One word must be spent on poor Albert,
Casimir’s son, [1522-1557] already mentioned.
This poor Albert, whom they call ALCIBIADES, made a
great noise in that epoch; being what some define as
the “Failure of a Fritz;” who has really
features of him we are to call “Friedrich the
Great,” but who burnt away his splendid qualities
as a mere temporary shine for the able editors, and
never came to anything.
A high and gallant young fellow, left
fatherless in childhood; perhaps he came too early
into power:-he came, at any rate, in very
volcanic times, when Germany was all in convulsion;
the Old Religion and the New having at length broken
out into open battle, with huge results to be hoped
and feared; and the largest game going on, in sight
of an adventurous youth. How Albert staked in
it; how he played to immense heights of sudden gain,
and finally to utter bankruptcy, I cannot explain
here: some German delineator of human destinies,
“Artist” worth the name, if there were
any, might find in him a fine subject.
He was ward of his Uncle George; and
the probable fact is, no guardian could have been
more faithful. Nevertheless, on approaching the
years of majority, of majority but not discretion,
he saw good to quarrel with his Uncle; claimed this
and that, which was not granted: quarrel lasting
for years. Nay matters ran so high at last, it
was like to come to war between them, had not George
been wiser. The young fellow actually sent a
cartel to his Uncle; challenged him to mortal combat,-at
which George only wagged his old beard, we suppose,
and said nothing. Neighbors interposed, the Diet
itself interposed; and the matter was got quenched
again. Leaving Albert, let us hope, a repentant
young man. We said he was full of fire, too much
of it wildfire.
His profession was Arms; he shone
much in war; went slashing and fighting through those
Schmalkaldic broils, and others of his time; a distinguished
captain; cutting his way towards something high, he
saw not well what. He had great comradeship with
Moritz of Saxony in the wars: two sworn brothers
they, and comrades in arms:-it is the same
dexterous Moritz, who, himself a Protestant, managed
to get his too Protestant Cousin’s Electorate
of Saxony into his hand, by luck of the game; the
Moritz, too, from whom Albert by and by got his last
defeat, giving Moritz his death in return. That
was the finale of their comradeship. All things
end, and nothing ceases changing till it end.
He was by position originally on the
Kaiser’s side; had attained great eminence,
and done high feats of arms and generalship in his
service. But being a Protestant by creed, he
changed after that Schmalkaldic downfall (rout of
Muhlberg, 24th April, 1547), which brought Moritz an
Electorate, and nearly cost Moritz’s too Protestant
Cousin his life as well as lands. [Account of it in
De Wette, Lebensgeschichte der Herzöge zu Sachsen(Weimar,
1770), p-35.] The victorious Kaiser growing
now very high in his ways, there arose complaints against
him from all sides, very loud from the Protestant
side; and Moritz and Albert took to arms, with loud
manifestos and the other phenomena.
This was early in 1552, five years
after Muhlberg Rout or Battle. The there victorious
Kaiser was now suddenly almost ruined; chased like
a partridge into the Innspruck Mountains,-could
have been caught, only Moritz would not; “had
no cage to hold so big a bird,” he said.
So the Treaty of Passau was made, and the Kaiser
came much down from his lofty ways. Famed TREATY
OF PASSAU (22d August, 1552), which was the finale
of these broils, and hushed them up for a Fourscore
years to come. That was a memorable year in German
Reformation History.
Albert, meanwhile, had been busy in
the interior of the country; blazing aloft in Frankenland,
his native quarter, with a success that astonished
all men. For seven months he was virtually King
of Germany; ransomed Bamberg, ransomed Würzburg,
Nurnberg (places he had a grudge at); ransomed all
manner of towns and places,-especially rich
Bishops and their towns, with VERBUM DIABOLI
sticking in them,-at enormous sums.
King of the world for a brief season;-must
have had some strange thoughts to himself, had they
been recorded for us. A pious man, too; not in
the least like “Alcibiades,” except in
the sudden changes of fortune he underwent. His
Motto, or old rhymed Prayer, which he would repeat
on getting into the saddle for military work,-a
rough rhyme of his own composing,-is still
preserved. Let us give it, with an English fac-simile,
or roughest mechanical pencil-tracing,-by
way of glimpse into the heart of a vanished Time and
its Man-at-arms: [Rentsch, .]
Das Walt der Herr
Jesus Christ,
Mit dem Vater,
der über uns ist:
Wer stärker
ist als dieser Mann,
Der komm und thu’
ein Leid mir an.
Guide it the Lord Jesus
Christ, [Read “Chris”
or
“Chriz,” for the rhyme’s sake.]
And the Father, who
over us is:
He that is stronger
than that Man, [Sic.]
Let him do me a hurt
when he can.
He was at the Siege of Metz (end of
that same 1552), and a principal figure there.
Readers have heard of the Siege of Metz: How Henry
II. of France fished up those “Three Bishoprics”
(Metz, Toul, Verdun, constituent part of Lorraine,
a covetable fraction of Teutschland) from the troubled
sea of German things, by aid of Moritz now KUR-SACHSEN,
and of Albert; and would not throw them in again,
according to bargain, when Peace, the PEACE OF PASSAU
came. How Kaiser Karl determined to have them
back before the year ended, cost what it might; and
Henry II. to keep them, cost what it might. How
Guise defended, with all the Chivalry of France; and
Kaiser Karl besieged, [19th October, 1552, and onwards.]
with an Army of 100,000 men, under Duke Alba for chief
captain. Siege protracted into midwinter; and
the “sound of his cannon heard at Strasburg,”
which is eighty miles off, “in the winter nights.”
[Kohler, Reichs-Historie, ;-and
more especially Munzbelustigungen (Nurnberg,
1729-1750), i-129. The Year of this Volume,
and of the Number in question, is 1737; the Münze
or Medal “recreated upon” in of Henri
II.]
It had depended upon Albert, who hung
in the distance with an army of his own, whether the
Siege could even begin; but he joined the Kaiser,
being reconciled again; and the trenches opened.
By the valor of Guise and his Chivalry,-still
more perhaps by the iron frosts and by the sleety
rains of Winter, and the hungers and the hardships
of a hundred thousand men, digging vainly at the ice-bound
earth, or trampling it when sleety into seas of mud,
and themselves sinking in it, of dysentery, famine,
toil and despair, as they cannonaded day and night,-Metz
could not be taken. “Impossible!”
said the Generals with one voice, after trying it
for a couple of months. “Try it one other
ten days,” said the Kaiser with a gloomy fixity;
“let us all die, or else do it!” They
tried, with double desperation, another ten days; cannon
booming through the winter midnight far and wide, four
score miles round: “Cannot be done, your
Majesty! Cannot,-the winter and the
mud, and Guise and the walls; man’s strength
cannot do it in this season. We must march away!”
Karl listened in silence; but the tears were seen to
run down his proud face, now not so young as it once
was: “Let us march, then!” he said,
in a low voice, after some pause.
Alcibiades covered the retreat to
Diedenhof (THIONVILLE they now call it): outmanoeuvred
the French, retreated with success; he had already
captured a grand Due d’Aumale, a Prince of the
Guises,-valuable ransom to be looked for
there. It was thought he should have made his
bargain better with the Kaiser, before starting; but
he had neglected that. Albert’s course
was downward thenceforth; Kaiser Karl’s too.
The French keep these “Three Bishoprics (TROIS
Évêchés),” and Teutschland laments the
loss of them, to this hour. Kaiser Karl, as some
write, never smiled again;-abdicated, not
long after; retired into the Monastery of St. Just,
and there soon died. That is the siege of Metz,
where Alcibiades was helpful. His own bargain
with the Kaiser should have been better made beforehand.
Dissatisfied with any bargain he could
now get; dissatisfied with the Treaty of Passau,
with such a finale and hushing-up of the Religious
Controversy, and in general with himself and with the
world, Albert again drew sword; went loose at a high
rate upon his Bamberg-Würzburg enemies,
and, having raised supplies there, upon Moritz and
those Passau-Treatiers. He was beaten at
last by Moritz, “Sunday, 9th July, 1553,”
at a place called Sievershausen in the Hanover Country,
where Moritz himself perished in the action.-Albert
fled thereupon to France. No hope in France.
No luck in other small and desperate stakings of his:
the game is done. Albert returns to a Sister he
had, to her Husband’s Court in Baden; a broken,
bare and bankrupt man;-soon dies there,
childless, leaving the shadow of a name. [Here, chiefly
from Kohler (Munzbelustigungen, ii-416),
is the chronology of Albert’s operations:-Seizure
of Nurnberg &c., 11th May to 22d June, 1552; Innspruck
(with Treaty of Passau) follows. Then Siege
of Metz, October to December, 1552; Bamberg, Würzburg
and Nurnberg ransomed again, April, 1553; Battle of
Sievershausen, 9th July, 1553. Würzburg &c.
explode against him; Ban of the Empire, 4th May, 1554.
To France thereupon; returns, hoping to negotiate,
end of 1556; dies at Pforzheim, at his Sister’s,
8th January, 1557.-See Pauli, ii-138.
See also Dr. Kapp, Erinnerungen an diejenigen Markgrafen
&c. (a reprint from the Archiv fur Geschichte
und Alterthumskunde in Ober-Franken, Year 1841).]
His death brought huge troubles upon
Baireuth and the Family Possessions. So many
neighbors, Bamberg, Würzburg and the rest,
were eager for retaliation; a new Kaiser greedy for
confiscating. Plassenburg Castle was besieged,
bombarded, taken by famine and burnt; much was burnt
and torn to waste. Nay, had it not been for help
from Berlin, the Family had gone to utter ruin in
those parts. For this Alcibiades had, in his
turn, been Guardian to Uncle George’s Son, the
George Friedrich we once spoke of, still a minor,
but well known afterwards; and it was attempted, by
an eager Kaiser Ferdinand, to involve this poor youth
in his Cousin’s illegalities, as if Ward and
Guardian had been one person. Baireuth which
had been Alcibiades’s, Anspach which was the
young man’s own, nay Jagerndorf with its Appendages,
were at one time all in the clutches of the hawk,-had
not help from Berlin been there. But in the end,
the Law had to be allowed its course; George Friedrich
got his own Territories back (all but some surreptitious
nibblings in the Jagerndorf quarter, to be noticed
elsewhere), and also got Baireuth, his poor Cousin’s
Inheritance;-sole heir, he now, in Culmbath,
the Line of Casimir being out.
One owns to a kind of love for poor Albert Alcibiades.
In certain sordid times, even a Failure of a Fritz is better than some
Successes that are going. A man of some real nobleness, this Albert;
though not with wisdom enough, not with good fortune enough. Could he have
continued to rule the situation (as our French friends phrase it); to march
the fanatical Papistries, and Kaiser Karl, clear out of it, home to Spain and
San Justo a little earlier; to wave the coming Jesuitries away, as with a
flaming sword; to forbid beforehand the doleful Thirty-Years War, and the still
dolefuler spiritual atrophy (the flaccid Pedantry, ever rummaging and
rearranging among learned marine-stores, which thinks itself Wisdom and Insight;
the vague maunderings, flutings; indolent, impotent daydreaming and
tobacco-smoking, of poor Modern Germany) which has followed therefrom,-ACH
GOTT, he might have been a “SUCCESS of a
Fritz” three times over! He might have been
a German Cromwell; beckoning his People to fly, eagle-like,
straight towards the Sun; instead of screwing about
it in that sad, uncertain, and far too spiral manner!-But
it lay not in him; not in his capabilities or opportunities,
after all: and we but waste time in such speculations.