Neither as to intellectual culture,
in Duhan’s special sphere, and with all Duhan’s
good-will, was the opportunity extremely golden.
It cannot be said that Friedrich, who spells in the
way we saw, “ASTEURE” for “A CETTE
HEURE,” has made shining acquisitions on
the literary side. However, in the long-run it
becomes clear, his intellect, roving on devious courses,
or plodding along the prescribed tram-roads, had been
wide awake; and busy all the while, bringing in abundant
pabulum of an irregular nature.
He did learn “Arithmetic,”
“Geography,” and the other useful knowledges
that were indispensable to him. He knows History
extensively; though rather the Roman, French, and
general European as the French have taught it him,
than that of “Hessen, Brunswick, England,”
or even the “Electoral and Royal House of Brandenburg,”
which Papa had recommended. He read History,
where he could find it readable, to the end of his
life; and had early begun reading it,-immensely
eager to learn, in his little head, what strange things
had been, and were, in this strange Planet he was
come into.
We notice with pleasure a lively taste
for facts in the little Boy; which continued to be
the taste of the Man, in an eminent degree. Fictions
he also knows; an eager extensive reader of what is
called Poetry, Literature, and himself a performer
in that province by and by : but it is observable
how much of Realism there always is in his Literature;
how close, here as elsewhere, he always hangs on the
practical truth of things; how Fiction itself is either
an expository illustrative garment of Fact, or else
is of no value to him. Romantic readers of his
Literature are much disappointed in consequence, and
pronounce it bad Literature;-and sure enough,
in several senses, it is not to be called good!
Bad Literature, they say; shallow, barren, most unsatisfactory
to a reader of romantic appetites. Which is a
correct verdict, as to the romantic appetites and
it. But to the man himself, this quality of mind
is of immense moment and advantage; and forms truly
the basis of all he was good for in life. Once
for all, he has no pleasure in dreams, in parti-colored
clouds and nothingnesses. All his curiosities
gravitate towards what exists, what has being and reality
round him. That is the significant thing to him;
that he would right gladly know, being already related
to that, as friend or as enemy; and feeling an unconscious
indissoluble kinship, who shall say of what importance,
towards all that. For he too is a little Fact,
big as can be to himself; and in the whole Universe
there exists nothing as fact but is a fellow-creature
of his.
That our little Fritz tends that way,
ought to give Noltenius, Finkenstein and other interested
parties, the very highest satisfaction. It is
an excellent symptom of his intellect, this of gravitating
irresistibly towards realities. Better symptom
of its quality (whatever QUANTITY there be of it),
human intellect cannot show for itself. However
it may go with Literature, and satisfaction to readers
of romantic appetites, this young soul promises to
become a successful Worker one day, and to DO something
under the Sun. For work is of an extremely unfictitious
nature; and no man can roof his house with clouds
and moonshine, so as to turn the rain from him.
It is also to be noted that his style
of French, though he spelt it so ill, and never had
the least mastery of punctuation, has real merit.
Rapidity, easy vivacity, perfect clearness, here and
there a certain quaint expressiveness : on the
whole, he had learned the Art of Speech, from those
old French Governesses, in those old and new French
Books of his. We can also say of his Literature,
of what he hastily wrote in mature life, that it has
much more worth, even as Literature, than the common
romantic appetite assigns to it. A vein of distinct
sense, and good interior articulation, is never wanting
in that thin-flowing utterance. The true is well
riddled out from amid the false; the important and
essential are alone given us, the unimportant and
superfluous honestly thrown away. A lean wiry
veracity (an immense advantage in any Literature,
good or bad!) is everywhere beneficently observable;
the QUALITY of the intellect always extremely good,
whatever its quantity may be.
It is true, his spelling-“ASTEURE”
for “A CETTE HEURE”-is
very bad. And as for punctuation, he never could
understand the mystery of it; he merely scatters a
few commas and dashes, as if they were shaken out of
a pepper-box upon his page, and so leaves it.
These are deficiencies lying very bare to criticism;
and I confess I never could completely understand
them in such a man. He that would have ordered
arrest for the smallest speck of mud on a man’s
buff-belt, indignant that any pipe-clayed portion
of a man should not be perfectly pipeclayed :
how could he tolerate false spelling, and commas shaken
as out of a pepper-box over his page? It is probable
he cared little about Literature, after all; cared,
at least, only about the essentials of it; had practically
no ambition for himself, or none considerable, in
that kind;-and so might reckon exact obedience and punctuality, in a soldier,
more important than good spelling to an amateur literary man : He never
minded snuff upon his own chin, not even upon his waistcoat and breeches :
A merely superficial thing, not worth bothering about, in the press of real
business!-
That Friedrich’s Course of Education
did on the whole prosper, in spite of every drawback,
is known to all men. He came out of it a man of
clear and ever-improving intelligence; equipped with
knowledge, true in essentials, if not punctiliously
exact, upon all manner of practical and speculative
things, to a degree not only unexampled among modern
Sovereign Princes so called, but such as to distinguish
him even among the studious class. Nay many “Men-of-Letters”
have made a reputation for themselves with but a fraction
of the real knowledge concerning men and things, past
and present, which Friedrich was possessed of.
Already at the time when action came to be demanded
of him, he was what we must call a well-informed and
cultivated man; which character he never ceased to
merit more and more; and as for the action, and the
actions,-we shall see whether he was fit
for these or not.
One point of supreme importance in
his education was all along made sure of, by the mere
presence and présidence of Friedrich Wilhelm in
the business : That there was an inflexible law
of discipline everywhere active in it; that there
was a Spartan rigor, frugality, veracity inculcated
upon him. “Economy he is to study to the
bottom;” and not only so, but, in another sense
of the word, he is to practise economy; and does,
or else suffers for not doing it. Economic of
his time, first of all : generally every other
noble economy will follow out of that, if a man once
understand and practise that. Here was a truly
valuable foundation laid; and as for the rest, Nature,
in spite of shot-rubbish, had to do what she could
in the rest.
But Nature had been very kind to this
new child of hers. And among the confused hurtful
elements of his Schooling, there was always, as we
say, this eminently salutary and most potent one,
of its being, in the gross, APPRENTICESHIP TO FRIEDRICH
WILHELM the Rhadamanthine Spartan King, who hates
from his heart all empty Nonsense, and Unveracity most
of all. Which one element, well aided by docility,
by openness and loyalty of mind, on the Pupil’s
part, proved at length sufficient to conquer the others;
as it were to burn up all the others, and reduce their
sour dark smoke, abounding everywhere, into flame
and illumination mostly. This radiant swift-paced
Son owed much to the surly, irascible, sure-footed
Father that bred him. Friedrich did at length
see into Friedrich Wilhelm, across the abstruse, thunderous,
sulphurous embodiments and accompaniments of the man;-and proved himself, in all
manner of important respects, the filial sequel of Friedrich Wilhelm.
These remarks of a certain Editor are perhaps worth adding :-
“Friedrich Wilhelm, King of
Prussia, did not set up for a Pestalozzi; and the
plan of Education for his Son is open to manifold objections.
Nevertheless, as Schoolmasters go, I much prefer him
to most others we have at present. The wild man
had discerned, with his rugged natural intelligence
(not wasted away in the idle element of speaking and
of being spoken to, but kept wholesomely silent for
most part), That human education is not, and cannot
be, a thing of VOCABLES. That it is a thing of earnest facts; of
capabilities developed, of habits established, of dispositions well dealt with,
of tendencies confirmed and tendencies repressed :-a laborious
separating of the character into two FIRMAMENTS;
shutting down the subterranean, well down and deep;
an earth and waters, and what lies under them; then
your everlasting azure sky, and immeasurable depths
of aether, hanging serene overhead. To make
of the human soul a Cosmos, so far as possible, that
was Friedrich Wilhelm’s dumb notion : not
to leave the human soul a mere Chaos;-how
much less a Singing or eloquently Spouting Chaos,
which is ten times worse than a Chaos left MUTE, confessedly
chaotic and not cosmic! To develop the man into
DOING something; and withal into doing it as the Universe
and the Eternal Laws require,-which is but another name for really doing and not
merely seeming to do it :-that was Friedrich Wilhelm’s
dumb notion : and it was, I can assure you, very
far from being a foolish one, though there was no
Latin in it, and much of Prussian pipe-clay!”
But the Congress of Cambrai is met,
and much else is met and parted : and the Kaiser’s
Spectre-Hunt, especially his Duel with the She-Dragon
of Spain, is in full course; and it is time we were
saying something of the Double-Marriage in a directly
narrative way.