Austrian affairs are not now in their
nadir-point; a long while now since they passed that.
Austria, to all appearance dead, started up, and began
to strike for herself, with some success, the instant
Walpole’s soup-royal (that first 200,000
pounds, followed since by abundance more) got to her
lips. Touched her poor pale lips; and went tingling
through her, like life and fiery elasticity, out of
death by inanition! Cardinal moment, which History
knows, but can never date, except vaguely, some time
in 1741; among the last acts of judicious Walpole.
Austria, thanks to its own Khevenhullers
and its English guineas, was already rising in various
quarters: and now when the Prussian Affair is
settled, Austria springs up everywhere like an elastic
body with the pressure taken from it; mounts steadily,
month after month, in practical success, and in height
of humor in a still higher ratio. And in the
course of the next Two Years rises to a great height
indeed. Here - snatched, who knows with
what difficulty, from that shoreless bottomless slough
of an Austrian-Succession War, deservedly forgotten,
and avoided by extant mankind - are some of
the more essential phenomena, which Friedrich had
to witness in those months. To witness, to scan
with such intense interest, - rightly, at
his peril; - and to interpret as actual “Omens”
for him, as monitions of a most indisputable nature!
No Haruspex, I suppose, with or without “white
beard, and long staff for cutting the Heavenly Vault
into compartments from the zenith downwards,”
could, in Etruria or elsewhere, “watch the flight
of birds, now into this compartment, now into that,”
with stricter scrutiny than, on the new terms, did
this young King from his Potsdam Observatory.
WAR-PHENOMENA IN THE WESTERN PARTS: KING GEORGE TRIES, A SECOND TIME, TO
DRAW HIS SWORD; TUGS AT IT VIOLENTLY, FOR SEVEN MONTHS (February-October, 1742).
“The first phenomenon, cheering
to Austria, is that of the Britannic Majesty again
clutching sword, with evident intent to draw it on
her behalf. [Tindal, x; Old Newspapers; &c.
&c.] Besides his potent soup-royal of Half-Millions
annually, the Britannic Majesty has a considerable
sword, say 40,000, of British and of subsidized; - sword
which costs him a great deal of money to keep by his
side; and a great deal of clamor and insolent gibing
from the Gazetteer species, because he is forced to
keep it strictly in the scabbard hitherto. This
Year, we observe, he has determined again to draw
it, in the Cause of Human Liberty, whatever follow.
From early Spring there were symptoms: Camps
on Lexden and other Heaths, much reviewing in Hyde-Park
and elsewhere; from all corners a universal marching
towards the Kent Coast; the aspects being favorable.
’We can besiege Dunkirk at any rate, cannot
we, your High Mightinesses? Dunkirk, which, by
all the Treaties in existence, ought to need no besieging;
but which, in spite of treatyings innumerable, always
does?’ The High Mightinesses answer nothing
articulate, languidly grumble something in optative
tone; - ’meaning assent,’ thinks
the sanguine mind. ‘Dutch hoistable, after
all!’ thinks he; ‘Dutch will co-operate,
if they saw example set!’ And, in England, the
work of embarking actually begins.
“Britannic Majesty’s purpose,
and even fixed resolve to this effect, had preceded
the Prussian-Austrian Settlement. May 20th, ["9th”
by the Old Newspapers; but we always translate
their o.s.] ’Two regiments of Foot,’ first
poor instalment of British Troops, had actually landed
at Ostend; - news of the Battle of Chotusitz,
much more, of the Austrian-Prussian Settlement, or
Peace of Breslau, would meet them there.
But after that latter auspicious event, things start
into quick and double-quick time; and the Gazetteers
get vocal, almost lyrical: About Howard’s
regiment, Ponsonby’s regiment, all manner of
regiments, off to Flanders, for a stroke of work;
how ’Ligonier’s Dragoons [a set of wild
swearing fellows, whom Guildford is happy to be quit
of] rode through Bromley with their kettle-drums going,
and are this day at Gravesend to take ship;’” - or
to give one other, more specific example:
“Yesterday [3d July, 1742] General
Campbell’s Regiment of Scotch Greys arrived
in the Borough of Southwark, on their march to Dover,
where they are to embark for Flanders. They are
fine hardy fellows, that want no seasoning; and make
an appearance agreeable to all but the innkeepers,” - who
have such billeting to do, of late. [Daily Post,
June 23d (o.s.), 1742.] “Grey Dragoons,”
or Royal Scots-Greys, is the title of this fine Regiment;
and their Colonel is Lieutenant-General John Campbell,
afterwards Duke of Argyle (fourth Duke), Cousin of
the great second Duke of Argyle that now is. [Douglas,
Scotch Peerage (Edinburgh, 1764), .] Visibly
billeting there, in Southwark, with such intentions: - and, by accident, this
Editor knows Twenty of these fine fellows! Twenty or so, who had gone in
one batch as Greys; sons of good Annandale yeomen, otherwise without a career
open: some Two of whom did get back, and lived to be old men; the rumor of
whom, and of their unheard-of adventures, was still lingering in the air, when
this Editor began existence. Pardon, O reader! -
“But, all through those hot
days, it is a universal drumming, kettle-drumming,
coast-ward; preparation of transports at Gravesend,
at the top of one’s velocity. ’All
the coopers in London are in requisition for water-casks,
so that our very brewers have to pause astonished for
want of tubs.’ There is pumping in of water
day and night, Sunday not excepted, then throwing
of it out again [owing to new circumstances]:
250 saddle-horses, and 100 sumpter ditto, for his Majesty’s
own use, - these need a deal of water, never
to speak of Ligonier and the Greys. ’For
the honor of our Country, his Majesty will make a grander
appearance this Campaign than any of his Predecessors
ever did; and as to the magnificence of his equipage,’ - besides
the 350 quadrupeds, ’there are above 100 rich
portmanteaus getting ready with all expedition.’
[Daily Post, September 13th (I.th).] The Fat Boy too [Royal Highness
Duke of Cumberland, one should say] is to go; a most brave-hearted,
flaxen-florid, plump young creature; hopeful Son of Mars, could he once get
experience, which, alas, he never could, though trying it for five-and-twenty
years to come, under huge expense to this Nation! There are to be 16,000
troops, perhaps more; 1,000 sandbags (empty as yet); demolition of Dunkirk the
thing aimed at. If only the Dutch prove hoistable! -
“And so, from May on to September,
it noisily proceeds, at multiplex rates? and often
with more haste than speed: and in such five months
(seven, strictly counted) of clangorous movement and
dead-lift exertion, there were veritably got across,
of Horse and Foot with their equipments, the surprising
number of ‘16,334 men.’ [Adelung,
iii. A, 201.] May 20th it began, - that
is, the embarking began; the noise and babble about
it, which have been incessant ever since, had begun
in February before; - and on September 26th,
Ostend, now almost weary of huzzaing over British
glory by instalment, had the joy of seeing our final
portions of Artillery arrive: Such a Park of Siege-and-Field
Artillery,” exults the Gazetteer, “as” - as
these poor creatures never dreamt of before.
“Magnanimous Lord Stair, already
Plenipotentiary to the Dutch, is to be King’s
General-in-Chief of this fine Enterprise; Carteret,
another Lord of some real brilliancy, and perhaps
of still weightier metal, is head of the Cabinet;
hearty, both of them, for these Anti-French intentions:
and the Public cannot but think, Surely something will
come of it this time? More especially now that
Maillebois, about the middle of August, by a strange
turn of fortune, is swept out of the way. Maillebois,
lying over in Westphalia with his 30 or 40,000, on
‘Check to your King’ this year past, had,
on sight of these Anti-Dunkirk movements, been ordered
to look Dunkirk way, and at length to move thitherward,
for protection of Dunkirk. So that Stair, before
his Dunkirk business, will have to fight Maillebois;
which Stair doubts not may be satisfactorily done.
But behold, in August and earlier, come marvellous
news from the Prag quarter, tragical to France; and
Maillebois is off, at his best speed, in the reverse
direction; on a far other errand!” - Of
which readers shall soon hear enough.
“Dunkirk, therefore, is now
open. With 16,000 British troops, Hanoverians
to the like number, and Hessians 6,000, together near
40,000, not to speak of Dutch at all, surely one might
manage Dunkirk, if not something still better?
It is AFTER Maillebois’s departure that these
dreadful exertions, coopering of water-casks, pumping
all Sunday, go on at Gravesend: ‘Swift,
oh, be swift, while time is!’ And Generalissimo-Plenipotentiary
Stair, who has run over beforehand, is ardent enough
upon the Dutch; his eloquence fiery and incessant:
’Magnanimous High Mightinesses, was there, will
there again be, such a chance? The Cause of Human
Liberty may be secured forever! Dunkirk - or
what is Dunkirk even? Between us and Paris, there
is nothing, now that Maillebois is off on such an
errand! Why should not we play Marlborongh again,
and teach them a little what Invasion means? It
is ourselves alone that can hinder it! Now, I
say, or never!’
“Stair was a pupil of Marlborough’s;
is otherwise a shining kind of man; and has immense
things in his eye, at this time. They say, what
is not unlikely, he proposed an Interview with Friedrich
now at Aachen; would come privately, to ‘take
the waters’ for a day or two, - while
Maillebois was on his new errand, and such a crisis
had risen. But Friedrich, anxious to be neutral
and give no offence, politely waived such honor.
Lord Stair was thought to be something of a General,
in fact as well as in costume; - and perhaps
he was so. And had there been a proper COUNTESS
of Stair, or new Sarah Jennings, - to cover
gently, by art-magic, the Britannic Majesty and Fat
Boy under a tub; and to put Britain, and British Parliament
and resources, into Stair’s hand for a few years, - who
knows what Stair too might have done! A Marlborough
in the War Arts, - perhaps still less in
the Peace ones, if we knew the great Marlborough, - he
could not have been. But there is in him a recognizable
flash of magnanimity, of heroic enterprise and purpose;
which is highly peculiar in that sordid element.
And it can be said of him, as of lightning striking
ineffectual on the Bog of Allen or the Stygian Fens,
that his strength was never tried.” - For
the upshot of him we will wait; not very long.
These are fine prospects, if only
the Dutch prove hoistable. But these are as nothing
to what is passing, and has passed, in the Eastern
Parts, in the Bohemian-Bavarian quarter, since we
were there. Poor Kaiser Karl, what an outlook
for him! His own real Bavaria, much more his imaginary
“Upper Austria” and “Conquests on
the Donau,” after that Segur Adventure, are
plunging headlong. As to his once “Kingdom
of Bohemia,” it has already plunged; nay, the
Army of the Oriflamme is itself near plunging, in
spite of that Pharsalia of a Sahay! Bavaria itself,
we say, is mostly gone to Khevenhuller; Segur with
his French on march homeward, and nothing but Bavarians
left. The Belleisle-Broglio grand Budweis Expedition
is gone totally heels over head; Belleisle and Broglio
are getting, step by step, shut up in Prag and besieged
there: while Maillebois - Let us try whether, by snatching out here a
fragment and there a fragment, with chronological and other appliances, it be
not possible to give readers some conceivable notion of what Friedrich was now
looking at with such interest! -
HOW DUC D’HARCOURT, ADVANCING TO REINFORCE THE ORIFLAMME, HAD TO SPLIT
HIMSELF IN TWO; AND BECOME AN “ARMY OF BAVARIA,” TO LITTLE EFFECT.
The poor Kaiser, who at one time counted
“30,000 Bavarians of his own,” has all
along been ill served by them and the bad Generals
they had: two Generals; both of whom, Minuzzi,
and old Feldmarschall Thorring (Prime Minister
withal), came to a bad reputation in this War.
Beaten nearly always; Thorring quite always, - “like
a DRUM, that Thorring; never heard of except when
beaten,” said the wits! Of such let us not
speak. Understand only, FIRST, that the French,
reasonably soon after that Linz explosion, did, in
such crisis, get reinforcements on the road; a Duc
d’Harcourt with some 25,000 faring forward, in
an intermittent manner, ever since “March 4th.”
And SECONDLY, that Khevenhuller has fast hold of Passau,
the Austrian-Bavarian Key-City; is master of nearly
all Bavaria (of München, and all that lies south
of the Donau); and is now across on the north shore,
wrenching and tugging upon Kelheim and the Ingolstadt-Donauworth
regions, with nothing but Thorring people and small
French Garrisons to hinder him; - where it
will be fatal if he quite prosper; Ingolstadt being
our Place-of-Arms, and House on the Highway, both
for Bavaria and Bohemia!
“For months past, there had
been a gleam of hope for Kaiser Karl, and his new
‘Kingdom of Bohemia,’ and old Electorate
of Bavaria, from the rumor of ’D’Harcourt’s
reinforcement,’ - a 20 or 30,000 new
Frenchmen marching into those parts, in a very detached
intermittent manner; great in the Gazettes. But
it proved a gleam only, and came to nothing effectual.
Poor D’Harcourt, owing to cross orders [Groglio
clamorously demanding that the new force should come
to Prag; Karl Albert the Kaiser, nominally General-in-Chief,
demanding that it should go down the Donau and sweep
his Bavaria clear], was in difficulty. To do either
of these cross orders might have brought some result;
but to half-do both of them, as he was enjoined to
attempt, was not wise! Some half of his force
he did detach towards Broglio; which got to actual
junction, partly before, partly after, that Pharsalia-Sahay
Affair, and raised Broglio to a strength of 24,000, - still
inadequate against Prince Karl. Which done, D’Harcourt
himself went down the Donau, on his original scheme,
with the remainder of his forces, - now likewise
become inadequate. He is to join with Feldmarschall
Thorring in the” - And does it, as
we shall see presently!...
München, 5th MAY. “Rumor
of D’Harcourt had somewhat cleared Bavaria of
Austrians; but the reality of him, in a divided state,
by no means corresponds. Thus München City,
in the last days of April, - D’Harcourt
advancing, terrible as a rumor, - rejoiced
exceedingly to see the Austrians march out, at their
best pace. And the exultant populace even massacred
a loitering Tolpatch or two; who well deserve it, think
the populace, judging by their experience for the
last three months, since Barenklau and Mentzel became
King here. - ’Rumor of D’Harcourt?’
answers Khevenhuller from the Kelheim-Passau
side of things: ’Let us wait for sight
of him, at least!’ And orders München to
be reoccupied. So that, alas, ‘within a
week,’ on the 5th of May, Barenklau is back upon
the poor City; exacts severe vengeance for the Tolpatch
business; and will give them seven months more of
his company, in spite of D’Harcourt, and ‘the
Army of Bavaria’ as he now called himself:” - new
“Army of Bavaria,” when once arrived in
those Countries, and joined with poor Thorring and
the Kaiser’s people there. Such an “Army
of Bavaria,” first and last, as - as
Khevenhuller could have wished it! Under D’Harcourt,
joined with old Feldmarschall Thorring (him whom
men liken to a DRUM, “never heard of except
when beaten"), this is literally the sum of what fighting
it did:
“HILGARTSBERG (Deggendorf Donau-Country),
MAY 28th. D’Harcourt and Thorring, after
junction at Donauworth several weeks ago, and a good
deal of futile marching up and down in those Donau
Countries, - on the left bank, for most part;
Khevenhuller holding stiffly, as usual, by the Inn,
the Iser, and the rivers and countries on the right, - did
at last, being now almost within sight of Passau
and that important valley of the Inn across yonder,
seriously decide to have a stroke at Passau, and
to dislodge Khevenhuller, who is weak in force, though
obstinate. They perceive that there is, on this
left bank, a post in the woods, Castle of Hilgartsberg,
none of the strongest Castles, rather a big Country
Mansion than a Castle, which it will be necessary first
to take. They go accordingly to take it (May
28th, having well laid their heads together the day
before); march through intricate wet forest country,
peat above all abundant; see the Castle of Hilgartsberg
towering aloft, picturesque object in the Donau Valley,
left bank; - are met by cannon-shot, case-shot,
shot of every kind; likewise by Croats apparently
innumerable, by cavalry sabrings and levelled bayonets;
do not behave too well, being excessively astonished;
and are glad to get off again, leaving one of their
guns lodged in the mud, and about a hundred unfortunate
men. [Guerre de Bohême, i-148, 136, &c.]
This quite disgusted D’Harcourt with the Passau
speculation and these grim Khevenhuller outposts.
He straightway took to collecting Magazines; lodging
himself in the attainable Towns thereabouts, Deggendorf
the chief strength for him; and gave up fighting till
perhaps better times might arrive.” We
will wish him good success in the victualling department,
hope to hear no more of him in this History; - and
shall say only that Comte de Saxe, before long, relieves
him of this Bavarian Army; - and will be
seen at the head of it, on a most important business
that rises.
Kaiser Karl begins to have real thoughts
of recalling this Thorring, who is grown so very AUDIBLE,
altogether home; and of appointing Seckendorf instead.
A course which Belleisle has been strongly recommending
for some time. Seckendorf is at present “gathering
meal in the Ober-Pfalz” (Upper Palatinate, road
from Ingolstadt to Eger, to Böhmen generally),
that is, forming Magazines, on the Kaiser’s behalf
there: “Surely a likelier man than your
Thorring!” urges Belleisle always. With
whom the Kaiser does finally comply; nominates Seckendorf
commander, - recalls the invaluable Thorring!
“to his services in our Cabinet Council, which
more befit his great age.” In which safe
post poor Thorring, like a Drum NOT beaten upon, has
thenceforth a silent life of it; Seckendorf fighting
in his stead, - as we shall have to witness,
more or less.
Khevenhuller’s is a changed
posture, since he stood in Vienna, eight or nine months
ago; grimly resolute, drilling his “6,000 of
garrison,” with the wheelbarrows all busy! - But
her Hungarian Majesty’s chief success, which
is now opening into outlooks of a quite triumphant
nature, has been that over the New Oriflamme itself,
the Belleisle-Broglio Army, - most sweet
to her Majesty to triumph over! Shortly after
Chotusitz, shortly after that Pharsalia of a Sahay,
readers remember Belleisle’s fine Project, “Conjoined
attack on Budweis, and sweeping of Bohemia clear;” - readers
saw Belleisle, in the Schloss of Maleschau, 5th June
last, rushing out (with violence to his own wig, says
rumor); hurrying off to Dresden for co-operation; equally
in vain. “Co-operation, M. lé Marechal;
attack on Budweis?” - Here is another Fragment: -
HOW BELLEISLE, RETURNING FROM DRESDEN
WITHOUT CO-OPERATION FOUND THE ATTACK HAD BEEN DONE, - IN
A FATALLY REVERSE WAY. PRAG EXPECTING SIEGE.
COLLOQUY WITH BROGLIO ON THAT INTERESTING POINT.
PRAG BESIEGED.
BUDWEIS, JUNE 4th,-PRAG, JUNE 13th.
“Broglio, ever since that Sahay [which had been
fought so gloriously on Frauenberg’s account],
lay in the Castle of Frauenberg, in and around, - hither
side of the Moldau river, with his Pisek thirty miles
to rear, and judicious outposts all about. There
lay Broglio, meditating the attack on Budweis [were
co-operation once here], - when, contrariwise, altogether on the sudden, Budweis
made attack on Broglio; tumbled him quite topsy-turvy, and sent him home to Prag,
uncertain which end uppermost; rolling like a heap of mown stubble in the wind,
rather than marching like an army!"... Take one glance at him: -
“JUNE 4th, 1742 [day BEFORE
that of Belleisle’s “Wig” at Maleschau,
had Belleisle known it!] - Prince Karl, being
now free of the Prussians, and ready for new work,
issued suddenly from Budweis; suddenly stept across
the Moldau, - by the Bridge of Moldau-Tein,
sweeping away the French that lay there. Prince
Karl swept away this first French Post, by the mere
sight and sound of him; swept away, in like fashion,
the second and all following posts; swept Broglio
himself, almost without shot fired, and in huge flurry,
home to Prag, double-quick, night and day, - with
much loss of baggage, artillery, prisoners, and total
loss of one’s presence of mind. ‘Poor
man, he was born for surprises’ [said Friedrich’s
Doggerel long ago]! Manoeuvred consummately [he
asserts] at different points, behind rivers and the
like; but nowhere could he call halt, and resolutely
stand still. Which undoubtedly he could and should
have done, say Valori and all judges; - nothing
quite immediate being upon him, except the waste-howling
tagraggery of Croats, whom it had been good to quench
a little, before going farther. On the third night,
June 7th, he arrived at Pisek; marched again before
daybreak, leaving a garrison of 1,200, - who
surrendered to Prince Karl next day, without shot fired.
Broglio tumbling on ahead, double-quick, with the tagraggery
of Croats continually worrying at his heels, baggage-wagons
sticking fast, country people massacring all stragglers,
panted home to Prag on the 13th; with ‘the Gross
of the Army saved, don’t you observe!’
And thinks it an excellent retreat, he if no one-else.
[Guerre de Bohême, i, &c.; _ Campagnes,_
(his own Despatch).]
“At Pisek, Prince Karl has ceased
chasing with his regulars, the pace being so uncommonly
swift. From Pisek, Prince Karl struck off towards
Pilsen, there to intercept a residue of Harcourt reinforcements
who were coming that way: from Broglio, who knew
of it, but in such flurry could not mind it, he had
no hindrance; and it was by good luck, not management
of Broglio’s, that these poor reinforcements
did in part get through to him, and in part seek refuge
in Eger again. Broglio has encamped under the
walls of Prag; in a ruinous though still blusterous
condition; his positions all gone; except Prag and
Eger, nothing in Bohemia now his.”
PRAG, 17th JUNE-17th AUGUST.
“It is in this condition that Belleisle, returning
from the Kuttenberg-Dresden mission (June 15th), finds
his Broglio. Most disastrous, Belleisle thinks
it; and nothing but a Siege in Prag lying ahead; though
Broglio is of different opinion, or, blustering about
his late miraculous retreat, and other high merits
too little recognized, forms no opinion at all on
such extraneous points.... From Versailles, they
had answered Belleisle: ’Nothing to be made
of Dresden either, say you? Then go you and take
the command at Prag; send Broglio to command the Bavarian
Army. See, you, what can be done by fighting.’
On this errand Belleisle is come, the heavy-laden man,
and Valori with him, - if, in this black
crisis, Valori could do anything. Valori at least
reports the colloquy the Two Marshals had [one bit
of colloquy, for they had more than one, though as
few as possible; Broglio being altogether blusterous,
sulphurous, difficult to speak with on polite terms].
[Valori, -166; Campagnes, , 124,
&c. &c.] ‘Army of Bavaria?’ answers Broglio;
’I will have those Ten Battalions of the D’Harcourt
reinforcement, then. I tell you, Yes! Prag?
Prag may go to the - What have I to do with
Prag? The oldest Marechal of France, superseded,
after such merits, and on the very heel of such a retreat!
Nay, but where is YOUR commission to command in Prag,
M. lé Marechal?’ Belleisle, in the haste
there was, has no Commission rightly drawn out by
the War-office; only an Order from Court. ’I
have a regular commission, Monseigneur:
I want a Sign-manual before laying it down!’
The unreasonable Broglio.
“Belleisle, tormented with rheumatic
nerves, and of violent temper at any rate, compresses
the immense waste rage that is in him. His answers
to Broglio are calm and low-voiced; admirable to Valori.
One thing he wished to ascertain definitely:
What M. de Broglio’s intentions were; and whether
he would, or would not, go to Bavaria and take charge
there? If so, he shall have all the Cavalry for
escort; Cavalry, unless it be dragoons, will only
eat victual in case of siege. - No, Broglio
will not go with Cavalry; must have those Ten Battalions,
must have Sign-manual; won’t, in short!” - Will
stay, then, thinks Belleisle; and one must try to
drive him, as men do pigs, covertly and by the rule
of contraries, while Prag falls under Siege.
What an outlook for his Most Christian
Majesty’s service, - fatal altogether,
had not Belleisle been a high man, and willing to undertake
pig-driving!... “Discouragement in the Army
is total, were it not for Belleisle; anger against
Broglio very great. The Officers declare openly,
’We will quit, if Broglio continue General!
Our commissions were made out in the name of Marechal
de Belleisle [in the spring of last Year, when he
had such levees, more crowded than the King’s!] - we
are not bound to serve another General!’ - ’You
recognize ME for your General?’ asks Belleisle.
’Yes!’ - ’Then, I bid you
obey M. de Broglio, so long as he is here.’
[Valori, .]...
“JUNE 27th. The Grand-Duke,
Maria Theresa’s Husband, come from Vienna to
take command-in-chief, joins the Austrian main Army
and his Brother Karl, this day: at Konigsaal,
one march to the south of Prag. Friedrich being
now off their hands, why should not they besiege Prag,
capture Prag! Under Khevenhuller, with Barenklau,
and the Mentzels, Trencks, - poor D’Harcourt
merely storing victual, - Bavaria lies safe
enough. And the Oriflamme caged in Prag: - Have
at the Oriflamme!
“Prag is begirdled, straitened
more and more, from this day. Formal Siege to
begin, so soon [as the artillery can come up’
which is not for seven weeks yet]. And so, in
fine, ‘AUGUST 17th, all at once,’ furious
bombardment bursts out, from 36 mortars and above 100
big guns, disposed in batteries around. [Guerre
de Bohême, i, 170.] To which the French,
Belleisle’s high soul animating everything, as
furiously responded; making continual sallies of a
hot desperate nature; especially, on the fifth day
of the siege, one sally [to be mentioned by and by]
which was very famous at Prag and at Paris."...
CONCERNING THE ITALIAN WAR WHICH SIMULTANEOUSLY WENT ON, ALL ALONG.
War in Italy - the Spanish
Termagant very high in her Anti-Pragmatic notions - there
had been, for eight months past; and it went on, fiercely
enough, doggedly enough, on both sides for Six Years
more, till 1748, when the general Finis came.
War of which we propose to say almost nothing; but
must request the reader to imagine it, all along, as
influential on our specific affairs.
The Spanish Termagant wished ardently
to have the Milanese and pertinents, as an Apanage
for her second Infant, Don Philip; a young gentleman
who now needs to be provided for, as Don Carlos had
once done. “Cannot get to be Pope this
one, it appears,” said the fond Mother (who
at one time looked that way for her Infant,):
“Well, here is the Milanese fallen loose!”
Readers know her for a lady of many claims, of illimitable
aspirations; and she went very high on the Pragmatic
Question. “Headship of the Golden Fleece,
Madam; YOU head of it? I say all Austria, German
and Italian, is mine!” - though she
has now magnanimously given up the German part to
Kaiser Karl VII.; and will be content with the Italian,
as an Apanage for Don Philip. And so there is
War in Italy, and will be. To be imagined by us
henceforth.
A War in which these Three Elements
are noticeable as the chief. FIRST, the Sardinian
Majesty, [Charles Emanuel, Victor Amadeus’s Son
(Hubner, : born 27th April, 1701; lived
and reigned till 19th February, 1773 (OErtel, .]
who is very anxious himself for Milanese parings and
additaments; but, except by skilfully playing off-and-on
between the French side and the Austrian, has no chance
of getting any. For Spain he is able to fight;
and also (on good British Subsidies) against Spain.
Element SECOND is the British Navy, cruising always
between Spain and the Seat of War; rendering supplies
by sea impossible, - almost impossible.
THIRD, the Passes of Savoy; wild Alpine chasms, stone-labyrinths;
inexpugnable, with a Sardinian Majesty defending;
which are the one remaining road, for Armies and Supplies,
out of Spain or France.
The Savoy Passes are, in fact, the
gist of the War; the insoluble problem for Don Philip
and the French. By detours, by circuitous effort
and happy accident, your troops may occasionally squeeze
through: but without one secure road open behind
them for supplies and recruitments, what good is it?
Battles there are, behind the Alps, on what we may
call the STAGE itself of this Italian War-theatre;
but the grand steady battle is that of France and
Don Philip, struggling spasmodically, year after year,
to get a road through the COULISSES or side-scenes, - namely,
those Savoy Passes. They try it by this Pass and
by that; Pass of Demont, Pass of Villa-Franca or Montalban
(glorious for France, but futile), Pass of Exilles
or Col d’Assiette (again glorious, again futile
and fatal); sometimes by the way of Nice itself, and
rocky mule-tracks overhanging the sea-edge (British
Naval-cannon playing on them); - and can
by no way do it.
There were fine fightings, in the
interior too, under Generals of mark; General Browne
doing feats, excellent old General Feldmarschall
Traun, of whom we shall hear; Maillebois, Belleisle
the Younger, of whom we have heard. There was
Battle of Campo-Santo, new battle there (Traun’s);
there was Battle of Rottofreddo; of Piacenza (doleful
to Maillebois), - followed by Invasion of
Provence, by Revolt of Genoa and other things:
which all readers have now forgotten. [Two elaborate
works on the subject are said to be instructive to
military readers: Buonamici (who was in it, for
a while). De Bello Italico Commentarii (in Works
of Buonamici, Lyon, 1750); and Pezay, Campagnes
de Maillebois (our Westphalian friend again) en
Italie, 1745-1746 (Paris, 1775).] Readers are
to imagine this Italian War, all along, as a fact very
loud and real at that time, and continually pulsing
over into our German Events (like half-audible thunder
below the horizon, into raging thunder above), little
as we can afford to say of it here. One small
Scene from this Italian War; - one, or with
difficulty two; - and if possible be silent
about all the rest:
SCENE, ROADS OF CADIZ, October, 1741:
BY WHAT ASTONISHING ARTIFICE THIS ITALIAN WAR DID,
AT LENGTH, GET BEGUN.
... “The Spanish Court,
that is, Termagant Elizabeth, who rules everybody
there, being in this humor, was passionate to begin;
and stood ready a good while, indignantly champing
the bit, before the sad preliminary obstacles could
be got over. At Barcelona she had, in the course
of last summer, doubly busy ever since Mollwitz time,
got into equipment some 15,000 men; but could not
by any method get them across, - owing to
the British Fleets, which hung blockading this place
and that; blockading Cadiz especially, where lay her
Transport-ships and War-ships, at this interesting
juncture. Fleury’s cunctations were disgusting
to the ardent mind; and here now, still more insuperable,
are the British Fleets; here - and a pest
to him! - is your Admiral Haddock, blockading
Cadiz, with his Seventy-fours!
“But again, on the other or
Pragmatic side, there were cunctations. The Sardinian
Majesty, Charles Emanuel of Savoy, holding the door
of the Alps, was difficult to bargain with, in spite
of British Subsidies; - stood out for higher
door-fees, a larger slice of the Milanese than could
be granted him; had always one ear open for France,
too; in short, was tedious and capricious, and there
seemed no bringing him to the point of drawing sword
for her Hungarian Majesty. In the end, he was
brought to it, by a stroke of British Art, - such
to the admiring Gazetteer and Diplomatic mind it seemed; - equal
to anything we have since heard of, on the part of
perfidious Albion.
“One day, ‘middle of October
last,’ the Seventy-fours of Haddock and perfidious
Albion, - Spanish official persons, looking
out from Cadiz Light-house, ask themselves, ’Where
are they? Vanished from these waters; not a Seventy-four
of them to be seen!’ - Have got foul
in the underworks, or otherwise some blunder has happened;
and the blockading Fleet of perfidious Albion has
had to quit its post, and run to Gibraltar to refit.
That, I guess, was the Machiavellian stroke of Art
they had done; without investigating Haddock and Company
[as indignant Honorable Members did], I will wager,
That and nothing more!
“In any case, the Termagant,
finding no Seventy-fours there, and the wind good,
despatches swiftly her Transports and War-ships to
Barcelona; swiftly embarks there her 15,000, France
cautiously assisting; and lands them complete, ‘by
the middle of December,’ Haddock feebly opposing,
on the Genoa coast: ‘Have at the Milanese,
my men!’ Which obliges Charles Emanuel to end
his cunctations, and rank at once in defence of that
Country, [Adelung, i, 538 (who believes
in the “stroke of art"): what kind of “art”
it was, learn sufficiently in Gentleman’s
Magazine, &c. of those months.] lest he get no
share of it whatever. And so the game began.
Europe admired, with a shudder, the refined stroke
of art; for in cunning they equal Beelzebub, those
perfidious Islanders; - and are always at
it; hence their greatness in the world. Imitate
them, ye Peoples, if you also would grow great.
That is our Gazetteer Evangel, in this late epoch
of Man’s History."...
OTHER SCENE, BAY OF NAPLES, 19th-20th
August, 1742: KING OF TWO SICILIES (BABY CARLOS
THAT WAS), HAVING BEEN ASSISTING MAMMA, IS OBLIGED
TO BECOME NEUTRAL IN THE ITALIAN WAR.
Readers will transport themselves
to the Bay of Naples, and beautiful Vesuvian scenery
seen from sea. The English-Spanish War, it would
appear, is not quite dead, nor carried on by Jenkins
and the Wapping people alone. Here in this Bay
it blazes out into something of memorability; and
gives lively sign of its existence, among the other
troubles of the world.
“SUNDAY, AUGUST 19th, Commodore
Martin, who had arrived overnight, appears in the
Bay, with due modicum of seventy-fours, ’dursley
galleys,’ bomb-vessels, on an errand from his
Admiral [one Matthews] and the Britannic Majesty,
much to the astonishment of Naples. Commodore
Martin hovers about, all morning, and at 4 P.M. drops
anchor, - within shot of the place, fearfully
near; - and therefrom sends ashore a Message:
’That his Sicilian Majesty [Baby Carlos, our
notable old friend, who is said to be a sovereign
of merit otherwise], has not been neutral, in this
Italian War, as his engagements bore; but has joined
his force to that of the Spaniards, declared enemies
of his Britannic Majesty; which rash step his Britannic
Majesty hereby requires him to retract, if painful
consequences are not at once to ensue!’ That
is Martin’s message; to which he stands doggedly,
without variation, in the extreme flutter and multifarious
reasoning of the poor Court of Naples: ‘Recall
your 20,000 men, and keep them recalled,’ persists
Martin; and furthermore at last, as the reasoning
threatens to get lengthy: ’Your answer
is required within one hour,’ - and
lays his watch on the Cabin-table.
“The Court, thrown into transcendent
tremor, with no resource but either to be burnt or
comply, answers within the hour: ‘Yes:
in all points.’ Some eight hours or so
of reasoning: deep in the night of Sunday, it
is all over; everything preparing to get signed and
sealed; ships making ready to sail again; - and
on Tuesday at sunrise, there is no Martin there.
Martin, to the last top-gallant, has vanished clean
over the horizon; never to be seen again, though long
remembered. [Tindal’s Rapin, x
(MISdates, and is altogether indistinct); Gentleman’s
Magazine, xi: - CAME, “Sunday
morning, 19th August, n.s.;” “anchored
about 4 p.m.;” “2 a.m. of 20th” all
agreed; King Carlos’s LETTER is GOT, ships prepared
for sailing; - sail that night, and to-morrow,
21st, are out of sight.] One wonders, Were Pipes and
Hatchway perhaps there, in Martin’s squadron?
In what station Commodore Trunnion did then serve
in the British Navy? Vanished ghosts of grim mute
sea-kings, there is no record of them but what is itself
a kind of ghost! Ghost, or symbolical phantasm,
from the brain of that Tobias Smollett; an assistant
Surgeon, who served in the body along with them, his
singular value altogether unknown.” - King
Carlos’s Neutrality, obtained in this manner,
lasted for a year-and-half; a sensible alleviation
to her Hungarian Majesty for the time. We here
quit the Italian War; leaving it to the reader’s
fancy, on the above terms. .......
THE SIEGE OF PRAG CONTIMES. A GRAND SALLY THERE.
“PRAG, 22d AUGUST. In the same
hours, while Martin lay coercing Naples, the Army
of the Oriflamme in Prag City was engaged in ’furious
sallies;’” - readers may divine
what that means for Prag and the Oriflamme!
“Prag is begirdled, bombarded
from all the Wischerads, Ziscabergs and Hill environments;
every avenue blocked, ’above 60,000 Austrians
round it, near 40,000 of them regulars:’
a place difficult to defend; but with excellent arrangements
for defence on Belleisle’s part, and the garrison
with its blood up. Garrison makes continual furious
sallies, - which are eminently successful,
say the French Newspapers; but which end, as all sallies
do, in returning home again, without conquest, except
of honor; - and on this Wednesday, 22d August,
comes out with the greatest sally of all. [Campagnes,
v; Guerre de Bohême, i.] While Commodore
Martin, many a Pipes and Hatchway standing grimly on
the watch unknown to us, is steering towards Matthews
and the Toulon waters again. The equal sun looking
down on all.
“It was about twelve o’clock,
when this Prag sally, now all in order, broke out,
several thousand strong, and all at the white heat,
now a constant temperature. Sally almost equal
to that Pharsalia of a Sahay, it would seem; - concerning
which we can spend no word in this brief summary.
Fierce fighting, fiery irresistible onslaught; but
it went too far, lost all its captured cannon again;
and returned only with laurels and a heavy account
of killed and wounded, - the leader of it
being himself carried home in a very bleeding state.
’Oh, the incomparable troops!’ cried Paris; - cried
Voltaire withal (as I gather), and in very high company,
in that Visit at Aachen. A sally glorious, but
useless.
“The Imperial Generals were
just sitting down to dinner, when it broke out; had
intended a Council of War, over their wine, in the
Grand-Duke’s tent: ‘What, won’t
they let us have our dinner!’ cried Prince Karl,
in petulant humor, struggling to be mirthful.
He rather likes his dinner, this Prince Karl, I am
told, and does not object to his wine: otherwise
a hearty, talky, free-and-easy Prince, - ’black
shallow-set eyes, face red, and much marked with small-pox.’
Clapping on his hat, faculties sharpened by hunger
and impatience, let him do his best, for several hours
to come, till the sally abate and go its ways again.
Leaving its cannon, and trophies. No sally could
hope to rout 60,000 men; this furious sally, almost
equal to Sahay, had to return home again, on the above
terms. Upon which Prince Karl and the others got
some snatch of dinner; and the inexorable pressure
of Siege, tightening itself closer and closer, went
on as before.
“The eyes of all Europe are
turned towards Prag; a big crisis clearly preparing
itself there.... France, or aid in France, is
some 500 miles away. In D’Harcourt, merely
gathering magazines, with his Khevenhuller near, is
no help; help, not the question there! The garrison
of Eger, 100 miles to west of us, across the Mountains,
barely mans its own works. Other strong post,
or support of any kind in these countries, we have
now none. We are 24,000; and of available resource
have the Magazines in Prag, and our own right hands.
“The flower of the young Nobility
had marched in that Oriflamme; - now standing
at bay, they and it, in Prag yonder: French honor
itself seems shut up there! The thought of it
agitates bitterly the days and nights of old Fleury,
who is towards ninety now, and always disliked war.
The French public too, - we can fancy what
a public! The young Nobility in Prag has its
spokes-men, and spokes-women, at Versailles, whose
complaint waxes louder, shriller; the whole world,
excited by rumor of those furious sallies, is getting
shrill and loud. What can old Fleury do but order
Maillebois: ’Leave Dunkirk to its own luck;
march immediately for relief of Prag!’ And Maillebois
is already on march; his various divisions (August
9th-20th) crossing the Rhine, in Dusseldorf Country;” - of
whom we shall hear.
... “Some time before the
actual Bombardment, Fleury, seeing it inevitable,
had ordered Belleisle to treat. Belleisle accordingly
had an interview, almost two interviews, with Konigseck.
[Guerre de Bohême, i ("2d July”
the actual interview); i (the corollary to it,
confirmatory of it, which passed by letters).] ’Liberty
to march home, and equitable Peace-Negotiations in
the rear?’ proposed Belleisle. ‘Absolute
surrender; Prisoners of War!’ answered Konigseck;
’such is her Hungarian Majesty’s positive
order and ultimatum.’ The high Belleisle
responded nothing unpolite; merely some, ‘ALORS,
MONSIEUR !’ And rode back to Prag,
with a spirit all in white heat; - gradually
heating all the 24,000 white, and keeping them so.
“In fact, Belleisle, a high-flown
lion reduced to silence and now standing at bay, much
distinguishes himself in this Siege; which, for his
sake, is still worth a moment’s memory from mankind.
He gathers himself into iron stoicism, into concentration
of endeavor; suffers all things, Broglio’s domineering
in the first place; as if his own thin skin were that
of a rhinoceros; and is prepared to dare all things.
Like an excellent soldier, like an excellent citizen.
He contrives, arranges; leads, covertly drives the
domineering Broglio, by rule of contraries or otherwise,
according to the nature of the beast; animates all
men by his laconic words; by his silences, which are
still more emphatic.... Sechelles, provident
of the future, has laid in immense supplies of indifferent
biscuit; beef was not attainable: Belleisle dismounts
his 4,000 cavalry, all but 400 dragoons; slaughters
160 horses per day, and boils the same by way of butcher’s-meat,
to keep the soldier in heart. It is his own fare,
and Broglio’s, to serve as example. At Broglio’s
quarter, there is a kind of ordinary of horse-flesh:
Officers come in, silent speed looking through their
eyes; cut a morsel of the boiled provender, break
a bad biscuit, pour one glass of indifferent wine;
and eat, hardly sitting the while, in such haste to
be at the ramparts again. The 80,000 Townsfolk,
except some Jews, are against them to a man.
Belleisle cares for everything: there is strict
charge on his soldiers to observe discipline, observe
civility to the Townsfolk; there is occasional ‘hanging
of a Prag Butcher’ or so, convicted of spyship,
but the minimum of that, we will hope.”
MAILLEBOIS MARCHES, WITH AN “ARMY
OF REDEMPTION” OR “OF MATHURINS”
(WITTILY SO CALLED), TO RELIEVE PRAG; REACHES THE BOHEMIAN
FRONTIER, JOINED BY THE COMTE DE SAXE; ABOVE 50,000
STRONG (August 9th-September 19th).
Maillebois has some 40,000 men:
ahead of him 600 miles of difficult way; rainy season
come, days shortening; uncertain staff of bread ("Seckendorf’s
meal,” and what other commissariat there may
be): a difficult march, to Amberg Country and
the top of the Ober-Pfalz. After which are Mountain-passes;
Bohemian Forest: and the Event ? “Cannot
be dubious!” thinks France, whatever Maillebois
think. Witty Paris, loving its timely joke, calls
him Army of Redemption, “L’ARMEE DES
MATHURINS,” - a kind of Priests, whose
business is commonly in Barbary, about Christian bondage: - how
sprightly! And yet the enthusiasm was great:
young Princes of the Blood longing to be off as volunteers,
needing strict prohibition by the King; - upon
which, Prince de Conti, gallant young fellow, leaving
his wife, his mistress, and miraculously borrowing
2,500 pounds for equipments, rushed off furtively by
post; and did join, and do his best. Was reprimanded,
clapt in arrest for three days; but afterwards promoted;
and came to some distinction in these Wars. [Barbier,
i (that of Conti, i; Adelung, &c.]
The March goes continually southeast;
by Frankfurt, thence towards Nürnberg Country
("be at Furth, September 6th"), and the skirts of the
Pine-Mountains (FICHTEL-GEBIRGE), - Anspach
and Baireuth well to your left; - end, lastly,
in the OBER-PFALZ (Upper Palatinate), Town of Amberg
there. Before trying the Bohemian Passes, you
shall have reinforcement. Best part of the “Bavarian
Army,” now under Comte de Saxe, not under D’Harcourt
farther, is to cease collecting victual in the Donau-Iser
Countries (Deggendorf, north bank of Donau, its head-quarter);
and to get on march, - circling very wide,
not northward, but by the Donan, and even by the SOUTH,
bank of it mainly (to avoid the hungry Mountains and
their Tolpatcheries), - and, at Amberg, is
to join Maillebois. This is a wide-lying game.
The great Marlborough used to play
such, and win; making the wide elements, the times
and the spaces, hit with exactitude: but a Maillebois?"He
is called by the Parisians, ’VIEUX PETIT-MAITRE
(dandy of sixty,’ so to speak); has a poor upturned
nose, with baboon-face to match, which he even helps
by paint."... Here is one Scene; at Frankfurt-on-Mayn;
fact certain, day not given.
FRANKFURT, “LATTER END OF AUGUST,”
1742. “At Frankfurt, his Army having got
into the neighborhood,” - not into Frankfurt
itself, which, as a REICHS-STADT, is sacred from Armies
and their marchings, - “Marechal de
Maillebois, as in duty bound, waited on the Kaiser
to pay his compliments there: on which occasion,
we regret to say, Marechal de Maillebois was not so
reverent to the Imperial Majesty as he should have
been. Angry belike at the Adventure now forced
on him, and harassed with many things; seeing in the
Imperial Majesty little but an unfortunate Play-actor
Majesty, who lives in furnished lodgings paid for by
France, and gives France and Maillebois an infinite
deal of trouble to little purpose. Certain it
is, he addressed the Imperial Majesty in the most
free-and-easy manner; very much the reverse of being
dashed by the sacred Presence: and his Officers
in the ante-chamber, crowding about, all day, for
presentation to the Imperial Majesty, made a noise,
and kept up a babble of talk and laughter, as if it
had been a mess-room, instead of the Forecourt of
Imperial Majesty. So that Imperial Majesty, barely
master of its temper and able to finish without explosion,
signified to Maillebois on the morrow, That henceforth
it would dispense with such visits, Poor Imperial
Majesty; a human creature doing Play-actorisms of
too high a flight. He had the finest Palace in
Germany; a wonder to the Great Gustavus long ago:
and now he has it not; mere Meutzels and horrent shaggy
creatures rule in München and it: and the
Imperial quasi-furnished lodgings are respected in
this manner!” [Van Loon, Kleine Schriften,
i (cited in Buchholz, i. CAMPAGNES
is silent; usually suppressing scenes of that kind.] - The
wits say of him, “He would be Kaiser or Nothing:
see you, he is Kaiser and Nothing!” ["Aut
nihil aut Cæsar, Bavarus Dux esse volebat; Et nihil
et Cæsar factus utrumque simul." (Barbier, i.)]...
AUGUST 19th-SEPTEMBER 14th. “Comte
de Saxe is on march, from Deggendorf; north bank of
the Donau, by narrow mountain roads; then crosses the
Donau to south bank, and a plain country; - making
large circuit, keeping the River on his right, - to
meet Maillebois at Amberg; his force, some 10 or 12,000
men. Seckendorf, now Bavarian Commander-in-chief,
accompanies Saxe; with considerable Bavarian force,
guess 20,000, ‘marching always on the left.’
Accompanies; but only to Regensburg, to Stadt-am-Hof,
a Suburb of Regensburg, where they cross the Donau
again.” - SUBURB of Regensburg, mark
that; Regensburg itself being a Reichs-Stadt, very
particularly sacred from War; - the very Reichs-DIET
commonly sitting here; though it has gone to Frankfurt
lately, to be with its Kaiser, and out of these continual
trumpetings and tumults close by. [Went 10th May,
1742, - after three months’ arguing
and protesting on the Austrian part (Adelung,
iii. A, 102, 138).] - “At Regensburg,
once across, Seckendorf with his Bavarians calls halt;
plants himself down in Kelheim, Ingolstadt, and the
safe Garrisons thereabouts, - calculates
that, if Khevenhuller should be called away Prag-ward,
there may be a stroke do-able in these parts.
Saxe marches on; straight northward now, up the Valley
of the Naab; obliged to be a good deal on his guard.
Mischievous Tolpatcheries and Trencks, ever since
he crossed the Donau again, have escorted him, to right,
as close as they durst; dashing out sometimes on the
magazines.” One of the exploits they had
done, take only one: - in their road TOWARDS Saxe, a few days ago: -
... “SEPTEMBER 7th, Trenck
with his Tolpatcheries had appeared at Cham, - a
fine trading Town on the hither or neutral side of
the mountains [not in Böhmen, but in Ober-Pfalz,
old Kur-Pfalz’s country, whom the Austrians
hate]; - and summoning and assaulting Cham,
over the throat of all law, had by fire and by massacre
annihilated the same. [Adelung, iii A, 258; Guerre
de Bohême; &c.] Fact horrible, nearly incredible;
but true. The noise of which is now loud everywhere.
Less lovely individual than this Trenck [Pandour Trenck,
Cousin of the Prussian one,] there was not, since
the days of Attila and Genghis, in any War. Blusters
abominably, too; has written [save the mark!] an ’AUTOBIOGRAPHY,’ - having
happily afterwards, in Prison and even in Bedlam,
time for such a Work; - which is stuffed with
sanguinary lies and exaggerations: unbeautifulest
of human souls. Has a face the color of indigo,
too; - got it, plundering in an Apothecary’s
[in this same country, if I recollect]: ‘ACH
GOTT, your Grace, nothing of money here!’
said the poor Apothecary, accompanying Colonel Trenck
with a lighted candle over house and shop. Trenck,
noticing one likely thing, snatched the candle, held
it nearer: - likely thing proved gunpowder;
and Trenck, till Doomsday, continues deep blue. [Guerre
de Bohême.] Soul more worthy of damnation I have
seldom known.”
“SEPTEMBER 19th (five days after
dropping Seckendorf), Saxe actually gets joined with
Maillebois; - not quite at Amberg, but at
Vohenstrauss, in that same Sulzbach Country, a forty
miles to eastward, or Prag-ward, of Amberg. Maillebois
and he conjoined are between 50 and 60,000. They
are got now to the Bohemian Boundary, edge of the Bohemian
Forest (big BOHMISCHE WALD, Mountainous woody Country,
70 miles long); they are within 60 miles of Pilsen,
within 100 of Prag itself, - if they can cross
the Forest. Which may be difficult.”
PRINCE KARL AND THE GRAND-DUKE, HEARING
OF MAILLEBOIS, GO TO MEET HIM (September 14th); AND
THE SIEGE OF PRAG IS RAISED.
“SEPTEMBER llth, the Besieged
at Prag notice that the Austrian fire slackens; that
the Enemy seems to be taking away his guns. Villages
and Farmsteads, far and wide all round, are going up
in fire. A joyful symptom: - since August
13th, Belleisle has known of Maillebois’s advent;
guesses that the Austrians now know it. - SEPTEMBER
14th, their Firing has quite ceased. Grand-Duke
and Prince Karl are off to meet this Maillebois, amid
the intricate defiles, ’Better meet him there
than here:’ - and on this fourth morning,
Belleisle, looking out, perceives that the Siege is
raised. [Espagnac, ; Campagnes, .]
“A blessed change indeed.
No enemy here, - perhaps some Festititz, with
his canaille of Tolpatches, still lingering about, - no
enemy worth mention. Parties go out freely to
investigate: - but as to forage? Alas,
a Country burnt, Villages black and silent for ten
miles round; - you pick up here and there
a lean steer, welcome amid boiled horse-flesh; you
bundle a load or two of neglected grass together, for
what cavalry remains. The genius of Sechelles,
and help from the Saxon side, will be much useful!
“Perhaps the undeniablest advantage
of any is this, That Broglio, not now so proud of
the situation Prag is in, or led by the rule of contraries,
willingly quits Prag: Belleisle will not have
to do his function by the medium of pig-driving, but
in the direct manner henceforth. ’Give
me 6 or 8,000 foot, and what of the cavalry have horses
still uneaten,’ proposes Broglio; ’I will
push obliquely towards Eger, - which is towards
Saxony withal, and opens our food-communications there: - I
will stretch out a hand to Maillebois, across the Mountain
Passes; and thus bring a victorious issue!’ [Espagnac,
.] Belleisle consents: ’Well, since
my Broglio will have it so!’ - glad
to part with my Broglio at any rate, - ’Adieu,
then, M. lé Marechal (and,’ SOTTO VOCE,
‘may it be long before we meet again in partnership)!’
Broglio marches accordingly (’hand’ beautifully
held out to Maillebois, but NOT within grasping distance);
gets northwestward some 60 miles, as far as Toplitz
[sadly oblique for Eger], - never farther
on that errand.”
THE MAILLEBOIS ARMY OF REDEMPTION CANNOT REDEEM AT ALL; - HAS TO STAGGER
SOUTHWARD AGAIN; AND BECOMES AN “ARMY OF BAVARIA,” UNDER BROGLIO.
“SEPTEMBER 19th-OCTOBER 10th,,’ - Scene
is, the Eger-VohenStrauss Country, in and about that
Bohemian Forest of seventy miles. - “For
three weeks, Maillebois and the Comte de Saxe, trying
their utmost, cannot, or cannot to purpose, get through
that Bohemian Wood. Only Three practicable Passes
in it; difficult each, and each conducting you towards
more new difficulties, on the farther side; - not
surmountable except by the determined mind. A
gloomy business: a gloomy difficult region, solitary,
hungry; nothing in it but shaggy chasms (and perhaps
Tolpatchery lurking), wastes, mountain woodlands, dumb
trees, damp brown leaves. Maillebois and Saxe,
after survey, shoot leftwards to Eger; draw food and
reinforcement from the Garrison there. They do
get through the Forest, at one Pass, the Pass nearest
Eger; - but find Prince Karl and the Grand-Duke
ranked to receive them on the other side. ’Plunge
home upon Prince Karl and the Grand-Duke; beat them,
with your Broglio to help in the rear?’ That
possibly was Friedrich’s thought as he watched
[now home at Berlin again] the contemporaneous Theatre
of War.
“But that was not the Maillebois-Broglio
method; - nay, it is said Maillebois was
privately forbidden ‘to run risks.’
Broglio, with his stretched-out hand (12,000 some
count him, and indeed it is no matter), sits quiet
at Toplitz, far too oblique: ‘Come then,
come, O Maillebois!’ Maillebois, - manoeuvring
Prince Karl aside, or Hunger doing it for him, - did
once push forward Prag-ward, by the Pass of Caaden;
which is very oblique to Toplitz. By the Pass
of Caaden, - down the Eger River, through
those Mountains of the Circle of Saatz, past a Castle
of Ellenbogen, key of the same; - and ’Could
have done it [he said always after], had it not been
for Comte de Saxe!’ Undeniable it is, Saxe, as
vanguard, took that Castle of Ellenbogen; and, time
being so precious, gave the Tolpatchery dismissal
on parole. Undeniable, too, the Tolpatchery,
careless of parole, beset Caaden Village thereupon,
4,000 strong; cut off our foreposts, at Caaden Village;
and - In short, we had to retire from those
parts; and prove an Army of Redemption that could
not redeem at all!
“Maillebois and Saxe wend sulkily
down the Naab Valley (having lost, say 15,000, not
by fighting, but by mud and hardship); and the rapt
European Public (shilling-gallery especially) says,
with a sneer on its face, ‘Pooh; ended, then!’
Sulkily wending, Maillebois and Saxe (October 30th-November
7th) get across the Donau, safe on the southern bank
again; march for the Iser Country and the D’Harcourt
Magazines, - and become ‘Grand Bavarian
Army,’ usual refuge of the unlucky."...
OF SECKENDORF IN THE INTERIM.
“For Belleisle and relief of Prag, Maillebois
in person had proved futile; but to Seckendorf, waiting
with his Bavarians, the shadow and rumor of Maillebois
had brought famous results, - famous for
a few weeks. Khevenhuller being called north to
help in those Anti-Maillebois operations, and only
Barenklau with about 10,000 Austrians now remaining
in Baiern, Seckendorf, clearly superior (not to speak
of that remnant of D’Harcourt people, with their
magazines), promptly bestirred himself, in the Kelheim-Ingolstadt
Country; got on march; and drove the Austrians mostly
out of Baiern. Out mostly, and without stroke
of sword, merely by marching; out for the time.
München was evacuated, on rumor of Seckendorf
(October 4th): a glad City to see Barenklau march
off. Much was evacuated, - the Iser
Valley, down partly to the Inn Valley, - much
was cleared, by Seckendorf in these happy circumstances.
Who sees himself victorious, for once; and has his
fame in the Gazettes, if it would last. Pretty
much without stroke of sword, we say, and merely by
marching: in one place, having marched too close,
the retreating Barenklau people turned on him, ’took
100 prisoners’ before going; [Espagnac, .] - other
fighting, in this line ‘Reconquest of Bavaria,’
I do not recollect. Winter come, he makes for
Maillebois and the Iser Countries; cantons himself
on the Upper Inn itself, well in advance of the French
[Braunau his chief strong-place, if readers care to
look on the Map]; and strives to expect a combined
seizure of Passau, and considerable things, were
Spring come."...
AND OF BROGLIO IN THE INTERIM.
“As for Broglio, left alone at Toplitz, gazing
after a futile Maillebois, he sends the better half
of his Force back to Prag; other half he establishes
at Leitmeritz: good halfway-house to Dresden.
’Will forward Saxon provender to you, M. de
Belleisle!’ (never did, and were all taken prisoners
some weeks hence). Which settled, Broglio proceeded
to the Saxon Court; who answered him: ’Provender?
Alas, Monseigneur! We are (to confess it
to you!) at Peace with Austria: [Treatying ever
since “July 17th;” Treaty actually done,
“11th September”) (Adelung, iii.
A, 201, 268).] not an ounce of provender possible;
how dare we?’ - but were otherwise politeness
itself to the great Broglio. Great Broglio, after
sumptuous entertainments there, takes the road for
Baiern; circling grandly (’through Nürnberg
with escort of 500 Horse’) to Maillebois’s
new quarters; - takes command of the ‘Bavarian
Army’ (may it be lucky for him!); and sends Maillebois
home, in deep dudgeon, to the merciless criticisms
of men. ’Could have done it,’ persists
the VIEUX PETIT-MAITRE always, ’had not’ - one knows what, but cares
not, at this date! -
“Broglio’s quarters in
the Iser Country, I am told, are fatally too crowded,
men perishing at a frightful rate per day. [Espagnac,
.] ‘Things all awry here, - thanks
to that Maillebois and others!’ And Broglio’s
troubles and procedures, as is everywhere usual to
Broglio, run to a great height in this Bavarian Command.
And poor Seckendorf, in neighborhood of such a Broglio,
has his adoes; eyes sparkling; face blushing slate-color;
at times nearly driven out of his wits; - but
strives to consume his own smoke, and to have hopes
on Passau notwithstanding.” - And
of Belleisle in Prag, and his meditations on the Oriflamme? - Patience,
reader.
Meantime, what a relief to Kaiser
Karl, in such wreck of Bohemian Kingdoms and Castles
in Spain, to have got his own München and Country
in hand again; with the prospect of quitting furnished-lodgings,
and seeing the color of real money! April next,
he actually goes to München, where we catch a
glimpse of him. ["17th April, 1743,” Montijos
&c. accompanying (Adelung, iii. B, 119,
120).] This same October, the Reich, after endless
debatings on the question, “Help our Kaiser,
or not help?” [Ib. iii A, 289.] has voted him
fifty ROMER-MONATE ("Romish-months,” still so
termed, though there is NOT now any marching of the
Kaiser to Rome on business); meaning fifty of the
known QUOTAS, due from all and sundry in such case, - which
would amount to about 300,000 pounds (could it, or
the half of it, be collected from so wide a Parish),
and would prove a sensible relief to the poor man.
VOLTAIRE HAS BEEN ON VISIT AT AACHEN, IN THE INTERIM, - HIS THIRD VISIT
TO KING FRIEDRICH.
King Friedrich had come to the Baths
of Aachen, August 25th; the Maillebois Army of Redemption
being then, to the last man of it, five days across
the Rhine on its high errand, which has since proved
futile. Friedrich left Aachen, taking leave of
his Voltaire, who had been lodging with him for a
week by special invitation, September 9th; and witnessed
the later struggles and final inability of Maillebois
to redeem, not at Aix, but at Berlin, amid the ordinary
course of his employments there. We promised
something of Voltaire’s new visit, his Third
to Friedrich. Here is what little we have, - if
the lively reader will exert his fancy on it.
Voltaire and his Du Chatelet had been
to Cirey, and thence been at Paris through this Spring
and Summer, 1742; - engaged in what to Voltaire
and Paris was a great thing, though a pacific one:
The getting of MAHOMET brought upon the boards.
August 9th, precisely while the first vanguard of
the Army of Redemption got across the Rhine at Dusseldorf,
Voltaire’s Tragedy of MAHOMET came on the stage.
August 9th, llth, 13th, Paris City
was in transports of various kinds; never were such
crowds of Audience, lifting a man to the immortal
gods, - though a part too, majority by count
of heads, were dragging him to Tartarus again.
“Exquisite, unparalleled!” exclaimed good
judges (as Fleury himself had anticipated, on examining
the Piece): - “Infamous, irreligious,
accursed!” vociferously exclaimed the bad judges;
Reverend Desfontaines (of Sodom, so Voltaire persists
to define him), Reverend Desfontaines and others giving
cue; hugely vociferous, these latter, hugely in majority
by count of heads. And there was such a bellowing
and such a shrieking, judicious Fleury, or Maurepas
under him, had to suggest, “Let an actor fall
sick; let M. de Voltaire volunteer to withdraw his
Piece; otherwise !” And so it had to be:
Actor fell sick on the 14th (Playbills sorry to retract
their MAHOMET on the 14th); and - in fact,
it was not for nine years coming, and after Dedication
to the Pope, and other exquisite manoeuvres and unexpected
turns of fate, that MAHOMET could be acted a fourth
time in Paris, and thereafter AD LIBITUM down to this
day. [OEuvres de Voltaire, i n.; &c. &c.]
Such tempest in a teapot is not unexampled,
nay rather is very frequent, in that Anarchic Republic
called of Letters. Confess, reader, that you
too would have needed some patience in M. de Voltaire’s
place; with such a Heaven’s own Inspiration
of a MAHOMET in your hands, and such a terrestrial
Doggery at your heels. Suppose the bitterest of
your barking curs were a Reverend Desfontaines of
Sodom, whom you yourself had saved from the gibbet
once, and again and again from starving? It is
positively a great Anarchy, and Fountain of Anarchies,
all that, if you will consider; and it will have results
under the sun. You cannot help it, say you; there
is no shutting up of a Reverend Desfontaines, which
would be so salutary to himself and to us all?
No: - and when human reverence (daily going,
in such ways) is quite gone from the world; and your
lowest blockhead and scoundrel (usually one entity)
shall have perfect freedom to spit in the face of
your highest sage and hero, - what a remarkably
Free World shall we be!
Voltaire, keeping good silence as
to all this, and minded for Brussels again, receives
the King of Prussia’s invitation; lays it at
his Eminency Fleury’s feet; will not accept,
unless his Eminency and my own King of France (possibly
to their advantage, if one might hint such a thing!)
will permit it. [Ib. lxxi (Letter to Fleury,
“Paris, Aud").] “By all means; go,
and” - The rest is in dumb-show; meaning,
“Try to pump him for us!” Under such omens,
Voltaire and his divine Emilie return to their Honsbruck
Lawsuit: “Silent Brussels, how preferable
to Paris and its mad cries!” Voltaire, leaving
the divine Emilie at Brussels, September 2d, sets
out for Aix, - Aix attainable within the
day. He is back at Brussels late in the evening,
September 9th: - how he had fared, and what extent of pumping there was, learn
from the following Excerpts, which are all dated the morrow after his return: -
THREE LETTERS OF VOLTAIRE, DATED BRUSSELS,
10th SEP.
1. TO CIDEVILLE (the Rouen Advocate,
who has sometimes troubled us).... “I have
been to see the King of Prussia since I began this
Letter [beginning of it dates September 1st].
I have courageously resisted his fine proposals.
He offers me a beautiful House in Berlin, a pretty
Estate; but I prefer my second-floor in Madame du Chatelet’s
here. He assures me of his favor, of the perfect
freedom I should have; - and I am running
to Paris [did not just yet run] to my slavery and persecution.
I could fancy myself a small Athenian, refusing the
bounties of the King of Persia. With this difference,
however, one had liberty [not slavery] at Athens;
and I am sure there were many Cidevilles there, instead
of one,” - HELAS, my Cideville!
2. TO MARQUIS D’ARGENSON
(worthy official Gentleman, not War-Minister now or
afterwards; War-Minister’s senior brother, - Voltaire’s
old school-fellows, both these brothers, in the College
of Louis lé Grand).... “I have
just been to see the King of Prussia in these late
days [in fact, quitted him only yesterday; both of
us, after a week together, leaving Aix yesterday]:
I have seen him as one seldom sees Kings, - much
at my ease, in my own room, in the chimney-nook, whither
the same man who has gained two Battles would come
and talk familiarly, as Scipio did with Terence.
You will tell me, I am not Terence; true, but neither
is he altogether Scipio.
“I learned some extraordinary
things,” - things not from Friedrich
at all: mere dinner-table rumors; about the 16,000
English landing here ("18,000” he calls them,
and farther on, “20,000”) with the other
16,000 PLUS 6,000 of Hanoverian-Hessian sort, expecting
20,000 Dutch to join them, - who perhaps
will not? “M. de Neipperg [Governor of Luxemburg
now] is come hither to Brussels; but brings no Dutch
troops with him, as he had hoped,” - Dutch
perhaps won’t rise, after all this flogging and
hoisting?” Perhaps we may soon get a useful and
glorious Peace, in spite of my Lord Stair, and of
M. van Haren, the Tyrtaeus of the States-General [famed
Van Haren, eyes in a fine Dutch frenzy rolling, whose
Cause-of-Liberty verses let no man inquire after]:
Stair prints Memoirs, Van Haren makes Odes; and with
so much prose and so much verse, perhaps their High
and Slow Mightinesses [Excellency Fenelon sleeplessly
busy persuading them, and native Gravitation SLEEPILY
ditto] will sit quiet. God grant it!
“The English want to attack
us on our own soil [actually Stair’s plan];
and we cannot pay them in that kind. The match
is too unfair! If we kill the whole 20,000 of
them, we merely send 20,000 Heretics to - What
shall I say? - A L’ENFER, and gain
nothing; if they kill us, they even feed at our expense
in doing it. Better have no quarrels except on
Locke and Newton! The quarrel I have on MAHOMET
is happily only ridiculous."... Adieu, M. lé
Marquis.
3. TO THE CARDINAL DE FLEURY.
“Monseigneur,... to give your Eminency,
as I am bound, some account of my journey to Aix-la-Chapelle.”
Friedrich’s guest there; let us hear, let us
look.
“I could not get away from Brussels
till the 2d of this month. On the road, I met
a courier from the King of Prussia, coming to reiterate
his Master’s orders on me. The King had
me lodged near his own Apartment; and he passed, for
two consecutive days, four hours at a time in my room,
with all that goodness and familiarity which forms,
as you know, part of his character, and which does
not lower the King’s dignity, because one is
duly careful not to abuse it [be careful!]. I
had abundant time to speak, with a great deal of freedom,
on what your Eminency had prescribed to me; and the
King spoke to me with an equal frankness.
“First, he asked me, If it was
true that the French Nation was so angered against
him; if the King was, and if you were? I answered,” - mildly
reprobatory, yet conciliative, “Hm, no,
nothing permanent, nothing to speak of.”
“He then deigned to speak to me, at large, of
the reasons which had induced him to be so hasty with
the Peace.” “Extremely remarkable
reasons;” “dare not trust them to this
Paper” (Broglio-Belleisle discrepancies, we guess,
distracted Broglio procedures); - they have
no concern with that Pallandt-Letter Story, - “they
do not turn on the pretended Secret Negotiations at
the Court of Vienna [which are not pretended at all,
as I among others well know], in regard to which your
Eminency has condescended to clear yourself [by denying
the truth, poor Eminency; there was no help otherwise].
All I dare state is, that it seems to me easy to lead
back the mind of this Sovereign, whom the situation
of his Territories, his interest, and his taste would
appear to mark as the natural ally of France.”
He said farther [what may be relied on as true by his
Eminency Fleury, and my readers here], That he passionately wished to see
Bohemia in the Emperors hands [small chance for it, as things now go!]; that he
renounced, with the best faith in the world, all claim whatever on Berg and
Julich; and that, in spite of the advantageous proposals which Lord Stair was
making him, he thought only of keeping Silesia. That he knew well enough
the House of Austria would, one day, wish to recover that fine Province, but
that he trusted he could keep his conquest; that he had at this time 130,000
soldiers always ready; that he would make of Neisse, Glogau, Brieg, fortresses
as strong as Wesel [which he is now diligently doing, and will soon have done];
that besides he was well informed the Queen of Hungary already owed 80,000,000
German crowns, which is about 300 millions of our money [about 12 millions
sterling]; that her Provinces, exhausted, and lying wide apart, would not be
able to make long efforts; and that the Austrians, for a good while to come,
could not of themselves be formidable. Of themselves, no: but with
Britannic soup-royal in quantity? -
“My Lord Hyndford had spoken
to him” as if France were entirely discouraged
and done for: How false, Monseigneur!
“And Lord Stair in his letters represented France,
a month ago, as ready to give in. Lord Stair
has not ceased to press his Majesty during this Aix
Excursion even:” and, in spite of what
your Eminency hears from the Hague, “there was,
on the 30th of August, an Englishman at Aix on the
part of Milord Stair; and he had speech with the King
of Prussia [CROYEZ MOI!] in a little Village
called Boschet [Burtscheid, where are hot wells], a
quarter of a league from Aix. I have been assured,
moreover, that the Englishman returned in much discontent.
On the other hand, General Schmettau, who was with
the King [elder Schmettau, Graf SAMUEL, who does a
great deal of envoying for his Majesty], sent, at
that very time, to Brussels, for Maps of the Moselle
and of the Three Bishoprics, and purchased five copies,” - means
to examine Milord Stair’s proposed Seat of War,
at any rate. (Here is a pleasant friend to have on
visit to you, in the next apartment, with such an
eye and such a nose!)...
“Monseigneur,” finely
insinuates Voltaire in conclusion, “is not there”
a certain Frenchman, true to his Country, to his King,
and to your Eminency, with perhaps peculiar facilities
for being of use, in such delicate case? - JE
SUIS,” much your Eminency’s. [OEuvres,
lxxii. (to Cideville), (D’Argenson),
(Fleury).]
Friedrich, on the day while Voltaire
at Brussels sat so busy writing of him, was at Salzdahl,
visiting his Brunswick kindred there, on the road
home to his usual affairs. Old Fleury, age ninety
gone, died 29th January, 1743, - five months
and nineteen days after this Letter. War-Minister
Breteuil had died January 1st. Here is room for
new Ministers and Ministries; for the two D’Argensons, - if
it could avail their old School-fellow, or France,
or us; which it cannot much.