So that, as we said, there are two
elements for young Fritz, and highly diverse ones,
from both of which he is to draw nourishment, and
assimilate what he can. Besides that Edict-of-Nantes
French element, and in continual contact and contrast
with it, which prevails chiefly in the Female Quarters
of the Palace,-there is the native German
element for young Fritz, of which the centre is Papa,
now come to be King, and powerfully manifesting himself
as such. An abrupt peremptory young King; and
German to the bone. Along with whom, companions
to him in his social hours, and fellow-workers in
his business, are a set of very rugged German sons
of Nature; differing much from the French sons of Art.
Baron Grumkow, Leopold Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (not
yet called the “Old Dessauer,” being
under forty yet), General Glasenap, Colonel Derschau,
General Flans; these, and the other nameless
Generals and Officials, are a curious counterpart
to the Camases, the Hautcharmoys and Forcades, with
their nimble tongues and rapiers; still more to the
Beausobres, Achards, full of ecclesiastical
logic, made of Bayle and Calvin kneaded together;
and to the high-frizzled ladies rustling in stiff silk,
with the shadow of Versailles and of the Dragonnades
alike present to them.
Born Hyperboreans these others; rough
as hemp, and stout of fibre as hemp; native products
of the rigorous North. Of whom, after all our
reading, we know little.-O Heaven, they have had long lines of rugged ancestors,
cast in the same rude stalwart mould, and leading their rough life there, of
whom we know absolutely nothing! Dumb all those preceding busy
generations; and this of Friedrich Wilhelm is grown almost dumb. Grim
semi-articulate Prussian men; gone all to pipe-clay and mustache for us.
Strange blond-complexioned, not unbeautiful Prussian honorable women, in hoops,
brocades, and unintelligible head-gear and hair-towers,-ach
Gott, they too are gone; and their musical talk, in the French or German
language, that also is gone; and the hollow Eternities have swallowed it, as
their wont is, in a very surprising manner!-
Grumkow, a cunning, greedy-hearted,
long-headed fellow, of the old Pomeranian Nobility
by birth, has a kind of superficial polish put upon
his Hyperboreanisms; he has been in foreign countries,
doing legations, diplomacies, for which, at least
for the vulpine parts of which, he has a turn.
He writes and speaks articulate grammatical French;
but neither in that, nor in native Pommerish Platt-Deutsch,
does he show us much, except the depths of his own
greed, of his own astucities and stealthy audacities.
Of which we shall hear more than enough by and by.
OF THE DESSAUER, NOT YET “OLD.”
As to the Prince of Anhalt-Dessau,
rugged man, whose very face is the color of gunpowder,
he also knows French, and can even write in it, if
he like,-having duly had a Tutor of that
nation, and strange adventures with him on the grand
tour and elsewhere;-but does not much practise
writing, when it can be helped. His children,
I have heard, he expressly did not teach to read or
write, seeing no benefit in that effeminate art, but
left them to pick it up as they could. His Princess,
all rightly ennobled now,-whom he would
not but marry, though sent on the grand tour to avoid
it,-was the daughter of one Fos an Apothecary at Dessau; and is still a
beautiful and prudent kind of woman, who seems to suit him well enough, no worse
than if she had been born a Princess. Much talk has been of her, in
princely and other circles; nor is his marriage the only strange thing Leopold
has done. He is a man to keep the worlds tongue wagging, not too
musically always; though himself of very unvocal nature. Perhaps the
biggest mass of inarticulate human vitality, certainly one of the biggest, then
going about in the world. A man of vast dumb faculty; dumb, but fertile,
deep; no end of ingenuities in the rough head of him :-as
much mother-wit, there, I often guess, as could be
found in whole talking parliaments, spouting themselves
away in vocables and eloquent wind!
A man of dreadful impetuosity withal.
Set upon his will as the one law of Nature; storming
forward with incontrollable violence : a very
whirlwind of a man. He was left a minor; his Mother
guardian. Nothing could prevent him from marrying
this Fos the Apothecary’s Daughter; no tears
nor contrivances of his Mother, whom he much loved,
and who took skilful measures. Fourteen months
of travel in Italy; grand tour, with eligible French
Tutor,-whom he once drew sword upon, getting some rebuke from him one night in
Venice, and would have killed, had not the man been nimble, at once dexterous
and sublime :-it availed not.
The first thing he did, on re-entering Dessau, with
his Tutor, was to call at Apothecary Fos’s,
and see the charming Mamsell; to go and see his Mother,
was the second thing. Not even his grand passion
for war could eradicate those; he went to his grand
passion for Dutch William’s wars; the wise mother
still counselling, who was own aunt to Dutch William,
and liked the scheme. He besieged Namur; fought
and besieged up and down,-with insatiable
appetite for fighting and sieging; with great honor,
too, and ambitions awakening in him;-campaign
after campaign : but along with the flamy-thundery
ideal bride, figuratively called Bellona, there was
always a soft real one, Mamsell Fos of Dessau, to
whom he continued constant. The Government of
his Dominions he left cheerfully to his Mother, even
when he came of age : “I am for learning
War, as the one right trade; do with all things as
you please, Mamma,- only not with Mamsell, not with her!-
Readers may figure this scene too, and shudder over it.
Some rather handsome male Cousin of Mamsell, Medical Graduate or whatever he
was, had appeared in Dessau :-Seems, to admire Mamsell much; of course, in a
Platonic way, said rumor :-“He? Admire?”
thinks Leopold;-thinks a good deal of it,
not in the philosophic mood. As he was one day
passing Fos’s, Mamsell and the Medical Graduate
are visible, standing together at the window inside.
Pleasantly looking out upon Nature,-of course
quite casually, say some Histories with a sneer.
In fact, it seems possible this Medical Graduate may
have been set to act shoeing-horn; but he had better
not. Leopold storms into the House, “Draw,
scandalous canaille, and defend yourself!”-And
in this, or some such way, a confident tradition says,
he killed the poor Medical Graduate there and then.
One tries always to hope not : but Varnhagen is
positive, though the other Histories say nothing of
it. God knows. The man was a Prince; no
Reichshofrath, Speyer-Wetzlar Kammer, or other
Supreme Court, would much trouble itself, except with
formal shakings of the wig, about such a peccadillo.
In fine, it was better for Leopold to marry the Miss
Fos; which he actually did (1698, in his twenty-second
year), “with the left-hand,”-and
then with the right and both hands; having got her
properly ennobled before long, by his splendid military
services. She made, as we have hinted, an excellent
Wife to him, for the fifty or sixty ensuing years.
This is a strange rugged specimen,
this inarticulate Leopold; already getting mythic,
as we can perceive, to the polished vocal ages; which
mix all manner of fables with the considerable history
he has. Readers will see him turn up again in
notable forms. A man hitherto unknown except
in his own country; and yet of very considerable significance
to all European countries whatsoever; the fruit of
his activities, without his name attached, being now
manifest in all of them. He invented the iron
ramrod; he invented the equal step; in fact, he is
the inventor of modern military tactics. Even
so, if we knew it : the Soldiery of every civilized
country still receives from this man, on parade-fields
and battle-fields, its word of command; out of his
rough head proceeded the essential of all that the
innumerable Drill-sergeants, in various languages,
daily repeat and enforce. Such a man is worth
some transient glance from his fellow-creatures,-especially
with a little Fritz trotting at his foot, and drawing
inferences from him.
Dessau, we should have said for the
English reader’s behoof, was and still is a
little independent Principality; about the size of
Huntingdonshire, but with woods instead of bogs;-revenue
of it, at this day, is 60,000 pounds, was perhaps
not 20, or even 10,000 in Leopold’s first time.
It lies some fourscore miles southwest of Berlin, attainable
by post-horses in a day. Leopold, as his Father
had done, stood by Prussia as if wholly native to
it. Leopold’s Mother was Sister of that
fine Louisa, the Great Elector’s first Wife;
his Sister is wedded to the Margraf of Schwedt, Friedrich
Wilhelm’s half-uncle. Lying in such neighborhood,
and being in such affinity to the Prussian House, the
Dessauers may be said to have, in late times, their
headquarters at Berlin. Leopold and Leopold’s
sons, as his father before him had done, without neglecting
their Dessau and Principality, hold by the Prussian
Army as their main employment. Not neglecting
Dessau either; but going thither in winter, or on
call otherwise; Leopold least of all neglecting it,
who neglects nothing that can be useful to him.
He is General Field-Marshal of the
Prussian Armies, the foremost man in war-matters with
this new King; and well worthy to be so. He is
inventing, or brooding in the way to invent, a variety
of things,-“iron ramrods,”
for one; a very great improvement on the fragile ineffective
wooden implement, say all the Books, but give no date
to it; that is the first thing; and there will be
others, likewise undated, but posterior, requiring
mention by and by. Inventing many things;-and
always well practising what is already invented, and
known for certain. In a word, he is drilling
to perfection, with assiduous rigor, the Prussian
Infantry to be the wonder of the world. He has
fought with them, too, in a conclusive manner; and
is at all times ready for fighting.
He was in Malplaquet with them, if
only as volunteer on that occasion. He commanded
them in Blenheim itself; stood, in the right or Eugene
wing of that famed Battle of Blenheim, fiercely at
bay, when the Austrian Cavalry had all fled;-fiercely
volleying, charging, dexterously wheeling and manoeuvring;
sticking to his ground with a mastiff-like tenacity,-till
Marlborough, and victory from the left, relieved him
and others. He was at the Bridge of Cassano;
where Eugene and Vendome came to hand-grips;-where
Mirabeau’s Grandfather, col-D’ARGENT,
got his six-and-thirty wounds, and was “killed”
as he used to term it. [Carlyle’s Miscellanies,
v. ? Mirabeau.] “The hottest fire I ever
saw,” said Eugene, who had not seen Malplaquet
at that time. While Col-d’Argent sank collapsed
upon the Bridge, and the horse charged over him, and
again charged, and beat and were beaten three several
times,-Anhalt-Dessau, impatient of such
fiddling hither and thither, swashed into the stream
itself with his Prussian Foot : swashed through
it, waist-deep or breast-deep; and might have settled
the matter, had not his cartridges got wetted.
Old King Friedrich rebuked him angrily for his impetuosity
in this matter, and the sad loss of men.
Then again he was at the Storming
of the Lines of Turin,-Eugene’s feat
of 1706, and a most volcanic business;-was
the first man that got-over the entrenchment there.
Foremost man; face all black with the smoke of gunpowder,
only channelled here and there with rivulets of sweat;-not
a lovely phenomenon to the French in the interior!
Who still fought like madmen, but were at length driven
into heaps, and obliged to run. A while before
they ran, Anhalt-Dessau, noticing some Captain posted
with his company in a likely situation, stept aside
to him for a moment, and asked, “Am I wounded,
think you?-No? Then have you anything
to drink?” and deliberately “drank a glass
of aqua-vitae,” the judicious Captain carrying
a pocket-pistol of that sort, in case of accident;
and likewise “eat, with great appetite, a bit
of bread from one of the soldiers’ haversacks;
saying, He believed the heat of the job was done, and
that there was no fear now!”-[Des
weltberumkten Leopoldi, &c. (Anonymous, by Ranfft,
cited above), pp. 42-45, 52, 65.]
A man that has been in many wars;
in whose rough head, are schemes hatching. Any
religion he has is of Protestant nature; but he has
not much,-on the doctrinal side, very little.
Luther’s Hymn, Eine feste Burg ist unser
Gott, he calls “God Almighty’s grenadier-march.”
On joining battle, he audibly utters, with bared head,
some growl of rugged prayer, far from orthodox at
times, but much in earnest : that lifting of his
hat for prayer, is his last signal on such occasions.
He is very cunning as required, withal; not disdaining
the serpentine method when no other will do.
With Friedrich Wilhelm, who is his second-cousin (Mother’s
grand-nephew, if the reader can count that), he is
from of old on the best footing, and contrives to
be his Mentor in many things besides War. Till
his quarrel with Grumkow, of which we shall hear,
he took the lead in political advising, too; and had
schemes, or was thought to have, of which Queen Sophie
was in much terror.
A tall, strong-boned, hairy man; with
cloudy brows, vigilant swift eyes; has “a bluish
tint of skin,” says Wilhelmina, “as if
the gunpowder still stuck to him.” He wears
long mustaches; triangular hat, plume and other equipments,
are of thrifty practical size. Can be polite enough
in speech; but hides much of his meaning, which indeed
is mostly inarticulate, and not always joyful to the
by-stander. He plays rough pranks, too, on occasion;
and has a big horse-laugh in him, where there is a
fop to be roasted, or the like. We will leave
him for the present, in hope of other meetings.
Remarkable men, many of those old
Prussian soldiers : of whom one wishes, to no
purpose, that there had more knowledge been attainable.
But the Books are silent; no painter, no genial seeing-man
to paint with his pen, was there. Grim hirsute
Hyperborean figures, they pass mostly mute before
us : burly, surly; in mustaches, in dim uncertain
garniture, of which the buff-belts and the steel,
are alone conspicuous. Growling in guttural Teutsoh
what little articulate meaning they had : spending,
of the inarticulate, a proportion in games, of chance,
probably too in drinking beer; yet having an immense
overplus which they do not so spend, but endeavor
to utter in such working as there may be. So have
the Hyperboreans lived from of old. From the times
of Tacitus and Pytheas, not to speak of Odin and Japhet,
what hosts of them have marched across Existence,
in that manner;-and where is the memory that would, even if it could, speak of
them all!-
We will hope the mind of our little
Fritz has powers of assimilation. Bayle-Calvin
logics, and shadows of Versailles, on this hand, and
gunpowder Leopolds and inarticulate Hyperboreans
on that : here is a wide diversity of nutriment,
all rather tough in quality, provided for the young
soul. Innumerable unconscious inferences he must
have drawn in his little head! Prince Leopold’s
face, with the whiskers and blue skin, I find he was
wont, at after periods, to do in caricature, under
the figure of a Cat’s;-horror and
admiration not the sole feelings raised in him by
the Field-Marshal.-For bodily nourishment
he had “beer-soup;” a decided Spartan
tone prevailing, wherever possible, in the breeding
and treatment of him.
And we need not doubt, by far the
most important element of his education was the unconscious
Apprenticeship he continually served to such a Spartan
as King Friedrich Wilhelm. Of whose works and
ways he could not help taking note, angry or other,
every day and hour; nor in the end, if he were intelligent,
help understanding them, and learning from them.
A harsh Master and almost half-mad, as it many times
seemed to the poor Apprentice; yet a true and solid
one, whose real wisdom was worth that of all the others,
as he came at length to recognize.