While the Hanover Imminency was but
beginning, and horrid crisis of War or Duel-was
yet in nobody’s thoughts, the Anspach Wedding
[30th May, 1729] had gone on at Berlin. To Friedrich
Wilhelm’s satisfaction; not to his Queen’s,
the match being but a poor one. The bride was
Frederika Louisa, not the eldest of their Daughters,
but the next-eldest: younger than Wilhelmina,
and still hardly fifteen; the first married of the
Family. Very young she: and gets a very young
Margraf,-who has been, and still is a minor;
under his Mother’s guardianship till now:
not rich, and who has not had a good chance to be
wise. The Mother-an excellent magnanimous
Princess, still young and beautiful, but laboring
silently under some mortal disease-has done
her best to manage for him these last four or five
years; [Pollnitz, Memoirs and Letters (English
Translation, London, 1745), -204. There
are “MEMOIRS of Pollnitz,” then “MEMOIRS
AND LETTERS,” besides the “MEMOIRS of Brandenburg”
(posthumous, which we often cite); all by this poor
man. Only the last has any Historical value,
and that not much. The first two are only worth
consulting, cautiously, as loose contemporary babble,-written
for the Dutch Booksellers, one can perceive.] and,
as I gather, is impatient to see him settled, that
she may retire and die.
Friday forenoon, 19th May, 1729, the
young Margraf arrived in person at Berlin,-just
seventeen gone Saturday last, poor young soul, and
very foolish. Sublime royal carriage met him
at the Prussian frontier; and this day, what is more
interesting, our “Crown-Prince rides out to meet
him; mounts into the royal carriage beside him;”
and the two young fools drive, in such a cavalcade
of hoofs and wheels,-talking we know not
what,-into Potsdam; met by his Majesty and
all the honors. What illustrious gala there then
was in Potsdam and the Court world, read,-with
tedium, unless you are in the tailor line,-described
with minute distinctness by the admiring Fassmann.
[pp.396-401.] There are Generals, high Ladies,
sons of Bellona and Latona; there are dinners, there
are hautboys,-“two-and-thirty blackamoors,”
in flaming uniforms, capable of cymballing and hautboying
“up the grand staircase, and round your table,
and down again,” in a frightfully effective manner,
while you dine. Madame Kamecke is to go as Oberhofmeisterinn
to Anspach; and all the lackeys destined thither are
in their new liveries, blue turned up with red velvet.
Which is delightful to see. Review of the Giant
grenadiers cannot fail; conspicuous on parade with
them our Crown-Prince as Lieutenant-Colonel:
“the beauty of this Corps as well as the perfection
of their EXERCITIA,”-ah yes, we know
it, my dim old friend. The Marriage itself followed,
at Berlin, after many exercitia, snipe-shootings,
feastings, hautboyings; on the 30th of the month; with
torch-dance and the other customary trimmings; “Bride’s
garter cut in snips” for dreaming upon “by
his Royal Majesty himself.” The LUSTBARKEITEN,
the stupendous public entertainments having ended,
there is weeping and embracing (MORE HUMANO);
and the happy couple, so-called happy, retire to Anspach
with their destinies and effects.
A foolish young fellow, this new Brother-in-law,
testifies Wilhelmina in many places. Finances
in disorder; Mother’s wise management, ceasing
too soon, has only partially availed. King “has
lent some hundreds of thousands of crowns to Anspach
[says Friedrich at a later period], which there is
no chance of ever being repaid. All is in disorder
there, in the finance way; if the Margraf gets his
hunting and his heroning, he laughs at all the rest;
and his people pluck him bare at every hand.”
[Schulenburg’s Letter (in Forster, ii.]
Nor do the married couple agree to perfection;-far
from it: “hate one another like cat and
dog (like the fire, COMME LE FEU),”
says Friedrich: [Correspondence (more than once).]
“his Majesty may see what comes of ill-assorted
marriages!”-In fact, the union proved
none of the most harmonious; subject to squalls always;-but
to squalls only; no open tempest, far less any shipwreck:
the marriage held together till death, the Husband’s
death, nearly thirty years after, divided it.
There was then left one Son; the same who at length
inherited Baireuth too,-inherited Lady
Craven,-and died in Bubb Doddington’s
Mansion, as we often teach our readers.
Last year, the Third Daughter was
engaged to the Heir-Apparent of Brunswick; will be
married, when of age. Wilhelmina, flower of them
all, still hangs on the bush, “asked,”
or supposed to be “asked by four Kings,”
but not attained by any of them; and one knows not
what will be her lot. She is now risen out of
the sickness she has had,-not small-pox
at all, as malicious English rumor gave it in England;-and
“looks prettier than ever,” writes Dubourgay.
Here is a marriage, then; first in
the Family;-but not the Double-Marriage,
by a long way! The late Hanover Tornado, sudden
Waterspout as we called it, has quenched that Negotiation;
and one knows not in what form it will resuscitate
itself. The royal mind, both at Berlin and St.
James’s, is in a very uncertain state after such
a phenomenon.
Friedrich Wilhelm’s favor for
the Crown-Prince, marching home so gallantly with
his Potsdam Giants, did not last long. A few weeks
later in the Autumn we have again ominous notices
from Dubourgay. And here, otherwise obtained,
is a glimpse into the interior of the Berlin Schloss;
momentary perfect clearness, as by a flash of lightning,
on the state of matters there; which will be illuminative
to the reader.
CROWN-PRINCE’S DOMESTICITIES SEEN IN A FLASH OF LIGHTNING.
This is another of those tragi-comic
scenes, tragic enough in effect, between Father and
Son; Son now about eighteen,-fit to be getting
through Oxford, had he been an English gentleman of
private station. It comes from the irrefragable
Nicolai; who dates it about this time, uncertain as
to month or day.
Fritz’s love of music, especially
of fluting, is already known to us. Now a certain
Quantz was one of his principal instructors in that
art, and indeed gave him the last finish of perfection
in it. Quantz, famed Saxon music-master and composer,
Leader of the Court-Band in Saxony, king of flute-players
in his day,-(a village-farrier’s son
from the Göttingen region, and himself destined
to shoe horses, had not imperative Nature prevailed
over hindrances);-Quantz, ever from Fritz’s
sixteenth year, was wont to come occasionally, express
from Dresden, for a week or two, and give the young
man lessons on the flute. The young man’s
Mother, good Queen Feekin, had begged this favor for
him from the Saxon Sovereignties; and pleaded hard
for it at home, or at worst kept it secret there.
It was one of the many good maternities, clandestine
and public, which she was always ready to achieve for
him where possible;-as he also knew full
well in his young grateful heart, and never forgot,
however old he grew! Illustrious Quantz, we say,
gives Fritz lessons on the flute; and here is a scene
they underwent;-they and a certain brisk
young soldier fellow, Lieutenant von Katte, who was
there too; of whom the reader will tragically hear
more in time.
On such occasions Fritz was wont to
pull off the tight Prussian coat or COATIE, and clap
himself into flowing brocade of the due roominess and
splendor,-bright scarlet dressing-gown,
done in gold, with tags and sashes complete;-and
so, in a temporary manner, feel that there was such
a thing as a gentleman’s suitable apparel.
He would take his music-lessons, follow his clandestine
studies, in that favorable dress:-thus Buffon, we hear, was wont to shave, and
put on clean linen, before he sat down to write, finding it more comfortable so.
Though, again, there have been others who could write in considerable disorder;
not to say litter, and palpable imperfection of equipment: Samuel Johnson,
for instance, did some really grand writing in a room where there was but one
chair, and that one incapable of standing unless you sat on it, having only
three feet. A man is to fit himself to what is round him: but surely
a Crown-Prince may be indulged in a little brocade in his leisure moments!-
Fritz and Quantz sat doing music,
an unlawful thing, in this pleasant, but also unlawful
costume; when Lieutenant Katte, who was on watch in
the outer room, rushes in, distraction in his aspect:
Majesty just here! Quick, double quick!
Katte snatches the music-books and flutes, snatches
Quantz; hurries with him and them into some wall-press,
or closet for firewood, and stands quaking there.
Our poor Prince has flung aside his brocade, got on
his military coatie; and would fain seem busy with
important or indifferent routine matters. But,
alas, he cannot undo the French hairdressing; cannot
change the graceful French bag into the strict Prussian
queue in a moment. The French bag betrays him;
kindles the paternal vigilance,-alas, the
paternal wrath, into a tornado pitch. For his
vigilant suspecting Majesty searches about; finds the
brocade article behind a screen; crams it, with loud
indignation, into the fire; finds all the illicit
French Books; confiscates them on the spot, confiscates
all manner of contraband goods:-and there
was mere sulphurous whirlwind in those serene spaces
for about an hour! If his Majesty had looked
into the wood-closet? His Majesty, by Heaven’s
express mercy, omitted that. Haude the Bookseller
was sent for; ordered to carry off that poisonous
French cabinet-library in mass; sell every Book of
it, to an undiscerning public, at what price it will
fetch. Which latter part of his order, Haude,
in deep secrecy, ventured to disobey, being influenced
thereto. Haude, in deep secrecy, kept the cabinet-library
secure; and “lent” the Prince book after
book from it, as his Royal Highness required them.
Friedrich, it is whispered in Tobacco-Parliament,
has been known, in his irreverent impatience, to call
the Grenadier uniform his “shroud (STERBEKITTEL,
or death-clothes);” so imprisoning to the young
mind and body! Paternal Majesty has heard this
blasphemous rumor; hence doubtless, in part, his fury
against the wider brocade garment.
It was Quantz himself that reported
this explosion to authentic Nicolai, many years afterwards;
confessing that he trembled, every joint of him, in
the wood-closet, during that hour of hurricane; and
the rather as he had on “a red dress-coat,”
whioh color, foremost of the flaring colors, he knew
to be his Majesty’s aversion, on a man’s
back. [Nicolai, Anekdoten (Berlin, 1790), i.] Of incomparable Quantz, and his heart-thrilling
adagios, we hope to hear again, under joyfuler circumstances.
Of Lieutenant von Katte,-a short stout young
fellow, with black eyebrows, pock-marked face, and
rather dissolute manners,-we shall not
fail to hear.