This Siege of Stralsund, the last
military scene of Charles XII., and the FIRST ever
practically heard of by our little Fritz, who is now
getting into his fourth year, and must have thought
a great deal about it in his little head,-Papa
and even Mamma being absent on it, and such a marching
and rumoring going on all round him,-proved
to be otherwise of some importance to little Fritz.
Most of his Tutors were picked up
by the careful Papa in this Stralsund business.
Duhan de Jandun, a young French gentleman, family-tutor
to General Count Dohna (a cousin of our Minister Dohna’s),
but fonder of fighting than of teaching grammar; whom
Friedrich Wilhelm found doing soldier’s work
in the trenches, and liked the ways of; he, as the
foundation-stone of tutorage, is to be first mentioned.
And then Count Fink von Finkenstein, a distinguished
veteran, high in command (of whose qualities as Head-Tutor,
or occasional travelling guardian Friedrich Wilhelm
had experience in his own young days [Biographisches
Lexikon aaler Helden und Militairpersonen, welche
sich in Preussischen Diensten berumht gemacht haben
(4 vols. Berlin, 1788), , ? Finkenatein.-A
praiseworthy, modest, highly correct Book, of its kind;
which we shall, in future, call Militair-Lexikon,
when referring to it.]); and Lieutenant-Colonel Kalkstein,
a prisoner-of-war from the Swedish side, whom Friedrich
Wilhelm, judging well of him, adopts into his own service
with this view : these three come all from Stralsund
Siege; and were of vital moment to our little Fritz
in the subsequent time. Colonel Seckendorf, again,
who had a command in the four thousand Saxons here,
and refreshed into intimacy a transient old acquaintance
with Friedrich Wilhelm,-is not he too of terrible importance to Fritz and him?
As we shall see in time!-
For the rest, here is another little
incident. We said it had been a disappointment
to Papa that his little Fritz showed almost no appetite
for soldiering, but found other sights more interesting
to him than the drill-ground. Sympathize, then,
with the earnest Papa, as he returns home one afternoon,-date
not given, but to all appearance of that year 1715,
when there was such war-rumoring, and marching towards
Stralsund;-and found the little Fritz, with
Wilhelmina looking over him, strutting about, and
assiduously beating a little drum.
The paternal heart ran over with glad
fondness, invoking Heaven to confirm the omen.
Mother was told of it; the phenomenon was talked of,-beautifulest,
hopefulest of little drummers. Painter Pesne,
a French Immigrant, or Importée, of the last
reign, a man of great skill with his brush, whom History
yet thanks on several occasions, was sent for; or
he heard of the incident, and volunteered his services.
A Portrait of little Fritz drumming, with Wilhelmina
looking on; to which, probably for the sake of color
and pictorial effect, a Blackamoor, aside with parasol
in hand, grinning approbation, has been added,-was
sketched, and dexterously worked out in oil, by Painter
Pesne. Picture approved by mankind there and
then. And it still hangs on the wall, in a perfect
state, in Charlottenburg Palace; where the judicious
tourist may see it without difficulty, and institute
reflections on it.
A really graceful little Picture;
and certainly, to Prussian men, not without weight
of meaning. Nor perhaps to Picture-Collectors
and Cognoscenti generally, of whatever country,-if
they could forget, for a moment, the correggiosity
of Correggio, and the learned babble of the Sale-room
and varnishing Auctioneer; and think, “Why it
is, probably, that Pictures exist in this world, and
to what end the divine art of Painting was bestowed,
by the earnest gods, upon poor mankind?” I could
advise it, once, for a little! Flaying of Saint
Bartholomew, Rape of Europa, Rape of the Sabines,
Piping and Amours of goat-footed Pan, Romulus suckled
by the Wolf : all this, and much else of fabulous,
distant, unimportant, not to say impossible, ugly and
unworthy, shall pass without undue severity of criticism,
in a Household of such opulence as ours, where much
goes to waste, and where things are not on an earnest
footing for this long while past! As Created Objects,
or as Phantasms of such, pictorially done, all this
shall have much worth, or shall have little.
But I say, Here withal is one not phantasmal; of indisputable
certainty, home-grown, just commencing business, who
carried it far!
Fritz is still, if not in “long-clothes,”
at least in longish and flowing clothes, of the petticoat
sort, which look as of dark-blue velvet, very simple,
pretty and appropriate; in a cap of the same; has
a short raven’s feather in the cap; and looks
up, with a face and eyes full of beautiful vivacity
and child’s enthusiasm, one of the beautifulest
little figures, while the little drum responds to his
bits of drumsticks. Sister Wilhelmina, taller
by some three years, looks on in pretty marching attitude,
and with a graver smile. Blackamoor, and accompaniments
elegant enough; and finally the figure of a grenadier,
on guard, seen far off through an opening,-make
up the background.
We have engravings of this Picture;
which are of clumsy poor quality, and misrepresent
it much : an excellent Copy in oil, what might
be called almost a fac-simile and the perfection of
a Copy, is now (1854) in Lord Ashburton’s Collection
here in England. In the Berlin Galleries,-which are made up, like other
Galleries, of goat-footed Pan, Europas Bull, Romuluss She-Wolf, and the
correggiosity of Correggio; and contain, for instance, no Portrait of Frederick
the Great; no Likenesses at all, or next to none at all, of the noble series of
Human Realities, or of any part of them, who have sprung not from the idle
brains of dreaming Dilettanti, but from the Head of God Almighty, to make this
poor authentic Earth a little memorable for us, and to do a little work that may
be eternal there :-in
those expensive Halls of “High Art” at
Berlin, there were, to my experience, few Pictures
more agreeable than this of Pesne’s. Welcome,
like one tiny islet of Reality amid the shoreless sea
of Phantasms, to the reflective mind, seriously loving
and seeking what is worthy and memorable, seriously
hating and avoiding what is the reverse, and intent
not to play the dilettante in this world.
The same Pesne, an excellent Artist,
has painted Friedrich as Prince-Royal : a beautiful
young man with MOIST-looking enthusiastic eyes of
extraordinary brilliancy, smooth oval face; considerably
resembling his Mother. After which period, authentic
Pictures of Friedrich are sought for to little purpose.
For it seems he never sat to any Painter, in his reigning
days; and the Prussian Chodowiecki, [Pronounce KODOV-YETSKI;-and
endeavor to make some acquaintance with this “Prussian
Hogarth,” who has real worth and originality.]
Saxon Graff, English Cunningham had to pick up his
physiognomy from the distance, intermittently, as
they could. Nor is Rauch’s grand equestrian
Sculpture a thing to be believed, or perhaps pretending
much to be so. The commonly received Portrait
of Friedrich, which all German limners can draw at
once,-the cocked-hat, big eyes and alert
air, reminding you of some uncommonly brisk Invalid
Drill-sergeant or Greenwich Pensioner, as much as
of a Royal Hero,-is nothing but a general
extract and average of all the faces of Friedrich,
such as has been tacitly agreed upon; and is definable
as a received pictorial-myth, by no means as a fact,
or credible resemblance of life.
But enough now of Pictures. This
of the Little Drummer, the painting and the thing
painted which remain to us, may be taken as Friedrich’s
first appearance on the stage of the world; and welcomed
accordingly. It is one of the very few visualities
or definite certainties we can lay hold of, in those
young years of his, and bring conclusively home to
our imagination, out of the waste Prussian dust-clouds
of uninstructive garrulity which pretend to record
them for us. Whether it came into existence as
a shadowy emanation from the Stralsund Expedition,
can only be matter of conjecture. To judge by
size, these figures must have been painted about the
year 1715; Fritz some three or four years old, his
sister Wilhelmina seven.
It remains only to be intimated, that
Friedrich Wilhelm, for his part, had got all he claimed
from this Expedition : namely, Stettin with the dependent Towns, and
quietness in Pommern. Stettin was, from of old, the capital of his own
part of Pommern; thrown in along with the other parts of Pommern, and given to
Sweden (from sheer necessity, it was avowed), at the Peace of Westphalia, sixty
years ago or more :-and
now, by good chance, it has come back. Wait another
hundred years, and perhaps Swedish Pommern altogether
will come back! But from all this Friedrich Wilhelm
is still far. Stettin and quiet are all he dreams
of demanding there.
Stralsund he did not reckon his; left
it with the Danes, to hold in pawn till some general
Treaty. Nor was there farther outbreak of war
in those regions; though actual Treaty of Peace did
not come till 1720, and make matters sure. It
was the new Queen of Sweden, Ulrique Eleonora (Charles’s
younger Sister, wedded to the young Landgraf of Hessen-Cassel),-much
aided by an English Envoy,-who made this
Peace with Friedrich Wilhelm. A young English
Envoy, called Lord Carteret, was very helpful in this
matter; one of his first feats in the diplomatic world.
For which Peace, [Stockholm, 21st January, 1720 :
in Mauvillon -417) the Document itself at large.]
Friedrich Wilhelm was so thankful, good pacific armed-man,
that happening to have a Daughter born to him just
about that time, he gave the little creature her Swedish
Majesty’s name; a new “Ulrique,”
who grew to proper stature, and became notable in
Sweden, herself, by and by. [Louisa Ulrique, born 24th
July, 1720; Queen of Sweden in time coming.]