TTo the present class of readers, Furstenbund
is become a Nothing; to all of us the grand Something
now is, strangely enough, that incidental item which
directly followed, of Reviewing the Silesian soldieries,
who had so angered his Majesty last year. “If
I be alive next year!” said the King to Tauentzien.
The King kept his promise; and the Fates had appointed
that, in doing so, he was to find his - But
let us not yet pronounce the word.
AUGUST 16th, 1785, some three weeks
after finishing the Furstenbund, Friedrich set out
for Silesia: towards Strehlen long known to him
and us all; - at Gross-Tinz, a Village in that neighborhood, the Camp and Review
are to be. He goes by Crossen, Glogau; in a circling direction:
Glogau, Schweidnitz, Silberberg, Glatz, all his Fortresses are to be inspected
as well, and there is much miscellaneous business by the road. At
Hirschberg, not on the military side, we have sight of him; the account of which
is strange to read: -
“THURSDAY, AUGUST 18th,”
says a private Letter from that little Town, [Given
IN EXTENSO, Rodenbeck, ii-333.] “he
passed through here: concourse of many thousands,
from all the Country about, had been waiting for him
several hours. Outriders came at last; then he
himself, the Unique; and, with the liveliest expression
of reverence and love, all eyes were directed on one
point. I cannot describe to you my feelings,
which of course were those of everybody, to see him,
the aged King; in his weak hand the hat; in those
grand eyes such a fatherly benignity of look over
the vast crowd that encircled his Carriage, and rolled
tide-like, accompanying it. Looking round when
he was past, I saw in various eyes a tear trembling.
["Alas, we sha’n’t have him long!”]
“His affability, his kindliness,
to whoever had the honor of speech with this great
King, who shall describe it! After talking a good
while with the Merchants-Deputation from the Hill
Country, he said, ’Is there anything more, then,
from anybody?’ Upon which, the President (KAUFMANNSALTESTE,”
Merchants’-Eldest) “Lachmann, from Greiffenberg,”
which had been burnt lately, and helped by the King
to rebuild itself, “stepped forward, and said,
’The burnt-out Inhabitants of Greiffenberg had
charged him to express once more their most submissive
gratitude for the gracious help in rebuilding; their
word of thanks, truly, was of no importance, but they
daily prayed God to reward such Royal beneficence.’
The King was visibly affected, and said, ’You
don’t need to thank me; when my subjects fall
into misfortune, it is my duty to help them up again;
for that reason am I here.’"...
Saturday 20th, he arrived at Tinz;
had a small Cavalry Manoeuvre, next day; and on Monday
the Review Proper began. Lasted four days, - 22d-25th
August, Monday to Thursday, both inclusive. “Head-quarter
was in the DORF-SCHULZE’S (Village Mayor’s)
house; and there were many Strangers of distinction
quartered in the Country Mansions round.”
Gross-Tinz is about 12 miles straight north from Strehlen,
and as far straight east from the Zobtenberg:
Gross-Tinz, and its Review of August, 1785, ought
to be long memorable.
How the Review turned out as to proficiency
recovered, I have not heard; and only infer, by symptoms,
that it was not unsatisfactory. The sure fact,
and the forever memorable, is, That on Wednesday, the
third day of it, from 4 in the morning, when the Manoeuvres
began, till well after 10, when they ended, there
was a rain like Noah’s; rain falling as from
buckets and water-spouts; and that Friedrich (and perhaps
most others too), so intent upon his business, paid
not the least regard to it; but rode about, intensely
inspecting, in lynx-eyed watchfulness of everything,
as if no rain had been there. Was not at the pains
even to put on his cloak. Six hours of such down-pour;
and a weakly old man of 73 past. Of course he
was wetted to the bone. On returning to head-quarters,
his boots were found full of water; “when pulled
off, it came pouring from them like a pair of pails.”
He got into dry clothes; presided
in his usual way at dinner, which soon followed; had
many Generals and guests, - Lafayette, Lord
Cornwallis, Duke of York; - and, as might
be expected, felt unusually feverish afterwards.
Hot, chill, quite poorly all afternoon; glad to get
to bed: - where he fell into deep sleep,
into profuse perspiration, as his wont was; and awoke,
next morning, greatly recovered; altogether well again,
as he supposed. Well enough to finish his Review
comfortably; and start for home. Went - round
by Neisse, inspection not to be omitted there, though
it doubles the distance - to Brieg that day;
a drive of 80 miles, inspection-work included.
Thence, at Breslan for three days more: with
dinners of state, balls, illuminations, in honor of
the Duke of York, - our as yet last Duke
of York, then a brisk young fellow of twenty-two;
to whom, by accident, among his other distinctions,
may belong this of having (most involuntarily) helped
to kill Friedrich the Great!
Back to Potsdam, Friedrich pushed
on with business; and complained of nothing.
Was at Berlin in about ten days (September 9th), for
an Artillery Review; saw his Sister Amelia; saw various
public works in a state of progress, - but
what perhaps is medically significant, went in the
afternoon to a kind of Spa Well they have at Berlin;
and slept, not at the Palace, but at this Spa, in
the hostelry or lodging-house attached. [Rodenbeck,
IN DIE.] Next day (September 10th), the Artillery
Manoeuvre was done; and the King left Berlin, - little
guessing he had seen Berlin for the last time.
The truth is, his health, unknown
to him (though that of taking a Night at the Spa Well
probably denotes some guess or feeling of the kind
on his part), must have been in a dangerous or almost
ruinous state. Accordingly, soon afterwards,
September 18th-19th, in the night-time, he was suddenly
aroused by a Fit of Suffocation (what they call STICKFLUSS);
and, for some hours, till relief was got, everybody
feared he would perish. Next day, there came
gout; which perhaps he regarded almost as a friend:
but it did not prove such; it proved the captain of
a chaotic company of enemies; and Friedrich’s
end, I suppose, was already inexorably near.
At the Grand Potsdam Review (22d-23d September), chief
Review of all, and with such an affluence of Strangers
to it this Autumn, he was quite unable to appear; prescribed
the Manoeuvres and Procedures, and sorrowfully kept
his room. [This of 23d September, 1785, is what Print-Collectors
know loosely as “FRIEDRICH’S LAST REVIEW;” - one
Cunningham, an English Painter (son of a Jacobite
ditto, and himself of wandering habitat), and Clemens,
a Prussian Engraver, having done a very large and
highly superior Print of it, by way of speculation
in Military Portraits (Berlin, 1787); in which, among
many others, there figures the crediblest Likeness
known to me of FRIEDRICH IN OLD AGE, though Friedrich
himself was not there. (See PREUSS, i;
especially see RODENBECK, ii n.) - As
Crown-Prince, Friedrich had SAT to Pesne: never
afterwards to any Artist.]
Friedrich was always something of
a Doctor himself: he had little faith in professional
Doctors, though he liked to speak with the intelligent
sort, and was curious about their science, And it is
agreed he really had good notions in regard to it;
in particular, that he very well understood his own
constitution of body; knew the effects of causes there,
at any rate, and the fit regimens and methods: - as
an old man of sense will usually do. The complaint
is, that he was not always faithful to regimen; that,
in his old days at least, he loved strong soups, hot
spicy meats; - finding, I suppose, a kind
of stimulant in them, as others do in wine; a sudden
renewal of strength, which might be very tempting
to him. There has been a great deal of unwise
babble on this subject, which I find no reason to
believe, except as just said: In the fall of
this year, as usual, perhaps rather later than usual, - not
till November 8th (for what reason so delaying, Marwitz
told us already), - he withdrew from Sans-Souci,
his Summer-Cottage; shut himself up in Potsdam Palace
(Old Palace) for the winter. It was known he was
very ailing; and that he never stirred out, - but
this was not quite unusual in late winters; and the
rumors about his health were vague and various.
Now, as always, he himself, except to his Doctors,
was silent on that subject. Various military
Doctors, Theden, Frese and others of eminence, were
within reach; but it is not known to me that he consulted
any of them.
Not till January, 1786, when symptoms
worse than ever, of asthma, of dropsy, began to manifest
themselves, did he call in Selle, the chief Berlin
Doctor, and a man of real sagacity, as is still evident;
who from the first concluded the disease to be desperate;
but of course began some alleviatory treatment, the
skilfulest possible to him. [Christian Gottlieb Selle,
KRANKHEITSGESCHICHTE DES HOCHSTSEELIGEN Königs
VAN PREUSSEN FRIEDRICHS DES ZWEYTEN MAJESTAT
(Berlin, 1786); a very small Pamphlet, now very rare; - giving
in the most distinct, intelligent, modest and conclusive
way, an account of everything pertinent, and rigorously
of nothing else.] Selle, when questioned, kept his
worst fears carefully to himself: but the King
noticed Selle’s real opinion, - which,
probably, was the King’s own too; - and
finding little actual alleviation, a good deal of
trouble, and no possibility of a victorious result
by this warfare on the outworks, began to be weary
of Selle; and to turn his hopes - what hopes
he yet had - on the fine weather soon due.
He had a continual short small cough, which much troubled
him; there was fear of new Suffocation-Fit; the breathing
always difficult.
But Spring came, unusually mild; the
King sat on the southern balconies in the genial sun
and air, looking over the bright sky and earth, and
new birth of things: “Were I at Sans-Souci,
amid the Gardens!” thought he. APRIL 17th,
he shifted thither: not in a sedan, as Marwitz
told us of the former journey; but “in his carriage,
very early in the morning, making a long roundabout
through various Villages, with new relays,” - probably with the motive
Marwitz assigns. Here are two contemporaneous Excerpts: -
1. MIRABEAU AT SANS-SOUCI..
“This same day,” April 17th, it appears,
[Preuss: in OEuvres de Frederic, xx
n.] “the King saw Mirabeau, for the second and
last time. Mirabeau had come to Berlin 19th January
last; his errand not very precise, - except
that he infinitely wanted employment, and that at
Paris the Controller-General Calonne, since so famous
among mankind, had evidently none to offer him there.
He seems to have intended Russia, and employment with
the Czarina, - after viewing Berlin a little,
with the great flashy eyesight he had. He first
saw Friedrich January 25th. There pass in all,
between Friedrich and him, seven Letters or Notes,
two of them by the King; and on poor Mirabeau’s
side, it must be owned, there is a massively respectful,
truthful and manly physiognomy, which probably has
mended Friedrich’s first opinion of him. [...
“Is coming to me to-day; one of those loose-tongued
fellows, I suppose, who write for and against all the
world.” (Friedrich to Prince Henri, “25
January, 1786:” OEuvres de Frederic,
xxv.)] This day, April 17th, 1786, he is at
Potsdam; so far on the road to France again, - Mirabeau
Senior being reported dangerously ill. ’My
Dialogue with the King,’ say the Mirabeau Papers,
’was very lively; but the King was in such suffering,
and so straitened for breath, I was myself anxious
to shorten it: that same evening I travelled on.’
“Mirabeau Senior did not die
at this time: and Controller-General Calonne,
now again eager to shake off an importunate and far
too clear-sighted Mirabeau Junior, said to the latter:
’Back to Berlin, could n’t you? Their
King is dying, a new King coming; highly important
to us!’ - and poor Mirabeau went.
Left Paris again, in May; with money furnished, but,
no other outfit, and more in the character of Newspaper
Vulture than of Diplomatic Envoy,” [Rodenbeck,
ii. Fils Adoptif, Mémoires de Mirabeau
(Paris, 1834), i-292, 296.] as perhaps we may
transiently see.
2. MARIE ANTOINETTE AT VERSAILLES; TO HER SISTER
CHRISTINE AT BRUSSELS (Husband and she, Duke and Duchess of Sachsen-Teschen, are
Governors of the Netherlands): -
MARCH 20th, 1786.... “There
has been arrested at Geneva one Villette, who played
a great part in that abominable Affair [of the Diamond
Necklace, now emerging on an astonished Queen and world].
[Carlyle’s Miscellanies (Library Edition),
-96,? DIAMOND NECKLACE. The wretched
Cardinal de Rohan was arrested at Versailles, and put
in the Bastille, “August 15th, 1785,”
the day before Friedrich set out for his Silesian
Review; ever since which, the arrestments and judicial
investigations have continued, - continue
till “May 10th, 1786,” when Sentence was
given.] M. Target”, Advocate of the enchanted
Cardinal, “is coming out with his MEMOIR:
he does his function; and God knows what are the lies
he will produce upon us. There is a MEMOIR by
that Quack of a Cagliostro, too: these are at
this moment the theme of all talk.”
APRIL 6th. “The MEMOIRS,
the lies, succeed each other; and the Business grows
darker, not clearer. Such a Cardinal of the Church!
He brazenly maintains his distracted story about the
Bosquet [Interview with me in person, in that Hornbeam
Arbor at Versailles; to me inconceivable, not yet
knowing of a Demoiselle d’Oliva from the streets,
who had acted my part there], and my Assent [to purchase
the Necklace for me]. His impudence and his audacity
surpass belief. O Sister, I need all my strength
to support such cruel assaults.... The King of
Prussia’s condition much engages attention
(Préoccupe) here, and must do at Vienna
too: his death is considered imminent. I
am sure you have your eyes open on that side."...
AAPRIL 17th (just while the Mirabeau
Interview at Potsdam is going on).... “King
of Prussia thought to be dying: I am weary of
the political discussions on this subject, as to what
effects his death must produce. He is better
at this moment; but so weak he cannot resist long.
Physique is gone; but his force and energy of soul,
they say, have often supported him, and in desperate
crises have even seemed to increase. Liking to
him I never had: his ostentatious immorality (Immoralité
Affichée,” ah, Madame!) “has much
hurt public virtue [public orthodoxy, I mean], and
there have been related to me [by mendacious or ill-informed
persons] barbarities which excite horror. He has
done us all a great deal of ill. He has been
a King for his own Country; but a Trouble-feast for
those about him; - setting up to be the arbiter
of Europe; always undertaking on his neighbors, and
making them pay the expense. As Daughters of
Maria Theresa, it is impossible we can regret him,
nor is it the Court of France that will make his funeral
oration.” [Comte de Hunolstein, Correspondance
inédite de Marie Antoinette (Paris, 1864),
p, 137, 149. - Hunolstein’s
Book, I since find, is mainly or wholly a Forgery!
(NOTE of 1868.)]
From Sans-Souci the King
did appear again on horseback; rode out several times
("Conde,” a fine English horse, one of his favorites,
carrying him, - the Conde who had many years of sinecure afterwards, and was
well known to Touring people): the rides were short; once to the New
Palace to look at some new Vinery there, thence to the Gate of Potsdam, which he
was for entering; but finding masons at work, and the street encumbered, did
not, and rode home instead: this, of not above two miles, was his longest
ride of all. Selles attendance, less and less in esteem with the King,
and less and less followed by him, did not quite cease till June 4th; that day
the King had said to Selle, or to himself, It is enough. That longest of
his rides was in the third week after; June 22d, Midsummer-Day. July 4th,
he rode again; and it was for the last time. About two weeks after, Conde
was again brought out; but it would not do: Adieu, my Conde; not possible,
as things are! -
During all this while, and to the
very end, Friedrich’s Affairs, great and small,
were, in every branch and item, guided on by him, with
a perfection not surpassed in his palmiest days:
he saw his Ministers, saw all who had business with
him, many who had little; and in the sore coil of
bodily miseries, as Hertzberg observed with wonder,
never was the King’s intellect clearer, or his
judgment more just and decisive. Of his disease,
except to the Doctors, he spoke no word to anybody.
The body of Friedrich is a ruin, but his soul is still
here; and receives his friends and his tasks as formerly.
Asthma, dropsy, erysipelas, continual want of sleep;
for many months past he has not been in bed, but sits
day and night in an easy-chair, unable to get breath
except in that posture. He said one morning,
to somebody entering, “If you happened to want
a night-watcher, I could suit you well.”
His multifarious Military businesses
come first; then his three Clerks, with the Civil
and Political. These three he latterly, instead
of calling about 6 or 7 o’clock, has had to
appoint for 4 each morning: “My situation
forces me,” his message said, “to give
them this trouble, which they will not have to suffer
long. My life is on the decline; the time which
I still have I must employ. It belongs not to
me, but to the State.” [Preuss, i n.]
About 11, business, followed by short surgical details
or dressings (sadly insisted on in those Books, and
in themselves sufficiently sad), being all done, - his
friends or daily company are admitted: five chiefly,
or (NOT counting Minister Hertzberg) four, Lucchesini,
Schwerin, Pinto, Gortz; who sit with him about one
hour now, and two hours in the evening again: - dreary
company to our minds, perhaps not quite so dreary
to the King’s; but they are all he has left.
And he talks cheerfully with them “on Literature,
History, on the topics of the day, or whatever topic
rises, as if there were no sickness here.”
A man adjusted to his hard circumstances; and bearing
himself manlike and kinglike among them.
He well knew himself to be dying;
but some think, expected that the end might be a little
farther off. There is a grand simplicity of stoicism
in him; coming as if by nature, or by long SECOND-nature;
finely unconscious of itself, and finding nothing
of peculiar in this new trial laid on it. From
of old, Life has been infinitely contemptible to him.
In death, I think, he has neither fear nor hope.
Atheism, truly, he never could abide: to him,
as to all of us, it was flatly inconceivable that
intellect, moral emotion, could have been put into
HIM by an Entity that had none of its own. But
there, pretty much, his Theism seems to have stopped.
Instinctively, too, he believed, no man more firmly,
that Right alone has ultimately any strength in this
world: ultimately, yes; - but for him
and his poor brief interests, what good was it?
Hope for himself in Divine Justice, in Divine Providence,
I think he had not practically any; that the unfathomable
Demiurgus should concern himself with such a
set of paltry ill-given animalcules as oneself
and mankind are, this also, as we have often noticed,
is in the main incredible to him.
AA sad Creed, this of the King’s; - he
had to do his duty without fee or reward. Yes,
reader; - and what is well worth your attention,
you will have difficulty to find, in the annals of
any Creed, a King or man who stood more faithfully
to his duty; and, till the last hour, alone concerned
himself with doing that. To poor Friedrich that
was all the Law and all the Prophets: and I much
recommend you to surpass him, if you, by good luck,
have a better Copy of those inestimable Documents! - Inarticulate
notions, fancies, transient aspirations, he might
have, in the background of his mind. One day,
sitting for a while out of doors, gazing into the
Sun, he was heard to murmur, “Perhaps I shall
be nearer thee soon:” - and indeed nobody
knows what his thoughts were in these final months.
There is traceable only a complete superiority to
Fear and Hope; in parts, too, are half-glimpses of
a great motionless interior lake of Sorrow, sadder
than any tears or complainings, which are altogether
wanting to it.
Friedrich’s dismissal of Selle,
June 4th, by no means meant that he had given up hope
from medicine; on the contrary, two days after, he
had a Letter on the road for Zimmermann at Hanover;
whom he always remembers favorably since that DIALOGUE
we read fifteen years ago. His first Note to
Zimmermann is of June 6th, “Would you consent
to come for a fortnight, and try upon me?” Zimmermann’s
overjoyed Answer, “Yes, thrice surely yes,”
is of June 10th; Friedrich’s second is of June
16th, “Come, then!” And Zimmermann came
accordingly, - as is still too well known.
Arrived 23d June; stayed till 10th July; had Thirty-three
Interviews or DIALOGUES with him; one visit the last
day; two, morning and evening, every preceding day; - and
published a Book about them, which made immense noise
in the world, and is still read, with little profit
or none, by inquirers into Friedrich. [Ritter von Zimmermann,
Uber Friedrich den Grossen und meine Unterredungen
mit Ihm kurz von seinem Tode (1 vovo:
Leipzig, 1788); - followed by Fragmente
über Friedrich den Grossen (3 volmo:
Leipzig, 1790); and by &c. &c.] Thirty-three Dialogues,
throwing no new light on Friedrich, none of them equal
in interest to the old specimen known to us.
In fact, the Book turns rather on
Zimmermann himself than on his Royal Patient; and
might be entitled, as it was by a Satirist, DIALOGUES
OF ZIMMERMANN I. AND FRIEDRICH II. An unwise Book;
abounding in exaggeration; breaking out continually
into extraneous sallies and extravagancies, - the
source of which is too plainly an immense conceit
of oneself. Zimmermann is fifteen years older
since we last saw him; a man now verging towards sixty;
but has not grown wiser in proportion. In Hanover,
though miraculously healed of that LEIBESSCHADE, and
full of high hopes, he has had his new tribulations,
new compensations, - both of an agitating
character. “There arose,” he says,
in reference to some medical Review-article he wrote,
“a WEIBER--EPIDEMIK, a universal shrieking
combination of all the Women against me:” - a
frightful accident while it lasted! Then his
little Daughter died on his hands; his Son had disorders,
nervous imbecilities, - did not die, but did
worse; went into hopeless idiotcy, and so lived for
many years. Zimmermann, being dreadfully miserable,
hypochondriac, what not, “his friends,”
he himself passive, it would seem, “managed to
get a young Wife for him;” thirty years younger
than he, - whose performances, however, in
this difficult post, are praised.
Lastly, not many months ago (Leipzig,
1785), the big FINAL edition of “SOLITUDE”
(four volumes) has come out; to the joy and enthusiasm
of all philanthropic-philosophic and other circulating-library
creatures: - a Copy of which came, by course
of nature, not by Zimmermann’s help, into the
hands of Catharine of Russia. Sublime imperial
Letter thereupon, with ‘valuable diamond ring;’
invitation to come to Petersburg, with charges borne
(declined, on account of health); to be imperial Physician
(likewise declined); - in fine, continued
Correspondence with Catharine (trying enough for a
vain head), and Knighthood of the Order of St. Wladimir, - so
that, at least, Doctor Zimmermann is RITTER Zimmermann
henceforth. And now, here has come his new Visit
to Friedrich the Great; - which, with the
issues it had, and the tempestuous cloud of tumid
speculations and chaotic writings it involved him in,
quite upset the poor Ritter Doctor; so that, hypochondrias
deepening to the abysmal, his fine intellect sank
altogether, - and only Death, which happily
followed soon, could disimprison him. At this
moment, there is in Zimmermann a worse “Dropsy”
of the spiritual kind, than this of the physical,
which he has come in relief of!
Excerpts of those Zimmermann DIALOGUES
lie copiously round me, ready long ago, - nay,
I understand there is, or was, an English TRANSLATION
of the whole of them, better or worse, for behoof
of the curious: - but on serious consideration
now, I have to decide, That they are but as a Scene
of clowns in the Elder Dramatists; which, even were
it NOT overdone as it is, cannot be admitted in this
place, and is plainly impertinent in the Tragedy that
is being acted here. Something of Farce will
often enough, in this irreverent world, intrude itself
on the most solemn Tragedy; but, in pity even to the
Farce, there ought at least to be closed doors kept
between them.
Enough for us to say, That Ritter
Zimmermann - who is a Physician and a Man
of Literary Genius, and should not have become a Tragic
Zany - did, with unspeakable emotions, terrors,
prayers to Heaven, and paroxysms of his own ridiculous
kind, prescribe “Syrup of Dandelion” to
the King; talked to him soothingly, musically, successfully;
found the King a most pleasant Talker, but a very
wilful perverse kind of Patient; whose errors in point
of diet especially were enormous to a degree.
Truth is, the King’s appetite for food did still
survive: - and this might have been, you
would think, the one hopeful basis of Zimmermann’s
whole treatment, if there were still any hope:
but no; Zimmermann merely, with uncommon emphasis,
lyrically recognizes such amazing appetite in an old
man overwhelmed by diseases, - trumpets it
abroad, for ignorant persons to regard as a crime,
or perhaps as a type generally of the man’s past
life, and makes no other attempt upon it; - stands by his Extract of Dandelion
boiled to the consistency of honey; and on the seventeenth day, July 10th,
voiceless from emotion, heart just breaking, takes himself away, and ceases.
One of our Notes says: -
“Zimmermann went by Dessau and
Brunswick; at Brunswick, if he made speed thither,
Zimmermann might perhaps find Mirabeau, who is still
there, and just leaving for Berlin to be in at the
death: - but if the Doctor and he missed
each other, it was luckier, as they had their controversies
afterwards. Mirabeau arrived at Berlin, July 21st:
[Mirabeau, HISTOIRE SECRETE DE LA
COUR DE BERLIN, tome iii. of OEuvres
de Mirabeau: Paris, 1821, LETTRE v. .] vastly
diligent in picking up news, opinions, judgments of
men and events, for his Calonne; - and amazingly
accurate, one finds; such a flash of insight has he,
in whatever element, foul or fair.
“JULY 9th, the day before Zimmerman’s
departure, Hertzberg had come out to Potsdam in permanence.
Hertzberg is privately thenceforth in communication
with the Successor; altogether privately, though no
doubt Friedrich knew it well enough, and saw it to
be right. Of course, all manner of poor creatures
are diligent about their own bits of interests; and
saying to themselves, ‘A New Reign is evidently
nigh!’ Yes, my friends; - and a precious
Reign it will prove in comparison: sensualities,
unctuous religiosities, ostentations, imbecilities;
culminating in Jena twenty years hence.”
Zimmermann haggles to tell us what
his report was at Brunswick; says, he “set the
Duke [ERBPRINZ,, who is now Duke these six years past] sobbing and
weeping; though towards the Widow Duchess there must have been some hope held
out, as we shall now see. The Duchesss Letter or Letters to her Brother
are lost; but this is his Answer: -
FRIEDRICH TO THE DUCHESS-DOWAGER OF BRUNSWICK.
“SANS-SOUCI, 10th August, 1786.
“MY ADORABLE SISTER, - The
Hanover Doctor has wished to make himself important
with you, my good Sister; but the truth is, he has
been of no use to me (M’A Été INUTILE).
The old must give place to the young, that each generation
may find room clear for it: and Life, if we examine
strictly what its course is, consists in seeing one’s
fellow-creatures die and be born. In the mean
while, I have felt myself a little easier for the
last day or two. My heart remains inviolably attached
to you, my good Sister. With the highest consideration, - My
adorable Sister, - Your faithful Brother
and Servant, “FRIEDRICH.” [OEuvres de
Frederic, xxvii. .]
This is Friedrich’s last Letter; - his
last to a friend. There is one to his Queen,
which Preuss’s Index seems to regard as later,
though without apparent likelihood; there being no
date whatever, and only these words: “Madam, - I
am much obliged by the wishes you deign to form:
but a heavy fever I have taken (GROSSE Fièvre
QUE J’AI PRISE) hinders me from answering
you.” [Ib. xxv.]
OOn common current matters of business,
and even on uncommon, there continue yet for four
days to be Letters expressly dictated by Friedrich;
some about military matters (vacancies to be filled,
new Free-Corps to be levied). Two or three of
them are on so small a subject as the purchase of
new Books by his Librarians at Berlin. One, and
it has been preceded by examining, is, Order to the
Potsdam Magistrates to grant “the Baker Schroder,
in terms of his petition, a Free-Pass out of Preussen
hither, for 100 bushels of rye and 50 of wheat, though
Schroder will not find the prices much cheaper there
than here.” His last, of August 14th, is
to De Launay, Head of the Excise: “Your
Account of Receipts and Expenditures came to hand
yesterday, 13th; but is too much in small: I
require one more detailed,” - and explains,
with brief clearness, on what points and how.
Neglects nothing, great or small, while life yet is.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 15th, 1786, Contrary
to all wont, the King did not awaken till 11 o’clock.
On first looking up, he seemed in a confused state,
but soon recovered himself; called in his Generals
and Secretaries, who had been in waiting so long,
and gave, with his old precision, the Orders wanted, - one
to Rohdich, Commandant of Potsdam, about a Review
of the troops there next day; Order minutely perfect,
in knowledge of the ground, in foresight of what and
how the evolutions were to be; which was accordingly
performed on the morrow. The Cabinet work he
went through with the like possession of himself, giving,
on every point, his Three Clerks their directions,
in a weak voice, yet with the old power of spirit, - dictated
to one of them, among other things, an “Instruction”
for some Ambassador just leaving; “four quarto
pages, which,” says Hertzberg, “would have
done honor to the most experienced Minister;”
and, in the evening, he signed his Missives as usual.
This evening still, - but - no evening
more. We are now at the last scene of all, which
ends this strange eventful History.
Wednesday morning, General-Adjutants,
Secretaries, Commandant, were there at their old hours;
but word came out, “Secretaries are to wait:”
King is in a kind of sleep, of stertorous ominous character,
as if it were the death-sleep; seems not to recollect
himself, when he does at intervals open his eyes.
After hours of this, [Selle (ut sup.); Anonymous
(Kletschke), LETZTE STUNDEN UND LEICHENBEGANGNISS
FRIEDRICHS DES ZWEYTEN, (Potsdam, 1786); Preuss,
i et seq.; Rodenbeck, ii-366.] on a ray
of consciousness, the King bethought him of Rohdich,
the Commandant; tried to give Rohdich the Parole as
usual; tried twice, perhaps three times; but found
he could not speak; - and with a glance of
sorrow, which seemed to say, “It is impossible,
then!” turned his head, and sank back into the
corner of his chair. Rohdich burst into tears:
the King again lay slumberous; - the rattle
of death beginning soon after, which lasted at intervals
all day. Selle, in Berlin, was sent for by express;
he arrived about three of the afternoon: King
seemed a little more conscious, knew those about him,
“his face red rather than pale, in his eyes
still something of their old fire.” Towards
evening the feverishness abated (to Selle, I suppose,
a fatal symptom); the King fell into a soft sleep,
with warm perspiration; but, on awakening, complained
of cold, repeatedly of cold, demanding wrappage after
wrappage ("KISSEN,” soft QUILT of the old
fashion); - and on examining feet and legs,
one of the Doctors made signs that they were in fact
cold, up nearly to the knee. “What said
he of the feet?” murmured the King some time
afterwards, the Doctor having now stepped out of sight.
“Much the same as before,” answered some
attendant. The King shook his head, incredulous.
He drank once, grasping the goblet
with both hands, a draught of fennel-water, his customary
drink; and seemed relieved by it; - his last
refection in this world. Towards nine in the evening,
there had come on a continual short cough, and a rattling
in the breast, breath more and more difficult.
Why continue? Friedrich is making exit, on the
common terms; you may HEAR the curtain rustling down.
For most part he was unconscious, never more than
half conscious. As the wall-clock above his head
struck 11, he asked: “What o’clock?”
“Eleven,” answered they. “At
4” murmured he, “I will rise.”
One of his dogs sat on its Stool near him; about midnight
he noticed it shivering for cold: “Throw
a quilt over it,” said or beckoned he; that,
I think, was his last completely conscious utterance.
Afterwards, in a severe choking fit, getting at last
rid of the phlegm, he said, “LA MONTAGNE EST
PASSEE, NOUS IRONS MIEUX, We are over the
hill, we shall go better now.”
Attendants, Hertzberg, Selle and one
or two others, were in the outer room; none in Friedrich’s
but Strutzki, his Kammerhussar, one of Three who are
his sole valets and nurses; a faithful ingenious man,
as they all seem to be, and excellently chosen for
the object. Strutzki, to save the King from hustling
down, as he always did, into the corner of his chair,
where, with neck and chest bent forward, breathing
was impossible, - at last took the King on
his knee; kneeling on the ground with his other knee
for the purpose, - King’s right arm
round Strutzki’s neck, Strutzki’s left
arm round the King’s back, and supporting his
other shoulder; in which posture the faithful creature,
for above two hours, sat motionless, till the end
came. Within doors, all is silence, except this
breathing; around it the dark earth silent, above it
the silent stars. At 20 minutes past 2, the breathing
paused, - wavered; ceased. Friedrich’s
Life-battle is fought out; instead of suffering and
sore labor, here is now rest. Thursday morning,
17th August, 1786, at the dark hour just named.
On the 31st of May last, this King had reigned 46
years. “He has lived,” counts Rodenbeck,
“74 years, 6 months and 24 days.”
His death seems very stern and lonely; - a
man of such affectionate feelings, too; “a man
with more sensibility than other men!” But so
had his whole life been, stern and lonely; such the
severe law laid on him. Nor was it inappropriate
that he found his death in that poor Silesian Review;
punctually doing, as usual, the work that had come
in hand. Nor that he died now, rather than a
few years later. In these final days of his,
we have transiently noticed Arch-Cardinal de Rohan,
Arch-Quack Cagliostro, and a most select Company of
Persons and of Actions, like an Elixir of the Nether
World, miraculously emerging into daylight; and all
Paris, and by degrees all Europe, getting loud with
the DIAMOND-NECKLACE History. And to eyes of
deeper speculation, - World-Poet Goethe’s,
for instance, - it is becoming evident that
Chaos is again big. As has not she proved to
be, and is still proving, in the most teeming way!
Better for a Royal Hero, fallen old and feeble, to
be hidden from such things.
“Yesterday, Wednesday, August
16th,” says a Note which now strikes us as curious,
“Mirabeau, smelling eagerly for news, had ridden
out towards Potsdam; met the Page riding furiously
for Selle (’one horse already broken down,’
say the Peasants about); and with beak, powerful beyond
any other vulture’s, Mirabeau perceived that
here the end now was. And thereupon rushed off,
to make arrangements for a courier, for flying pigeons,
and the other requisites. And appeared that night
at the Queen’s Soiree in Schonhausen [Queen
has Apartment that evening, dreaming of nothing],
‘where,’ says he, ’I eagerly whispered
the French Minister,’ and less eagerly ‘MON
AMI Mylord Dalrymple,’ the English one; - neither
of whom would believe me. Nor, in short, what
Calonne will regret, but nobody else, could the pigeons
be let loose, owing to want of funds.’”
[Mirabeau, HISTOIRE SECRETE, &c. (LETTRE
xiv.), p-63.] - Enough, enough.
Friedrich was not buried at Sans-Souci,
in the Tomb which he had built for himself; why not,
nobody clearly says. By his own express will,
there was no embalming. Two Regiment-surgeons
washed the Corpse, decently prepared it for interment:
“At 8 that same evening, Friedrich’s Body,
dressed in the uniform of the First Battalion of Guards,
and laid in its coffin, was borne to Potsdam, in a
hearse of eight horses, twelve Non-commissioned Officers
of the Guard escorting. All Potsdam was in the
streets; the Soldiers, of their own accord, formed
rank, and followed the hearse; many a rugged face
unable to restrain tears: for the rest, universal
silence as of midnight, nothing audible among the people
but here and there a sob, and the murmur, ‘ACH,
DER Güte KONIG!’
“All next day, the Body lay
in state in the Palace; thousands crowding, from Berlin
and the other environs, to see that face for the last
time. Wasted, worn; but beautiful in death, with
the thin gray hair parted into locks, and slightly
powdered. And at 8 in the evening [Friday, 18th],
he was borne to the Garnison-Kirche of Potsdam;
and laid beside his Father, in the vault behind the
Pulpit there,” [Rodenbeck, ii (Public
Funeral was not till September 9th).] where the two
Coffins are still to be seen.
I define him to myself as hitherto
the Last of the Kings; - when the Next will
be, is a very long question! But it seems to me
as if Nations, probably all Nations, by and by, in
their despair, - blinded, swallowed like
Jonah, in such a whale’s-belly of things brutish,
waste, abominable (for is not Anarchy, or the Rule
of what is Baser over what is Nobler, the one life’s
misery worth complaining of, and, in fact, the abomination
of abominations, springing from and producing all others
whatsoever?) - as if the Nations universally,
and England too if it hold on, may more and more bethink
themselves of such a Man and his Function and Performance,
with feelings far other than are possible at present.
Meanwhile, all I had to say of him is finished:
that too, it seems, was a bit of work appointed to
be done. Adieu, good readers; bad also, adieu.