 t 9 + l5 ÷ l k ÷ 4 + 1l o 3 g m p 1 i 3 p l p<br />
-3 i l c l p 3 h e l i z h o 3 f e l ÷ z. a z + 4 + 6 i z i l h i z<br />
-+ 1 + 6 o 3 h ÷ 5 + l e 1 ÷ z <u>a 1</u> + 3 ÷ 7 r ÷ l o 3 ÷ 4<br />
-÷ 1 + 5 h p 1 n ÷ 3 + z g φ ÷ 6 i l ÷ 4 <u>m</u> + 5 l ÷ z +<br />
-l z + 1. c 1 c z p l 4 l φ p 3 f i z + 6 + 7 <u>m</u> + 5 + l h o z<br />
-p l h + ll + z + 3 + z g c 1 + l4 o z ÷ 6 k c z ÷ 5 + 6<br />
-÷ 3 ÷ 5 ÷ 7 i z c z h r ÷ 1 + 6 ÷ 3 a z + 4 o l s <u>i 3</u> + 1<br />
-+ 6 + z r + 3 φ ÷ 4 ÷ l + 5 h i z + 1 <u>p</u> 3 + 3 ÷ z 6 ÷<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span><br />
-13 c z x ÷ 4 ÷ l + 6 ÷ 3 k a z + 4 ÷ ll. o 3 c 1 + lz ÷ 3<br />
-÷ 5 c z d + z y r + 3 ÷ g + 4 + l + 6 <u>p</u> 3 + 1 h + o z<br />
-+ <u>g m</u> + l x i l c l n ÷ n <u>m</u> + l ÷ g o l f i z o 3 x i l c l<br />
-<u>p</u> 3 + l x o 3 + z a l + 16 ÷ g d + 1 + l <u>a z</u> + z g ÷ l4<br />
-+ l o 3 φ u l o z f c z h s c 1 o 3 h <u>p 1</u> + 4 l ÷ <u>z g</u> ÷ 3 h p<br />
-l p 3 n c l o 3 h i z ÷ 8 + 13 + l + 9 + z h + l0 + ll <u>p</u><br />
-3 + 1 s r f + 6 ÷ 3 h o 3 + 8 h o 3 ÷ 4 ÷ g e l ÷ 3 x c l<br />
-÷ ll ÷ 1 ÷ g o z ÷ 10 + 5 u l ÷ 5 + 8 + 8 c l s + lz +<br />
-l3 e l o 3 φ ÷ g c z k i z f b l ÷ 6 l + 6 c 1 c z o l o z b r p 1<br />
-<u>r</u> + 3 ÷ l3 <u>i 3</u> ÷ 6 s o z m + 6 ÷ l i z ÷ 8 <u>r</u> + 5 ÷ 3 <u>l</u><br />
-÷ 1 l + 1 z x o z p l x + l4 ÷ l0 + 8 + 5 ÷ g f i z a z e l<br />
-o l o z φ + g o 1 h r + 11 f + 6 h g φ n + 3 ÷ 4 + 3 + l0<br />
-+ 6 h o z c l + 14 c l n o 3. a z + 4 c 1 9 f e l o 3 c l c z ÷<br />
-l4 o 3. x ÷ l3 i z d f p 3 c l 6 p l o z f i z i l p 3 c l x p l x o<br />
-z c l o z e l o 1 x u l p l o l p 3 ÷ 1z h ÷ z + 11 ÷ z + 3<br />
-+ z c l i z i 1 p 3 + 13. p l o l f e l c z ÷ l4 o 3 f h a z e l<br />
-c l x o 3 o l o z h + z ÷ 8 b 9 ÷ l6 e l ÷ l h i z f e l o 3 h<br />
-o 3 f e l c z c 1 i z o l p 3 c. l i z g p 3 o l c 1 i z k g o z p l u<br />
-l φ ÷ 5 + 8 p 3 c 1 h i z c l. r c 1 e l c z r p 1 o 3 x c l c z p<br />
-3 ÷ u x φ i z c z p l n ÷ 7 c l x b h o l c l n ÷ 8 x u l + 3<br />
-÷ 4 x p l 9 l c z p 3 c 1. i l o l o 3 d p 3 c l c z o l f i z x o l<br />
-c l o 3 c 1 p 3 f o l o 3 x u l p l d m ÷ 3 h r ÷ 1 + 6 p 3 k<br />
-9 f + 6 ÷ z c l c z x o z p l 4 l s ÷ l i z ÷ 8 s d ÷ z ÷ 6<br />
-÷ z ÷ l3 s o 3 o l h φ ÷ 8 9 f ÷ 5 + g h o z o 1 c l e z i l<br />
-c l i z x i 1 f e l ÷ l + 1l p 3 g e l i z. n + z n ÷ 7 i z c z<br />
-b g p l i 1 o l c l e l x p 1 p 3 p 3 o l 9 + 9 y p l e l r o z e l<br />
-c z s + a 5. b o z c l i l o l f x i l + l x o l ÷ i z + 8 o l c l<br />
-p 3.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 1 1 2 3 &nbsp; 2 1 &nbsp; 2 2 &nbsp; 3 2 3 2 4 2 3 4 2 5 4<br />
-p a d i c u l m o p o n i t r a p o c e q u e f i t a r a n t i m a t<br />
-a b c d e f g h i k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z a b c d e f g h i k</p>
-
-<p>1 5 &nbsp; 6 3 4 3 3 1 4 &nbsp; 5 3 2 6. 2 6 3 7 4 2 3 7.<br />
-b i x a n t e r v o k o m b o. s i c i n d i o.<br />
-l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z. a b c d e f g h.</p>
-
-<p><span class="mleft9">g. h. v. w. y. z.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="mleft4">|N. W.&mdash;&mdash;|</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="mleft10">Lettre deux fois lignée ne signifié rien.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Actors">
-<tbody>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">The K. of England</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Garrick.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Queen C. Matilda</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mrs. Yates.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdld"><span class="smcap">Lichtenstein</span></td></tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Lug&mdash;n&mdash;st&mdash;n</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Woodward.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdld"><span class="smcap">Seckendorf</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. S&mdash;k&mdash;d&mdash;rf</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Beard.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlc"><span class="smcap">Dieden</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Bn. D&mdash;d&mdash;n</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Powel.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlc"><span class="smcap">Bülow</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Bn. B&mdash;l&mdash;w</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Holland.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlc"><span class="smcap">Schimmelmann</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Bn. S&mdash;m&mdash;l&mdash;n</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Foote.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Ld. North</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Mattocks.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Delaval</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Shutter.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlc"><span class="smcap">Ahlefeldt</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Ct. A&mdash;f&mdash;t</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Reddish.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Ld. Simpelton</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mr. Clarck.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Texier</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mdle. Louise Bonneval.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Bulow</td>
- <td class="tdl">Anne Moulin.</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="APPENDIX_C" id="APPENDIX_C"></a>APPENDIX C.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">(<em>Correspondence of M. le Texier</em>).</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 1.</p>
-
-<p>D<span class="smcap">EAR</span> S<span class="smcap">IR</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Having had nothing material to communicate to you since your
-departure from hence, I would not trouble you with my letters till I
-did hear from you, in consequence of our agreement, and now I find
-myself honoured with your's of the 22nd November and 5th December;
-both which, for reason of the early frost, and constant
-easterly wind, I did not receive but lately, and at a short distance
-from one another. I congratulate you <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'verry'">very</ins> heartily upon the shortness
-of your passage, and happy arrival in London, and beg you'll
-accept of my sincere thanks for the friendly expressions of your
-letters, and the intelligence you are so obliging to impart to me. I
-make not the least doubt but you'll be able to employ your time a
-great deal better, and enjoy quite other pleasures in that great
-world, where you must almost be lost in, than you did in our little
-trading town of Hambro'. The inclosed letters which you transmitted
-to me, have been deliver'd according to your direction.
-You'll certainly hear from Mr. Holland directly. Mr. and Mrs.
-Matthiessen and their family, have often enquired for you, are verry
-glad of the intelligence I gave them from you, and that they may
-expect to see you, perhaps, in a short time, back again in those
-quarters, and do return their best compliments to you. I am glad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-to hear that Garrick approves of the new play that is intended to
-be performed; but cannot help wondering at the same time of his
-backwardness of concurring more effectually in its execution; but
-this may perhaps comme in time, when he has more particularly digested
-the plan, and seen the first actors in motion. You don't tell
-me of having seen him yourself: this is, however, what I could have
-wished, as you are by far better able than Woodward to give him a
-clear idea of the whole, and remove such objection as he could have
-to it. I have not yet heard from Beard, tho' I suppose, he must
-be in correspondence with Holland. As to Foote, I had no letters
-from him, and none did I expect; as we agreed, before his departure,
-that he should not write, but when circumstances did absolutely
-require it. Do you think that Shutter will have orders to advance
-the performance of this play on the stage he is at this time engaged
-on, or that Garrick will, perhaps, chose somebody else for
-having the management of it there. I cannot tell you anything
-more on this subject till things are come to maturity. Meanwhile,
-if you hear of something which you think will be worth transmitting,
-I'll be obliged to you for the communication of it. Our German
-plays are interrupted till the beginning of February, and the
-Cristmass vacancies won't allow the balls at the Boselhoff till the
-latter end of this month. Last week I heard at a verry grand concert
-the famous violin player, Lolly, who is, perhaps, the greatest
-virtuoso on that instrument at present in Europe. It is said he'll
-visit Engeland, where, I dare say, he'll be as much admired as in the
-other places he has been. You don't tell me how you deal with
-pleasures and amusements; for my part, my dear friend, I catch as
-much of the sweets of life as time and circumstances will alow.
-You must take up with this dish of broken English as it is, and
-excuse the inaccuracies of it, provided only you are able to understand
-it. Let me hear from you, and believe me, at all events, your
-devoted humble servant and friend.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>From Mons. T&mdash;&mdash;r, written from Hamburgh,<br />
-about the beginning of January</em>, 1775.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 2.</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">Y</span> D<span class="smcap">EAR</span> F<span class="smcap">RIEND</span>,</p>
-
-<p>I have received consecutively, and very safely, four of your letters.
-The first from Z&mdash;&mdash;, the second from Rotterdam, and the two last
-ones, from yᵉ 14th and 21st instant, from London, which give me
-a circumstantial account of your journey, and your transactions after
-your arrival at the last mention'd place. I should have answer'd
-them by the post of last Friday, if it had not been for the absence
-of Holland, who having been down to his estates for about 12 days,
-and beeing only return'd yesterday, it was only this morning I could
-communicate to him the contents of your last two letters. He is
-extremely satisfied; as, indeed, he ought to be, of the activity, the
-zeal, skil, and affection, with which you embrac'd and acted in the
-cause of Mrs. Yates, and pitty's only that all the trouble you have
-taken, and our endeavours, cannot prevail on Garrick's obstinacy to
-act his part in the <em>manner</em> the other actors desire it, in the new intended
-play, which may possibly be deficient in succes, in case he
-should persist in his refusal. As we have no intelligence as yet from
-Woodward or Beard (which we expect, however, every moment), we
-can form no judgment about his intentions, and therefore we are as
-little able to give you a cathegorical answer upon your question,
-whether we can make any further use of your services, or not? and,
-besides having no true account of the state of affairs from the stage
-where the play is to be acted. If the comedians have not been interrupted,
-if they know their parts, if the stage is adapted, if the
-machinery's are readdy, &amp;c., of which I doubt very much. You must
-remember that at your departure things did not look very bright,
-and that we were in apprehension of some disagreable news. Tho'
-we don't know the circumstances of what has happened there, and
-tho' the pot is not entirely <em>crack'd</em>, or has not <em>boil'd over</em>, as a certain
-person express'd itself, something must, however, have been the
-matter, and discomposed for the present the arrangements that were
-made, as <em>Mr. Reddish</em>, and two others of the first actors, have left<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-the playhouse, and undertook a journey during this summer to the
-south of Germany, till the suspicions that probably have been raised
-are dissipated, and the difficulty's they met with have been removed,
-which we hope will be towards the winter, when they will all meet
-again on the stage to make a fresh rehearsal, of which the success
-may be less doubtfull, if Garrick will second them as he ought.
-But be the case what it will, we expect every day, and certainly in
-the course of next weak, ours and your good friend, <em>Mr. Foote</em>, who
-will certainly relieve us of our anxiety, clear our doubts, and lead us
-in the way to give you a clear and positive decision. Till then, my
-dear, good friend, you must be quiet, and remain where you are
-without taking any resolution (exept on Garrick's immediate orders).
-This is what Holland entreats you to mind till he has explained himself
-with Foote, which, as you see, will be very soon, assuring you
-upon his honour, that his first business will be to settle with him in
-what manner to employ you, and then to give you immediate and
-positive resolution if you are to continue in the same station, and
-send you a draught at the same time; or in case you were at present
-of no use for to bring the play on the stage, to entreat Mrs. Yates
-(who is already acquainted with your ability's), in the strongest terms
-to recommand you to her friend, Mr. Garrick. This, my dear friend,
-is all I can, and am commissioned to say to you upon this account.
-I hope my next will be more satisfactory to you; meanwhile be assured
-that Holland, as well as myself, we have the highest and best
-grounded esteem for your noble and disinterested way of thinking,
-and whatever be the event, we shall always congratulate ourself of
-having made your acquaintance, and cemented your friendship.</p>
-
-<p>Holland begs to be excused in not writing to you himself, as he
-is extremely fatigued of his journey, and troubled with a vast deal
-of business which he found at his return; he begs you'll be so good
-to secure for him the chariot you have bespoke, for which he'll send
-you the draught you require. I am extremely satisfied with the
-manner in which you communicate to me what intelligence you give
-us, and which I understand perfectly. I wish mine were as intelligible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-to you, which however I doubt of. Be so good, my dear friend,
-to continue in the same way, but observe at the same time, when
-you make the cover to Mr. Matthiessen, to lay a small bit of paper
-between the seal of my letters and Matthiessen cover, as one of
-them stuck so fast to it that it was tore to pieces in the opening of
-it, but happily there remained just so much of the seal that it could
-not be opened.</p>
-
-<p>I'll be oblig'd to you for the books; my mother, brothers, sister,
-and her children, make their best compliments to you, and wish you
-health and pleasure. So do I do likewyse, my dear friend; farewell,
-and remember your devoted friend and servant.</p>
-
-<p>By my next you shall have more, and perhaps a little tit-tat,
-which time won't allow at present.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>The</em> 2<em>nd of May</em>, 1775.</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p5">No. 3.</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">Y</span> D<span class="smcap">EAR</span> F<span class="smcap">RIEND</span>,</p>
-
-<p>I received in due time your favour of yᵉ 13th of June, which
-was soon followed by that of yᵉ second of the same month, accompanying
-a parcel of silk, and four books, three of which I delivered
-according to your orders, and kept the fourth to myself, as you desir'd
-me. Be so good to receive my most gratefull acknowledgement
-for this mark of your friendship. I have not yet found time sufficient
-to go through it with due attention, but I'll reserve the perusal
-of it for those hours which free from business I can devote to friendship,
-and shall look upon it as a conversation which cannot but
-afford me a great deal of pleasure, as anything that comes from the
-author will always be dear to me. When I deliver'd the silk to
-Holland, I communicated to him the contents of your first of the
-13th of June; he join'd with me in his commendations with regard
-to your noble and disinterested way of thinking, and acknowledged
-the justness of your expectations with respect to Garrick. He
-assures you of the continuation of his friendship and esteem, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-desir'd me to tell you that he made repeated applications to <em>Beard</em>,
-for insisting with <em>Woodward</em> to recommand you to Garrick's remembrance;
-so that I don't doubt but you'll have heard by this time of
-something beeing done for you, the news of which will be most
-heartily wellcome to me, you may be assured. Foote has left this
-place some time ago; but he is soon to return, in order to be married
-to a young and amiable lady, one of the first family's of this
-country. He jointly with <em>Holland</em>, is in hopes that you have burnt
-all the letters and papers which you have received from the latter
-one, as well as from Miss Bonneval, respecting the unhappy affair
-that was the object of your correspondence; and they beg that you'll
-be so kind to confirm them in these hopes, for their future quiet and
-tranquillity. I expect, my dear friend, not only to receive of your
-letters, before you leave England, but even during your new intended
-travels, when you'll be at leisure, and your thaughts will bring you
-back to this place, where you have undoubtedly left a great many
-friends, some of which are strongly attach'd to you, and more particularly
-Bonneval's family. They all of them beg that you'll accept
-of their best compliments and hearty wishes for your wellfare.</p>
-
-<p>It is with astonishment and sorrow I have read in the several
-papers the account of the bloody scene exhibited in America. Is it
-possible that the spirit of <em>rebellion</em> (for as far as I am able to judge
-I cannot call it <em>liberty</em>) has raised their madness so far as to make
-them run blindly to their destruction? for what will be the consequence
-of all this? a <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'shokking'">shocking</ins> bloodshed between <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'childern'">children</ins> of the
-same mother, a total destruction of their property, and the utter
-ruin of all commerce and trade in those parts of the world, while a
-storm is preparing at this side of the water, which may perhaps
-strike a fatal blow to Old England, without being able to prevent it.
-What would become of Brittain's grandeur, if this great Spanish
-Armada was intended on your coasts, or on some of your American
-settlements? This opinion gains generally ground here, and few
-people think this undertaking to be only for the barbarian coast.
-But what is still more astonishing, is the spirit of division that prevails<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-in the metropolis, and the outrageous conduct of part of its
-citisents; nothing remains but they should likewise take up arms, in
-order to render the scene compleat. I pitty with all my heart those
-who are at the helm; and from my peaceable hermitage (which you
-have seen), when stretched upon my sopha, I cannot help smiling at
-the reading of your brilliant regattas and sommer diversions, amidst
-all those clamours, and while half of the nation is under arms, or
-preparing themselves to be so. But enough of this. <em>Comment vont
-les plaisirs</em>, and <em>les amours</em>? I wish you success in both. God
-bless you, my dear sir; remember him who is very cordialy your
-devoted humble friend and servant.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>July the</em> 18<em>th. N.B.</em> 1775.</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p5">No. 4.</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">Y</span> D<span class="smcap">EAR</span> S<span class="smcap">IR</span>,</p>
-
-<p>It was not but yesterday I receiv'd your's of yᵉ 21st July, as
-we had then two mails due from England, and much about the same
-time, or a little after you have dispatch'd it, my last (which was
-wrote about the middle of the same month) must have come to your
-hands, if it did come at all, for I cannot account for its delay, having
-desired my sister to have it put in the Post Office. I gave you an
-account in it of the several applications Holland had made on your
-behalf to Beard, relative to Woodward's putting Garrick in mind of
-you; the assurances we had got from Beard of his having acted
-according to his promiss, and the ignorance we then were in of its
-success. I have only the time to acquaint you now, that I saw Holland
-this morning, who told me of Beard mentioning in a letter he
-had lately receiv'd, that he hoped to have in a few days something
-to communicate to him about you. That he, Holland, is expecting
-this intelligence with the greatest impatience, and that as soon as
-he shall have received it, he will immediately do himself the pleasure
-of writing to you, in order to acquaint you of it. But, my dear
-sir, how are we to act in directing our letters to you? as I see it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-your intention to set out from England after the 14th of this month.
-At all events I'll direct what I have to send to you at the direction
-you left me at your departure, and which I make use of now, in the
-supposition that you'll leave such orders that anything will be transmitted
-to you. I have likewise to acknowledge the favour of your
-former, including a column of the newspapers, for the communication
-of which I am most sincerely oblig'd to you. I find this
-account wrote with elegance, and that warm interest the subject requir'd,
-and don't doubt it will answer the intention it was design'd
-with. You see, my dearest friend, that our ignorance is the sole
-cause of our silence, and thus I hope you'll be persuaded to pardon
-it, and not adscribe it to ingratitude and oblivion, which are sentiments
-that will never find entrance in our breast; but, on the contrary,
-be assured that we wish nothing with more ardor then to see
-you happy, and to see you rewarded, as you deserve it, by someboddy
-else, it beeing not in our power to effect it, but by our repeated intercessions,
-which I still hope will have their effect. I must finish
-here, in order not to miss the time of the post office. Thus farewell,
-and remember him who is with the sincerest affection your
-devoted friend and servant.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>August the</em> 4<em>th</em>, 1775.</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p5">No. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>July the</em> 16<em>th</em>, 1776.</p>
-
-<p>Not only, my dearest friend, several little excursions in the country,
-but also our friend Holland's absence, who did return only since
-a couple of days, have prevented my answering immediately the
-very kind letter which you favour'd me with on the 18th of January.
-It gave me an uncommon pleasure to hear of you, after so long a
-<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'scilence'">silence</ins>, which I could very well account for, as I knew that you was
-again on a visit on the Continent. I understand that you did not
-follow your first plan of crossing the Pirrenean mountains, and going
-to the south of Spain, for else you would have received a letter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-which I directed to you at Madrid, <em>a la poste restante</em>, in September
-last, as we did agree. If it be lost, there is no great news in it, as
-it contain'd nothing material. It was only <em>une lettre d'amitié</em>, and
-an enquiry after your health, with a short account of our doing here
-in the usual stile.</p>
-
-<p>I give you my most sincere thanks for the sentiments of friendship
-and affection which you honour me with; be assured of the
-most hearty return, not only from me, but likewise from our friends
-Holland and Foote, and of the gratefull sense we do all retain of
-your noble and generous behaviour. Believe me, dear sir, that it
-gives us the greatest pain and sorrow to hear that nothing has been
-done as yet on your behalf from Garrick's side, notwithstanding
-Beard's strong recommendations thro' Woodward's channel. Beard
-expresses his astounishment at it as well as Holland, and we are entirely
-at a loss how to account for Garrick's neglect, in not making
-you a return so justly deserved, and which can come from <em>him</em> only.
-I do not doubt a moment of Woodward having made all possible
-applications, and in that supposition, the critical circumstances of
-Garrick's own affairs, and the hurry and perplexity he has been in,
-can alone account for his behaviour. Holland desires that you will
-be assured of his esteem, of his attachment and friendship for you,
-and how much he wishes to convince you of those sentiments, nothing
-will be able to efface them out of his heart; and the same I
-dare answer for Foote, whom we have not seen since last summer,
-but who is expected here at the beginning of August. As all the
-hopes of renewing a theatrical entertainement are entirely dropt,
-you may easily imagin that Beard and Holland do but seldom correspond
-together, and yet only on friendly terms.</p>
-
-<p>I wish that the presenting the prints may open the way of helping
-you to Garrick's remembrance, and if means could be found out
-of being presented to him yourself, this, I dare say, would be of
-more effect.</p>
-
-<p>I paid for the hire of the carriage at Utrecht according to your
-desire. Caillé had an opportunity to send hither a person of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-acquaintance, to whom I paid the money, and who gave me a receipt
-for it, so that this point is settled.</p>
-
-<p>I was extremely welcome to my mother and brother, and likewyse
-to Mr. M&mdash;&mdash;'s family, with the news of having received a letter
-from you. They were greatly rejoiced at hearing you were well, and
-safe return from your late excursion. They beg you'll accept of the
-return of their best compliments, and hearty sallutation to you.
-Mrs. S&mdash;&mdash; had the misfortune of loosing again two childern last
-winter, but three weeks ago she was brought to bed of a boy; this
-does partly make up the former loss. However, her constitution is
-much hurt, and she enjoys but very little health.&mdash;I would be much
-obliged to you, if at your leisure moments you would favour me with
-a short account of your late excursion, and how you was pleased in
-that tour; for such an attentive traveller as you are, I dare say nothing
-will have escaped your inspection. I must acknowledge to
-you that I am tired with the sedentary life I lead here, and the insignificant
-business I am employ'd in; and between you and me I
-have made application of beeing sent to England; in how far I shall
-be able to succeed in this attempt I cannot tel, however, I have
-some hopes. How happy should I be if I could have the pleasure
-of meeting you in England, and embracing him whom I esteem and
-love with all my heart. This, my dear sir, you may be assured of
-from your affectionate and most devoted friend and servant.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>From Mons. Le T&mdash;&mdash; to N. W. W.</em></p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p5">No. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Sept. yᵉ</em> 5<em>th</em>, 1776.</p>
-
-<p>You must pardon me, my dear friend, if I deferred returning an
-immediate answer to your kind letter of yᵉ 30th July. Holland's
-absence, and Foote not being at that time arrived, put it out of my
-power to give you a satisfactory one, before I had seen either of them.
-They are both here now, and have retain'd for you the same sentiments
-of friendship and esteem which you have impress'd them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-with at the beginning of our mutual acquaintance. They acknowledge
-the justice of your claim on their warmest interest and recommendation
-on your behalf. They were even beforehand in offering
-to renew them, and to do anything in their power which might be of
-further service to you; but they cannot help beeing surprised that all
-their wishes and join'd endeavours with Beard, have hitherto been
-unsuccessfull on that subject. How is it possible that Garrick, who
-makes pretention on feeling and sentiments, can be regardless to
-the services you intended him, and in which you have so effectually
-been employed? This strange behaviour is above their conception.
-However, as they are willing to account for this, more than seeming,
-neglect, on behalf of the hurry of business, and the many vexations
-he has labour'd under this year past, they hope that repeated application
-will be of better effect. Foote, you will remember, has never
-been in any direct intercourse with Beard or Woodward. But Holland
-not only accepted writing again in the strongest terms, but told
-me that having had some time ago a <em>rendez-vous</em> with <em>Beard</em>, you
-took up great part of their conversation, in which he dwelt upon the
-absolute necessity that something ought to be done for you, and that
-they both would write to Woodward on that subject; so that you
-may be sure, my dear friend, if their goodwill can have any effect,
-and their recommendation any weight upon Garrick, you cannot,
-with the help of your friends in England, fail of being successful in
-your attempt to get a place, the intelligence of which will give me,
-as you may easily guess, the most complete satisfaction; and so I
-am positive it would also to Foote and Holland, who, I can assure
-you, do lament at each time that I do mention you to them, their
-incapacity of serving you according to their heart's desire, and do
-constantly express in the most distinguished expression, their high
-esteem for your personal quality's and noble way of thinking, and
-their perfect gratitude for your behaviour in general. Those sentiments
-they will certainly never part with; and they beg that you
-will do them the favour to continue that friendship for them, of which
-you have given them such uncontestable proofs; and give me leave,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-my dear friend, to join my request to theirs, that I may retain the
-same share in your remembrance.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. and Mrs. M&mdash;&mdash;, and their family, are highly pleased, as
-well as my mother and brother, to hear of you; they desire that
-you'll be so good to accept of their best compliments. Mr. Mathias
-is very much obliged to you for your kind remembrance, wishes you
-<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'blank'">a</ins> great deal of good, and gives his best salutes to you.</p>
-
-<p>I will be vastly obliged to you for the new production of your pen,
-which you are so good to promiss me. I wait for them with impatience,
-as they will in a manner make me amends for our separation,
-and let me enjoy your company, at least, in idea.</p>
-
-<p>I have but little hopes remaining of beeing successful in my application
-for a change in my situation. Tho' I do not give them up
-entirely for the future, I cannot flatter myself for the present of
-being so happy to make a trip to Albion, unless some unexpected
-events would open the way for it.</p>
-
-<p>I perceive that the last disagreable news from the North American
-Continent, have but little influence on the uninterrupted pleasures
-of your town. However, the success of the present civil war
-cannot fail of drawing the most serious consequences at their issue,
-and of bringing on a prodigious change in a great many fortunes.
-Well! but let them fight and quarrel as long as they please, I won't
-much trouble my head about it; but I will ever be ready to convince
-you that I am sincerely,</p>
-
-<blockquote><p>My dear Sir,<br />
-<span class="mleft3">Your devoted friend and well-wisher.</span></p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p5">No. 7.</p>
-
-<p>I can now very easily account, my dear friend, for Beard's silence
-with regard to your last letter. His absence from his ordinary
-place of abode, is undoubtedly the only reason of your having been
-without any news from him since the latter end of June. He has
-made a tour to Saxony, where he intended staying two or three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'monts'">months</ins>, but would be back towards the end of this month; this is
-what I could learn from our friend Holland, who has likewise been
-a very long time without his letters (their litterary intercourse being
-now almost dropt). He thinks your letter cannot be lost, but supposes
-it has been left at Z&mdash;&mdash;, or only been sent of late to him
-on his tour; so that you will have receiv'd now, or will probably in
-a short time, the answer you expected; meanwhile you may, my
-dear sir, make yourself very easy about the fate of your letter, which
-certainly cannot be lost. Surprising it is that all applications made
-on your behalf have hitherto been without effect; nevertheless, I
-am of opinion you must not give up the hope of success; a favourable
-moment will probably come, and Woodward will no doubt sease
-it to remind Garrick of your services. I cannot help having some
-apprehensions with regard to your intention, which you communicate
-to me in your last letter, of putting in order the anecdotes relative
-to Mrs. Yates, in a kind of memoirs; not, my dear sir, that I
-have the least doubt of your prudence and discretion; but you must
-know how easily an unforeseen accident may happen which can
-occasion the los of such a paper, which falling in other hands would
-certainly be published to the world, and what would be the consequence
-for those who have had any share in its contents? at least
-you will, no doubt, keep their names to yourself, and interwow the
-whole in such a manner, that it must remain untelligible to all those
-who are no knowing ones. I leave this to your caution, and we all
-depend upon your known prudence. Both Holland and Foote, who
-is return'd about a fortnight ago, where his business does call him
-in the winter time, desire that you'll be assured of their everlasting
-friendship and esteem.</p>
-
-<p>All your acquaintances here present their best compliments to
-you. There is since a couple of days a general rumor here of an
-approaching war. This will to all appearances occasion some more
-activity in trade, as well as in polliticks. Adieu, my dear friend; I
-wish you health and pleasure, and beg you will believe me very sincerly
-and faithfully, yours.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>Nov. yᵉ</em> 12<em>th</em>, 1776.</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">No. 8.</p>
-
-<p>Yours, my dear friend, of yᵉ 26th Nov. and 5th Dec., arrived at
-one and the same day, as we had three English mails due, owing to
-the east wind that has constantly blown this long while; and as I
-have desired, once for all, that any letter which comes from you
-should remain at my mother's house till I come to fetch it in person;
-they were not delivered to me till the day before yesterday, so
-that you must not be surprised at having received no immediate
-answer to them.</p>
-
-<p>So agreeable your letters have hitherto been to me, so very deeply
-has the last one affected me. The intelligence you give me, and
-which accounts at the same time for the presentation of the memoirs
-in question to Garrick, has afflicted me beyond expression. You cannot,
-you must not doubt, my dearest friend, of the part I take in the
-most minutest thing that may interest your wellfare. How should
-I not feel for your concerns? but at the same time how great are
-you in my Eeyes, how great must you be in the Eeyes of those who
-are acquainted with your principles, with the motives that do lead
-you in this occasion? Be assured that if anything could add to the
-esteem which you have commanded from me, from Holland and
-Foote, it would be the disclosure you have now made. I do conceive
-how it could have hurt your pride with narrow-minded souls;
-but with us it cannot. Men of honour and feeling, like you, are
-much above the caprices of fortune, and I am assured that its inconsistencies
-cannot in any degree affect their way of thinking. We
-have too many proofs of your strickt honour, disinterestedness, and
-even self-denial, to harbour the least doubt of any change of sentiment
-on your side. Not indeed, be easy on that account. Far from
-disapproving your plan, I would be the first to advise it; so does
-Holland, so would Foote. Happy we would be if we had interest
-enough with Garrick to contribute to its success. You know, my
-dear friend, how deeply we are obliged to you, and how much we
-have wished to convince you of our gratitude; but, at the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-time how unsuccessfull all our endeavours and applications have
-been. I approve much of your letting Woodward know of your
-intended plan; he must, and certainly will back it by his interest,
-and I hope that this will do at least. We have almost lost sight of
-him, and so likewise of Beard; I don't even know with certitude if
-he is returned, tho' I suppose he must be so at this time. Holland,
-who is very sickly, and has been so the whole winter, has not received
-any letters from him since his departure. Foote is return to
-the capital, as I told you, and will not visit our quarters before next
-summer.</p>
-
-<p>Do believe me, my dear friend, that I don't mind any loss of time
-or expence in our intercourse. I wish to hear from you; your letters
-are always wellcome to me, and give me a particular satisfaction.
-This will reach you by the new direction you have given me, and at
-the same time you'll receive two lines by the former way in order to
-acquaint you of it. Let me know by your first which of the two I
-shall keep for the future. All your friends here return their best
-compliments to you, and wish you well. So does he who is very
-sincerely and affectionately yours.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>The</em> 25<em>th Dec.</em>, 1776.</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p5">No. 9.</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">Y</span> D<span class="smcap">EAR</span> S<span class="smcap">IR</span>,</p>
-
-<p>It is a long time since I had any of your letters, and it will be
-near the same that I did not do myself the pleasure of writing to
-you. What is become of you since, and what has been the success
-of your application with Garrick? Those, my dear sir, are natural
-questions from the part of him that interests himself so warmly for
-you as I do. It would afford me the greatest pleasure if you could
-see the accomplishment of your desires. Mine did not succeed
-according to the hopes I had form'd. I have been obliged to relinquish
-the idea of beeing employed at London, having lately been
-nominated to the post of Resident at Dantzig, where I expect to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-setled towards the end of this year; but first I'll be obliged to go
-to C&mdash;&mdash;, and intend setting out next week thither. So, my dear
-friend, that if you do me the pleasure of giving me some news of
-your welfare, you wil be so good to direct them, during the remainder
-of this year, at our old direction, where I have given orders that
-your letters should be kept til my return. You'll however observe
-not to mention anything of the old topic in them, for fear of their
-miscarrying, and when I shal have reach'd my new destination, I'll
-give you another direction for the future, for I should be glad to
-cultivate our correspondence, and the friendship which has subsisted
-between us. Be assured, my dear friend, that where ever my
-fate may dispose of me, I shall desire the continuance of it, for him
-that is for ever with a sincere esteem, your devoted friend and
-servant.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>The</em> 16<em>th of Aug.</em>, 1777.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-
-<p class="p6">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="INDEX_TO_VOL_III" id="INDEX_TO_VOL_III"></a>INDEX TO VOL. III.<br />
-
-<span class="small70">HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL.</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="p5">A.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Aalborg, castle of, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Caroline Matilda, designated the countess of, imprisoned there, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Aboe, lieutenant, groundless charges brought against, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">biographical notices of, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how disposed of, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Alexandra, Princess of Wales, the great grand-daughter of Prince Frederick of Denmark, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Altona, Mr. Wraxall's visit to, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">crowded with the partisans of Queen Matilda, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Ancher, Kofod, one of the commissioners who passed sentence on Struensee and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mercifully disposed, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Arnholdt, bailiff of Bramstedt, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Arnim, <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Her'">Herr</ins> von, minister of the King of Prussia, intercedes on behalf of Justiz-rath Struensee, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-<li>A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span>, containing extracts from the correspondence of Mr. Wraxall with his father, relative to the restoration of Caroline Matilda, <a href="#Page_291">291</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">B.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Bang, counsellor, defends Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Berger, professor, employed in incommoding his Majesty, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">groundless charges brought against, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub2">how disposed of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Beringskjold, his political career, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conspiracy, and arrest, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his trial and imprisonment, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Beringskjold, Frau von, her death, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Berkentin, Frau von, chief gouvernante to the prince royal, and the early patroness of Struensee, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bernstorff, Peter Andreas, foreign affairs entrusted to, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">privy councillor, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bodenhausen, von, the Hanoverian privy councillor, receives Queen Matilda at Stade, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Braëm, G. A., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>; and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bramstedt, bailiwick of, solicited by Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">described, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <em>note</em>.</li>
-
-<li>Brandt, count Enevold, indictment of, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">retrospect of his career and conduct, <a href="#Page_3">3</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his position at court, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the different charges against, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his assault on the king, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his presuming manners, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">broke the fidelity due to his sovereign by being an accomplice with Struensee and the queen, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his neglect of duty, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his joining Struensee in robbing the royal treasury, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">injustice of the charges against, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">defended by Counsellor Bang, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the different charges rebutted, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his character not affected by Struensee's forgery, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his Quixotism, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter to the judges, and petition to the king, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">pleads his youth and eccentricity, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">makes a modest request, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his punishment predetermined, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sentence on, promulgated, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the intimate friend of Struensee, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">a close attendant on the king, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">delivery of the sentence upon him, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the charges against him recapitulated, <a href="#Page_63">63</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his behaviour to the king, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">assists Struensee in producing a misunderstanding, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">obtains large sums from the royal treasury, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his assault and battery on the king, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">high treason thus committed, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sentence, degradation from the dignity of count, and all other honours, his body to be quartered and exposed on the wheel, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">royal confirmation of the sentence, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;</li>
-<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span><span class="mleft1">injustice of the sentence, and groundlessness of the charges,</span> <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Reverdil's animadversions on the sentence, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sentence announced to him by his defender Bang, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">intercession of Owe Guldberg on his behalf, and the unfeeling treatment of the Queen Juliana Maria, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">intercession of his mother and sister, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Struensee's letter to, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives from Dean Hee the confirmation of his sentence and the day of execution, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">confesses his real sentiments as to his religious belief and moral feelings, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his penitence, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">preparations for his execution, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his escutcheon broken, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his execution, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the body divided into four quarters, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his head exposed on a pole, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Brieghil, the valet, his evidence, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Brunswick, hereditary princess of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <em>note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her gracious reception of Mr. Wraxall at Celle, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">difficulties created by her presence, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">niece to Queen Juliana Maria of Denmark, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Brunswick Bevern, prince of, appointed commandant of Copenhagen, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bülow, baron von, receives Queen Matilda at Stade, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">an exile at Altona, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his ring presented to the queen by Mr. Wraxall as proof of his mission, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conferences with Wraxall, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">gives instructions to him respecting his proposed visit to the queen, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter to George III., <a href="#Page_227">227</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter on the queen's sudden death, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his despair, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bülow, baroness von, an elegant woman, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bülow, marshal von, appeases the crown prince, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p5">C.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Cabinet orders issued by Struensee, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">for disbanding the foot-guards, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-<li>Caroline Matilda, no longer regarded as Queen of Denmark after the dissolution of her marriage, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">all her ties with Denmark broken off, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her grief at the deaths of Struensee and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her generosity of mind, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the charges against her submitted to English lawyers, who declared them unsubstantiated by evidence, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the English court insisted that no sentence should be passed on her, and fitted out a strong fleet, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Walpole's version of the affair, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his gossip respecting her, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">title of "Countess of Aalborg" conferred on her, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">temper of the English with regard to, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Sir R. M. Keith's active interference on her behalf, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">concessions of the Danish ministry, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">order of release presented to her by Keith, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrival of a squadron to take her away, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">writes an affecting letter to her brother, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">resolved that she should take up her residence at Celle in Hanover, and be allowed £8,000 a-year, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">interesting anecdote of, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her affection for her children, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves a letter for the king, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his grief at her departure, <em>ib.</em>, <em>note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her suite, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her farewell to Denmark, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the documents connected with the dissolution of her marriage deposited in the secret archives, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her arrival at Stade, and her joyous reception, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her presents, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her new suite, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrives at Celle, and takes up her abode in the royal chateau, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her amiability and charitable disposition, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her reading and studious pursuits, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the happiness of her home, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her great interest in her children, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her conversations with Colonel Keith, <a href="#Page_162">162</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Grub-street attacks on, exposed by Reverdil, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her course of life at Celle, <a href="#Page_167">167</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her literary taste, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her court theatricals, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her letter to her sister detailing her course of life at Celle, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her great pleasure at receiving the portrait of her son, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Mr. Wraxall's introduction to, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her gracious reception of him, and confiding affability, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">again visited by Mr. Wraxall, who communicates a project, with certain conditions, for restoring her to the throne of Denmark, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>-<a href="#Page_189">9</a> (<em>see</em> W<span class="smcap">RAXALL</span>);</li>
-<li class="isub1">instructions respecting the project, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;</li>
-<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span><span class="mleft1">her important conversations with Wraxall, and plans laid down for further proceedings,</span> <a href="#Page_195">195</a> <em>et seq.</em>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her sudden death, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a> (<em>see</em> A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span>);</li>
-<li class="isub1">details of her illness, death, and funeral, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>-<a href="#Page_249">>9</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">suspected of having been poisoned, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">general mourning for in England, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">monuments erected to her memory, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter to her brother, written during her illness, and published after her death, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">evidences of her innocence and purity of mind, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Mr. Wraxall's portraiture of her virtues and character, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>-<a href="#Page_258">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">correspondence of Mr. Wraxall with his father relative to her restoration, <a href="#Page_291">291</a> <em>et seq.</em> (<em>see</em> A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span>).</li>
-
-<li>Carstens, A. G., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Celle, Queen Matilda's residence at, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her course of life at, <a href="#Page_160">160</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Mr. Wraxall's frequent visits and interviews with the queen, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a> <em>et seq.</em>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>-<a href="#Page_233">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Christian VII., Count Brandt's assault on, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his profuse presents to Struensee and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his power as sovereign, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <em>note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">confirms the atrocious sentences passed upon Struensee and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his court festivities and revolting apathy, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">grants a free pardon to Colonel Falckenskjold, and releases him from the fortress of Munkholm, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives a letter from his wife previous to her departure for Hanover, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his expressions of affection for her, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at the instigation of the crown prince he dismisses his ministers, and appoints a new cabinet, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">drawn into personal collision with the hereditary prince, but the <em>coup d'état</em> is accomplished, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Colin, Major, appointed commandant of the fortress Munkholm, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Colleges, impediments of the, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dismissal of the, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Commission of Inquiry, the members of, who tried and sentenced Struensee, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">allot rewards to the persons employed in convicting the prisoners, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <em>note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">their proceedings against the minor prisoners of state, and charges brought against them, <a href="#Page_104">104</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
-
-<li>Copenhagen, bitterness at, against Struensee and his cabinet orders, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">its suburban grounds, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Council, duties of the, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">abolition of the, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Council of Thirty-two, established by Struensee, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Counter-revolution projected by the Danish exiles, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Court festivities, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</li>
-<li>exhibit a revolting exhibition of apathy and want of sympathy, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Crown prince of Denmark, begins to assume power, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his examination, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his determined spirit, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of age to enter the council of state, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spirited interference with the court forms of proceeding, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects the overthrow of the ministry by a <em>coup d'état</em>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">proclamation of, as regent, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Count Bernstorff, the enlightened statesman, his adviser, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cypher writing, adopted by Mr. Wraxall, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">key to the fictitious names, <a href="#Page_312">312</a> (A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span>).</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p5">D.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Danish chancery, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Danish language, Struensee's ignorance of the, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">frequently perverted in translation, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>D<span class="smcap">ENMARK</span>, the constitution of, gives the king absolute power, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <span class="smcap">NOTE</span>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">feeling of the nation at Struensee's conduct, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">state trials, and execution of the ministers Counts Struensee and Brandt, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Caroline Matilda's farewell to, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">counter-revolution in, proposed, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the new ministry growing unpopular, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">plan for effecting the counter-revolution in, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">terminated only by the death of the queen, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, (<em>see</em> C<span class="smcap">AROLINE</span> M<span class="smcap">ATILDA</span>, and W<span class="smcap">RAXALL</span>);</li>
-<li class="isub1">retrospective view of, <a href="#Page_259">259</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">political reaction in, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">all the reforms of Struensee's government abolished, and the abuses of "the good old times" restored, <a href="#Page_260">260</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">triumvirate in the government, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">disunion among the conspirators, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fate of the ministers, <a href="#Page_264">264</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the indigenate law of, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">the crown prince enters the council of state, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects the overthrow of ministry by a <em>coup d'état</em>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the counter-revolution completely effected, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p5">E.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Egede, Professor J., anecdote told by, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Eickstedt, Hans Henry von, his political career, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sudden dismissal, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">retires to the island of Fühnen, where he dies, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Elliot, Mr., British envoy at Copenhagen, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <em>note</em>.</li>
-
-<li>England sends a squadron for the release of Caroline Matilda, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Exiles of Denmark, their project for effecting a counter-revolution, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">F.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Falckenskjold, his notes on the trial of Struensee, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">decided that he should be the victim of judicial vengeance for his admiration of Struensee, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his detection of the quarter-master's roguery, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">groundless charges against, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>-<a href="#Page_119">119</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sentenced to be imprisoned for life in the fortress of Munkholm, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">account of his voyage to Munkholm, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his description of the fortress, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his treatment, <a href="#Page_128">128</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his solace and recreation, <a href="#Page_130">130</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his disposition to misanthropy, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">increased severity in his treatment, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">wretchedness of his domicile, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">insulted by the commandant, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives a royal pardon, and an order for his release, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">conditions of his release, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">allowed to take ship for Holland, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fixes his domicile at Montpellier, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives permission to retire to the Pays de Vaud, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the court of Petersburg proposes to him the post of chief of the staff in the army, but the court of Copenhagen refuses its assent, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in 1788 he visits Copenhagen, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the Danish government recalls him, and confers on him the rank and pay of a major-general, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ends his days in comfort, and dies at the advanced age of eighty-two, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his evidence of Queen Matilda's innocence and purity of mind, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Foot-guards, disbandment of the, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Forgery, charge of against Count Brandt rebutted, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Frederick II. of Denmark, gradually acquires absolute sway, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <em>note</em>.</li>
-
-<li>Frederick, prince of Denmark, the marriage festival of, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his contests with the crown prince, and overthrow of his party, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">driven into obscurity, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">marries a princess of Mecklenburg, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his youngest daughter the grandmother of Alexandra, present princess of Wales, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Fusilier guards disbanded, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">G.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Gähler, Frau von, charges brought against her, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how disposed of, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Gähler, general von, groundless charges brought against, <a href="#Page_113">113</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his principal crime that of interfering with everything without possessing requisite knowledge, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how disposed of, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Gallows Hill, where the skulls and bones of Counts Struensee and Brandt were exposed, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li>George III., Mr. Wraxall's communications with, <a href="#Page_204">204</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his instructions respecting his sister, the queen of Denmark, and the Danish nobles, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his assent to the project for restoring the queen under certain conditions, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter of the Danish nobility to, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li>German language encouraged by Struensee, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Göhrde, chateau of, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrival of the queen at, and also of her sister, the hereditary princess of Brunswick, <a href="#Page_157">157</a> <em>et note</em>.</li>
-
-<li>Griffenfeldt, count von, imprisoned in the fortress of Munkholm, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">notices of, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Guards, disbandment of the, by Struensee, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Guldberg, O., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>; and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his intrigues against Struensee, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">draws up Falckenskjold's pardon and release, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>;</li>
-<li><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span><span class="mleft1">becomes cabinet secretary,</span> <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his ministry, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">honours conferred upon him, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives the name of Höegh-Guldberg, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">opposed by the crown prince, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his overthrow, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">H.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Hanbury, Mr., English consul at Hamburgh, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">invites Mr. Wraxall to dinner, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Hansen, admiral, unfounded charges brought against, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how disposed of, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hauch, general, first deputy of the College of War, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hee, Rev. Dr., the chaplain of Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attends Brandt to the scaffold, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">rewards allotted to, <a href="#Page_95">95</a> <em>et note</em>.</li>
-
-<li>Hesse, Prince Charles of, invited to Copenhagen, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hesselberg, colonel von, charges brought against, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">biographical notices of, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how disposed of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Holck, count, his alleged freedom with the king, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Holstein, count, presented with a diamond solitaire by the queen, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Holstein, countess, her personal appearance, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Horse-guards, corps of, disbanded, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Huth, lieutenant-general von, councilor of state, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">I.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Indigenate law of Denmark, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p5">J.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Juell-Wind, J. K., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Juliana Maria, the dowager queen, her vengeance satiated in witnessing the execution of Counts Struensee and Brandt, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her presents to the chaplains who attended the unhappy victims, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <em>note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Suhm's account of her avenging spirit, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her unnatural feelings, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her heartless conduct after the death of Queen Matilda, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her absolute sway, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her fury at the overthrow of the Guldberg ministry, and at the insulting treatment of her son by the crown prince, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her power at an end, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">driven into obscurity, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">K.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Keith, colonel Sir R. M., his visits to the Queen of Denmark, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his active interference on the queen's behalf, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Lord Suffolk's letter to, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his anecdote of the queen, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">accompanies her to the chateau Göhrde, and then takes leave of her, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter to Lord Suffolk, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his interview with the queen, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Köller-Banner, one of the triumvirate in the government of Denmark, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his projects for remodelling the army, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his plans examined, and rejected, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his dissatisfaction, and dismissal, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appointed governor of the fortress of Rendburg, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">royal concessions made to him, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives his discharge from the military service and retires to Altona, where he dies, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Kronsborg, anecdote of the fettered slave of, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">L.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Lehzen, pastor, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his account of the queen's death, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Leyser, Dr. von, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li><em>Lex Regia</em>, a law by which all government decrees, letters and documents, shall be signed by the king, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Lichtenstein, baron von, Mr. Wraxall's interviews with respecting the Queen of Denmark, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">communicates the king's views and intentions, <a href="#Page_204">204</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Mr. Wraxall's satisfactory interview with.</li>
-
-<li>Louisa Augusta, princess, separated from her mother, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">M.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>McBride, captain, arrives at Copenhagen, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">introduced to Caroline Matilda, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Magistracy, abolition of the, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mantel, the queen's valet, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mathias, British minister at Hamburg, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mattheson, Mr. Wraxall's letters to be addressed to, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-<li>Matthiesen, Jerome, Mr. Wraxall and several Danish nobility sup with, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span></li>
-
-<li>Moranti, the negro boy, his evidence, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mösting, von, minister of finances, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Munkholm, fortress of, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Colonel Falckenskjold sentenced to imprisonment for life there, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">history of his abode there, <a href="#Page_125">125</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">voyage to, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">description of the fort, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">a monastery of Benedictines founded here by Canute the Great, <em>ib. note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">demoralised state of the soldiery, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Lieutenant-General von der Osten the commandant, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">officers of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the garrison chaplain, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">a fresh commandant of the fortress, Major Colin, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">imprisonment of Beringskjold, the political foe of Falckenskjold, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Münter, Dr., peruses the sentence against Struensee with trembling, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his communications with Struensee, <a href="#Page_73">73</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his opinions on Struensee's conduct, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his kindness to Struensee, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attends him to the scaffold, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>-<a href="#Page_93">3</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">rewards allotted to, <a href="#Page_95">95</a> <em>et note</em>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">N.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Norwegian coast, the, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">O.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Ortwed, Etats-rath, the king's bailiff, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Osnabrück, strange adventure at, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Osten, lieutenant-general von der, commandant of Munkholm, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his brutal character, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">brings a pardon to Colonel Falckenskjold, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Osten, count von der, one of the triumvirate in the government of Denmark, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">banished to Jütland, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his subsequent appointment, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <em>ib.</em></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">P.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Prince Royal, Struensee's letter to his governess, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">Q.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Queen Dowager (<em>see</em> J<span class="smcap">ULIANA</span> M<span class="smcap">ARIA</span>.)</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">R.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Rantzau, count von, his blackness of soul, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Struensee's letter to, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">no hostile feelings entertained against, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">one of the triumvirate in the government of Denmark, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">suddenly removed from his office, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ordered to quit the country, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">settles at Avignon, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Reforms, by Struensee, <a href="#Page_39">39</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
-
-<li>Reverdil's animadversions on Count Brandt's trial and sentence, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">exposes the Grub Street libellers, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Roques, M., pastor of the French Protestant Church at Celle, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his testimony to the queen's innocence and purity of mind, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Rosencrone, count, opposed by the crown prince, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Rosenkranz, von, privy councillor, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Rothes, Christian Adolphus, an anonymous libeller, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Royal prerogative, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">S.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>St. Germain, count de, sentiment of, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li>"Sandkrug," the suburban inn of Celle, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scarlet fever, prevalence of, in the neighbourhood of Celle, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the queen's illness and death caused by, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
-
-<li>Schack, supreme marshal von, dismissed, and expelled <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'blank'">from</ins> the court by the crown prince, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scheel, the valet, his evidence, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Schimmelmann, baron von, and his lady, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">their son introduced to Mr. Wraxall, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his revolutionary project, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Schmidt, J. C. E., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Seckendorf, baron, chamberlain to the queen Matilda, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Mr. Wraxall's interview with, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">acts as the confidential agent between the queen and Mr. Wraxall, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his warm reception of Mr. Wraxall, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his note, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Wraxall's interview with, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">delivers important letters to him, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter respecting the queen's sudden death, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Seeland dragoons, reform in the regiment of, <a href="#Page_54">54</a> <em>note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ordered to the court and city, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-<li>Serfdom, restoration of, in Denmark, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span></li>
-<li class="isub1">its subsequent abolition, <em>ib.</em></li>
-
-<li>Sevel, professor F. C., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">acted as inquisitor, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his insulting treatment of Colonel Falckenskjold, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Small-pox, ravages of the, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Sporon, tutor of the crown prince, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stade, the queen's arrival at, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stampe, H., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, and Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stampe, baron de, an odd adventure with, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stampe, privy councillor, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stemann, von, minister of finance, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his overthrow, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Struensee, count Fred., his robbery of the royal treasury, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">assisted by Count Brandt in all his crimes, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sentence on, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the charges against him recapitulated, <a href="#Page_34">34</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his general conduct and designs, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">abolishes the council, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his impediments of the colleges, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his ignorance of the Danish language, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his important reforms <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his despotism, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his dismissal of the ministry, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his establishment of the Council of Thirty-two, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his avarice and selfishness, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his salaries, <em>ib. note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">excludes all from the throne, excepting his intimate friends and relations, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his selfishness, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the large presents received from his Majesty, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his embezzlements, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his ambition not less than his avidity, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his "moderation," <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his assumed authority, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his cabinet orders, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his disregard of the <em>Lex Regia</em>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">contravenes the royal prerogative, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his disbandment of the guards, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his cabinet extracts, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his despotic administration, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">committed the crime of high treason in an eminent degree, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sentence, degradation from the dignity of count and all other honours, his body to be quartered, &amp;c., <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">royal assent given to the sentence, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sentence announced to him by Commissioner Uldall, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his fortitude, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his deep concern for Count Brandt, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his doubts and ruminations, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter to his parents, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his conversations with Münter, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter to Frau von Berkentin, chief gouvernante to the prince royal, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter to Chamberlain Christian Brandt, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his letter to Count Rantzau, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his farewell to his brother Justiz-rath Struensee, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his procession to the place of execution, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his hopes of salvation, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his behaviour, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his execution and horrible death, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his head exposed on a pole, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his skull eventually stolen by four English sailors, <a href="#Page_94">94</a> <em>note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his character, <a href="#Page_96">96</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in prosperity not a hero, in misfortune cowardly and worthless, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of the romantic episodes of his life, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his acquirements, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his enlightened despotism, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">remarks on his administration, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his mistaken policy, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">after his fall behaved like a coward and a traitor, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Baron Seckendorf's account of his administration and the plots against his life, <a href="#Page_199">199</a> <em>note</em>.</li>
-
-<li>Struensee, Justiz-rath, his intercommunication with his brother, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">charges brought against him, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his high character, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his honorable conduct while in Prussia, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">honored with the distinguished favor of Prince Henry of Prussia, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">released from prison, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes minister of state in Prussia and ennobled in 1789, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Sturtz, councillor, groundless charges brought against, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">biographical notices of, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how disposed of, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dies of grief, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Suffolk, lord, his letter to Sir R. M. Keith respecting queen Matilda, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Keith's letter to, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>; Wraxall's fruitless visit to, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Suhm, the historian, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his anecdote of the dowager queen's avenging spirit, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="p5">T.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Texier, M. le, treasurer to Christian VII., <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">proposes to Mr. Wraxall a project for restoring the Queen of Denmark, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letters to be addressed to, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Thirty-two, council of the, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Torp, the valet, his evidence, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-<li>Traventhal league, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span></li>
-
-<li>"Trésor," the, reserved by Struensee as a special cabinet treasury, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Trondhjem, garrison of, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">(<em>see</em> M<span class="smcap">UNKHOLM</span>).</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">U.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Uldall, commissioner, announces to Struensee the sentence passed upon him, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">V.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Vardohuus, a small fort built by Christian IV., <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">W.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Walpole, Horace, his version of the sailing of the British fleet, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his gossip respecting Queen Caroline Matilda, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Warnstedt, count, his alleged freedoms with the king, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Willebrandt, Etats-rath, groundless charges brought against, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how he was disposed of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Wiwet, Fiscal General, his charges against Count Brandt, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Wraxall, Mr. N. W., anecdote related by, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his visit to Celle, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">biographical notices of <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his introduction to Queen Matilda and the Princess of Brunswick, and his gracious reception, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his varied conversations with the queen, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">proceeds to Hamburg, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dines with the English consul, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the distinguished company he meets with, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sentiments in favour of the queen, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives a proposal for undertaking her restoration to the throne of Denmark, accepts the offer, and proceeds to Celle as an agent of the conspiracy, <a href="#Page_180">180</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his communications with the queen, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>-<a href="#Page_189">9</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his second visit to the queen, with full instructions, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>-<a href="#Page_194">4</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his important conversations with the queen, and his plans laid down for future proceedings, <a href="#Page_195">195</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">meets with a strange adventure, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his return to England, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his arrival in London, and introduction to Baron von Lichtenstein, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his communications with the king respecting the Queen of Denmark, and the plans of her exiled nobility for her restoration, <a href="#Page_204">204</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives the king's answer to his propositions, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the articles in favour of the revolution assented to by the king, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves England for Celle, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">account of his journey and its dangers, <a href="#Page_209">209</a> <em>et seq.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his arrival at Celle, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his interesting interview with the queen, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his departure from Celle, and arrival at Hamburg, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">delivers his despatches, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">again visits the queen with letters from baron Bülow, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his interesting interview with the queen, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>-<a href="#Page_233">3</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his interview with Baron von Seckendorf, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his departure from Celle, and arrival in London, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">delivers his letters to M. Hinüber, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the difficulties he has to encounter, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives intelligence of the death of the Queen of Denmark, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the termination of his enterprise, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">through the interest of Lord North he receives 1,000 guineas for his services, and the promise of a seat at the Board of Green Cloth, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <em>note</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the promise never fulfilled on account of his adverse vote in Parliament, <em>ib.</em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">extracts from his correspondence with his father, relative to the restoration of Caroline Matilda, <a href="#Page_291">291</a> <em>et seq.</em>, (A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span>);</li>
-<li class="isub1">his remuneration for his outlay and services withheld, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sample of his cypher writing, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>-<a href="#Page_312">312</a>, (A<span class="smcap">PPENDIX</span>.)</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="p5">Z.</p>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li>Zell, (see C<span class="smcap">ELLE</span>), the castle of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Zimmermann, Dr., <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="center">LEWIS &amp; SON, PRINTERS, SWAN BUILDINGS, MOORGATE STREET. LONDON.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="center">13, W<span class="smcap">ATERLOO</span> P<span class="smcap">LACE</span>, S.W.,<br />
-<span class="mleft10">L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span>, <em>May</em>, 1864.</span><br /></p>
-
-<p class="p7a">MESSRS. Wᴹ H. ALLEN &amp; CO.'S</p>
-
-<p class="p7b">PUBLICATIONS.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p class="p3a">IN THE PRESS.</p>
-
-<p class="p6b">MEMOIRS OF CAROLINE MATILDA,</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">Queen of Denmark, Sister of George III.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In Three vols. 8vo.</p>
-
-<p class="center">From Family and State Papers in the possession of Sir Lascelles Wraxall,
-Bart. <span class="rightline">[<em>In June.</em></span><br /></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p6b">THE MYSTERIES OF THE VATICAN.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">From the German. In Two Vols. post 8vo.</p>
-
-<hr class="r30" />
-
-<p class="p7">HENRY VIII.: <span class="small70">AN HISTORICAL SKETCH</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p5">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> CHARLES HASTINGS COLLETTE.</p>
-
-<blockquote><p><em>This Work contains a Reply to the several popular errors connected with
-the domestic and public character of Henry VIII., and acts attributed to
-him.</em></p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="center">Post 8vo, 9s.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>March</em> 19, 1864.&mdash;"Mr.
-Collette has furnished Protestants with a
-manual of instruction on one of the most
-important periods of English history."</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ORNING</span> A<span class="smcap">DVERTISER</span>, <em>March</em> 22, 1864.&mdash;"We
-heartily commend this volume to
-the general perusal of Protestant Englishmen,
-as an antidote of the false aspersions
-heaped upon the character of Henry VIII.,
-the chosen instrument, whatever may have
-been his failings, to break the chains which
-bound England in their numbing fetters,
-and to clear the way for the glorious liberty
-of thought and free perusal of God's word,
-to which these islands owe so much of their
-prosperity and glory."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p7d">"THEIR MAJESTIES' SERVANTS:"</p>
-
-<p class="p3b">Annals of the English Stage.</p>
-
-<p class="p7b">ACTORS&mdash;AUTHORS AND AUDIENCES,</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">From THOMAS BETTERTON to EDMUND KEAN.</p>
-
-<p class="p4">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> D<span class="smcap">R</span>. DORAN, F.S.A.,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of "Table Traits," "Lives of the Queens of England of the House of Hanover,"
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="center">2 vols. 8vo, 32s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p4b">"BILL OF THE PLAY."</p>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>VOL. I.</strong></p>
-
-<p>Prologue&mdash;The Decline and Fall of the
-Players&mdash;The "Boy Actresses," and the
-"Young Ladies"&mdash;The Gentlemen of the
-King's Company&mdash;Thomas Betterton&mdash;"Exeunt,"
-and "Enter"&mdash;Elizabeth Barry&mdash;"Their
-first appearance on this stage"&mdash;The
-Dramatic Poets&mdash;Noble, gentle, and
-humble Authors&mdash;Professional Authors&mdash;The
-Dramatic Authoresses&mdash;The Audiences
-of the Seventeenth Century&mdash;A Seven Years'
-Rivalry The United and the Disunited
-Companies&mdash;Union, Strength, Prosperity&mdash;Competition,
-and what came of it&mdash;The
-Progress of James Quin, and Decline of
-Barton Booth&mdash;Barton Booth&mdash;Mrs. Oldfield&mdash;From
-the Death of Anne Oldfield to
-that of Wilks&mdash;Robert Wilks&mdash;Enter, Garrick&mdash;Garrick,
-Quin, Mrs. Porter&mdash;Rivalry;
-and Enter, Spranger Barry&mdash;The Old
-Dublin Theatre&mdash;Garrick and Quin: Garrick
-and Barry&mdash;The Audiences of 1700-1750&mdash;Exit,
-James Quin&mdash;England and
-Scotland.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><strong>VOL. II.</strong></p>
-
-<p>Margaret Woffington&mdash;Colley Cibber&mdash;England
-and Ireland&mdash;Byan, Rich, O'Brien&mdash;Susanna
-Maria Cibber&mdash;Re-appearance
-of Spranger Barry&mdash;Retirement of Mrs.
-Prichard&mdash;The last Years of Garrick and
-Barry&mdash;David Garrick&mdash;Spranger and Anne
-Barry&mdash;Kitty Clive, Woodward, Shuter&mdash;Samuel
-Foote&mdash;Supplemental Catalogue of
-New Plays from the retirement of Garrick
-to the end of the Eighteenth Century&mdash;Of
-Authors, and particularly of condemned
-Authors&mdash;The Audiences of the last half of
-the Eighteenth Century&mdash;Charles Macklin&mdash;A
-Bevy of Ladies; but chiefly, Mrs.
-Bellamy, Miss Farren, Mrs. Abington, and
-"Perdita"&mdash;A Group of Gentlemen&mdash;John
-Henderson&mdash;Sarah Siddons&mdash;John Kemble&mdash;George
-Frederick Cooke&mdash;Master Betty&mdash;Stage
-Costume and Stage Tricks&mdash;Prologues,
-Epilogues; Dedications, and Benefits&mdash;Old
-Stagers Departing&mdash;New Ideas;
-New Theatres; New Authors; and the
-New Actors&mdash;Edmund Kean.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>Nov.</em> 21, 1863.&mdash;"Dr. Doran
-has contrived a couple of volumes which,
-while they satisfy the information-seeking
-few, will be received as a treasury of amusing
-anecdote by the lovers of gossip.
-The stage of any country, whether it
-flourishes or not, is sure to produce a crop
-of good stories, and no one can tell good
-stories better than Dr. Doran."</p>
-
-<p>D<span class="smcap">AILY</span> N<span class="smcap">EWS</span>, <em>Dec.</em> 29, 1863.&mdash;"An elaborate
-history of the drama in all its aspects....
-When once taken up it must be
-read through. Every page of the work is
-barbed with wit, and will make its way
-point foremost.... These volumes
-provide entertainment for the most diverse
-tastes."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">ATURDAY</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>Dec.</em> 26, 1863.&mdash;"As
-a collection of anecdotes and brief biographies,
-Dr. Doran's book leaves little or
-nothing to desire."</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ORNING</span> P<span class="smcap">OST</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 16, 1864.&mdash;"Dr.
-Doran's book contains a copious review of
-all subjects connected with dramatic literature,
-with the lives of players, and with the
-business of the stage, during the whole
-period of the rise and growth of theatrical
-representations in England. The style of
-the volumes is clever and amusing in a high
-degree; and the diversified stories of information
-which they condense entitle them
-to a perusal by every lover of the drama,
-and especially by every aspirant to the
-honours of the sock and buskin."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p7d">GERMAN LIFE AND MANNERS,</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">AS SEEN IN SAXONY AT THE PRESENT DAY:</p>
-
-<p class="center">With an Account of Village Life&mdash;Town Life&mdash;Fashionable Life&mdash;Married
-Life&mdash;School and University Life, &amp;c., of Germany at the Present Time.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Illustrated with Songs and Pictures of the Student Customs at the University of
-Jena.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> HENRY MAYHEW,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of "London Labour and London Poor," "Great World of London," &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Two Volumes, 8vo, 32s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>December</em> 5<em>th</em>, 1863.&mdash;"This
-is a work, which in its outspoken and
-perhaps sometimes boisterous frankness,
-will shock many admirers of Goethe and
-Schiller, and of the land they lived in;
-but which, nevertheless, in despite of the
-honest, downright blows which Mr. Mayhew
-distributes so freely with his English
-cudgel on the members of almost every
-German class and profession, and on
-almost every German custom and institution,
-is full of original thought and observation,
-and may be studied with profit
-by both German and English&mdash;especially
-by the German."</p>
-
-<p>B<span class="smcap">ELL'S</span> M<span class="smcap">ESSENGER</span>, <em>January</em> 23<em>rd</em>, 1864.&mdash;"Mr.
-Mayhew's very amusing volumes
-well deserve careful perusal. The Luther
-exploration is deeply interesting."</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ORNING</span> P<span class="smcap">OST</span>, <em>December</em> 31<em>st</em>, 1863.&mdash;"Mr.
-Mayhew has made up two very interesting
-volumes."</p>
-
-<p>I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> T<span class="smcap">IMES</span>, <em>January</em> 16<em>th</em>, 1864.&mdash;"Mr.
-Mayhew has produced the most
-entertaining and (to a careful reader) instructive
-book we have seen for a long
-time&mdash;a book that will be greedily gone
-through and long remembered by everybody
-that takes it up."</p>
-
-<p>I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> N<span class="smcap">EWS</span>, <em>January</em> 2<em>nd</em>, 1864.&mdash;"To
-say that Mr. Henry Mayhew has
-written two exceedingly entertaining
-volumes will appear, to those who know
-anything of his writings, equivalent only
-to saying that he has written two volumes.
-He has now left English for German life;
-so far, at least, as Saxony offers a specimen
-of it, and his descriptions are characterised
-by the same graphic, uncompromising, and,
-one is bound to say, moreover, studded,
-as usual, by gems of wit, humour and
-anecdote, and illustrated by comparisons
-or contrasts, drawn from that vast stock of
-experiences with which his acquaintance
-with an extensive range of society has
-supplied him."</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">LASGOW</span> M<span class="smcap">ORNING</span> J<span class="smcap">OURNAL</span>, <em>April</em> 18,
-1864.&mdash;"Mr. Mayhew's work is excessively
-interesting, and in many passages excessively
-amusing, there can be no manner of
-of doubt, while we have every reason to
-believe that the picture it presents of German
-life and manners is in the main strictly
-and literally true."</p>
-
-<p>L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 16<em>th</em>, 1864.&mdash;"We
-do not know where to look for a better
-view of the student life of a German university
-than Mr. Mayhew gives us <em>àpropos</em>
-of that of Jena."</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="p7d"><span class="small70">THE</span><br />
-
-FORESTS AND GARDENS OF SOUTH INDIA.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> HUGH CLEGHORN, M.D., F.L.S.,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Conservator of Forests, Madras Presidency.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In post 8vo, with Map and numerous Illustrations, price 12s.</p>
-
-
-<p>D<span class="smcap">AILY</span> N<span class="smcap">EWS</span>.&mdash;"Full of valuable information, and thoroughly reliable in all its statements."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p2">S<span class="smcap">ECOND</span> E<span class="smcap">DITION</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">Dedicated, by Permission, to the Bishop of Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">SOCIAL LIFE OF MUNICH.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> EDWARD WILBERFORCE, E<span class="smcap">SQ.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Post 8vo, cloth, 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">CONTENTS:</p>
-
-<div class="indexcola">
-Munich from the Outside.<br />
-Manners and Customs.<br />
-Royalty.<br />
-"The Two Kings of &mdash;&mdash;"<br />
-Public Buildings.<br />
-Picture Galleries.<br />
-Künstler Feste.<br />
-Cornelius in Munich.<br />
-Kaulbach.<br />
-Munich Artistic.<br />
-Practical Munich.<br />
-Bavarian Railways.<br />
-The Royal Library.<br />
-The Theatre in Munich.<br />
-Concerts in Munich.<br />
-Beerhouses.<br />
-Village Life in Bavaria.<br />
-Laws of Trade.<br />
-Laws of Marriage.<br />
-Laws of Police.<br />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>S<span class="smcap">PECTATOR</span>, <em>Nov.</em> 21, 1863.&mdash;"The 'Social
-Life' is altogether an admirable photographic
-picture, sharp and clear, and true
-in every line of light and shade."</p>
-
-<p>R<span class="smcap">EADER</span>, <em>Nov.</em> 14, 1863.&mdash;"It will command
-the attention of every thinking
-German. Mr. Wilberforce's interesting
-volume embraces nearly the whole range
-of Munich life, political, social, and artistic.
-'Social Life in Munich' is entirely free
-from the scandalous anecdotes by which
-town travels are so often disfigured.
-Written throughout in a pleasing lively
-strain, it is evidently the work of a keen
-observer, who benefits the Germans whilst
-he amuses his own countrymen."</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">UARDIAN</span>, <em>Dec.</em> 2, 1863.&mdash;"Mr. Wilberforce
-has written a clever and characteristic
-account of this famous city of art."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">ATURDAY</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>Dec.</em> 26, 1863.&mdash;"A
-very able volume. Mr. Wilberforce is a
-very pleasant and agreeable writer, whose
-opinion is worth hearing on the subject of
-modern art, which enters largely into the
-matter of his discourse."</p>
-
-<p>E<span class="smcap">DINBURGH</span> C<span class="smcap">OURANT</span>, <em>Nov.</em> 14, 1863.&mdash;"We
-welcome this agreeable and instructive
-book."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="p7d">SIR EVERARD'S DAUGHTER.</p>
-
-<p class="p5">A NEW NOVEL.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> JOHN CORDY JEAFFRESON,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of "Live it Down," &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Second Edition, post 8vo, 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>July</em> 11, 1863.&mdash;"It is, perhaps,
-the most remarkable work of fiction
-that Mr. Jeaffreson has written."</p>
-
-<p>B<span class="smcap">ELL'S</span> M<span class="smcap">ESSENGER</span>, <em>July</em> 18, 1863.&mdash;"Compared
-with many of Mr. Jeaffreson's
-larger literary productions, this tale is but
-a sketch; yet as such it shows the hand of
-a master, and proves that had he been at
-the pains to have elaborated his subject
-upon a broader canvas, it would have been
-not only one of the most successful specimens
-he has ever prepared, but one of the
-most remarkable, for a long time past,
-given to the public by any other modern
-novelist."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p7d">THE IONIAN ISLANDS</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">In the Year 1863.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> P<span class="smcap">ROFESSOR</span> D. T. ANSTED, M.A., F.R.S.</p>
-
-<p class="center">8vo, cloth, with Maps and Cuts, 16s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>S<span class="smcap">ATURDAY</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>Dec.</em> 5, 1863.&mdash;"What
-Mr. Ansted saw in the Ionian
-Islands he saw well, and under good
-auspices, and has noted down carefully."</p>
-
-<p>N<span class="smcap">ONCONFORMIST</span>, <em>Dec.</em> 18, 1863.&mdash;"Professor
-Ansted's volume furnishes interesting
-information on all points on which information
-might fairly be looked for in
-such a work. His narrative is throughout
-light and agreeable reading."</p>
-
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>Dec.</em> 21, 1863.&mdash;"Through
-these Islands Professor Ansted has accomplished
-a pleasant run, the incidents of
-which are as pleasantly narrated. What
-Professor Ansted effected in his volume on
-the Channel Islands for that insular group
-in our own seas, he has accomplished as successfully
-for these Isles of Greece in the
-work which we now make over to its assured
-public."</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> P<span class="smcap">RESS</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 22, 1864.&mdash;"Highly interesting
-on account of the great variety of
-information it contains, and not less highly
-commendable for the impartiality with
-which the various data for judging of the
-expediency of the transfer of the Islands
-to the kingdom of Greece are placed before
-the reader."</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="p7d">TRAVELS IN MEXICO,<br />
-
-<span class="small70">SOUTH AMERICA, &amp;c., &amp;c.</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> G. T. VIGNE, E<span class="smcap">SQ.</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of "A Personal Visit to Ghuzni and Affghanistan," and "Travels in Kashmir,
-Ladak," &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="center">With Illustrations, 2 vols. post 8vo, 21s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>, <em>Nov.</em> 15, 1863.&mdash;"The author
-seems to have travelled over a great part
-of South America, and to have visited all
-the principal towns and places worth seeing,
-and his observations, which are made with
-cleverness and intelligence, are characterized
-by remarkable freshness of feeling,
-an unaffected style, and a conscientious
-truthfulness."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">PECTATOR</span>, <em>Nov.</em> 28, 1863.&mdash;"While in
-Nicaragua the Filibusters were attracting
-the attention of Europe, and his (Mr.
-Vigne's) sketch of the fortunes of General
-Walker up to his execution forms an
-episode of considerable interest. The special
-charm in Mr. Vigne's work is the keenness
-of his observations as a naturalist in
-the country in which, above all others,
-nature seems to have revelled in strange
-and fantastic creations. Without attempting
-set descriptions of external scenery
-or natural phenomena, he manages, by the
-fidelity and freshness of style, to convey
-to the mind of the reader the pervading
-atmosphere of the scene and circumstances
-with rare felicity."</p>
-
-<p>R<span class="smcap">EADER</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 16, 1864.&mdash;"We can recommend
-this work as a pleasantly written
-narrative of travel in a most interesting
-and little known region."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p7d">VICTOR HUGO;</p>
-
-<p class="p6b">A LIFE RELATED BY ONE WHO HAS WITNESSED IT.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">INCLUDING</p>
-
-<p class="p3b">An Original Drama, in Three Acts,</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">ENTITLED</p>
-
-<p class="p7b">"INEZ DE CASTRO."</p>
-
-<p class="p3a">FROM THE FRENCH.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Two Vols. post 8vo, £1 1s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2a">Contents:</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-La Vendée.<br />
-Marriage.<br />
-Campaign of the Rhine.<br />
-Fra Diavolo.<br />
-Journey into Italy.<br />
-Arrest of Lahorie.<br />
-Meeting with Napoleon.<br />
-Coucha the Monk.<br />
-Story of General Louis Hugo.<br />
-El Empecinado.<br />
-An Idyll at Bayonne.<br />
-Masserano Palace.<br />
-College of the Noble.<br />
-France Invaded.<br />
-Bourbons.<br />
-The Hundred Days.<br />
-The Foolish Things Master Hugo<br />
- &nbsp; did before he was fully fledged.<br />
-First Introduction to the Academy.<br />
-A Word for Chateaubriand.<br />
-Death of the Mother.<br />
-Lamennais becomes Victor<br />
- &nbsp; Hugo's Confessor.<br />
-A Wedding.<br />
-A Visit to Blois.<br />
-Coronation of Charles X.<br />
-Visit to Lamartine.<br />
-M. Victor Hugo's Recital.<br />
-Letter from Lamennais.<br />
-Cromwell.<br />
-Amy Robsart.<br />
-The Scaffold.<br />
-The Consequences of<br />
- &nbsp; "The Last Day of a Convict."<br />
-Ernani.<br />
-Notre Dame de Paris.<br />
-Marion de Lorme.<br />
-Lucrezia Borgia.<br />
-Marie Tudor.<br />
-La Esmeralda.<br />
-Fête at Versailles.<br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>June</em> 27, 1863.&mdash;"The story
-of such a life as M. Victor Hugo, told by a
-witness, can hardly fail to be a tale which
-will make Europe sit still to listen."</p>
-
-<p>P<span class="smcap">RESS</span>, <em>July</em> 25, 1863.&mdash;"These volumes
-contain a wonderful wealth of anecdote,
-and we predict that they will be read with
-great avidity."</p>
-
-<p>L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>July</em> 25, 1863.&mdash;"We
-have said enough, we hope, to show our
-readers that the present volumes will repay
-perusal. From beginning to end we have
-found them full of lively and interesting
-gossip, with numerous passages which have
-also an historical value."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">TANDARD</span>, <em>Sept.</em> 29, 1863.&mdash;"This is altogether
-a very charming little book; its
-contents are so various that no reader can
-fail to be pleased, and the style&mdash;light,
-graceful, and piquant&mdash;is the perfection of
-chatty biography."</p>
-
-<p>N<span class="smcap">ONCONFORMIST</span>, <em>Sept.</em> 2, 1863.&mdash;"A work
-which is sure to attract much attention."</p>
-
-<p>E<span class="smcap">DINBURGH</span> C<span class="smcap">OURANT</span>, <em>Sept.</em> 19, 1863.&mdash;"The
-anecdotes&mdash;the pictures&mdash;the sketches
-of continental men and women&mdash;all of
-which follow each other naturally in the
-story of the career of a famous Frenchman,
-make this life as instructive as it is amusing
-to British readers."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="center"><em>In One handsome 8vo volume</em>, <em>with</em> 72 <em>Illustrations on Wood by</em> V<span class="smcap">IZETELLY</span>, L<span class="smcap">OUDAN</span>,
-N<span class="smcap">ICHOLLS</span>, <em>and</em> H<span class="smcap">ART</span>, <em>also with a Map</em>, <em>price</em> <em>£</em>1 6<em>s</em>.</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">THE CHANNEL ISLANDS:</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">CONTAINING</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">Part I.&mdash;PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY.</p>
-
-<p>The Channe and Channel Islands&mdash;Alderney, Ortach, and the Casquets&mdash;Island
-and Coast of Guernsey&mdash;Islands and Rocks near Guernsey&mdash;Jersey
-and adjacent Rocks&mdash;Chaussey Archipelago and the Minquiers&mdash;Climate,
-Meteorology, and Sanitary Condition.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">Part II.&mdash;NATURAL HISTORY.</p>
-
-<p>Vegetable productions natural to the Islands&mdash;Animals in the Islands and
-adjacent Seas&mdash;Geology and Mineralogy, Ancient Formations&mdash;Modern Destruction
-and Renovation&mdash;Fauna and Flora, considered in reference to their
-Physical Geography and Geology.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">Part III.&mdash;CIVIL HISTORY.</p>
-
-<p>Pagan and Legendary Period&mdash;German Period&mdash;Norman Conquest to beginning
-of Civil Wars&mdash;Civil Wars&mdash;Accession of William the Third to present
-Time&mdash;Antiquities and Archæology&mdash;Language and Literature.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p5">Part IV.&mdash;ECONOMICS and TRADE.</p>
-
-<p>Agriculture&mdash;Horticulture&mdash;Trade, Commerce, and Manufactures&mdash;Constitution
-and Laws&mdash;Manners and Customs&mdash;Principal Public Institutions&mdash;Hints
-to Tourists&mdash;Money, Weights, and Measures&mdash;Statistics.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> DAVID THOMAS ANSTED, M.A., F.R.S., &amp;c.,</p>
-
-<p class="center small80">AND</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">ROBERT GORDON LATHAM, M.A., M.D., F.R.S.</p>
-
-<p><em>The Illustrations drawn on Wood expressly for this Work, by</em> P<span class="smcap">AUL</span> J. N<span class="smcap">AFTEL</span>, <em>Member of
-the London Society of Painters in Water Colours</em>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>S<span class="smcap">ATURDAY</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>April</em> 4, 1863.&mdash;"This
-is a really valuable work. A book
-which will long remain the standard authority
-on its subject. No one who has
-been to the Channel Islands, or who purposes
-going there, will be insensible of its
-value."</p>
-
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>Nov.</em> 16, 1862.&mdash;"It is the
-produce of many hands, and every hand a
-good one. Nearly everything which a man
-can desire to know about Jersey, Guernsey,
-Alderney, and Sark, about their history,
-geography, and natural history, Professor
-Ansted and Dr. Latham have contrived to
-tell."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">PECTATOR</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 24, 1863.&mdash;"We are
-quite sure that to all classes of readers
-this work will prove exceedingly interesting,
-while scientific men will acknowledge
-that it leaves no room for any future
-history of the Islands."</p>
-
-<p>L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 17, 1863.&mdash;"We
-can safely say that no one can visit the
-Channel Islands without finding much to
-interest and inform in the work before us."</p>
-
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>, <em>Nov.</em> 30, 1862.&mdash;"As gems of
-art, these illustrations have rarely been
-equalled, and certainly have never been
-surpassed. They are alone sufficient to
-confer a lasting popularity and permanent
-value. The volume however, possesses an
-intrinsic worth irrespective of all its graces
-of adornment, which will not fail to command
-it the hearty approbation of every
-reader."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p5">SECOND EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="p7b">AN INQUIRY <span class="small80">INTO THE</span> THEORIES <span class="small80">OF</span> HISTORY,
-CHANCE, LAW, WILL;</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">With SPECIAL REFERENCE to the PRINCIPLES of POSITIVE
-PHILOSOPHY.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> WILLIAM ADAM.</p>
-
-<p class="center">8vo, cloth, 15s.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>W<span class="smcap">ESTMINSTER</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>.&mdash;"The 'Inquiry
-into the Theories of History,'
-although anonymous, is a first-rate book.
-Its object is to reconcile Theism with the
-scientific conception of law, and from that
-reconciliation to deduce a true theory of
-history. The book contains a most able
-and effectual vindication of Theism, and of
-a rational, as opposed to irrational, Positivism."</p>
-
-<p>C<span class="smcap">ORNHILL</span> M<span class="smcap">AGAZINE</span>.&mdash;"Written with
-remarkable ability, and, considering its
-polemical spirit, with excellent temper.
-The style is always animated, and at times
-felicitous. The volume gives ample proof
-of metaphysical acuteness. One good
-service it will certainly effect&mdash;namely,
-that of fastening the attention of its
-readers on the great fundamental problems
-of historical science."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">PECTATOR</span>.&mdash;"The whole book bears the
-evident mark of maturity of thought. The
-third chapter is full of thoughtful and able
-argument, in which the positions, not only
-of Comte, but often of Mill, are powerfully
-and successfully assailed."</p>
-
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>.&mdash;"The book now under
-notice is no doubt heavy and massive, but
-no competent critic will be prepared to
-pronounce it dull. It is exceedingly calm
-and candid, clear-sighted, and ingenious in
-an eminent degree. It is well thought and
-weightily written. We have not come
-across a book of the present day for a considerable
-while so far removed from the
-common run of writing and of thinking as
-this one is. This author manifests that
-originality which always goes to the centre
-of a question, whether well or ill conceived,
-and takes sundry important and fresh
-views of the entire problem before turning
-aside from the contemplation of it. Be the
-writer who he may, he has the credit, at
-least, of producing a highly original work."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="p7d">THE POLISH CAPTIVITY:</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">An ACCOUNT of the PRESENT POSITION and PROSPECTS of the
-POLES in the KINGDOM of POLAND,</p>
-
-<p class="center">A<span class="smcap">ND IN THE</span> P<span class="smcap">OLISH</span> P<span class="smcap">ROVINCES OF</span> A<span class="smcap">USTRIA</span>, P<span class="smcap">RUSSIA, AND</span> R<span class="smcap">USSIA</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> SUTHERLAND EDWARDS.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Two Volumes, 8vo, with Chromo-Lithographic Illustrations, 26s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>T<span class="smcap">Imes</span>, <em>April</em> 2, 1863.&mdash;"A highly opportune
-production."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">PECTATOR</span>, <em>March</em> 28, 1863.&mdash;"The
-'Polish Captivity' is full of light but suggestive
-sketches, <em>pièces justificatives</em> of
-historic value, national songs and stories,
-descriptions of Polish towns, Polish notabilities,
-and Polish women, and is, besides,
-a book an English lady might read with
-twice the ease of Mr. Trollope's latest
-novel."</p>
-
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>March</em> 21, 1863.&mdash;"Mr.
-Edwards' book will be read with deep interest.
-It is well written, and the narratives
-are well constructed."</p>
-
-<p>L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>March</em> 28, 1863.&mdash;"The
-book in which Mr. Sutherland
-Edwards has depicted the 'Polish Captivity'
-would have been valuable at any
-time, but the opportuneness of its arrival
-so enhances its merits, that it is certain to
-command a greater than ordinary success."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p5">SECOND EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">THE RUSSIANS AT HOME:</p>
-
-<p class="p4b">UNPOLITICAL SKETCHES.</p>
-
-<p>Showing what Newspapers they read; what Theatres they frequent; and
-how they eat, drink, and enjoy themselves; with other matter relating
-chiefly to Literature, Music, and to Places of Historical and Religious Interest
-in and about Moscow.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> SUTHERLAND EDWARDS, E<span class="smcap">SQ.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Second Edition, in post 8vo, with Illustrations, price 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>E<span class="smcap">DINBURGH</span> E<span class="smcap">VENING</span> C<span class="smcap">OURANT</span>.&mdash;"It is
-a book that we can seriously recommend,
-not only to those who are desirous of
-abundant and reliable information respecting
-the social economy of the Russian
-people, but to those who seek an entertaining
-volume, that may be perused in any
-part with both profit and amusement."</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">LOBE</span>.&mdash;"This book is full of useful information
-and sensible comment on a
-people and country which are very little
-known in England, even among the cultivated
-and travelling classes."</p>
-
-<p>I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> T<span class="smcap">IMES</span>.&mdash;"The book may
-be recommended as embodying a large
-amount of varied information concerning
-Russia in the pleasantest possible form.
-Every page has the advantage of being
-readable, and is always fresh in what it has
-to say and in the manner of saying it."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">PECTATOR</span>.&mdash;"This is not only one of
-the most amusing books that we have read
-for a long time, but also the best and most
-reliable account of Russian life and manners
-which has hitherto been given to the
-public."</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="p5">SECOND EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">THE HISTORY OF THE OPERA,</p>
-
-<p class="p4b">From Monteverde to Donizetti.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> SUTHERLAND EDWARDS, E<span class="smcap">SQ.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">2 vols. post 8vo, 21s.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> T<span class="smcap">IMES</span>.&mdash;"The new history of the
-lyrical drama with which Mr. Sutherland
-Edwards favours the public, has three
-qualities to recommend it. In the first
-place, it contains, for its size, a very complete
-account of the progress of an art,
-which now, beyond all others, occupies the
-attention of the civilized world; in the
-second place, it is one of those treasures of
-amusing anecdote that may be taken up
-and laid down at a moment's notice; in the
-third place, it abounds with the observations
-of a shrewd and independent thinker,
-who has seen much, read much, and
-travelled much, and who approaches his
-subject less as a professed musician than as
-one of those cultivated men who take a
-position between the artist and the multitude,
-and who, after all, constitute the
-body upon whom the general appreciation
-of every art depends.... The anecdotes,
-which we have given in illustration
-of an extremely short and inglorious period
-of operatic history, occupy but very few
-pages in Mr. Edwards' book; and, when we
-inform our readers that his two volumes are
-replete with matter of the same kind, they
-will easily judge of the amount of entertainment
-to be derived from his labours.
-So abundant is his material, that he might,
-if he had pleased, have filled a dozen
-quartos; and, as he himself confesses, he
-found the task of omission heavier than
-that of collection. Let us add, that he
-has omitted well, and that he has seasoned
-a pleasant and instructive history with the
-very concentrated essence of agreeable
-gossip."</p>
-
-<p>H<span class="smcap">ERALD</span>.&mdash;"Mr. Edwards has here produced
-a work which ought to command a
-great sale, if its merits and the great
-number of opera-goers may be considered.
-Completely master of his subject, and
-possessing a ready and pleasing pen, Mr.
-Edwards in these volumes gives us an exceedingly
-interesting history of operatic
-performances."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">UN</span>.&mdash;"We commend these light and
-pleasant volumes to all lovers of musical
-and dramatic art, assuring them they will
-find ample entertainment in their animated
-pages."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p5">SECOND EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIRS:</p>
-
-<p class="p4b">Autobiography, Diaries, and Correspondence.</p>
-
-<p class="center">INCLUDING</p>
-
-<p class="p5"><span class="gesperrt">LETTERS FROM</span></p>
-
-<div class="indexcola">
-<p>KING JEROME,<br />
-MADAME PATTERSON BONAPARTE,<br />
-THE DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE,<br />
-DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE,<br />
-DUKE OF LEINSTER,<br />
-MARQUIS WELLESLEY,<br />
-MARQUIS OF ANGLESEY,<br />
-MARQUIS OF ABERCORN,<br />
-MARCHIONESS OF ABERCORN,<br />
-THE EARL OF ABERDEEN,<br />
-THE EARL OF CARLISLE,<br />
-LORD MELBOURNE,<br />
-LADY CAROLINE LAMB,<br />
-LORD CLONCURRY,<br />
-LADY STANLEY,<br />
-LORD DARNLEY,<br />
-THE COUNTESS OF CORK AND ORRERY,<br />
-LADY LEITRIM,<br />
-LORD DUNCANNON,<br />
-LORD MACAULAY,<br />
-LORD ERSKINE,<br />
-JOSEPH HUME,<br />
-DANIEL O'CONNELL,<br />
-SHEIL,<br />
-E. JENNER,<br />
-LA FAYETTE,<br />
-BYRON,<br />
-COUNTESS GUICCIOLI,<br />
-MOORE,<br />
-DOUGLAS JERROLD,<br />
-SIR E. BULWER LYTTON,<br />
-THOMAS CAMPBELL,<br />
-MRS. HEMANS,<br />
-REV. SIDNEY SMITH.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>.&mdash;"Full of pleasant memoirs
-and piquant reading."</p>
-
-<p>D<span class="smcap">AILY</span> T<span class="smcap">ELEGRAPH</span>.&mdash;"The book that
-tells the story of Lady Morgan's life will
-always be of value for its pictures of a
-state of society which, with much of its
-good, and more of its evil, has passed
-away for ever."</p>
-
-<p>D<span class="smcap">AILY</span> N<span class="smcap">EWS</span>.&mdash;"Surveying, as they do,
-considerably more than half the last hundred
-years, and touching upon some of the
-most instructive events of that period, these
-volumes, it need hardly be said, are most
-interesting. Princes, dukes, and nobles,
-authors, artists, and <em>literati</em> of every profession,
-crowd the pages of the work."</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ANCHESTER</span> E<span class="smcap">XAMINER</span>.&mdash;"One of the
-most pleasant books of its class with which
-we are acquainted."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">In Two Volumes, 8vo, price 26s.</p>
-
-<p class="center">With a Portrait of L<span class="smcap">ADY</span> M<span class="smcap">ORGAN</span>, by Sir Thomas Lawrence, and a Portrait
-of S<span class="smcap">IR</span> C<span class="smcap">HARLES</span> M<span class="smcap">ORGAN</span>.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="p7d">THE NATIONALITIES OF EUROPE.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> D<span class="smcap">R</span>. R. G. LATHAM.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Two Vols. 8vo, 32s.</p>
-
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>.&mdash;"The mass of facts gathered from all quarters and crowded together
-in the pages of these volumes is something wonderful."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p5">THIRD EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">HISTORY OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE</p>
-
-<p class="p7b">IN INDIA.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> EDWARD THORNTON, E<span class="smcap">SQ</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Containing a copious Glossary of Indian Terms, and a complete Chronological
-Index of Events, to aid the aspirant for Public Examinations.</p>
-
-<p class="center">One Vol. 8vo, with Map, price 16s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> T<span class="smcap">IMES</span>.&mdash;"Mr. Thornton is master
-of a style of great perspicuity and vigour,
-always interesting, and frequently rising
-into eloquence. His power of painting
-character and of bringing before the eye of
-the reader the events which he relates, is
-remarkable; and if the knowledge of India
-can be made popular, we should say his is
-the pen to effect it."</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">LOBE</span>.&mdash;"Mr. Thornton's history is comprehensive
-in its plan, clear and forcible in
-its style, and impartial in its tone."</p>
-
-<p>E<span class="smcap">DINBURGH</span> E<span class="smcap">VENING</span> C<span class="smcap">OURANT</span>.&mdash;"The
-writer evinces diligence and research into
-original authorities; his style is easy, and
-the intrinsic interest of the important events
-of Indian history is thus increased by a
-popular and amusing narrative."</p>
-
-<p>P<span class="smcap">ATRIOT</span>.&mdash;"The style of the work is
-free, rapid, and spirited, and bears marks
-of a thorough familiarity with the subject.
-Every Englishman ought to be acquainted
-with the history of the British Empire in
-India, and we therefore cordially recommend
-this work to our readers."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">The L<span class="smcap">IBRARY</span> E<span class="smcap">DITION</span> in Six Vols. may be had, £2 8s.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="p7d">A GAZETTEER OF INDIA,</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">Compiled chiefly from the Records at the India Office,</p>
-
-<p class="center">WITH NOTES, MARGINAL REFERENCES, AND MAP.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> EDWARD THORNTON, E<span class="smcap">SQ.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">*&#8270;* The chief objects in view in compiling this Gazetteer are:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="p8">1st. To fix the relative position of the various cities, towns, and villages, with
-as much precision as possible, and to exhibit with the greatest practicable
-brevity all that is known respecting them; and,</p>
-
-<p class="p8">2ndly. To note the various countries, provinces, or territorial divisions, and
-to describe the physical characteristics of each, together with their
-statistical, social, and political circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>To these are added minute descriptions of the principal rivers and chains of
-mountains; thus presenting to the reader, within a brief compass, a mass of
-information which cannot otherwise be obtained, except from a multiplicity
-of volumes and manuscript records. The work, in short, may be regarded as
-an epitome of all that has been written and published respecting the territories
-under the government or political superintendence of the British power
-in India.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In Four Vols. 8vo, with Map, price £2 16s.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[12]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p5">FOURTH EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="p7b">AUTOBIOGRAPHY</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">OF</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">MISS CORNELIA KNIGHT,</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">Lady-Companion to the Princess Charlotte of Wales,</p>
-
-<p class="center">WITH EXTRACTS FROM HER JOURNALS AND ANECDOTE BOOKS.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In Two Vols. 8vo, with Portrait of the P<span class="smcap">RINCESS</span> C<span class="smcap">HARLOTTE</span> of W<span class="smcap">ALES</span>,
-price 26s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>T<span class="smcap">IMES</span>.&mdash;"Why we should turn to these
-volumes as among the most interesting of
-the recent season will be sufficiently evident
-as we indicate their contents."</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ORNING</span> S<span class="smcap">TAR</span>, <em>July</em> 22, 1861.&mdash;"Emphatically
-a readable book is this autobiography.
-Indeed, having once opened it,
-the reader cannot easily lay it aside until
-he has got through the whole. Not the
-least interesting part is the collection of
-miscellaneous anecdotes of persons and
-events which are clustered together as a
-sort of appendix at the close. It is a book
-fit to be read, but fit also for something
-better than a casual reading; worthy of a
-higher repute than an evanescent popularity,
-merely founded upon the great
-names it introduces, and the amusing scraps
-of gossip it contains."</p>
-
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>June</em> 8, 1861.&mdash;"Of the
-popularity of these volumes, on account of
-their historical as well as gossiping merits,
-there can be no doubt whatever."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="p7d">THE REPUBLIC OF FOOLS:</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">BEING</p>
-
-<p class="p4b">THE HISTORY OF THE STATE AND PEOPLE OF ABDERA, IN
-THRACE.</p>
-
-<p class="center">TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN OF C. M. VON WIELAND,</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y THE</span> R<span class="smcap">EV</span>. H. CHRISTMAS.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In Two Volumes, post 8vo, cloth, price 18s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>.&mdash;"As a prose satire, the History
-of the Abderites yields only in breadth
-of humour and pungency of wit to Dean
-Swift's immortal Travels of Captain Lemuel
-Gulliver; and of works of that class, we
-know of none in any language that can
-compare with either of the two."</p>
-
-<p>L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>.&mdash;"Here is enjoyment
-for many a Christmas to come, for many
-thousands of English boys, and many
-thousands of English men and women.
-Unfortunately for the world, Pisistratus
-Caxton departed this life without having
-made any contribution towards the great
-history of human folly, save, indeed, by
-the records of his own. Mr. Christmas has
-given us something even better in his
-translation of Wieland's Abderites; and
-in the simplest, most racy, and vernacular
-English, has enriched our literature with
-another character of the family dear to
-mankind, of the Quixotes, Gullivers and
-other human foils of human self-love and
-vanity. If the addition to our shelves of a
-book to delight the young and instruct the
-old, overflowing with wit, fun, drollery inexpressible,
-wisdom, depth and knowledge,
-is an achievement deserving of national
-thanks, we undertake to convey our share
-to Mr. Christmas, fearing only lest we
-should not have thanked him sufficiently."</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">ORNING</span> H<span class="smcap">ERALD</span>.&mdash;"There is, indeed,
-about it, nothing of the stiffness of a translation;
-and the work reads with all the
-ease and freedom of an original composition."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p7d">THE HISTORY OF CHESS,</p>
-
-<p class="center">From the Time of the Early Invention of the Game in India till the
-Period of its Establishment in Western and Central Europe.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> DUNCAN FORBES, LL.D.</p>
-
-<p class="center">8vo, 15s.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>H<span class="smcap">ERALD</span>.&mdash;"This volume will be a welcome
-addition to the library of every lover
-of the noble game of chess. Our author
-makes a stout fight for the Hindoos as the
-inventors of the game, and adduces many
-cogent proofs in support of his opinion.
-He shows how the game is played in other
-countries, how it has been modified both in
-the names of the pieces and the names of
-the game by the peculiarities of the
-country or the national temperament of
-the inhabitants; and then traces the steps
-by which it has arrived at its present place
-of honour in civilized and intellectual
-Europe. The book is, therefore, full of
-curious lore, that lean on other and higher
-subjects than chess-playing, for it involves
-dissertations on ethnology, comparative
-etymology, the dispersion and settlement
-of nations, and the manners and customs
-of different countries, to a degree that
-would not be at all anticipated by a person
-who contented himself by reading the
-title-page. All this information is given,
-not in any dry, repulsive, or even technical
-style, but freshly, clearly, and in an
-animated manner&mdash;the style that would
-naturally be adopted by a gentleman and
-man of the world."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="p7d">THE ARMIES OF THE GREAT POWERS.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> LASCELLES WRAXALL.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Post 8vo, 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>*&#8270;* "The object of this work is to furnish a correct and detailed account of the amount
-and nature of the forces belonging to the Great Powers. At a glance may be perceived
-the strength of the respective armies, and characteristics of their troops, their drill,
-discipline, and uniform. Although Mr. Wraxall treats more especially of the Armies of
-France, Austria, England, Russia, and Prussia, he has not omitted those of Sardinia,
-Turkey, and Anglo-India. The value of such a manual can hardly be over-estimated at
-the present moment."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">ATURDAY</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>.&mdash;"To all whose
-interest in the noble art of national self-defence
-is as real as it should be, a compilation
-like Mr. Wraxall's has considerable
-value."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="p7d">SIN: <span class="small80">ITS CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="center">AN ATTEMPT TO INVESTIGATE THE ORIGIN, NATURE, EXTENT, AND
-RESULTS OF MORAL EVIL.</p>
-
-<p>A Series of Lent Lectures.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y THE</span> R<span class="smcap">EV</span>. HENRY CHRISTMAS, M.A., F.R.S.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Post 8vo, cloth, price 5s.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>C<span class="smcap">IVIL</span> S<span class="smcap">ERVICE</span> G<span class="smcap">AZETTE</span>.&mdash;"These lectures
-are learned, eloquent, and earnest, and
-though they approach the 'limits of religious
-thought,' they do not transgress
-those limits; and they present the reader
-with a comprehensive review, based upon
-revelation, of the nature, extent, and consequences
-of moral evil or sin, both in this
-world and the world to come."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p7d">HUNGARY AND TRANSYLVANIA</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">In 1862.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> P<span class="smcap">ROFESSOR</span> D. T. ANSTED, M.A., F.R.S., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>June</em> 16, 1862.&mdash;"Professor
-Ansted's descriptions are written with a
-neatness attesting the accuracy of a
-scientific observer's eyes. His volume is
-one of both value and entertainment: a
-book calculated to turn the thoughts of
-tourists down the Danube."</p>
-
-<p>D<span class="smcap">AILY</span> N<span class="smcap">EWS</span>, <em>Sept.</em> 8, 1862.&mdash;"We have
-read many books on Hungary, but not one
-which, in so brief a compass and on so
-many different aspects of the land and its
-inhabitants, conveys an equal amount of
-information in so satisfactory a style."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="p7d">MEMORABLE EVENTS OF MODERN HISTORY.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> J. G. EDGAR.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In One closely-printed post 8vo volume, with Illustrations, price 6s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p>*&#8270;* A volume narrating the History of the Principal Events of Modern
-Europe, and calculated to serve at once as an educational book, as a reading
-book, and a book of reference.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>P<span class="smcap">RESS</span>, <em>Feb.</em> 2, 1862.&mdash;"Mr. Edgar is
-always pure, elegant, and vigorous. He
-seems to have received from nature, what
-men vainly strive to acquire from art, the
-power of writing narrative easily, clearly,
-and forcibly. Goldsmith possessed this
-faculty, and Southey undoubtedly possessed
-it; and we know of few contemporary
-writers in the English language
-who possess it to an equal degree with
-Mr. Edgar. The book is a capital one, and
-fully up to the higher level of educational
-literature, of which the rising generation
-has the benefit. We confidently recommend
-it to the public, and wish it, for their
-sakes, all the success which it deserves."</p>
-
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>, <em>Feb.</em> 23, 1862.&mdash;"A most
-acceptable and useful present for the youth
-of both sexes."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="p7d">THE SCIENCE OF HOME LIFE:</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">CONTAINING</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>Heat in its Relation to Things in General.</p>
-
-<p>On the Physical Relations of the Atmosphere
-as affected by Heat, Moisture,
-and Pressure.</p>
-
-<p>The Atmosphere in Relation to Vegetable
-and Animal Life.</p>
-
-<p>On Coal and Coal-Gas.</p>
-
-<p>On Flame, and the Chemistry of a Candle.</p>
-
-<p>The Physical and Chemical Properties of
-Water.</p>
-
-<p>On Soap, with some Account of Bleaching
-and Disinfecting Agents.</p>
-
-<p>Glass, China, and Earthenware.</p>
-
-<p>The Noble Metals.</p>
-
-<p>The Base Metals.</p>
-
-<p>On Fermentation and Fermented Liquors.</p>
-
-<p>The Breakfast Table.</p>
-
-<p>The Dinner Table.</p>
-
-<p>Ourselves in Relation to the External
-World.</p>
- </div>
-<p class="center">In 8vo, with numerous Illustrations, 6s.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p5">A COURSE</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">OF</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">ELEMENTARY MATHEMATICS,</p>
-
-<p class="center">FOR THE USE OF CANDIDATES FOR ADMISSION INTO EITHER OF THE
-MILITARY COLLEGES;
-OF APPLICANTS FOR APPOINTMENTS IN THE HOME OR INDIAN CIVIL SERVICE;
-AND OF MATHEMATICAL STUDENTS GENERALLY.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> P<span class="smcap">ROFESSOR</span> J. R. YOUNG.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In One closely-printed Volume, 8vo, pp. 648, price 12s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>March</em> 9, 1861.&mdash;"In the
-work before us he has digested a complete
-Elementary Course by aid of his long
-experience as a teacher and a writer; and
-he has produced a very useful book....
-Mr. Young has not allowed his own
-taste to rule the distribution, but has
-adjusted his parts with the skill of a
-veteran."</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> L<span class="smcap">ONDON</span> R<span class="smcap">EVIEW</span>, <em>April</em> 6, 1861.&mdash;"Mr.
-Young is well known as the author
-of undoubtedly the best treatise on the
-'Theory of Equations' which is to be
-found in our language&mdash;a treatise distinguished
-by originality of thought, great
-learning, and admirable perspicuity. Nor
-are these qualities wanting in the work
-which we are reviewing.... Considering
-the difficulty of the task which
-Mr. Young has undertaken to discharge,
-and the extent of useful knowledge he has
-succeeded in imparting accurately and
-lucidly in so small a compass, we can without
-hesitation commend this work to the
-public as by far the best elementary course
-of mathematics in our language."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p class="p7d">ANOTHER BLOW FOR LIFE.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> GEORGE GODWIN, E<span class="smcap">SQ.</span>, F.R.S.,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of "London Shadows, Town Swamps, and Social Bridges," Editor of
-"The Builder," &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="center">ASSISTED BY JOHN BROWN.</p>
-
-<p class="p5">WITH FORTY-ONE ILLUSTRATIONS.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In fcap. 4to, cloth.</p>
-
-<hr class="r10a" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 3, 1864.&mdash;"This book
-should be studied by all who have a grain
-of kindly feeling towards their poorer
-neighbours, and every one should strive to
-find some means of alleviating the misery
-it points out. The illustrations with which
-the book is liberally supplied will go far to
-make the subject better understood."</p>
-
-<p>B<span class="smcap">ELL'S</span> M<span class="smcap">ESSENGER</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 16, 1864.&mdash;"'Another
-Blow for Life' is a great and
-good book, and does honour to its author's
-head and heart."</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> R<span class="smcap">EADER</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 9, 1864.&mdash;"The author
-deserves honour for the persevering and
-indomitable energy with which he has
-faithfully chronicled all those material
-dilapidations and filth which are the inevitable
-concomitants of moral decadence,
-and we hope his book will fall into the
-thankful hands of every thinking man and
-escape the too frequent fate of books chronicling
-disagreeable truths which come
-unpleasantly, 'between the wind and our
-nobility.'"</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p5">THIRD EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">ILLUSTRATED HORSE DOCTOR:</p>
-
-<blockquote><p>Being an Accurate and Detailed Account, accompanied by more than 400
-Pictorial Representations, characteristic of the various Diseases to which the
-Equine Race are subjected; together with the latest Mode of Treatment, and
-all the Requisite Prescriptions written in Plain English.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> EDWARD MAYHEW, M.R.C.V.S.,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of "The Illustrated Horse Management."</p>
-
-<p class="center">In 8vo, price 18s. 6d., cloth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><em>Mr. Mayhew's</em> I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> H<span class="smcap">ORSE</span> D<span class="smcap">OCTOR</span>, <em>and his companion volume</em>,
-T<span class="smcap">HE</span> I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> H<span class="smcap">ORSE</span> M<span class="smcap">ANAGEMENT</span>, <em>should be in the possession of all
-who keep horses</em>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p2a">CONTENTS:</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> B<span class="smcap">RAIN AND</span> N<span class="smcap">ERVOUS</span> S<span class="smcap">YSTEM</span>.&mdash;Phrenitis;
-Abscess within the brain;
-Staggers; Sleepy Staggers and Mad
-Staggers; Megrims; Hydrophobia;
-Tetanus; Stringhalt; Partial Paralysis;
-Gutta Serena.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> E<span class="smcap">YES</span>.&mdash;Simple Ophthalmia; Specific
-Ophthalmia; Cataract; Fungoid
-Tumours within the substance of the
-Eye; Lacerated Eyelid; Impediment in
-the Lachrymal Duct.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> M<span class="smcap">OUTH</span>.&mdash;Excoriated Angles of the
-Mouth; Parrot Mouth; Lampas; Injuries
-to the Jaw; Aphtha; Lacerated
-Tongue; Teeth; Scald Mouth.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> N<span class="smcap">OSTRILS</span>.&mdash;Cold; Nasal Polypus;
-Nasal Gleet; Highblowing and
-Wheezing.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> T<span class="smcap">HROAT</span>.&mdash;Sore Throat; Cough;
-Laryngitis; Roaring; Choking; Rupture
-and Stricture of the &OElig;sophagus; Bronchocele.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> C<span class="smcap">HEST AND ITS</span> C<span class="smcap">ONTENTS</span>.&mdash;Congestion
-in the Field; Congestion in the
-Stable; Bronchitis, or Inflammation of
-the Air Passages; Pneumonia, or Inflammation
-of the Lungs; Pleurisy; Hydrothorax;
-Disease of the Heart.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> S<span class="smcap">TOMACH</span>, L<span class="smcap">IVER</span>, &amp;<span class="smcap">C</span>.&mdash;Spasm of the
-Diaphragm; Acute Gastritis; Chronic
-Gastritis; Bots; Chronic Hepatitis;
-Crib-biting.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> A<span class="smcap">BDOMEN</span>.&mdash;Enteritis; Acute Dysentery;
-Chronic Dysentery; Acites, or
-Dropsy of the Abdomen; Influenza;
-Abdominal Injuries; Worms; Spasmodic
-Colic, Fret, Gripes; Windy Colic.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> U<span class="smcap">RINARY</span> O<span class="smcap">RGANS</span>.&mdash;Nephritis, or Inflammation
-of the Kidneys; Cystitis,
-or Inflammation of the Bladder; Spasm
-of the Urethra; Calculi; Hæmaturia, or
-Bloody Urine; Diabetes Insipidus, or
-Profuse Staling; Albuminous Urine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Skin.</span>&mdash;Mange; Prurigo; Ringworm;
-Surfeit; Hide-bound; Lice; Larva in
-the Skin; Warts; Tumours; Swollen
-Legs; Sitfast; Grease; Mallenders and
-Sallenders; Cracked Heels.</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">PECIFIC</span> D<span class="smcap">ISEASES</span>.&mdash;Broken Wind; Mellanosis;
-Water Farcy; Purpura Hæmorrhagica;
-Strangles; Glanders.</p>
-
-<p>L<span class="smcap">IMBS</span>.&mdash;Osseous Deposits; Spavin;
-Splint; Ringbone; Strain of the Flexor
-Tendon; Clap of the Back Sinews;
-Sprain of the Back Sinews; Breaking
-Down; Curb; Occult Spavin; Rheumatism;
-Windgalls; Bog Spavin;
-Thoroughpin; Capped Knee; Capped
-Hock; Capped Elbow; Luxation of the
-Patella; Blood Spavin.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> F<span class="smcap">EET</span>.&mdash;Lameness; Pumice Foot;
-Sandcrack; False Quarter; Seedy Toe;
-Tread and Over-reach; Corns; Quittor;
-Canker; Thrush; Ossified Cartilages;
-Acute Laminitis, or Fever in the Feet;
-Sub-Acute Laminitis; Navicular Disease.</p>
-
-<p>I<span class="smcap">NJURIES</span>.&mdash;Poll Evil; Fistulous Withers;
-Fistulous Parotid Duct; Phlebitis, or
-Inflammation of the Vein; Broken
-Knees; Open Synovial Cavities; Open
-Synovial Joints; Wounds.</p>
-
-<p>O<span class="smcap">PERATIONS</span>.&mdash;Tracheotomy; Periosteotomy;
-Neurotomy; Division of the
-tendons; Quittor.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2a">CRITICAL NOTICES.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>F<span class="smcap">IELD</span>, <em>July</em> 28, 1863.&mdash;"The book contains
-nearly 600 pages of valuable matter,
-which reflects great credit on its author,
-and, owing to its practical details, the
-result of deep scientific research, deserves
-a place in the library of medical, veterinary,
-and non-professional readers."</p>
-
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>August</em> 4, 1860.&mdash;"Mr.
-Mayhew has written several works on the
-diseases, with details of the anatomy, of
-animals. His accuracy is great. The
-chapters are well arranged. Each speaks
-of the diseases of one part of the equine
-frame. The illustrations to these are excellent.
-The operations are accurately
-described; not the slightest useful hint is
-forgotten; while to render this portion
-more intelligible, diagrams of the parts to
-be operated on, with views of the instruments,
-are generally given; and the prescriptions,
-as stated in the title-page, are
-made out in English. The causes,
-symptoms, and treatment of diseases are
-briefly recorded in a summary, forming an
-appendix. We conclude by commending
-Mr. Mayhew's book, especially to every
-possessor of the most useful of the 'servants
-of man.'"</p>
-
-<p>I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> N<span class="smcap">EWS</span>.&mdash;"The great mass
-of the illustrations are wonderfully faithful,
-and they are so varied and interesting
-that we would undertake to get rid of the
-most confirmed bore that ever pressed
-heavily on mankind for a good two hours
-by only handing him the book, and directing
-his attention to them. It is a well-known
-fact that grooms only remember
-the names of four or five diseases, and are
-sadly indiscriminate in their knowledge of
-symptoms. This book furnishes at once
-the bane and the antidote, as the drawings
-show the horse not only suffering from
-every kind of disease, but in the different
-stages of it, while the alphabetical summary
-at the end gives the cause, symptoms,
-and treatment of each."</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">LOBE.</span>&mdash;"Every gentleman who possesses
-or cares for horses, would do well to
-keep this book in his house."</p>
-
-<p>E<span class="smcap">RA.</span>&mdash;"We advisedly say that 'The
-Illustrated Horse Doctor' is the very best
-book of the kind which we know; and
-what gives it an especial charm is, that the
-author so thoroughly sympathises with the
-noble animal which he describes. Without
-pretending to go into any analysis of this
-valuable work, we at once pronounce it as
-scientific, yet intelligible; informing, yet
-highly amusing; acceptable to the profound
-horse-doctor, yet the work of all
-others for the bookshelves in every gentleman's
-sanctum."</p>
-
-<p>A<span class="smcap">RMY AND</span> N<span class="smcap">AVY</span> G<span class="smcap">AZETTE</span>.&mdash;"Mr.
-Mayhew's volume will, we imagine, meet
-with a hearty welcome. It is just such a
-good practical work on the Veterinary Art
-as most of us horse-using (and not unfrequently,
-we fear, abusing) Englishmen
-have long felt the need of.&mdash;We must not
-conclude our remarks without commenting
-on the numerous wood-cuts with which the
-volume is embellished. It is truly, as it
-professes to be, an '<em>Illustrated Horse
-Doctor</em>.'"</p>
-
-<p>I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> T<span class="smcap">IMES</span>.&mdash;"Many years ago
-the writer of these lines was incidentally
-'read up' in horse literature, and a good
-deal in the way of sporting people. His
-reading and observation in that way have
-been very pleasantly recalled by this <em>model</em>
-book. We need not waste words about this
-admirable volume&mdash;manual, we were going
-to say, but it is more of an armful than a
-handful. It is quite beyond praise of ours
-in its completeness and general excellence,
-concerned as it is our lot to be with the
-study instead of the steed. But we showed
-it to a friend of ours (living at Horsely-down),
-who spends his mornings at Tattersall's
-and his afternoons at the Alhambra,
-and his evenings at Astley's, and his criticism
-was conveyed in these emphatic
-words. 'Sir,' said he (his name is Ryder),
-'it is the Buchan's Domestic Medicine of
-the stable; the mantle of Bucephalus has
-fallen upon Mr. Mayhew.' Every way
-the work is interesting, and it is beautifully
-got up; the paper and print being the best
-we have seen for some time."</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="p7d">TEA CULTIVATION,</p>
-
-<p class="p4b">COTTON AND OTHER AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENTS IN INDIA.</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> W. NASSAU LEES, LL.D.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In 8vo, price 8s. 6d.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p3b">The Illustrated</p>
-
-<p class="p7d">HORSE MANAGEMENT,</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">CONTAINING</p>
-
-<p class="p5">DESCRIPTIVE REMARKS UPON ANATOMY, MEDICINE, SHOEING,
-TEETH, FOOD, VICES, STABLES;</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">LIKEWISE</p>
-
-<p class="p5">A PLAIN ACCOUNT OF THE SITUATION, NATURE, AND
-VALUE OF THE VARIOUS POINTS;</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">TOGETHER WITH</p>
-
-<p class="p5">COMMENTS ON GROOMS, DEALERS, BREEDERS, BREAKERS, AND
-TRAINERS;</p>
-
-<p class="p2a">ALSO ON CARRIAGES AND HARNESS.</p>
-
-<p class="p5">Embellished with more than 400 Engravings from Original Designs
-made expressly for this Work.</p>
-
-<p class="p4">B<span class="smcap">Y</span> EDWARD MAYHEW, M.R.C.V.S.,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of "The Illustrated Horse Doctor," and other works.</p>
-
-<p class="center">In One Volume 8vo, pp. 612.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="p2a">CONTENTS:</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE BODY</span> of the horse anatomically considered.</p>
-
-<p>P<span class="smcap">HYSIC.</span>&mdash;The mode of administering it,
-and minor operations.</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">HOEING.</span>&mdash;Its origin, its uses, and its
-varieties.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE TEETH.</span>&mdash;Their natural growth, and
-the abuses to which they are liable.</p>
-
-<p>F<span class="smcap">OOD.</span>&mdash;The fittest time for feeding, and
-the kind of food which the horse naturally
-consumes.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE EVILS</span> which are occasioned by modern
-stables.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE FAULTS</span> inseparable from most present
-erections which are used as stables.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE SO-CALLED "INCAPACITATING VICES,"</span>
-which are the results of injury or of
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">TABLES</span> as they should be.</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">ROOMS.</span>&mdash;Their prejudices, their injuries,
-and their duties.</p>
-
-<p>H<span class="smcap">ORSE DEALERS.</span>&mdash;Who they are; their
-mode of dealing; their profits; their
-morality, and their secrets.</p>
-
-<p>P<span class="smcap">OINTS.</span>&mdash;Their relative importance, and
-where to look for their development.</p>
-
-<p>B<span class="smcap">REEDING.</span>&mdash;Its inconsistencies and its disappointments.</p>
-
-<p><ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Breakinig'">B<span class="smcap">REAKING</span></ins> <span class="smcap">AND TRAINING.</span>&mdash;Their errors
-and their results.</p>
-
-<p>C<span class="smcap">ARRIAGES.</span>&mdash;Their cost; their make; their
-excellences and their management.</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">ADDLERY, HARNESS, AND STABLE SUNDRIES.</span>&mdash;Of
-what these consist; their application
-and their preservation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><em>Mr. Mayhew's</em> I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> H<span class="smcap">ORSE</span> D<span class="smcap">OCTOR</span>, <em>and his companion volume</em>,
-T<span class="smcap">HE</span> I<span class="smcap">LLUSTRATED</span> H<span class="smcap">ORSE</span> M<span class="smcap">ANAGEMENT</span>, <em>should be in the possession of all
-who keep horses</em>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2a">CRITICAL NOTICES.</p>
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>A<span class="smcap">THENÆUM</span>, <em>Feb.</em> 20, 1864.&mdash;"Mr. Mayhew
-thoroughly comprehends the matter,
-and all masters of studs&mdash;we may say,
-every owner of a single pony or ass&mdash;will
-derive much profit and an equal amount of
-pleasure by perusing this volume; for the
-book is not only distinguished by common
-sense, but by its power of amusing. We
-never met with a volume which more
-honestly and efficiently carried out the
-promise made on its title-page. A large
-amount of English life, ways, manners,
-morals, dodges and doings is described by
-Mr. Mayhew, as well as more serious
-matter connected with the question which
-he so ably handles."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">TANDARD</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 27, 1864.&mdash;"It is, perhaps,
-the most perfect work yet published
-upon the management of horses. Everywhere
-Mr. Mayhew writes ably and
-readably, and with neither fear nor favour;
-his observations always commend themselves
-to one's understanding, and he hits
-fairly many blots in our present system of
-management. The engravings are exceedingly
-well executed, and they illustrate the
-text actually as well as nominally."</p>
-
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 10, 1864.&mdash;"Mr. Mayhew
-is already favourably known to a large
-number of persons interested in the
-management of horses by a former work,
-with the title of the 'Illustrated Horse
-Doctor,' and the volume under notice will
-certainly add considerably to his reputation
-for extensive knowledge and thorough
-acquaintance with the subject with which
-he professes to deal. Mr. Mayhew also has
-some very useful remarks on the situation,
-nature and value of the various points to
-be looked for by the purchaser of a horse,
-and this useful information is supplemented
-by some very excellent and truthful remarks
-upon grooms, dealers, breeders,
-breakers and trainers, the whole forming a
-most valuable work for guidance and reference,
-and displaying in every page an
-earnest desire to improve the condition and
-treatment of one of the noblest and most
-serviceable animals provided for the use of
-man."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">PECTATOR</span>, <em>Feb.</em> 6, 1864.&mdash;"No horseman
-who can afford to buy it will regret
-the purchase of Mr. Mayhew's 'Illustrated
-Horse Management.'"</p>
-
-<p>B<span class="smcap">ELL'S</span> M<span class="smcap">ESSENGER</span>.&mdash;"There can be no
-question that Mr. Mayhew is the most competent
-man of the day for the task which
-he has undertaken, and we must add most
-satisfactorily accomplished. 'The Illustrated
-Horse Management' may be fitly
-termed an encyclopædia of all that relates
-to the horse, and the several uses to which
-it can be applied. We, therefore, earnestly
-recommend this handsome volume to our
-readers, with the conviction that every one
-who cares for his horse can profitably and
-pleasurably consult its well-stored pages."</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">UN</span>, <em>Jan.</em> 19, 1864.&mdash;"We have read Mr.
-Mayhew's book with all the attention
-which it so eminently merits, and we have
-no hesitation in asserting that it is the most
-comprehensive and instructive work on the
-subject of horse management which we
-have ever had the luck to meet with. The
-'Illustrated Horse Management' is a
-work which should find a place in the
-library of every country gentleman, for
-the most experienced may derive benefit
-from its perusal."</p>
-
-<p>N<span class="smcap">ONCONFORMIST</span>, <em>March</em> 9, 1864.&mdash;"Grooms
-hate their masters to be too
-knowing, but whoever shall quietly study
-this book, and make it his guide for a few
-weeks in the observation and control of his
-own stable, will not afterwards feel himself
-to be dependent on his servants. Mr. Mayhew
-writes clearly, forcibly, and delightfully,
-and we earnestly recommend his
-book to every one who is the owner of
-even a pony for his children's use, while
-those who have extensive stables should
-read and read again every paragraph of
-its closely packed contents."</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">LOBE</span>, <em>Feb.</em> 22, 1864.&mdash;"Mr. Mayhew
-writes on a subject of which he is master;
-and his new book is a work of care, experience
-and general enlightenment, as concerns
-the management of horses."</p>
-
-<p>E<span class="smcap">CONOMIST</span>, <em>March</em> 5, 1864.&mdash;"The 'Illustrated
-Horse Management,' by Edward
-Mayhew, is really a very useful book to all
-who are concerned with horses, either for
-pleasure or profit. To English farmers,
-who may be induced to breed horses, the
-various points of management which are
-insisted on by Mr. Mayhew in ample detail
-have a money value."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="bord1">
-<p class="p7d">THE HORSES OF THE SAHARA,</p>
-
-<p class="p3b">And the Manners of the Desert.</p>
-
-<p class="p4">B<span class="small70">Y</span> E. DAUMAS,</p>
-
-<p class="center">General of the Division Commanding at Bordeaux, Senator, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="center">WITH COMMENTARIES BY THE EMIR ABD-EL-KADER (Authorized Edition).</p>
-
-<p class="center">In 8vo, cloth, price 10s. 6d., by post 11s. 2d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2a">CONTENTS:</p>
-
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p class="p2">Part I.</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">OURCES OF</span> I<span class="smcap">NFORMATION</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Remarks by the Emir Abd-el-Kader.&mdash;Treatise
-on the Horse.</p>
-
-<p>O<span class="smcap">N THE</span> O<span class="smcap">RIGIN OF THE</span> A<span class="smcap">RAB</span> H<span class="smcap">ORSE</span>.&mdash;Four
-great epochs; Creation of the horse;
-Change of coat; Moral qualities of the
-thorough-bred.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> B<span class="smcap">ARB.</span>&mdash;Oneness of the race; Letter
-from M. Lesseps on the Alexandria races;
-Weight carried by African horses.</p>
-
-<p>Traditional love of the horse; Arab proverbs.</p>
-
-<p>Superiority of the horses of the Sahara.</p>
-
-<p>B<span class="smcap">REEDS.</span>&mdash;Incontestable purity of the
-Saharene Barb; Endurance of the Arab;
-Two varieties of the horse.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> S<span class="smcap">IRE AND THE</span> D<span class="smcap">AM</span>.&mdash;Mare and foal;
-Influence of the sire; Purity of race.</p>
-
-<p>R<span class="smcap">EARING AND BREAKING IN.</span>&mdash;Early training;
-Elementary Exercises; Names.</p>
-
-<p>D<span class="smcap">IET.</span>&mdash;Camel's and ewe's milk; Dates;
-Green food; Repose and fat injurious to
-a horse.</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">ROOMING</span>, H<span class="smcap">YGIENE</span>, P<span class="smcap">ROPORTIONS</span>.&mdash;Selection
-of food and water; How to foretell
-the size and character of a horse; Ingenious
-measurements.</p>
-
-<p>C<span class="smcap">OATS.</span>&mdash;Variety of colours; White spots;
-Tufts; Favourite coats; Objectionable
-coats.</p>
-
-<p>O<span class="smcap">N</span> C<span class="smcap">HOOSING AND</span> P<span class="smcap">URCHASING</span> H<span class="smcap">ORSES</span>.</p>
-
-<p>S<span class="smcap">HOEING.</span>&mdash;Farriers; their privileges and
-tools; Cold shoeing.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> H<span class="smcap">ARNESS</span>.&mdash;The Arab saddle; Advantages
-of the Arab system.</p>
-
-<p>M<span class="smcap">AXIMS OF THE</span> A<span class="smcap">RAB</span> C<span class="smcap">AVALIER.</span>&mdash;Endurance;
-Making the horse a study.</p>
-
-<p>Horse-racing among the Arabs.</p>
-
-<p>A<span class="smcap">BD-EL</span>-K<span class="smcap">ADER ON THE</span> A<span class="smcap">RAB</span> H<span class="smcap">ORSE</span>.&mdash;Examples
-of endurance; Reasons for
-early training; High price of mares;
-Identity of the Arab and the Barb; General
-instructions; Draught horses.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> W<span class="smcap">AR</span> H<span class="smcap">ORSE.</span>&mdash;His form and qualities.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">Part II.&mdash;The Manners of the Desert.</p>
-
-<p>The Arab horse derives his character from
-his Arab master.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> S<span class="smcap">AHARA, BY</span> A<span class="smcap">BD-EL</span>-K<span class="smcap">ADER</span>.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> R<span class="smcap">AZZIA.</span>&mdash;Three kinds of razzia: the
-Tehha, the Khrotefa, the Terbigue;
-Episodes; Popular chaunt; The combat;
-Circumstantial details.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> K<span class="smcap">HRIANIA, OR</span> T<span class="smcap">HEFT.</span>&mdash;Horse, camel,
-and sheep stealing; Superstitions.</p>
-
-<p>W<span class="smcap">AR BETWEEN</span> D<span class="smcap">ESERT</span> T<span class="smcap">RIBES.</span>&mdash;Motives;
-Proclamation of war; Summoning allies;
-Departure; Amorous intrigues; Thefts;
-Scouts; Preliminaries of peace; Saharene
-diplomacy; Conclusion of peace;
-Hostilities; The eve of battle; Challenges;
-War cries; The Battle; Defeat;
-Victory; Anecdotes.</p>
-
-<p>Lamentations of an Arab warrior.</p>
-
-<p>U<span class="smcap">SAGES OF</span> W<span class="smcap">AR.</span>&mdash;Distribution of the
-plunder; The chief; Loan of a horse;
-Female spectators of the battle.</p>
-
-<p>The horse of noble race.</p>
-
-<p>O<span class="smcap">STRICH</span> H<span class="smcap">UNTING.</span>&mdash;On horseback; Details
-of the excursion; From an ambush;
-Habits of the ostrich.</p>
-
-<p>G<span class="smcap">AZELLE HUNTING.</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Greyhound.</span></p>
-
-<p>H<span class="smcap">AWKING.</span></p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> C<span class="smcap">HACE, BY</span> A<span class="smcap">BD-EL</span>-K<span class="smcap">ADER.</span>&mdash;The
-gazelle; The hyæna; The panther; The
-lion; modes of hunting.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> C<span class="smcap">AMEL.</span>&mdash;Management, Diet, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> S<span class="smcap">HEEP.</span>&mdash;Immense flocks; Their usefulness
-in the Sahara.</p>
-
-<p>L<span class="smcap">IFE IN THE</span> D<span class="smcap">ESERT.</span>&mdash;The villager; The
-master of the tent; Sobriety; Runners;
-Inventory of a wealthy Arab's fortune;
-His occupations; Armourers; Legislation;
-Women's employment; Hospitality;
-Mendicants; Sorcerers; Magic; Religion.</p>
-
-<p>T<span class="smcap">HE</span> A<span class="smcap">RAB</span> A<span class="smcap">RISTOCRACY.</span>&mdash;The thorny
-shrub and the date-tree; The Sherifs;
-The marabouts and the <em>djouad</em>; A great
-tent; The <em>vendetta</em>; Examples; Blood
-money; <em>Lex talionis</em>; Birth, education,
-and marriage; Polygamy; An Arab interior;
-Amusements; Death; Funeral rites.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="indexcol">
-<p>O<span class="smcap">BSERVER</span>, <em>May</em> 3, 1863.&mdash;"There is not
-a page in this book from which we may
-not gather useful hints or valuable information
-respecting the nature, habits and
-management of horses."</p>
-
-<p>E<span class="smcap">DINBURGH</span> C<span class="smcap">OURANT.</span>&mdash;"We have rarely
-read a work giving a more picturesque and,
-at the same time, practical account of the
-manners and customs of a people, than
-this book on the Arabs and their horses."</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> To form an idea of the pretended denunciation made by the king to the
-commission, it is only necessary to observe that page Schack, who was the
-intermediary, received for this gratifications and an employment whose appointments
-amounted to 4,000 crowns a-year.&mdash;<cite>Mémoires de Falckenskjold</cite>,
-p. 214.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> An allusion to King Frederick III., who was fond of the bowl, and in his
-orgies permitted a general fraternity. In reference to this remark of the
-advocate, Mr. Wraxall says (in his "Northern Tour"): "This seems more like
-the speech of an Englishman than a Dane, and breathes a manly and unfettered
-spirit."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> This letter no longer exists, and was, in all probability, suppressed by the
-commission.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> On this point Reverdil writes: "The bailiwick of Bramstedt, bordering
-that held by M. Brandt the elder, was situated in the southernmost province of
-the kingdom, and near Hamburg. This remote province, consequently, suited
-him better than any other, and what he solicited as an exile, and to some extent
-as the equivalent of a capital punishment, would have been to any other person
-a very considerable recompense, and the end desired by some old servant of the
-state for a life usefully devoted to the advantage of the country."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> This is translated <em>verbatim</em> from the original, published in 1772, a copy of
-which was forwarded me from the Danish Foreign Office.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> These adherents who aided in the suppression of the privy council were
-Rantzau and Köller, that is to say, the men who figured among the principal
-enemies and accusers of Struensee. It was Rantzau who invented the decree
-that suppressed this council.&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>, p. 205.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Did they forget that the constitution which governs Denmark gives the
-king absolute power? Could not the king dismiss one of his officers without
-form of trial or the intervention of justice? Remember, that those who brought
-this charge against Struensee also removed from office persons who displeased
-them, and even deprived them of their liberty and property. What I personally
-experienced certainly places me in the position to judge.&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>,
-p. 205.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> A reference to the sieges of Charles X. in 1658 and 1659, and more especially
-to the violent assault by the Swedes on the night of February 11, 1659,
-which was repulsed by the citizens, and to the conduct of the Copenhageners
-at the Diet of 1660, when the sovereignty was handed over to Frederick III.,
-and the previous electoral kingdom was converted into an agnatic-cognatic
-Denmark-Norway, exclusive of the German Duchies and counties.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> This accusation is devoid of truth. Brandt could not always be about his
-Majesty. The truth is, that the king was no more difficult to approach under
-Struensee's administration than he had been under the previous ministry. He
-was frequently alone, and I saw him arrive thus at Gripsholm. It was after the
-fall of Struensee that the king, being closely watched, was only accessible as
-far as pleased the dominant party.&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>, p. 205.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> I may remark that Struensee had a salary of 1,500 crowns as secretary to
-the cabinet; that he afterwards had 3,000 in his quality of councillor; that he
-lived inexpensively and dressed plainly; that only a few days before his fall he
-set up his carriage, the magnificence of which was imputed as a crime&mdash;it
-was a carriage in the English style, without gilding or painting, lined with
-straw-coloured cloth. Guldberg, who charged him with avidity, afterwards
-thought proper to accept a gratification of 100,000 crowns in one sum, by a
-note signed by the king.&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>, p. 208.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> If Struensee's enemies had not been his accusers and judges, they would
-not have compared a small present made to the queen with what the king gave
-to simple private persons without fortune, whom he had summoned and
-admitted to his familiarity. They would not have pretended to be ignorant
-why Struensee wrote the accounts of May, 1771, and did not write the following
-accounts when he had ceased to be cabinet secretary.&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>, p. 206.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Struensee had no more power on this account than when he was merely
-master of requests and private secretary to the king. The great reforms were
-effected while he occupied those two posts. Besides, according to the royal
-law, "the king can appoint any minister under such title and with such
-power as he pleases." It was no contravention of the law to accept an office
-which the king could give and revoke at his pleasure; but, with such a law as
-that of Denmark, weight may be attached to any sort of accusation. Count de
-St. Germain was accused of infringing the royal law, because he proposed to
-raze the useless fortresses and dress the army in blue. The first Bernstorff
-was also accused of contravention of the <cite>Lex Regia</cite> when he was dismissed.
-The persons who condemned Struensee to death for having encroached on the
-absolute power of the king, issued the following decree on February 13, 1772,
-or while the trial was going on:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"All orders shall be drawn up by the council and through the council. No
-order given directly by the king shall be carried into effect, unless the bearer
-of it has made application to the department which it concerns, and this
-department has acknowledged the said order."&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>, p. 208.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> It was, on the contrary, Struensee's principle to purge the army and civil
-service of foreigners, and only to leave natives; the reform had already been
-effected in this way in the regiment of Seeland Dragoons. Braëm, one of the
-commissioners to try Struensee, was well aware of this, as he was a member of
-the War Department.&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>, p. 209.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> The order concerning this reform is the only one which Struensee was
-accused of having issued without the king's privity. The War Department,
-of which I was a member, received on December 21 the Minutes of this order
-for the disbandment of the Foot Guards; it made no protest; it did not ask
-that the minute should be signed by the king, which was not necessary; the
-patent was immediately drawn up, and addressed, according to custom, to the
-king, that it might receive his signature and seal; the king signed this patent
-on December 23; such is the exact truth. How could it be stated in the
-sentence that the king had no cognizance on December 21 of a minute the
-patent of which he ratified on the 23rd by his signature? How could he be
-ignorant on December 24 of an order he had signed on the 23rd?&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>,
-p. 209.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Struensee denied this: there were no proofs, and it is well known that this
-minister only gave orders in writing.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> It is a curious fact that Brandt's having given Prince Frederick a separate
-box was made a capital crime; that Baron de Bülow, the king's equerry, was
-exiled for giving a separate stable to the horses of Prince Frederick; and that
-I was cruelly prosecuted for having allowed the band to play at a place which
-Prince Frederick was passing.&mdash;<cite>Falckenskjold</cite>, p. 222.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Reverdil, p. 422.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Reverdil is the only writer who produces this curious document.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Gespräch im Reiche der Todten.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Gespräch im Reiche der Todten.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Struensee's skull was eventually stolen by four English sailors, belonging
-to a Russian man-of-war commanded by Admiral Greig.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> It has been said that Juliana Maria expressed a regret at not seeing the
-decapitated corpse of Caroline Matilda by the side of that of her accomplices.
-But such language would be quite contrary to the reserve, prudence, and
-dissimulation of which she furnished so many proofs during the whole of her
-life.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> The Commission of Inquiry has received orders to consider in what manner
-the persons <em>employed in convicting</em> the prisoners of state should be rewarded;
-in consequence of which it was allotted that Dr. Hee and Dr. Münter
-should each receive 300 rix dollars; but the court was of a different opinion,
-and judged it most proper to make presents to these ecclesiastics. The two
-civil officers who drew up the protocol each received 150 Danish ducats.&mdash;<cite>Annual
-Register</cite> for 1772.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> This letter I have found in Raumer's "Beiträge zur neueren Geschichte,"
-vol. i.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> "Authentische Aufklärungen," p. 246.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> "Mémoires de Falckenskjold," p. 252.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> The judges could not have brought forward a greater proof of their ill-will
-than this. For even the usurping faction did not dare upset this regulation,
-which was so useful for the cultivation of desolate districts in Norway.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Reverdil, p. 437.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> The judges evidently acted on the principle that if they threw mud
-enough, some of it would be sure to stick.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> The royal promise to grant him a pension of 3,000 dollars when he
-retired from active service.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Struensee's younger brother, the lieutenant in Falckenskjold's regiment,
-also obtained employment in Prussia.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Canute the Great, <span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 1028, founded on Munkholm a Monastery of
-Benedictines, the first of that order established in Norway; a low round tower
-is all that remains of it, and this is within the walls of the fortress. It was
-in a small gloomy chamber in this tower that the Staats minister of Denmark,
-Graf von Griffenfeldt, was immured from 1680 to 1698. He was originally,
-Peter Schumacker. This dungeon is no longer shown; but it is said that he
-had worn a deep channel in the pavement in walking up and down, and
-indented the stone table where he had rested his hand in passing it. This
-fortress has ceased to be used for state prisoners, but it is still the dark and
-solitary rock which Victor Hugo has described in his "Hans of Iceland,"
-looking more like a prison-house than a fortress.&mdash;<cite>Murray's Handbook</cite> for
-Denmark, &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> A small fort built by King Christian IV., more than 200 years ago, as a
-protection for the Danish fisheries, and to guard against Russian encroachments
-in the Varanger Fjord.&mdash;<em>Murray's Handbook</em> for Denmark, &amp;c.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> De Flaux: "Du Danemarc."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> "Memoirs of an Unfortunate Queen," p. 94.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> <cite>General Evening Post</cite>, May 14.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> "Walpole's Journal of the Reign of George III.," vol. i. pp. 89-91.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Sir R. M. Keith's "Memoirs," vol. i. p. 287.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Coxe's "Travels," vol. v. p. 113.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> "Memoirs of an Unfortunate Queen," p. 98.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> "Authentische Aufklärungen," p. 252.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> The following interesting account, which I have found in a pamphlet
-published under the title of "Sittliche Frage," was not sufficiently authenticated
-to be embodied in my text. Still I do not think it should be passed over,
-as it affords an idea of the sentiments of the queen's party.</p>
-
-<p>Keith laid before the king the letter of separation for his signature, which
-the king was about to sign without reading. "No, no, your Majesty," the envoy
-said, "read it first. It concerns you. It is the separation between yourself
-and your consort, which the court of England solicits for the reasons given."
-The king cried in confusion, "What! I am to lose my wife? State it even in
-writing? No, I cannot. I love and long for her again. Where are Struensee
-and Brandt? I long for them too." "Your Majesty," Keith replied, "they
-have been quartered, your Majesty signed their sentences yourself, and as it is
-also wished to condemn the queen to death, my court demands her back." The
-king became inconsolable. He asked for the queen and his two counts, and
-dismissed the envoy.</p>
-
-<p>That England imposed weighty points on the Danish court, and demanded
-all possible satisfaction for the trick played the queen regnant, is evident from
-the following facts:&mdash;The queen is still called Queen of Denmark, even by the
-Danish court; her children by the king are brought up royally, and called the
-crown prince of the Danish kingdom and the king's daughter. When she
-set out from Kronborg for Celle, all royal honours were granted (which could
-not have been the case had the fabulous intercourse been true), and a pension
-of 30,000 rix-dollars is to be paid her annually.</p>
-
-<p>The king now lives very sadly, and his days pass away in melancholy. He
-still exclaims, "My wife, my wife! she has been torn from me. I ask for her
-again. My ministers, my Struensee and Brandt, where are they? They have
-been condemned to death. They have passed over into eternity, and I am
-left desolate."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> They write from Hanover that the Hereditary Princess of Brunswick has
-been at Goerde, accompanied, contrary to expectation, by her husband, which
-is looked upon as a convincing proof that a perfect harmony subsists between
-these two illustrious personages. They stayed four days with Queen Caroline
-Matilda of Denmark, who was overjoyed to see her sister. It is since reported
-that the queen may possibly soon make a tour to Brunswick.&mdash;<cite>Annual Register</cite>
-for 1772.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> I am indebted for this account to the "Memoirs of an Unfortunate Queen,"
-and it the more confirms my opinion that the book was written by some one
-immediately about her Majesty's person.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> "Memoirs of Sir R. M. Keith," vol. i., p. 304.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> I have, perhaps, dwelt more fully on this subject than it deserves; but I
-have also suffered from this iniquitous system. My agent in Germany wrote
-me some months ago that he had made an invaluable <em>trouvaille</em>&mdash;no less than
-an apology for Caroline Matilda, written by herself. Of course, I at once secured
-it; but was rather disappointed to find that it was translated from the
-English. On reading, I found many discrepancies, but did not give up all hope
-of being able to make use of the pamphlet. I had the British Museum searched
-for the original, but in vain; and I began to think that the alleged translation
-was only intended to add value to a document which might have been drawn up
-by a German from expressions which had fallen from the queen. Imagine my
-disgust when, as the reward of all my trouble, I found in the list of pamphlets
-in the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite> for 1772, the following:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The Queen of Denmark's own Account of the late Revolution in Denmark:
-Written while her Majesty was a Prisoner in the Castle of Cronenburgh, and now
-first published from the Original Manuscript sent to a noble Earl." 8vo., 1s. 6d.
-Wheble.</p>
-
-<p>The publisher and the title were quite sufficient to convince me that the
-pamphlet issued from the great <em>officina</em> of Grub Street.</p></div>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> Eldest sister of H.R.H. Caroline, Princess of Wales.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> I found this anecdote carefully preserved among my grandfather's papers.
-The person who wrote it down for him, added, "Tout c&oelig;ur capable de sentiment,
-pourra imaginer combien dans la situation de la jeune Reine, si digne
-d'un meilleur sort, des scènes pareilles devoient être attendrissantes, et à quel
-point on devoit être touché et pénétré d'admiration, en voyant que ce n'étoit
-pas le Faste, les grandeurs, ce trône, l'objet de l'ambition, même des plus
-grands heros: mais l'éloignement de sa famille royale, et ses retours sur la
-situation de celle ci, qui étoient la source de cette douleur et de ces larmes
-d'autant plus amères qu'elle les cachait avec le plus grand soin." This opinion
-my readers will assuredly endorse.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> My narrative is made up from the "Private Journal" already mentioned,
-and a MS. entitled an "Historical Narrative of the Attempt to Restore the
-Queen." In the former, my grandfather gives the following account of the
-proposition:&mdash;"A momentary astonishment covered me, but it neither altered
-my cheek nor faltered on my tongue. I felt in the most unbounded degree
-where it might lead. I was conscious where it must lead. I felt myself born
-for the achievement, and I ardently embraced it. 'Yes,' <em>I</em> said in reply, 'I am
-the man you seek; give me the commission; I am ready in a day, an hour, a
-minute. My life, my labour,&mdash;dispose of them as your own. Enthusiasm I
-shall not want in such a cause so noble, so honourable to me.' 'It is well,' he
-said. 'I am satisfied; wait till this evening, or, at latest, to-morrow. You
-shall see and talk with this person. At the Comédie Française we meet this
-night. Adieu.'"</p></div>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> In the "Private Journal" I find: "We conversed most closely, most familiarly,
-most unreservedly, more than an hour. Her graciousness and goodness knew
-no bounds. She described (as to an equal) the king, and her sister, the Princess
-of Brunswick, especially the last. Her dress was very simple and plain. It could
-scarce be more so." From the minutes of this conversation, I also find that the
-queen told my grandfather that three emissaries had reached her from Copenhagen.
-The first was a Dane of the name of Guldenstern, about a year and a
-half previously; the second mentioned the name of Count Holstein; he was
-a musician, and named some of the bourgeoisie, whom she had never heard of.
-The third came about a year before, but his communication was nothing.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> The "Private Journal" adds:&mdash;"Toward eleven at night, as we had finished
-business, our discourse took another turn, and fell on the Danish affairs. The
-baron gave me a most interesting and masterly account of Struensee's administration,
-his character, and his history. He explained the manner in which he
-acquired his Majesty's graces, and how he kept possession of them. He gave
-me the relation of the plot for massacring them all at the "<em>B&oelig;uf roti</em>," and
-how they escaped it. He passed to the fatal night when the two counts were
-arrested, and the wonderful incident of the tea-party, which Madame de
-Schimmelmann broke off by her refusal. He ended with his own arrest and
-honorary exile. 'Twas a relation to listen to; and I devoured his words.
-They are inerasable from my memory."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> George III., it must be borne in mind, considered his public duties as
-superior to private feelings. In 1775, he, though overwhelmed with grief at
-his sister's death, obtained from Christian VII. a decree that the Danes were
-to give no sort of assistance to the American rebels.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> The admirers of cryptography will find a specimen of the baron's letters
-in the Appendix. To the same dreary limbo I have also consigned my grandfather's
-letters to his father relating to this affair, solely through a fear that I
-might be charged with giving him undue prominence in a work purporting to
-be the life of Caroline Matilda.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Seckendorf.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Baron von Bülow and his friends nobly kept their word, and constantly
-urged George III., through Lichtenstein, to reward my grandfather for his
-great exertions on behalf of Caroline Matilda. It was not, however, till
-1781, or when Mr. Wraxall had a seat in the House of Commons, and a useful
-vote, that Lord North brought up the subject. My grandfather then received
-1,000 guineas for his services, and the promise of a seat at the Board of
-Green Cloth. The promise was not kept; for what reason he shall tell us
-himself:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"In November, 1783, on the meeting of Parliament, the memorable East
-India Bill was introduced by Mr. Fox. Upon the first division that took
-place on the bill, I quitted Lord North, notwithstanding the motives I had to
-adhere to him; rather choosing to abandon my expectations, however near
-their accomplishment, than give my support to a measure which I considered
-to be pregnant with mischief to the country and constitution. I joined Mr.
-Pitt in opposition, and was one of the one hundred and twenty members who
-formed the minority on that evening against a majority of two hundred and
-twenty-nine in favour of the bill."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> Mantel's own words to Mr. Wraxall in 1777. He added, however, "I
-neither believe the body could communicate any infection, nor that she stayed
-long enough, had there been any, to receive it. Whether it might have made
-any deep or injurious impression on her mind, I cannot say; but I cannot in
-any degree attribute her consequent illness and death to this accident."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> Lehzen's "Die Letzten Stunden der Königinn von Danemark."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> It is a strange coincidence that the body of Caroline Matilda should be deposited
-close to that of her unhappy ancestress, Sophia Dorothea, whose fate was
-in so many respects like her own. Both have been bespattered for many years
-by calumny, but Dr. Doran took up the cause of Sophia Dorothea, and amply
-proved her innocence. My only hope is that I may have been equally successful
-in the cause of Caroline Matilda.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> The authenticity of this letter is incontestable. It has reached me through
-the Duchess of Augustenburg, who was allowed to take a copy by the late
-King of Hanover.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> "Mémoires de mon Temps."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> "Mémoires de mon Temps."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> "Frederick II. of Prussia had, by means of his cousin the queen dowager,
-gradually acquired an almost absolute sway in the cabinet of Denmark, and
-directed the foreign affairs in subserviency to the views of the French court,
-and in opposition to the interests of England. Count Bernstorff being the
-only person in the Danish ministry who ventured in any degree to oppose
-the French and Prussian policy, his dismissal was resolved on in the cabinets
-of Versailles and Berlin; and his conduct with regard to the armed neutrality
-offered an opportunity to effect their purpose."&mdash;<cite>Coxe's Travels</cite>, vol. v.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> "The examination continued above an hour, and the prince replied in a
-very sensible manner, sufficiently proving, from the readiness and perspicuity of
-his answers, that the reports of his incapacity were unfounded. He spoke in a
-loud, clear, manly voice, with a dignity and propriety which astonished the
-assembly; and when he repeated the oath, by which he swore to continue true
-to the Established Church, he did it in so feeling a manner as absolutely to
-draw tears from the eyes of many who were present."&mdash;<cite>Coxe's Travels</cite>, vol. v.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> During the early part of Juliana's regency&mdash;a French tourist tells us&mdash;the
-king, in one of his lucid intervals, signed a state paper in the following terms:&mdash;"Christian
-VII., by the grace of God, King of Denmark, &amp;c., in company
-with Juliana Maria and others, by grace of the devil."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> The only foreigner who is supposed to have had any knowledge of the
-transaction, was Mr. Elliot, who had left Berlin to come to Copenhagen, in
-the capacity of British envoy: and the king of Great Britain was the first
-sovereign to whom the prince-royal communicated his success.&mdash;<cite>Coxe's Travels</cite>,
-vol. v.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="p4b">Transcriber Notes:</p>
-
-<p>P. <a href="#Page_109">109</a>. 'prfoessional men.', changed 'prfoessional' to 'professional'.</p>
-<p>Changed all instances of 'negociation' to 'negotiation'.</p>
-<p>P. <a href="#Page_313">313</a>. Changed 'verry' to 'very', in 'I congratulate you very'.</p>
-<p>P. <a href="#Page_318">318</a>. Changed 'shokking' and 'childern' to 'shocking' and 'children', in 'a shocking bloodshed between children'.</p>
-<p>P. <a href="#Page_320">320</a>. Changed 'scilence' to 'silence', in 'so long a silence'.</p>
-<p>P. <a href="#Page_324">324</a>. Added 'a' to 'wishes you a great deal of good'.</p>
-<p>P. <a href="#Page_325">325</a>. Changed 'monts' to 'months', in 'two or three months'.</p>
-<p>P. <a href="#Page_329">329</a>. Index: Arnim, Her, changed 'Her' to 'Herr'.</p>
-<p>P. <a href="#Page_334">334</a>. Index: Schack, added 'from' to 'and expelled from the court'.</p>
-<p>Index: Struensee, his important reforms--added page number '39'.</p>
-<p>Add <a href="#Page_354">18</a>: 'Breakinig and training', changed 'Breakinig' to 'Breaking'.</p>
-<p>Corrected various punctuation.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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