For one thing, Friedrich Wilhelm,
weary of all this English pother and futility, will
end the Double-Marriage speculation; Wilhelmina shall
be disposed of, and so an end. Friedrich Wilhelm,
once the hunting was over at Wusterhausen, ran across,
southward,-to “Lubnow,” Wilhelmina
calls it,-to Lubben in the Nether Lausitz,
[25th October, 1729 (Fassmann, .] a short day’s
drive; there to meet incognito the jovial Polish Majesty,
on his route towards Dresden; to see a review or so;
and have a little talk with the ever-cheerful Man
of Sin. Grumkow and Seckendorf, of course these
accompany; Majesty’s shadow is not surer.
Review was held at Lubben, Weissenfels
Commander-in-chief taking charge; dinner also, a dinner
or two, with much talk and drink;-and there
it was settled, Wilhelmina has since known, that Weissenfels,
Royal Highness in the Abstract, was to be her Husband,
after all. Weissenfels will do; either Weissenfels
or else the Margraf of Schwedt, thinks Friedrich Wilhelm;
somebody shall marry the baggage out of hand, and let
us have done with that. Grumkow, as we know, was
very anxious for it; calculating thereby to out the
ground from under the Old Dessauer, and make this
Weissenfels Generalissimo of Prussia; a patriotic thought.
Polish Majesty lent hand, always willing to oblige.
Friedrich Wilhelm, on his return homewards,
went round by Dahme for a night:-not “Dam,”
O Princess, there is no such town or schloss!
Round by Dahme, a little town and patch of territory,
in the Saxon Countries, which was Weissenfels’s
Apanage;-“where plenty of Tokay”
cheered the royal heart; and, in such mood, it seemed
as if one’s Daughter might do very well in this
extremely limited position. And Weissenfels, though
with dark misgivings as to Queen Sophie, was but too
happy to consent: the foolish creature; a little
given to liquor too! Friedrich Wilhelm, with
this fine project in his head, drove home to Potsdam;-and
there laid about him, on the poor Crown-Prince, in
the way we have seen; terrifying Queen and Princess,
who are at Berlin till Christmas and the Carnival
be over. Friedrich Wilhelm means to see the Polish
Majesty again before long,-probably so
soon as this of Weissenfels is fairly got through
the Female Parliament, where it is like there will
be difficulties.
Christmas came to Berlin, and the King with it; who did the
gayeties for a week or two, and spoke nothing about business to his Female
Parliament. Dubourgay saw him, at Parade, on New-Years morning; whither
all manner of Foreign Dignitaries had come to pay their respects: Well,
cried the King to Dubourgay, we shall have a War, then,-universa1 deadly tug at
those Italian Apanages, for and against an insulted
Kaiser,-“War; and then all that is
crooked will be pulled straight!” So spake Friedrich
Wilhelm on the New-Year’s morning; War in Italy,
universal spasm of wrestle there, being now the expectation
of foolish mankind: Crooked will be pulled straight,
thinks Friedrich Wilhelm; and perhaps certain high
Majesties, deaf to the voice of Should-not, will understand
that of Can-not, Excellenz!-Crooked will
become straight? “Indeed if so, your Majesty,
the sooner the better!” I ventured to answer.
[Dubourgay, 8th January, 1730.]
New Year’s day is not well in,
and the ceremonial wishes over, when Friedrich Wilhelm,
his mind full of serious domestic and foreign matter,
withdraws to Potsdam again; and therefrom begins fulminating
in a terrible manner on his womankind at Berlin, what
we called his Female Parliament,-too much
given to opposition courses at present. Intends
to have his measures passed there, in defiance of
opposition; straightway; and an end put to this inexpressible
Double-Marriage higgle-haggle. Speed to him!
we will say.-Three high Crises occur, three
or even four, which can now without much detail be
made intelligible to the patient reader: on the
back of which we look for some catastrophe and finis
to the Business;-any catastrophe that will
prove a finis, how welcome will it be!
WILHELMINA TO BE MARRIED OUT OF HAND. CRISIS FIRST: ENGLAND SHALL SAY
YES OR SAY NO.
Still early in January, a few days
after his Majesty’s return to Potsdam, three
high Official gentlemen, Count Fink van Finkenstein,
old Tutor to the Prince, Grumkow and General Borck
announce themselves one morning; “Have a pressing
message from the King to her Majesty.” [Wilhelmina,
.] Queen is astonished; expecting anything sooner.-“This
regards me, I have a dreading!” shuddered Wilhelmina
to Mamma. “No matter,” said the Queen,
shrugging her shoulders; “one must have firmness;
and that is not what I shall want;”-and
her Majesty went into the Audience-chamber, leaving
Wilhelmina in such tremors.
Finkenstein, a friendly man, as Borck
too is, explains to her Majesty, “That they
three have received each a Letter overnight,-Letter
from the King, enjoining in the FIRST place ‘silence
under pain of death;’ in the SECOND place, apprising
them that he, the King, will no longer endure her
Majesty’s disobedience in regard to the marriage
of his Daughter, but will banish Daughter and Mother
‘to Oranienburg,’ quasi-divorce, and outer
darkness, unless there be compliance with his sovereign
will; THIRDLY, that they are accordingly to go, all
three, to her Majesty, to deliver the enclosed Royal
Autograph [which Finkenstein presents], testifying
what said sovereign will is, and on the above terms
expect her Majesty’s reply;”-as
they have now sorrowfully done, Finkenstein and Borck
with real sorrow; Grumkow with the reverse of real.
Sovereign will is to the effect:
“Write to England one other time, Will you at
once marry, or not at once; Yea or No? Answer
can be here within a fortnight; three weeks, even
in case of bad winds. If the answer be not Yea
at once; then you, Madam, you at once choose Weissenfels
or Schwedt, one or the other,-under what
penalties you know; Oranienburg and worse!”
Here is a crisis. But her Majesty
did not want firmness. “Write to England?
Yes, willingly. But as to Weissenfels and Schwedt,
whatever answer come from England,-Impossible!”
steadily answers her Majesty. There was much
discourse, suasive, argumentative; Grumkow “quoting
Scripture on her Majesty, as the Devil can on occasion,”
says Wilhelmina. Express Scriptures, Wives,
be obedient to your husbands, and the like texts:
but her Majesty, on the Scripture side too, gave him
as good as he brought. “Did not Bethuel
the son of Milcah, [Genesis xxi-58.] when Abraham’s
servant asked his daughter in marriage for young Isaac,
answer, We will call the damsel and inquire of her
mouth. And they called Rebecca, and said unto
her, Wilt thou go with this man? And she said,
I will go." Scripture for Scripture, Herr von
Grumkow! “Wives must obey their husbands;
surely yes. But the husbands are to command things
just and reasonable. The King’s procedure
is not accordant with that law. He is for doing
violence to my Daughter’s inclination, and rendering
her unhappy for the rest of her days;-will
give her a brutal debauchee,” fat Weissenfels,
so describable in strong language; “a younger
brother, who is nothing but the King of Poland’s
Officer; landless, and without means to live according
to his rank. Or can it be the State that will
profit from such a marriage? If they have a Household,
the King will have to support it.-Write
to England; Yes; but whatever the answer of England,
Weissenfels never! A thousand times sooner see
my child in her grave than hopelessly miserable!”
Here a qualm overtook her Majesty; for in fact she
is in an interesting state, third month of her time:
“I am not well; You should spare me, Gentlemen,
in the state I am in.-I do not accuse the
King,” concluded she: “I know,”
hurling a glance at Grumkow, “to whom I owe all
this;”-and withdrew to her interior
privacies; reading there with Wilhelmina “the
King’s cruel Letter,” and weeping largely,
though firm to the death. [Wilhelmina, -182.
Dubourgay has nothing,-probably had heard
nothing, there being “silence under pain of death”
for the moment.]
What to do in such a crisis?
Assemble the Female Parliament, for one thing:
good Madam Finkenstein (old Tutor’s wife), good
Mamsell Bulow, Mamsell Sonsfeld (Wilhelmina’s
Governess), and other faithful women:-well
if we can keep away traitresses, female spies that
are prowling about; especially one “Ramen,”
a Queen’s soubrette, who gets trusted with everything,
and betrays everything; upon whom Wilhelmina is often
eloquent. Never was such a traitress; took Dubourgay’s
bribe, which the Queen had advised; and, all the same,
betrays everything,-bribe included.
And the Queen, so bewitched, can keep nothing from
her. Female Parliament must, take precautions
about the Ramen!-For the rest, Female Parliament
advises two things: 1. Pressing Letter to
England; that of course, written with the eloquence
of despair: and then 2. That in case of
utter extremity, her Majesty “pretend to fall
ill.” That is Crisis First; and that is
their expedient upon it.
Letter goes to England, therefore;
setting forth the extremity of strait, and pinch:
“Now or never, O my Sister Caroline!” Many
such have gone, first and last; but this is the strongest
of all. Nay the Crown-Prince too shall write
to his Aunt of England: you, Wilhelmina, draw
out, a fit brief Letter for him: send it to Potsdam,
he will copy it there! [Wilhelmina, .] So orders
the Mother: Wilhelmina does it, with a terrified
heart; Crown-Prince copies without scruple: “I
have already given your Majesty my word of honor never
to wed any one but the Princess Amelia your Daughter;
I here reiterate that Promise, in case your Majesty
will consent to my Sister’s Marriage,”-should
that alone prove possible in the present intricacies.
“We are all reduced to such a state that”-Wilhelmina
gives the Letter in full; but as it is professedly
of her own composition, a loose vague piece, the very
date of which you have to grope out for yourself,
it cannot even count among the several Letters written
by the Crown-Prince, both before and after it, to
the same effect, which are now probably all of them
lost, [TRACE of one, Copy of ANSWER from Queen Caroline
to what seems to have been one, Answer rather of dissuasive
tenor, is in State-Paper Office: Prussian
Despatches, vol. xl,-dateless;
probably some months later in 1780.] without regret
to anybody; and we will not reckon it worth transcribing
farther. Such Missive, such two Missives (not
now found in any archive) speed to England by express;
may the winds be favorable. Her Majesty waits
anxious at Berlin; ready to take refuge in a bed of
sickness, should bad come to worse.
DUBOURGAY STRIKES A LIGHT FOR THE ENGLISH COURT.
In England, in the mean while, they
have received a curious little piece of secret information.
One Reichenbach, Prussian Envoy at London-Dubourgay
has long marvelled at the man and at the news he sends
to Berlin. Here, of date 17th January, 1730, is
a Letter on that subject from Dubourgay, official
but private as yet, for “George Tilson, Esq.:”-Tilson
is Under-Secretary in the Foreign Office, whose name
often turns up on such occasions in the DUBOURGAY,
the ROBINSON and other extinct Paper-heaps of that
time. Dubourgay dates doubly, by old and new
style; in general we print by the new only, unless
the contrary be specified.
“TO GEORGE TILSON, ESQ. (Private.)
“BERLIN, 6th Ja (by new style, 17th Ja.
“SIR,-I believe you
may remember that we have for a long time suspected
that most of Reichenbach’s Despatches were dictated
by some people here. About two days ago a Paper
fell into my hands,” realized quietly for a
consideration, “containing an Account of money
charged to the ’Brothers Jourdan and Lautiers,’
Merchants here, by their Correspondent in London,
for sending Letters from,” properly in, or through,
“your City to Reichenbach.
“Jourdan and Lautiers’s
London Correspondents are Mr. Thomas Greenhill in
Little Bell Alley and Mr. John Motteux in St.
Mary Axe. Mr. Guerin my Agent knows them very
well; having paid them several little bills on my
account:”-Better ask Mr. Guerin.
“I know not through the hands of which of those
Merchants the above-mentioned Letters have passed;
but you have ways enough to find it out, if you think
it worth while. I make no manner of doubt but
Grumkow and his party make use of this conveyance
to (SIC) their instructions to Reichenbach. In
the Account which I have seen, ‘eighteen-pence’
is charged for carrying each Letter to Reichenbach:
the charge in general is for ‘Thirty-two Letters;’
and refers to a former Account.” So that
they must have been long at it.
“I am, with the greatest truth,
“DUBOURGAY.”
Here is a trail which Tilson will
have no difficulty in running down. I forget
whether it was in Bell Alley or St. Mary Axe that the
nest was found; but found it soon was, and the due
springes were set; and game came steadily dropping
in,-Letters to and Letters from,-which,
when once his Britannic Majesty had, with reluctance,
given warrant to open and decipher them, threw light
on Prussian Affairs, and yielded fine sport and speculation
in the Britannic Majesty’s Apartment on an evening.
This is no other than the celebrated
“Cipher Correspondence between Grumkow and Reichenbach;”
Grumkow covertly instructing his slave Reichenbach
what the London news shall be: Reichenbach answering
him, To hear is to obey! Correspondence much
noised of in the modern Prussian Books; and which
was, no doubt, very wonderful to Tilson and Company;-capable
of being turned to uses, they thought. The reader
shall see specimens by and by; and he will find it
unimportant enough, and unspeakably stupid to him.
It does show Grumkow as the extreme of subtle fowlers,
and how the dirty-fingered Seckendorf and he cooked
their birdlime: but to us that is not new, though
at St. James’s it was. Perhaps uses may
lie in it there? At all events, it is a pretty
topic in Queen Caroline’s apartment on an evening;
and the little Majesty and she, with various laughters
and reflections, can discern, a little, How a poor
King of Prussia is befooled by his servants, and in
what way a fierce Bear is led about by the nose, and
dances to Grumkow’s piping. Poor soul,
much of his late raging and growling, perhaps it was
only Grumkow’s and not his! Does not hate
us, he, perhaps; but only Grumkow through him?
This doleful enchantment, and that the Royal Wild Bear
dances only to tunes, ought to be held in mind, when
we want anything with him.-Those, amid
the teheeings, are reflections that cannot escape
Queen Caroline and her little George, while the Prussian
Express, unknown to them, is on the road.
WILHELMINA TO BE MARRIED OUT OF HAND. CRISIS SECOND: ENGLAND SHALL HAVE
SAID NO.
The Prussian Express, Queen Sophie’s
Courier to England, made his best speed: but
he depends on the winds for even arriving there; and
then he depends on the chances for an answer there;
an uncertain Courier as to time: and it was not
in the power of speed to keep pace with Friedrich
Wilhelm’s impatience. “No answer yet?”
growls Friedrich Wilhelm before a fortnight is gone.
“No answer?”-and January has
not ended till a new Deputation of the same Three
Gentlemen, Finkenstein, Borck, Grumkow, again waits
on the Queen, for whom there is now this other message.
“Wednesday, 25th January, 1730,” so Dubourgay
dates it; so likewise Wilhelmina, right for once:
“a day I shall never forget,” adds she.
Finkenstein and Borck, merciful persons,
and always of the English party, were again profoundly
sorry. Borck has a blaze of temper in him withal;
we hear he apprised Grumkow, at one point of the dialogue,
that he, Grumkow, was a “scoundrel,” so
Dubourgay calls it,-which was one undeniable
truth offered there that day. But what can anything
profit? The Message is: “Whatever
the answer now be from England, I will have nothing
to do with it. Negative, procrastinative, affirmative,
to me it shall be zero. You, Madam, have to choose,
for Wilhelmina, between Weissenfels and Schwedt; otherwise
I myself will choose: and upon you and her will
alight Oranienburg, outer darkness, and just penalties
of mutiny against the Authority set over you by God
and men. Weissenfels or Schwedt: choose
straightway.” This is the King’s message
by these Three.
“You can inform the King,”
replied her Majesty, [Wilhelmina, .] “that
he will never make me consent to render my Daughter
miserable; and that, so long as a breath of life (UN
SOUFFLE DE VIE) remains in me, I will not permit her
to take either the one or the other of those persons.”
“Is that enough? For you, Sir,” added
her Majesty, turning to Grumkow, “for you, Sir,
who are the author of my misfortunes, may my curse
fall upon you and your house! You have this day
killed me. But I doubt not, Heaven will hear
my prayer, and avenge these wrongs.” [Dubourgay,
28th January, 1730; Wilhelmina, (who suppresses
the maledictory part).]-And herewith to
a bed of sickness, as the one refuge left!
Her Majesty does now, in fact, take
to bed at Berlin; “fallen very ill,” it
would appear; which gives some pause to Friedrich Wilhelm
till he ascertain. “Poorly, for certain,”
report the Doctors, even Friedrich Wilhelm’s
Doctor. The humane Doctors have silently given
one another the hint; for Berlin is one tempest of
whispers about her Majesty’s domestic sorrows,
“Poorly, for interesting reasons:-perhaps
be worse before she is better, your Majesty!”-“Hmph!”
thinks Friedrich Wilhelm out at Potsdam. And
then the treacherous Ramen reports that it is all shamming;
and his Majesty, a Bear, though a loving one, is driven
into wrath again; and so wavers from side to side.
It is certain the Queen held, faster
or looser, by her bed of sickness, as a main refuge
in these emergencies: the last shift of oppressed
womankind;-sanctioned by Female Parliament,
in this instance. “Has had a miscarriage!”
writes Dubourgay, from Berlin gossip, at the beginning
of the business. Nay at one time she became really
ill, to a dangerous length; and his Majesty did not
at first believe it; and then was like to break his
heart, poor Bear; aud pardoned Wilhelmina and even
Fritz, at the Mother’s request,-till
symptoms mended again. [Wilhelmina, .] JARNI-BLEU,
Herr Seckendorf, “Grumkow serves us honorably
(DIENET EHRLICH)”-does not he!-Ambiguous
bed of sickness, a refuge in time of trouble, did
not quite terminate till May next, when her Majesty’s
time came; a fine young Prince the result; [23d May,
1730, August Ferdinand; her last child.] and this
mode of refuge in trouble ceased to be necessary.
WILHELMINA TO BE MARRIED OUT OF HAND. CRISIS THIRD: MAJESTY HIMSELF WILL
CHOOSE, THEN.
Directly on the back of that peremptory
act of disobedience by the womankind on Wednesday
last, Friedrich Wilhelm came to Berlin himself.
He stormfully reproached his Queen, regardless of the
sick-bed; intimated the infallible certainty, That
Wilhelmina nevertheless would wed without delay, and
that either Weissenfels or Schwedt would be the man.
And this said, he straightway walked out to put the
same in execution.
Walked, namely, to the Mother Margravine
of Schwedt, the lady in high colors, Old Dessauer’s
Sister; and proposed to her that Wilhelmina should
marry her Son.-“The supreme wish of
my life, your Majesty,” replied she of the high
colors: “But, against the Princess’s
own will, how can I accept such happiness? Alas,
your Majesty, I never can!”-and flatly
refused his Majesty on those terms: a thing Wilhelmina
will ever gratefully remember of her. [Wilhelmina,
.]
So that the King is now reduced to
Weissenfels; and returns still more indignant to her
Majesty’s apartment. Weissenfels, however,
it shall be; and frightful rumors go that he is written
to, that he is privately coming, and that there will
be no remedy. [Wilhelmina, .] Wilhelmina, formerly
almost too florid, is gone to a shadow; “her
waist hardly half an ell;” worn down by these
agitations. The Prince and she, if the King see
either of them,-it is safer to run, or squat
behind screens.
HOW FRIEDRICH PRINCE OF BAIREUTH CAME TO BE THE MAN, AFTER ALL.
In this high wind of extremity, the
King now on the spot and in such temper, Borck privately
advises, “That her Majesty bend a little,-pretend
to give up the English connection, and propose a third
party, to get rid of Weissenfels.”-“What
third party, then?”-“Well,
there is young Brandenburg-Culmbach, for example, Heir-Apparent
of Baireuth; Friedrich, a handsome enough young Prince,
just coming home from the Grand Tour, we hear; will
have a fine Territory when his Father dies: age
is suitable; old kinship with the House, all money-quarrels
settled eight or ten years ago: why not him?”-“Excellent!”
said her Majesty; and does suggest him to the King,
in the next Schwedt-Weissenfels onslaught. Friedrich
Wilhelm grumbles an assent, “Well, then:-but I will be passive, observe;
not a GROSCHEN of Dowry, for one thing!-
And this is the first appearance of
the young Margraf Friedrich, Heir-Apparent of Baireuth;
who comes in as a hypothetic figure, at this late
stage;-and will carry off the fair prize,
as is well known. Still only doing the Grand
Tour; little dreaming of the high fortune about to
drop into his mouth. So many wooers, “four
Kings” among them, suing in vain; him, without
suing, the Fates appoint to be the man.
Not a bad young fellow at all, though
no King. Wilhelmina, we shall find, takes charmingly
to him, like a good female soul; regretless of the
Four Kings;-finds her own safe little island
there the prettiest in the world, after such perils
of drowning in stormy seas.-Of his Brandenburg
genealogy, degree of cousinship to Queen Caroline of
England, and to the lately wedded young gentleman of
Anspach Queen Caroline’s Nephew, we shall say
nothing farther, having already spoken of it, and
even drawn an abstruse Diagram of it, [Antea,
vol. v. c.] sufficient for the most genealogical
reader. But in regard to that of the peremptory
“Not a GROSCHEN of Dowry” from Friedrich
Wilhelm (which was but a bark, after all, and proved
the reverse of a bite, from his Majesty), there may
a word of explanation be permissible.
The Ancestor of this Baireuth Prince
Friedrich,-as readers knew once, but doubtless
have forgotten again,-was a Younger Son;
and for six generations so it stood: not till
the Father of this Friedrich was of good age, and
only within these few years, did the Elder branch die
out, and the Younger, in the person of said Father,
succeed to Baireuth. Friedrich’s Grandfather,
as all these progenitors had done, lived poorly, like
Cadets, on apanages and makeshifts.
So that the Young Prince’s Father,
George Friedrich, present incumbent, as we may call
him, of Baireuth, found himself-with a couple
of Brothers he has, whom also we may transiently see
by and by-in very straitened circumstances
in their young years. THEIR Father, son of younger
sons as we saw, was himself poor, and he had Fourteen
of them as family. Now, in old King Friedrich
I.’s time, it became apparent, as the then reigning
Margraf of Baireuth’s children all died soon
after birth, that one of these necessitous Fourteen
was likely to succeed in Baireuth, if they could hold
out. Old King Friedrich thereupon said, “You
have chances of succession; true enough,-but
nobody knows what will become of that. Sell your
chance to me, who am ultimate Heir of all: I
will give you a round sum,-the little ‘Domain
of Weverlingen’ in the Halberstadt Country,
and say ‘Half a Million Thalers;’ there
you can live comfortably, and support your Fourteen
Children,”-“Done,” said
the necessitous Cousin; went to Weverlingen accordingly;
and there lived the rest of his days, till 1708; leaving
his necessitous Fourteen, or about Ten of them that
were alive and growing up, still all minors, and necessitous
enough.
The young men, George Friedrich at
the top of them, kept silence in Weverlingen, and
conformed to Papa; having nothing to live upon elsewhere.
But they had their own thoughts; especially as their
Cousin of Baireuth was more and more likely to die
childless. And at length, being in the Kaiser’s
service as soldiers some of them, and having made
what interest was feasible, they, early in Friedrich
Wilhelm’s reign, burst out. That is to
say, appealed to the REICHSHOFRATH (Imperial Aulic
Council at Vienna; chief Court of the Empire in such
cases); openly protesting there, That their Papa had
no power to make such a bargain, selling their birthright
for immediate pottage; and that, in brief, they would
not stand by it at all;-and summoned Friedrich
Wilhelm to show cause why they should.
Long lawsuit, in consequence; lengthy
law-pleadings, and much parchment and wiggery, in
that German Triple-Elixir of Chancery;-little
to the joy of Friedrich Wilhelm. Friedrich Wilhelm,
from the first, was fairness itself: “Pay
me back the money; and let it be, in all points, as
you say!” answered Friedrich Wilhelm, from the
first. Alas, the money was eaten; how could the
money be paid back? The Reichshofrath dubitatively
shook its wig, for years: “Bargain bad in
Law; but Money clearly repayable: the Money was
and is good;-what shall be done about the
Money!” At length, in 1722, Friedrich Wilhelm,
of himself, settled with this present Margraf, then
Heir-Presumptive, How, by steady slow instalments,
it could be possible, from the revenues of Baireuth,
thriftily administered, to pay back that Half-Million
and odd Thalers; and the now Margraf, ever since his
accession in 1726, has been annually doing it.
So that there is, at this time, nothing but composed
kinship and friendship between the two Courts, the
little and the big: only Friedrich Wilhelm, especially
with his will crossed in this matter of the Baireuth
Marriage, thinks to himself, “Throw more money
into such a gulf? The 600,000 Thalers had better
be got out first!” and says, he will give no
Dowry at all, nor take any charge, not so much as give
away the Bride, but be passive in the matter.
Queen Sophie, delighted to conquer
Grumkow at any rate, is charmed with this notion of
Baireuth; and for a moment forgets all other considerations:
Should England prove slack and fail, what a resource
will Baireuth be, compared with Weissenfels! And
Wilhelmina entering, her Majesty breaks forth into
admiration over the victory, or half-victory, just
gained: What a husband for you this, my dear,
in comparison! And as Wilhelmina cannot quite
join in the rapture on a sudden; and cannot even consent,
unless Papa too give his real countenance to the match,
Mamma flies out upon the poor young Lady: [Wilhelmina,
.] “Take the Grand Turk or the Great Mogul,
then,” said the Queen, “and follow your
own caprice! I should not have brought so many
sorrows on myself, had I known you better. Follow
the King’s bidding, then; it is your own affair.
I will no longer trouble myself about your concerns;-and
spare me, please, the sorrow of your odious presence,
for I cannot stand it!” Wilhelmina wished to
reply, but the answer was, “Silence! Go,
I tell you!” “And I retired all in tears.”
“All in tears.” The
Double-Marriage drifting furiously this long while,
in such a sea as never was; and breakers now Close
a-lee,-have the desperate crew fallen to
staving-in the liquor-casks, and quarrelling with
one another?-Evident one thing is, her Majesty
cannot be considered a perfectly wise Mother!
We shall see what her behavior is, when Wilhelmina
actually weds this respectable young Prince. Ungrateful
creature, to wish Papa’s consent as well as mine!
that is the maternal feeling at this moment; and Wilhelmina
weeps bitterly, as one of the unluckiest of young
Ladies.
Nay, her Brother himself, who is sick
of this permanent hurricane, and would fain see the
end of it at any price, takes Mamma’s part;
and Wilhelmina and he come to high words on the matter.
This was the unkindest cut of all:-but,
of course, this healed in a day. Poor Prince,
he has his own allowance of insults, disgraces, blows;
has just been found out in some plan, or suspicion
of a plan; found out to be in debt at least, and been
half miraculously pardoned;-and, except,
in flight, he still sees no deliverance ahead.
Five days ago, 22d January, 1730, there came out a
Cabinet-Order (summary Act of Parliament, so to speak)
against “lending money to Princes of the Blood,
were it even to the Prince-Royal.” A crime
and misdemeanor, that shall now be; and Forfeiture
of the Money is only part of the penalty, according
to this Cabinet-Order. Rumor is, the Crown-Prince
had purchased a vehicle and appurtenances at Leipzig,
and was for running off. Certainty is, he was
discovered to have borrowed 1,000 Thalers from a certain
moneyed man at Berlin (money made from French scrip,
in Mississippi Law’s time);-which
debt Friedrich Wilhelm instantly paid. “Your
whole debt, then, is that? Tell me the whole!”-“My
whole debt,” answered the Prince; who durst
not own to about 9,000 other Thalers (1,500 pounds)
he has borrowed from other quarters, first and last.
Friedrich Wilhelm saw perhaps some premonition of
flight, or of desperate measures, in this business;
and was unexpectedly mild: paid the 1,000 Thalers
instantly; adding the Cabinet-Order against future
contingencies. [Ranke, ; Forster, &c.] The Prince
was in this humor when he took Mamma’s side,
and redoubled Wilhelmina’s grief.
DOUBLE-MARRIAGE, ON THE EDGE OF SHIPWRECK, FLIES OFF A KIND OF
CARRIER-PIGEON, OR NOAH’S-DOVE, TO ENGLAND, WITH CRY FOR HELP.
Faithful Mamsell Bulow consoles the
Princess: “Wait, I have news that will
put her Majesty in fine humor!”-And
she really proved as good as her word. Her news
is, Dubourgay and Knyphausen, in this extremity of
pinch, have decided to send off not letters merely;
but a speaking Messenger to the English Court.
One Dr. Villa; some kind of “English Chaplain”
here, [Wilhelmina, ; Dubourgay’s Despatch,
28th January, 1730.] whose chief trade is that he
teaches Wilhelmina English; Rev. Dr. Villa, who honors
Wilhelmina as he ought, shall be the man. Is to
go instantly; will explain what the fatal pass we are
reduced to is, and whether Princess Wilhelmina is
the fright some represent her there or not.
Her Majesty is overjoyed to hear it:
who would not be? Her Majesty “writes Letters”
of the due vehemency, thinks Wilhelmina,-dare
not write at all, says Dubourgay;-but loads
Villa with presents, with advices; with her whole
heart speeds him under way. “Dismissed,
turned off for some fault or other-or perhaps
because the Princess knows enough of English?”
so the rumor goes, in Villa’s Berlin circle.
“The Chaplain set out with his
despatches,” says Wilhelmina, who does not name
him, but is rather eloquent upon his errand; “loaded
with presents from the Queen. On taking leave
of me he wept warm tears. He said, saluting in
the English fashion,”-I hope with
bended knee, and the maiden’s fingers at his
lips-“’He would deny his Country,
if it did not do its duty on this occasion.’”
And so hastened forth on his errand. Like a Carrier-Pigeon
sent in extremity;-like Noah’s-Dove
in the Deluge: may he revisit our perishing Ark
with Olive in his bill!