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,lf«»-»- 'T-.^UL--- ♦ -■ — ^- -•^■•^ ' • ^.. -.--- ^ 



fl 



FREDERICK THE GREAT, 



HIS 



COURT AND TIMES. 



EDITED. 



WITH AN INTRODUCTION, 



BY THOMAS CAMPBELL, ESQ., 



AUTHOR OP 



"THE PLEASURES OP HOPE* 



VOL. III. 



LONDON: 
HENRY COLBURN, PUBLISHER. 

GREAT MARLB<«OUaH STREET. 

1848. 



31) 



LONDON : 

F« 8H0BBRL, JUM., 51 , RDPBRT STEBBT» HATMARKBT, 

PRINTER TO H.R. H. PRINCE ALBERT. 



CONTENTS 



OF 

THE THIRD VOLUME. 



CHAPTER XXVI. 

Campaign of 1756 — The Prussian Array enters Saxony — Attempts at 
negociation on the part of the King of Poland — Frederick enters Dres- 
den — The Saxon Army encamps in a strong position near Pima, which 
is blockaded bv the Prussians — Conduct of Count Bruhl — His Ward- 
robe — His Political Career — Royal Picture-Gallery — The Queen of 
■ Poland — ^The Emperor Francis ; his character, and manifestoes against 
Frederick — Seizure of the Saxon State- Papers — Grounds for believing 
that Saxony was not a party to the confederacy against Prussia — Popu- 
larity of the King at Dresden — ^The Austrians take the field — Frederick 
marches to Bohemia to meet them — Battle of Ix)wositz — Retreat of 
Marshal Browne, the Austrian commander — Distresses of the Saxons at 
Pima — Abortive attempt by Browne to relieve them — Frederick rejoins 
the blockading Force — Surrender of the Saxons — Their Incorporation 
with the Prussian Army — The King makes Dresden his head-quarters 
for the winter — His Occupations in the Field . . . . 1 

CHAPTER XXVn. 

C^ynpaign of 1757 — Proceedings of the Diet of Ratisbon against Frede- 
rick — Activity and Schemes of Austria and France — Frederick's Allies — 
The Queen of Poland and Countess Briihl — Sufferings of Mecklenburg — 
Affair of Glasow — Forces of the Belligerent Powers — The Prussians 
«nter Bohemia — Battle of Prague — Death of Marshal Schwerin — The 
t Austrians seek refuge in Prague — Blockade of the City by the Prus- 
sians — ^Abortive attempts of the Austrians to escape — Furious Thunder- 
storm — Bombardment of Prague — Sufferings of the inhabitants — Care- 
lessness of the Austrian Generals — Expedition of Colonel Mayr in South 
Germany — Frederick leaves Keith before Prague and marches to meet 
Daun — Battle of KoUin — Stipulations of the Secret Treaty between 
France and Austria . . ^ 32 

CHAPTER XXVIII. 

Campaign of 1757 continued — Dejection of the Prussian Army after its 
defeat at Kollin — ^Tbe King proceeds to Prague and raises the Blockade 
—Despatch of Sir Andrew Mitchell, relative to the disaster at Kollin — 
Letter from the King to Lord Marischal on the same subject— Exulta- 
tion at Vienna — Death of General Manstein — The Austrian General, 
Loudon — Death of the Queen-mother — Grief of Frederick — Extracts 
from Letters of his to d'Argens — Letters from the Margravine of Bay- 
reuth to Voltaire — Duplicity and Malignity of the latter — Disastrous 
Retreat of the Prince of Prussia from Bohemia through Lusatia-^ 



IV CONTENTS. 

Destruction of Zittau — Displeasure of Frederick with his Brother — 
Narrative of the latter — He retires from the Army — His Death and 
Character J4 

CHAPTER XXIX. 
Campaign of 1767 continued — ^Military Operations in Western Germany — 
Action at Hastenbeck — Retreat of the Duke of Cumberland — Convention 
of Eloster-Zeven — ^The Russians enter Prussia — Battle of Gross-Jagers- 
dorf — Retreat of the Russians — Their savage excesses — ^The Swedes 
overrun Pomerania — Marshal Lehwald retakes nearly all their conquests 
— Frederick advances from Lusatia against Daun — Intercepted Cor- 
respondence of the Queen of Poland — The King transfers his Army to 
the Duke of Bevem^ and marches against the French and the Troops of 
the Empire — ^Action at Jakelberg^ and death of Winterfeld — Grief of the 
King for the loss of that Officer — His firmness — Seydlitz surprises the 
French at Grotha — Occupation of Berlin by the Austrians and Russians 
— Noble sentiment of the Duke de Crillon — Battle of Rossbach — Defeat 
and flight of the French — Courtesy of the King to the Prisoners — Wan- 
ton barbarity of the French — Extracts from Letters of Frederick's^ rela- 
tive to his situation — Effects of the Victory of Rossbach . • 97 

CHAPTER XXX. 

Campaign of 1757 continued — ^The King marches to the relief of Schweidnitz 
— ^Keith makes an incursion into Bohemia — ^Surrender of Schweidnitz to 
the Austrians — ^Defeat of the duke of Bevern near Breslau — Surrender of 
that city to the Austrians — Frederick hastens to Silesia — His Address to 
his Officers — Battle of Leuthen — The King surprises a number of Aus- 
trian Officers at Lissa — He retakes Breslau — ^The Prussians recover Lieg- 
nitz — Prince Charles resigns the command of the Austrian army — Ingra- 
titude of count Schaffgotsch^ primate of the Catholic church in Prussia- 
Treachery of the Abbe de Prades — Father Gleim ; his Songs of a Prussian 
Grenadier — Gothe's picture of family dissensions excited by Frederick's 
popularity — ^Enthusiasm manifested for the King in England — Duke Fer- 
dinand of Brunswick ; his military operations . . ' • . 126 

CHAPTER XXXI. 

Campaign of 1758 — The general enthusiasm in behalf of the King facili- 
tates the recruiting of the Prussian Army — Provincial Militia — Plan of 
Frederick's Enemies in this Campaign — Operations of Duke Ferdinand 
of Brunswick — Flight of the French across the Rhine — Battle of Crefeld 
— ^English troops sent to join the Duke— Advantages gained by the French 
— ^The Saxon Corps — Operations in Silesia — Reduction of Schweidnitz 
by the Prussians — Frederick makes an incursion into Moravia^ and lays 
siege to Ollmiitz — ^The Austrians intercept a large Prussian Convoy, and 
oblige the King to raise the Siege — He retreats to Bohemia, and thence 
to Silesia — The Russians, under Count Fermor, again take possession of 
East Prussia, and force the Inhabitants to swear allegiance to the Em- 
press—Their Cruelty — ^The King hastens to meet the Invaders, who bom- 
bard and destroy Ciistrin— His visit to that place— Battle of Zorndorf— 
Loyalty of the Prussians to their rightful Sovereign — Frederick makes 






CONTENTS. V 

the Saxons swear allegiance to him — Plot of the Russian Prisoners 
at Ciistrin — Secret Treaty of December 1768 between France and 
Austria 164 

CHAPTER XXXII. 

Campaign of 1768, continued — Frederick repairs to Saxony — Operations 
of Daun, the Austrian commander-in-chief-— Battle of Hochkirch — 
Death of Field-marshal Keith — Behaviour of Frederick — Death of the 
Margravine of Bayreuth — Efficacy of Occupation in alleviating mental 
afflictions — Frederick, joined by Prince Henry, enters Silesia, relieves 
the fortress of Neisse— -Gallant defence of General Treskow, and noble 
behaviour of his Wife — Daun marches to Saxony, and threatens Dres- 
den — Decisive Conduct of CouA Schmettau, the commandant — On the 
approach of Frederick, the Austrians retire to Bohemia — Count Schla- 
berndorf, Directin^-Minister of Silesia — Distinctions conferred on Daun 
for the unprofitable victory of Hochkirch — Sentiments of the Pope on 
the occasion — Frederick's Satires on his Enemies — His Resources for 
prosecuting the War ...*.... 196 

CHAPTER XXXIII. 
Campaign of 1759 — ^Incursion of the Prussians in Poland — Prince Sul- 
kowski — Operations of Duke Ferdinand in Western Germany — Battle of 
Minden — Cowardice of Lord George Sackville — Retreat of the French 
to the Lahn — Actions of Fulda and Dillenburg — Plan for the Operations 
of the Allies — Incursions of the Prussians into Moravia and Bohemia — 
The Russians advance upon Brandenburg — General Wedel appointed 
dictator of the army opposed to the Invaders — Is defeated by them at 
Ziillichau — Frederick goes in person to meet them — Disastrous Battle of 
Kunersdorf — Despondency of the King, who resigns the command to 
general Finck — Major Kleist — Surrender of Torgau and Dresden to the 
Austrians — Inactivity of Soltikof, the Russian commander-in-chief— Jea- 
lousies of the two imperial Generals — The King is joined in Silesia by 
Prince Henry — The latter draws Daun to Saxony — Operations of the 
King for recovering Dresden — Capitulation of General Finck at Maxen 
— Frederick passes the winter at Freiberg — Letters to bis Friends re- 
specting his situation — Duplicity and Malice of Voltaire — The King's 
Literary Occupations ; 223 

CHAPTER XXXIV. 

Frederick endeavours to raise enemies against Austria in Italy-— He com- 
municates his desire for Peace to the hostile Powers — His Resources for 
prosecuting the War — Plans of the Allies for the Campaign of 1760 — 
Loudon foiled in an Attack on a Prussian Detachment — He attacks and 
destroys Fouque's Corps near Landeshut — Pillage of that Town by the 
Austrians — Loudon surprises Glatz — Hard case of Father Faulhaber — 
Loudon bombards Breslau, which is relieved by Prince Henry — ^Tlie 
King marches for Silesia ; but turns off to Dresden and bombards it — 
On hearing of the Disasters in Silesia, he again sets out for that Pro- 
vince — Severity of the King to the Regiment of Anhalt-Bernburg — 
His critical situation — Despondency of Prince Henry — Battle of Lieg- 



4 COURT AND TIMES OF 

The Saxon army, amounting in the whole to 17,000 
men, with 150 pieces of cannon, had, on the approach 
of the Prussians, concentrated itself near Dresden, and, 
on the 2d of September, taken a strong position and 
encamped near Pima. Thither king Augustus repaired 
on the following day, with the princes Xavier and Charles. 
The Swiss guard alone remained in Dresden. Frederick 
continued to hold out hopes of a compromise, till he had 
enclosed the camp of Pima on all sides. His army in 
Saxony amounted to nearly 70,000 men. With rather 
more than half this force the Saxons were cut off, with- 
out hostilities, from any communication with their coun- 
try. General Dyhem had fortified the naturally strong 
position in such a manner that a surprise was impossible. 
It was therefore concluded that Frederick would not stop 
to make himself master of this advantageous position, 
but push on with his whole army for Bohemia. That 
he might blockade and starve out the Saxon army was 
an idea which never occurred to any one. The king, it 
is true, was in great haste ; but, having convinced him- 
self that it would be impossible to reduce the Saxons by 
main force without great loss, and knowing that their 
army was provisioned only till the 20th of September, 
and could not break through without the greatest risk, 
he relinquished the intention of an attack for a blockade, 
cooped the enemy up more closely, and strove to pre- 
vent the approach of the Austrians by abattis and other 
means, as the troops were not numerous enough to form 
a cordon of sufficient strength, twenty miles in circum- 
ference, around the Saxon camp. The Prussian force 
engaged in this service amounted to 40,000 men, at first 
under the command of the king himself, and afterwards 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 5 

of the margrave of Schwedt and prince Maurice of An- 
halt. Ferdinand of Brunswick and marshal Keith were 
despatched with the rest of the army to meet the 
Austrians, who were approaching from Bohemia. 

On entering the Saxon capital, Frederick declared that 
he had taken possession of the electorate only in trust ; 
accordingly, pillage and violence were strictly forbidden. 
But though he had given a formal assurance that private 
property should be respected, count Briihl had sent away 
many of his effects from his residences : these the Prus- 
sians seized without the knowledge of the king, regard- 
ing the conduct of the Saxon minister as a doubt of the 
fulfilment of the royal promise. The countess Briihl 
complained to the king, who directed the matter to be 
investigated, and the property in question to be restored. 

" At the same time," he wrote to her, " I cannot help 
reminding you that this circumstance would not have 
happened if you, as well as your husband, had not taken 
it into your head that my army had come to Saxony for 
no other purpose than to rob you. I beg you to relin- 
quish an opinion so unjust to me, and to be assured that 
I shall never approve such proceedings, which are as 
discordant with my intentions as they are incompatible 
with my honour ; and that I would rather overlook all 
former hostility manifested against me than revenge my- 
self in this manner." The minister's mansion, however, 
was fated to be turned into a guard-house. The most 
remarkable part, perhaps, of its contents was the ward- 
robe, in which were found, according to the report of 
an eyewitness, " 60 swords, 80 canes, 322 snuff-boxes, 
528 suits of clothes, 600 pair of boots, 800 pair of shoes, 
and materials of various kinds not made up enough to 



6 COURT AND TIMES OF 

clothe three towns." One room was filled entirely with 
wigs. Frederick, when he saw them, exclaimed—" What 
a number of wigs for a man who has no head !" 

Augustus was in fact only the nominal, Briihl the 
virtual, sovereign of Saxony. Without holding any high 
office, he had been the personal favourite of king 
Augustus II. It so happened that, at the decease of 
that monarch, which took place unexpectedly at Warsaw, 
the crown of Poland and the crown jewels were in 
Briihl's custody : with these he hastened immediately 
to Dresden, delivered them to the new elector, and was 
extremely active in securing for him the succession to 
the Polish throne. Augustus III. had granted his 
favour to count Sulkowski ; Briihl, not feeling strong 
enough to oust the minister, courted his friendship, and 
shared with him the duties of government. Having 
married the countess KoUo wrath, who enjoyed the 
favour of the queen, he succeeded, through the influence 
of the latter, in displacing Sulkowski. Appointed prime 
minister in 1 748, he neglected no means of securing the 
confidence of the king, and contrived, with astonishing 
address, to keep aloof all who wished to approach him. 
Not a lacquey was engaged for the king's service without 
Briihl's approbation. If his majesty was going to 
chapel, the way thither was previously cleared of spec- 
tators. The king expected his minister to keep up a 
brilliant and expensive establishment ; and Briihl ful- 
filled this wish to the utmost extent. He had two hun- 
dred servants, and his guard of honour was better paid 
than the king's ; his table was the most sumptuous, his 
wardrobe the most splendid, his domestic arrangements 
the most magnificent. " Briihl," said the king of Prussia, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 7 

" had more suits of clothes, watches, lace, boots, shoes, 
and slippers, than any man of his time. Caesar would 
have classed him among those frizzed and perfumed 
heads from which he had nothing to fear." Augustus III. 
was not CsBsar, and with that weak sovereign Briihl 
was every thing. Never had prince a more servile mi- 
nister. Briihl was always in his train : he passed whole 
days about his person without uttering a word, while the 
Ustless monarch sauntered about smoking, and looked 
at: without seeing him. " Briihl, have I money ?" was 
the incessantly reiterated question. In order to be able 
to answer it in the affirmative, the minister drained the 
public coffers, loaded the country with debts — ^nay, even 
reduced the military force, so that, as we have seen, on 
the entrance of the Prussians, Saxony had only 17,000 
men under arms. 

One of Frederick's first visits, after his arrival in 
Dresden, was to the celebrated picture-gallery. Lost 
in admiration, he paused long before particular master- 
pieces. The inspector of the gallery trembled for the 
safety of his. charge; he already beheld in imagination 
the best pictures travelling to Berlin. " I suppose," 
said the king, at length, inquiringly, " that I may be 
permitted to have copies made of some of these paint- 
ings.?" These words dispelled at once the sad fore- 
bodings of the inspector. 

The queen of Poland, Marie Josephine, eldest daugh- 
ter of the emperor Joseph I., whom Sir Charles Hanbury 
Williams describes as " ugly beyond painting, ai^d mali- 
cious beyond expression," had not accompanied her 
husband to the camp at Pima, but remained with the 
electoral prince in Dresden. Though she was Frederick's 



8 COURT AND TIMES OF 

irreconcilable enemy, he personally conducted himself 
not as a foe to the elector, but as his friend and ally. 
He left her and her son in unmolested possession of the 
palace and the marks of royal state, and sent them the 
most polite messages. The queen, in return, invited 
him to dinner, and offered him the use of her chamber- 
lains to attend upon him, but he declined these ciyi- 
lities. Scarcely a day passed without her sending to 
make inquiries after the king's health, accompanied with 
assurances of friendship, while, at the same time, she 
was in constant communication with the Austrian ge- 
nerals, to whom she transmitted, by various ingenious 
stratagems, all the intelligence she could collect con- 
cerning the state and movements of the Prussian army. 
The emperor Francis, whose ruling passion was the 
accumulation of wealth, stooped to any means and en- 
gaged in any speculations to gratify it. He drew large 
sums from his Tuscan dominions, and is even said to 
have conveyed from Florence and disposed of many of 
the crown jewels collected by his predecessors, the mag- 
nificent Medici. The money derived from these sources 
he employed in commercial enterprises, in the establish- 
ment of manufactories, and in loans at usurious interest 
and on good security, even to the government of his 
wife, who never suffered him to interfere in public 
affairs. " Surrounding him,'^ says Horace Walpole, 
** with the frightfuUest maids of honour she could select, 
she permitted him to hoard what she never let him have 
temptation or opportunity to squander." He undertook 
the commissariat of the imperial army, farmed the cus- 
toms of Saxony, in association with count Bolza and a 
tradesman named Schimmelmann — nay, contracted, on 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 9 

the breaking out of the present hostilities, for the sup- 
plies of forage and flour required by the troops of the 
king of Prussia, who was at war with his wife. 

From a prince entirely swayed by such sordid senti- 
ments, the anathemas and denunciations levelled by him 
as head of the empire against Frederick came with a 
peculiarly ill grace. No means were omitted by the 
court of Vienna to prejudice the king in the public 
opinion. All the causes of his attack were wisely 
passed over, while the attack itself was represented in 
the blackest possible colours. The empire was inun- 
dated with mandates, appeals, exhortations, intended to 
rouse it to a general war against the Prussian monarch. 
But the masterpiece of all these manifestoes was a 
Dehortatoriuniy a warning, addressed to the king, by 
the same head of the empire, who was assisting to fill 
the Prussian magazines, and who most paternally ad- 
monished Frederick " to desist from his most audacious 
and culpable rebellion to pay all the costs to the king 
of Poland, and to return home quietly and peaceably." 
In another of these state-papers " all the generals and 
other military officers of the king of Prussia were com- 
manded to abandon their unrighteous master, and not to 
participate in his heinous transgression, upon pain of ex- 
posing themselves to the vengeance of the head of the 
empire." 

Frederick could not remain indifferent to this kind of 
attack. In order to his defence, he was desirous of ob- 
taining the original state-papers deposited in the archives 
of the palace of Dresden, copies of which were already 
in his possession, lest his enemies might allege that the 
latter were false, and that he had been deceived by his 



1 COURT AND TIMES OF 

agents. The archives were deposited in three rooms 
communicating with the private apartments of the 
queen, who had the only key to them. General Wylich, 
whom Frederick had appointed commandant of Dresden, 
was ordered to secure the papers in question. He sent 
major Wangenheim on this errand. The queen posi- 
tively refused to deliver the key. Wylich himself then 
repaired to the palace, hut she plainly told him that he 
should not obtain the papers without the employment of 
force ; and, as his master had declared to the world that 
he would not use any violence, all Europe would not 
fail to exclaim against the outrage. " Besides," she 
added, " you will yourself be the victim. Depend upon 
it, your king will not scruple to sacrifice you to his own 
honour." With these words, she clapped her back 
against the door of the archives, in the attitude of de- 
fending the entrance ; and not till she was assured by 
the commandant that he had orders to use force, did she 
desist from her opposition. The door was then broken 
open, and all the original papers of the Saxon cabinet 
since the peace of Dresden, forming together more than 
forty volumes, ready packed to be sent off to Poland, 
were secured and transmitted to Berlin. From these 
documents, Hertzberg drew up in a week that celebrated 
memorial, written to demonstrate the perfidious designs 
of Frederick's enemies, to which the king gave with 
his own hand the epithet of raisonne. The court 
of Austria' itself could not deny the facts which were 
there disclosed. 

It is, however, but justice to Saxony to admit that 
I have not been able to discover any satisfactory proofs 
that the court of Dresden had acceded to the alliance of 



FREa)ERICK THE GREAT. 1 1 

the two imperial courts against Frederick. Count Herz- 
berg, the author of the Memoire raisonne, goes no fur- 
ther in reference to this subject than to say, " It is true 
that the court of Saxony deferred from time to time 
its formal accession to the treaty of Petersburg." 

The same statesman in his subsequent Refutation of 
the Remarks on the Manifestoes of the King of Prussia, 
which Remarks had been published on the part of 
Austria, does not venture to represent the malevolent 
intentions of the Austrian and Saxon court, alleged to 
have been discovered, as having been>% proved : he 
merely says, " that the connexion between the danger- 
ous designs of the courts of Vienna and Dresden, which 
have been successively discovered and almost all proved 
by original documents, shows* that the information in 
question deserves the highest degree of credibility, and 
demonstrates with evidence the reality of the danger 
which has been pointed out." 

A pamphlet recently published at Leipzig, containing 
diplomatic documents hitherto inedited,* illustrative of 
the causes of the war, furnishes strong grounds for 
assuming that count Briihl, the Saxon prime minister, 
and count Flemming, the Saxon ambassador at Vienna, 
were both unacquainted with the progress of the nego- 
ciations between the imperial courts, and with the secret 
tendency of the treaty of alliance with France of the 
2d of May, 1756. *' I begin to suspect," writes the 
ambassador in plain terms in a despatch of the 17th of 
July, 1756, " that they mean to do without us, in order 
that they may not owe us any obligations." Again he 

• The title is : Einige iieue Aktenstiicke, iiber die Veranlassung des 
siebeujahrigen Krieges^ und der in Folge desselben entstandenen Allianzen. 



1 2 COURT AND TIMES OF 

writes : " Studied as are the tenns in which count 
Bestuchef has wrapped up these overtures, it appears, 
however, from his saying he flattered himself that he 
as well as count Kaunitz might be able to put an end 
to their reserve, that there is some important secret be- 
tween the two imperial courts." The nature of their 
connexion was of course only matter of surmise. 

Another despatch of the 28th of July shows that 
Flemming was still without positive information on 
this point : " The king of Prussia," he writes, " may be 
persuaded that he will not be disturbed or attacked, 
during this year at least, since I am sure that at present 
there is no concert, and still less any plan formed either 
with France or with Russia for invading the Prussian 
dominions. Still, from all that I remark, I cannot but 
conclude that this court [that of Vienna] must be quite 
sure of the friendship and the attachment of Russia." 

Lastly, after the irruption of the Prussians into 
Saxony and the seizure of the papers kept in the privy 
cabinet, Briihl writes on the 20th of September as fol- 
lows : " Besides this, the king of Prussia has caused 
the cabinet to be opened by force, and the papers by 
which he now pretends to justify his outrageous pro- 
ceedings to be carried off. The seizure of these papers, 
which we could never have expected on the part of a 
prince who does not declare himself an enemy, is infi- 
nitely grievous to us ; and it is certain that, though the 
king of Prussia has seen that we have not pleaded his 
cause, still he will not find that we had entered into 
any concert against him, since this is not the case." 

If, however, the Saxon cabinet had just cause for 
inclining to the side of the enemies of Prussia, in the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 13 

existing state of political affairs, still the minister must 
be severely censured for having neglected the means 
that ought to have been employed to ward off the 
threatened danger. The statesmanlike views and spirited 
advice of Flemming furnish an honourable contrast 
with the apathy and helplessness of Briihl. In the de- 
spatch of the 17th of July, 1756, the ambassador, after 
using the expression already quoted, proceeds: "I 
hasten to acquaint your excellency with my suspicions, 
though they may not be wholly founded, that you may 
be able to think timely of remedies. In my humble 
judgment, there are but two which are adapted to our 
views, to the wants of our country, and to the criti- 
cal junctures which threaten and which perhaps may 
not very soon be over : a good army, capable of acting 
and commanding respect from this court ; 30,000 men, 
and perhaps fewer, would render us this essential ser- 
vice : a sincere and close friendship with Russia would 
do the rest," 

Such are the grounds upon which the author of the 
pamphlet founds the conclusion that Saxony had taken 
no part in the confederacy against Frederick, and 
that the government was entirely ignorant of the cir- 
cumstances and the result of the negociations which 
had taken place between Austria and Russia, and 
between the former power and France. " The king of 
Prussia," he adds, ** needed a pretext for anticipating 
the undeniably hostile designs of the two imperial 
courts : the occupation of Saxony seemed advantage- 
ous to him ; he boldly set about it, and then strove to 
justify it as well as he could to the world by his mani- 
festoes and declarations." 



14 COURT AND TIMES OF 

The pamphlet in question affords, I think, internal 
evidence that it is the production of a Saxon ; and as 
I have not set myself up for the apologist of the Prus- 
sian monarch, but aspire only to the character of his 
impartial historian and biographer, I wish to allow all 
the weight they deserve to the arguments of his enemies 
as well as to those of his friends. 

Frederick, during his residence in Dresden, attended 
divine service at the Protestant church, gave frequent 
balls, masquerades, and concerts, at which he excited 
admiration by his excellent performance on the flute, and 
seemed, though superintending negotiations and miUtary 
affairs, to be wholly occupied in gaining the hearts of 
the Saxons by his gaiety, good-humour, and winning 
manners. The principal persons of the country attended 
his levees, and many of them were invited to his table ; 
while the strict discipline observed by his troops in- 
creased his popularity. 

When the king took up arms, the court of Vienna 
was extremely backward in its preparations. The cabinet 
of the empress imagined that it had abundance of time ; 
but when tidings of the events in Saxony arrived, states- 
men and military commanders exclaimed in astonish- 
ment : " Who could have thought it !" All the troops 
that marshal Browne could collect by the end of August, 
in the camp at Kolin on the Elbe, were 26,000 infantry, 
and 7000 cavalry : the Hungarian and Transylvanian 
levies were on the road; and orders were issued for 
raising those of Brabant and Italy. On hearing that 
Frederick had entered Saxony, Browne detached general 
. count Wied, with 4000 hussars, cavalry, and grenadiers, 
to Aussig to observe him; while prince Piccolomini, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 1 5 

with a corps of 17,000 foot and 5000 horse, assembled 
in Morayia, was to oppose Schwerin, who was penetrat- 
ing from Silesia into Bohemia by way of Nachod, with 
26,000 men. The king himself thereupon replaced 
duke Ferdinand of Brunswick at Cotta, and sent him 
forward as his advanced guard to Bohemia, 

The Saxons, in taking their strong position at Pima, 
had materially deranged Frederick's plan of operations. 
Winterfeld had represented to him all the advantages 
which might be gained by a rapid march upon Prague, 
and advised an attack of the position, more especially as 
the camp was not then entrenched, and the Saxons were 
in waat not only of ammunition but also of provisions. 
The king was loth to hazard the lives of some thousands 
of his brave fellows : he considered that Augustus and 
Briihl were much too fond of indulgence to submit to 
fast long, and this notion maintained its ascendency over 
his mind. Had the king followed Winterfeld's counsel, 
it is possible that much blood might have been spilt, but, 
on the other hand, the war might perhaps have been 
abridged by some years. 

It was not long, it is true, before impatience began to 
pervade the Saxon camp : its result was, that king 
Augustus opened a correspondence, in which he made 
proposals of neutrality. From former experience, Fre- 
derick knew what reliance was to be placed on Saxon 
promises ; but he waited till one division of his army 
had driven back the Austrian advanced posts on the 
Bohemian frontiers. He then broke off the negociations, 
sending Winterfeld to the king of Poland, to represent 
to him that the vicious politics of his minister had re- 
duced him to such a situation, as to preclude him from 



1 6 COURT AND TIMES OF 

pursuing a middle course ; that, on the contrary, the 
existing state of things left him no other choice than, in 
alliance with Prussia, to oppose the ambitious designs 
of the house of Austria. Augustus turned a deaf ear 
to these overtures, and solicited an opportunity to retire 
to Poland, so that Frederick found himself left to his 
own unaided efforts. 

The Saxons had been shut up in their camp for three 
weeks, as much to their own discomfort as to the annoy- 
ance of the king on account of the delay. Their only 
hope was that of being relieved by the Austrians. The 
court of Vienna made, in fact, every exertion to afford 
them succour. No sooner was Browne in marching con- 
dition, than he debouched from the mountains, towards 
the end of September, with 70,000 men, and appeared 
in the vicinity of Lowositz. The moment Frederick 
received intelligence of his approach, he left the blockade 
of the Saxons to the margrave Charles, and hastened with 
24,000 men to join the army under marshal Keith, at 
Aussig. 

On the 26th, the king took the command of the army 
in the camp of Johnsdorf, a position which he found to 
be most unfavourable for a battle. He lost no time, 
therefore, in breaking up with his troops, and went to 
meet Browne, whose pontoons had at length arrived, fully 
resolved to risk an engagement in order to prevent the 
Austrians from penetrating into Saxony. To observe the 
enemy with the more safety, Frederick marched, on the 
29th September, with his advanced guard to Tiirmitz, 
where he received certain intelligence that Browne was 
preparing to pass the Eger, and to advance upon Lowo- 
sitz. The king then formed his army into three columns, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 17 

under Keith, the prince of Prussia, and marshal Gessler, 
directing them by different routes upon Wehnina. On 
the 30th, when the Prussians reached the heights of 
Aujest, they beheld the Austrian camp in the plain of 
Lowositz. This position the Austrians had taken the 
same morning, after passing the Eger by bridges of boats, 
thrown across at Budin and Doran. 

The Prussian army spent the night of the 1st of Octo- 
ber on the elevated ridge between Wopama and Prison, 
before Welmina ; but Frederick deemed it necessary to 
push on with the advanced guard to the defile between 
the hills of Lowos and Radostitz, and occupied those two 
hills, which command the whole plain south of Lowositz 
as far bs the Eger, and which the Austrians had neglected 
to secure. It was midnight before the Prussians had 
taken the positions allotted to them, and the columns 
passed the rest of the night close to one another in 
marching order. 

The Austrians were almost twice as numerous as their 
adversaries, and favoured, moreover, by a very advanta- 
geous position. Browne supported his left wing on a 
deep swamp, and covered half his army so completely by 
this and other accidents of situation, that there was no 
fear of a successful attack on that side : the right ex- 
tended to the small town of Lowositz and the Elbe. He 
posted in the town his best infantry and a great quantity 
of artillery, and planted a strong battery before it ; but 
yet he had not availed himself of all the advantages that 
he might have secured. After a most fatiguing march, 
the king was in time to occupy the great defile between 
the lofty hills of Lowos and Homolka, leading to the 
plain of Lowositz, with six battalions, and to anticipate 

VOL. III. c 



18 COURT AND TIMES OF 

his adversary in this operation. Through this defile th^ 
Prussians had to march up. The wide space in which 
they then moved obliged the king to draw up his little 
army in four lines, and to support its wings upon the 
high hills. While the left drove the Croats out of the 
vineyards, in which Browne had posted them, the right 
advanced upon the hill of Homolka. Two different 
attacks made by the Prussian cavalry were baffled by the 
heavy fire poured into their flanks by the artillery from 
Lowositz and Sulowitz. 

A thick fog enveloped both armies for several hours, 
during which Frederick conceived that he had only 
Browne's rear-guard before him, till the discomfiture and 
retreat of his cavalry, with the loss of nearly a thousand 
of its number, convinced him that it was the whole Aus- 
trian army with which he had to deal. The Prussian 
cavalry was of no further use in this engagement, the 
horses being not only exhausted by the two disastrous 
attacks, but having had neither fodder nor water for 
thirty hours. 

The fog having cleared off about noon, Frederick was 
enabled to observe the Austrian line of battle from the 
Homolka. He resolved to trust the fortune of the day 
to his infantry, much as he had reason to spare it on 
account of the smallness of its force. Tempelhof relates 
that Frederick, after reconnoitring the enemy's position, 
determined to attack Lowositz from the Lowos, whereas 
all the other reports leave no doubt that he was only bent 
on maintaining his position, and that the Austrians were 
the assailants, being encouraged by the advantage which 
they had gained over the Prussian cavalry to attack the 
left wing on the hill of Lowos. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 19 

Browne bad drawn together the flower of his troops 
near Lowositz* C!olonel Lascy, with three battalions 
and six grenadier companies, first attempted to storm 
the hill of Lowoe, while a detachment of Croats was 
directed by Welhota upon the left flank of the Prussians. 
The situation of the latter was the more critical, as some 
of the regiments posted here, though supplied with sixty 
roimds of ball-cartridge, had wholly expended their am- 
munition in an action which had already lasted six hours, 
The duke of Bevem, who commanded in this quarter^ 
was informed of the circumstance, and asked what was 
to be done, Lascy and his troops being already half way 
up the hilL " For what purpose," exclaimed the duke, 
" have the lads been taught to charge with fixed ba- 
yonets V No sooner was the idea suggested, than it was 
carried into execution. The Prussians poured like a 
mountain torrent upon the enemy, overturning all before 
them. Lascy was wounded in this attempt, and part of 
his troops were driven into the Elbe. Lowositz was set 
on fire, and all who defended that post were obliged to 
make a precipitate retreat. This decided the victory 
about three o'clock in the afternoon. 

Preuss tells us that, when the Prussian infantry took 
Lowositz, not only had the cavalry quitted the field, but 
Frederick himself, on receiving intelligence that the left 
wing had expended all its ammunition, that it had sus- 
tained considerable loss, and that the enemy was conti- 
nually reinforcing his troops in the vineyards on the 
Lowos, had given up the day for lost, and retired with 
the garde du corps to the village of Bilinka, half way to 
Welmina, where major Oelsnitz, who had highly dis- 
tinguished himself, overtook him with the news of the 

victory. 

c 2 



20 COURT AND TIMES OF 

As little more than the Austrian advanced posts Bad 
been engaged, Browne effected his retreat in excellent 
order, the Prussian cavalry being too much exhausted 
to pursue the enemy. The force of the Austrians ex- 
ceeded 40,000 men ; Frederick had only 24,000, but a 
much more powerful artillery, the fire from which, as well 
as from that of the Austrians, was incessant. The loss 
of the Prussians is stated by Gaudi at 2864, killed, 
wounded, and missing ; and it is curious that the Aus- 
trians admitted the loss of one less than the same number 
of men, 475 horses, two standards, and three pieces of 
cannon. 

It was at the commencement of this battle, immedi- 
ately after the first unsuccessful charge of the Prussian 
cavalry, that a garde du corps, covered with blood and 
without hat, came galloping straight towards the king, 
who, with his retinue, had posted himself on a rising 
ground. He strove to turn his horse, but to no. pur- 
pose ; some of the king's aides-de-camp, therefore, 
placed themselves in the way, and stopped the animaL 
The rider was angry at their interference. ** I will 
turn my horse, I'll engage, without any help of yours." 
So saying, he turned about to dash again upon the 
enemy. " My dear fellow," cried the king, " stop and 
have your wound bound up. Your horse, too, is wounded 
on the head." ^* Why, your majesty," replied the man, 
^* I have no fear that the devil will fetch me, and the 
jade has four sound legs yet." With these words he 
was preparing to gallop off. *^ Wait one moment," said 
the king, and, taking his handkerchief from his pocket, 
gave it to an aide-de-camp, and ordered him to bind up 
the man's head with it. " I thank your majesty," cried 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 21 

the garde du corps ; " yoii will never get your handker-* 
chief again ; but you shall be paid for it, and I will be 
revenged." Away he galloped direct for the enemy* 
When the battle was over, as this man dixl not appear in 
his rank, the king was curious to learn what had become 
of him. After long search, he was found dead upon the 
field, having received many cuts and shots, and grasping 
his discharged pistol in his right hand. The king's hand* 
kerchief was still about his head ; and near him lay two 
Austrian horse-soldiers, one of them dead, the other 
severely wounded. " That fellow," said the latter to 
those who came to look for the man, " had the devil 
himself in him. He cut away, in his turban, at such 
a rate that nobody durst go near him. A ball brought 
him down at last, and then he shot my comrade 
here/' The king surveyed the body with emotion for 
some time, and exclaimed : " That fellow deserved a 
squadron !" 

The victorious army remained upon the field of battle; 
The king took up his head-quarters at Kinitz, and 
caused the defile near Welmina to be immediately occu-^ 
pied. Browne kept his troops under arms in the posi* 
tion which he had taken immediately after the battle. 
The king, apprehensive of a new conflict, was disposed 
to retreat at night, on account of the superior force of 
his antagonist ; but Oelsuitz, who had been promoted 
for his share in the victory, dissuaded him from the iu- 
tention, and about midnight a deserter brought tidings 
ef Browne's retreat. The marshal caused the bridge 
over the Elbe, at Leitmeritz, and that across the Eger, 
to be broken down behind him, and next day took pos- 
session of his old camp beyond the latter river, alleging 



22 COURT AND TIMES OF 

want of water as a plea for his retreat, though, in his 
report of the engagement, he admits that his right wing 
was supported on the Elbe, and his left on the ponds of 
Tschischkowitz. 

On the 2d, Frederick removed his head-quarters 
to Lowositz ; he rewarded 47 oflBcers, from captains 
up to colonels, with the order of Merit ; and on the 
8d the victory was celebrated with Te Deum and feux 
dejoie. 

In a letter written the day after the battle to 
Schwerin, the king admits that he ^^ has not found in 
the enemy the Austrians of old/' From what occurred 
yesterday, he adds, ^^ I see that these people only aim at 
involving us in fights of posts, and that we mxist take 
care not to attack them precipitately. They are more 
artful than they formerly were, and you may believe me 
when I assure you that, unless one can bring a great 
quantity of heavy artillery against them, it will cost 
innumerable lives to beat them. Never," he continues, 
" have my troops performed such prodigies of valour 
since I have had the honour to command them, both 
cavalry and infantry^" and in another account of the 
battle he says : " I see from this effort what my troops 
are capable of doing." 

The Austrians, on the other hand, are said to have 
exclaimed, while looking at their wounds : " We have 
met again with the old Prussians !" It is worthy of 
remark that Browne released the Prussian ofiicers who 
were taken prisoners, and the king followed his chival- 
rous example. 

On the other side of Bohemia nothing of consequence 
had taken place. Schwerin had encamped, on the 22d 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 25 

of September, at Aujest, near Konigingratz ; whfle Pic- 
colomini occupied a position that was unassailable, at 
no great distance, looking carelessly on while the Prus- 
sians carried off all the forage they could find in the 
villages, in sight of the Austrian camp, and levied 
/ supplies and contributions wherever they could. Such 
was the situation of the two armies, till Schwerin re- 
turned, on the 20th of October, to Silesia, 

By the retreat of Browne to Budin, Frederick had 
indeed thwarted the original design of the Austrians to 
penetrate into Saxony and relieve the army of the king 
of Poland, which was still blockaded at Pima ; but he 
was too weak to attempt anything against the enemy. 
He, therefore, contented himself with strengthening 
his camp by fortifications, and observing the Aus- 
trians. To advance and cross the Eger was out of the 
question, as, in that case, he would have exposed 
his rear to the Austrian corps stationed at Leitmeritz. 

The results of the battle of Lowositz rendered the 
situation of the unfortunate Saxons encamped near 
Pima more hopeless than ever. Closely blockaded by 
40,000 Prussians, stationed on both sides of the Elbe, 
who cut off all supplies, they had not the least chance 
of success if they attempted to break through the line 
of their adversaries. In this time of distress, the Saxons 
exhibited the most striking proofs of loyalty and devo- 
tion to their sovereign ; though it must be admitted that 
he had done nothing to deserve such attachment, but, 
on the contrary, imposed heavy burdens on his Pro- 
testant country, for the maintenance of a luxurious 
Catholic court and prodigal courtiers. So much the 
more praiseworthy is the fidelity with which the nation 



24 COURT AND TIMES OF 

in general, and the military in particular, adhered 
to the person and cause of the sovereign in this trying 
emergency. 

The troops composing the force at Pima had been 
assembled in the greatest haste. Horses of all sorts 
had been put in requisition for drawing the artillery, 
and artisans and labourers taken as drivers of the train ; 
hence arose great confusion and disorder. By the ex- 
press command of Briihl, the army was supplied with 
provisions for four days only ; and supplies, which were 
on the way, were left behind. The idea entertained was 
that a convention of neutrality, or a speedy retreat to 
Bohemia, would render the expense of collecting stores 
of this kind unnecessary. On the 10th of September, 
when the blockade of the camp was formed by the Prus* 
sians, it contained scarcely a fortnight's provisions. The 
king and his court would not submit to any abridg-^ 
ment of their usual enjoyments ; and on this account 
the rations were at once reduced one third. The selfish 
monarch took good care to provide for his personal 
comfort ; for, at his request, Frederick allowed him to 
send a cart to Dresden once a week to fetch supplies for 
his own table. 

A participator in the distress which the faithful 
Saxons had here to endure for five weeks has left a 
simple, natural, and affecting picture of their suffer-- 
ings, in his diary, from which I shall make two or three 
extracts. 

** September 19. We had been scarcely ten days in 
the camp, when the infantry ceased to be allowed any 
more rations, but each was obliged to keep his horse 
alive as well as he coul4. Accordingly, the horses were 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. S5 

turned oat to graze, and each of them had to provide 
for his own subsistence ; nay, at last, it went so far, that 
the rations of the cavalry also were cut off; of coarse 
they too were forced to turn out their horses, and these 
absolutely ate up the moss which grows on the dry hills, 
so clean that, as there was no pasturage left, their riders 
were* obliged to go into the woods and gardens, and 
pluck leaves, and also green twigs from the trees, to 
feed their cattle with them. The allowance of bread 
for the men was likewise reduced ; for, instead of receiv- 
ing six pounds every three days as formerly, they now 
had but four. The most plentiful thing was meat ; but 
not a morsel of any vegetable was to be had. We 
hoped, from day to day, that the Prussians would leave 
us and march off to Bohemia; for, as we saw so 
many troops constantly marching in different columns 
towards Bohemia, we concluded that those which were 
blockading us would not stay long, but soon follow the 
others.'* 

** October 3. Things grew worse and worse every day; 
for the holrses which were turned out to grass, finding 
nothing more to eat, dropped down and died of hunger, 
which was lamentable to see. Out of a total of some 
thousands, several hundred dropped in this manner; 
some of them died immediately, but others rolled about 
and could neither live nor die ; some even got up again, 
ate the mould for very hunger, dropped again, and 
kicked, and struggled, and rolled about till they died. 
Each soldier was now forced to make shift six days with 
four pounds of bread ; of meat they could get what 
they wanted, as the peasants in general disposed of their 
cattle." 



26 COURT AND TIMES OF 

" October 13. We had crossed the Elbe in a thick 
fog^ with the intention of attempting to break through 
and join the Austrians. The fog turned to very heavy 
rain, which lasted for two days and nights. Provisions 
were extremely scarce ; for the little there was in our 
old camp we had entirely consumed, and taken nothing 
with us, because we had been assured that, as soon as 
we were across the Elbe, we should fall in with the 
Imperialists and find plenty of every thing. As this 
was not the case, we went into the fields to collect any 
cabbage-stalks that were still standing there, and boiled 
them without salt or other seasoning. But, as these 
scarcely sufficed to appease our hunger for the first day, 
we had t. .t«,e for tt on the mLng day,. Bre^ 
was not to be had, even if we would have paid ten 
dollars for a mouthful. During the last days, so much 
as a florin and a dollar was paid for a single cabbage- 
stalk. Meat was no longer to be got for money." 

Browne had, so early as the 2 2d of September, 
acquainted Count Rutowski, the commander-in-chief 
of the Saxon army, that he intended to descend the 
Elbe, for the purpose of supporting the Saxons in an 
attempt to break through the Prussian lines on the right 
bank of the river. The day fixed for this joint opera- 
tion was the 12th of October. Though he had since 
lost the battle of Lowositz, and would gladly have de- 
ferred the execution of this plan for a few days, yet, 
on learning the extreme distress which prevailed in the 
Saxon camp, he determined to adhere to the original 
design. Having reinforced general Macguire at Leit- 
meritz, he left count Luchesi in command of the camp 
at Budin, and set out on the 7th of October with 8000 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 27 

men and twenty pieces of cannon, crossed the Elbe in 
boats at Raudnitz, in spite of the bad weather and 
wretched roads arrived on the 9th at Kamnitj^ and, in 
the afternoon of the 11th, was, according to his pro-*, 
mise, on the heights between Lichtenhain and Mitteldorf, 
about three miles from Schandan. On the eyening of 
that day, the Saxons were to hare thrown a bridge of 
boats across the Elbe, under the guns of the impregna- 
ble fortress of Konigstein, near the village of Thurms- 
dorf ; but they could not accomplish that purpose till 
the following night. The Saxons, exhausted with 
hunger and cold, actually crossed the river in the night 
of the 13th; but the violence of the wind prevented 
Browne from hearing the two guns fired at Konigstein, 
as the preconcerted signal that Butowski was ready for 
the attack. He wrote that same night to inform the 
Saxon commander that he could not wait for him later 
than nine on the following morning, and he actually 
quitted his position at that hour, to return to Bohemia. 
Butowski, having crossed the Elbe, broke down the 
bridge, and, pursued by the Prussians, lost his rear- 
guard, baggage, and half of his artillery. The state 
of his troops was truly pitiable. " All the ravines and 
rocks," says the writer whom I have already quoted, 
" through which we had to pass, were occupied in great 
force by the enemy; and Browne, from whom we ex- 
pected assistance, was gone. We had passed seventy- 
two hours, for forty-eight of which it had been raiuing 
incessantly, without bread and provisions, in the open 
air, and under arms. Few had any other food than the 
roots of vegetables, which had been long consumed; 
boiled hair-powder, reasoned with gunpowder, was a 



28 COURT AND TIMES OF 

treat ; and wood, [sawdust, I suppose,] was the fodder 
of the horses." 

All hopes of succour were at an end. King Augustus 
and count Briihl, enjoying themselves in ease and secu* 
rity at Konigstein, gave orders for a desperate attacks 
All the generals, on the contrary, agreed that they had 
no other course left but to treat with the enemy. The 
conqueror prescribed humiliating conditions. Faming 
and distress compelled submission. Rutowski invited 
general Winterfeld to the Saxon camp, and on the 1 4th 
agreed upon an armistice, which was proclaimed to both 
armies just at the moment of the king's arrival at the 
6amp of Struppen. He had left Lowositz on the pre-* 
ceding day, having only just then heard of Browne's 
expedition. Next morning, Winterfeld brought the 
king's answer to the articles of capitulation^ His 
proposal that the Saxons should join him and march 
against Austria was rejected: they chose rather to 
surrender themselves prisoners of war. On the 1 6th, 
the capitulation was exchanged, and on the following 
day, the king crossed the Elbe by the bridge of boats 
at Raden, to wait on the heights of Waltersdorf for 
the Saxons, who marched that morning from Ebenheit- 
Pefore they reached Raden, they halted to form into 
regiments, for the purpose of crossing the river, taking 
the oath on the other side, and marching to Struppen. 
All the regiments were obliged to lay down their arms. 
Frederick himself met them, rode along the ranks, and 
when the Saxon generals took off their hats as they 
came up to him, he courteously bade them welcome, 
and invited them to dine with him. A liberal allowance 
of bread was distributed among the half - famished 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 29 

soldiers. The officers rejected the inost advantageous 
offers of service, and were allowed liberty to go 
wherever they pleased, on giving their word of honour 
not to serve, against Prussia. The privates and subal- 
terns were, forced to swear fidelity to the Prussian 
colours. Those who were not to be intimidated into 
compliance were distributed among the Prussian troops ; 
with the rest were formed ten new regiments, to which 
were assigned new uniforms and new commanders. The 
impolicy of this measure was soon apparent ; for the 
Saxons, who had borne their deplorable fate with such 
fortitude, that scarcely one hundred deserters had gone 
over to the Prussians during the blockade, were filled 
with implacable hatred against their conquerors, seized 
the first opportunity of deserting in whole divisions, 
and either returned home or sought some other service! 
The same spirit animated the recruits, to the number of 
9000, raised in Saxony in the following spring to com- 
plete those regiments. 

King Augustus, who had witnessed from Konigstein 
the captivity of his army, solicited passports from 
Frederick ; and on the 20th of October, accompanied 
hj his two younger sons and count Briihl, he left that 
fortress, which was declared neutral, for Warsaw. The 
queen, and their eldest son, the electoral prince, with 
his consort, would not quit Dresden* Frederick wrote 
a polite farewell letter to the king of Poland, whom 
he addressed, " Sir, my brother,'* and took care that 
his majesty should receive no molestation on his journey 
from Prussian troops. 

Frederick now returned to Bohemia, and marched his 
army into Saxony, where it took up its winter quarters. 



80 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Schwerin also quitted his camp on the Slst of October, 
and led his troops into winter*qaarters in Upper and 
Lower Silesia ; while Winterfeld and Lestwitz kept np 
the communication between the two armies, in the line 
from Zittau to Hirschberg and Landshut. Marshal 
Browne also put his anny into winter-quarters, and 
went to Prague ; while Picoolomini's troops were can- 
toned in Bohemia and Moravia. 

Frederick, having made Dresden his head-quarters, 
organised the administration of the Saxon territories, 
levied recruits, and lived exactly as he was accustomed to 
do in Berlin. He read, composed verses, played on the 
flute, went to operas, concerts, and assemblies, and 
even attended a sermon delivered by superintendent 
am Ende, in the church of the Cross, on the text: 
" Bender unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and 
unto God the things that are God's," and was so well 
pleased with it that he sent the preacher a present of 
champagne, requested him to publish the sermon, and 
accepted the dedication. He visited the Catholic church 
also to hear Hasse's music. The rich treasures of art 
in the Saxon capital were left untouched ; and it was 
only by permission of the court of Dresden that Frede- 
rick had a copy of Battoni's Magdalen made for him, 
and that he visited the Japanese palace. It is true 
that he would have been glad to see the queen follow 
her family to Poland ; but she would not stir, and died 
in Dresden in November, 1757, after her court had, 
with her knowledge, endeavoured to put Meissen and 
Dresden into the hands of Frederick's enemies. The 
only revenge taken by the philosopher of Sans-Souci 
was on count Briihl, as one of the instigators of this 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. x 81 

unhappy war. His mansions, Belvedere, near Dresden, 
Nischwitz, near Wurzen, and Grochwitz, near Hertzberg, 
suffered severely; and at a later period, Pforten, 
another of his seats in Lower Lusatia, was burned 
by a detachment of hussars sent by the king for the 
purpose. 

In the field, Frederick was even more indefatigable 
than in time of peace. On his arrival at head-quarters 
after a niiarch, his first care was to post the vedettes 
and to inspect the camp; the maps and plans were 
then spread out; and, when he had accurately ac- 
quainted himself with the ground, he instructed some 
of his hussar officers how to spy out the enemy. Then 
came his cabinet councillors, Eichel and Coper. The 
rest of his time till dinner was devoted to his journal. 
If any thing occurred at the advanced posts, he hastened 
thither himself, and interrogated deserters. At table, 
gaiety and good-humour prevailed, as in quiet times ; 
but the conversation mostly turned upon military mat- 
ters. After dinner, the cabinet councillors came again, 
and when the army halted for a few days, the reader 
was at hand to entertain him. For supper, the king 
was accustomed for some time to take soaked biscuits, 
with French cheese and Tyrolese wine, and to sleep 
five hours. If any thing, however trivial, occurred at 
the advanced posts, the officer on duty had orders to 
cause him to be waked. Two horses were kept con- 
stantly saddled for such occasions. During the whole 
war,. Frederick never used a tent, and he would put up 
with the meanest cottage, if it was but in communica- 
tion with one wing of his army* 



82 COURT AND TIMES OP 



CHAPTER XXVn. 

Campaign of 1757 — Proceedings of the Diet of Ratisbon against Frede- 
rick — Activity and Schemes of Austria and France— Frederick's Allies— 
The Queen of Poland and Countess Briihl — Sufferings of Mecklenburg — 
Affair of Glasow — Forces of the Belligerent Powers — The Prussians 
enter Bohemia — Battle of Prague — Death of Marshal Schwerin — The 
Austria ns seek refuge in Prague — Blockade of the City by the Prus- 
sians — Abortive attempts of the Austrians to escape-— Furious Thunder-* 
storm — Bombardment of Prague — Sufferings of the inhabitants — Care* 
lessness of the Austrian Generals — Expedition of Colonel Mayr in South 
Grermany — Frederick leaves Keith before Prague and marches to meet 
Daun — Battle of Kollin — Stipulations of the Secret Treaty between 
France and Austria. 

Frederick's enemies had neglected no means to swell 
the ranks of his opponents. They accused him of 
violating the law of nations, of disturbing the peace 
of the continent, because he had not suffered himself 
to be taken by surprise, of committing unheard-of 
atrocities ; in short they did all but brand him as a 
robber against whom the whole world ought to unite. 
The Aulic Council in Vienna commenced a formal pro- 
cess against the king, for the purpose of causing him to 
be put to the ban of the empire, that is to say, proclaim- 
ing him to have forfeited his dominions and his dignity 
as a sovereign, and getting an army of execution sent 
against him by the Diet. According to ancient custom. 
Dr. Aprill, an imperial notary, was sent to Plotho, the 
Prussian envoy at Ratisbon, with two citizens as wit- 
nesses, to serve upon him, as the king's representative, 
what we should call the bill of indictment, and a sum- 
mons to appear before the tribunal of the fiscal. Blotho 
refused to receive the papers, and thrust the bearer of 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 33 

them cmt of doors. As this interruption of the forma- 
lities delayed the process, France advised that the 
antiquated resource of the ban should be relinquished, 
and that in its stead the Diet should set in motion a 
numerous army against Prussia. This recommendation 
was followed ; and the German princes were required 
to furnish their respective contingents for the purpose 
of forming an imperial army of execution, the command 
of which was given to prince Joseph of Saxe-Hildburg- 
hausen. In the resolution of the Diet for raising this 
army, it was called a hasty or rather hastening (eiknde) 
army of execution ; but in the public notification of 
that resolution, by a whimsical typographical error, 
arising from the omission of a single letter, the Ger- 
man word eilende was changed into elende (signifying 
wretched, miserable,) and all its operations proved that 
a more characteristic epithet could not have been found 
for this contemptible force. 

To instigate France to increased exertion, the court 
of Vienna reinforced the influence of Pompadour with 
the complaints of the dauphiness, a daughter of the 
unfortunate king of Poland's, and with the persuasions 
of marshal Belleisle, a hoary intriguer. The empress 
Elizabeth of Russia was only in want of means to 
afford active proof of her enmity to the king of Prus- 
sia ; to remove that obstacle, Maria Theresa borrowed 
of France two millions of dollars, which she transmitted 
to the czarina. In Sweden, the Diet, likewise bribed 
by French gold, declared against the king, upon the 
pretext that Sweden had guaranteed the peace of West- 
phalia. Austria even strove to disseminate the notion 
that Frederick was aiming at the overthrow of the 

VOL. III. D 



34 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Catholic religion. By such means the princes of Ger- 
many were induced to grant the empress-queen an 
auxiliary force of 60,000 men, to which was given the 
appellation of an imperial army of execution. Russia 
prontised to furnish 100,000 men, France 150,000, and 
Austria the same number. Sweden was to take the 
field with 40,000 ; while the Netherlands, Denmark, 
and Poland, took no part in the crusade. Frederick's 
dominions were again partitioned before-hand : Austria 
was to have Silesia, Russia the Prussian provinces, 
Sweden Pomerania, Saxony Magdeburg and Halber- 
Btadt, and France stipulated for the Westphalian pro- 
vinces ; the rest the king was to be allowed to retain 
if he made proper submission. 

Frederick was not without respectable allies : En- 
gland, duke Charles of Brunswick- Wolfenbiittel, whose 
sons held commands in the Prussian army, the land- 
grave of Hesse-Cassel, the duke of Gotha, and the 
count of Biickeburg. By the treaty of January 11th, 
1757, the king united himself more closely with Great 
Britain, and the English nation was filled with the 
warmest enthusiasm for him. Pitt, then secretary of 
state, whose master mind exercised so powerful an in- 
fluence on public affairs during this war, omitted no 
opportunity of expressing, either in public or private, 
his sense of the importance of this alliance, and his 
warm admiration of the Prussian monarch. Thus in 
March he writes to Sir Andrew Mitchell : " I feel the 
most grateful sentiments of veneration and zeal for a 
prince, who stands the unshaken bulwark of Europe, 
against the most powerful and malignant conspiracy 
that ever yet has threatened the independence of man- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 35 

kind." Still the cabinet of St. James's never supported 
Frederick so powerfully as it might have done, neither 
did it send a squadron to the Baltic, as stipulated in 
the fourth article of this new treaty. When he found 
that his plans for the energetic defence of Germany 
were not listened to in London, and the mission of 
general Schmettau to Hanover on the same account 
produced no effect, he was obliged to abandon Wesel 
for the purpose of concentrating his force. Saxony, 
meanwhile, was so administered by a Prussian war- 
directory that it was chiefly the rich resources which it 
affi>rded, together with the English subsidies, that sup- 
plied him with the means of carrying on the war with 
half of Europe. During this first winter, Saxony had to 
furnish flour, fodder, and horses, to pay a considerable 
war contribution, to levy 9000 recruits ; all the military 
stores were conveyed to Magdeburg; the salaries of 
the electoral functionaries were greatly reduced, many 
cut off entirely; and Schimmelmann, the merchant 
who was afterwards minister of Denmark, purchased of 
the king Saxon porcelain to the amount of 200,000 
dollars. 

The king endeavoured at the same time to remove 
some dangerous enemies from Dresden. We have seen 
that the queen was obstinately bent on remaining in 
tiie Saxon capital, where she might possibly find oppor- 
tunities to revenge herself on Frederick for the humilia- 
tions to which she and her family had been subjected. 
He was informed that the Austrians purposed to sur- 
prise the neutral fortress of Konigstein, in concert 
with the Saxon commandant; and it was discovered 
that the queen and the countess Bruhl were engaged 

D 2 



86 COURT AND TIMES OF 

in a treacherous correspondence with the enemy. The 
latter was ordered to leave Saxony. She was ex- 
tremely reluctant to comply, and, in answer to her 
repeated remonstrances, the king thus wrote : " The 
suspicion against you, madam, is too strong for me to 
suffer your presence any longer in Dresden. Do not 
imagine that I am to be offended with impunity. 
Nothing would be easier than to revenge myself if I 
pleased : but I am content to let people know that 
I have it in my power to do so. Let both your hus- 
band and yourself beware of tiring out my patience, 
or you may feel the terrible consequences of your 
conduct. I will nevertheless intimate to you that the 
queen, the Austrians, and the Frencli, are planning the 
downfall of your husband. If you will take the trou- 
ble to investigate the matter, you will find that this 
is founded on truth. This communication is not made 
because I desire your friendship : I despise it too much, 
and have means of conquering my enemies, both open 
and secret, without being obliged to have recourse to 
meanness and cruelty." 

Mecklenburg was suffering at this time still more 
severely than Saxony. The duke had insisted at Ratis- 
bon more warmly than any other prince of the empire 
that Frederick should be put to the ban. The Prussians 
thereupon entered his country, but the duke fled, and 
his unoffending subjects had to suffer for his folly. 
They were compelled to furnish fodder, cattle, a contri- 
bution of some millions, and 16,000 recruits. 

Frederick having, in the month of November, per- 
formed a pilgrimage to the field of Liitzen, memorable 
for the death of his favourite hero, Gustavus Adolphus, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 37 

where he stayed some hours, while a survey of the 
ground was made hy engineers, repaired in the first 
days of January to his own capital. Here he passed 
only eight days, from the 4th to the 12th, and then 
returned to Dresden, the centre of his cares. Having 
ordered the reserves in Pomerania, originally destined 
for marshal Lehwald, to join the troops in Saxony, he 
hastened towards the end of January to Hainan in 
Silesia, to concert with Schwerin the plan of the ensu- 
ing campaign. 

During the whole winter, the two hostile armies 
enjoyed almost undisturbed repose. The prisoners of 
war were exchanged at Peterswalde, and bloodless 
skirmishes occasionally took place. An affair of rather 
more consequence, when Lascy attempted to surprise 
the Prussian posts in Lusatia, cost major Blumenthal of 
prince Henry's regiment his life. Infinitely more injuri- 
ous was the aversion already manifested by the Saxons 
to the Prussian service. Excited and encouraged by 
Frederick's enemies, many even of the officers forfeited 
their word, and were received with open arms by the 
Austrians. 

Towards the end of March, the Prussian head^quar- 
ters were fixed at Lockwitz. Here occurred a circum- 
stance which excited a great sensation. The king had 
taken a soldier named Glasow into his service as 
chamber-hussar, and afterwards made him his valet de 
chambre. He placed great confidence in this man, and 
even entrusted him with the care of his privy purse. 
Glasow was suddenly sent off to be imprisoned in 
Spandau, without any official intimation of his crime. 
Surmise was not long in deciding its nature. Archen- 



38 COURT AND TIMES OF 

holtz, the historian of the Seven Years' War, and many 
other writers after him, relate as an undoubted fact, 
that Glasow had formed the atrocious design of poison- 
ing his master with a cup of chocolate, that other 
persons were acquainted with this intention, and that 
the secret was revealed by one of them. Some, with 
a more poetical imagination, represent the attendant, 
disconcerted by the piercing look of the monarch, throw- 
ing himself with the poisoned chocolate at the feet of 
his master, and confessing his guilt. The reader will 
rejoice with me, for the honour of human nature, to learn 
that this story is pure fiction, Glasow had made an 
improper use of the king's seal, and, with the assistance 
of the keeper of a coffee-house, named Volker, forged 
several orders in the name of his master. Glasow died 
in the fortress before the expiration of his twelve months' 
imprisonment. 

This circumstance shows how little Frederick cared 
about the stories circulated respecting him. No prince, 
perhaps, was ever more misrepresented, slandered, and 
vilified in print ; yet he steadily pursued his coarse, re- 
gardless of these effusions of private rancour. But he 
did not always disdain to defend himself from political 
charges, especially when they had a tendency to make 
the world believe that he was actuated by designs of 
ambition and conquest. Thus, on the 16th of January, 
1757, he caused a pamphlet to be burned by the hand 
of the public executioner in Berlin, in which the author 
pretended to furnish incontestable proof of his right to 
the kingdom of Bohemia. Since 1741, indeed, several 
malicious publications of this kind had appeared, setting 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 89 

up claims in behalf of the Prassian monarch to terri- 
tories belonging to other princes. 

Frederick calculated that all his enemies would not 
be ready for some time to act jointly against him, and 
upon this assumption he founded his plan of operation* 
He hoped, by a sudden attack on the Austrian army in 
Bohemia, to gain all those advantages which he had 
been unable to obtain in the preceding year. To this 
end he strove to encourage a belief that, not feeling him- 
self strong enough to attack, it was his intention to wait 
for the enemy in Saxony. To heighten the illusion, he 
caused Dresden to be fortified. His real object was to 
lull the Austrian generals into security, and to induce 
them to form magazines on the Bohemian frontiers. 

Thus too, when duke Ferdinand of Brunswick, as go- 
vernor of Magdeburg, reminded the king that this for- 
tress was in want of many things which would be indis- 
pensably necessary in case of a siege, Frederick replied 
that he hoped the duke was not under any apprehension 
of a siege of Magdeburg, as they must all be put out 
of the way before such a thing could happen. " Adieu,'* 
he wrote to the same prince, on another occasion : " with 
firmness and vigilance, with energy and prudence, we 
will drive the devil himself out of hell, if there is one." 

The Prussian army, amounting, at the commence- 
ment of the war, to 154,000 men, was increased during 
the winter to 210,000, including about 22,000 Saxons, 
whose patriotism, it is true, soon taught them the way 
to Poland. The imperial army, too, was so considerably 
reinforced that an old warrior could not refrain from 
saying : " With this army the king of Prussia would 



40 COURT AND TIMES OF 

drive the devils themselves out of hell." " Ay,'* re* 
plied another Austrian, "but with his own he would 
drive them all into it again, if twice as many of them 
as there are of us and our allies were marching against 
him." 

The numerical force of the armies actually brought 
into the field by the belligerent powers in 1757 was as 
follows : Austrians 143,000, French 134,000, Russians 
100,000, troops of the empire 32,000, and Swedes 
22,000, forming a total of 431,000. To oppose thes^ 
Frederick had but 152,000 men, besides 45,000 English 
and Hanoverians — that is altogether no more than 
197,000; but he counterbalanced this excessive dis- 
proportion by those powers of genius concentrated in his 
single person, by which he imparted harmony and unity 
to his operations, while his adversaries, acting separately, 
crossed and paralyzed each other's efforts. 

The king committed the defence of Prussia to marshal 
Lehwald, and the protection of Pomerania to general 
ManteuffeL The rest of his army destined to take the 
field was thus distributed : in Silesia and the county of 
Glatz 33,000 men under Schwerin ; the duke of Bevern 
with 22,000 in Upper Lusatia; 36,000 under the 
king in person near Dresden ; and prince Maurice with 
18,000 in the Saxon district of Voigtland. The Aus- 
trians, on their part, had collected 36,000 men in 
Moravia, under marshal Daun ; 20,000 near Reichen- 
berg under count Konigseck ; 50,000 near Budin, under 
Browne, who was to advance upon Dresden ; and 20,000 
at Eger, under the duke of Ahremberg, who had direc- 
tions to march through Voigtland, and to effect a junc^ 
tion with Browne and Konigseck, near Dresden. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 41 

It was originally proposed that the chief command of 
the imperial forces should be conferred on Browne, a 
commander of great experience and reputation ; but, 
through the personal influence of the empress-queen, her 
brother-in-law, duke Charles of Lorraine, whose prerious 
ill success had deprived him of the confidence of the 
troops, was placed at the head of the Austrian army. 
Browne was to assist him. No precise plan of opera- 
tions had been determined upon, but it was generally 
admitted that an attack would be made upon Saxony 
and Lusatia. Considerable magazines were accordingly 
formed at different points of the Bohemian frontiers. 
When, in the beginning of March, duke Charles pur- 
posed to concentrate the distant regiments, Browne and 
Neipperg opposed that intention. The former even 
wished that Frederick might be induced to make some 
attempt, conceiving that it could only be ruinous to 
him : and, as duke Charles was detained by illness in 
Vienna, no precautionary measures were for the present 
adopted by Browne, though warned by prince Kaunitz, 
who recommended a rational defensive. 

The four Prussian divisions broke up between the 
18th and the 21st of April, to penetrate at so many 
difierent points into Bohemia, with a view to cut off in 
detail the scattered corps of the enemy, or to drive them 
back upon Prague, to decide by a victory the fate of 
that capital, and to pursue the beaten foe into the Aus- 
trian provinces. According to Frederick's calculations, 
his whole force was to be collected in the environs of 
Prague on the 5th of May. He himself entered Bo- 
hemia by way of Aussig ; Maurice marched direct for 
Eger : and as the duke of Ahremberg was concentrating 



42 COURT AND TIMES OF 

his corps there, Maurice suddenly turned about, and 
proceeded through the passes which the enemy had neg- 
lected to occupy, by way of Commotau to Linay, where 
his division joined that of the king. The duke of 
Bevem's column, which was to have joined Schwerin's at 
Tumau, on the Iser, came by the way upon Eonigseck's 
entrenched camp near Beichenberg, attacked it under 
very disadvantageous circumstances, and stormed it in 
spite of batteries, ditches, and abattis. The enemy fled 
with the loss of a thousand men, several pieces of can- 
non, and three standards, to Liebenau, where, secured 
by the defiles from further pursuit, Konigseck rallied 
the fugitives. Schwerin, who had crossed the Elbe at 
Konigshof, was on the point of turning the beaten ge- 
neral, when the latter retreated upon Prague, abandon- 
ing the magazine at Jung-Bunzlau, with several millions 
of florins, to the Prussians. 

Meanwhile the king was advancing upon Prague, to 
attack Browne and drive him from his strong position 
at Budin, before Ahremberg should bring him reinforce- 
ment. Having crossed the Eger, the imperial general, 
fearing lest he should be cut off from Prague, retreated 
upon that city, closely followed by Frederick, and was 
on the 30th of April at Tuchomierschitz. Here prince 
Charles, who had arrived at Prague on the preceding 
day, joined the army. Browne approached him with 
tears in his eyes. " I am very unfortunate," said he ; 
" I wish I were dead." The enemy, he continued, was 
advancing, and they must absolutely attack him. The 
duke strove, in vain, to cheer him ; indeed despondence 
pervaded the whole army. All the generals were of 
opinion that they ought to fall back upon Prague, lest 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 43 

the Prussians should get thither before them, and cut off 
their communication with the magazines in the resir, 
with the corps of Konigseck and Serbelloni, and with 
part of Bohemia. Browne alone, intent on seeking 
death, was for attacking the enemy, as the adyantage of 
the ground was on the side of the Austrians ; but his 
advice was not adopted. On the 1st of May the Aus- 
trian army retired upon Prague, the left wing under 
duke Charles in person, the right under Browne. The 
former passed through Prague, and encamped at Nusle, 
on the right bank of the Mulde ; the latter crossed the 
river below the city, and took post at Malleschitz : the 
two divisions numbered 45,000 men. Count Thiirheim 
occupied Prague, which, however, was utterly destitute 
of the means of resistance. 

The Austrians had taken so favourable a position that 
it would have been very difficult to come at them. Their 
left wing was supported upon the hill called the Ziska- 
berg, and protected by the works of Prague ; a declivity 
of several hundred feet covered the centre ; the right 
wing occupied an eminence, at the foot of which lay the 
village of Stjerbohol, and this was the most accessible 
point. Frederick impatiently awaited the arrival of 
Schwerin. He had but few troops, and the strong Aus- 
trian army opposed to him might have handled him 
roughly. No sooner was he joined by the marshal than 
the king informed him, on the 6th of May, that he was 
determined to attack prince Charles without delay ; that, 
to render the victory complete, prince Maurice should 
throw a bridge of boats across the Mulde above Prague, 
cross the river with the whole right wing of Keith's 
corps, which was blockading what is called the little 



44 COURT AND TIMES OF 

side of the city, and fall upon the rear of the enemy, 
while he himself (the king) would attack him in front 
and flank. Schwerin and the other generals would have 
dissuaded him from the execution of this plan, which 
they thought too bold. The marshal's troops had made 
a long march and were fatigued : the ground on which 
the battle was to be fought seemed unsafe, and had not 
been sufficiently examined. Frederick, however, silenced 
all scruples by observing that it was necessary, under 
all circumstances, to attack, adding, ^^ the freshest eggs 
are the best." Schwerin, now seventy-three years old, 
with that youthful vivacity for which he was remarkable, 
pulling down his hat over his brow, exclaimed, '* Well, 
if a battle must be fought to-day, I will attack the Aus- 
trians at once on the spot where I see them/' It was 
with difficulty that he was restrained from an act of 
precipitation ; the king having directed general Win- 
terfeld first to reconnoitre minutely the position of the 
enemy's right wing. 

In executing the commission, Winterfeld is said to 
have examined but superficially the ground on which the 
right wing of the Austrians was drawn up. According 
to his report, it was possible enough to get at the enemy 
there ; but his opinion would have been greatly modified, 
had time and circumstances permitted a more particular 
examination. Near the village of Stjerbohol ran a small 
stream, in which ponds were formed by means of dams. 
These ponds had been let off*, and the ground sown with 
oats, to serve at first as food for the young carp with 
which these ponds were to be stocked again after the 
harvest. The oats gave the appearance of solid ground to 
spots which were afterwards found to be deep quagmires. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 45 

At nine in the morning, the Prussian left wing marched 
in silence along the decliyity to attack the enemy's left* 
As soon as the Austrian commander perceived this, he 
ordered up the cavalry and part of the infantry of the 
left wing, to give a warmer reception to the Prussians, 
when their cavalry should have advanced between the 
narrow passes and the swamps near the village of 
Bichowitz. After a most difficult march, the Prussian 
cavalry, nevertheless, took up a position in a plain, 
which, cooped up by the village and a pond, left them 
but just space sufficient and at the same time covered 
the two wings. Thrice they charged the Austrian ca- 
valry, and at length threw them into confusion. So 
dense a cloud of dust had enveloped the combatants 
during these three attacks as to produce great confu- 
sion : two Prussian regiments even fired upon one ano- 
ther. In vain did prince Charles strive to rally his 
beaten troops : he was hurried away by the fugitives, 
and so exhausted by excitement of mind and bodily ex- 
ertion that he fell senseless from his horse. Seized with 
violent cramp in the stomachy he was carried to Nusle 
and bled ; but the Austrians were driven from that place 
by the Prussian cavalry, and it was not till all was lost 
that the prince was able to return to the field of battle. 

Meanwhile, the first eight grenadier battalions of the 
Prussian left wing advanced across meadow-ground to- 
wards the enemy. They had to contend with the greatest 
difficulties before they could reach him, sometimes sink- 
ing up to their knees in mud and swamp, at others 
having to march upon narrow dykes and paths scarcely 
a yard wide : so that it was impossible for them to form 
till they arrived at the plain near Stjerbohol. They had 



46 COURT AND TIMES OF 

yet to pass a rayine, and to proceed a little distance, in 
order to join the advancing army. They had been or- 
dered by Schwerin and Winterfeld, who commanded 
them, to push rapidly forward without firing. They 
were gallantly following their leader, when, just as the 
first grenadiers issued from the ravine upon the glacis- 
like ground, a tremendous fire of canister-shot mowed 
down rank after rank. At first the brave grenadiers 
continued to advance ; but when Winterfeld, at the head 
of Schwerin'8 regiment, sank wounded from his ho^e, 
and the fire grew fiercer, they turned in confusion and 
fell back. " When," relates Winterfeld, in a narrative 
in his own handwriting, '' in a few minutes I came to 
myself, and lifted up my head, I saw none of our men 
near or about me, but all behind me in full retreat. 
The enemy's grenadiers had halted about eighty paces 
from me, not venturing to pursue us. I got up as 
quickly as my weakness permitted, and overtook our 
confused masses : but neither entreaties nor threats 
could induce a single man to turn his face towards the 
enemy, and still less to halt. In this embarrassment I 
was found by the field-marshal, while the blood was 
streaming from my neck. As I was on foot, and none 
of my people about me, he gave me the led horse which 
he had with him." 

The Austrian grenadiers did, however, attempt to 
pursue the beaten Prussians, and Browne himself was 
riding before them to lead them on to victory, when a 
cannon-ball shattered his right leg. He fell from his 
horse, and, like prince Charles, was carried insensible 
from the field. Hence the Austrian army was, during 
the greatest part of the battle, without any commander- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 47 

in-chief ; so that there was no unity of purpose, each of 
the generals of divisions acting independently of the 
rest. 

The veteran marshal Schwerin, seeing with deep 
chagrin his own regiment giving way, called to the men 
and induced them to halt. Snatching from captain 
Bohr the colours which he had taken from an ensign 
for the purpose of rallying the troops, he cried, " Come 
on, my lads !" and the brave Prussians, accustomed to 
obey the orders of their beloved commander, were ready 
to follow him. But scarcely had they- formed for a new 
attack, scarcely had Schwerin advanced a dozen steps 
with the colours in his hand, when he sunk to the ground 
pierced with five balls, and the colours covered the body 
of the dying hero. Most of the oflScers were soon killed 
or wounded. The troops again gave way, and twelve 
field-pieces and several pair of colours fell for a short 
time into the hands of the Austrians. 

Frederick now put himself at the head of the left 
wing. His second line, consisting of fourteen battalions, 
had formed anew. Sixteen pieces of heavy cannon and 
howitzers played from the heights of Lower Potschernitz 
upon the enemy. The Prussian centre had advanced un- 
molested, and threatened the left flank of the Austrian 
right wing, which, seeing its own cavalry in flight, turned 
quickly about, and, unable to maintain its former posi- 
tion, fled after the beaten cavalry. The impetuosity of 
the attack of the Prussians was irresistible. The troops 
were inflamed to fury by the fall of Schwerin, and the 
commanders of brigades dismounted and led their heroes 
on foot to meet the enemy. 

The duke of Bevern had meanwhile passed the defile 



48 COURT AND TIMES OF 

of Hostawitz, and, after driving back the enemy in a 
most sanguinary conflict, he advanced upon Malleschitz 
and took a battery beyond that village, which, however, 
his troops were obliged to abandon to the Austrians 
under Konigseck. 

The attack of the Austrian right wing upon the Prus- 
sian left produced a gap in the enemy's order of battle, 
into which the king immediately penetrated with his 
right wing. While prince Ferdinand of Brunswick 
stormed the principal Austrian redoubt on the height 
of Hlopetin, and pursued the fleeing foe along the tops 
of the hills, prince Henry proceeded against three 
entrenched Austrian divisions, which, possessing such 
important advantages of ground, and seconded by a far 
superior artillery, sought to maintain their position. 
But general Manstein, with Wedel's, Fink's, and Canitz's 
grenadiers, and the regiments of Itzenplitz and Man- 
teuffel, was not to be deterred by any obstacles. These 
heroes, with lowered arms, ascended the heights against 
the entrenched enemy, and it was not till they could 
discern the white of their eyes that they used their 
muskets, and then with such eflect that the Austrians 
immediately fled. Seven redoubts were stormed, after 
a sanguinary conflict ; and when the regiment of Itzen- 
plitz was checked in the pursuit of the enemy by a 
broad, wet ditch, and was preparing to cross it by 
means of poles, prince Henry, crying, " Follow me, my 
lads !" instantly leaped with his horse into the ditch, 
when the whole regiment waded through and pursued 
its victorious career in wet clothes. The storming of 
the redoubt on the height of Hlopetin cost Winterfeld's 
regiment a thousand men, and, notwithstanding this 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 49 

loss, it would not desist from the attempt. " Com- 
rades ! " cried the grenadiers of prince Maurice and 
Manteuffel, " stop ! Let us come on ! You have won 
honour enough !" and, presently, they too covered the 
blood-stained field, till at length prince Henry's brigade 
took the redoubt. 

The flank fire of this battery, being turned against 
the Austrians, soon dislodged them from that position, 
so that Bevem was enabled to retake the redoubt near 
Malleschitz, and the resistance of the retreating Austrians 
became fainter. Four times Konigseck strove to main- 
tain himself; every new height afforded him occasion to 
form a new line of battle : but the Prussians steadily 
followed him, so that his only chance of protection was 
in Prague. 

The left wing of the Austrians still occupied its ori- 
ginal position on the Ziskaberg, without having fired a 
shot, or drawn a sword. These now sought to make 
head against the advancing Prussians. A cavalry attack, 
though not without a severe sacrifice, gave the infantry 
time to draw up before Wolschau in several lines. The 
Prussian cuirassier regiment of Schonaich now advanced 
from Malleschitz, and was on the point of charging the 
enemy, when, by some unaccountable accident, the 
Prussian infantry fired upon it. The Austrians, taking 
advantage of the confusion occasioned by this circum- 
stance, threw themselves into Prague with less loss than 
they would otherwise have suffered. Their left wing 
poured in horrible confusion through the gates, which 
were not wide enough to admit the pressing throng, while 
the beaten right wing fled to Beneschau. Vineyards 
and gardens prevented the pursuit. The cavalry of the 

VOL. III. E 



50 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Prussian right wing could not come up in time, owing 
to the difficulty of the ground, while that of the left lay 
too drunk to be fit for battle around the casks of the 
sutlers in the camp of the Austrians. Zieten assured 
the king that he had not above a hundred sober hussars 
at his disposal : they had been celebrating, in their way, 
their victorious attack, by which the first success had 
been gained. 

About three in the afternoon the bloody conflict ter- 
minated. The Prussian army extended from the Ziska- 

• 

berg to Branik, on the Mulde, above Prague, enclosing 
that city. Its success would have been more important, 
if prince Maurice, of Keith's corps, had thrown a bridge 
over the river, as the king had directed, or only crossed 
it with the cavalry, and fallen upon the rear of the routed 
enemy. As it was, all that Keith could do was to place 
his troops in the best manner for preventing the escape 
of the Austrians from Prague to the left bank of the 
Mulde. It was here that Seydlitz, then only colonel of 
the regiment of Rochow, had nearly lost his life in the 
Mulde, when, to ascertain whether it really was impos- 
sible to ford the river, he attempted to pass it, and sank 
with his horse up to the holsters in a quicksand. He 
was saved by his men, who adored him, at the risk of 
their own lives, and soon became one of the most distin- 
guished leaders of the Prussian army. 

The loss of the Austrians amounted, according to their 
official account, to about 13,000 men, and above 400 
officers ; but, according to Frederick's statement, it was 
not less, including prisoners, than 24,000. Field-marshal 
Browne died of his wounds on the 25th of June. A 
great number of pontoons, the baggage and tents of the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 51 

annj, 71 standards^ and S3 pieces of cannoa — accoiding 
to the king's acoouBt, 60 pieces — fell into the hands of 
the conquerors. 

The numerical loss of the Prussians was little short 
of that of the enemy, and far exceeded it in unportance. 
" The loss of the Prussians," says the king, " amounted 
to 18,000 men" — ^according to the report of the general 
staff, 12,169 men, and 340 officers — "besides field- 
marshal Schwerin, who alone was worth 10,000. His 
death withered the laurels purchased with such valuable 
blood. On that day fell the pillars of the Prussian 
infantry." Among these were, besides Schwerin, gene- 
rals Yon Amstel, Herault, Schoning, and Blankensee; 
colonels the duke of Holstein-Beck, Manstein, Rohe, 
baron Goltz, Sydow, Winterfeld, and Loben, most of 
whom were mortally wounded, and died soon after the 
battle. Generals Fouque, Winterfeld, and Plettenberg 
were very severely wounded, but recovered. The offi- 
cers had certainly done their duty in the most exemplary 
manner. " Those about the king," says Kiister, who 
was then chaplain of a regiment, " spoke with admiration 
of his personal intrepidity. One of them had his arm 
shattered, and the other received a ball which lodged in 
the breast-bone. Both fell insensible close to the king. 
They assured me that, when they came to themselves, 
and were told that the king was alive and well,, all their 
pains were greatly alleviated." 

Schwerin, who had learned the art of war in the 
school of Marlborough and Eugene, had been in the ser- 
vice of Holland and Mecklenburg before he entered in 
1720 into that of Prussia. Frederick, as we have seen, 
took him for his instructor and adviser in the wars of 

E 2 



62 COURT AND TIMtS OF 



Silesia. Kind and aifable to his soldiers, whom he called 
his children, Schwerin was celebrated, long after his 
death, in popular songs and books ; and some of the 
former are still sung by the Prussian soldiers. It would 
almost appear that he had a presentiment of his approach- 
ing end ; for, ten days before the battle, he thus wrote 
to his wife : " God, who has manifestly led us so far, will . 
continue to assist us. If the enemy does not give way, 
I shall vigorously oppose him, that I may conclude my 
career happily, and end it with honour, for which I pray 
to God fervently every day, and also that he may grant 
you health and preserve you." The body of the hero 
was found with difficulty among the heaps of slain and 
wounded, conveyed to the Margaret convent outside the 
city of Prague, and laid before the altar. There Fre- 
derick gazed with evident emotion, and tears in his eyes, 
at his deceased general. " Schwerin," he says, in that 
passage of his works which has just been quoted, ** still 
possessed all the fire of youth, notwithstanding his ad- 
vanced age. Deeply mortified, he saw the Prussians 
obliged to give way, and with extraordinary courage 
opposed the enemy." 

The remains of the field-marshal were conveyed to his 
estates in Pomerania, and deposited in the family burial- 
place at Wusseken. Frederick honoured the memory of 
the veteran hero by a marble monument in the Wilhelms- 
Platz in Berlin, and even his enemies did him justice. 
When the emperor Joseph II. was holding a review near 
Stjerbohol, in September, 1 776, he had a triple salute of 
small arms and cannon fired by five grenadier battalions 
on the spot where Schwerin fell, and, at each discharge, 
himself and all his oflScers respectfully took off their 



N 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 53 

hats. On the same spot, some Prussian officers erected, 
in 18S4, a pyramid of red marble as a monument to 
Schwerin. The colours which the hero was carrying 
%vhen he fell are preserved at St. Petersburg as a sacred 
relic. How they came into the hands of the Russians 
is not known ; perhaps at Kunersdorf. 

In the night which succeeded the sanguinary battle of 
Prague, upwards of 50,000 fighting men, including the 
garrison, with 140 pieces of cannon, were cooped up in 
that capital. Through general Krockow, whom Fre- 
derick sent the same evening to summon the place, he 
learned the force of the Austrians in the city, and con- 
ceived what Napoleon has characterised as "one of the 
boldest and most prodigious plans that ever was con- 
ceived in modern times," namely, to repeat at Prague 
what he had executed at Pirna, starve the Austrian 
army into surrender, and then, annihilating the last 
troops of the empress, dictate peace on the ramparts of 
Vienna before his other enemies had completed their 
armaments. He therefore enclosed the strongly fortified 
city by a line fourteen English miles in length, on both 
banks of the Mulde. He himself on the right bank, and 
Keith on the left, distributed the troops in the most 
judicious manner for preventing the escape of the enemy. 
Above and below Prague, two pontoon bridges were 
thrown across to preserve the communication, and forty- 
eight redoubts sprang up out of the earth around the city. 
On the 9th of May, colonel Straus, with a thousand 
brave Prussians, stormed the Ziskaberg, which was 
scarcely a thousand paces distant from the works ; but 
this conquest, won with considerable ease, cost the 
Prussian commander his life. Such, however, was the 



64 COURT AND TIMES OF 

irresolution of the leaders, and the despondency of the 
Austrian troops, that, though the 50,000 men shut up 
in the city included 4000 horse and 1400 artillerymen, 
abundantly supplied with arms and military stores^ they 
suffered themselves to be closely blockaded for several 
weeks, without seizing any occasion to escape a disgrace- 
ful captivity, and never thought of forcing a passage, 
but only once or twice of sneaking away. 

At first Frederick was without siege-artillery; the 
communication between the different divisions of the 
Prussian troops was incomplete, and it would have been 
easy to break through, and to effect a junction with 
Daun, who now commanded Serbelloni's corps, and had 
advanced to Bohmisch-Brod. Preparations for this pur- 
pose were several times made. In the night of the 14th 
and 19th of May, the Prussian posts were disturbed; 
but the enemy, finding them upon their guard, on the least 
motion in the Prussian camp, relinquished all thoughts 
of a serious attack, and returned to the city, concluding 
that their plan had been betrayed. 

On the 17th, the Prussian siege-artillery arrived, and 
preparations were instantly made to bombard the city. 
Duke Charles resolved to make an attempt to get away 
in the night between the S3d and S4th. But this time 
his intention was really betrayed to the Prussians by a 
deserter; and when the Austrians, 12,000 strong, sallied 
from Prague, about ten o'clock, against the left wing of 
Kleist's corps, the besiegers were quite ready to receive 
them. The darkness of the night, in which their attack* 
on the Prussian redoubts were made without concert, 
still more their own blunders and neglect, since, for 
instance, the soldiers who had to climb walls in the gar- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 65 

dens were not proyided with ladders, the confusion in 
which the grenadiers fired upon their own troops, toge- 
ther with the hravery and presence of mind of the 
Prussians, frustrated this attempt also ; so that, after 
a nocturnal conflict of four hours, the besieged were 
obliged to return to the city with the loss of a thousand 
killed and as many wounded. 

On the 29th of May, the Prussians had completed their 
preparations for bombarding just at the moment when a 
tremendous thunderstorm brought frightful hardships 
upon both besiegers and besieged. A deluge of rain 
which accompanied the storm swelled the Mulde to such 
a degree, that it overflowed its banks to the distance of 
a hundred paces, inundated the camp of the Prussians, 
and carried away their baggage and the two pontoon 
bridges. The flood did not less damage to the people 
of Prague, pouring into their magazines and cellars, and 
spoiling their provisions. Now, when the pontoons^ 
beams, and planks carried down by the current pro- 
claimed that the communication between the divisions 
of the Prussian army on both banks of the river was 
totally destroyed, would have been the moment when an 
attempt of the besieged to force their way out might, if 
ever, have succeeded. But the Austrians were too 
busily occupied in saving the provisions threatened by 
the water to think of such an attempt at that time, and 
the bombardment meanwhile opened by Frederick threw 
a fresh obstacle in their way. 

Scarcely had the thunder ceased when, about mid- 
night, a rocket gave the Prussians the signal to open 
their fire. A terrific night for Prague ensued. The 
inhabitants, alarmed by the flood, were lamenting the 



66 COURT AND TIMES OF 

loss of their provisions, when the peals of the artillery, 
and the shower of red-hot balls, threatened them with 
new calamities. From the Ziskaberg and two other 
points, three hundred bombs and eight hundred red-hot 
balls were thrown into the city, and produced con- 
flagrations in different places. The shrieks and lamenta- 
tions of the terrified inhabitants were heard in the 
Prussian camp. Defenceless men, women, and children 
fled from their burning homes, and were crushed in the 
streets by the falling bombs, or wandered about without 
shelter, exposed to the horrors of war. Numbers 
wished to leave the city, where death threatened them 
in so many different forms — disease, famine, fire, inun- 
dation, bombardment. The churches were filled with 
the dying; the starving people complained in the 
streets ; flames were ascending in all quarters to heaven ; 
and the fugitives were not safe any where from the 
balls, which fell now in one place, and now in another. 

In the next and the following night, the horrors of 
these scenes were infinitely aggravated. By the violence 
of the flames, which could not be quenched in some 
parts of the city, whole streets were converted into 
ruins. In the space of three weeks more than 180,000 
bombs and red-hot balls were thrown into the city. 
The new town and the Jew's town were totally de- 
stroyed ; nine hundred houses had already been reduced 
to ashes. The people of Prague bestowed particular 
care on the church belonging to the palace, which was 
set on fire upwards of thirty times during the siege, 
and saved as often through the vigilance of one of the 
canons. The silver coflSn of St. Nepomuck, the patron 
saint of Bohemia, and the other valuables of the church, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 57 

were removed to a place of safety. The citizens, under 
these severe trials, implored the general, but to no pur- 
pose, to put an end to their miseries by a speedy 
capitulation ; and Frederick refused permission for their 
departure. To no purpose did the Austrians drive out 
of the city 12,000 famished houseless wretches; the 
power of inhuman war compelled Frederick, the philan- 
thropist, to send back these children of despair, in order 
that increasing famine might force .his enemies to a 
more speedy surrender. 

It was not till the morning of the 2d of June that 
the besieged ventured to make a sally from two different 
sides. That from the Wissehrad totally failed, as the 
Prussian batteries could reach the flank of the Austrians 
and render it impossible for them to form their troops : 
but on the little side some advantages were gained, and 
the assailants even stormed part of a redoubt, in which 
they took three pieces of cannon. It was a gratification 
to the dying field-marshal to learn that it was his son, 
colonel Browne, who, by his valour and judicious mea- 
sures, won the only trophies on this occasion, though 
he, too, was compelled to return to Prague. 

Prince Charles, adhering to the instructions which he 
had received from Vienna, ventured upon no further at- 
tempts against the Prussians. " The honour of the whole 
nation," wrote Maria Theresa, " and of the imperial 
arms, depends on the resolute defence of Prague ; nay, 
the salvation of the whole Roman empire is at stake. 
Field-marshal Daun will come to your relief; his army 
is receiving daily reinforcements. The French, too, are 
in full march ; and so, by the help of God, the state of 
the suflferers will soon assume a different aspect." 



68 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Meanwhile, famine and misery increased from day to 
day in the populous city. The ready money of the 
wealthiest inhabitants was already exhausted, and tin 
coins were made for the purposes of ordinary life. 
Though the fire of the besiegers had not destroyed the 
principal magazine of the Austrians, there was a dearth 
of the most indispensable necessaries ; and even horse- 
flesh began to be scarce, when famine destroyed the 
animals by hundreds. The generals in Prague, indeed, 
felt none of the hardships of war. They lived in safety 
in a massive building, the windows of which were se- 
cured by planks and bulwarks, in the Clementinum, the 
Jesuits' College ; and their well-supplied tables, their 
social games and amusements, and even the ceremonies 
of the mass, with which they are reported to have dis- 
pelled their mortal ennui, must have formed a strong 
contrast with the famine in the streets, the exhausted 
state of the starving garrison, and the prayers of the 
wretched inhabitants. One might be disposed to regard 
such accounts as the inventions of national animosity, 
but Archenholz, who furnishes these particulars, appears 
to be but too well informed on the subject ; for he tells 
us that the hereditary prince of Modena was an honour- 
able exception to the other generals, by his beneficence 
and goodness of heart towards the distressed and 
wounded, and that he deserved by his active piety the 
blessings and attachment of all the necessitous — a piety 
widely differing from that of Charles of Lorraine, of whom 
he only says, that he attended mass every day, and that 
he neglected to perform none of the external duties of 
religion. It has even been asserted that, at the very 
commencement of the blockade, the preservation of the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 59 

city, exposed, from the negligence of the garrison, en- 
gaged in exercises of penance, to a surprise by the 
Prussians, was owing solely to the vigilance of a monk. 
This man is said to have watched from an observa- 
tory the movement of a Prussian column towards the 
north side of the city, and to have given such warning 
to the Austrians as induced them to take precautions 
against an attack in that quarter. This anecdote, if 
authentic, bespeaks at any rate the unparalleled care- 
lessness of the disheartened Austrian army, as well as 
the daring spirit of the Prussians, who deemed it pos- 
sible, even in broad day, to surprise a city defended by 
50,000 men. 

Meanwhile, colonel Mayr, who, in the preceding win- 
ter, had raised a partisan corps in Lusatia, set out with 
his own troops, Kalben's corps, and 200 Szekely hussars, 
in the whole about 1,500 men, on a daring expedition, 
which struck no little terror into the princes of South 
Germany. The news of the battle of Prague, which 
nearly dissolved the army of execution, followed by the 
appearance of Prussian troops, who gave themselves 
out for the advanced guard of a corps of 20,000 
men, scattered the diplomatists composing the diet of 
Ratisbon in all directions. The elector of Bavaria, 
who had not only urged the expediency of extreme 
measures against Frederick, but promised to send a 
separate auxiliary corps to the Austrians, protested 
against the march of Prussian troops into his dominions. 
Regardless of his complaints, Mayr destroyed the 
enemy's magazines in the circle of Pilsen and the Upper 
Palatinate, levied military contributions wherever he 
came, even in Niirnberg and Bamberg, broke down 



60 COURT AND TIMES OF 

bridges, and did all the mischief he could to the enemies 
of Prussia. The elector of Bavaria and several other 
princes sent envoys to Frederick; the whole empire 
inclined to his side ; and the French, staggered by the 
victory of Prague, might probably have changed their 
line of politics, had not the king been destined so soon 
to experience the fickleness of Fortune. 

The detention of the Prussian army before Prague 
was as mortifying to the king as to the inhabitants of 
that unfortunate city. He lost through it, as in the 
preceding year at Pirna, valuable time that was not to 
be retrieved. Threatening intelligence reached him from 
Westphalia and Prussia: on the one side, 100,000 
French were advancing ; on the other, the like number 
of Russians; while marshal Daun, with an army in- 
creased to 54,000 men, was at Bohmisch-Brod, and 
might, with that force, easily raise the blockade of 
Prague. So early as the 9th of May, Frederick had 
sent Zieten, with 43 squadrons, to observe the Austrian 
army, and afterwards detached the duke of Bevem for 
the same purpose, with a corps which, including Zieten's 
cavalry, amounted to about 17,000 men. Before this 
so inferior force, Daun retreated beyond KoUin, and 
even to Kuttenberg, leaving only 7000 under Nadasdy 
at the former place. This corps was of course inade- 
quate to the protection of the magazine at KoUin, 
which, after an unsuccessful action, it was obliged to 
abandon to the Prussians. Daun, in obedience to his 
instructions, continued to retreat, and Bevem, reinforced 
to 24,000 men, drove the Austrian advanced guard from 
all its positions as far as Kuttenberg. 

Frederick, filled with overweening confidence by his 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 61 

knowledge of the Austrian plan of operations, which 
had been betrayed to him, and most unaccountably 
underrating the strength of Daun's corps, which he 
regarded as numerically inferior to that of Bevem, re- 
commended the oflfensiye to the latter. But, when 
informed of the real state of things, he was aware that 
Daun might, by two days' march, place him between 
two fires and accomplish his destruction. To prevent 
such a catastrophe, he resolved to take all the troops 
that could possibly be spared from before Prague, to 
join Bevern, and to give battle to Daun, a victory over 
whgm must necessarily lead to the surrender of the 
city. Accordingly, transferring the command of the 
blockading army to marshal Keith, he set out with 
10,000 picked troops to join the corps of the duke of 
Bevem, and to execute in person those plans for which 
the latter had not felt himself strong enough. 

On the 13th of June, Daun advanced upon Kutten- 
berg, Bevem fell back to KoUin, and was joined, on the 
following evening, at Kaurzim, by the king. His army, 
reinforced by prince Maurice with six battalions and 
ten squadrons, now amounted to 34,000 men. On the 
16th, the imperial general, with an army of 54,000, 
had encamped in a very strong position at Krich- 
enau, protected by ponds and marshy meadows, which 
rendered him unassailable. Here Frederick discovered 
him at noon on the 17th; and, resolving to risk an 
attack on his left flank, encamped in the evening between 
Kaurzim and Wrptschau. 

On the right of the road, coming from the little town 
of KoUin, on the left bank of the Elbe, extends a plain 
farther than the eye can reach. On the left is a gentle 



62 COURT AND TIMES OF 

eminence, which^ near the Tillage of Chotzemitz^ forms a 
kind of knoll. From the right side of this eminence, 
when you face it, runs a long deep ravine with pre- 
cipitous sides, opening, at a considerable distance, into 
a valley between hills. On the left, also, this eminence 
subsides into a narrow valley enclosed by steep hills, 
and in the rear only it gradually slopes to level ground. 
In the evening of the 1 7th, Daun changed his position, 
so that his right wing occupied the above-mentioned 
knoll, and the rest of his army was covered by the ravine 
running to the left. Hence, on the morning of the 18th, 
nothing was to be seen of him, so that it was unceij^in 
what might be his intention. To the king a battle was 
desirable ; he resolved, therefore, to go to Kollin, where 
he knew that he should find enemies. General Treskow 
started at five in the morning, with five battalions and 
twenty squadrons, to open the march and to cover it 
against the Croats at Planian. He took the village. 
Zieten followed with four battalions and thirty-five 
squadrons, and then the rest of the army ; while Man- 
teuffel's grenadier battalion was left behind at Kaurzim 
with the baggage. 

From the heights beyond Planian, the king perceived 
Daun's army most advantageously drawn up in order 
of battle on the heights behind Chotzemitz. The bat- 
teries of his numerous artillery were so placed as to sweep 
the foot of the heights. Frederick, bent upon a decisive 
engagement, continued his march along the Emperor's 
Road to the inn called the Golden Sun, where the army 
halted at ten in the morning, on account of the intense 
heat. The cavalry dismounted. The king and all the 
generals entered the house, and went up stairs to recon- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 63 

noitre the enemy's position from the windows of the 
room on the left. In an honr Frederick opened the 
door of the opposite room. " I have made the disposi- 
tions for battle," said he, to the assembled aides-de- 
camp. "I have ordered General Hiilsen, with seven 
grenadier battalions, to march forward on the Emperor's 
Road ; the whole army, bearing to the left, is to follow 
him, to ascend the heights and to endeavour to turn the 
right wing of the enemy, in order to support Hiilsen 
more effectively. When he has commenced the attack, 
the cavalry of the left wing is to take a position at 
a suitable distance in his rear, and not to attack the 
enemy till he has begun to give way. As the right 
wing is to refuse, most of its cavalry also is to go to the 
left wing." 

Daun was on the height behind Brzistwy, and guessed 
the king's intention. He, therefore, reinforced his right 
wing, so as to form a strong line on a spot where 
his antagonist expected to find only a weak flank; 
and he gave orders that the troops should not leave the 
heights, even if the attack of the Prussians should be 
repulsed. 

It was half past one when Hiilsen attacked Krzeczhorz. 
The king halted the main body of the army to await 
the result of the attack of the advanced guard, and paid 
no attention to the remark of prince Maurice that the 
army ought to continue its march in order to reach the 
destined point of support of the left wing. Hiilsen met 
with a vigorous resistance, and the king sent three 
grenadier battalions to strengthen him ; but, before 
their arrival, he had taken the village and seven pieces 
of cannon. On pushing forward, he found Daun's re- 



64 COURT AND TIMES OF 

serve advantageously posted, and waited for the king 
before he ventured upon a further attack. Frederick 
was still halting, till he heard that Zieten had driven 
back and was pursuing Nadasdy. He then gave orders 
to advance. Prince Maurice again remonstrated. He 
observed that the movement could not succeed; that 
the left wing was still too far from the intended point 
of support ; that in this manner it would be impossible 
to gain the enemy's right flank, but that they would 
come direct upon his strong front. The king repeated 
his order, and, as Maurice still remonstrated, Frederick 
drew his sword, and, with threatening look, angrily 
asked the prince whether he would obey or not. Ac- 
cordingly, the infantry marched up opposite to the 
height of Chotzemitz, nearly parallel to the front of the 
Imperialists, about 1500 paces from Hiilsen. The king 
immediately ordered the left wing to advance. General 
Manstein was again instructed not to engage with his 
brigade and the sixteen squadrons on the right wing; 
and General Pennavaire was to remain with twenty 
squadrons at the foot of the height of Brzistwy, till the 
infantry should have gained, an advantage. 

In order to reach Hiilsen, prince Maurice was obliged, 
in advancing, to bear to the left, which was difficult 
under a heavy fire of artillery. Two of Hiilsen's grena- 
dier battalions had taken the Oak Wood, and eight 
others had gained ground upon a great battery situated 
on the right, which was likewise taken before Maurice 
came up. The first line of the enemy was giving way ; 
and the battle might possibly have been won, had Zieten 
and Pennavaire supported Hiilsen's efforts. The favour- 
able moment was lost; the Prussian grenadiers were 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 65 

dislodged from the Oak Wood; and Zieten, attacked 
by Nadasdy, who had been reinforced, was driven back 
to Kutlirz, By some, the inactivity of Zieten*s troops 
at this critical moment is ascribed to an accident that 
befel their commander. These relate that, while the 
general was encouraging his men to renew the attack, 
a case-shot from the Austrian batteries grazed his head, 
and carried away his cap. Insensible from the contusion, 
he was falling from his horse, when he was caught by 
a cornet, placed upon another horse, and afterwards in 
the carriage of prince Maurice, where he recovered his 
senses and remained till the battle was over« 

Meanwhile, just as Hiilsen and prince Maurice were 
making their attack, general Manstein, most unseason- 
ably and contrary to orders, attacked the village of 
Chotzemitz, thus depriving the left wing, at the decisive 
moment, of the requisite support, besides crippling the 
other battalions of the right wing. It was now past 
three o'clock. Hiilsen and prince Maurice maintained 
most gallantly the height which they had ascended, 
when two lines of Austrian cavalry appeared upon their 
left flank; these retired, when Pennavaire at length 
advanced* by command of the king; but his ten 
squadrons of cuirassiers were in their turn obliged 
by the fire from the Oak Wood to fall back behind 
Krzeczhorz. 

Seydlitz, in the sequel one of the most distinguished 
generals of cavalry in the Prussian army, appeared here 
for the first time at the head of a brigade^ By the 
king^s order, he hastened to the support of this point 
with the regiments of Rochow's cuirassiers and Ner- 
mann's dragoons, overthrew an Austrian intSantry regi* 

VOL. III. F 



66 COURT AND TIMES OF 

ment at the first charge, dispersed two of cavalry, and 
broke into an infantry regiment of the second line and 
took its colours : but the fire from the Oak Wood, from 
which the Austrian cavalry advanced upon his left flank, 
obliged him also to fall back with his exhausted troops 
behind Krzeczhorz. 

Pennavaire brought up his cuirassiers a second time, 
to support Hiilsen's left flank by a bold attack'; but, 
though the king himself was at their head, they were so 
disheartened that they fled at the first shots fired from 
the fatal Oak Wood, without halting till they were 
beyond the Emperor's Road. 

It was now four o'clock. The discomfiture of the 
Prussian cavalry had left Hiilsen and prince Maurice to 
their own unaided efforts on the blood-stained height 
between the Oak Wood and Chotzemitz. For two 
hours the brave Prussians had maintained their ground, 
in spite of the tremendous fire of the enemy. Their 
ammunition was now expended ; and no fresh troops 
were at hand to relieve them or to keep up the line with 
the main body of the array, so that, completely isolated, 
they were exposed every moment to flank attacks. 

But if Hiilsen was not supported by the rest of the 
Prussian army, this was owing to the alteration made 
by the king in his dispositions and the untimely ardour 
of general Manstein. Instead of making the army pro- 
ceed further to the left upon the Emperor's Road, 
Frederick had, after Hiilsen's first successes, led his 
whole force against the Austrian front ; and while his 
brave fellows were there attempting in vain to climb 
the steep acclivities, he was unable to support Hiilsen 
at the right time. " These attacks," says the Austrian 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 67 

veteran Cogniazo, " were of no advantage to the enemy, 
though frequently repeated with all imaginable spirit 
and intrepidity. I mean not to say that they were 
baffled chiefly by the far greater bravery of our troops ; 
for it was not very difficult for us to repulse attacks 
which, under such extraordinary and almost insuperable 
difficulties of the ground, could not be made but in 
broken divisions, and without order or combination. 
Neither the Prussians nor the Austrians can boast that 
they ever saw the white of each other's eyes. We saw, 
in fact, nothing but the tin caps shimmering above the 
high com ; and as often as these brave unfortunate fel- 
lows had climbed a third or mid*way up the steep hill 
with incredible toil, they were received and hurled back 
again by a regular fire from the infantry, and a tremen- 
dous shower of case-shot from the batteries crossing in 
all directions." 

Troops might, it is true, have been drawn from the 
Prussian right wing for the support of Hiilsen, had not 
these also involved themselves in a most destructive 
conflict. We have seen that, at the time when Hiilsen 
and prince Maurice were making their attack on the 
great Austrian battery, Manstein had taken three 
battalions from the centre to attack the village of 
Chotzemitz. Captain Varenne, one of the king's aides- 
de-camp, had observed in riding past the general: 
" Those Croats ought to be driven out of Chotzemitz." 
This accidental expression the brave and ambitious 
Manstein took for an order from the king; and of 
course not only were more battalions involved in the 
battle, but the advance of the whole right wing was 
rendered indispensable : so that these troops were fight- 

F 2 



^8 COURT AND TIMES OF 

ing on most unfavourable ground, without the least 
iope of success, at the critical moment when they were 
needed in another place. They stormed Chotzemitz, 
indeed, with great loss, and then Manstein advanced 
against inaccessible heights, where in the space of an 
hour he lost 1800 out of 3000 men. 

Meanwhile prince Maurice, who strove in vain to 
restore the communication in the Prussian line of bat- 
tle, perceived five squadrons of cuirassiers not far from 
his weakened and exhausted troops. These were 
sent, after the failure of Seydlitz and Pennavaire, to 
•support the infantry and to make head against the 
Austrians till succours should arrive. But no sooner 
had Maurice led them through the intervals of his infan- 
try towards the Austrian grenadiers, than they were 
saluted with a most furious fire of case-shot, and 
fled, throwing into confusion the regiments of prince 
Henry and Bevem, and hurrying them along in their 
precipitate flight. Taking advantage of this disorder, 
the Saxon lieutenant-colonel Benkendorf broke in with 
two squadrons among the Prussian infantiy : the other 
Saxon regiments followed, and attacked in front and 
rear the fourteen battalions of the Prussian left wing. 
With a fury increased by the disgrace of Pima, they 
cut down the Prussians, disheartened, exhausted, and 
fleeing in confusion. "This is for Striegau!" they 
shouted, plying their sabres without mercy — " this for 
Pima r 

Frederick, in a state of desperation, had led his cavalry 
six times against Daiin's positions ; but as often had it 
been repulsed. He strove to rally the fugitives. His 
eyes flashing with indignation, and pointing to the bat- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 69 

teries, he exclaimed : " Blackguards, do you expect ta 
live for ever !" His body guard and prince Henry's 
regiment still continued the conflict after the others bad 
fled. Whenever they were broken, the squares again 
closed, and the enemy's horse who had penetrated inta 
them paid for their temerity with their lives. But at 
length the incessant fire levelled whole ranks, so that 
out of thousands only a few hundred survived. Thus 
perished the flower of his army, with which he had 
till then achieved exploits all but miraculous. 

Frederick collected on the Emperor's Road a small 
body of the fugitives. With music playing, he was 
advancing at the head of forty men towards a battery, 
in hopes that his example would excite to imitation ; 
but those few forsook him when the enemy's balls began 
to whiz about their ears. His aides-de-camp alone re- 
mained near him. Still he rode on, till major Grant, who 
had just returned from London as bearer of the news of 
the victory of Prague, or, according to other accounts, 
Mitchell, the English ambassador, asked : " Is your 
majesty going to storm the battery by yourself?'* The 
king halted, reconnoitered the enemy's position once- 
more with the telescope, and then coolly rode off to the 
left wing to give the duke of Bevern arders for the 
retreat. 

Convinced that the battle was irretrievably lost,, the 
king sent for the duke of Bevern and prince Maurice,^ 
and directed them to lead the retreating army through 
the pass of Planian to Nimburg^ and there to cross the 
Elbe. He himself, accompanied by hia garde du corps, 
rode forward for that place. But, before the troops 
could be withdrawn from the field of battle, another 



70 COURT AND TIMES OF 

sangainary conflict took place. Daun had ordered his 
left wing to proceed to Brzesan ; and the Prussians of 
the right wing under Bevem, listening only to the sug- 
gestions of their valour, fell upon the enemy, in spite 
of the most tremendous cannonade. The regiment of 
the guard alone lost 24 officers and 475 men, and the 
regiments of Maurice and Kalkstein, 2,100. The heroic 
regiment of Meinecke dragoons charged eight times, and 
though it was almost entirely destroyed, it saved the 
infantry, which was enabled to quit the field while it 
kept the Austrian cavalry in check. About seven 
o'clock this wing left the field, without being pursued, 
but in great confusion. Seydlitz and Pennavaire had 
retired along the Austrian front to Planian, and the left 
wing retreated to the same place. Zieten alone, having 
repulsed three attacks by Nadasdy, kept his ground on 
the field of battle till night, when he too retired un- 
molested. 

The loss of the Prussians on this disastrous day 
exceeded 13,000 men, including 326 excellent officers, 
and the flower of their infantry, besides 46 pieces of 
cannon and 22 pair of colours ; but their greatest loss 
was that of confidence in their own strength and invin- 
cibility. The conqueror lost only 8,110 men. 

Frederick himself appeared overwhelmed with despon- 
dency. When he beheld the remnant of his fine regiment 
of guards, which was reduced to 260 men, the tears 
came into his eyes. " My lads," said he, with forced 
cheerfulness, " you have had a sad day of it ; but only 
have patience ; I will make amends for all." In stop- 
ping to water the weary horses in the way to Nimburg, 
the king first felt the want of refreshment. An old 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 71 

horseman, with wounds yet bleeding, took up some 
water with his hat, and handing it to the king, said : 
** Drink, your majesty. After all, a battle is but a 
battle. But 'tis well you are alive. God Almighty is 
alive too, and he can give us the victory another day." 
Frederick looked kindly at the man and drank out of 
the hat ; he then pursued his way to Nimburg. On 
another occasion, a grenadier comforted the king in this 
manner : " What signifies it if the empress has for 
once gained a victory ! The devil will not fetch us the 
sooner for that." 

On reaching Nimburg, he was seen seeking a resting- 
place where he might reflect undisturbed on his situa- 
tion* Seated on the side of a well, lost in thought, he 
was found drawing figures with his stick in the sand. 
Like Marius of old on the ruins of Carthage, Frederick 
here mused over the fortunes of his country. All the 
hopes of a speedy peace, generated by his previous suc- 
cesses, were destroyed at one blow. But his counte- 
nance soon displayed the expression of a tranquillity of 
mind, which failed not to have a beneficial influence on 
those about him ; and when he rose with cheerful look 
^nd issued his orders, any one would have taken him 
for the victor instead of the vanquished. " I conclude," 
says Walpole, in one of his letters at this time, "the 
next we hear of him will be a great victory ; if he sets 
at night in a defeat, he always rises next morning in a 
triumph." 

While Frederick was thus engaged in the field, his 
enemies were busy in the cabinet planning the division 
of 'his dominions among them and other territorial 
changes. On the 1st of May, a secret treaty between 



72 COURT AND TIMES OP 

Austria and France was concluded and signed, the prin- 
cipal stipulations of which were these. 

France shall furnish 105,000 men and 10,000 Bava- 
rian and Wirtemberg troops as an auxiliary force to the 
empress Maria Theresa. 

It shall pay to Austria a yearly subsidy of twelve 
million livres. 

It guarantees to Austria the restitution of Silesia, 
the county of Glatz, the principality of Crossen, and 
the addition of such districts as are suitably situated for 
the empress. 

The duchy of Magdeburg, the principality of Hal- 
berstadt, and the circle of the Saal, were promised to 
the king of Poland, as elector of Saxony, by way of 
indemnity for the losses sustained from the invasion of 
the king of Prussia ; and that king was moreover to 
be obliged to cede Hither Pomerania and his Westpha- 
lian provinces. 

Austria, on her part, promised, as soon as she should 
be in possession of Silesia and the other provinces 
assigned to her, to cede to France in the Netherlands 
the principalities of Chimay and Beaumont, the towns 
of Ostend, Nieuport, Ypres, Fumes, Mens, Fort Knoque, 
and a district of a league round it. 

In like manner, the empress ceded to the Infant 
Don Philip, duke of Parma, Piacenza, and Guastalla, 
all the rest of the so-called Austrian Netherlands, 
with the exception of the duchy of Luxemburg, where 
the fortress was to be demolished at the expense of 
France. 

Don Philip, on the other hand, ceded the above-mea- 
tioned duchies to the court of Vienna. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 73 

Such were the gains which, in the confidence of their 
strength, Frederick's powerful foes reckoned upon mak- 
ing by their league to crush him. We shall see how 
soon the indomitable spirit, skill, and perseverance of 
the man whom they had in imagination already trampled 
in the dust, baffled their united efforts, and compelled 
them to abate their ambitious pretensions. 



74 COURT AND TIMES OF 



CHAPTER XXVin. 

Campaign of 1757- continued — Dejection of the Prussian Army after its 
defeat at Kollin — ^Tbe King proceeds to Prague and raises the Blockade 
— Despatch of Sir Andrew Mitchell, relative to the disaster at Kollin — 
Letter from the King to Lord Marischal on the same subject — Exulta- 
tion at Vienna — Death of General Manstein — The Austrian General, 
Loudon — Death of the Queen-mother — Grief of Frederick — Extracts 
from Letters of his to d'Argens — Letters from the Margravine of Bay- 
reuth to Voltaire — Duplicity and Malignity of the latter — Disastrous 
Retreat of the Prince of Prussia from Bohemia through Lusatia — 
Destruction uf Zittau — Displeasure of Frederick with his Brother — 
Narrative of the latter — He retires from the Army — His Death and 
Character. 

Extreme was the dismay of the whole Prussian army 
after the defeat at Kollin : the spell of its invincibility 
was broken. The troops, especially the infantry, who 
had lost 12,000 out of 18,000 men, marched in sullen 
silence across the Elbe to Lissa, whence they were to 
continue their retreat to Prague. Their baggage was 
saved by colonel Manteuffel, through the negligence of 
Daun, who, though he had proved himself an able 
general during the battle, knew not how to follow up 
his victory. Instead of pursuing active measures for 
the total destruction of his beaten adversary, he con- 
tented himself with returning to his old camp at 
Krichenau, and singing Te Deum for his glorious vic- 
tory. Many of the Prussians, nevertheless, abandoned 
their colours, and quitted an army which they deemed 
devoted to ruin. In the night after the battle, nine 
hundred deserters presented themselves at the Austrian 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 75 

advanced posts, and the army before Prague lost, in like 
manner, one thousand men in a single night. 

Frederick, leaving the relics of his garde du corps in 
Alt'Bunzlau, arrived before Prague on the 1 9th of June, 
and was still so low-spirited that he was obliged to 
leave the necessary preparations fqr retreat to his bro- 
ther, prince Henry. In the blockading corps the news 
of the disaster had produced the utmost consternation. 
" I was witness," says Retzow, " of the extraordinary 
dismay of all the generals assembled there. They, who 
were wont to be so proud of their own valour and the 
discipline of their troops, could scarcely disguise their 
feelings. A silence of some minutes was the sure sign 
of extreme despondency : the prince of Prussia alone, 
otherwise so mild in disposition, broke out into loud 
lamentations over the conduct of his royal brother." 
The prince had been adverse to the war from the first. 
He hated in Winterfeld one of its prime movers, and 
would have been glad if Frederick had not relinquished 
his alliance with France. So far back as in October, 1 756, 
he wrote to the marquis de Valori, the French ambas- 
sador in Berlin, that " his children would probably be 
the victims of these injudicious measures : " and now he 
expressed his apprehensions loudly and unreservedly. 
Officious persons reported his words to the king, who 
withdrew his confidence entirely from his brother. 

Frederick at first attributed his disaster to prince 
Maurice, to general Manstein, and to disobedience to 
his orders. On the Sunday after the battle, in the 
camp at Leitmeritz, Kiister, chaplain to the staff, was 
directed not only to employ in his sermon all the rational 
arguments of religion to raise the depressed courage of 



76 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the troops, but also to reprove most unsparinglj both 
officers and privates who had behaved ill on the daj of 
battle for neglect of their duty. At the same time, colonel 
Balbi intimated to the chaplain that an accurate re- 
port would be made to the king of the manner in which 
this order was fulfilled. The task was none of the 
easiest, as this sermon was to be delivered in the tent 
of prince Maurice, who immediately afterwards vindi- 
cated himself in such a manly and straightforward 
manner, that in less than an hour the guard of honour, 
which had been withdrawn from him, was restored. 

" The king," writes Sir Andrew Mitchell, in his de- 
spatch to his court, ^^ ascribes the loss of the battle to the 
ardour of his troops, who, contrary to his orders, attacked 
the enemy in front: for, according to his directions, 
the Prussian left wing alone should have attacked the 
right of the Austrians in flank. This was done with 
great success : the Prussians took some batteries, ad- 
vanced two hundred paces beyond them, gained the 
enemy's flank, and threw them into great confusion. 
The king's intention was, in case of emergency, to draw 
troops from his right wing to his left ; and if the former 
had remained in the position assigned to it, it would 
have kept the Austrian left wing in check, so that it 
could not have acted. But the good effect of these 
dispositions was totally frustrated by the ardour of his 
troops in the centre. When these perceived the success 
of the left wing, they were desirous to participate in 
the victory which they considered as certain, and at- 
tacked a village, situated a little to the left of the 
Austrian centre. They took it ; and thus the whole 
Prussian right wing was drawn into the fight, and ex-r 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 77 

posed to the fire of the batteries Unaccustomed to 

reverses, the king probably relied too much on his good 
fortune. Eight victories that he had won — so he himself 
admitted — ^had given him a notion that the Austrians 
might be dislodged from the most advantageous posi- 
tions ; and, in fact, any one must be more than man if, 
after such a series of victories, he could be wholly free 
ftom presumption." 

On cool consideration, the king discovered and ac- 
knowledged that he was himself in fault. Three days 
after the battle, he thus writes to Lord Marischal in 
Neufchatel : ^^ The imperial grenadiers are admirable 
troops* One hundred companies defended a height 
which my best infantry could not take. Ferdinand, 
who led it, made seven attacks, but in vain« The first 
time, he gained possession of a battery, but could not 
keep it. The enemy had the advantage of a numerous 
and well-served artillery, with which the Prussian alone 
is capable of competing, I had too few infantry. All 
my cavalry were present, and stood by inactive, except- 
ing a single attack, which I made with the horse and 
some pieces of cannon. Ferdinand advanced without 
firing ; so much the less did the enemy spare their fire. 
They had two heights, two redoubts, and an astonishing 
artillery. Some of my regiments were entirely de- 
stroyed. Henry performed prodigies. I trembled for 
my worthy brothers. They are too bold. In truth, I 
must have more infantry. Success, my dear lord, fre- 
quently inspires us with a dangerous confidence. Twenty- 
three battalions were not sufficient to drive 60,000 men 
from an advantageous position. I shall know better 
another time. Fortune on that day turned her back 



78 COURT AND TIMES OF 

upon me. It was no more than I might have expected : 
she is a female, and I am not galant. She declared 
herself for the ladies who are at war with me. What 
say you to the league against the margrave of Branden* 
burg? How the great Frederick William would be 
astonished, if he could see his great grandson battling 
it with the Russians, the Austrians, almost all the Ger- 
mans, and a hundred thousand French to boot ! I know 
not whether it will be a disgrace to me to be conquered ; 
but this I know, that there will be no honour in having 
conquered me." 

The same sentiment is expressed by Voltaire when 
alluding to the contest in which the Prussian monarch 
was engaged. " Louis XIV. has been admired," he says, 
*^ for having' resisted the united force of Germany, 
England, Italy, and Holland ; but we have seen in our 
days an event incomparably more extraordinary than 
that — a margrave of Brandenburg alone, and single- 
handed, making a successful resistance against Austria, 
France, Russia, Sweden, and the greater part of Ger- 
many. This is a prodigy, which can be attributed only 
to the discipline of the troops and the superiority of 
the general who commands them. Chance may gain a 
single battle : but when a weak power resists so many 
strong ones for the space of seven years, and in an open 
country, and is able to repair the greatest reverses, this 
cannot be the work of good-fortune. It is, indeed, in 
this point that the war of which we are about to 
treat differed from all that had hitherto desolated the 
world." 

Great was the exultation in Vienna for the victory of 
KoUin. Entertainments, illuminations, medals, promo- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 79 

tions, and increase of pay, expressed tlie joy of the 
court and the people at the discomfiture of their foe, 
to whom they hoped this stroke would prove fatal. In 
honour of the victory, the empress founded the order of 
Maria Theresa, as a reward for valour; and marshal 
Daun was directed to make such promotions in the 
army as he thought fit. 

On the 20th of June the blockade of Prague was 
raised. The unfortunate inhabitants, after a great part 
of their city had been destroyed, and the calamities of 
war had been aggravated to the utmost, beheld the 
enemy march away from their entrenchments in the 
best order, without any particular loss, excepting that 
of the wounded and deserters. That portion of the 
army under the king himself proceeded without mo- 
lestation to join the corps of the duke of Bevern near 
Lissa. Marshal Keith, who did not quit his camp before 
Prague till the afternoon of the same day, was pur- 
sued by duke Charles, and in a warm action with him 
had 400 men killed and wounded. When the king was 
quitting the corps of the duke of Bevern, he left gene- 
ral Winterfeld as superior in command to the duke. 
The general asked for a reinforcement. " In my opi- 
nion," rejoined the king, " the army is strong enough : 
do not ymb command them." At his departure, he rode 
away to a little distance, then suddenly turned back, 
leaped from his horse, and said to Winterfeld : " I had 
almost forgotten to leave you your instructions. I have 
nothing more to say than — Take care of yourself for 
my sake." 

The next concern of Frederick was to recruit the 
beaten army left at Nimburg under the command of 



80 COURT AND TIMES OP 

prince Maurice. The king thereupon led one part of his 
force to Leitmeritz ; the other, which encamped on the 
27th at Jung-Bunzlau, on the right bank of the Iser, 
was expressly ordered not to fall back any further upon 
Zittau. The command of this corps was transferred on 
the Sdth to the prince of Prussia. In this position the 
Prussian army remained three whole weeks waiting to 
see what steps the enemy would take. 

Daun and duke Charles meanwhile continued inactive 
in their respective positions, and it was not till eight 
days after the victory which they neglected to follow 
up, that they united their forces in the vicinity of 
Prague. Their light troops, under Nadasdy and Loudon, 
then ventured pn some petty enterprises — the former 
chiefly aiming at intercepting the communication be- 
tween the two Prussian camps, about forty miles dis* 
tant from each other; the latter scouring the high 
roads. While thus engaged, Loudon fell in with general 
Manstein, whose left arm had been shattered in the 
battle by a musket-ball, and thirty other wounded offi- 
cers, proceeding by the king's command from Leitme- 
ritz to Dresden. They had arrived on the 27th of June, 
under an escort of 200 Saxons, at Welmina, when they 
were met by Loudon and his Pandours. They might 
perhaps have effected their retreat to Leitmeritz ; but 
Manstein was weary of a life which, after the fault 
that he had committed, held out no very agreeable 
prospect. Determined to defend himself to the last 
extremity, he ordered the convoy to draw up on the 
next height. The Pandours appeared, and the escort, 
unwilling to risk their lives for a few Prussians, ran 
away. Manstein prepared to defend himself; and, as 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 8t 

Be would liot hear of surrender, he was cut down hy 
the Pandours* 

Laudon, or Loudon, whose name will hereafter appear 
among the most conspicuous of the Austrian generals, 
was of Scottish extraction, but bom in Liyonia. He en- 
tered the Russian armj, and had seen a good deal of 
service, when he was dismissed with the rank of captain. 
During the first Silesian war he obtained a commission 
in Trenk's Pandours. He fought in Bavaria and on the 
Rhine, at Hohenfriedberg and Sorr, but, having in-» 
curred the enmity of his commander, was obliged to 
quit the Austrian service, on which he denounced Trenk, 
and caused him to be confined in a fortress, where he 
died. After living many years in poverty and obscu-» 
rity, Loudon obtained a majority in a Croatian regi- 
ment, married, and embraced the Catholic religion* 
He next became lieutenant-colonel of the light troops 
sent to the assistance of the army of the empire. Ar- 
riving in Browne's camp the day after the battle of 
Lowositz, he had the fortune, on the 8th of October, 
with 800 Croats, to surprise the Prussian major Strozzy, 
with a detachment of green hussars, who lost a number 
of men killed and horses taken. This was the first sue-' 
cessful attempt of the Austrians against the Prussians, 
and opened the career of glory to the enterprising com- 
mander. After the battle of KoUin, he was promoted 
to be major-general : his commission fell into the hands 
of Frederick, who forwarded it to him with a most 
flattering letter of congratulation. 

The defeat at KoUin was the commencement of a 
series of misfortunes, which deeply afflicted the Prussian 
monarch. While encamped at Leitmeritz, he receive^ 

VOL. III. G 



82 COURT AND TIMES OF 

intelligence of the death of his adored mother, on the' 
28th of June, at Mon Bijou. Frederick had, as we have 
seen, always manifested the fondest affection for this 
princess, and lightened her widowhood by the most du- 
tiful attentions. His grief for her loss was, therefore, 
expressed in every possible way. " The king," writes 
Sir Andrew Mitchell, on the 2nd of July, " has seen 
nobody since the arrival of the mournful tidings, and I 
hear that he is deeply afflicted. His sorrow is certainly 
sincere, for never did man give more proofs of duty and 
affection than he has shown to his mother on every occa- 
sion, and never did mother more deserve the love of aU 
her children." Again he writes on the 4th of July : "The 
king sent for me yesterday; it was the first time that 
he spoke to any one since the news of his mother's 
death. I was deeply touched to see how he indulged 
his grief, and gave way to the most tender, filial senti- 
ments, while calling to mind the manifold obligations 
which he owed to his mother, how she suffered, how she 
bore her sufferings, how much good she did to every 
body, and what a comfort it was to him that he had 
contributed to make the latter part of her life easy and 
agreeable." In the later years of his own life, the king 
often recurred to this painful subject. In 1779, in a 
conversation with Garve on happiness, he asserted that 
he had experienced, in his time, the acutest sorrows 
of the heart, "adding," says Garve, "in a tone of 
kindness and familiarity more affecting than I had 
known him use in any of his conversations with me, 
' Did you know what I felt, for instance, at the death of 
my mother, you would see that I have been unhappy as 
any other, and more unhappy than others, because I have 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 83 

had more sensibility/ " In his works, also, Frederick 
Im .looted m<MnmLt. «t p^tai. U, hi, mother. 

The manifold afflictions of this period are painfully 
expressed in his letters to d'Argens. ^^ Consider, my 
dear marquis," he writes to him in June from Leitmeritz, 
^^ that man is more sensitive than rational. I have read 
the third canto of Lucretius over and over again ; and 
have found nothing in it but the necessity of evil and 
the insufficiency of the remedy. The alleviation of my 
sorrows lies in the daily business that I am obliged to 
go through, and in the incessant occupations which the 
number of my enemies imposes upon me. Had I been 
killed at Kollin, I should now be in a port where I 
should have no more storms to fear. Now I must be 
tossed upon a tempestuous sea, till some small spot in 
the universe affords me that ease which I have not been 
able to find in this world. Farewell, my friend. I wish 
you health and every kind of happiness that I have not." 

Again he writes to the same friend from Leitmeritz 
on the 19th of July : "Look upon me, my dear mar* 
quis, as a wall in which, for two years past, Fate has 
been battering a breach. I am shaken on all sides. 
Domestic misfortunes, private sorrows, public distresses, 
fresh impending annoyances — ^such is my daily bread. 
Do not imagine, however, that I shall give way to them. 
Were all the elements to be dissolved, I would bury my- 
self under their ruins with the same coolness that I am 
at this moment writing to you. In such trying times, 
one must provide one's-self with bowels of iron and heart 
of brass, in order to divest one's-self of all sensibility. 
Now is the time for stoicism. At this moment the poor 
disciples of Epicurus would not have a word to say for 

G 2 



84 COURT AND TIMES OF 

their philosophy. The next month will he a terrible 
one, and very decisive for my poor country. I, for my 
part — firmly resolved to save or to perish with it — have 
contracted a way of thinking suitable for such times and 
circumstances. Our situation is to be compared only 
with the times of a Marius, a Sylla, the triumvirates; 
and the most cruel and atrocious scenes of the civil 
wars. You are too far distant to form any conception 
of the crisis in which we find ourselves, and of the hor- 
rors which surround us. Consider, I beseech you, the 
exceedingly dear persons that I have successively lost, 
and the adversities that I see advancing with hasty strides. 
What is wanting to place me completely in the situ* 
ation of tormented Job ? My otherwise weakly constitu-* 
tion withstands these storms, I myself know not how ; 
and I am astonished at my own endurance in situations 
which, three years ago, I could not have contemplated 
without shuddering. This is indeed a letter in whicl< 
you will find little joy and little consolation ; but I pour 
out my whole heart, and write more to ease it than to 
entertain you, Philosophy, my friend, is good for 
alleviating past and future evils, but it falls short when 
employed against the present." 

Before I return to the events of the war, I must ad- 
vert to the margravine of Bayreuth, the beloved sister 
of Frederick, whose letters to Voltaire express in the 
liveliest manner the impression made by that unlucky 
day. and its results on the female relatives of the king, 
but at the same time the generous sympathy which they 
felt for him. On the 19th of August she writes ; " I 
am in a frightful situation, and shall not survive the ruin 
of my house and family. That is the only comfort 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 86 

which is left me. You will have some fine subjects for 
tragedies." On the 12th of September, she pens this 
doubly beautiful testimony : " Nothing is left me but 
to follow the destiny of the king, if it is unfortunate. I 
have never pretended to be a philosopher ; but I have 
done my best to become one. The little progress that 
I have made has taught me to despise grandeur and 
wealth ; but I have found in philosophy nothing that 
can heal the wounds of the heart, excepting the means of 
ridding ourselves of our troubles by parting with life. 
The state in which I am at present is worse than death. 
I see the greatest man of the age, my brother, my friend, 
exposed to the greatest danger. I see my whole family 
exposed to storms and perils, my native land torn in 
pieces by a ruthless foe, and the country in which I 
live threatened, perhaps, with similar danger. that 
Heaven would visit me alone with all the evils that I 
am here describing to you ! I would endure them with 
fortitude." 

And how did Frederick find his friends in these 
days of adversity — Finckenstein, Winterfeld, countess 
Camas, d'Alembert, but above all d'Argens ? all faithful 
and sympathizing. At the head of the traitors must be 
placed Voltaire. The former exchange of ideas between 
him and the king was too gratifying to both not to have 
been long since renewed, but the arrow still rankled in 
the wound of the poet ; he did homage to the conqueror 
of Prague, after he had enlisted with his pasquinades 
under the banners of the foes of Prussia. On the 1 3th 
of September, 1756, he thus wrote to count d'Argental : 
"Madame Denis hopes that 24,000 French will sooa 
pass through Frankfurt ; she will recommend to them a 



86 COURT AND TIMES OF 

certain Monsieur Freytag, the agent of the Solomon of 
the North, who at times takes it into his head to order 
soldiers with fixed bayonets into a lady's bed-chamber. 
I wish marshal Richelieu commanded this army. After 
the French have beaten the English, they will surely be 
able to overthrow the ranks of the Vandals/' 

A similar vein of gall and venom runs through all his 

letters to Richelieu himself ; for instance, that of the 

6th of October, 1756, in which he relates that Frederick 

invited him to Prussia four months before, holding out 

to him, at the same time, magnificent promises. On the 

10th of October, he wishes to inform the marquise de 

Pompadour, through Richelieu, that the king was not 

accustomed to pay her any compliments, but that Maria 

Theresa had a month before spoken of her in terms of 

the highest praise. Nay, more — in a letter to Richelieu, 

of the 1st of November, he boasts of having invented a 

destructive machine to be employed against Frederick's 

army. To the margravine of Bayreuth he nevertheles9 

wrote, on the 8th of February, 1757 : " The king, your 

brother, has had the goodness to write me a letter, in 

which he assures me of his gracious favour. My heart 

has always loved him, my mind has always admired him, 

and I believe that I shall admire him still more. The 

empress of Russia wishes to have me in Petersburg, to 

write the life of Peter I. ; but Peter I. is no longer the 

greatest man of this age, and I wiU not go to a country 

whose army the king, your brother, will beat. — I know 

not whether the ministerial change in France has yet 

reached your royal highness. It is believed that the 

abbe de Bemis will have the greatest confidence. You 

see what comes of writing pretty verses." 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 87 

A tone of enmity to Frederick pervades likewise all 
Voltaire's letters to d'Alembert. They show no sym- 
pathy with his misfortunes ; nay, on the 6th of Decem- 
ber, 1757, he writes — ** He will lose his own dominions, 
together with the countries which he has conquered." 
He had, in fact, had the insolence to prepare the king 
for cessions, and to offer him comfort on the prospect of 
being obliged to submit to them. Hypocritical friend- 
ship is indeed occasionally expressed by his pen, but his 
heart had no share in it : for, at the same time that the 
king was dedicating to him his best poems, on existence 
and non-existence, and on the duties of princes, he was 
thus writing to d'Argental : " I have enjoyed the revenge 
of consoling the king of Prussia, and that satisfies me. 
He beats and is beaten, and will be ruined, without a 
new miracle. It were better for him to be a philoso- 
pher, as he boasted of being." Lastly, with the malig- 
nity of a demon, he calls the king, in all his letters 
written after the 12th of December, either to d'Alem- 
bert or to other acquaintance throughout all France, 
nothing but Luc, in allusion to an odious charge against 
Frederick, probably of his own fabrication, which it is 
impossible for me even to hint at. 

The two imperial generals,- after uniting their forces, 
agreed to direct them against the corps of the prince of 
Prussia, which was destined for the defence of Silesia 
and Lusatia, and which we left encamped at Jung- 
Bunzlau. On the first of July they crossed the Elbe ; 
Nadasdy was already within five miles of the Prussian 
camp. Unable to resist the superior force of the enemy, 
the prince was obliged to fall back, which he did, but 
not by the direct road to Zittau, according to the inten- 



B8 COURT AND TIMES OF 

tions of his royal brother. At Bohmisch-Lelpa he took 
« strong position behind the Pulsnitz, while Zittau and 
«Gabel were occupied by several battalions. On the 14th 
of July, Daun and duke Charles, having crossed the Iser, 
advanced to Niemes, within five miles of the left flank 
of the prince of Prussia, which they turned and gained 
a day's march towards Gabel, Here was posted general 
Puttkammer, with four battalions and 600 hussars, to 
protect the convoys coming from the magazines at Zittau 
to the Prussian army. Having defended himself with 
the greatest obstinacy for three days against the at* 
tacks of 20,000 men, he was obliged, as no relief arrived, 
to surrender, with his detachment of 2000 and seven 
pieces of cannon. After the loss of this position, the 
prince could not maintain his ground at Leipa. To pre- 
vent the capture of his magazines, he was forced to con- 
tinue his retreat to Zittau by circuitous routes of such 
difficulty that the loss of the baggage was inevitable. 
Many of the troops, exhausted by efforts, privations, 
and hardships, fell ill on the march ; others forsook 
their colours in sight of the enemy. The army was five 
days in advancing less than 25 English miles ; for, in the 
hills of Lusatia, the roads were so narrow that the wag- 
gon-train was obliged to halt every moment. Besides, 
hourly actions were taking place with the light troops 
of the enemy. The drivers of the train unharnessed the 
horses, broke in pieces the pontoons and baggage- 
waggons, and blocked up the way against the. artillery 
which followed, till it could be cleared again with great 
labour. More than 2000 men deserted in this short 
distance; the provision -carriages, all the pontoons, 
and even many of the ammunition- waggons were lost, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 89 

and the last spark of confidence was of course extin- 
guished. 

When arrived on the 22 d before Zittau, they found 
the enemy already posted on the Eckartsberg, and took 
a strong position opposite to them. General Schmettau 
had succeeded in throwing himself into the town, and 
in despatching, with Winterfeld's assistance, a convoy 
of provisions to the famished Prussians. Schmettau 
had again quitted the place, leaving there colonel Die-« 
recke, with four battalions. The main army of the 
Austrians at length arrived on the 23d, and bombarded 
the town so violently that they set it on fire, and in a 
short time four-fifths of the houses, including the Prus-» 
sian magazine, were reduced to ashes. Colonel Dierecke 
defended the place till the destruction of the magazine 
had rendered it of no value ; and, unable to endure the 
excessive heat caused by the conflagration, he would 
have retired, but, through the treachery of a Saxon bat- 
talion, which opened the gates to the Austrians, he was 
tnade prisoner with 260 pioneers. The rest of his men 
effected their escape and joined the Prussian army. 

Zittau was at this time the next most important 
commercial town to Leipzig in the Saxon dominions. 
It was the seat of many manufactures, and its destruc-* 
tion is considered an act of wanton cruelty on the part 
of duke Charles, as it possessed scarcely any means of 
defence. The damage done by it to Saxon subjects was 
estimated at ten millions of dollars ; while the Prussians 
lost provisions suflScient for the supply of 40,000 men 
for three weeks. 

The prince of Prussia now proceeded without moles* 
tation, by slow marches, to Bautzen. The disasters 



90 COURT AND TIMES OF 

which he had experienced called the king to his support. 
Having crossed the Elbe at Pima, and there left prince 
Maurice, with 10,000 men, to protect Dresden against 
Loudon, he marched with the rest of his force to join 
his brother at Bautzen, where he arrived on the 29 th of 
July. Frederick treated the prince, to whose blunders 
and incapacity he attributed the losses which he had sus- 
tained, with unmitigated contempt, and the generals of 
his corps came in for their share of the royal indigna, 
tion. General Wamery, who himself belonged to the 
corps of the prince, and cannot be reckoned a panegyrist 
of the king's, calls this retreat ^^ one of the most disas- 
trous that ever was made ; that cost more thaii a battle, 
merely because it was conducted contrary to all rules 
and to common sense. It deprived the Prussian army of 
more than 10,000 men." Perhaps this may moderate 
the censure that we might be disposed to pass upon 
Frederick's anger, though we may acquit the prince for 
having, contrary to better conviction, by the express 
command of the king, tarried too long in Bohemia, and 
consider him chargeable only with having, on false re* 
ports that the Emperor's Road was intercepted, marched 
in a curve along narrow, stony, hollow ways, allowing 
the enemy to get before him by the direct route. 

The account given by the prince himself of the con" 
duct of Frederick on this occasion is interesting. 

" About ten o'clock, the king came to the right wing 
of our army. He was accompanied by the life-guard 
and some quarter-masters, whom he directed to mark 
out the camp for the regiments which he had brought 
with him. I mounted my horse and went to him, with 
dukes Augustus William of Bevern and Frejierick of 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 91 

Wirtemberg, and the principal generals. As soon as 
the king saw us, he turned his horse, and continued for 
a quarter of an hour in that position. But at length he 
was obliged to turn about, to make way for the quarter- 
masters. I went up to him to pay my respects. He said 
not a wordy neither did he condescend to look at me, and 
hardly took off his hat. The duke of Bevem and the 
other generals were no better received. He called ge- 
neral von der Goltz, and said to him- — * Tell my brother 
and all his generals, that were I to do what is right, I 
should have all their heads off ! ' This was a most un- 
pleasant compliment. Some of the generals were dis- 
concerted, others piqued, and these last made a joke of 
the matter. I learned that the king had forbidden the 
regiments which he had brought with him to hold any 
intercourse with those under my command, alleging that 
my oflScers and soldiers had lost all courage and all sense 
of honour. He drove from his presence general Schulze, 
whom I had sent to him for the parole for my army. 
And when I carried him myself the lists and reports of 
the army, he snatched them out of my hand and turned 
his back upon me. General Schmettau received orders 
to keep out of the king's sight, and to go with the first 
opportunity to Dresden. After this degrading treat- 
ment, I resolved to leave the camp and to go to Baut-* 
zen. Next morning I wrote the following letter to the 
king : — 

" * My dear brother — The letters you have written to 
me and the reception which I yesterday experienced, 
sufficiently indicate that in your opinion I have lost 
honour and reputation. This grieves without humbling 
me, as I have nothing to reproach myself with. I am 



92 COURT AND TIMES OF 

certain that I have not acted from obstinacy. Neither 
did I follow the advice of persons incapable of giving 
good counsel, but have done all that I thought most 
beneficial for the army. All your generals will do me 
this justice, I deem it useless to solicit you to let my 
conduct be investigated — ^for that would be doing me 
a favour. Of course I must not expect it. My health 
is impaired by the fatigues of war, and still more by 
vexation. I have taken lodgings in the town to recruit 
myself. I have requested the Duke of Bevem to lay 
before you the reports of the army. He can explain 
every thing. Be assured, my dear brother, that not- 
withstanding the misfortune which bows me down, but 
which I have not deserved, I shall never cease to be 
devoted to the state, and, as a faithful member of it, 
my joy will be perfect when I hear of the happy issue 
of your enterprises/ 

*^ The king gave me the following answer in his own 
handwriting: — *My dear brother — Your misconduct 
has been extremely injurious to my affairs. It is not 
the enemy, but your vicious measures, that occasion all 
my vexation. My generals are inexcusable, whether 
they gave you such bad advice or suffered you to take 
such fnjudicious resolutions. Your ears are accustomed 
only to hear the words of flatterers. Daun did not 
flatter you, and you see the consequences. In this me- 
lancholy situation, I have nothing left me but to prepare 
myself for the utmost extremity. I will fight, and if 
we cannot conquer, we will all perish together, I com- 
plain not of your heart, but of your incapacity and your 
want of judgment to choose the best means. He who has 
but few days to live needs not dissemble. I wish you 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 93 

more prosperity than I have had, and that all the mis- 
fortunes and unpleasant circumstances which have be-* 
fallen you may teach you to manage important matter? 
with more care, reason, and resolution. The greater 
part of the disasters which I foresee proceed from you 
alone. You and your children will suffer from them 
more than I shall. Be assured, nevertheless, that I 
haye ever loved you, and that in these sentiments I 
shall die.' 

** I thought it best not to make any reply to this 
letter, but requested permission, through colonel Len-« 
tulus, to go to Dresden. The king answered that I 
might go wherever I pleased." 

Thus ended the military career of Prince Augustus 
William, eldest brother of the king, and heir presump-* 
tive to the crown of Prussia. After living some time at 
Dresden, the unfortunate prince went, at the beginning 
of October, to Leipzig, and then retired to Oranienburg, 
his residence near Berlin, where he died on the 12th of 
June, 1758, deeply lamented and respected by his bro-» 
ther Henry and those oflScers of the army who were 
united by a particular bond of attachment ; whereas, 
the party of Winterfeld and Fouque were implicitly 
devoted to the sovereign. Not even the tidings of his 
death seem to have reconciled Frederick with his 
brother, who, though no doubt deeply mortified by the 
treatment which he experienced from the king, igr 
erroneously said by some to have died of a broken heart ; 
for the surgeons who opened his body found all tha 
nobler parts in a perfect state, but on the left side of 
the head six ounces of extravasated blood. In 1744, 
during the siege of Prague, his head had been hurt by 



94 COUKT AND TIMES OF 

a fall from his horse, and since that time he had fre- 
quently complained of pain on that side of the head 
which had received the injury. An army surgeon, 
named Puchterl, was the only medical attendant of the 
prince till the end of May, 1758, when the derange- 
ment of the stomach by ewes' milk, pancakes, and cher- 
ries, and the accession of a tertian fever, caused doctors 
Meckel and Muzel, the two most eminent physicians in 
Berlin, to be called in. They entertained very different 
views respecting his complaint. Their report calls the 
dangerous fall a secondary cause of death, though 
Meckel thought nothing of it ; and the medicinal coun- 
cillor Augustin, who published a highly interesting 
statement of the case, is of opinion that the prince died 
through the skill of the doctors. 

The king, when he heard of the death of his brother 
Augustus William, appeared to be little more reconciled 
to him than at first. When lieutenant Hagen, the 
prince's aide-de-camp, brought him the melancholy 
tidings, Frederick coldly asked : " What disorder was 
it that my brother died of ?" " Grief has shortened the 
prince's life," replied the officer. The king turned his 
back upon him. Hagen was remanded to the regiment 
from which he had been taken at the commencement 
of the war, and fell at Burkersdorf. 

The prince of Prussia was rather tall than short, and 
well made : he was a capital horseman, excelled on the 
violoncello, and A^as fond of painting, in which he re- 
ceived instructions from Pesne. The sciences, especi- 
ally mathematics and metaphysics, had improved his 
mind, and the works of the best writers his taste. Noble 
manners and virtues rendered him a universal favourite. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 95 

We have seen how desirous his father was to divert the 
crown from the head of his eldest son and to appoint 
Augustas William his successor; and he created for 
him, in 1731, the dignity of stadtholder of Pomerania, 
which has since devolved to each succeeding heir to the 
throne of Prussia. He served, during the Silesian wars, 
so much to the satisfaction of his royal brother, that 
Frederick dedicated to him, in 1751, his Memoirs of the 
House of Brandenburg ; and in that dedication he ex- 
pressed with touching fondness, in the face of the whole 
world, the high hopes which he cherished of the heir to 
his crown. Augustus William, whose consort it will be 
recollected was sister to Frederick's queen, left three 
children — Frederick William, the successor of the great 
king ; Henry, the especial favourite of the latter ; and 
Wilhelmine, married to the Stadtholder of Holland. 
Another prince, bom after his death, lived but a few 
months. Frederick selected his own old preceptor, 
marshal Kalkstein, to superintend the education of the 
other two sons, and on the Slst of June, 1758, he thus 
wrote to him from the camp at Prosnitz : " My dear 
marshal, a series of misfortunes, which has pursued me 
for some years past, has bereft me of my brother, whom 
I fondly loved, notwithstanding the vexation that he 
occasioned me." 

Much of that unsparing rigour with which Frederick 
treated his brother must undoubtedly be ascribed to his 
personal situation at the time and its influence upon his 
temper. He was certainly wrong in imposing upon the 
prince a task to the performance of which perhaps 
none but his own powers were adequate. We have seen 
how keenly he was affected by his mother's death, 



96 COURT AND TIMES OF 

which happened only ten days after the disastrous battle 
of Kollin ; and the subsequent reverses of his armied 
were not likely either to raise his spirits, to allay 
irritation, or to bespeak indulgence. Only five weeks 
back the empress had trembled in her capital ; now her 
proclamations were calling upon the people of Silesia to 
submit again to her sceptre. That province was unpro-' 
tected ; new enemies were arming on all sides, and of 
his own troops Frederick had lost 60,000 in four 
months. The bravest of them had fallen before Prague 
and at Kollin ; the survivors were disheartened; while 
hostile forces, advancing on two opposite sides, threat-* 
ened to wrest from him his hereditary dominions and 
Saxony, Great allowance must therefore be made for 
the king, if, under these trying circumstances, he did 
manifest undue acrimony against his unfortunate bro- 
ther ; especially when it is known that in this time of 
tribulation he more than once expressed his determi- 
nation not to survive his ruin, and wrote these memo<^ 
rable words : 

" Pour moi^ menace du naufrage, 
Je dois, en affrontant I'orage, 
Penser, vivre, et mourir en Roi." 

'^ Let tempests threat^ impending ruin lower> 
Still be it mine as king to think, live, die !" 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 97 



CHAPTER XXIX. 

Campaign of 1757 continued — Military Operations in Western Germany — 
Action at Hastenbeck — Retreat of the Duke of Cumberland — Convention 
of Kloster-iZeven — ^The Russians enter Prussia — Battle of Gross-Jagers- 
dorf — Retreat of the Russians — Their savage excesses — ^The Swedes 
overrun Pomerania — Marshal Lehwald retakes nearly all their conquests 
— Frederick advances from Lusatia against Daun — Intercepted Cor- 
respondence of the Queen of Poland — The King transfers his Army to 
the Duke of Bevem>and marches against the French and the Troops of 
the Empire — ^Action at Jakelberg^ and death of Winterfeld — Grief of the 
King for the loss of that Officer — His firmness — Seydlitz surprises the 
French at Grotha — Occupation of Berlin by the Austrians and Russians 
— ^Noble sentiment of the Duke de Crillon — Battle of Rossbach — Defeat 
and flight of tJie French — Courtesy of the King to the Prisoners — Wan- 
ton barbarvty of the French — Extracts from Letters of Frederick 's^ rela- 
tive to his situation — Effects of the Victory of Rossbach. 

While Frederick was scarcely able to make head 
against the Austrian force alone, his two other formi- 
dable foes were advancing to overwhelm him. A French 
army of 100,000 men, penetrating into Germany on the 
north-west, had taken possession of Cleves, Wesel, and 
East Friesland, in the beginning of April. Their prin- 
cipal rendezvous was Cologne. Here count d'Etrees, 
the ablest of marshal Saxe's pupils, arrived early in 
May, and encamped on the 26th, with his whole force, 
near Miinster. The duke of Cumberland, who had col- 
lected the allied troops at Bielefeld, with instructions 
to protect the electorate of Hanover, retreated before 
the French across the Weser, and left d'Etrees master 
of all Hesse. At length, on the 26th of July, the two 
armies met near the village of Hastenbeck, south-east- 
ward of Hameln ; and, though the hereditary prince of 
Brunswick and the Hanoverian colonel von Breitenbach 

VOL. III. H 






98 COURT AND TIMES OF 

had won the victory, the duke would not keep his ground, 
but relinquished the field of battle to the beaten enemy, 
and continued his retreat to Stade, on which the French 
exultingly took possession of the territories of Hanover 
and Brunswick. 

It is a remarkable circumstance, that at Hastenbeck 
neither of the hostile commanders seems to have been 
seriously desirous of gaining laurels. While the one was 
intent only on running away, the other showed no dis- 
position to do any thing at all. It was not till d'Etrees 
received hints from his friends in Paris, that if he meant 
to earn any fame he had no time to lose, as the duke de 
Richelieu was already appointed to supersede him, that 
the equivocal victory was in a manner forced upon him ; 
and, on the 7th of August, the new commander arrived 
at Miinden to reap the convenient fruits of it. Richelieu 
immediately detached the prince de Soubise, a favourite 
of the king's mistress, the marquise de Pompadour, with 
25,000 men to Erfurt, to join the army of the empire, and 
to drive the Prussians out of Saxony, while he himself 
pursued Cumberland, who fled without stopping, to Stade. 

The tide of war had now rolled so near to the Danish 
territory, that the court of Copenhagen could not expect 
a more favourable occasion either to join the rest of Eu- 
rope against Prussia, or generously to assist Frederick 
in his distress. But the minister, count Bemstorf, hated 
the court of Berlin, and his sovereign, Frederick V., hated 
war. With these dispositions, the Danish monarch un- 
dertook the office of mediator, and count Lynar, governor 
of Oldenburg and Delmenhorst, who resided in the for- 
mer town, was directed to negociate a truce between the 
French and the allied armies. This was an easy task, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 99 

for Cumberland had run away from the lists. Richelieu 
had something else to do than to seek battles. So ex- 
cessive was his rapacity, that his own soldiers were scan- 
dalised by it, and called him by no other name but " Le 
petit Pere la Maraude ;" and so far was he from wishing 
to conceal the fruits of his numberless extortions during 
his six months' command, that he built with them a splen- 
did palace in Paris, which, to his disgrace, is called, to this 
d^y? by the people, " Le Payillon d'Hannorre." In short, 
on the 8th of September, the pious Danish mediator con- 
cluded the conyention of Kloster-Zeven, according to 
which the troops of Hesse, Gotha, Brunswick, and Biicke- 
burg returned to their respective countries, while the 
Hanoverians were to remain quietly at Stade, on the 
right bank of the Elbe. Nothing further was stipulated, 
and the approval of the two great courts was not even 
waited for. Neither, indeed, could it reasonably be ex- 
pected, as both Richelieu and Cumberland had betrayed 
their employers. The former prepared for an incursion 
into the principality of Halberstadt, while the latter 
hastily shipped himself for England without permission. 
The duke of Cumberland, the second, and, after the 
deatb of the prince of Wales, the only son of George H., 
had been from his youth the favourite of the king. The 
deeper was his majesty's chagrin at the signal disappoint- 
ment of his hopes on this occasion. He received his son 
with freezing coldness, and publicly observed, " Here is 
my son, who has ruined me, and disgraced himself." But 
this was not the first time that he had branded his name 
with infamy. The cruelties practised by him after the 
victory of CuUoden had for ever crushed the party of the 
Pretender, but had gained him the execration of all hu- 

H 2 



100 COURT AND TIMES OF 

mane minds. On the 15th of October, he resigned all 
his military appointments, and died in 1765 without issue. 

What different views may be taken of the same thing 
is proved by a letter from count Lynar to his father-in- 
law, Henry XXIV. Reuss, count of Plauen, who resided 
at Kostritz : " The idea of concluding this convention 
[that of Kloster-Zeven], was an inspiration of Heaven. 
The holy Spirit has given me power to stop the progress 
of the French, as Joshua of old did that of the sun. 
Almighty God made me his unworthy instrument to pre- 
vent more of this Lutheran, this precious Hanoverian, 
blood from being spilt." 

Meanwhile the Russians, on the opposite side of the 
Prussian dominions, showed much more activity than 
their allies in the West. Their army, about 83,000 
strong, broke up in May, under the command of field- 
marshal count Apraxin, and advanced in four columns 
towards the Prussian frontiers. Three of these columns 
proceeded through Poland, the fourth marched through 
Samogitia upon Memel. That fortress was taken after 
a bombardment of five days, and served the enemy for 
an excellent place d^armes. The invaders pursued their 
course to Wehlau, and during this march committed 
atrocious cruelties. The Prussian marshal Lehwald, a 
veteran of 72, who had no more than 22,000 men at his 
disposal, was charged with the defence of the country. 
He was posted at Insterburg. Notwithstanding the infe- 
riority of his force, he resolved, on the 30th of August, 
to attack the enemy in his entrenchments near Gross 
Jagersdorf. The Russians, on perceiving his intention, 
set fire to the villages situated before their front, that the 
smoke rising from them might conceal their movements. 



i 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 101 

Lehwald drew up his army in a line of battle running 
parallel to the Russian camp, and meant to have planted 
heavy cannon on a height which had been found unoccu- 
pied on the preceding day ; but the enemy had antici- 
pated him, and already taken possession of the height. 
Military skill and discipline compensated* the Prussians 
for their inferiority in number. Their cavalry on both 
wings drove back the enemy's horse upon their infantry, 
but the wings were too well covered to permit them to 
follow up the advantage. The Prussian infantry then 
advanced to the attack, and its left wing, penetrating 
the ranks of the Russians, took a great quantity of artil- 
lery. The right wing, which should have made the real 
attack, was less successful ; being turned, its flank was 
completely exposed to the enemy's line. The confusion 
arising from this circumstance was not a little increased 
when the second line, which afterwards advanced, unable 
to distinguish friend from foe, on account of the smoke 
from the burning villages, fired upon the first line. The 
battle had lasted ten hours : more than 6000 Prussians 
lay dead or wounded on the field of battle, when Lehwald 
issued orders for the retreat, which was eflTected in the 
best order. 

A week afterwards, Apraxin quitted Prussia, which 
his troops had completely drained, retaining possession 
of Memel and its environs only. A favourable circum- 
stance had occasioned this retreat, which the public at 
that time could not account for, Frederick's mortal 
enemy, the empress Elizabeth, was attacked by so dan- 
gerous an illness, that there was no prospect of her reco- 
very. Under these circumstances, Bestuchef, the high 
chancellor, at the instigation of the grand-duke Peter, 



102 COURT AND TIMES OF 

an enthusiastic admirer of Frederick's, recalled the 
Russian army : English gold probably contributed to 
this effect. Lehwald pursued the Russians to the fron- 
tiers. They left behind them 15,000 sick, 80 pieces of 
cannon, and a great quantity of camp equipage. Plun- 
der, murder, conflagration, and other savage excesses, 
marked their route. They hung innocent inhabitants 
from trees, ripped open their bodies, tore out their hearts 
and their intestines, cut off their noses and ears, broke 
their legs, fired villages and hamlets, formed a circle 
round the burning houses, and drove back their fleeing 
inmates into the flames. Their wanton brutality was 
especially wreaked on the nobles and the clergy : these 
they tied to the tails of their horses, and dragged them 
after them, or stripped them naked, and laid them upon 
blazing fires — ^nay, they were very near devouring them 
into the bargain. Their senseless revenge was exercised 
even on the dead ; they opened the graves, and scattered 
abroad the mutilated corpses. The small -pox ridded 
Prussia of the Calmucks, the most savage of these can- 
nibals. Being attacked by this disease, with which they 
were unacquainted, and swept off by thousands, the rest 
hurried back without orders to their own country : a few 
only continued with the army, and accompanied it in the 
sequel to Germany. 

No sooner was Prussia cleared of this enemy than a 
Swedish force of 22,000 men, under the command of 
baron Uugem Sternberg, landed in Pomerania. In the 
struggles between the two great political parties of that 
time, known by the designation of the hats and the caps, 
the former, which sided with France, and was led by 
count Gillenborg, had gained the ascendency over the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 103 

latter, headed by count Horn. The senate, therefore, 
under the influence of France, but upon the pretext of 
guaranteeing the peace of Westphalia, resolved upon 
thisexpedition against Prussia, notwithstanding the close 
family alliance between the sovereigns of the two coun- 
tries. This army pushed forward across the Peene ; 
and, as the garrison of Stettin, about 8000 strong, under 
general Manteuffel, could not leave that place without 
danger to the province, Demmin, Anclam, Usedom, and 
WoUin, fell into the hands of the enemy. For the rest, 
the Swedes were content with levying military contribu- 
tions and plundering the defenceless inhabitants ; while, 
at the same time, they were as timid as hares. At the 
commencement of the campaign, one of their divisions 
had penetrated into the Ukermark. One night five pos- 
tillions, in the uniform of hussars, armed with pistols, 
fired into a wood where several hundred of these plun- 
derers were lurking : seized with a panic, the whole 
detachment fled to Prenzlau, and excited such conster- 
nation there, that the army evacuated the Ukermark on 
the following day. In October, Lehwald, who was re- 
lieved from the Russians, advanced against the Swedes, 
wrested from them nearly all their conquests, and forced 
them to take shelter under the guns of Stralsund. As 
the marshal had been obliged to send part of his small 
force to join the new-formed allied army under duke 
Ferdinand of Brunswick, he was not able to reduce An- 
clam and the fort of Peenemunde till the following 
March. Individual members of the senate at Stock- 
holm made the severest remarks on the useless operations 
of the Swedish army, which was continually changing 
its generals ; and in 1 758, count Palmstiema thus wrote 



104 COURT AND TIMES OF 

V 

to count Hamilton, who then commanded it : " You 
sneaked like a fox into the enemy's country, and ran 
out of it again like a hare." 

We left Frederick in Lusatia, whither he had re- 
paired from Bohemia on learning the disasters that had 
befallen his brother, the prince of Prussia, He was oc- 
cupied for a fortnight in procuring fresh supplies of pro- 
visions. Then, threatened on the right by the French, 
on the left by the Russians, he first advanced against 
Daun. At Bernstadt he learned that Nadasdy was at 
Ostritz, and despatched general Werner against him. 
The hostile commander himself narrowly escaped ; his 
baggage and its escort were taken ; and among the for- 
mer were found original letters from the queen of Poland 
at Dresden, proving the existence of treacherous designs, 
and these the Prussian commander, general Fink, showed 
to her in her own handwriting. In his manuscript auto- 
biography, that oflScer relates how painful it was to him 
to observe the communication kept up by the queen, 
by letter and by confidential persons even, with Frede- 
rick's valet, the perfidious Anderson. Countess Ogilvie^ 
gouvernante of the queen of Poland, with many other 
persons of her household, were obliged to quit Dresden ; 
countess Briihl was sent under escort to Poland ; and 
Schonberg, one of the pages, to Berlin. But neither 
these examples nor urgent remonstrances could deter 
the queen from prosecuting her intrigues. 

Meanwhile Daun maintained his inassailable post near 
Eekartsberg. The king had no time to lose. He knew 
that the French were in Erfurt, Cumberland at Staade. 
Magdeburg and the Old Mark were threatened by the 
French ; Rosen and his Swedes had crossed the Peene . 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 105 

the troops of the empire were advancing upon Saxony, 
and Bavaria and Wirtemberg coming to reinforce the 
Imperialists. As Daun was not to be drawn from his 
position, the king returned to Bemstadt, encamped on 
the heights between Jauemick and the Neisse, beyond 
which Winterfeld's corps extended to Radmeritz, trans- 
ferred his army of 86,000 men to the duke of Beyem, and, 
conceiving the frontiers of Silesia to be thus sufficiently 
covered, he marched with 18 battalions and 30 squadrons 
to meet the French, under Soubise, who had formed a 
junction with the troops of the empire commanded by the 
prince of Hildburghausen, and with a corps of Austrians. 

After the king's departure, Bevem encamped on the 
Landeskron, near Goriitz, while Winterfeld's detach- 
ment was on the Jakelberg or Holzberg, on the other 
bank of the Neisse, near the village of Moys. On the 
7th of September the two generals held a conference at 
Goriitz. Nadasdy seized the opportunity to attack the 
Holzberg. Winterfeld hastened thither to avert the 
annihilation of his corps, but in vain : he was himself 
mortally wounded. The action cost the king 1900 
men and many brave officers; but the consequences 
were still more deplorable than the disaster itself. On 
the following day Bevem broke up his camp, marched 
by Naumburg to Liegnitz, weakened himself by de- 
tachments amounting to 15,000 men, and continued to 
retreat before Daun and prince Charles of Lorraine as 
far as the Lohe, near Breslau, while the enemy took 
post opposite to him near Lissa. 

Frederick had, meanwhile, gone to Dresden; and, 
having united his corps of 12,000 men with the 10,000 
under prince Maurice, had proceeded to Naumburg, and 



106 COURT AND TIMES OF 

across the Saale to Buttstadt. It was during this march 
that tidmgs reached him nearly at the same time of the 
death of his friend and of the convention of Kloster* 
Zeven. ** I shall find means," he exclaimed, " to make 
head against the multitude of my enemies, but I 
shall find but few Winterfelds again;" and tears 
trickled from his eyes. Richly did the deceased officer 
deserve this regard by his indefatigable zeal and his 
unbounded devotedness to his sovereign, with whose 
patriotic ideas his own exactly coincided. The rapidity 
with which the king had raised him to the highest mili- 
tary ranks, and the unlimited confidence that he placed 
in him, had no doubt excited jealousy and envy. At 
any rate, there were not wanting those who were ready 
to speak ill of him, especially the brothers of the mo- 
narch. The prince of Prussia was on his death-bed 
when he received intelligence that Winterfeld had 
fallen. " Now," said he, " I shall die much more con- 
tented, since I know that there is one bad and dangerous 
man less in the army ;" and in his last moments he ex- 
claimed : " My life is drawing to a close ; the latter part 
of it has been full of afflictions, but Winterfeld is the 
man who has shortened it." Wherever party-spirit 
prevails, there will be prejudices on both sides ; but 
even Winterfeld's enemies say that he rushed upon 
death in despair, because he could not conquer ; and 
the tears of a great king over such a sacrifice ensure im- 
mortality to the victim. 

On the 1 4th of September the king arrived at Erfurt. 
The vainglorious enemy began already to retreat, 
and deemed themselves fortunate to find a strong 
position near Eisenach. Without pursuing them, Fre- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 107 

derick remained near Erfurt with 10,000 men, and sent 
duke Ferdinand of Brunswick with 4000 into the prin- 
cipality of Halberstadt to drive out the French, and 
prince Maurice with 8000 to Saxony, to observe the 
movements of the Austrians between the Mulde and the 
Elbe. With this insignificant force he waited three 
weeks in his position near Erfurt, to see what prince 
Soubise would attempt against him. 

As for the convention of Kloster-Zeven, Frederick 
thus expressed himself in a letter to duke Ferdinand : 
** The disgraceful convention which the duke of Cum- 
berland has been misled by the Hanoverian ministers to 
conclude is another unlucky circumstance for me ; how- 
ever, we must do our duty." In this letter he could not 
state what he might himself attempt ; but the duke was 
directed, " in case all cords should break," to throw 
himself into Magdeburg. " In our situation," he wrote 
to the same prince on the following day, September 21st, 
" we ought to feel convinced that each of us is equal to 
four other men." But the feelings of his soul are most 
clearly expressed in the poems composed during this time 
of tribulation, the finest that he ever wrote, especially 
the incomparable epistle to d'Argens, commencing : 
" Friend, now the die is cast !" and the noble effusion 
addressed to Voltaire on the 9th of October, in answer 
to his arguments against a voluntary death, concluding 
with those expressive lines already quoted : 



Let tempests threat^ impending ruin lower^ 
Still be it mine as king to think> live, die !" 



The same spirit breathes in the Elegy addressed by the 
illustrious poet to his country — " 0, my beloved people, 
whose welfare is the object of all my wishes, whose hap* 



108 COURT AND TIMES OF 

piness duty commands me to study, I see thee surrounded 
with dangers ! Thy lamentable condition deeply afflicts 
and bows me down. How gladly would I forget the 
splendour of my rank, how gladly would I spill every 
drop that circulates in my veins, to help thee ! Yes, to 
thee belongs this blood, and my agitated heart cheer- 
fully offers the vital stream as a sacrifice to my country !" 
It was this noble spirit that saved the state, near as it 
was brought to the brink of perdition. 

But though the courage of the king was upheld by a 
generous confidence in his own powers, he despised not 
the insinuating arts of flattery. He knew Richelieu's 
political sentiments ; he knew that he was, like the cele- 
brated cardinal of his name, an enemy to the house of 
Habsburg, and an admirer of the philosopher of Sans- 
Souci ; he wrote him a soothing note, and addressed to 
him a poetical epistle, in which he is styled the peace- 
maker, the preserver of Genoa, the conqueror of Mi- 
norca. Richelieu actually entertained the proposals for 
peace, submitted by the king on the 7th of September, 
and referred them to his court, which, influenced by 
revenge, refused to listen to them. Nothing daunted by 
this rebuff, Frederick sent colonel Balbi, disguised as 
amtmann, to Richelieu's camp, with a present of 100,000 
dollars for the duke, with whom he had made some cam- 
paigns in Flanders. If peace was out of the question, 
still this well-timed bribe gained some alleviation for the 
Prussian territories, and Richelieu remained inactive. 

When Frederick marched from Dresden, on the 12th 
of September, for Erfurt, Soubise retreated to Eisenach. 
The king followed him, cleared Gotha from the enemy, 
and left Seydlitz, who had been promoted to the rank of 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 109 

major-general for his services at KoUin, with 1600 horse, 
to observe the enemy, that he might himself approach 
nearer to the Elbe, for the protection of his threatened 
capital. Seydlitz took a position between Gotha and 
Erfurt. On the 19th, Soubise and Hildburghausen ad- 
vanced with 10,000 men to Gotha. They were met by 
Seydlitz, who drew up his cavalry in such a manner as 
to make the enemy believe that the whole force of the 
king was opposed to them. They turned about and fled, 
evacuating Gotha with the utmost precipitation. Seyd- 
litz entered the town, and he and his officers sat down in 
the ducal palace to the dinner prepared for Soubise and 
his staff. So sudden was the surprise, that the French 
left behind them all their baggage. The booty exhibited 
a curious collection of the numberless articles employed 
for the toilet: — pommades, perfumes, powdering and 
dressing-gowns, bag-wigs, umbrellas, parrots : while a 
host of whining lacqueys, cooks, friseurs, players, and 
prostitutes, were chased from the town to follow their 
pampered masters to Eisenach. Three officers and 1 50 
soldiers were made prisoners. Unimportant as was this 
surprise in itself, it was remarkable for the judgment 
and resolution of the Prussian commander, and for the 
confidence with which it inspired the cavalry. On this 
account, the king, in his History of the Seven Years' 
War, treats with particular complacency of this event ; 
which furnishes a proof, he remarks, that the talent and 
intrepidity of a general are more effective in war than 
the number of the troops. Seydlitz, fearing lest he 
should be surrounded, quitted Gotha on the 2 2d of 
September, to rejoin the king, and the town fell again 
into the hands of the French. 



110 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Towards the conclusion of this year, a foe that in past 
ages had been deemed the most formidable of any was 
foiled in a manner which appears almost ludicrous. This 
was the ban of the empire, which the imperial Aulic Coun- 
cil assembled at Ratisbon was making the most strenuous 
eflfbrts to get voted against the king. On the 14th of 
October, the advocate of the council repaired, in the cha- 
racter of an imperial notary, with two witnesses, to the 
residence of baron Plotho, the Prussian ambassador at 
Ratisbon, to serve him with fiscal citation or summons, 
requiring the attendance of the elector and margrave of 
Brandenburg, to hear and see himself put to the ban of 
the empire, and deprived of all his territories, fiefs, 
grants, rights, immunities, and expectancies. Plotho 
received the notary in his dressing-gown ; and the lat- 
ter described the interview in an ofiicial document to 
this purport : — " And his excellency baron Plotho flew 
into such a violent passion that he could no longer con- 
trol himself, but, with trembling hands and flushed face, 
and extending both arms towards me, at the same time 
holding the citation in his right hand, he exclaimed— 

* What ! you think to serve it, do you, scoundrel ! ' I 
replied that it was my duty as notary, and I must exe- 
cute it. Nevertheless, he fell upon me with the greatest 
fury, seized me by the fore-part of my cloak, and cried, 

* Will you take it back V As I declined to do so, he 
forcibly thrust the citation under the breast of my coat, 
and, still holding me by the cloak, pushed me out of the 
room, and ordered two of his servants who stood by to 
fling me down stairs." The ban of the empire had in 
fact become like the anathema of the Vatican, an anti- 
quated, ineffective formality, when launched against a 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. Ill 

sovereign of Frederick's spirit and genius ; and his sub- 
sequent victories caused the Aulic Council to drop all 
further proceedings. 

Meanwhile a corps, detached from the French main 
army in Westphalia, was advancing through Hesse upon 
Langensalza ; and reports arrived that an Austrian par- 
tisan corps was penetrating from Upper Lusatia into the 
Mark. The king therefore left Erfurt, and, crossing the 
Saale near Naumburg and the Elbe at Torgau, marched 
to Annaberg, where he learned the fate of his capital. 
Four thousand Croats, under general count Haddik, be- 
longing to the Austrian corps in Upper Lusatia, com- 
manded by general Marschall, had appeared before Ber- 
lin on the 16th of October, and demanded a ransom of 
300,000 dollars. The garrison of the city consisted of 
only five weak battalions of provincial militia, two of 
which, with their leader, major Tesmar, were cut in 
pieces at the Silesian gate, while general Rochow, the 
commandant, who had made no dispositions for resist- 
ance, with the others, escorted the queen and the royal 
family to Spandau. The sum required by Haddik could 
not be raised within the specified time : he then increased 
his demand to 500,000 dollars, but was at length con- 
tent to take 185,000. No sooner was Haddik in pos- 
session of his booty, than he retired precipitately to 
Cottbus. A few hours afterwards, Seydlitz arrived with 
8000 cavalry to the relief of Berlin, and he was followed 
the next day by the whole corps of prince Maurice. 

With a view to cut off Haddik's retreat, the king had 
taken a position at Hertzberg, where he remained some 
days to learn what were the further intentions of the 
French, by which he should himself decide whether to 



112 COURT AND TIMES OF 

oppose them or to go to Silesia and protect Schweidnitz 
against Nadasdy- Unforeseen events intervened, and he 
did neither. After the departure of the Prussians from 
Erfurt, Soubise had crossed the Saale and was approach- 
ing Leipzig, where marshal Keith had the most urgent 
need of assistance. He declared to the magistrates that 
he was determined to defend himself to the last man, 
and to bum down the suburbs if the enemy should ap- 
proach any nearer. The magistrates accordingly sent a 
deputation to the prince of Hildburghausen and Sou- 
bise^ intreating them not to come nearer to the city. 
Meanwhile the king hastened forward, and arrived in 
Leipzig on the 26th ; prince Henry and prince Maurice 
joined him with their corps on the following day, and 
duke Ferdinand on the 28th. He had thus collected an 
army S4,000 strong, composed of troops, which only a 
week before had been widely dispersed in Saxony, the 
Mark, and Magdeburg. 

On the 30th of October, the king, dividing his army 
into two columns, marched with one of them, and took 
up his head-quarters at Liitzen, while the other, under 
Keith, proceeded to Merseburg. On the morning of 
the 17th, the duke de Crillon was to retreat with 17 
French grenadier companies across the bridge of Weis- 
senfels, and to occupy certain cantonments. The bridge 
was set on fire, but Frederick was, with his advanced 
guard, at the heels of the French. Crillon had 
posted two trusty officers. Canon and Brunet, on an 
island in the Saale, which had a communication with 
the left bank, to observe the Prussians ; while he himself, 
with the rest of his officers, sat down to breakfast on 
the greensward. Brunet presently came to him, and 



FREDERICK THE GREAT, 113 

asked if bis men might shoot the king of Prussia, who 
could be seen by them, from their ambush, close to the 
pillars of the destroyed bridge- Crillon handed a glass 
of wine to Brunet, and sent him back to his post with 
this remark : " I placed you and your comrades there 
to see that the bridge was properly burned down, not to 
kill a general who might come singly to reconnoitre ; 
still less the sacred person of a king, which ought always 
to be respected. " 

The Prussians, haying found all the bridges over the 
Saale destroyed, were obliged to construct others of 
boats, by means of wliich they passed that river on the 
2d of November at Halle, Merseburg, and Weissenfels ; 
and, on the morning of the following day, the corps 
under the king, prince l\[aurice, and marshal Keith, 
concentrated themselves in the camp on the heights of 
Braunsdorf. The enemy had encamped behind the 
brook near Mucheln. Frederick reconnoitered his posi- 
tion, which was injudiciously chosen. His hussars 
penetrated, out of bravado, into the midst of the French, 
and carried off horses and even soldiers out of the 
tents. He resolved to attack the following day : but 
in the night Soubise changed his position, and encamped 
opposite to the king in a better, where he had thrown 
up redoubts, which rendered the attack far more 
difficult. Frederick then took a strong camp between 
Bedra and Bossbach. 

On observing this retrograde movement, Soubise 
pushed forward his pickets with artillery, and can- 
nonaded, but without effect. All his trumpeters, drum- 
mers, and fifers, were ordered to play, as after a victory, 
to the annoyance of the brave Prussians. Some of the 

VOL. III. I 



^ 



114 COURT AND TIMES OF 

French officers, indulging their national vanity, re- 
marked : *^ It is doing Monsieur le marquis de Brande- 
bourg too much honour to carry on a sort of war with 
him ;" and their commander, reckoning upon not merely 
defeating but taking the king and his whole army, 
despatched a courier to Paris to announce his certain 
captivity. 

Early in the morning of the 5th of November, count 
• de St. Germain, with 6000 men, took post at Grost, 
opposite to the camp of Rossbach, to cut off the Prus- 
sians from Merseburg ; while the army itself moved to 
the right upon Buttstadt to turn their left flank, and to 
fall upon their rear, as soon as they should attempt to 
retreat to Weissenfels. Seydlitz started very early, with 
the hussars and a detachment of Meyer's partisans, to 
reconnoitre the enemy, but was prevented by a brisk 
cannonade from the heights of the village of Schortau. 
About eleven in the forenoon, the enemy were seen 
striking" the tents, and marching off to the right. 
Frederick conceived that they were retreating upon 
Freiburg, and was for attacking the post on the heights 
of Schortau, under the idea that it was the rear-guard. 
Captain Gaudi, who had been charged to watch the 
enemy from the castle of Rossbach, where the king had 
his head-quarters, perceived that the enemy were not 
retiring, but approaching. Angry at this false intel- 
ligence, as he considered it, he went, vrith all his gene- 
rals, to the uppermost rooms. It was some time before 
he could convince himself that Gaudi was right; and 
he formed on the spot the plan for the attack. It was 
now half-past two. " Forward ! " was the word of com- 
mand given, and by three o'clock there was not a man 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 115 

in the Tillage. Soubise had reached Buttstadt with the 
heads of his columns. 

The Prussians, about 22,000 strong, appeared to be 
hastening back to Kayna on the Merseburg road. The 
enemy, amounting to 64,000, cannonaded. Frederick 
posted his little army behind the Janus hill, on the right 
of Rossbach. Seydlitz, with the whole of the cavalry, 
formed the advanced guard. He was to turn the cavalry 
of the enemy's army, and to fall * suddenly upon the 
heads of their columns before they had time to form. 
The two armies marched side by side, and approached 
nearer and nearer to one another. Frederick occupied 
the Janus hill ; Soubise moved through the valley. The 
Prussian battery, under colonel Moller, played with 
decisive effect ; that of the enemy, in the hollow, was 
inefficient. 

By singular accident, a great number of hares were 
enclosed between the two armies ; terrified by the sound 
of the cannon, these timid animals attempted in vain to 
escape either on one side or on the other. One of the 
first balls fired by the French killed one of these hares 
before the front of the Prussian troops, on which these 
jocosely cried out : " We are sure to beat — the French 
are killing one another ! '^ 

Seydlitz had now turned the right of the enemy be- 
fore they were aware. Halting with his brave squadrons 
on the height, he perceived a favourable moment, and 
resolved to attack without waiting for the infantry. 
Riding forward to some distance in front of his 
squadrons, he flung- his tobacco-pipe into the air, as 
a signal for the attack. For some minutes two Austrian 
cuirassier regiments withstood the Prussians, man to 

i2 



116 COURT AND TIMES OF 

man, and horse to horse : they were supported by two 
French regiments only : these brave fellows were almost 
entirely cut off. Ae infantry of both armies was yet 
in march, and their heads were only five hundred paces 
apart. The king was rather further from Reichardts- 
werben, which he was anxious to reach. Keith was 
sent thither, with the five battalions which formed the 
second line, while Frederick himself kept approaching 
nearer and nearer to prince Soubise. Daring and skill 
on the one hand, heavy, irresolute, lifeless masses on 
the other, left the vital question for Prussia not long 
undecided. By six o'clock, the cavalry had dispersed 
the confused crowd of the enemy's infantry ; and night 
threw a veil over their precipitate and ludicrous flight. 
The king's right wing, under duke Ferdinand of Bruns- 
wick, had not quitted the morass of Braunsdorf ; the 
troops of the empire had taken to their heels after a 
few rounds of artillery; and ten Prussian battalions 
had not fired a shot. Only seven of the king's bat- 
talions had been in the fire. An hour and a half sufficed 
to decide the victory. The fugitives ran in lamentable 
disorder to Freiburg, and crossed the Unstrut. Five 
thousand prisoners were taken ; among these were 
5 generals and 300 oflScers ; besides 67 pieces of can- 
non, 7 pair of colours, 1 5 standards, and a great quan- 
tity of baggage. Altogether the loss of the allies 
amounted to 10,000 men; that of the conquerors to 
166 killed, and 376 wounded. 

In wretched plight the runaways fled through Thurin- 
gia towards their own homes, the troops of the empire 
by way of Erfurt, the French by Weissensee, and with 
such breathless haste, that the last of them reached 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 117 

Langeusalze, 52 miles from the field of battle, on the 
7th. The road to Erfurt was strewed with cuirasses 
and cavalry boots, with muskets and fragments of wea- 
pons. It is asserted that two Prussian dragoons made 
prisoners of more than one hundred troops of the em- 
pire, who were attempting, in their flight, to hide them- 
selves in a garden. Many of them dispersed over the 
country of Eichsfeld, plundering wherever they went, 
till the peasants collected and took summary vengeance 
upon them. The fugitives then assembled at Nord- 
hausen and Heiligenstadt, whither they were summoned 
by bills posted in the villages. 

Frederick returned solemn thanks to his army for 
this victory. From the youngest major-general, Seyd- 
litz was deservedly promoted to lieutenant-general. His 
very enemies, the officers whom he had been instrumental 
in making prisoners, could not help remarking, " Ce 
garden etait ne general." If Seydlitz reminds us of 
the most brilliant period of Rome's military glory, so 
his romantic character raises him to an elevation which 
few of Frederick's generals attained. Independent and 
victorious, as at the head of his centaur squadrons, we 
see him at court, and at the table of the king. Great 
by his own merit, he was ready to award the laurel to 
the feats of others, Greneral Meiuecke, his senior in 
the service, and like him, wounded at Bossbach,. was 
a worthy partner in the honour of the victory. Seydlitz 
was charged to assure him of the king's favour ; but he 
told him at the same time that he should never forget 
the respect which he owed to one of the bravest officers, 
who was older than himself, and whose friendship he 
was anxious to possess. 



118 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Balke, appointed in 1761 chaplain-general of the 
army, owed that post to the recommendation of general 
Seydlitz. The conversation at the king's table tnming 
one day on the battle of Bossbach, Frederick declared 
that for this victory he was chiefly indebted to Seydlitz 
and his regiment. The general rejoined, that not only 
had the officers and the regiment, bnt also Balke the 
chaplain, laid lustily about them ; and that the latter, 
buckling on a spare cavalry sword, had undauntedly 
charged along with the men. " The devil he did ! " ex- 
claimed the king ; " then he deserves to be rewarded for 
it too. The chaplain-general is just dead, and he shall 
have his place.'' 

Frederick was far from retaliating upon the enemy 
the arrogance shewn towards himself. When the cap- 
tive officers were introduced to him the day after the 
battle, in the new camp which he had taken at Burg- 
werben, he addressed them thus : '^ Grentlemen, I cannot 
yet accustom myself to consider the French as my ene- 
mies." This courtesy won all hearts. He perceived a 
handsome young man, with one arm in a sling, inquired 
his name and rank, and said : *^ You are wounded, I 
see." — " I owe this wound to your majesty's brave 
cavalry," repUed th^ officer, in the most complimentary 
manner. ** It procures me the happiness of seeing 
closely so great a monarch as your majesty." — " I am 
sorry for you," said the king ; " but I hope you will 
soon recover; and, that we may see one another the 
oftener, will you dine with me to-day?" 

Another prisoner, lieutenant-general count de Mailly, 
received permission to go to Paris on his parole. In 
the following year, when he solicited a prolongation of 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 119 

his leave of absence, Frederick thus wrote to him : " I 
grant you further leave of absence the more cheerftdly, 
because it affords me pleasure to render service to a man 
of merit, and because I have always thought that the 
untoward events which befall kings should be as little 
injurious as possible to private persons. Take as much 
time as you require to arrange your affairs. Should the 
cabinet of Vienna become rather more pliable, as I have 
reason to expect, and consent to a cartel, you might 
wholly spare yourself a disagreeable journey, as the ex- 
change might take place without your shifting your 
place of abode.** 

According to Thiebault, many of his countrymen 
taken at Rossbach proved themselves wholly unworthy 
of the favour that Frederick was disposed to show them. 
He says that prince Henry sent the three hundred 
French officers taken prisoners on that occasion to Ber- 
lin. All of them were admitted at the queen's on court- 
days. Some of the younger in particular behaved with 
the greatest indecency, cracking and eating nuts even 
behind her majesty's chair, and flinging the shells on 
the floor. The queen never would complain of this 
conduet. But they posted up, in several quarters of 
the city, a list of the ladies of the court, with the prices 
at which, as they alleged, their favours might be bought. 
Their swords were then taken from them again, and they 
were sent to the fortress of Magdeburg, a punishment 
in which the queen had no hand, but which proceeded 
from the government alone. 

Many years after the battle, the inhabitants of the 
neighbourhood erected a monument in memory of this 
victory, and which, at the same time, recorded the 



120 COURT AND TIMES OF 






atrocious inhumanities committed by the French on de- 
fenceless Germany. Napoleon, when he viewed the 
field of Rossbachy ordered this monument, a pillar, to be 
remoyed to Paris, and set up near one of the churches. 
On the 30th of May, 1814, the day before the first 
entry of the allies into Paris, the invalids rushed out 
of their hotel, and flung the pillar into the Seine, 
that it might not fall again into the hands of the Prus- 
sians. After the battle of Leipzig, however, several 
Prussian officers caused a new iron pillar to be set up on 
the field of battle* 

The dastardly conduct of the troops of the empire at 
Rossbach drew from the Prussian monarch a piece of 
pleasantry that is worth recording. A few days after 
the battle, Frederick asked one of his generals at table, 
which of the princes of Germany lived in the most mag- 
nificent style. Some of the company guessed one, some 
another, but none of them hit upon the right person. 
" It is the prince of Hildburghausen,*' said the king at 
last, " for he keeps 30,000 runners.'' 

The enthusiasm kindled throughout all Germany in 
behalf of the Prussian monarch by this seasonable vic- 
tory is not to be described. It was universally hailed 
as a national triumph over foreign hordes, which had 
proved themselves, whether among friends or foes, more 
destructive than a cloud of locusts, more savage than 
the most ravenous beasts. Of the two, indeed, their 
allies perhaps suffered most from their wanton bar- 
barity. " It is not the Prussians," says a Saxon memoir 
of that time, *^ who have laid waste our fields, our vine- 
yards, and our gardens ; it is not the Prussians who have 
trampled down our growing crops, who have robbed ug 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 121 

on the highway, who have plundered our houses, who 
have carried off and destroyed our proTisions. It is not 
the Prussians who have desecrated our churches, and 
made a mock of all that is sacred. No, it is ovlt friends, 
the French and the troops of the empire, our so ardently 
wished-for deliverers, who have plunged us into these 
miseries." Whatever they could not consume or carry 
away, was destroyed or rendered useless. They broke 
in pieces household furniture, casks and other vessels ; 
tore up papers and books ; ripped open beds, and strewed 
the feathers over the fields ; and slaughtered cattle which 
they could not remove, and left them to putrify in the 
deserted farmyards. Twenty villages around Freiburg 
were rendered desolate, because the French had sojourned 
in them. Nor were the private soldiers alone to blame 
for these wanton excesses, of which their officers set 
them the example. Thus it is related that the marquis 
d'Argenson, who commanded the French in Halberstadt, 
whenever he was about to leave a house in which he 
lodged, was accustomed to break in pieces the furniture, 
and to destroy the looking-glasses with a diamond. Of 
the manner in which the clergy were treated by these 
marauders, some idea may be formed from this fact. An 
engraving of the time represents a clergyman in full 
paraphernalia upon all-fours on the ground, while a 
French officer is stepping on his back to mount his 
horse. The circumstance happened at Weichschiitz, 
near Weissenfels ; the^ clergyman's name was Schren. 

But, lest these statements, as coming from Germans, 
may be thought exaggerated, let us hear the account 
given of the cowardice and rapacity of the French by an 
undeniable witness, one of their own superior officers, the 



1 22 COURT AND TIM£S OF 

same count de St. Germain whom we have just seen 
taking part in the battle of Bossbach. Writing to his 
friend Du Vemey, in Paris, on the 11th of November, 
he says : *^ I head a band of robbers, of murderers, who 
deserve to be broke upon the wheel, who ran away at 
the first musket-shot, who are alwjays ready to mu- 
tiny Never did army behave worse : the first 

cannon-shot decided our discomfiture and disgrace:" 
and on the Idth of the same month he writes : ^^ The 
country is plundered and laid waste for thirty leagues 
round, as if fire from heaven had &Uen upon it : our 
marauders have scarcely left the very houses standing. I 
have had much to suffer from the licentiousness and wan- 
tonness of our troops ; I hope the court will put an end 
to the disorder. Strong remedies are required, and if 
the knife is not put to the root of the evil, we must ab- 
stain from war. Our loss in the battle has not been so 
considerable as the regimental reports at first repre- 
sented. One was said to have lost 80 officers, and has 
really lost but four or five ; they have all made their ap- 
pearance again in from five to eight days ; and so the 
soldiers in proportion. Would you believe that an en- 
sign, with his colours and five or six soldiers, has got to 
Gottingen, and that kettle-drums which have been thrown 
away have been picked up there ? I should never have 
done, were I to attempt to rdate all the circumstances 
of this kind. The country for forty miles round was 
covered with our soldiers: they plundered, mur- 
dered, violated women, robbed, and committed all pos- 
sible abominations. Had the enemy pursued us briskly 
after he had thrown me into confusion, he might have 
annihilated our whole army. No doubt he had no vrish 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 123 

to do SO : and it is certain that the king of Prussia 
issued orders to spare our men and to crush the Grer- 
mans. His hussars have sent back several of our sol- 
diersy after treating them kindly. It is impossible 
to add to the generosity and the delicacy which he 
has shown to our prisoners. When they sent their 
letters unsealed, requesting that they might be for- 
warded, the king said : ^ I cannot accustom myself to 
consider you as my enemies, and have no mistrust of 
you ; so seal your letters, and you shall receive the an- 
swers unopened.' He also assured them that he should 
have no rejoicings on account of the victory ; that it 
grieved his heart ; that, for the rest, the French were not 
weU commanded, and that, as they had not been in 
order of battle, they could not bring their valour to 
bear. We are going into winter-quarters in the country 
of Hanau. To me it seems no very good policy to lay 
waste Hesse. The Empire is incensed against us ; it is 
with great chagrin and dissatisfaction that it sees some 
of its members crushed. I still think that we are en- 
gaged in a bad war, and that it would be best to put an 
end to it. It cannot end well if it lasts any time." 

" Let it not be imagined," writes the same officer, 
" that king Frederick is hated in the empire — ^very far 
from it. Even in Saxony he has at least as many 
friends as enemies : the peasants there have even turned 
their arms against us and fired upon us." 

All that count St. Germain here writes concerning the 
treatment of the French by the king is nothing but the 
truth ; for, in the preceding September, he had di- 
rected duke Ferdinand to release captive officers of that 
nation on their parole, but to treat the privates well 



124 COURT AND TIMES OF 

and to cajole them, because he did not imagine that 
the French would do any thing extraordinary. A strik- 
ing instance of his particular attention to them was ex- 
hibited in the visit which he paid, in passing through 
Leipzig, on the 11th of November, to the wounded ge- 
neral Custine, whom he took such pains to cheer under 
his misfortunes, that the captive warrior, raising him- 
self on his death-bed, exclaimed : ** Ah, sire ! you are 
greater than Alexander ; he tortured his prisoners, you 
pour oil into the wounds of yours !" 

To one of the most implacable and persevering of his 
enemies Frederick could not forbear showing some re- 
sentment. The queen of Poland, regardless of the 
warnings she had received, still continued her corre- 
spondence with the king's enemies. Fresh letters of 
hers were intercepted; these Fink, the Prussian com- 
mandant of Dresden, was ordered to read to her himself; 
and, as she had written, among other things, that the 
Prussians would gain no more victories, the king ordered 
guns to be fired on account of his victory at Rossbach 
behind the Catholic church and also behind the palace ; 
and Te Deum to be sung in the open place near the 
Catholic church, almost under the very windows of the 
queen. The intelligence was believed to have accele- 
rated the death of this princess, whose health had for 
some time been very precarious. Her mortification 
was extreme. Having dismissed her attendants one 
night in very low spirits, she was found dead in her bed 
next morning. 

The letters written by the king about this time furnish 
matter for reflection. To d'Argens he writes from Tor- 
gau, the 1 5th of November : " This year, my dear mar- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 125 

quis, has been a terrible one for me. I venture to attempt 
the impossible in order to save my dominions ; but, in 
truth, I have more need than ever of the assistance of 
good luck." Then, adverting to his victory as an intro- 
duction to a more cheerful tone, he proceeds : " I have 
made a terrible quantity of verses, which, if I live, you 
shall see in winter-quarters, or, if I perish, I will leave 
them to you. Your countrymen have committed cru- 
elties worthy of the Pandours ; they are execrable plun- 
derers. Farewell, my dear marquis ; you are probably 
at this moment in bed ; take care not to grow fast to it ; 
and recollect that you have to pay me a visit in winter- 
quarters. Meanwhile, you have plenty of time to rest 
yourself, for I know not where I shall be able to see you. 
I have the lot of Mithridates, only I have not two sons 
and a Monima. Farewell, my amiable idler." 

Though the king could assume this light strain, he 
was quite aware of his critical situation. On the 12th 
of November he wrote to his friend and cabinet minister, 
count Finckenstein : " This is a commencement of suc- 
cess, but a great deal more is necessary." Thus, too, he 
remarks, in his history of this war, that the battle of 
Bossbach had merely afforded him the liberty to seek 
fresh dangers in Silesia. But his victory had produced 
other and more important effects. Richelieu quitted his 
camp near Halberstadt, and retired to the electorate of 
Hanover ; the allies, ready to lay down their arms, re- 
sumed courage, so that the Brunswickers, Hessians, 
and Biickeburgers, were ready to take the field, when 
Frederick, at the solicitation of George II., sent duke 
Ferdinand to command them. 



126 COURT AND TIMES OF 



CHAPTER XXX. 

Campaign of 1757 continued — ^The King marches to the relief of Schweidnitz 
— Keith makes an incursion into Bohemia^— Surrender of Schweidnitz to 
the Austrians — ^Defeat of the duke of Bevern near Breslau — Surrender of 
that city to the Austrians — Frederick hastens to Silesia — His Address to 
his Officers— Battle of Leuthen — The King surprises a number of Aus- 
trian Officers at Lissa — He retakes Breslau — ^Tlie Prussians recover Lieg- 
nitz — Prince Charles resigns the command of the Austrian army — Ingra- 
titude of count Schaffgotsch^ primate of the Catholic church in Pnissia — 
Treachery of the Abbe de Prades — Father Gleim ; his Songs of a Prussian 
Grenadier — ^Gothe's picture of family dissensions excited by Frederick's 
popularity — ^Enthusiasm manifested for the King in England— Duke Fer- 
dinand of Brunswick ; his military operations. 

The numerous prisoners taken in the pursuit of the 
French after the battle of Rossbach having been sent off 
by way of Leipzig to Magdeburg and Berlin, Frederick 
set out on the 12th of November with 14,000 men for 
the relief of Schweidnitz, while his brother Henry and 
duke Ferdinand observed the French force under Riche- 
lieu. Keith, who, with scarcely 6000 men, was destined 
to remain in Saxony, marched from Merseburg to Chem- 
nitz, in order to facilitate the progress of the king, who 
was harassed by an Austrian corps of twelve to fourteen 
thousand men under Marschall. He then made an incur- 
sion into Bohemia, collected stores of all sorts, demanded 
military contributions, and destroyed large magazines 
between the Elbe and Eger. Loudon hastened by forced 
marches from the vicinity of Gieshiibel, and threw him- 
self into Prague, while Marschall left the king to proceed 
unmolested, and hastened from Bautzen and Zittau to 
Bohemia. Keith's force was supposed to be much greater 
than it really was. Having destroyed the magnificent 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 127 

bridge over the Elbe at Leitmeritz, he commenced his 
retreat, and reached Chemnitz on the 5th of December. 
The Prussian commander, having not only accomplished 
all the immediate objects of this incursion, but essentially 
promoted the operations of the king in Silesia, distributed 
his little fofce along the whole frontier of Bohemia for 
the defence of Saxony, 

The king, having scared Haddik from Lusatia, pursued 
his march without molestation. Meanwhile the Prussian 
arms were experiencing severe reverses in Silesia. We 
left the army of the duke of Bevem, to whom the defence 
of that important province was committed, and that of 
prince Charles of Lorraine, in the environs of Breslau. 
Here both parties continued inaxjtive for nearly five weeks. 
The Austrians had Schweidnitz in their rear, and were 
fearful lest that fortress might prove dangerous to them 
in case of defeat. It became a serious question with 
them whether they should, before the end of the year, 
make any further attempt for the re-conquest of Silesia, 
or retire at once to Bohemia. Shame forbade the latter 
course. Nadasdy was sent with 80,000 men to reduce 
Schweidnitz. The trenches were opened on the 27th of 
October; on the 10th of November, the third parallel 
was completed. The garrison made several successful 
sallies, and, though great part of the town was destroyed 
by bombs, the enemy had not yet taken any of the works. 
The imperial general, impatient of delay, determined to 
storm. In the night of the 11th, a general assault was 
made. The governor, major-general Seers, and the next 
in command, were so intimidated, that they surrendered 
themselves prisoners of war, with nearly 6000 men, be- 
fore the face, as it were, of the duke of Bevem (observes 



128 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the king), who should have averted such a misfortune. 
The military chest, containing 236,000 dollars, a con- 
siderable magazine, 180 pieces of cannon, with a great 
quantity of powder and ammunition, fell into the hands 
of the Austrians^ who by this conquest became masters 
of the mountains and of all the passes leading to Bohemia. 
Nadasdy, having left a garrison in Schweidnitz, rejoined 
prince Charles with the rest of his force. The imperial 
general, whose army was increased by reinforcements 
of Bavarians and Wirtembergers to 80,000 men, now 
resolved to make a decisive attack upon the 30,000 
Prussians opposed to him, and to put an end at once to 
the campaign, perhaps to the war. 

The Prussians occupied a fortified camp between Cosel 
and Little Mochber. Three villages in front of it were 
entrenched and occupied by troops. The right flank was 
covered by abattis, and the left by entrenchments. In 
the night of the 2 2d of November, prince Charles made 
his dispositions for the attack, and before daybreak the 
Austrians advanced in three columns, provided with 
fascines and other materials for storming. A thick fog 
favoured the attempt. The cannonade conunenced about 
nine in the morning, at a great distance, and with little 
effect. The Austrians attacked at four different points, 
while Bevem, who expected the principal attack on his 
left flank, had drawn thither the greatest part not only 
of his cavalry but also of his artillery, so that the Aus- 
trian artillery in the centre was thrice as numerous as 
the Prussian. Another blunder of Bevem *s was that he 
had not opposed the passage of the river Lohe by the 
Austrians, but expressly ordered that part of their army 
should be suffered to cross it ; and, lastly, his redoubts 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 129 

were so far apart, and situated so low, as to do no material 
injury to the enemy, 

Nadasdy, who commenced the attack on the Prussian 
left wing, could not make any impression on Zieten, who 
was opposed to him. The latter commanded a separate 
corps of about 8000 men ; and his hussars and dragoons 
behaved with such intrepidity, as very soon to cool the 
courage of the Croats, Hungarians, and Wirtembergers. 
The conflict was more obstinate and sanguinary at the 
centre and on the right wing. The centre of the Aus- 
trians, advancing to the Lohe, opened a cannonade, which 
lasted three hours, dismounted the Prussian batteries, 
and covered their passage across a bridge, the construc- 
tion of which was finished by one o'clock. The resistance 
of the Prussians under general Schultz was now of no 
avaiL The king's brother, prince Ferdinand, whose horse 
had been already killed under him, seized the colours of 
his regiment, and repeatedly led it on, together with the 
prince of Prus^a's regiment, to charge with the bayonet, 
till both were almost entirely destroyed. 

Pennavaire's fifteen squadrons of cuirassiers now came 
up, but were twice repulsed, and Pennavaire himself 
wounded. Though Bevem led them in person to the 
second charge, they were thrown into confusion, owing 
to the intersected ground, and the tremendous fire of the 
Austrians. Generals Lestwitz and Ingersleben made an 
obstinate stand at Schmiedefeld against a superior force 
of the enemy, who for an hour could not gain a foot of 
ground ; but, threatened on the flank by the corps of 
the enemy, which had overpowered general Schultz, they 
were obliged to abandon the redoubts from Schmiedefeld 
to Hofchen, and retreated to Little Gandau. 

VOL. III. K 



130 COURT AND TIMES OF 

The Austrian centre now advanced at the charge-step 
upon Gandau, where Bevern had with some difficulty 
formed a line of 1 4 battalions* Though it was growing 
dusk, both armies fought with renewed fury. A regular 
fire checked the progress^f the enemy, who at one point 
were even driven back to the Lohe, 

In their attack on Pilsnitz, the Austrians, in spite of 
redoubled efforts, were thrice repulsed with great loss 
hj the eflfective fire of the foot-jagers posted in the 
abattis. But neither their valour nor that of the corps 
of Brandeis availed to retrieve the fortune of the day : 
Bevern was in want of troops at the threatened points, 
especially cavalry, which he ordered up from his left 
wing ; but, before they arrived, the firing, which had 
been kept up without intermission the whole day, sud- 
denly ceased at all points. The Prussian commander 
now meditated a decisive night attack, by which he hoped 
to regain the advantages which he had lost in the day ; 
but, returning from a conference on the subject with 
Zieten, he found that his troops had quitted their posi- 
tions without orders ; and the right wing, indeed, was 
already beyond Breslau. He had no course left but 
to follow the rest of the troops, and, covered by Zieten, 
to quit the field of battle, where the enemy remained for 
the night. Leaving 5000 men, under general Lestwitz, 
in Breslau, the remainder of the Prussian army took a 
position beyond that city. In this sanguinary engage- 
ment, it had lost, according to the king's account, 80 
pieces of cannon and 8000 men ; but, according to 
Gaudi's, 36 pieces of cannon and 6174 men. 

The immediate consequence of this defeat was the 
surrender of Breslau. On the 24th of November, gene- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 131 

ml Lestwitz capitulated on the first summons. The royal 
coffers and 98 pieces of cannon fell into the hands of 
the Austrians. It was stipulated that the garrison should 
have free egress from the city, but, out of the 5000 men 
who composed it, only 182 remained true to their 
colours ; all the rest accepted the bounty offered by the 
Austrians. 

Early in the morning of the same day, the duke of 
BeYem, riding out with a single groom upon pretext of 
reconnoitring, approached so near to the Austrian ad- 
vanced posts that he was taken prisoner. Frederick 
considered this captivity as voluntarily incurred to avoid 
the account to which the duke knew that he should be 
called. The conjecture appears more than plausible. 
Bevem must have recollected the harshness with which 
the king treated his own brother: and what sort of 
reception could he expect from him after the loss of all 
Silesia! The court of Vienna paid him great respect, 
and soon released him, as a relative of the imperial 
family, without exchange. Frederick sent him in dis- 
grace to his government, Stettin, where he had occasion 
in the following year to display his patriotism against 
the Swedes, and also to form in Pom crania, according to 
ideas of his own, battalions of recruits for completing 
the army. Towards the conclusion of the war, when 
the king recalled him to active service, he further dis- 
tinguished himself, 

General Kyau, on whom the command of Bevern's 
army now devolved, marched with it up the Oder to 
Glogau, and was followed by Lestwitz, with the handful 
of men brought by him from Breslau. Crossing the 
river under Zieten's guidance, they then went to meet 

X 2 



1 32 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the king, and formed a junction with him at Parchwitz. 
Kyau and Lestwitz were both punished with confine- 
ment in a fortress ; Seers, the late governor of Schweid- 
nitz, on returning from captivity, was dismissed from the 
service. 

The tidings of all these disasters reached the king at 
once. Frederick, who in adversity never forsook his 
army and his people, pursued his course, undaunted by 
the discomfiture of his generals and the diminution of 
his forces, and regardless of the severity of the season. 
It is two hundred miles from Leipzig to Parchwitz, 
where he was met by Zieten with the first regiments of 
Bevem's army, and that distance he had performed with 
14,000 men in 17 days without magazines. His corps 
was always in cantonments, and those upon whom the 
soldiers were quartered had orders to supply them with 
the best. Full of the recollections of Rossbach, these 
warriors soon communicated their own high spirits to 
their Silesian comrades, whom the king treated in such 
a manner that I gladly avail myself of his own words 
to describe it. " The troops," says he, '^ which crossed 
the Oder near Glogau to come back, could not form a 
junction with those of the king before the 2d of Decem- 
ber. They were disheartened and depressed by their 
previous defeat. The officers were touched in the point 
of honour : they were desired to recollect their former 
achievements ; means were employed to dispel the melan- 
choly ideas, whose impression was still fresh ; recourse 
was even had to wine to cheer their dejected minds. 
The king addressed the soldiers, and directed them to be 
supplied gratuitously with provisions. All possible ex- 
pedients that time admitted of were practised to revive 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 133 

that confidence without which it is vain to hope for 
victory. Their countenances began to put on a more 
cheerful look, and those who had beaten the French at 
Rossbach persuaded their comrades to take courage. A 
little rest recruited the strength of the soldiers, and the 
army was ready on the first occasion to wipe away the 
stain of the 22d of November. The king sought that 
occasion, and he soon found it.** 

On the 4th his troops took Neumarkt, together with 
a great quantity of provisions belonging to the enemy, 
and prevented Daun from occupying the heights behind 
that town. Frederick was determined to attack and 
to bring on an engagement, It was represented to him 
that the enemy's army was twice as strong as his. " I 
know it," he replied, " but I have no other alternative 
than to conquer or perish. I am determined to attack 
them, were they even on the top of the church-steeples 
of Breslau.** Charles of Lorraine expected to annihi- 
late the king. Daun advised him to be cautious and to 
maintain his position behind the Lohe; while count 
Luchesi said, in order to flatter the prince : " The Berlin 
parade " — so he contemptuously denominated the Prus- 
sians — "will give your highness very little trouble.*' 
The Imperialists quitted their secure camp on the Lohe, 
advanced upon Lissa, and rejoiced the king by taking a 
position which greatly facilitated his design. "The 
fox has crept out of his hole," said he to prince Francis 
of Brunswick ; " now I will punish his impertinence.** 

We know that in the most critical moments great 
commanders have by sudden inspirations inflamed the 
courage of their compatriots to the highest degree of 
enthusiasm. " Forty centuries look down upon you from 



1 34 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the summits of these pyramids," said Bonaparte to his 
soldiers, before his victory over the Mameluke Beys. 
" England expects every man to do his duty," was the 
electric signal of the inimitable Nelson to his fleet at 
Trafalgar. Both touched with masterly skill the national 
feelings of their men. Frederick, who possessed an 
iri'esistible power of language, could not let slip the all- 
decisive moment, without pointing out its importance in 
a wonderfully impressive address. Assembling his gene- 
rals and staff-officers on the road between Neumarkt and 
Leuthen, on a spot still marked by a birch tree, he made 
a speech which Retzow, one of those who heard it, re- 
ports in these words :— 

" * It is known to you, gentlemen, that prince Charles 
of Lorraine has taken Schweidnitz, defeated the duke 
of Bevem, and made himself master of Breslau, while 
I was forced to arrest the progress of the French and 
of the troops of the Empire. Part of Silesia, my capi- 
tal and all my military stores there are in consequence 
lost, and my misfortunes would be complete, did I not 
place unbounded confidence in your courage, your forti- 
tude, and your patriotism, which you have proved on so 
many occasions. I acknowledge with the deepest feel- 
ings of my heart these serrices rendered to the country 
and to me. There is scarcely one of you who has not 
distinguished himself by some great and honourable 
deed ; I flatter myself, therefore, that on the present 
occasion you will not fail to do all that the State has a 
right to demand of your valour. That moment is at 
hand. I should think that I had done nothing, if I 
were to leave the Austrians in possession of Silesia. 
Let me then apprize you that I shall attack, against all 



F~- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 155 

the rules of the art, the army of prince Charles, nearly 
thrice as strcmg as our own, wherever I find it* I say 
nothing about the number of the enemy, nor the import* 
ance of the position which they hare chosen ; all this I 
hope the intrepidity of my troops and strict obedience 
to my dispositions wiU strive to overcome. I must 
venture upon this step, or all is lost : we must beat the 
enemy, or all perish before his batteries. So I think — 
so will I act. Make known this my determination to 
all the officers of the army ; prepare the common sol- 
diers for the scenes which will soon ensue, and tell them 
that I feel authorised to require of them unconditional 
obedience. If you consider that you are Prussians^ 
you will certainly not render yourselves unworthy of the 
name; but, should one or other of you be afraid to 
share all dangers with me, he shall have his dismission 
this very day, without incurring the slightest reproach 
from me.* 

" This speech,** continues Retzow, " thrilled the blood 
of the heroes present, kindled in their bosoms fresh 
ardour to distinguish themselves by surpassing bravery, 
and to sacrifice blood and life for their great sovereign, 
who remarked this impression with extreme satisfaction. 
A solemn silence, which succeeded on the part of his 
auditors, and the enthusiasm which he could read in 
their faces, assured him of the entire devotednefes of 
his army. With a complacent smile, he then pro- 
ceeded : 

" * I felt convinced beforehand that not one of you 
would forsake me: I reckon therefore on your faith* 
ftil aid and on certain victory. Should I fall, and 
not be able to remunerate you for the services you 



136 COURT AND TIMES OP 

have rendered me, the country must do it. Now go 
to the camp, and repeat to the regiments what I have 
said to you.'" 

Thus far Frederick had employed the tone of persua- 
sion in order to excite the enthusiasm of his hearers ; 
but now, convinced of the irresistible power of his 
words, he was again the king, and announced the pun- 
ishments which he should inflict on those who neglected 
their duty. 

" * Any regiment of cavalry,* said he, * which does not 
immediately charge the enemy when it is ordered, shall 
dismount immediately after the battle and be turned 
into a garrison regiment. The battalion of infantry 
which, be it where it may, begins to hesitate, shall lose 
its colours and swards ; and shall have the lace cut off 
its uniform. Now, gentlemen, farewell ; in a short time 
we shall either have beaten the enemy, or we shall never 
see one another again !' 

" So well did the great king understand the rare art 
of at once awakening confidence and instilling obedi- 
ence. His eloquence, and a peculiar emphasis which he 
laid upon certain expressions, were so irresistible that— • 
I will boldly maintain— even the rudest and the most 
unfeeling, nay even those who might have well-founded 
reason to be dissatisfied with him, could not help being 
filled with enthusiasm for him, when they heard him 
speak thus from the heart. The feeling which the king 
had kindled in the assembly was soon communicated to 
all the other officers and soldiers in the army. The 
Prussian camp rang with sounds of rejoicing. The old 
warriors, who had won so many battles under Frederick 
II., shook hands and promised faithfully to support one 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 137 

another, and they besought the young not to shun the 
enemy, but, in spite of resistance, to confront him boldly. 
There was afterwards to be perceived in each a certain 
inward feeling of confidence and firmness — usually the 
happy omens of victory. With impatience the troops 
awaited the order for breaking up ; and this little army, 
picked men it is true, went cheerfully and contentedly 
to meet its fate. What could not the king accomplish 
with such troops, and what did he not effect by his 
fertile genius f* 

Thus far Retzow. Another account informs us that 
when Frederick desired those who were afraid to leave 
his army, deep emotion was visible in the faces of his 
faithful officers. Major-general Rohr was so affected 
that tears trickled down his cheeks. The king, touched 
at the sight, embraced him and said : " My dear Rohr, 
I did not mean you !" Profound silence prevailed for 
some time, till a staff officer emphatically exclaimed : 
** A scoundrel who does that ! We are all ready to lay 
down our lives for your majesty !'* 

Frederick had occupied Bevem's camp with 33,000 
men and 167 pieces of cannon. Daun and Serbelloni 
advised the Austrian commander to await the king's 
further movements, but Prince Charles, agreeably to the 
suggestions of the more fiery spirits in his army, ad- 
vanced with 60,000 men to meet the Prussians. On the 
4th of December he crossed the Schweidnitz water, with 
the intention of pushing on to Parch witz, and covering 
Liegnitz. The march of the king disconcerted him. 
The Austrian army, drawn up in order of battle between 
Nypern and Leuthen, passed the night under arms. 

At half-past four on the morning of. the 5th, the 



138 



COURT AND TIMES OF 



Prussian axmy broke up in four columns, headed by 
the king himself. The troops, as they marched, struck 
up a religious morning hymn, accompanied by the 
regimental bands, beginning, as literally as I can render 
it, thus : — 

Grant that I do whatever I ought to do^ 
What for my station is by Thee decreed ; 

And cheerfully and promptly do it too. 
And when I do it^ grant that it succeed ! 

An officer asked the king if he should stop their 
singing. " Not upon any account," replied Frederick ; 
" with such men God will certainly give me thiB victory 
to-day." On a similar occasion Gustavus Adolphus had, 
above a century before, himself composed and sung the 
German hymn commencing : ** Verzage nicht du Haiiflein 
klein.'' " Be of good cheer, my little band." 

At Boma the king fell in with a line of cavalry which 
had been pushed forward under the command of general 
Nostitz. It was attacked with impetuosity, dispersed, 
and for the most part taken by the Prussian cavalry^ 
The brave Nostitz, chagrined at this disaster, rushed 
upon the sabres of the Prussian hussars, and received 
fourteen wounds, of which he died two days afterwards* 
Among the prisoners was a. Prussian hussar, who had 
deserted a day or two before. " Why did you leave 
me ?" said the king to him. " Indeed, your majesty," 
replied the grenadier, a Frenchman by birth, " things 
are going very badly with us." " Come, come," re- 
joined Frederick, "let, us fight another battle to-day: 
if I am beaten, we will desert together to-morrow;" and 
with these words he sent him back to his colours. 

From a hill near Heide the king reconnoitred the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 139 

enemy's position, which was now exposed to view from 
the centre to the left wing. The right was hid by the 
coppice of Guckerwitz. The Anstrians, alarmed for 
their right wing, against which the first attack of the 
Prussians seemed to be directed, immediately reinforced 
it by the reserve from the centre and part of the cavalry 
on the left wing. But no sooner had the Austrians 
weakened their left wing than, to their great astonish- 
ment, they saw the whole Prussian army wheel to the 
right, executing their evolutions with as much precision 
as if they were on parade, and disappearing behind the 
range of the Radaxdorf hills. Daun conceived that it 
was retreating. " The Prussians are off," said he ; 
" don't disturb them !" Presently, however, they were 
again descried advancing between Lobetinz and Strieg- 
witz, and threatening by this march the weakened left 
wing and the flank of the enemy. Frederick himself 
was stationed at the windmill of Lobetinz, where he 
could overlook the movements of the army and make 
the necessary dispositions for the battle. The king's 
intention was to lead his whole army against the 
enemy's left wing, then to wheel about, to overthrow 
that wing, but to keep back his own left with such 
caution as to prevent the occurrence of the fault that 
had been committed at Prague and KoUin, and contri- 
buted to the disastrous issue of the latter engagement. 

On the left wing of the Austrians were placed Wirtem- 
bergers, Bavarians, and Hungarians, who were pushed 
forward to the pine-wood of Sagschiitz. Wedel made 
the first attack upon these at one o'clock, with three 
battalions and ten pieces of artillery ; he advanced in 
spite of the enemy's fire, and drove them off. He then 



140 COURT AND TIMES OF 

moved to the right, and, supported by prince Maurice, 
attacked a battery, near which the Wirtembergers and 
Bavarians had rallied, with such irresistible fury, that 
the latter threw away their arms and fled to Leuthen ; 
while the rest of the troops strove to rally once more 
behind Great Gohlau. But, as the left wing of the 
Prussian army moved on in close line, and its advanced 
guard had extended itself considerably to the right, it 
turned the Austrians in such a manner that six bat- 
talions were soon in their rear, and all the efforts of the 
enemy to wrest their advantage from the Prussians 
proved utterly vain. On the contrary, the divisions, as 
they came up singly to the field of battle, were inva- 
riably thrown into confusion and put to flight. By 
this time too the Prussian cavalry of the right wing had 
overcome the difficulties of the ground, swamps, and 
ditches, between Sagschiitz and Gohlau, and fallen upon 
Nadasdy's dragoons. The garde du corps and gensd'armes 
first attacked the flank of the Austrians, annihilated the 
regiment of Modena, and took 2000 prisoners, chiefly 
runaway Wirtembergers and Bavarians. Zieten's hus- 
sars, eager for the fight, now came up from the third 
line without orders, and fell upon the confused masses, 
which fled without stopping to the wood of Rathenau, 
where they attempted to rally. 

Thus was the enemy's left wing, upon which the 
Prussians contrived to fall with a superior force, routed 
at the first onset ; and in this instance Frederick's tac- 
tics had produced a brilliant result. The Austrians, 
however, collected their artillery behind Leuthen, and 
hastened to send reinforcements to the left wing. In 
order to gain a position parallel to the front of attack, 



FREDERICK THE GRJBAT. 141 

their right wing was obliged to advance ; Luchesi, with 
the cavalry of that wing, pushed on towards Heide ; and 
the Austrian infantry closely concentrated itself in front 
of Leathen« 

Meanwhile the Prussian army moved forward en 
echelon, the battalions fifty paces apart, the right wing 
a thousand paces in advance of the left* Falling with 
dauntless intrepidity upon Leuthen, it took the village, 
and captain MoUendorf dislodged the enemy from the 
churchyard, which was strongly occupied. Here victory 
wavered for a painful half hour. Not only had the bat- 
talions separated in passing through the village, so that 
it was difficult to re-unite them by means of the suc- 
ceeding echelons, but a tremendous fire of case-shot, 
which received the left wing of the Prussians as they 
came up behind Leuthen, made six battalions give way, 
and neither by persuasions nor threats could they be 
induced to keep their ground. At length, when lieu- 
tenant Retzow met the fugitives with a fresh battalion, 
his father, the general, succeeded in renewing the en- 
gagement at this point, and leading his troops up to the 
enemy. The Prussians were thereby enabled to keep 
possession of Leuthen. Here the heavy artillery made 
a dreadful carnage. Near the windmills of Leuthen the 
Austrians were posted at least one hundred deep, and 
the balls from a Prussian battery of heavy artillery, 
falling upon these dense masses, swept down whole ranks. 
Still they stood firm, and maintained their ground in supe- 
rior number. The victory, indeed, hung as yet upon a hair; 
and, had not general Driesen come up with the cavalry, 
the Prussians, in spite of the advantages which they 
had won thus far, must have lost the battle, especially 



142 COURT AND TIMES OF 

as the Austrian right wing had not fired a single 
ronnd. 

It was already four o'clock, when general Luchesi, 
having advanced to the heights of Leuthen, saw the left 
flank of the Prussians exposed and prepared to fall upon 
it. The advance of the Prussians upon Leuthen had been 
till then concealed from his view by the range of heights 
between Badaxdorf and Leuthen, and he could not yet 
perceive the cavalry of their left wing, which, to the 
amount of fifty squadrons, having been marched up be- 
yond Radaxdorf, slowly moved on by the side of the in- 
fantry. At the moment when Luchesi was wheeling to 
the left upon the flank of the Prussians, Driesen fell fu- 
riously upon him. Turning him with ten squadrons, he 
directed the Bayreuth dragoons against his flank, and sent 
Puttkammer's hussars into his rear, while he himself at- 
tacked in front with thirty squadrons. This most sea- 
sonable attack, which annihilated the Austrian cavalry, 
or at least drove it from the field, decided the victory. 
Luchesi was killed on the spot : his troops fled to Lissa. 
This was a sign to the infantry, so closely pressed at 
Leuthen, that all was lost ; and, like them, the yet un- 
touched troops of the right wing, who had not even been 
engaged, flung away their arms, abandoned the artillery, 
and fled to the bridges, pursued by the Prussian hussars. 
Great numbers were cut in pieces or taken. 

The regiments of Wallis and Durlach still maintained 
their position on the windmill-hill before Leuthen ; but, 
when general Meyer, with ten squadrons, fell upon their 
rear, while the infantry attacked them in front, those 
brave fellows yielded to superior force, and were mostly 
made prisoners^ The Austrians fled at all points in wild 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 143 

disorder, aad Nadasdy alone, with the left wing beaten 
at the beginning of the conflict, covered in some degree 
the retreat. Thus had Frederick's tactics, seconded by 
the heroism of his gallant army, won a most brilliant 
triumph, after a battle of four hours. It cost the con- 
querors 6000 men killed and wounded : 7400 of the 
enemy strewed the field. Twenty thousand prisoners, 
116 pieces of cannon, 51 pair of colours, and 4000 bag- 
gage-waggons were the trophies of the day. 

The king lost no time in making amends to prince 
Maurice of Dessau for the injustice with which he had 
treated him at Kollin, when he threatened him for sup- 
posed disobedience with his sword, which he never drew 
but on that disastrous day . and he took his own pecu- 
liar way of doing so. He went to the prince, on the field 
of battle between Leuthen and Frobelwitz. ** I congra- 
tulate you on the victory, Mr. Fieldmarshal," said Fre- 
derick. Maurice, engaged with matters of professional 
duty, did not pay particular attention to the terms of 
the king's salutation. " Don't you hear ?" said he, in a 
louder tone ; " I congratulate you, Mr. Fieldmarshal." 
The prince now comprehended his drift, and thanked 
him for the unexpected promotion. So highly did the 
king appreciate the service rendered by Maurice in this 
engagement, that he acknowledged — " You have assisted 
me in this battle as no one ever yet assisted me" — ^a de- 
claration which, shortly before his decease, the prince 
deposited in the archives of his house. 

An old general was complimenting the king on the 
victory he had gained. — " That," replied the king, em- 
phatically, " is the work of a higher power." — " Yes," 
replied the veteran, " and of your majesty's excellent 



144 COURT AND TIMES OF 

dispositions." — " Nay, nay," rejoined Frederick, " it is 
all one." 

The same feeling evidently pervaded the brave Prus- 
sian soldiers. When night had put an end to the battle, 
and they were still under arms in the field, surrounded 
by dead and dying, a grenadier began singing the hymn. 
Nun danket alle Gott — " Now let us praise the Lord" — 
and was joined by all the 25,000 warriors who had sur- 
vived the bloody day. A sublimer Te Deum, methinks, 
was never performed since it became the fashion for 
men to offer thanksgivings to the God of peace and 
mercy for enabling them to slaughter thousands of their 
fellow-creatures. 

When the king saw the field of battle, and the dead 
and wounded exposed to the inclemency of a December 
night, he ejaculated, " When will my tribulations cease!" 
Numerous traits of individual heroism exhibited on this 
day have been recorded. " Brother soldiers," said a mu- 
tilated grenadier, rising, with the assistance of his mus- 
ket, to his comrades as they passed him, ^^ fight like 
brave Prussians. Conquer or die for your king." 
Another, who had lost both legs, was found smoking 
his pipe on the field. *^ What signifies my death ! " 
cried he, taking the pipe from his lips ; " is it not for 
my king that I die I" Colonel Byla, commander of the 
fuselier regiment Old Wirtemberg, being very severely 
wounded, some of his men hastened to him, to carry 
him off the ground. ** Go, my lads," said he, " and do 
your duty. I am provided for." 

Frederick, as it may easily be supposed, had not 
spared himself on this decisive day. A party of fifty 
green hussars, picked men, commanded by lieutenant 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 145 

Frankenberg, accompanied him from early morning in 
his excursions, " Hark you, Frankenberg," said the 
king to that officer, " in the battle that we are about to 
fight to-day, I shall be obliged to expose myself more 
than usual. You and your fifty men are to be my 
escort. You must not quit me, and take care not to let 
me fall into the hands of the canaille. If I fall, throw 
your cloak over me immediately, and send for a carriage 
which will be found behind the first battalion of the 
guard. Put the body into the carriage, and say not a 
word to any creature. The battle will continue and the 
enemy be beaten." 

Attended by a single page carrying his telescope, the 
king rode to a hill a little to the right of Borna, where 
he alighted, and looked through the glass which rested 
on the shoulder of the page. Frankenberg, agreeably to 
the directions which he had received, was not with the 
rest of the king's retinue, but close behind him. " Nay, 
nay," cried Frederick, motioning him back with his left 
hand, *^ that was not what I meant. Keep further off 
here." 

When the army had marched up, the heavy cavalry of 
the first brigade was posted opposite to the churchyard, 
where the Austrians had one of their strongest batteries. 
In front of it were drawn up their light cavalry and nu- 
merous flankers to decoy the Prussians the more readily 
to the attack. To ascertain what sort of ambuscade was 
here prepared, prince Maurice ordered some flankers to 
be sent to this point : the Austrians imprudently fired 
upon them with their heavy artillery, and thus betrayed 
their design. The prince was about to withdraw his 
flankers, when the king came up. " No, no," cried Fre- 

VOL. III. L 



146 COURT AND TIMES OF 

derick ; " your highness is wrong ; those shots are in- 
tended merely to alarm. Follow me, my lads !" The 
flankers collected around him, and he led them back to 
their former position. " Here," said he to them, " he- 
have like gallant fellows ; I will soon send you succour." 
The enemy kept up his fire, and Maurice observed to 
the king, that this position was too dangerous for him. 
*^ Indeed, that is true," replied Frederick, coolly ; " but 
I hope soon to drive them back." 

After the battle, the king was apprehensive lest the 
enemy might make a stand beyond the Schweidnitz 
water : he therefore asked which battalions had a mind 
to go with him to Lissa. Manteuffers and Wedel's 
grenadier battalions and the Bornstadt regiment imme- 
diately declared themselves ready to accompany him. 
Zieten insisted that the enemy had not made a formal 
retreat, and that it was only their last regiments which, 
at nightfall, had fled in disorder. " I know," rejoined 
the king, ^* that they are beaten, wholesale and retail, 
and it will be so much the easier for us to occupy the 
bridge near Lissa this very night. — How many charges 
have you left ?" he asked, turning to the artillery-men. 
"About twenty." — "That is enough. Come along; 
and you, Zieten, stay with me. But send on some of 
the hussars with you about thirty paces before us. We 
will speak loud, that they may be guided by the sound 
in the dark. — Hark ye, hussars, I shall have guns fired 
now and then, but they shall not do you any harm : the 
gunners shall take out the quoins of mire, and fire at 
the greatest possible elevation, so that the. balls may 
fly further and rustle in the air, to keep the enemy on 
the run You have heard what I said, gunners ; 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 147 

I shall always be close to you, and tell you when to 
fire." 

On reaching the village of Sahra, a light was per- 
ceiyed in the public-house ; and, as it was so dark that 
a man could not see his hand b^ore him, the king 
■ordered a lantern to be brought. The landlord, afraid 
of losing his lantern, brought it himself. The king 
ordered him to walk by the side of his horse and to lay 
hold of his stirrup. The party now proceeded along a 
dyke planted on each side with willows, and the king 
learned all that he wanted to know of his guide, who 
was an honest fellow of the Protestant confession, and 
not a little alarmed when he found at last that it was 
the king with whom he had been talking. 

While the party observed profound silence, in order 
not to lose a word of the simple account of the country- 
man, which was far from favourable to the Austrians, it 
had approached within three hundred paces of Lissa. 
A number of musket-shots were suddenly fired from a 
distance of thirty paces : these were chiefly directed at 
t&e lantern, which almost touched the ground, and 
wounded the legs of several of the horses. *^ Out with 
the light 1" was now the order, and away they scam- 
pered right and left between the willows into the dry 
meadows. 

^^ But, good God, my dear Zieten," said the king, 
^* this could not possibly have happened, if the hussars 
had, according to orders, kept thirty paces in advance/' 
The fact was that they too, wishing to hear the land- 
lord's story, had kept as close as possible to the king, 
«o that they had not perceived the post till the enemy 
fired^ and immediately ran away. 

l2 



1 48 COURT AND TIMES OF 

The king might, it is true, have sent forward a couple 
of squadrons and battalions, but it is probable that he 
omitted to do so, lest he should harass the already ex- 
hausted troops. He now ordered one of his aides-de- 
camp to ride back speedily and to fetch up the above- 
mentioned grenadier battalions, adding that he was per- 
fectly satisfied with the valour they had shown that 
day ; that he wished them to take their quarters with 
him for the night at Lissa; and that every private 
•should receive a dollar in addition to his pay* 

While Frederick was giving these orders, several 
officers rode forward vrith the hussars, and came back 
reporting that they had been close to Lissa, but seen 
nothing of the enemy. The king now waited for the 
two grenadier battalions, and entered Lissa at their 
head. All was quiet, but many lights were observed in 
the houses on either side. The king, still preceding the 
grenadiers, having his retinue by his side, came to a 
spacious place near the chateau, and about sixty paces 
from the bridge across the Schweidnitz water. Out of 
some of the houses came Austrian soldiers, with bundles 
of straw on their backs : they were seized and taken to 
the king. They told him that on the other side of the 
bridge was posted a captain with 150 men, who had 
orders to cover the bridge with straw, and to set it on 
fire upon the approach of the Prussians. This state- 
ment was presently confirmed ; for the captain, apprised 
of the circumstance, ordered his men to fire, and several 
grenadiers were wounded beside and behind the king. 
" Fall back," cried the artillery-men, " let us have a 
slap at them too !" Those on horseback moved close to 
the houses, lest they should run the same risk from 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 149 

friend and foe. The gunners gave the enemy several 
rounds, and the grenadiers fired over them. At this^ 
moment a brisk fire was opened upon the Prussians 
from the windows of all the houses : it was returned 
by the grenadiers. All were shouting and commanding 
at once. " Gentlemen," said the king with great com- 
posure, " follow me ; I'll tell you what to do." 

He thereupon turned to the left over the drawbridge 
leading to the chateau, followed by most of his aides-de-^ 
camp. Scarcely had they reached the door, when seve- 
ral Austrian ofiicers, with candles in their hands, rushed 
down stairs and out of the lower rooms to seek their 
horses, which were waiting for them in the open place 
before the chateau. The king alighted with his attend- 
ants. He accosted the enemy's officers with the greatest 
sang-froid. " Good evening, gentlemen," said he. " I 
dare say you did not expect me here. Can one get a 
night's lodging along with you ?" 

The Austrians were completely surprised. The prin- 
cipal generals and staff-oflicers, taking the candles from 
the inferior officers and grooms, courteously lighted the 
king np stairs into one of the first rooms, and, on enter- 
ing, presented themselves to the king, who inquired the 
name and rank of each and entered into conversation 
with them. A great number of Prussian generals suc- 
cessively entered. Frederick asked] in surprise whence 
they came, and was informed that his whole army was 
marching upon Lissa. A misconception had occasioned 
this movement, which was most opportune for the king. 
Friends and foes were supplied with the best accommo- 
dations that the place afforded ; for it is scarcely neces- 



150 COURT AND TIMES OF 

sary to observe that all the Austrian officers were made 
prisoners. The baron, to whom the chateau belonged^ 
now made his appearance. " I am very hungry indeed/* 
said the king to him ; " I should like to have son[iethii^ 
to eat." 

The baron was under no little embarrassment, for the 
Austrians had consumed every thing that was to be got 
both in the chateau and in the village. There was no 
other way but to collect what they had left^ and make a 
sort of ragout with these remnants, to which the king 
sat down in high spirits and with an excellent appetite. 
He conversed meanwhile with his host, who waited upon 
him. All at once he looked stedfastly at him and signi- 
ficantly asked: "My dear baron, can you play at 
pharao?" The baron hesitated, for the question had no 
sort of connexion with the previous conversation. He 
knew that the king was an enemy to games of chance^ 

and timidly began : " When I was young— " — " Then 

you know," cried Frederick, interrupting him, " what 
Va bcmque is. That is the game I have been playing 
to-day." 

Having fluirfied his frugal meal, the king thanked the 
generals who dame to him for the parole in the most 
gracious terras fot the new jwoof they had given rf 
their zeal and valour, which he said would transmit their 
names to the latest posterity. "After such a day's 
work," he added, " rest is sweet," and retired. 

The loss of the Prussians in superior officers was 
not so great as might be expected* Major-general Kleist^ 
colonel By la, and major Auerswald were found among 
the slain ; and the brave major-general Rohr died of 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 151 

his wounds on the 12th of November. The total loss 
of the Prussians amounted to about 6000, including 
200 officers. 

The Austrians had 3000 killed, 6000 wounded, and 
lost 8000 prisoners, 116 pieces of cannon, 51 pair of 
colours, and 4000 carts and waggons. Luchesi, Otter- 
wolf, and prince Stolberg, were among the slain ; Haller, 
Maguire, Lascy, prince Lobkowitz, and Pressack, were 
severely wounded; and Nadasdy and O'Donnell be- 
came prisoners of war. 

Napoleon, who insists that in regard to tactics Frede-- 
rick never did any thing but what had been practised 
by generals ancient and modern in all ages, admits 
that " the battle of Leuthen serves to immortalize the 
moral character of Frederick, and to prove his exf 
traordinary military talents ;" and in another place he 
calls this victory " a master-piece of movements, ma- 
noeuvres, and resolution, which would alone suffice to 
immortalize Frederick and to rank him among the great- 
est generals." 

Night favoured the retreat of the beaten army. 
Zieten, with his hussars, pursued the fugitives to 
Bohemia, taking a great quantity of baggage and 
many prisoners, and that general and Fouque, who 
had succeeded to the command of Winterfeld's corp&, 
completely cleared the open country of the ^PSr 
trians. Schweidnitz alone, with a garrison of 7000 
men, remained in their possession. Colonel ^V^erner 
scoured Upper Silesia and occupied J%erndorf and 
Troppau. The king himself marched on the 6th of 
November from Lissa, and invested Breslau. The city 
was occupied by a very strong garrison, commanded by 



152 COURT AND TIMES OF 

general Sprecher. On being summoned, he not only 
refused to give up the place, but erected several gibbets 
for those who should talk of surrender. The trenches 
were opened on the 10th; the ditches began to be 
frozen ; and a bomb, falling upon a powder-magazine, 
blew up a bastion with 800 men. Apprehensive of an 
assault, Sprecher capitulated on the 19th, in compli- 
ance with the orders of the .commander-in-chief. The 
garrison, consisting of 12,000 men, with 5000 sick and 
wounded, became prisoners of war; and 81 pieces of 
cannon, besides those belonging to the fortifications, fell 
into the hands of the Prussians. 

During this short siege, Frederick had his head-quar- 
ters at the house of a peasant at Rothkretscham. The 
cold was intense, and the troops pulled down bams, 
stables, and houses, to procure fuel. The dragoons even 
fell foul of the woodwork at head-quarters, regardless 
of the remonstrances of the oflScer on duty. The latter, 
finding himself obliged to resort to violence, ordered 
out the guard. " The first man," said he, " who dares 
touch a piece of wood shall be fired at." The soldiers 
laughed, conceiving that he was not in earnest. Frederick 
heard the noise and called the officer to inquire what 
was the matter. On being told, " That is not the right 
way," said he. " Wait a moment ; I will soon put a 
stop to the mischief." He went outside the door. 
" Dragoons," said he, " if you go on in this manner, I 
shall have the snow coming in upon my bed : I am cer- 
tain you would not wish that." — Thenceforward the 
king's quarters were not molested. 

On the 2 2d of December, the king attended the 
thanksgiving sermon preached by inspector Burg in the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 153 

church of St. Elizabeth at Breslau : his gratitude to 
God and his joy were equalled only by his modesty. 
" Your friendship," he writes to d'Argens, " misleads 
you. I am only a schoolboy compared with Alexan- 
der, and not worthy to loose the latchets of Caesar's 
shoes. Necessity, the mother of all invention, has set 
me to work, and instigated me to employ desperate 
remedies for desperate eyils." 

The Prussians recovered Liegnitz on the 20th of De- 
cember, so that all Silesia was again in their possession, 
excepting the fortress of Schweidnitz, which the king 
ordered Fouque to invest, as the winter season pre- 
vented a formal siege. 

Meanwhile prince Charles of Lorraine, mortified by 
the severe animadversions and the cutting sarcasms 
called forth by his disasters at Vienna, resigned the 
command of the Austrian army and retired with general 
Sprecher to Brussels. Out of the army under his com- 
mand, Daim took back no more than 37,000 men to 
Bohemia. With these he drew a cordon along the 
frontiers of Silesia, and went into winter -quarters. 
Zieten did the same on the Prussian side, while Frede- 
rick, with the main army, wintered in the environs of 
Breslau. Prince Henry commanded in Saxony, and 
Keith covered the frontier of that country against the 
Austrians. 

We have seen what paternal kindness Frederick mani- 
fested for Silesia, and what pains he took to gain the 
affections of the inhabitants of all classes, both high and 
low. When fortune seemed for a moment to favour the 
arms of the former ruler, many, of the Catholic clergy 
in particular, hastened to renounce their allegiance to 



1 54 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the new sovereign. But Frederick was most grieved^ 
perhaps^ by the ingratitude of a man who was indebted 
to hini for his elevation. Thi» was. count SchafFgotsch, 
whom he had appointed to succeed cardinal Sinzendorf, 
as prince-bishop of Breslau and primate of the whole 
Catholic church in his dominions. Frederick, moreover, 
conferred on him the order of the Black Eagle, and 
assigned him apartments in the palace at Potsdam. 
Even in 1757 Scha%otsch had visited the king at 
Hainan, and accompanied him to Dresden. But though 
the pope himself had exhorted the bishop to show, in 
every way, his loyalty to a sovereign so well disposed 
towards the Catholic church, he repaid Frederick's 
bounty with such ingratitude that the Austrians them- 
selves could not help expressing their reprobation. When 
the Imperialists had taken Breslau, the recreant bishop 
not only expressed the utmost contempt for the Prussian 
monarch, but trampled under foot the order with which 
he had invested him. When the balance turned in Fre- 
derick's favour, Schaffgotsch, feeling himself unsafe in 
his diocese, retired to Moravia. In January, 1 758, he 
wrote from Nicolsburg, to assure the king of his attach* 
ment. " I shall leave you to your fate," replied his 
majesty, *^ convinced that such inexcusable conduct as 
yours will draw upon itself the punishment that it de- 
serves. You will not escape either the divine wrath or 
the execration of men ; for, cormpt as they may be, 
they are not so depraved as not to abhor the ungrateful 
and traitors." Repulsed by the court of Vienna, SchaflT- 
gotsch resided during the war partly in Rome, partly in 
Moravia. His revenues were sequestrated. At the 
peace of Hubertsburg he was permitted to return to 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 155 

Silesia, but Oppeln was assigned for his residence. The 
administration of the episcopal possessions was dis- 
solved; but when, in 1766, the bishop removed clan- 
destinely to the Austrian territory, the king ordered 
his revenues to be again sequestrated, and forbade the 
clergy to hold further communion with him. The pope 
then appointed an apostolical vicar. 

The king was well aware of the enmity of a great por- 
tion of the Catholic clergy of Silesia to his government. 
The joy of the friars there on the surrender of the city 
to the Austrians was equalled only by their consternation 
when it was retaken by Frederick. Knowing their sen- 
timents, he contented himself with quartering the Aus- 
trian prisoners of war upon the convents. He sent them, 
at the same time, this message. ^' As I know that the 
Austrians are your bosom friends, I wish to aflford you 
the pleasure of supplying their wants. I am persuaded 
that you will take great care of these, your good frijwids ; 
but, to induce you to pay them still greater attention, 
I shall require of you 20 dollars for each of your guests 
who is not forthcoming.^' 

Another person who about this time proved himself 
unworthy of the king's kindness was the Abbe de Prades. 
Frederick, on the recommendation of d'Alembert, had, 
in 1752, appointed this man successor tod'Arget in the 
office of reader ; and in 1757 he was just about to confer 
on him a rich prebend in the cathedral of Breslau, when 
it was discovered that he was plotting to betray his 
royal patron to the French. In fact, de Prades con- 
victed himself in a etter written by him in 1756 from 
Potsdam to the marquis de Valori, French ambassador 
in Berlin. He was sent to Magdeburg for some time. 



156 COURT AND TIMES OF 

lived subsequently at Glogau on a benefice that was 
given him there, and died in 1782. Le Cat succeeded 
him in the post of reader, or rather of private secretary, 
for such Thiebault assures us Le Cat actually was. Fre- 
derick, he says, was fond of reading himself, and the 
person whom he kept as reader had no other duty to 
perform but to listen to him. Besides, he adds, Le Cat 
had a weak, faint, and disagreeable voice, whence 
Thiebault doubts whether he ever read any thing to the 
king excepting the letters which were given to him to 
report upon ; "at least," says he, " I can affirm that, 
whenever the king could not read himself, it was I who 
read to him when he was in Berlin, and this I have done 
even when Le Cat was present. " 

It is not possible to describe the enthusiasm which 
Frederick's fortitude under adversity and his recent 
brilliant successes kindled not only in his own do- 
minions and throughout Germany, but in almost every 
country in Europe. His achievements inspired the poets 
— they were celebrated by Schubert, Rammler, Wieland^ 
but above all by Gleim, who has been justly denominated 
the Tyrtaeus of Prussia. Father Gleim, as he is com- 
monly called by the Germans, is a man of whom some 
notice is indispensable in the memoirs of the great king. 

Bom at Ermsleben, in the principality of Halber- 
stadt, in 1719, Gleim studied, under many privations 
from his straitened circumstances, at Halle ; and then 
accepted the oflSce of domestic tutor in the family of 
colonel Schultz at Potsdam, where he became acquainted 
with prince William, son of the margrave of Branden- 
burg Schwedt, who took him into his service as secre- 
taiy. It was at this time that Gleim became acquainted 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 1 57 

with Kleist, afterwards celebrated in Germany as the 
author of a poem on Spring : they soon became intimate 
friends, apd so continued till Kleist's death. In 1 744 
the second Silesian war parted them, and deprived Gleim 
of his kind patron, who fell before Prague. In the fol- 
lowing year he entered as secretary into the service of 
the old Dessauer, but soon quitted him on account of 
what he regarded as an act of unnecessary cruelty : the 
prince, namely, caused a Jew, who in Gleim's opinion 
was perfectly innocent, to be hanged on the 6th of 
December, 1745, in the camp near Dieskau, merely be- 
cause he suspected him of being a spy. 

After passing two years in Berlin, where he published 
his first poetical works, Gleim was appointed, in 1747, 
secretary to the chapter of the cathedral of Halberstadt. 
There he came into contact with most of those eminent 
writers to whom German literature owes its revival; 
and with many of them he contracted a close friendship, 
for friendship was the element of his life. His Military 
Songs, which have made his name more popular as a 
poet than any other of his compositions, celebrated the 
splendid achievements of the great Frederick, in a tone 
and with a fire and energy surpassed, perhaps, only by 
the spirit-stirring strains of Theodore Korner. These 
pieces, written in the character of a Prussian grenadier, 
the author transmitted to Kleist, who circulated them 
in the army to which he belonged ; and they were soon 
universally diffused and sung, not by the soldiers only, 
but by the people in general ; though they were not 
published in a collective form till 1778. 

On the 25nd of December, 1785, their author was 
admitted to an interview with the king ; and on leaving 



168 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the palace he said to duke Frederick Augustus of Bruns- 
wick : " Oh ! how I wish that I had the old hat which 
the king wore when I spoke with him!" .The duke 
.promised to procure it for him after Frederick's death, 
and kept his word. Not many days after the decease 
of the king in the following August, this hat was for- 
warded to the poet, with a letter from the duke, certi- 
fying that it was the same which the king had upon his 
head the morning before he expired. 

Respecting the above-mentioned interview, Gleim ob- 
served profound silence, not only towards the public, but 
also to his most intimate friends. From a poetical squib, 
containing the only allusion to the subject that was to be 
found among his manuscript papers, and given by Preuss 
in the third volume of his Life of Frederick, we may, 
however, infer that the conversation was of too trivial a 
nature to prove very flattering to so useful a coadjutor as 
the author of the Songs of a Prussian Grenadier had 
proved himself to the great king at the most critical period 
of his reign. 

After Frederick's death Gleim's enthusiasm for the 
great king was converted into glowing patriotism. The 
French revolution filled him with horror. To the Ger- 
mans he incessantly preached up union, and a conflict 
for life or death, in behalf of the independence of the 
country. During the last two years of his life, he was 
totally blind, but still continued to take the same warm 
interest as ever in the great events of the times, till his 
decease in 1803. Agreeably to his direction, he was 
buried in his ovm garden near Halberstadt. His col- 
lected works were published there in eight volumes, 
1811-13. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 159 

Gbthe, who was at this time a youth of 1 7 or 1 8, has 
giYen a lively picture of the dissenrions excited in fami- 
lies in consequence of Frederick's popularity, "The 
worid," he says, ** was split at once into two parties, and 
our family was a miniature of th*e great whole. My 
grandfather, who, as bailiff of Frankfurt, was one of the 
bearers of the canopy over Francis L at his coronation, 
and had been presented by the empress with a heavy 
gold chain and her portrait, was, with some of his daugh- 
ters and his sons-in-law, on the Austrian side. My father, 
who had been appointed imperial councillor by Charles 
VIL, and who had warmly sympathized in ^be fate of that 
unfortunate monarch, inclined, with the smaller half of 
his family, to the Prussians. The bickerings usual among 
brothers-in-law now took a definite form in which they 
could be expressed. My grandfather,* who was before 
a mild, quiet, easy man, became irritable. Discussions, 
disputes, quarrels, ensued. The ladies strove in vain 
to extinguish the flame, and, after several unpleasant 
scenes, my father absented himself from the company. 
We now rejoiced at home undisturbed at the Prussian 
victories, of which one of my aunts exultingly brought 
us accounts. All other interests gave place to this, and 
we spent the remainder of the year in ceaseless agitation. 
The occupation of Dresden, the moderation of the king, 
his slow but sure progress, the victory of Lowositz, the 
surrender of the Saxons, were so many triumphs for our 
party. All that could be said in favour of the adverse 
side was denied or extenuated; and, as the opposing 
members of the family pursued the same course, they 
could scarcely meet in the streets without acting over 
again the scenes that occur in Bomep and Juliet, 



1 60 COURT AND TIMES OF 

** Thus, then, I became a partisan of Prussia, or rather 
of Fritz — for what was Prussia to us ? It was the per- 
sonal qualities of the great king that operated upon all 
minds. I rejoiced with my father at our victories, was 
fond of copying the verses written upon them, and still 
more the satires upon the opposite party, slender as their 
poetical merit might be." 

The French themselves joined in those popular songs 
in praise of Frederick, and in depreciation of their own 
unworthy commanders. Nay, Duclos tells us that, after 
the victories of Bossbach and Leuthen, in the salonSy in 
the promenades, in the theatres of Paris, you met with 
more partisans of Prussia than of France, " The few," 
he says, " who were in the French interest durst scarcely 
express their sentiments." 

But no where, perhaps, had Frederick found more en- 
thusiastic admirers than in England. Here, in the autumn 
of 1757, William Pitt had been appointed foreign secre- 
tary of state. He called the Prussian monarch the firm- 
est bulwark of Europe against the mightiest and basest 
league that ever threatened the liberties of mankind, and 
infused new life into the British cabinet, by insisting that 
America must be conquered in Germany. So great a 
favourite was Frederick with the people, that they cele- 
brated his birthday with the same honours as that of their 
own sovereign, and his victories with illuminations. Both 
houses of parliament rang with his praise. It was pro- 
posed to raise a subscription in aid of his efforts ; and 
lady Salisbury did actually send him a sum of money as 
a present through her banker. Pitt availed himself of 
this universal enthusiasm to conclude a new treaty of 
alliance and subsidy with Prussia on the 11th of April, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 161 

1758, in London, ensuring to the king the yearly sum of 
^670,000, which his monetary ingenuity, sharpened hy 
necessity, contrived to convert into ten million dollars* 
The English subsidies, it is true, were not exactly what 
the king wanted ; ho would rather have seen a fleet in 
the Baltic, which would have relieved him from all alarm 
about his rear, but that Great Britain declined furnish- 
ing ; and Prussia and Westphalia being drained by the 
enemy, he was obliged to accept aid in money. The dis- 
graceful convention of Kloster Zeven was annulled on the 
26th of November ; and, as William HI. had selected the 
Brandenburg field-marshal Schomberg to assist in assert- 
ing his claims to the English throne, so George IL applied 
to Frederick for duke Ferdinand of Brunswick to com- 
mand his German troops at Stade. 

Ferdinand, fourth son of Ferdinand Albert, duke of 
Brunswick, was bom in 1721. He entered into the 
Prussian service in 1 740, as colonel and commander of 
the regiment which his brother, the reigning duke Charles, 
placed in the Prussian service. He was most graciously 
received by the king, and continued about his person till 
the breaking out of the first Silesian war. This and the 
succeeding war were a good school for the young soldier, 
who distinguished himself on various occasions, particu- 
larly at the battle of Sorr, after which Frederick, who 
had invested him in 1742 with the order of the Black 
Eagle, presented him with the reversion to the lordships 
of Pless and Beuthen, saying, " Here I give you what I 
owe you." This reversion the duke sold to count Prom- 
nitz for 30,000 dollars. In 1743, he was promoted to 
be major-general; in 1750, lieutenant-general; and, in 
1755, appointed governor of Magdeburg. Ferdinand 

VOL. III. M 



1 62 COURT AND TIMES OF 

contributed to decide the victory of Prague, by breaking 
through the enemy's line, and leading some battalions 
into the chasm. He continued to distinguish himself 
till towards the conclusion of 1757, when Sir Andrew 
Mitchell, on behalf of the English government, solicited 
the king of Prussia to give a commander to the allied 
British and Hanoverian army in the person of the duke. 
Frederick complied. After the victory of Rossbach, 
Ferdinand proceeded to his new destination, and arrived 
on the 22d of November at Stade. 

The subsequent career of the duke gained him the cha- 
racter of an accomplished general ; but, though he was 
now responsible only to the crown whose forces he com- 
manded, yet Frederick, to whose military service he in 
fact still belonged, was desirous of exercising a decisive 
influence upon the operations of the army under the duke. 
If Ferdinand felt mortified and fettered in some measure 
by this pretension of his old master, we see him acting 
with an humble friend in a kind of concert, of which mi- 
litary history furnishes no other example. Philip West- 
phal, the duke^s secretary, who constantly lived with him 
in head-quarters, not only planned all the great strategi- 
cal operations, but even the minutest details, as may be 
seen by the original papers deposited at the general staff 
of the Prussian army in Berlin. Ferdinand weighed these 
ideas, sometimes objected to them, and then executed the 
result of their joint conceptions. All was transacted 
between them in writing, each in his own apartment. 
Thus Westphal may be said to have performed the duty 
of the general staff for his prince ; and Ferdinand felt no 
jealousy of his incomparable friend, who was ennobled 
after the peace. Gn the contrary, it redounds greatly 



FREDERICK THE GREAT, 1 63 

to his honour to have discovered the rare military genius 
of his humble secretary, and to have made it a touchstone 
of his own ideas. On his arrival at Stade, the duke, 
without loss of time, set about the moral and physical 
re-organization of the troops which he was to command. 
He persuaded his brother, the reigning duke of Bruns- 
wick, to send back his contingent, which he had with- 
drawn ; the landgrave of Hesse, who had been driven 
almost to despair by the excesses of the French, entrusted 
to him his little force ; Frederick sent him some regi- 
ments of cavalry, so that before the end of the year he 
was at the head of an army of 36,000 men. He occupied 
Harburg, invested the citadel garrisoned by the French, 
sent general Diepenbrock to Bremen and Verden, and 
marched with the principal corps of 26,000 men against 
Richelieu, who precipitately evacuated the whole country 
between the Elbe and the AUer, and took up a strong 
camp behind the latter river near Celle. Ferdinand 
would have driven him from this position had not the 
severity of the season put an end to his operations. 
About this time, Richelieu received an intimation that he 
was soon to be superseded by a Benedictine abbot, the 
count de Clermont. The rapacious general resolved to 
make good use of his time, and sent 9000 men under 
general d'Argenson to Halberstadt, with instructions to 
plunder and to commit the most inhuman extortions. 



M 2 



1 64 COURT AND TIMES OF 



CHAPTER XXXI. 

Campaign of 1758 — The general enthusiasm in behalf of the King facili- 
tates the recruiting of the Prussian Army — Provincial Militia — Plan of 
Frederick's Enemies in this Campaign — Operations of Duke Ferdinand 
of Brunswick — Flight of the French across the Rhine — Battle of Crefeld 
— English troops sent to join the Duke — ^Advantages gained by the French 
— The Saxon Corps — Operations in Silesia — Reduction of Schweidnitz 
by the Prussians — Frederick makes an incursion into Moravia^ and lays 
siege to Ollmiitz — ^The Austrians intercept a large Prussian Convoy^ and 
oblige the King to raise the Siege — He retreats to Bohemia^ and thence 
to Silesia — The Russians^ under Count Fermor, again take ])ossession of 
East Prussia, and force the Inhabitants to swear allegiance to the Em- 
press — ^Their Cruelty — ^The King hastens to meet the Invaders, who bom- 
bard and destroy Custrin — His visit to that place — Battle of Zorndorf — 
Loyalty of the Prussians to their rightful Sovereign — Frederick makes 
the Saxons swear allegiance to him — Plot of the Russian Prisoners at 
Custrin — Secret Treaty of December 1768 between France and Austria. 

Frederick passed the winter at Breslau, refreshing 
his heart in the society of friends and of the Muses, 
and msking energetic preparations for the next cam- 
paign. He would have preferred peace, which he 
offered in vain after the victory of Leuthen to the em- 
press-queen, through prince Lobkowitz, one of his pri- 
soners* Pitt also made pacific overtures, but Keith, 
the English ambassador, exerted himself to no purpose 
at the court of Petersburg, where Austria, France, and 
Saxony, were all-powerful. Goderich, sent for the like 
purpose to Stockholm, was not allowed by the French 
party to cross the frontiers. Even Denmark concluded 
a subsidiary treaty with France against Prussia, but 
this threw very little weight into the scale, as the court 
of Copenhagen was decidedly adverse to war. 

Six pitched battles, severe marches, disasters of all 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 165 

kinds, and contagions diseases, had, during the campaign 
of 1757, reduced the Prussian army to one-third of its 
original complement ; but such were the efforts made to 
recruit and reinforce it during the winter, that, in April, 
1758, it was again complete as to number and well 
equipped. Not only did the cantons of Frederick's 
dominions furnish their respectiye quotas, but great 
numbers of foreigners and deserters,, attracted by the 
fame of the Prussian arms, enlisted under hi& banners. 
The extraordinary popularity of the king mainly con- 
tributed to this effect. Painters could not produce 
portraits of him fast enough to supply the demand in 
England and Switzerland. The general enthusiasm 
spread to the ranks of his adversaries. The French 
army, the officers in particular, extolled Frederick and 
duke Ferdinand, and discouraged their own soldiers, 
while they revelled inactive in luxurious indulgence. 
These sentiments were most beneficial to the king: 
they served to complete his ranks and to infuse con- 
fidence into the new army; so that Frederick found 
himself again at the head of 200^000 infantry and 
50,000 cavalry. 

In the campaign of 1757, the king, as we have seen, 
had been obliged to abandon his Westphalian provinces, 
as well as Prussia, to their fate. At the instigation of 
Hertzberg, then councillor of legation, but afterwards 
minister and a personal friend of the king's, his coun- 
trymen, the Pomeranians, raised in a few weeks ten 
battalions of militia, of 500 men each, to oppose the 
Swedes, who had invaded their country ; and this ex- 
ample was followed by Magdeburg and the electorate 
of Brandenburg. The statea of those two provinces 



1 66 COURT AND TIMES OF 

voluntarily raised each 2000 men, whom they main'* 
tained at their oWn expense till the peace ; and these 
militia not only defended hravely the fortresses of Col-* 
berg, Stettin, Ciistrin, Magdeburg, and Berlin itself, 
but kept up the petty war against the Russians and 
Swedes in Pomerania and the New Mark with great 
success. This proof of active patriotism in times of 
danger was not more serviceable than gratifying to the 
king, who ever afterwards regarded the province which 
had set the example with particular favour; for, in 
a political testament deposited in the Berlin archives, 
he advises his successors to rely most especially on the 
Ponieranian population, and to consider it as the main 
prop of the Prussian monarchy. 

Hie plan of Frederick's enemies in this campaign 
was to press him closely on all sides — ^the Russians on 
the Oder, the French on the Elbe, the Austrians in 
Silesia and Saxony ; and then, by finally uniting their 
forces, to crush him completely. The king, on his part, 
purposed that duke Ferdinand of Brunswick should 
keep the French in check, while he repelled the Aus- 
trians. To this end, it was requisite that he should, in 
the first place, reduce Schweidnitz ; he then designed, 
by an incursion into Moravia, to entice Daun to meet 
him ; while prince Henry was to annihilate the army of 
the empire, and to make himself master of Prague. 
When he should have crippled the Austrians in Bohemia 
and Moravia, he intended to turn, according to circum- 
stances, either against the Russians, whom he held very 
cheap, or against the French, and to beat them. But 
in case the cautious Daun should shun a battle, he 
would endeavour at least to draw him away from 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 167 

Bohemia, that prince . Henry might have «a clear stage 
for his operations. 

Agreeably to this general plan, duke Ferdinand vas 
the first to take the field, for the purpose of driving 
80,000 French from the soil of Germany with a dis- 
heartened force of 30,000 men. He was accompanied 
by his nephew, the hereditary prince of Brunswick, 
whose high-spirited mother, a sister of Frederick's, 
when taking leave of him before the regiment of the 
guard, said to her son : " I forbid you to appear again 
in my presence unless you have performed deeds worthy 
of your birth and your relatives." Count Clermont, 
abbot of St. Germain des Pres, a prince of the blood, 
arrived in Hanover, on the 1 4th of February, to super- 
sede Richelieu, just as the allies were beginning to 
move. Learning that prince Henry also was advancing 
upon Brunswick, he commenced his operations with a 
precipitate flight, evacuated all Lower Saxony, Bruns^ 
wick, Hanover, and Hildesheim, and appointed the left 
bank of the Weser, between Hameln and Minden, for 
the rendezvous of his troops. But when the garrison 
of Hameln, consisting of 3500 men, surrendered, after 
Qt siege of six days, in spite of its previous boasting, 
Clermont continued his flight, without intermission, by 
the worst roads, and in the most inclement weather, to 
Diisseldorf, and did not deem himself safe till he had 
the RhinQ between him and his pursuing enemy, Maga* 
zines, baggage, military chests, and stores, together with 
11,000 men, fell into the hands of Ferdinand. 

The western provinceis of Prussia, of which the French 
had taken possession in the name of the empress Maria 
Theresa, were meanwhile evacuated by those plunderers. 



168 COURT AND TIMES OF 

When their lait detachment, with fifteen baggage-wag- 
gons, was on the point of crossing the Ems at Leerort, 
some playfnl boys shouted : '^ Black hussars ! black 
hussars r" Such was the terror excited by the very 
name of those troops, that the fugitives broke open 
some of the trunks and chests, took out the most 
valuable effects, and leaped into the boats, leaving the 
rest to the mercy of the populace. 

Ferdinand, after resting between Miinster and Cos- 
feld, to recruit his army and to establish magazines^ 
followed the enemy across the Rhine on the 1st of June. 
At length, on the 23d of that month, Clermont resolved 
to give battle to his pursuers in the plain of Crefeld, 
where, in spite of his greatly superior force and ad- 
vantageous position, his daring adversary attacked him 
with such spirit, that he was defeated with the loss of 
4000 men, three pieces of cannon, and six pair of 
colours. This victory, indecisive in itself, led to the re- 
duction of Rormonde and Diisseldorf. In Paris it 
produced the same kind of impression as the glorious 
day of Rossbach. The people were delighted to have 
to add to the " Prince de Sottise" and the " Petit Pere 
la Maraude" a warrior priest, who *^ preached like a 
soldier and fought like an apostle." The latter was 
superseded on the 7th of July by lieutenant-general 
de Contades, who was directed by Belleisle, the French 
minister at war, " to convert Hanover and Westphalia 
into a desert, and to leave not a vestige of any growing 
thing but the roots in the ground." 

Meanwhile, Wesel and Gelders were still in the hands 
of the French ; and Soubise, who was yet behind the 
Lahn, occupied Frankfurt and Hanau. Ferdinand could 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 1 69 

not leave more than 5000 men, chiefly Hessian militia, 
under the prince of Isenburg, to cover Hesse. This 
corps was defeated at Sandershausen by the duke de 
Broglio, and the main army was in consequence obliged 
to fall back. 

The people of England, who idolized the king of 
Prussia, were filled with exultation by the victory of 
Crefeld; Pitt influenced both houses in favour of 
Frederick, and parliament voted that 18,000 men should 
be sent to Germany. On the 10th of July, the king 
reviewed these troops, amounting, however, to no more 
than 12,000, in Hyde Park, and they embarked at 
Harwich, on the 26th, for Emden. They consisted 
chiefly of the regiments of the guards, and 2000 High- 
landers, and were commanded by the duke of Marlbo- 
rough, who had under him lords Blandford, Waldegrave, 
Sackville, and other officers of distinction. They formed 
in every respect a splendid corps, which joined the 
allies at Coesfeld, without molestation, on the 20th 
of August. 

By Ferdinand's success on the left bank of the Rhine, 
the corps of Prince Soubise, which was to have pro- 
ceeded to Bohemia, was detained near the Mayn. To 
this corps of 25,000 men, Broglio's victory at Sanders- 
hausen opened the way to the electorate of Hanover. 
While Ferdinand turned off to Lippstadt, Contades fol- 
lowed him over the Rhine near Wesel ; but the duke 
succeeded in his object of preventing the junction of 
the two French armies. That of Contades, now pro- 
moted to marshal, was 75,000 strong. Ferdinand at 
first sent general Oberg against Soubise, who, on the 
1 0th of October, defeated his antagonist at Luttemberg, 



1 70 COURT AND TIMES OF 

and thus furnished his patroness, the marquise de Pom- 
padour, with a pretext for procuring him the marshal's 
staff. Content with this advantage, Souhise went into 
winter-quarters between the Rhine and Mayn, as did 
Contades between the Rhine and Meuse, and Ferdinand, 
after recalling Oberg's corps, between the Rhine and 
Weser. 

Soubise owed his victory chiefly to some of those 
Saxon regiments taken at Pima, which Frederick had 
attempted to transform into Prussian. Being left to- 
gether, they had deserted in troops, and fled to Hungary, 
where twelve new regiments were formed with them. 
These were taken into the pay of France, and they were 
commanded by Francis Xavier, second son of the king 
of Poland, who assumed the title of count of Lusatia. 
These troops had. been presented by the dauphiness with 
24 new pieces of cannon, on which were engraved her 
name and the arms of Saxony ; in May new colours had 
been given to them with great ceremony near Vienna; 
and, marching through Bavaria to Strasburg, they had 
joined Contades' army at Andernach. They distin- 
guished themselves in every action; but the officers 
included in the capitulation of Libenstein, and who had 
been dismissed on their parole, were justly condemned 
for joining the ranks of the count of Lusatia, which 
Frederick summoned them to quit. 

The king commenced operations in Silesia by forming 
a camp of observation between Landeshut and Friedland, 
to cover the siege of Schweidnitz, which was conducted 
by general Treskow, under whom colonel Balbi acted as 
engineer. Count Thiirheim defended the place till the 
(Grallows fort was taken by storm, on the 1 6th of April, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 171 

when he surrendered. Such was the scarcity of provi- 
sions in the place, that the garrison and the inhabitants 
must have been famished during the winter, had not an 
unexampled mortality diminished the consumption. 
The Imperialists, who three months before amounted to 
9000 men, marched only 1500 strong out of the fortress. 
Patient under hardships, loyal to their sovereign, and 
yet not malicious against the enemy, the citizens inva- 
riably manifested the most laudable sentiments. During 
this war the town was four times taken, three times by 
formal siege and once by starvation, and twice plun- 
dered ; and under all these afflictions the patriotism of 
the inhabitants justly acquired it the reputation of being 
one of the most loyal cities in the kingdom. 

Daun, who, on the resignation of prince Charles of 
Lorraine, had been appointed to the conmiand of the 
Austrian army in Bohemia, was too much occupied in 
repairing the losses which it had sustained to make any 
attempt to prevent the fall of Schweidnitz. Appre- 
hending an incursion of the Prussians into Bohemia, he 
ordered all the roads to be broken up and whole woods 
to be cut down to obstruct the march of the king. 
Frederick's plan was to make a diversion in Moravia, 
and, by the speedy reduction of Ollmiitz, to draw Daun 
out of Bohemia. Accordingly, he marched with 88,000 
men by Neustadt, Jagemdorf, and Troppau, driving 
general de Ville out of Upper Silesia, and ascended the 
Nickelsberg before Daun received intelligence of this 
unexpected movement. The Austrian commander then 
quitted his strong camp at Skalitz, but, instead of anti- 
cipating the king, as he might have done, he posted 
himself on the frontiers near Leitomischl, and merely 



1 72 COURT AND TIMES OF 

sent generals Janus and Loudon to watch the moye- 
ments of his adversary. 

On the 3d of May the Prussian army arrived before 
OUmiitZy the garrison of which, after de Ville's retreat 
into the fortress, amounted to 9000 men. Frederick's 
plan was founded on the speedy surrender of the place, 
but it was frustrated by the obstacles which he had to 
encounter. The fortifications had been much strength- 
ened and repaired ; the place was amply supplied with 
provisions and stores ; and Marschall, the commandant, 
possessed all the firmness and talents requisite for his 
post. While Frederick himself marched with his corps 
of observation to meet Daun, he left marshal Keith to 
conduct the siege. For this service he had only 6000 
men, and his supply of artillery and stores was equally 
scanty. At Schweidnitz, Balbi had reason to complain 
of the parsimony of the king on this point, and of the 
infinite hardships which the soldiers had to encounter : 
but these inconveniences were much more severely felt 
at OUmiitz. The besiegers were unable to invest the 
place closely, so that the garrison could receive one 
reinforcement after another and provisions in abundance. 
The inundation of the river Morawa was also an ad van - 
tage to the enemy, as on that account the town could 
be attacked on one side only. 

After a blockade of seventeen days, the siege was, 
nevertheless, commenced, but the trenches were opened 
at such a distance that the Prussian bombs fell short of 
the town. Considerable time was occupied in correcting 
this fault ; but, on a nearer approach, the enemy's fire 
was found to be far superior to that of the besiegers, 
who were, moreover, annoyed by successful sallies, in 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 1 73 

one of which ten pieces of their cannon were spiked. 
Their ammunition began to run short, so that a certain 
quantity only could be allowed for each day; The fete 
of the fortress now depended on the safe arrival of a 
Prussian convoy of 3000 waggons, with provisions, 
ammunition, and money, which was coming from 
Troppau, escorted by the brave colonel Mosel with 
9000 men, to whom Zieten was sent with a detachment 
for its further protection. This circumstance was well 
known to the enemy. 

The dilatory Daun now came but too soon with his 
numerous army from Konigingratz. It was anything 
but an agreeable surprise to Frederick to see him arrive 
at Great Teinitz, and he burst forth into the involuntary 
commendation: ^^ There are the Austrians! they are 
learning to march." Having reinforced the commandant 
of OUmiitz, Daun despatched 25,000 men under gene- 
rals Loudon and Siskowsky to intercept the convoy. 
Occupying, without being seen, all the heights about a 
defile through which it would be obliged to pass, the 
enemy waited for colonel Mosel, who attacked them 
with such resolution, that Loudon was compelled to 
retire. The same evening Mosel was joined by Zieten 
with his detachment. During the action, the drivers and 
people of the train had turned back, affrighted, for 
Troppau, and Zieten was obliged to halt a day to collect 
the fugitives and restore order. This delay favoured 
the object of the enemy. Loudon, joined by Serbelloni's 
corps, placed a dangerous ambuscade for the convoy. 
Attacked in a difficult defile, Zieten's heroic troops 
were overcome by the nature of the ground and the 
vast superiority of the assailants. General Krockow, 



1 74 COURT AND TIMES OF 

whom the Austrians allowed to pass with the advanced 
guard, alone escaped with about S50 waggons ; while 
Zieten, after losing 2400 men and six pieces of cannon, 
was forced to retire, fighting all the way, to Troppau. 
Out of 900 recruits destined for the regiment of prince 
Ferdinand of Prussia, all hale young men, scarcely one 
hundred were left alive. This event was doubly disas- 
trous for the Prussians ; not only had their means of 
subsistence fallen into the hands of the enemy, but he 
occupied all the mountain passes with 25,000 men, so 
that it appeared next to impossible to return by the usual 
roads. 

Thus, not only was Frederick's plan for making 
OUmiitz a place d'armes for his operations in Bohemia 
frustrated, but he found himself cut off from his own 
dominions ; nay, he had every reason to expect that he 
should be surrounded on every side, and obliged to fight 
his way through the enemy at all risks. In this emer- 
gency, his genius abandoned him not. On the 1st of 
July, he assembled his generals and the commanders of 
regiments and battalions, and thus addressed them: 
^' Gentlemen, the enemy has found means to annihilate 
the convoy coming from Silesia, and I am forced by this 
fatal circumstance to raise the siege of Ollmiitz. But 
my officers must not suppose on this account that all is 
lost. No ; they may be assured that all shall be re- 
trieved in such a manner that the enemy shall have 
cause to remember it. The officers must impart courage 
to the men, and not suffer any murmurs. I have no 
fear that officers themselves will manifest despon- 
dency ; but, should I, contrary to expectation, perceive 
it in one or other, I shall not fail to punish it most 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 1 75 

severely. I shall now march and fight the enemy 
wherever I find hun, let him be posted where he will, 
let him have one or more batteries before him ; but — 
[nibbing his forehead with the crutch of his Spanish 
cane] I will not do so without reason and consideration. 
But I am sure that, when occasion offers, every 
officer, and every private too, will do his duty as he has 
hitherto done." 

Having thus strengthened the moral courage of his 
troops, he set about forming his plan. To deceive the 
enemy's generals, he sent orders to the commandant of 
Neisse to have bread and fodder in readiness for the 
army which was about to return by way of Troppau. 
Daiin accordingly occupied in force all the passes by 
which, as he conceived, the retreat would be executed, 
with a view to surround and intercept the whole Prus- 
sian army. Owing to these precautions, he left open 
the road to Bohemia and that country without defence, 
never dreaming that his antagonist would seek an outlet 
by difficult, almost impracticable, and circuitous ways. 
For that very reason the king chose this route. 

The Prussians commenced their retreat in the night 
of the 3d of July, with such caution and silence, that 
the enemy was not aware of their design till after it was 
accomplished. During the day, the battalions manned 
the trenches as usual, and the guns kept up a brisk fire. 
At night all the artillery, excepting five mortars and 
one useless cannon, was drawn ofi*, the flour put into 
carts, and the troops marched away : for want of con- 
veyance, it was found necessary to leave behind a small 
number of sick to the humanity of the enemy. By 
break of day, the whole Prussian army was in safety ; 



1 76 COURT AND TIMES OF 

and, though it had to encounter great difficulties in its 
further progress, yet Frederick arrived at Konigingratz 
on the 14th of July, without the loss of a single car- 
riage. Here he fixed himself in the strong camp at 
the conflux of the Adler and the Elbe; and Daun, 
who arrived eight days later, took a position near Li- 
bitschau, on the opposite side of the latfer river. 

Contrary to all expectation, Frederick, whose genius 
shone with peculiar lustre in adversity, contrived to re- 
tire without loss to Silesia. So much the more honour- 
able was his success to himself and his gallant followers. 
In his History of the Seven Years' War, he mentions 
by name, with particular commendation, marshal Keith, 
general Retzow, and lieutenant Kordshagen of the hus- 
sars. The latter, son of a peasant of Mecklenburg, 
served from the ranks upward in Zieten's hussars, and 
was on that general's recommendation made lieutenant, 
after the battle of Leuthen. Having been promoted, 
after various other services, to captain, he was one day 
invited to the king's table. The company was nume- 
rous, and the conversation turned upon the old nobility. 
" To what family do you belong?" said the king to 
Kordshagen. " My father," replied the latter, " is a 
plain peasant ; but I would not change him for any 
other in the world." — " That is a noble sentiment!" 
exclaimed Frederick, who showed on numberless occa- 
sions how highly he appreciated filial affection. It was 
this officer who furnished Engel with the subject for his 
Dutiful Son. He was deservedly ennobled by the king, 
and died with the rank of major. His family is now 
extinct ; his son, worthy of such a sire, having, as cap- 
tain of the Budorf regiment of hussars, fallen fighting, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 1 77 

with the boldness of a lion, in a rear-guiard action with 
the French near Criwitz in Mecklenburg, on the 3d of 
November, 1806. 

Great was the rejoicing in Vienna, when it was known 
that the Austrian states were once more cleared of the 
formidable foe. The empress dedicated a medal to the 
German Fabius, the commander who had conquered and 
might again conquer by delay* Daun pursued his mo- 
dest course. He made no attempt to transfer the theatre 
of the war to Silesia, where the king could leave only a 
corps of observation under the margrave Charles, while 
he himself went to meet the Russians, who had taken 
possession of Prussia, and were overrunning his northern 
provinces* 

As the court of Versailles, mortified and embittered 
by the disgrace of its arms at Rossbach, had, through 
its ambassador Stainville, afterwards duke de Choiseul, 
encouraged Maria Theresa to prosecute the war with 
vigour, so it had, through the medium of the notorious 
chevalier d'Eon, enlightened the empress Elizabeth, who 
had recovered from her illness, respecting the real cause 
of the inglorious campaign of 1757. Bestuchef was 
dismissed and brought to trial for treason, and count 
Woronzow appointed to succeed him; while Apraxin 
was recalled and sent to the fortress of !N^arva, The 
chief command of the army was given to general count 
Fermor, and he was ordered to take possession of Prussia 
again immediately. 

Fermor, a native of Livonia, of the Lutheran confes- 
sion, had been aide-de-camp to marshal Miinnich, at the 
siege of Danzig, in 1734. He was a strictly religious 
man, and kept a chaplain for himself and the Protes- 

VOL. III. N 



178 COURT AND TIMES OF 

tants about bim, who frequently preached in a large 
green tent, 120 feet long, presented to the count, toge- 
ther with 3000 ducats, by the city of Konigsberg ; at 
the further end of which was a separate apartment, fitted 
up as a sacristy ; the table was covered with red velvet, 
upon which the imperial arms were embroidered in gold. 
Fermor was, moreover, an amiable and humane man, but 
was frequently obliged to sacrifice his noble feelings to 
higher interests. 

When Apraiin, after his victory at Gross- Jagersdorf, 
retreated from Prussia to put his army into winter* 
quarters in Courland, Livonia, and Poland, he had left 
12,000 men at Memel. Here Fermor collected the 
force destined for the reoccupation of Prussia. March- 
ing from Memel on the 16th of January, 1758, he ar- 
rived in six days at Konigsberg. Fermor concluded a 
formal capitulation with that city, which was extended 
to the whole of Prussia. Totally destitute of troops, 
the country submitted without resistance. The empre^ 
considered it as her own property, and an oath of alle- 
giance to her was wrung from the authorities and the 
principal persons of the kingdom. The revenues were 
of course diverted into the Russian coffers. Bending to 
the inflexible will ef the new rulers, the people of Ko- 
nigsberg celebrated the birthday of the presumptive heir 
to the throne by fireworks, illuminations, and public fes* 
tivities, constrained to assume the mask of joy and at- 
tachment, while sorrow dwelt in their hearts. Money 
was coined with Elizabeth's portrait; her arms were 
set up in the towns, and her colours floated from every 
church-steeple. 

This state of things was, nevertheless, a signal benefit 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 179 

for the province, and so it was considered by the unfor- 
tunate inhabitants, when they recollected the horrible 
barbarities practised in the preceding year by their in- 
vaders. Very few proved untrue to their natural sove- 
reign, and many manifested their sincere loyalty to him 
by patriotic actions and sacrifices : stillj Frederick could 
not forget that they had sworn allegiance to another; 
and, regularly as he visited the different provinces of his 
dominions, he never set foot again in East Prussia, 

In the space of three months, Fennor reduced the 
whole province, excepting Danzig, under Russian au- 
thority. Reinforced by 20,000 men, originally destined 
for a corps of observation, he at length crossed the Vis- 
tula; and, that he might penetrate with the greater 
security through the New Mark to the Oder, he made 
himself master of both banks of the Wartha, not with- 
out taking formal possession of the Polish city of Posen. 
Pomerauia now lay open before him. Count Dohua, who 
had succeeded tield-marshal Lehwald in the command 
of the Prussian corps in that province, was obliged to 
abandon the Swedes whom he had shut up in Stralsund, 
in order to oppose to the bedt of his ability the destruc- 
tive torrent that was approaching the capital : but, a« 
the Russians were four times as strong as his force, he 
<M>uld not attempt any thing of oonsequence. In Bran- 
denburg and Pomerania the savage invaders threw off 
those restraints which they had imposed on themselves 
in the kingdom of Prussia. Murder and devastation 
attended their progress. All who could not get out of 
their reach were inhumanly maltreated, if not tortured 
to death. Whole villages, which they had first plun- 
dered, were burned down from the love of wanton de- 

N 2 



180 COURT AND TIMES OF 

struction. Infants were slaughtered in the arms of their 
brutally violated mothers ; infirm old men were cut in 
pieces; the churches were plundered and desecrated; 
und there was no inhumanity which these descendants 
of Tartars did not perpetrate. 

When tidings of these atrocities reached the king in 
Silesia, he resolved to hasten in person to the relief of 
his suffering subjects. In what spirit he went to meet 
his cruel enemies is apparent from his last will, which he 
delivered in writing to prince Henry, on the 10th of Au- 
gust, previously to his departure. That document was 
to this effect : — " The march which I shall commence 
to-morrow against the Russians, as well as the events 
of the war, may be attended with all sorts of accidents, 
and I might easily happen to be killed : I have therefore 
deemed it my duty to make you acquainted with my 
sentiments, as you are the guardian of our nephew, with 
unlimited powers. 

^^ 1 . If I am killed, all the armies must immediately 
take the oath of allegiance to my nephew. 

** 2. The operations must be continued with such 
energy that the enemy shall not discover any change in 
the commanding authority. 

" 3. As for the finances, I must tell you that the 
embarrassments which have recently befallen me, and, 
still more, those which I foresee, have obliged me to ac- 
cept the English subsidies, which are not payable till the 
month of October. 

" 4. With respect to politics — it is certain that, if 
we get well over this campaign, the enemy, weary and 
exhausted by the war, will be the first to wish for peace. 
Whereas, if, immediately after my death, impatience and 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 181 

too strong a desire for peace should be shown on our side, 
this might impose the necessity of accepting bad condi- 
tions, and taking the law from the conquered.'* 

Confiding the defence of Silesia to the margrave 
Charles and that of the electorate of Saxony to prince 
Henry, the king set off with 14,000 men to join count 
Dohna, who was encamped near Ctistrin, where he ar- 
rived, after a march of 1 70 miles, performed in eleven 
days. 

I Fermor had, meanwhile, appeared before Ciistrin, on 
the 1 3th of August. Seeing little probability of reducing 
the fortress, which he could not completely invest, on 
account of the proximity of Dohna, he determined to 
destroy the place. Dohna had received some reinforce- 
ments from Silesia and Saxony, and, in order to preserve 
the only bulwark of the country, had thrown four batta 
lions into the fortress, which was defended by the brave 
colonel Schach von Wittenau. On the morning of the 
15th, the Russians poured a shower of bombs and red- 
hot balls into the town, which was set on fire, and, be- 
fore night, converted into a heap of ashes. The inhabi- 
tants and the strangers, who, with their most valuable 
effects, had sought refuge here from the barbarities of 
the foreign hordes, fled towards Frankfurt. Few lives 
were lost ; but the archives and a great deal of property 
were destroyed : of the old town nothing was left stand- 
ing but the garrison-church and a single house. Still the 
Russians continued their fire till evening ; and when the 
oflScers, weary of the useless bombardment, desisted from 
it, Fermor, at nightfall, ordered the whole store of com- 
bustible balls to be thrown into the town, as there would 
be no further occasion for them that year. The confla- 



182 COURT AND TIMES OF 

gration was so fierce that the very cannon were melted 
in the arsenal. On the following day the Russians kept 
up a faint fire, and, on the 1 7th, Fermor summoned the 
conmiandant to surrender. He replied that, as the for- 
tress and the garrison had not suffered, though the town 
was a heap of rubbish, he should wait quietly to see 
what the enemy would do next. 

Rothenburg, president of the Chamber of the New 
MarJ[, who had left Ciistrin during the bombardment, 
acquainted the king, on his arriyal at Frankfurt, with 
the disaster which had befallen the town. His entry 
into that place is thus described by an officer who wit- 
nessed it. 

'^ The king, on horseback, preceded the troops, and 
the cavalry followed with drawn swords. Nobody knew 
whether it was his intention to halt there or only to 
march through. All at once, in front of the house of 
a clergyman^s widow, he cried " Halt !" and sent in an 
aide-de-camp to say that he should take up his quarters 
there for the night. The widow immediately made her 
appearance, and humbly represented that her dwelling 
was unworthy to receive so great a sovereign, as her 
apartments were very small and mean. The king raised 
her from the ground with his own hands, and told her 
kindly to give him any room, no matter what. She did so, 
and he went in. Presently he came back, leant against 
the doorpost, and gave the word of command, " March !'* 
While the troops were filing off before his majesty, I 
heard very distinctly every one of the enemy's shot fired 
against Ciistrin. I took notice that at each report the 
king took a pinch of 'snuff, and through the extraordi- 
nary firmness which distinguishes the character of this 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 183 

incomprehensible hero might be perceived a feeling of 
pity for the fate of the unfortunate town, and of anxious 
impatience to relieve it. When the troops were in their 
quarters, he took some cold refreshment with prince 
Maurice of Dessau and general Seydlitz. Orders were 
then issued for breaking up next morning ; but, in con- 
sequence of information received two hours afterwards 
from a spy, we started at two o'clock. Till that time the 
king had been sitting with the two officers just men- 
tioned at a small round table writing. About two he 
was again on horseback. So little rest did the tutelary 
angel and avenger of his people allow himself : and so 
we marched off in one corps for Ciistrin.'' 

The king himself, attended by six hussars, rode towards 
Golzow, where Dohna was posted with his corps. At 
Reitwein, he met a dyer from Ciistrin, named Klement, 
who with his wife and children, each carrying a bundle, 
was seeking a lodging for them. The king, wrapped 
in his cloak, asked him whence he came, and the dyer, 
who did not know him, gave him a simple account of 
his misfortunes. ^* Children," said Frederick, ^* I could 
not come sooner ; I will have all your houses rebuilt 
for you.'* At Golzow he found count Dohna : " Well," 
said he, " how goes it? Do the Russians stand firmly ?"— 
" Yes, your majesty," was the reply ; ^* they stand like 
walls."—** Good ! they will fall the better." He in- 
spected the troops, only 1 7,000 in number. " Your men 
are all excessively smart," said he to Dohna. " I have 
brought some with me that look like grasshoppers, but 
they can bite." 

After his retinue had overtaken him, he rode on 
towards Ciistrin, and was met by Kirchheim, the burgo- 



184 COURT AND TIMES OF 

master* Frederick inquired into the minutest parti- 
culars, and then went with him upon the ramparts, 
where they could overlook the ruins of the town. At 
the sight of this scene of desolation, he was heard to 
exclaim several times, " Incendiaries ! incendiaries !" At 
the Kirschberg battery, he met with the commandant, 
with whose defence, though most gallant, he was not 
altogether satisfied. When that officer would have made 
excuses for himself, Frederick stopped him with the 
words : " Say no more ; it is not your fault, but mine, 
for making you commandant.'' He assigned 200,000 
dollars for the immediate relief of the unfortunate in- 
habitants of Ciistrin, and subsequently expended large 
^ums in rebuilding the town. 

In the night of the 22d the Prussian army commenced 
its march down the Oder to Gustebiese ; here it crossed 
the river on the following day, and pitched its camp at 
Darmietzel, on the right bank of the MietzeL Thus 
Bomanzow, who was with the Russian cavalry at 
Schwedt, was cut off from the main army, and Fermor 
obliged to abandon the siege of Ciistrin, in order to 
give battle between Zorndorf and Quartschen. 

Before midnight on the 24th of August, the Rus- 
sians, numbering more than 50,000, formed in order of 
battle. They were drawn up in four lines, doubly 
covered by infantry on the flanks, so as to give them the 
appearance of a parallelogram, the left wing of which 
was supported upon the village of Quartschen, and the 
right extending to Zicher. The petty baggage was in 
the centre of this square ; the heavy baggage at Klein 
Kamin, about a mile off, protected by 8000 men. 

Frederick, at daybreak on the 25th, crossed the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 185 

Mietzel, and advanced behind the heath of Massin, ont 
of sight of the enemy. At length, Fermor, perceiving 
the Prussian anny, 32,000 strong, with 117 pieces of 
cannon besides the regimental artillery, approaching 
Wilkersdorf and Zomdorf, set fire to the latter village. 
This proceeding was injurious to himself, for the smoke, 
together with the cloud of dust raised by the horses, 
concealed from him all the movements of the king, who 
completely turned him and took him in the rear. Fre- 
derick might easily have made himself master of the 
baggage of the enemy, and then have forced them by a 
few marches, destitute as they would be of necessaries, 
to evacuate the country : but, like his whole army, he 
longed to bestow a signal chastisement on the ruthless 
spoilers ; and it is admitted that he ordered his troops 
to give them no quarter. 

When the Russian soldiers beheld the arms of the 
advancing Prussians glistening in the rays of the rising 
sun, they raised a tremendous shout of Prussac idiot — 
**The Prussians are coming!" The protopope, sur- 
rounded by subordinate popes, and followed by a great 
number of attendants, all bearing consecrated flags, rode 
solemnly along the inside of the square and blessed the 
troops. After this ceremony, each of the soldiers took 
a dram from a leathern bottle suspended from his belt, 
and they finished with a loud hurrah ! as a sign that 
they were ready to receive the approaching enemy. 

Silently and majestically the Prussians advanced. 
Suddenly deploying, they formed a long line in oblique 
order of battle, for Frederick's bold resolution was to 
gain the enemy's right wing and to refuse his own right. 
This unusual attack astonished his adversary. The 



186 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Prussian drums beat, and the bands played : IcK binja 
Herr in deiner Macht ! — ** Lord my God, I'm in thy 
hand !" 

The Russians awaited the king's approach motionless 
and in profound silence ; and even when his artillery 
poured a destructive fire upon their infantry not a man 
wavered : the gaps were filled from the rear ranks, and 
all appeared determined to conquer or perish. Even 
the removal of the baggage, which it was necessary to 
send with the cavalry behind the square, produced no 
confusion ; and though the Prussian infantry drew up 
their batteries still closer, and at last charged with the 
bayonet, still it was impossible to gain a foot of ground 
from the undaunted foe : nay, the grenadier battalions 
under general Manteuffel fell back about eleven o'clock 
in great confusion, after a sanguinary conflict of two 
hours* The right wing of the first line, under general 
Kanitz, which should have supported them, had, in com- 
ing up round Zomdorf, borne too much to the right, 
and was not in time to assist the fatigued combatants. 
The Russian infantry then burst with wild impetuosity 
from its ranks in the square, and dashed, along with 
their cavalry, in pursuit of the Prussians : they were 
soon in a state of inexpressible confusion. The Prus- 

• 

sian cavalry under Seydlitz now poured with irresistible 
fury from all sides upon that of the Russians, drove it 
back upon its own infantry, and cut it in pieces, in spite 
of the most desperate resistance. What tended to 
aggravate the confusion in a frightful degree was the 
indiscipline of the Russian soldiers, who seized all the 
spirituous liquors belonging to the sutlers. Intreaties, 
threats, punishments, were unavailing. When the officers 



r" 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 187 

broke the casks in pieces^ the men flung themselres on 
the ground to lap the favourite beverage out of the 
dust — ^nay, they even turned with rage upon their own 
officers, especially the Germans. 

Thus the whole Russian right wing was dispersed. 
A short respite was succeeded by renewed efiforts. The 
king supported the left wing on Zomdorf, and, as Kanitz 
had deranged his original plan, advanced with the right. 
The Russian cavalry again came on with extraordinary 
courage, but were repulsed by the regiments of Nonnann 
and the prince of Prussia. At the same time the king's 
left wing, composed of Dolma's troops, was thrown into 
great confusion, and fled precipitately to Wilkersdorf. 
Seydlitz threw himself into the gap, drove the enemy^s 
horse and foot into the marshes of Quartschen, sup- 
ported by several regiments — ^all choice Brandenburg 
troops, which had come from Silesia. General confusion 
prevailed among the vanquished Russians, but they fled 
not, neither indeed could they flee, for Frederick had 
broken down all the bridges. If blind despair actuated 
the one party, the other was inspired by revenge on 
account of the devastations committed by the enemy in 
his country. The mutual slaughter between individuals 
continued till evening. Several Russian generals then 
strove to rally a little band and to drive the conquerors 
from the field of battle. Thus the bloody conflict was 
renewed and continued till after dark. The last attacks 
Frederick had made in person, and he had been so near 
to the fire of the Russians and to the Cossacks, that 
his aides-de-camp, count Schwerin and Oppen, were 
taken almost close to him. Owing to the tremendous 
dust, the smoke from the powder, and the great heat of 



188 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the day, it was impossible to recognize any person's fea- 
tures, so that the troops knew the king by his voice 
alone. 

Both parties had fought like heroes. Next morning, 
the Russians were again drawn up in a square behind 
Zomdorf. By daybreak, Frederick reconnoitred the 
enemy. His army, in order of battle, occupied the 
ground on which the Russian left wing was placed at the 
beginning of the engagement. The Russians manifested 
a disposition to renew the conflict ; but ammunition ran 
short, and, after a cannonade of four hours, all was quiet. 
Fermor then made an implied confession of his defeat by 
soliciting an armistice for a few days to bury the dead. 
" The king has won the battle," replied Dohna, " and 
he will see to it that the dead are buried, and the wounded 
taken care of." At nightfall the Russians commenced 
their retreat, followed by the king as far as Blumberg. 
Romanzow, who had honourably distinguished himself 
by the excellent discipline which he had maintained 
during his march, retired from Schwedt and Stargard to 
Poland. Daun, who had despatched Loudon to count 
Fermor, also wrote him a letter which fell into Fre- 
derick's hands, advising him not to risk a battle with a 
crafty enemy, whom he did not yet know, but only to 
wait till he (Daun) should have executed his enterprise 
in Saxony. The king answered it himself in these words : 
*' You are quite right to warn general Fermor to be upon 
his guard against a crafty and artful enemy, whom you 
know better than he does : for he has stood his ground 
and been beaten." 

In no battle during the whole war was so much blood 
spilt as in this, for neither party would give or accept quar- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 189 

ter, and the few prisoners made were taken in the succeed- 
ing days. The Russians lost 941 officers, among whom were 
five generals, and 20,590 men ; the Prussians 324 offi- 
cers, and 11,061 men. They took 103 pieces of cannon, 
and 27 pair of colours and standards, but lost 26 of their 
own guns. The king acknowledged, with a sigh, that 
the Russians were easier to kill than to conquer. It was 
not till the year 1826 that a monument in commemora- 
tion of the battle was erected on the Friedrichsberg near 
Zorndorf. It bears this inscription : " Here stood Fre- 
derick the Great in thebattleof the 26th of August, 1758." 

" Heaven has granted your majesty another glorious 
day," said Sir Andrew Mitchell to the king on the field 
of battle. " But for A^»^," replied the king, pointing to 
Seydlitz, " we should be in a bad plight." Modest as he 
was brave, Seydlitz declined the honour so deservedly 
paid him by the king, saying, " Your majesty's cavalry 
won the victory, and has rendered itself worthy of the 
greatest rewards : but the garde du corps, under captain 
Wakenitz, has done wonders ; he in particular has merited 
thinks and recompence." That officer was accordingly 
promoted to lieutenant-colonel. 

The second Sunday after this hard-earned victory was 
kept as a day of thanksgiving throughout the whole coun- 
try with the usual solemnities. The sermon delivered on 
the occasion by Sack, chaplain to the court, was trans- 
lated into English, and published in London, where Fre- 
derick's victories were celebrated with as much enthusi- 
asm as in his own capital. 

It is right to observe that the Russians laid claim to 
the victory as well as the king. Fermor sent couriers to 
bis empress with intelligence of the happy event, which 



190 COURT AND TIMES OF 

cost him a great part of his army and the results of the 
whole campaign. As he asserted, in corroboration of his 
claim, that he had kept the field of battle, I think it right 
to introduce here the testimony of Peter Iwanowitsch 
Panin, one of his own generals. This officer confirmed 
the aboTe assertion with this marginal observation : 
" Those who kept the field were either killed, wounded, 

or drunk." 

The Russians in general, however, fought with the 
greater obstinacy for their intoxication ; and, exaspe- 
rated as were their antagonists, the battle was for this 
reason the more sanguinary. There were found Russians 
who had fallen upon wounded Prussians, and were man- 
gling them with their teeth, when they themselves were 
unable to use their arms and their adversaries to stir. 
The Cossacks, in particular, who threw off all military 
restraint, and after the battle plundered the dead and 
wounded in the rear of the Prussians, showed a savage- 
ness and cruelty of which civilized nations can form no 
conception. These were, of course, hunted down like 
wild beasts, and despatched without mercy. At Quart- 
schen more than a thousand of them were buried under 
the falling houses ; and, when they attempted to escape 
from the burning buildings, they were either driven back 
into them or cut in pieces. 

' Most justly did Frederick express his indignation to 
the captive Russian generals for their inhuman devasta- 
tion of his country. When Soltikof, Czemichef, Man* 
teuffel, Tiefenhausen, and Sievers were presented to him 
on the field of battle, he said to them, " I am sorry that 
I have no Siberia to send you to, that you might be treated 
as my officers are treated in your country, so you must 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 191 

go to the cellars of Custrin/' They were accordingly 
confined in the casemates for three days, and then quar- 
tered in the houses of citizens in the suburb. Shortly 
afterwards, the king rode with a numerous retinue through 
the place, and all the Russian generals ran to the windows 
to see the greatest captain of the age. Frederick took 
not the least notice of them, but turned his face the other 
way. 

Fermor stopped with his army behind the Plon, near 
Damm in Farther Pomerania, to cover general Palmbach, 
who was besieging Colberg, a place most conveniently 
situated for the supply of the Russian forces in Germany. 
Though provided with very scanty resources, the town 
was so gallantly defended by the brave major von der 
Heyde, with 700 militia, assisted by the patriotic bur- 
ghers, that, even after the loss of the covered way, all the 
assaults of the Russians were foiled. After a siege of 
twenty-nine days, they abandoned the enterprize, and 
their whole army retired to winter-quarters in Poland 
and Prussia. 

If the Russians spared the province of East Prussia 
those horrors which they inflicted on other parts of Fre- 
derick's dominions ; if it was considered by their empress 
as a permanent acquisition of her crown; and if its inha^ 
bitants were forced to swear allegiance to her as their 
sovereign with their lips — they afforded abundant proofs 
that they still treasured in their hearts the same devoted 
attachment as ever to their legitimate monarch. Thus 
Domhardt, director of the chamber of Gumbinnen, who 
continued to keep up an uninterrupted correspondence 
with the king, contrived to save the royal stud at Tra- 
kehnen ; he concealed, in like manner, part of the public 



1 92 COURT AND TIMES OF 

revenues, which he either reserved till he could safely 
transmit them to his master, or laid them out for his 
benefit. He purchased com in the country, and sent it 
to Colberg for the Prussian army; he remitted 100,000 
dollars to Frederick's head-quarters by the hands of Ka- 
peller, a loyal stocking- weaver of Gumbinnen ; and when, 
after Elisabeth's death, he went thither himself, he carried 
with him 300,000 ducats as an offering from the province 
of Prussia. It is known, too, that spirited young men 
of all classes passed by stealth through the Russian army, 
at the peril of their lives, to join that of the king, with 
Abbt's celebrated work *^ On Death for our Country" in 
their popkets. Many wealthy persons quitted their places 
of abode to their infinite prejudice, and would rather risk 
every thing than take the oath of allegiance. The depu- 
ties of the departmentof Gumbinnen, who were summoned 
to Insterburg to take that oath, shuddered at the idea of 
renouncing their allegiance to their lawful sovereign, and 
somewhat pacified their consciences by taking the re- 
quired oath with a glove upon the right hand, of which 
the three fingers that were to be raised had been previ- 
ously stuffed. Several other ofiBeers of that department 
besides Domhardt were every moment in danger of losing 
liberty and life. 

The clergy strove in their sermons to comfort their 
hearers with the hopes of better times. Those of Konigs- 
berg, who delayed their submission, were in consequence 
received most ungraciously by Fermor. Amoldt, preacher 
at the chapel royal, was required, after the battle of 
Kunersdorf, to deliver a thanksgiving sermon for the 
victory claimed by the Russians. As he had not time to 
write a new sermon, he selected one that he had composed 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 193 

many years before on Rom. xi., 22, 23 : " Behold, there- 
fore, the goodness and severity of God ; on them which 
fell severity, but toward thee goodness, if thou continue 
in his goodness. . . .God is able to graff them in again." 
Prefixing a new exordium suitable for the occasion, he 
took for his theme the duties of conquerors and of the 
conquered. He told the former — Korff, the governor, 
and many of the Russian generals being present — ^that, 
according to the words of the text, they ought to consi- 
der the goodness of God, which frequently gave prospe- 
rity to those who were not deserving of it ; that they 
ought not to be haughty but kind to the conquered and 
to prisoners. To the conquered he said that they ought 
to consider the severity of God, but not let their courage 
sink, for God could raise them, could graff them in again ; 
and that they should apply to themselves the passage in 
Micah vii., 8-11: "Rejoice not against me, mine 

enemy ; when I fall, I shall arise Then she that is 

mine enemy shall see it, and shame shall cover her .... 
now shall she be trodden down as the mire of the streets." 
Immediately after the service, Arnoldt was put under 
arrest in his own house ; a sentry was placed before the 
door, and an officer in the room with him. He was not 
allowed knife or fork, and other similar precautions were 
adopted. It was owing solely to the warm intercession 
of Korff, the governor, that he was not exiled to Siberia. 
After a long confinement, he was required to make a 
public apology from the pulpit. This he did in the fol- 
lowing terms : that, being informed that he had offended 
his most gracious sovereign, the empress of Russia, by 
his last thanksgiving sermon, he hereby publicly declared 
that such had not been his intention. 

VOL. III. o 



194 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Another clergyman, who was expected to preach on 
a Greek church-festival, according to the castom on 
such occasions, told his congregation that he had been 
commanded by the high authorities to celebrate the 
festival of St. Alexander. " This may have been a 
very good man," continued the preacher, " but I know 
nothing of him, neither do you know him. Let us 
therefore take for our consideration this day the follow- 
ing text of the Holy Scripture, (11. Tim., iv. 14): 
" Alexander the coppersmith did me much evil : the 
Lord reward him according to his works." 

Frederick took a sort of revenge in Saxony for the 
proceedings of his imperial enemy in Prussia. In a 
letter which he wrote during his march to Silesia be- 
fore the battle of Leuthen to general Finck in Dresden, 
he ordered him to make the magistrates and authorities 
of that capital take an oath of allegiance to the king 
of Prussia, as he meant thenceforward to treat the whole 
electorate in the same manner as the czarina should 
treat the kingdom of Prussia. Finck, as he relates in 
the manuscript memoirs of his life, repaired accordingly 
to the town-house, where the assembled magistrates 
made all sorts of remonstrances against the requisition. 
The commandant persisted. He surrounded the town- 
house with troops, and on the third day the magistrates 
begged to be liberated, promising to take the oath as 
they were forced to it. Accordingly, they swore alle- 
giance to the king of Prussia ; and the same was done 
at Wittenberg, Leipzig, Pirna, and other towns of 
Saxony. Frederick was severely censured for a pro- 
ceeding which in an enemy passed without remark. 

The great and increasing number of prisoners of war 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 195 

began to be dangerous. The Russians in Ciistrin, nearly 
twice as numerous as the garrison, entered, soon after 
the battle of Zorndorf, into a conspiracy for regaining 
their liberty. Three thousand privates, who were shut 
up at night in the casemates, and earned a small sum 
in the day by clearing away the ruins of the houses 
destroyed by the fire, were to rebel on a given signal, 
to fall upon the garrison, composed of a battalion of 
militia^ to make themselves masters of the 103 pieces 
of cannon taken at Zorndorf and planted in the market- 
place, and then to join either the Russians at Stargard, 
or the Austrians at Guben. The plot was discovered 
only the day before that fixed for its execution ; the 
guards were doubled; the Russian officers were put 
under arrest ; and a lieutenant Liiders, a native of Cour- 
land, was broke upon the wheel by command of the 
king. 



o 2 



196 COURT AND TIMES OF 



CHAPTER XXXII. 

Campaign of 1758, continued — Frederick repairs to Saxony — Operations 
of Daun^ the Austrian commander-in-chief — Battle of Hochkirch — 
Death of Field-marshal Keith — Behaviour of Frederick — Death of the 
Margravine of Bayreuth — Efficacy of Occupation in alleviating mental 
afflictions — Frederick, joined by Prince Henry, enters Silesia^ relieves 
the fortress of Neisse— Gallant defence of General Treskow, and noble 
behaviour of his Wife — Daun marches to Saxony, and threatens Dres- 
den — Decisive Conduct of Count Schmettau^ the commandant — On the 
approach of Frederick, the Austrians retire to Bohemia — Count Schla- 
berndorf, Directin^-Minister of Silesia — Distinctions conferred on Daun 
for the unprofitable victory of Hochkirch — Sentiments of the Pope on 
the occasion — Frederick's Satires on his Enemies-— His Resources for 
prosecuting the War, 

As Frederick, after his victory at Leuthen, was 
obliged to leave Daun to his fate, so, after the severe 
conflict in the New Mark, he was forced to leave the 
Russians to theirs. New events required his presence 
in another quarter. 

On the 21st of August, Loudon left Gorlitz with 7 or 
8000 men for Lower Lusatia, to support the operations 
of the Russians. The «6mall and ancient fortress of 
Peiz, situated on a branch of the Spree, fell into his 
hands, but in a way not at all discreditable to the 
Prussian arms. When the Austrians would have entered 
without any particular ceremony, the garrison, consist- 
ing of fifty old invalids, repulsed them with the loss of 
some of their men. The commander of the assailants 
then summoned the place in due form. The command- 
ant, before he would negociate, proposed to send two 
of his officers to ascertain whether the enemy's force 



J 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 197 

was sufficient to justify a summons. The Austrians 
agreed to this condition ; the officers returned, and at- 
tested their great superiority. The commandant then 
capitulated, and obtained for his fifty veterans free 
egress to Berlin, leaving the victors nothing but a few 
pieces of cannon, most of them very old. 

Loudon then scoured the country between Crossen 
and Frankfurt, with as much cruelty as the Cossacks. 
At Beeskow he was met by duke Francis of Brunswick, 
who had come from Tamsel, and who drove him back 
to Liibben. Margrave Charles sent Ziethen against 
him ; and, obliged himself by Daun's movement upon 
Lusatia to quit the camp of Griissau, he marched to 
Lowenberg, and encamped near Plagwitz to cover 
Silesia. Frederick now left count Dohna to oppose the 
Russians, and with the same troops that he had brought 
from Silesia he hastened to Saxony. Here prince 
Henry had in July encamped near Tschopa, opposing 
the troops of the empire under the count palatine of 
Deuxponts, and an attached Austrian corps under Had- 
dik, with whom he had kept up a regular petty war 
with considerable success. In the middle of August, 
Daun too arrived with 20,000 men at Pilnitz. Henry 
sent this intelligence to his brother, who rapidly ap- 
preached, and summoned Keith and margrave Charles 
from Silesia, while Fouque, with 4000 men, guarded 
the Bohemian passes, and kept the enemy out of the 
country on that side. 

The king's corps quitted Blumberg on the 2d of 
September, and on the 9th arrived at Dobritz, near 
Grossenhain, where he was joined by Keith and the 
margrave Charles. Their united force encamped on the 



198 COURT AND TIMES OF 

12 th between Bocksdorf and Reichenberg, where the 
king had a conference with prince Henry to concert 
future operations. He broke up the same evening, to 
occupy the heights of Weissig before the arrival of 
the enemy, who had not availed himself of Frederick's 
absence to attempt any thing decisive. 

Daun was encamped in an unassailable position, near 
the castle of Stolpen, when he received tidings of the 
battle of Zomdorf. He was meditating an attack on 
prince Henry, who was judiciously posted between 
Maxen and Gamig, when, on the 1 3th, Frederick drew 
up his little force only two or three miles from the 
Austrians, on the heights between Dresden and Stolpen. 
The enemy decided on defending himself, and was driven 
out of Bischofswerda, so that the communication be- 
tween Dresden and Bautzen was open to the Prussians. 

Apprehensive of being separated by the king's mas- 
terly manoeuvres from his magazines at Zittau, Daun 
quitted Stolpen in the night of the 6th of October, 
and immediately chose a still better position not far 
from Lobau, where his right wing was supported upon 
the Stromberg, near the little town of Weissenberg, 
and the left on the woody heights of Hochkirch, to cut 
off the king's communication with Silesia, where gene- 
rals count Harsch and the marquis de Ville were be- 
sieging the fortresses of Neisse and Kosel. When Daun 
had left Stolpen, Frederick quitted his position, marched 
with his whole army to Bautzen, and on the 10th of 
October took a position so astonishingly bold, between 
Hochkirch and Rodewitz, that Marwitz, the quarter- 
master, declined to mark out the camp, for which he 
was put under arrest. The Prussian generals them- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 199 

selves disapproved the dangerous position ; prince Mau- 
rice remonstrated ; but the king persevered in his pur- 
pose, gave directions himself where the camp should be 
pitched, and had it marked out by lieutenant Marquardt 
of the engineers, under the fire of the Austrians. 

The obstinacy and security of Frederick on this occa- 
sion are said to have been the result of false intelligence 
transmitted to him by major Soldner, a spy of his in the 
Austrian camp. It is related that his reports were 
usually conveyed to Frederick in a basket of eggs, 
among which was a hollow shell containing the letter of 
the spy. It chanced one day that Daun met with the 
messenger, laid the eggs under requisition for his own 
use, and thus discovered the treachery of Soldner, whom 
he pardoned, on condition that his future reports should 
contain no particulars but such as the marshal should 
furnish. In this manner the king was prepossessed with 
the idea that Daun was only desirous to secure ^himself 
from attack, while he completed his preparations for 
retreating to Bohemia. 

The two armies were only a cannon-shot apart, sepa- 
rated by defiles and ravines. Keith, who had stayed 
behind at Bautzen, to cover a convoy of flour expected 
from Dresden, followed the king on the 11th of October, 
and was not a little surprised to see the bold position, 
exposed all round to the enemy's cannon. " If the 
Austrians leave us alone here," said he, " they deserve 
to be hanged." — "It is to be hoped," replied Frederick, 
smiling, " that they are more afraid of us than of the 
gallows." The Austrians, on the other hand, when they 
saw the king in broad day pitch his camp on a spot 
commanded on all sides by their guns, and only a cannon- 



200 COURT AND TIMES OF 

shot from their front, exclaimed : *^ We all deserve to 
be broke, from the field-marshal downwards, if we let 
this bravado of the Prussians pass unpunished." But 
Daun had no mind either to be hanged or broke. A 
liight attack was the unusual counsel of his camp, and 
he had recourse besides to artifice. On the 11th he 
employed troops in felling trees in the wood opposite to 
the Prussian right wing, and in throwing up redoubts 
and small forts here and there along the front to in- 
crease the king's security, and to make it appear that 
his only object was to protect himself and to bar the 
road to Silesia against the enemy. But, in the night of 
that and the following day, his light troops annoyed 
the Prussian pickets. Frederick was the more certain 
of his point. 

At length, in the night of the 1 3th, his dilsttory foe, 
rousing himself to deal what Frederick afterwards 
called a " malicious blow," broke up with a portion of 
his army in three columns. The watch-fires were kept 
burning, and the air resounded as usual with the strokes 
of the axes. By three in the morning of the 1 4th, the 
enemy was before the Prussian camp, ready to attack on 
all sides. Daun headed his troops in person. He waited 
till not a sound was to be heard. The columns advanced, 
about half-past four, from the wood between Somsig 
and Wuischke, upon the right flank of the king. It was 
moonlight, but a dense fog enveloped the cautiously 
approaching assailants. A musquet-shot was heard — 
another, and another ; a Prussian post had perceived the 
heads of the columns. The battle-cry rang through 
Frederick's camp, while Hungarians and Walloons, all 
grenadiers, stormed the heights of Hochkirch, and in 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 201 

the first moment of alarm made themselves masters 
of the Prussian artillery, but not without a severe 
struggle. 

The king, who had his head-quarters in the centre of 
the army at Rodewitz, considered the attack as not at 
all serious. Riding up, on hearing the noise, to the 
infantry regiment of Wedel, which was encamped in the 
middle of the line, and seeing the men running to arms, 
he asked : " What are you about, lads ? It is nothing — 
only those scoundrels the Croats." When convinced of 
his mistake by the cannon-balls which began to fall in 
the camp, he ordered one regiment after another to 
advance to the succour of the right wing. The Prussian 
soldiers now displayed the fruits of their consummate 
discipline, and formed with a celerity and courage that 
were truly astonishing. A blind carnage ensued in 
the dark, almost without distinction of friend or foe. 

A desperate conflict took place about Hochkirch, the 
possession of which was equally important to the king, 
in case either of victory or defeat. Keith was directed 
to maintain the village .to the last extremity. At the 
first reports of the cannon, the gallant marshal had 
leaped from his couch, and, on hearing that the post of 
Hochkirch was overpowered, he hastened thither. He 
rallied his troops, drove out the enemy, but was himself 
obliged to give way. His men fell fast ; he sent for re- 
inforcements. His troops were dispersed ; seizing a 
drum, he strove to rally them, when a ball pierced his 
breast. He sank to the ground, and an English volun- 
teer named Tibay and his runner were the only persons 
near the hero when he expired. As the enemy's grena- 
diers kept advancing, his body was left on the field. A 



1 



202 COURT AND TIMES OF 

cannon-ball carried off the head of prince Francis of 
Brunswick ; prince Maurice was wounded and taken 
prisoner ; and the king had a horse killed under him. 

The flames of Hochkirch, fired by the Austrian gra- 
nadoes, now illumined the scene of carnage. The 
valour of the Prussians was obliged to yield to superior 
numbers. At seven o'clock the fog began to disperse, 
and Frederick was enabled to perceive his situation. He 
sent the last troops of the centre upon Hochkirch, and 
major MoUendorf to occupy the heights of the pass of 
Drehsa, which was his only line of retreat ; but, as 
nothing could be accomplished at Hochkirch, the battle 
nearly ceased at that point. 

The attack of the Austrians on the Prussian front had 
been repulsed. Daun's right wing, which, according to 
his disposition, was not to engage till his attack had 
succeeded, now came up. The Prussians fought with 
such intrepidity that, for an hour, the victory here was 
doubtful. But, as part of the troops, much weakened at 
Zorndorf, had left the flank exposed and fled, the enemy 
got into the rear of the great battery and took it. 
Content with this success, the Austrians allowed the 
Prussian left wing, under Retzow, to join the king. 
Seydlitz covered the retreat ; and about ten o'clock Fre- 
derick, dreaded by the enemy, quitted the field of bat- 
tle, " in such order and with as much coolness and sang 
froid as if he had been on the parade," and took a posi- 
tion about two miles from Hochkirch. 

Meanwhile a most sanguinary conflict was continued 
for the possession of the churchyard. It was defended 
by the second battalion of the regiment of margrave 
Charles, commanded by major Lange, with an intrepedity 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 203 

rarely paralleled. Against this post Daun sent the 
flower of his infantry ; but Lange and lieutenant 
Marwitz maintained their ground unsupported, with 
600 men against 22 grenadier battalions of the Impe- 
rialists, from half-past ten, when the general engage- 
ment ceased, till two o'clock. At length this Spartan 
band, " which," as Cogniazo, an Austrian general, ob- 
serves, "formed, as it were, the main dam against 
the flood pouring upon the Prussians on this side," 
seeing the retreat of their army secured, and having 
expended all their ammunition, attempted to fight their 
way through the host of their foes. They were instantly 
surrounded, and, after a brief but bloody struggle hand 
to hand, most of them were killed and the remainder 
made prisoners. 

Daun had no thought of pursuing his retiring foe, 
and moved in the evening, after his bootless victory, to 
his old camp. He had taken 101 pieces of cannon, 28 
pair of colours, two standards, and most of the tents. 
The loss of the Prussians, in killed, wounded, and mis- 
sing amounted to 8850, including 246 officers. The 
Austrians purchased their triumph with the sacrifice of 
nearly 6000 men, including 314 oflScers, among whom 
were five generals. 

The Prussians had to lament the loss of many a dis- 
tinguished leader besides the veteran marshal Keith and 
prince Francis of Brunswick, who were left dead on the 
field. Lord Dover, whose accuracy, indeed, is not al- 
ways unimpeachable, has given in his Life of Frederick 
some particulars concerning the former, which, though 
I have not found any mention of them elsewhere, I will 
venture to transcribe. He says that the marshal had 



204 COURT AND TIMES OF 

received a dangerous wound about eight o'clock, but 
refused to quit the field ; and that at nine a second ball 
in his breast despatched him. " His body," continues 
his lordship, " was afterwards stripped by the Austrian 
stragglers, and lay undistinguished among the slain. It 
had been carried, with many others, into the little church 
of the village of Hochkirch, where it lay with a Croat's 
cloak over it. Marshal Daun, accompanied by Lacy and 
other officers, happened to enter the church. Lacy ap- 
proached the body, removed the cloak, looked at it with 
great emotion, and said : * It is my father's best friend, 
Keith.' The old marshal Lacy and Keith had served 
together in the Russian army, and the young Lacy had 
been the pupil of the latter. He recognized the body 
from the scar of a dangerous wound on the thigh, which 
the marshal had received at the siege of Orzakow. At 
the sight of his old master, a naked and deserted corpse, 
Lacy burst into tears ; nor could Daun and the other 
officers present refrain from a similar expression of feel- 
ing. While they were thus contemplating all that re- 
mained of this distinguished warrior, a Croat made his 
appearance, dressed in the marshal's uniform, with his 
star and riband. Daun inquired how he came by these. 
* I took them,' he replied, ' from the fellow who lies 
yonder, whom I killed and stripped, and have given 
him my cloak in return.' " Daun immediately gave 
orders that the corpse should be interred with the 
honours due to Keith's rank and valour ; but in 1759 
the king caused his body to be conveyed to Berlin, and 
deposited in the vault of the garrison church there, and 
afterwards had a monument erected to him in the Wil- 
helm's Platz in that capital ; and, about the year 1776, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 205 

a monument to the memory of this diBtinguished officer 
was erected in the church of Hochkirch by his kinsman 
Sir Robert Keith, then envoy from England to the court 
of Vienna. 

The gallant Maurice of Dessau was so severely 
wounded that he was obliged to quit the army, to which 
he never returned, and he died in Berlin, of cancer in 
the lip, in 1760. Generals Retzow, Krockow, and Geist, 
fell victims to the effects of the hardships and wounds 
of that fatal day. The brave major Lange and lieu- 
tenant Marwitz, who had not evacuated the churchyard 
to general Odonel till the retreat was secured, were 
honourably sent, mortally wounded, after the king's 
army, by the enemy. " The second battalion of mar- 
grave Charles," said the king when he inspected his regi- 
ments, " acquired yesterday extraordinary honour; never 
shall I forget its behaviour, but I am grieved for the 
gallant major Lange ;" and in his posthumous works the 
king has left a well-deserved memorial of him, in testi- 
mony " how much may be accomplished by an individual 
with little." 

During this murderous conflict, Frederick had shown 
his usual recklessness of personal danger. As soon as 
the fog cleared away sufficiently, he was observing 
through a telescope the movements of the enemy, whose 
artillery was keeping up a heavy fire. A cannon-ball 
fell so close to him on his right as to cover him with 
dust and mould, and to cause his horse to start aside. 
Angry at the interruption, he struck his animal with his 
stick, till he had made it move back to the former posi- 
tion. No sooner had he again raised the glass to his 
eye than a second ball fell on the same spot, and the 



L 



206 COURT AND TIMES OF 

horse leaped aside as before. Some of the king's aides- 
de-camp then begged him to retire. He looked at them 
sternly for a moment, and then said with a smile : " As 
far as I can see, the enemy are firing right and left — ^here, 
there, and every where. They may hit me in another 
place as well as here, and behind my army I should be 
of no use." He continued to observe the enemy for 
some time through the glass, and then rode away. 

Though deeply moved after the battle by the sight of, 
his thinned regiments, he manifested the utmost serenity 
and composure. " My dear Golz," said he to the ge- 
neral of that name, " we were wakened rather roughly ; 
but I will repay those gentry in broad day for their in- 
civility." As the remnant of a regiment which had 
suffered most severely was passing, with the gunners at 
its head, he called out to them : " Gunners, what have 
you done with your cannon?" — "The devil fetched 
them in the night," replied one of them. " Then we 
will take them from him by day, won't we, grenadiers ?" 
rejoined the monarch with a smile. " Ay, that we will," 
answered a grenadier, " and with interest too." — " I'll 
be sure to be along with you," said the king. The only 
order issued on giving the parole was this : " The regi- 
ments will be supplied with fresh powder. The men 
must pass the night in their clothes." 

How the king's mind was engaged immediately after 
the disaster at Hochkirch is evident from the account 
given by Le Cat, who found him in the evening reading 
Bourdaloue's Sermons. As, after the disaster at KoUin, 

« 

Frederick was visited by a severe family affliction, so he 
had to mourn another loss after the surprise at Hoch- 
kirch. On the very same day, and at the same hour 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 207 

that his arms were suffering this humiliating reverse, 
expired his favourite sister, the margravine of Bayreuth. 
When the news of her death reached him, he was so de- 
pressed that he uttered not a word. Next morning, 
when Le Cat came to him, Frederick handed to him a 
roll of black-edged paper : it was a sermon which he 
had written upon a text of Scripture applicable to his 
situation. Le Cat strove to cheer his master, who 
thanked him for his sympathy, and assured him that he 
would neglect no means for extricating himself from his 
embarrassments, significantly adding : " At any rate, I 
have always something at hand to put an end to the 
tragedy." In these words he alluded to the poison in 
the form of pills which he carried about him to be used 
in the last extremity, especially in case he had chanced 
to be taken prisoner. He would then have deemed it 
his duty to die for the welfare of his country and his 
family. That trial, however, he was spared ; and the 
pressure of all other disasters was so momentary, that 
despair durst scarcely approach him; for all the re- 
sources of his great mind were instantly called forth to 
repair errors and to remedy misfortunes ; and never was 
that greatness so conspicuous as in the most critical 
ciFcumstanc^ 

We have seen what a deep interest Frederick took in 
the joys and sorrows of those who were near and dear 
to his heart. The margravine of Bayreuth was his oldest 
playmate and companion. We have seen their mutual 
attachment from infancy, and the tribulations which 
they had to endure together in their youth. We have 
seen, too, what alarm and anxiety she felt for her adored 
brother in the perilous situation in which he was placed 



208 COURT AND TIMES OF 

by the formidable powers leagued against him. Her 
health was too delicate to support her long under these 
solicitudes. Frederick applied to Voltaire, with whom, 
as we know, the princess had corresponded, for a tribute 
worthy of her memory. He sent the king a short poem. 
" I have received your verses," replied Frederick ; " pro- 
bably my instructions were not sufficiently explicit. I 
wish for a first-rate composition. All Europe must de- 
plore with me a virtue that was too little known. It is 
not requisite that my name should be mentioned ; I wish 
the whole world to know that she is worthy of immor- 
tality, and you to confer it on her. It is said that 
Apelles alone was worthy to paint Alexander ; and I 
consider that your pen only is worthy to render this 
service to her whom I shall never cease to mourn." 
Voltaire, in consequence, wrote his well-known Ode on 
the margravine. 

Fifteen years afterwards, Frederick's sorrow for this 
irreparable loss had not subsided. He writes to Vol- 
taire — " I approve the tears which you shed in calling 
to mind my sister with the duchess of Wirtemberg [the 
only child of the margravine] ; I should certainly have 
wept too, had I been present at the affecting scene. 
Whether it be from weakness, or excessive fondness, I 
know not, but I have lately done for this sister what 
Cicero thought of doing for his TuUia, and erected a 
temple of friendship in honour of her. At the further 
end is her statue, and on each of the columns a medal- 
lion representing one of those heroes who have gained 
celebrity by the warmth of their friendship. The tem- 
ple stands in a shrubbery in my garden, and I often go 
thither to muse on my many losses and on the happiness 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 209 

which I once enjoyed." This elegant little structure of 
marble, consisting of a low dome, supported by eight 
columns of the Corinthian order, still forms an extremely 
pleasing object from many points of the gardens of Sans 
Souci, 

I have learned from manifold experience that, under 
all sorrows, all mental afflictions, which can befal a man, 
it is fortunate for him to have occupations, duties, to 
which he is forced to attend*; and I am thankful to 
Heaven that such has been my lot in life. In a letter 
from Frederick to d'Alembert, on occasion of the death 
of his friend, mademoiselle de I'Espinasse, I find the 
great king expressing precisely the same sentiment in 
regard to the period of his life of which I am now 
treating. " Reason," he says, " ouffht to teach us to 
Moder.^ d. tb.. i, ;«,a™;.t in ol tee,i„s., but not 
to extinguish what is human in our bosoms. Deplore 
your loss, then, my dear friend. I will admit that the 
loss of friendship is irreparable, and that every one who 
is capable of appreciating the value of things must deem 
you worthy to possess friends, because you are suscep- 
tible of love. But, as it is beyond the power of men, 
and even of gods, to alter what is past, you must, on 
the other hand, think of preserving yourself for your 
remaining friends, that you may not cause them the 
mortal anguish which you are now feeling. I have lost 
friends, male and female ; I have lost five or six of them, 
and grief had well nigh broken my heart. It so hap- 
pened that I suffered this loss during the different wars 
in which I have been engaged, when I was obliged to 
attend incessantly to various arrangements ; and it was 
these indispensable duties that, by diverting my mind 

VOL. HI. p 



210 COUBT AND TIMES OF 



from its sorrows, probably preTented it firom sinking 
under tbem. I wish most sinoerel j tbat I bad some 
Tery difficult problem for yon to sotre, tbat this task 
might force yon to think of something else." 

Snch a problem for the king was the night of Hoch- 
kiroh, with its conseqn^iees, as well as its canses. In 
the first place, Xeisse, a most important fortress, de- 
manded instant succour : de Y ille and Harsch wero in- 
Testing it, and its fiill seemed to be a necessary result of 
the victory of the Anstrians. As Fennor had retreated 
to Poland, the king ordered general Wedel from the 
Ukermark, and count Dohna from Pomerania, to march 
to Saxony ; and summoned his brother Henry to join 
him, with 6,000 men from the army near Dresden. 

While Frederick was makmg these arrangements near 
Bautzen, Daun, who, after the battle of Hochkirch, had 
reoccnpied his former camp, adyanced and took post 
opposite to him: but his army ceased to appear for- 
midable, when its leader entrenched himself to the teeth, 
under the idea that the king would attack him, to make 
himself master of the road to Silesia. Accordingly, he 
wrote to Harsch — ** Gro on quietly with your siege ; I 
am stopping the king : he is cut off from Silesia, and, if 
he attacks me, yon may expect good news." 

On the 21st, prince Henry joined the king with his 
corps, bringing artillery and proTisions of every kind ; 
and, late in the eyening of the S4th, the whole army 
turned Daun's right wing, and reached Gorlitz, followed 
by the Anstrians. Some skmnishing took place between 
their adyanced-guard under Loudon and the Prussian 
rear-guard under prince Henry ; but Frederick pushed 
on, crossed the Queis, and entered Sflesia. While he 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 2 1 1 

pursued the route to Lowenberg, Jauer^ and Gross- 
Nossen, Henry marched to Landeshut, to relieve general 
Fouque, who was to join the king on the way to Neisse. 
That fortress was reduced to the last extremity. Fre- 
derick's name struck a panic into the besiegers ; general 
Treskow, the commandant, seized the opportunity to 
make a successful sortie, and, on the 6th of November, 
the Imperialists retired with loss, pursued by Fouque, 
by way of Jagemdorf, to Moravia. Kosel also was re- 
Ueyed, and all SUesia waa cleared of the enemy. 

Treskow had defended Neisse with extraordinary gal- 
lantry, and his wife had proved herself worthy of his 
name. Not long before, when the general was a prisoner 
of war in Vienna, she had made a journey thither to see 
him, and been received by the empress with great dis- 
tinction. During the siege, she was living on an estate 
of her own in the environs of the fortress, when she 
received a visit from baron Eichberg, aide-de-camp to 
Loudon, and Harsch, who made her magnificent offers to 
prevail upon her to use her influence with her husband 
to surrender the place to the Austrians. The high- 
spirited woman, to prevent a repetition of the insult, 
abandoned her residence and every thing in it to the 
enemy, and went to her husband, to share with him all 
the hardships of the siege. 

Daun, finding his plans in regard to Silesia frustrated, 
directed his course to Saxony. He hoped to make him- 
self master of Dresden, while Haddik was to take Tor- 
gau, and the army of the empire to reduce Leipzig. 
Meanwhile, Frederick, receiving intelligence at Gross- 
Nossen that Neisse was relieved, set out for Lusatia. 
At Daun's approach, the Prussian camp at Gamig was 

p 2 



2 1 2 COURT AND TIMES OF 

broken up, and the Prussian troops there, under general 
Finck, retired under the guns of Dresden, followed by the 
Pandours, who were easily driven back by Schmettau. 

Count Schmettau, who had lost the king's favour at 
the time of the disastrous retreat of his brother from 
Bohemia, had been appointed, in the spring of 1758, 
commandant of Dresden, in every respect a difficult 
post, but for which Schmettau, possessing as he did 
equal prudence and resolution, was peculiarly qualified. 
This he showed on the present occasion. The Saxon 
capital was nearly an open place, and, as the enemy 
threatened an attack, every preparation was made for 
burning down the Pirna suburb ; and, when the magis- 
trates came to implore the commandant to spare it, he 
referred them to the electoral prince, who alone could 
prevail on Daun to retire. As the Imperialists persisted 
in their object, the suburb was actually set on fire ; 280 
houses were burnt, and four persons lost their lives. 
Daun was now alarmed for the fate of the city itself. 
Dohna, Wedel, and the king were likewise approaching ; 
Daun retired to Bohemia; Haddik and the troops of 
the empire fled to Franconia; and Frederick, highly 
approving the conduct of Schmettau, was entirely re- 
conciled with that general. Count Dohna returned to 
Swedish Pomerania, and the king took up his winter- 
quarters at Breslau. Thus, in spite of two defeats, he 
remained, at the conclusion of the campaign, undisputed 
master of Saxony and Silesia. 

In the latter province, count Schlaberndorf had been 
appointed directing minister in 1 75 5 . In his office, which 
he held till 1 769, he was one of the most zealous and 
active instruments in the execution of the king's plans 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 213 

for the preservation of that valuable acquisition. After 
the battle of Hochkirch, in particular, he displayed such 
energy and ability in furthering the interests of his sove- 
reign, even at the risk of his life, that, when Frederick 
saw him, in his passage through Silesia for the relief of 
Neisse, he embraced him, called him the saviour of Silesia, 
and made him a present of 100,000 dollars. " But for 
the foresight of this man," said he, "land my army should 
have perished by famine." The minister, however, acted 
rather despotically, and, in conferring many benefits on 
the province, he frequently had recourse to harsh mea- 
sures. Neither did he hesitate on various occasions to 
sacrifice the interests of the states to the advantage of 
the king, and thus incurred such violent odium and such 
serious charges, that he fell into disgrace with Frederick. 
The chagrin which he felt on this account accelerated his 
death, which his rapidly declining health had previously 
shown to be near at hand. Just before his dissolution, 
he wrote thus to the king : " The authorities in Silesia 
have dravm upon me your majesty's displeasure, and this 
displeasure is driving the last nail into my coffin. I feel 
that I am near my end : when your majesty shall open 
this my most humble letter, I shall be no more. But, if 
I am destined to have the misfortune of carrying this 
displeasure with me to the grave, I am cheered by the 
consciousness that my whole life has been sacrificed to 
the interests of your majesty." Frederick had not for- 
gotten the meritorious services of his minister ; wishing 
to soothe his dying moments, he gave him assurances of 
his renewed favour ; but they arrived too late. He died 
on the 14th of December, 1769. 

That old diplomatic intriguer, count Seckendorf, whom. 



214 COURT AND TIMES OF 

in the early part of this work, we haye seen exercising so 
powerful an influence over the court of Prussia and the 
destiny of Frederick in particular, could not relinquish 
his old habits at the advanced age of 85. His relative 
and biographer himself relates that, ever since the com- 
mencement of the war, the count had been indefatigable 
in framing military and political plans against Prussia^ 
which he sent to the ministers and generals of the em- 
press ; and some of these had contributed not a little to 
many of the advantages gained by the Austrians. He 
was seized in December by command of the king, at his 
seat at Meuselwitz, in Saxe-Altenburg, and confined in 
the citadel of Magdeburg till May, 1759, when he was 
exchanged for prince Maurice of Dessau, who had been 
severely wounded and made prisoner at Hochkirch. 

The bootless victory of Hochkirch produced the high- 
est exultation at Vienna. The empress-queen, on whose 
name-day the battle was fought, sent the Austrian com- 
mander a most gracious letter, thanking him for the 
bouquet with which he had honoured that festive occa- 
sion ; the town-council of Vienna erected a pillar to com- 
memorate the event ; and the provincial states of Austria 
raised 300,000 florins to redeem Daun's mortgaged family 
estate of Ladendorf . The empress of Russia transmitted 
to him a gold sword ; and, while recording the honours 
paid to the marshal, I may add that, a few months after- 
wards, pope Clement XIH., who succeeded Benedict 
XIV. in July, 1758, presented him with a consecrated 
cap and gold-hilted sword. The cap was of crimson 
velvet, lined with ermine, and laced with gold ; in front 
was the figure of a dove embroidered in pearls, the symbol 
of the Holy Ghost, who was to hover over the blessed 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 215 

weapons of the Austrian commander. The letter which 
accompanied this precious gift is so fine a specimen of 
the sentiments of this vicegerent of the God of peace and 
love, that I must subjoin it. 

" Beloved son in Christ," he writes, on the 80th of 
January, 1759, "in the first place, our greeting and 
apostolical blessing ! We have received, vrith the most 
lively feelings of pleasure, the intelligence of thy exploits 
performed in war against the heretics, especially of the 
astonishing victory gained by thee on the 14th of Octo- 
ber last year over the Prussians. We have, therefore, 
as father of the true believers, in virtue of our office, 
thought it right to give increased energy to the efforts 
of thy valour by the power of our blessing, and to imi- 
tate the example of our predecessors in the papal chair, 
who conferred a consecrated hat and sword on prince 
Eugene of blessed memory, on account of the many 
victories which he won over the infidels. As, then, thou 
far surpassest in virtues that hero and champion of the 
church, and fightest against heretics, who adhere to the 
most abominable errors with more persevering wicked- 
ness than the infidels themselves, we impart to thee the 
blessing of Heaven, that, by means of the accompanying 
sword, thou mayst exterminate heresy, the pestilential 
stench of which is engendered by hell. The destroying 
angel shall fight by thy side; he shall annihilate the 
infamous race of the adherents of Luther and Calvin, and 
the supreme Avenger of all crimes will employ thiiie arrii 
to sweep the Ungodly tribes of the Amalekites and the 
Moabites ftom the face of the earth. 

" May thine arm ever reek with the blood of these 
impious wretches ! Put the axe to the root of this tree. 



216 COURT AND TIMES OF 

which has borne such accursed fruit, and let the northern 
regions of Germany, after the charming example of the 
holy Charles the Great, be brought back to the true faith 
by sword, fire, and blood ! If there is such joy among the 
blest in heaven over one lost sheep that is found again, 
with what joy wilt thou not fill all the saints and the 
true believers, when thou hast brought back this multi- 
tude of perverse and ungodly men into the bosom of the 
divine mother, the Church ! May the most blessed Virgin^ 
who is most devoutly worshipped at Maria-Zell, assist 
thee in thine undertakings ! May St. Nepomuk pray 
most fervently for thee, and may all heaven, with all the 
blest and the solemnly canonized saints, grant a prospe- 
rous issue to whatever thou dost ! Animated with this 
hope, we once more bestow on thee our apostolical bene- 
diction." 

Frederick, whom the English emphatically styled the 
Protestant hero, whom the pope had not yet recognised 
as king, and who was called in the Romish court-calendar 
** Marchese di Brandenburgo," only laughed at the puny 
efforts of his holiness to get up a crusade against him. 
They furnished him with a fertile theme for fugitive 
pieces, satirical poems, and witticisms, to understand 
which the reader ought to be aware of the circumstance 
of the consecrated present. Be it remarked, by the way, 
that after he received it, Daun never gained another vic- 
tory over the king. The object of those fugitive pieces, 
as Frederick has frequently intimated in his works, was 
" to have a slap at the pope," who blessed the sword of 
his enemies and afforded an asylum to blood-thirsty 
monks, as well as to carry on the war against his foes 
in all sorts of ways. " The more they persecute me," 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 217 

he writes, " the more I will scourge them ; and if I fall 
it shall be under a load of their libels, and under broken 
arms on the field of battle." To Algarotti he says, 
" Enjoy your repose, and forget not them against whom 
your pope has preached a sort of crusade ;" and when 
d'Argens expressed his apprehension lest the king's sati- 
rical pieces, especially the letter from the marquise de 
Pompadour to the queen of Hungary, might tend to delay 
peace, the king quieted him with the hope that nobody 
would suspect him of being the author of those sallies. 
Pezzl, in his " Life of Loudon," relates that, as soon as 
the king's satire on Daun's consecrated sword was pub- 
lished, the court of Vienna formally declared that he had 
received no such present from the pope. 

His attention, meanwhile, was not withdrawn from 
more serious and more urgent engagements. It was, of 
course, chiefly directed to the raising of resources for 
prosecuting the war. In the means of procuring soldiers 
and money he could not be very nice. Saxony was 
obliged to make new and increased sacrifices for the 
political intrigues of its sovereign. Recruits were raised 
in Mecklenburg, Swedish Pomerania, and Poland ; pri- 
soners of war were forced to change their uniform for 
the Prussian, and deserters were accepted. Mecklen- 
burg was required to pay 2,400,000 dollars, because it 
had permitted Swedish troops to enter the country. 
Upon the whole, the duchies of Schwerin and Giistrow 
had to furnish during the war upwards of 17 million 
dollars in military contributions and supplies. Mecklen- 
burg-Strelitz also was at first treated with great severity ; 
till the princess Charlotte, deeply affected by the dis- 
tresses to which her father's subjects were reduced. 



218 COURT AND TIMES OF 

addressed so pathetic an intercession in their behalf to 
Frederick, that he was induced to be more lenient in his 
exactions. The talent and goodness of heart displayed 
in this appeal had moreover such an eflTect on the young 
king George III. to whom Frederick warmly recom- 
mended the princess as a consort, that, in consequence, 
she was soon afterwards elevated to the throne of Eng- 
land, which she graced by her virtues for nearly sixty 
years. 

The English guineas, as well as the contributions of 
Saxony and other countries, were coined into money 
worth only half its nominal value. To those provinces 
of his own kingdom which the enemy had pillaged, 
Frederick remitted taxes. Prussia, which was occupied 
by the Russians till 1 762, received no assistance ; and 
the Westphalian districts, which were exposed to the 
French, very little. The king imposed no new taxes on 
his subjects, though the treasury was completely ex- 
hausted, and the diamond buttons and other valuables 
which had belonged to his grandfather had been dis^ 
posed of. 

When Frederick, in December, 1758, sent his friend 
Fouque a present of 2000 dollars, because he had no 
money left, he accompanied it with these words : " My 
dear friend, herewith I send you the widow's mite! 
accept it with the same kind feeling that I transmit it 
to you : it is a trifling aid which you may need in these 
times of distress." Fouque, in his letter of thanks, re- 
plied that the king had made him rich beyond his 
utmost wishes, adding that, to judge from his majesty's 
liberality, his treasures must be inexhaustible. " My 
dear friend," answered Frederick, " I am not so rich as 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 219 

you imagine, but by dint of ingenuity and shifts, (that is 
to say, by means of base coin and other expedients), I 
have amassed a capital for the ensuing campaign, so 
that till the end of February every thing will be duly 
paid. The overplus that was left for my own use I have 
shared with you and a few other friends ; so that you 
might rather compare me with Irus, the beggar, than 
with the wealthy Crcesus." In the same tone he soon 
afterwards expressed himself to d'Argens : " You may 
judge of my embarrassment when you know that I am 
obliged to resort to shifts to maintain and pay my 
army." 

With the present to Fouque, the king sent to his old 
associate a paper, entitled " How the war against the 
Austrians ought to be carried on in future," as the only 
fruit that he had gathered in his last campaign. In this 
performance he directs especial attention to those points 
in the military art in which the Austrians particularly 
excelled. He says in the introduction, that of all his 
enemies they have brought the trade of war to the 
highest perfection, and continues, " You will remark 
great skill in their tactics, extraordinary judgment in 
the choice of their encampments, accurate knowledge 
of localities, well-supported dispositions, prudence in 
undertaking nothing without the greatest certainty of 
attaining the end, and in never sufiering themselves to 
be forced to fight against their will. Without blushing, 
we ought to strive to imitate what appears to us to be 
good in the system of our enemies." 

This important manuscript, dedicated to his old friend, 
was accompanied by another of a few pages, " Instruc- 
tioBS for major-generals of cavalry," which Fouque was 



220 COURT AND TIMES OF 

desiied to inculcate most especially on major-general 
Meyer. Thus Frederick, while elevating the moral spirit 
of his army by his own self-denying patriotism, was intent 
also on sowing the seeds of intellectual improvement, 
and encouraging the acquisition of theoretical know- 
ledge as an essential groundwork for military distinction. 
It was in the course of this year, 1768, soon after 
the victory gained by duke Ferdinand at Crefeld over 
the French, that Frederick's German heart vented its 
indignation against those cruel marauders in a spirited 
Ode containing this cutting apostrophe : 

'* Tels ces bri gands de la Seine 
Armerent leurs fables maiDs, 
Croyant subjuguer saos peine 
Nos invincibles Germains. 
O nation folle et vaine ! 
Quoi ! 8ont-ce Ik ces guerriers 
Sous Luxembourg^ sous Turenne> 
Converts d'immortels lauriers : 
Qui^ vrais amans de la gloire, 
Affrontoient pour la victoire 
Les dangers et le trepas f 
Je vois leur vil assemblage 
Aussi vaillant au pillage 
Que llche dans les combats. 

Quoi ! votre faible monarque, 
Jouet de la Pompadour^ 
Fletri par plus d*une marque 
Des opprobres de Tamour, 
Lui qui, detestant les peines, 
Au hazard remet les renes 
De son royaume aux abois^ 
Ce Celadon sous un hetre 
Pretend nous parler en maitre 
Et dieter le sort des rois ! 
11 ignore dans Versailles, 
O^ son triste ennui Tendort, 
Que les combats, les batailles, 
Du monde iixent le sort." 

This poem Frederick sent to Voltaire, who, fearing, as 
he alleged, that it might bring him into trouble, trans- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 221 

mitted it to Choiseul. The duke employed Palissot to 
answer it in a very flat performance of twenty strophes. 
Voltaire then wrote to the king, telling him that Madame 
Denis had burned the Ode, apprehensive lest it might 
be attributed to his pen. Collini introduced it into his 
work : " Mon Sejour aupres de Voltaire," published in 
Paris in 1807. 

We have shown in the substance of the secret treaty 
of 1756 between France and Austria what terms they 
agreed to force upon the Prussian monarch. At that 
time, the balance of success was in favour of the former 
in the naval war which she was waging with Eng- 
land. The accession of Mr. Pitt to office and the 
energy of his measures had, however, turned the scale, 
and her subsequent operations were marked by a series 
of disasters. Nor had the campaigns of 1757 and 
1758 been attended with more gratifying results for 
either France or . Austria. In this state of things the 
abbe de Bemis, the French minister, deemed it expe- 
dient to prepare for a peace with England ; and he was 
sensible that the latter power would never assent to the 
cession of the Netherlands to a branch of the reigning 
house in France. These considerations led to the con- 
clusion of a new treaty with Austria, differing in many 
essential points from the preceding. This treaty was 
signed at Versailles, on the 30th of December, 1758. 

By the first treaty, France engaged to furnish 105,000 
men and 10,000 Bavarian and Wiirtemberg troops; — 
by the second,- only 100,000 men; and no mention is 
made of the German auxiliaries. 

By the first treaty, France was to pay a yearly sub- 
sidy of twelve million livres ; — by the second, only 



222 COURT AND TIMES OF 

3,540,000 ; but she takes upon herself exclusively the 
charge of the payments to Sweden and the maintenance 
of the Saxon troops. 

By the first treaty, several provinces which are speci- 
fied are to be wrested from the king of Prussia, and to 
be ceded by him ; — the second mentions the cession of 
Silesia and the county of Glatz only. 

In the first treaty, the acquisition of the duchy of 
Magdeburg and circle of Saal is positively assured to 
the elector of Saxony; — ^the second^ promises only a 
suitable indemnity. 

In the first treaty, Austria engages to cede to France 
a considerable tract of country and fortresses in the 
Netherlands, and to give up the rest of the Netherlands 
to the Infant Don Philip in exchange for the duchies of 
Parma, Piacenza, and Guastalla ;— in the second, this 
important article is omitted ; and it stipulates only, like 
the first, the temporary occupation of Ostend and 
Nieuport. 

In like manner, there is no mention in the second 
treaty either of the demolition of the fortress of Luxem- 
burg, or the cession of Toumay and its territory, which 
was absolutely to take place at all events, when Austria 
should be in possession of Silesia and the county of 
Glatz. 

The fimmess of Frederick, who emphatically and re- 
peatedly declared that he would never purchase peace 
at the price of a single village, rendered this treaty 
equally nugatory with the former. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 223 



CHAPTER XXXIII. 

Campaign of 1759— Incursion of the Prussians in Poland— Prince Sul- 
kowski — Operations of Duke Ferdinand in Western Germany — Battle of 
Minden — Cowardice of Lord Geor^^e Sackville — Retreat of the French 
to the Lahn — ^Actions of Fulda and Dillenburg; — Plan for the Operations 
of the Allies — Incursions of the Prussians into Moravia and Bohemia — 
The Russians advance upon Brandenburg — ^General Wedel appointed 
dictator of the army opposed to the Invaders — Is defeated by them at 
Ziillichau — Frederick goes in person to meet them — Disastrous Battle of 
Kunersdorf — Despondency of the King, who resigns the command to 
general Finck — Major Kleist — Surrender of Torgau and Dresden to the 
Austrians — Inactivity of Soltikof, the Russian commander-in-chief — Jea- 
lousies of the two imperial Generals — The king is joined in Silesia by 
Prince Henry — The latter draws Daun to Saxony — Operations of the 
King for recovering Dresden — Capitulation of General Finck at Maxen 
—Frederick passes the winter at Freiberg — Letters to his Friends re- 
specting his situation — Duplicity and Malice of Voltaire — The King's 
Literary Occupations. 

During this war, Poland observed a strict neutrality. 
A puny enemy of Frederick's in that country had, never- 
theless, the hardihood to manifest open hostility to the 
Prussians. Count Sulkowski, originally page and after- 
wards prime minister to Augustus III., was turned out 
of that post by Briihl, in 1738. He had since lived in 
his county of Lissa, almost independent, surrounded by 
household troops like a sovereign prince, and styled 
himself in his rescripts " by the grace of God." He 
purchased the lordship of Bielitz, in Upper Silesia, and 
the emperor Francis created him a prince of the empire 
in 1752. Though, as I have observed, the republic of 
Poland was strictly neutral, yet Sulkowski established 
magazines and raised troops for the service of Russia. 
Frederick, on receiving intelligence of his proceedings, in 



1 



224 COURT AND TIMES OF 

February, 1759, sent with all possible secrecy 4000 
men under major-general Wobersnow, who destroyed 
the magazines formed by Sulkowski at Posen and other 
places on the Wartha, containing flour for the supply of 
50,000 men for three months, and secured the prince 
and carried him to the fortress of Glogau. His troops 
were forced to enlist in the Prussian army. 

The king addressed a Latin manifesto to the Polish 
government in excuse for this incursion ; but the Poles 
were so far from taking it amiss, that they performed a 
similar act of justice in behalf of the Prussian monarch. 
When, namely, the young prince Lubomirski, with 80 
men, was committing ravages in Poland and Silesia, the 
commander-in-chief of the Polish army sent a detach- 
ment, which took the whole band, imprisoned the leader, 
and hanged his followers for their wilful violation of the 
Pmssian territory. 

Duke Ferdinand was this year again the first to take 
the field against Contades. The latter had wintered 
beyond the Lower Rhine ; Soubise, in the countries bor- 
dering on the Mayn; the Allies, in Westphalia and 
Hesse. Ferdinand's intention was to surprise the French 
on the Mayn in the beginning of spring, and to wrest 
from them the neutral city of Frankfurt, of which 
Soubise had possessed himself by stratagem. The pos- 
session of this city was of great importance to the 
French and their allies ; for it secured the communica- 
tion with the army of the Rhine, the troops of the Em- 
pire, and the Austrians. It was requisite that duke 
Ferdinand and prince Henry should concert measures to 
prevent the one from overrunning Hesse, and the two 
latter, Thuringia. The duke detached the hereditary 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 225 

prince of Brunswick to drive the Austrians and the con» 
tingents of the Empire out of Hesse ; and the prince 
sent a corps under general Knoblauch, who took Erfurt, 
tod caused the fortress of Petersburg to be declared 
neutral. In spite of the deep snow and the wretched 
roads, he pursued the enemy's generals, Guasco and 
Riedesel, through the forest of Thuringia to Ilmenau ; 
while lieutenant-colonel Kleist, in the sequel one of the 
most' daring partisans of his time, pushed forward with 
his green dragoons to Fulda, and levied a contribution 
of 12,000 florins from the prince bishop. 

But this expedition was much more remarkable for 
an occurrence of a different kind. The editor of the 
Erlangen paper, reckoning upon the protection of the 
army of the Empire, had indulged in very acrimonious 
expressions against the king of Prussia. Kleist sent a 
detachment of his dragoons to Erlangen, where, agree- 
ably to his orders, they seized the editor of the paper, 
gave him fifty lashes in the public market-place, and 
made him furnish a written acknowledgment that he 
had duly received them. 

Meanwhile, duke Ferdinand, leaving in Westphalia the 
English and Hanoverian troops, amounting to 25,000 men, 
under Lord George Sackville, who had succeeded the duke 
of Marlborough, and general Sporken, set out secretly, 
with a few attendants from Miinster, and, drawing his 
troops out of Hesse, concerted operations with prince 
Henry against the army of the Empire lying in Franconia. 

The duke de Broglio had now taken the command 
of the French corps under Soubise, who was recalled 
to Paris. Ferdinand found him advantageously posted 
on a height near Frankfurt, to the left of the vil- 

VOL. III. Q 



226 COURT AND TIMES OF 

lage of Bergen. A reinforcement was coming to enable 
him to maintain his position. Ferdinand hastened to 
anticipate it. On the 13th of April, he arrived with 
his corps of 28,000 men, a few hours after Broglio had 
been joined by the expected reinforcement. Of this 
circumstance Ferdinand was not aware. Before he 
could reconnoitre the camp of the enemy, occupied by 
35,000 French and Saxons, his troops commenced a 
partial, unequal, and unsuccessful combat, covered by 
the cavalry, under the Hessian general Urff. The can- 
nonade continued the whole day. This attack cost him 
2,000 men, an advantage to which such importance was 
attached in Vienna, that Broglio was created a prince of 
the empire. Fredinand's troops returned unmolested 
to their winter-quarters in Hesse. 

Contades was in Paris when tidings of the victory, if 
it deserves that name, arrived there, and were hailed with 
great rejoicing. Hastening back to his army, he ordered 
Broglio to join him, and advanced through Hesse, while 
the marquis d' Armentieres was to march from the Lower 
Rhine through Westphalia. Ferdinand, having experi- 
enced the fickleness of fortune, stood upon the defensive, 
waiting to see which of the two French armies he should 
have to prepare for. 

Armentieres took Miinster, Contades continued to 
approach ; and on the 10th of July, Broglio made him- 
self master of the fortress of Minden, Ferdinand pushed 
for that place. The enemy retired behind inaccessible 
morasses : his object was to cover the siege of Lipp- 
stadt, which the duke was equally desirous to relieve. 
With a view to entice Contades from his very advan- 
tageous position, he sent his nephew, the hereditary 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 227 

prince of Brunswick, to attack the duke de Brissac, who 
was protecting the rear. This movement had the desired 
effect. The French commander marched out to the 
attack at daybreak on the Ist of August, and, in spite 
of the cowardice of Lord George Sackville, who had 
succeeded to the command of the English troops on the 
death of the Duke of Marlborough, at Miinster, towards 
the end of 1758, and who kept the English cavalry out 
of the engagement, he gained a complete victory near 
Minden over Contades and Broglio. On the same day, 
Brissac was attacked and beaten at Gohfeld, about ten 
miles from Minden. The French, who had 85,000 men 
to the duke's 40,000, lost in this battle 8,000 killed, 
wounded, and prisoners, and 25 pieces of cannon ; and, 
but for the unpardonable disobedience of Sackville, Fer- 
dinand's success would have been far more brilliant. In 
his despatch to Loudon, he expressed his conviction 
that this must have been the case if the marquis of 
Granby had commanded the cavalry of the right wing. 
Ferdinand lost 2,611 men, among whom were 161 offi- 
cers. It was the English regiments that suffered most 
severely, and of course earned the chief glory of the 
victory, in memory of which our 12th, 20th, 23d, 25th, 
37th, and 51st regiments still bear the name " Minden" 
upon their colours. 

Archenholz conceives that Sackville was desirous of 
obtaining the chief command of the allied army instead 
of duke Ferdinand. This is not possible. That he was 
a coward is proved by all the evidence before the court- 
martial by which he was tried and sentenced to be broke 
in March, 1 760 ; but he had powerful friends who bore 
a grudge against Ferdinand for bringing forward the 

Q 2 



^ 



228 COURT AND TIMES OF 

charge, and threw many obstacles in the way ot his fur- 
ther operations. The nation and the sovereign, how- 
ever, did justice to his merits. A pension for life of 
^4000 per annum, the order of the Grarter, and a sword 
enriched with diamonds, were conferred upon him. Fre- 
derick celebrated his favourite, the hereditary prince, in 
an ode, invested him with the order of the Black Eagle, 
and in December, when the hopeful young commander 
brought 12,000 men to join the king, he presented him 
with a gold sword richly set with diamonds. 

This victory closed the territories of Waldeck and 
Paderbom against the French ; Lippstadt was evacuated 
by them, and Minden taken. At Detmold, the papers 
of Contades fell into the hands of Ferdinand. Among 
these was a letter from the French minister at war, the 
duke de Belleisle to the marshal, dated the 23d of July, 
renewing the execrable instructions given by Louvois 
seventy years before respecting the treatment of the 
Palatinate. Contades was ordered to lay waste the Ger- 
man dominions of the king of England, and to level 
every growing thing with the ground. Ferdinand pub- 
lished to the world, through the Berlin papers, these in- 
human injunctions, by which the hardships of war were 
designed to be so wantonly aggravated. 

Contades, after his defeat at Minden, retreated upon 
Cassel, and afterwards crossed the Eder and the Ohm, 
near Marburg, where he entrenched himself. Here he 
remained during the month of August. D'Etrees, the 
involuntary victor at Hastenbeck, was associated with 
him in the chief command. Ferdinand approached and 
made a bold attack on the town of Wetter, by which 
Broglio's corps at Gohfeld was in danger of being turned. 



FREDERICK TttE GREAT. 229 

The French, in consequence, retired beyond the Lahn. 
In the first days of September, he drove them to Qiessen, 
took the strong citadel of Marburg on the 11th, en- 
trenched himself at Kroffdorf, on the right side of the 
Lahn, kept open the communication with Westphalia 
and Hesse, annoyed the enemy's convoys, and, feeling 
quite secure in his camp, sent part of his troops to 
strengthen general Imhoff, who was besieging Miinster. 
Armentieres, hastening to the relief of the place, was 
driven back, and it surrendered on the 10th of November, 
Meanwhile, Contades had been obliged to resign the 
command to Broglio, who was bent on recovering Mar- 
burg before the winter. An attack made by the prince 
of Conde, with 1 0,000 men, on Ferdinand's left wing, 
was victoriously repulsed ; and a demonstration of the 
duke of Wirtemberg's upon Fulda, with a view to 
threaten Marburg and Cassel, terminated most piti- 
fully. The hereditary prince of Brunswick, being de- 
spatched against him with six or seven thousand men, 
found the duke, on the 30th of November, most injudi- 
ciously posted near Fulda, where he was engaged in the 
important business of preparing for a ball. By a spirited 
attack on his corps, the prince drove it across the Fulda, 
and, forcing the bridges, completely dispersed it with 
the loss of 1200 prisoners. Ferdinand, on his part^ then 
attacked Giessen, and, had he not been obliged to send 
12,000 of his troops to the assistance of Frederick, in 
Saxony, he would have been able to maintain his posi- 
tion in spite of all the efforts of Broglio to dislodge 
him. On quitting it, he retired to Marburg, on the 
4th and 5th of January, 1760, to the great joy of 
Broglio, who, on receiving the intelligence,^ gave his 



I 



230 COURT Amy times of 

anny the parole, " They are off." On the 7th a san- 
guinary action took place at Dillenburg, which gave 
the French reason to repent their eager pursuit. They 
then went into winter-quarters, chiefly on the left bank 
of the Rhine, and a portion of the army between Frank- 
furt and Neuwied. Ferdinand went with the greatest 
part of his troops to Westphalia, Osnabriick, and Miin- 
ster, while Imhoff remained in Hesse. 

During the winter of 1758-9, the king had not been 
attentive merely to the increase of the numerical force 
of his army, to the former complement of which he had 
added 30,000 men. It was at this time that he con- 
ceived and executed the idea of what might be considered 
an absolutely new invention — ^horse-artillery. One bri- 
gade of ten six-pounders was raised at Landeshut, and 
another at Leipzig : they were composed of dragoons 
and artillery-men, and commanded by Philip, brother 
of the well-known adjutant general William Anhalt« I 
shall take a future occasion to advert to the curious 
history of these brothers. 

Though Frederick had, in his preceding campaigns, 
been always the first to attack, circumstances obliged 
him this year to stand on the defensive. He continued 
in his strong camp at Schmottseifen, between Lowen- 
berg, Lauban, and Liebenthal, with an army of 45,000 
men. The intention of his enemies was to operate at 
once against Silesia, Brandenburg, and Lusatia. The 
Russians, 78,000 strong, joined by an auxiliary force 
of 30,000 Austrians, were to make themselves masters 
of a fortress on the Oder, or to march to Berlin ; while 
Daun, with 70,000 men, was to occupy the king in 
Silesia; and the army of the Empire, about 30,000 



FREDERICK THE GREAT- 231 

strong, was to drive prince Henry out of Saxony. The 
Swedes were to push on to Berlin. The French, twice 
as strong as duke Ferdinand, flattered themselves with 
the certainty of not only crushing him, but of being in 
time to share the general triumph over the Prussian 
monarch. When Belleisle, in his exultation at this 
prospect, went so far as to say to Pompadour, " Fre- 
derick will soon be in Paris ;" the favourite in reply paid 
him this involuntary compliment : " So much the bet- 
ter ; then I sJiaU see a king /" 

Quietly as Frederick purposed to wait for the enemy, 
he nevertheless sought to cripple him by destroying his 
magazines. With this view, Fouque and prince Henry 
made at the same time an incursion, the one into Mo- 
ravia, the other into Bohemia. The former found the 
magazines at OUmiitz beyond the reach of attack, and 
returned to Silesia, followed by De Ville, to whom he 
was obliged to abandon Neustadt. He then took a 
strong position at Oppersdorf. It was very rarely that 
Frederick cheered any of his generals who were foiled 
in their enterprises. The terms in which he wrote to 
his old friend Fouque from Landeshut on the 20th of 
April are for that reason the more remarkable. " Every 
thing," he says, " cannot turn out according to our 
wishes ; nevertheless, we must seek Fortune; sometimes 
we find her when we least expect it ; but sometimes 
this fickle coquette suddenly forsakes us, when she has 
drawn us to her by her deceitful blandishments." At 
the same time, he set out as secretly as possible for 
Neisse, to meet the enemy's corps ; but the monks and 
the Catholic priests communicated the movements of the 
heretical Prussians to the orthodox general, who had 



] 



232 COURT AND TIMES OF 

time to effect his retreat. Frederick might now apply 
to himself the consolation that he had offered to Fouque. 

Prince Henry was more successful in Bohemia, where 
Daun had concentrated his whole force on the frontiers 
of Silesia. Dividing his troops into two columns, he 
put himself at the head of one and gave the other to 
general Hiilsen. Marching with all possible secrecy and 
celerity, they entered Bohemia on the 15th of April, 
destroyed in five days the magazines at Toplitz, Aussig, 
Budin, Leutmeritz, Commotau, and Saatz, and returned 
by the same routes to Saxony. Tempelhof calculates 
that the magazines destroyed in this expedition contained 
bread sufficient to supply 50,000 men for 143 days, and 
fodder for 25,000 horses for two months. 

It would appear that about this time overtures were 
made to the British government to induce it to abandon 
the cause of Frederick, but as the king could not think of 
any peace unless in concert with England, so Pitt showed 
inviolable fidelity to the ally of his country. " Truly 
dear," he writes in June, 1759, to Mitchell, "as his Prus- 
sian majesty's interests are to me, it is my happiness to 
be able to say, that if any servant of the king could for*^ 
get (a thing, I trust, impossible) what is due by every 
tie to such an ally, I am persuaded his majesty would 
soon bring any of us to his memory again. In this 
confidence I rest secure that, whenever peace shall be 
judged proper to come under consideration, no peace of 
Utrecht will again stain the annals of England." 

In the like tone Frederick writes in the following 
May to Voltaire : " Whatever M. de Choiseul may think, 
he will be obliged in time to listen, and attentively too, 
to what I have planned. I shall not explain myself, but 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. SSS 

you will see in less than two months the whole 

scene will change in Europe ; and you will yourself 
admit that I was not at the end of my resources, and 
that I had reason to refuse your duke my park at 
Cleves. 

^^ I shall now spread all the sails of politics and the 
military art. Those scoundrels who are making war 
upon me have set me examples which I will copy most 
exactly. There will be no congress at Breda, and I 
will not put up my arms till I have made three more 
campaigns. Those blackguards shall see that they have 
abused my good dispositions, and we will not sign any 
peace but the king of England in Paris and I in Vienna." 

Daun, on receiving intelligence that the Russians 
were approaching Brandenburg, entered Lusatia, and 
took post on the 6th of July near Marklissa, in the vici- 
nity of the king. While Frederick made head against 
this opponent, it was requisite that he should keep an 
eye on the Russians, who were awaiting the arrival of a 
new general in chief. Fermor had gone, in the begin- 
ning of the year, to Petersburg, to vindicate himself 
against the charge of having acted favourably for Fre- 
derick, and sent his Lutheran chaplain Tage with de- 
spatches to the king. Tage had, in consequence, to 
suffer an imprisonment of two years. The count de la 
Messeliere, who was then attached to the French em- 
bassy to the court of Russia, had the hardihood to 
allege, what is utterly false, that Fermor was bribed by 
the king of Prussia, and that he was a tool of the grand- 
duke and his consort. Count Woronzow and the Aus- 
trian embassy also depreciated Fermor. He was there- 
fore recalled, but went back with patriotic disinterested- 



234 COURT AND TIMES OF 

ness to the army, to assist his more fortunate successor, 
general Soltikof. 

The Russians were advancing from the Vistula to the 
Wartha and the Oder, while Loudon was posted with 
20,000 men near Lauban, in readiness to form a junc- 
tion with them. The king, therefore, ordered Dohna 
to quit Swedish Pomerania and to meet and stop the 
progress of the Russians. Dohna accordingly crossed 
the Wartha, and destroyed some of the small Russian 
magazines, but was soon obliged to fall back before an 
army thrice as numerous as his own. Frederick, highly 
dissatisfied with Dohna, sent general Wedel, brother of 
the officer of that name who had so highly distinguished 
himself in the second Silesian war, to supersede him in 
the command of his army, with all the extraordinary 
powers of a dictator among the ancient Romans. The 
king dismissed the new dictator with a solemn address, 
concluding with these words: "I command you to 
attack the Russians wherever you find them, and to 
prevent their junction with the Austrians." 

On the 22d of July, Wedel joined the army at Ziilli- 
ehau. Though unacquainted with his own troops, with 
the enemy, and with the country, and though he had 
nothing but jealousy to encounter from the older ge- 
nerals over whom he was placed, he resolved the very 
next day to attack the Russians, who had in the night 
turned the Prussian left wing, and taken post near 
Palzig, on the Crossen road. They were drawn up in 
three lines in a semicircle, upon hills, when Wedel com- 
menced the attack near Kay, at four o'clock in the 
afternoon of the 23d. He had imagined that it was 
only the enemy's rear which he had before him ; but 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 235 

foiind them far superior in number to himself and in an 
excellent position. The Prussians had not time to form ; 
their cayalry and artillery were nearly useless to them. 
On deploying from the hollow way near the mill of Kay, 
and attempting to form on the plain bounded by mo- 
rasses, the destructive fire of the enemy's guns drove 
back the brigades and swept the above-mentioned plain. 
Under such circumstances small arms could effect no- 
thing. After a conflict of three hours, the dictator was 
forced to desist, having lost nearly one-third of his army. 
His friend and only supporter, general Wobersnow, who 
had endeavoured to dissuade him from engaging, fell at 
the beginning of the combat. He retired, unmolested by 
the Russians, who pursued their route towards Crossen, 
in the expectation of finding their allies at Frankfurt. 

Frederick had made an evident mistake in the choice 
of a dictator. He was now in a worse situation than 
before. Fouque had 1 0,000 men near Landeshut against 
de ViUe, with 20,000 ; to oppose his own 40,000 at 
Schmottseifen, Daun had 70,000 atMarktlissa. Dresden 
too had but a small force for its defence. But Bran- 
denburg was in the most imminent danger, and the king 
resolved to confront it. He summoned prince Henry 
with part of his troops to Sagan, and sent the prince of 
Wirtemberg to supply his place. Henry arrived by 
forced marches on the 28th of July at Schmottseifen, 
and on the following day the king broke up with a con- 
siderable force for Brandenburg. He was joined on the 
4th of August by Wedel, and on the 10th by Finck's 
corps, which he had ordered from Saxony. With an 
army of 48,000 men he crossed the Oder, and bivouacked 
on the night of the 11th near Bischofssee. 



236 COURT AND TIMES OF 

The king^s letters to his friend, count Finckenstein, 
the minister, afford a glimpse of what he had to go 
through at a crisis which required extraordinary exer- 
tions. On the 3d of August he writes from Beeskow — 
" I have just arrived here, after cruel and terrible 
marches; I am exceedingly fatigued, for I have not 
closed my eyes these six nights. Farewell." On the 
8th — " I have a great deal to arrange. I find great 
difficulties to surmount, and I must save, not ruin, the 
country. I must be more prudent, and at the same time 
more enterprising than ever : in short, I must do and 
dare whatever I may think possible. Nor have I any 
time to lose, if the enemy's attempt on Berlin is to be 
frustrated. Adieu, my dear friend : you will soon be 
singing — * In deep distress I cry to Thee,' or * Te 
Deum.' " 

Loudon had formed a junction with the Russians at 
Frankfurt. Both entrenched themselves on the right 
bank of the Oder. Soltikof occupied the heights of 
Kunersdorf, with his front to\^ards Frankfurt, his left 
wing posted on the Jiidenberg, and his right supported 
upon the Backergrund, while Loudon's corps abutted 
upon the left wing. The strong camp of the Russians 
had marshes, ponds, and copses in front, an extensive 
wood in the rear, and on the wings heights which co- 
vered their three lines. Besides these natural defences, 
the enemy had surrounded himself with a strong en- 
trenchment and numerous redoubts, which were well 
manned. 

Frederick formed his army in order of battle opposite, 
to Soltikof 's. His right wing was supported on Trettin, 
the left on Bischoffssee. Finck, with what was called the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 2S7 

rear-guard, was posted, in front of the lines, on heights 
which concealed the movements of the Prussians from 
the enemy. The two armies were parted only by a 
swampy brook, called the Hiihnerfliess. Soltikof, ap 
prehensive for his rear, changed the front, placed his 
right wing on the Jiidenberg, the left on the Miihlberg, 
and threw up new entrenchments ; while Loudon was at 
the foot of the Jiidenberg, ready to turn to whichever 
side he was wanted. 

Such was the position in which Frederick found the 
enemy when he arrived on the heights of Trettin. The 
heat was oppressive, and the king's thirst so great that 
he asked for water, and a peasant ran to the village and 
fetched him a jugful. Having refreshed himself, Frede- 
rick continued to reconnoitre the enemy and the coun- 
try. Presently, a lieutenant of Boiling's hussars, who 
had been sent out with a patrole to examine minutely 
the ground and the position of the Russians, returned 
and made his report, which, however, was far from sa- 
tisfactory to the king. Neither was he better pleased 
with the vague information given by a staif-oflScer near 
him, who, some years before, had been in garrison at 
Frankfurt, but recollected very little of the localities. 
The king was turning away, disappointed, when an hus- 
sar galloped up to the spot. His name was Plotz ; he 
had been by trade a cloth- weaver, and entered in 1758 
as a volunteer into the regiment, which was raised at 
Halberstadt, and so distinguished himself by courage, 
daring, and integrity, that, in a year, he was promoted 
to be a subaltern. He belonged to the patrole which 
had been sent out, but had ventured some distance fur- 
ther than the lieutenant had liked to advance. The 



238 COURT AND TIMES OF 

king observed him, asked where he came from, and, on 
being told, exclaimed — " What, then, have you been 
patrolling alone ?" — " The enemy cut me off from the 
detachment." — " How far have you been?" — " About 
four miles and a half from this place. A peasant that I 
met with called the country that we rode over the Dub- 
berow. I was very near Reipzig." — " That is not pos- 
sible. You would have been in the lion's jaws. Reipzig 
lies behind the Russian army." This the king said in a 
very ill-humour. Plotz, sure of his point, replied calmly, 
but evidently vexed, while a transient flush overspread 
his face — " Whether you think it impossible that I 
should have gone over the ground I have done, I do not 
know; but this I know that I have gone over it."— 
*^ Be quite easy, my son," rejoined the king ; " care for 
nobody, whoever it may be. Only report what you have 
seen." Plotz made a most circumstantial report, which, 
in the sequel, was found to be correct. In a year he was 
promoted to officer, afterwards ennobled, and died as 
general of hussars. 

The left flank of the Russians seemed to offer the best 
chance of success to the king, and he resolved to attack 
it on the following day. Accordingly, at two in the 
morning of the 12th, he put himself in motion ; but, 
instead of marching in a direct line, which would have 
brought him by unfavourable ways upon their most 
dangerous side, he thought it better to go along the 
Huhnerfliess and into the Reppen road, from which 
another road leads across the heath of Neuendorf to a 
height commonly called the Pechstange. Here the 
Prussians formed in three lines of infantry and two of 
cavalry, while Finck kept up such a fire from his bat- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 239 

teries oh the Rassian star-fort as to occupy Soltikof 's 
whole attention. 

Thus the king reached unobserved the margin of the 
wood at eleven in the forenoon, the sultry heat having 
greatly increased the fatigue of the march, which was 
much longer than had been anticipated. Batteries were 
immediately planted on two hills opposite to the enemy's 
right. General Sohenkendorf then advanced with eight 
battalions, covered by sixty pieces of cannon, and took 
the Russian entrenchment. The army followed, stormed 
all the redoubts, and drove the Russian infantry, in spite 
of its obstinate resistance, to the churchyard of Kuners- 
dorf, which Frederick's left wing took with difficulty. 

Finck's troops had by this time joined the others. 
Seven redoubts, the churchyard, the Spitzberg, and the 
Kichgrund were taken, with J 80 pieces of cannon. The 
enemy had lost many men, and was in great confusion. 
It was six in the evening. The fortune of the day seemed 
to be decided in favour of the Prussians through the 
valour of the infantry alone, and a courier was despatched 
to Berlin with the preliminary announcement of victory. 

But triumph not too soon — the Fates are jealous^ 
And suffer no invasion of their rights— 

So says SchiUer, and so Frederick soon learned by the 
most woful experience. He was determined not merely 
to conquer, but to annihilate, the Russians, who sought 
refuge in their last redoubt on the Jiidenberg. In order 
to wrest this also from them, the king sent for the ca- 
valry from the left wing, and ordered artillery to be 
brought forward, though Finck, Seydlitz, and other ge- 
nerals strove to dissuade him from renewing the attack, 
exhausted as the soldiers were with fatigue and the in- 



1 



240 COURT AND TIMES OF 

tense heat. He persisted in his purpose* Loudon now 
sallied from the bottom where he had hitherto lain con- 
cealed as a reserve ; the tough Russians, too, mustered 
their remaining strength, and turned the tide of the 
battle. The undaunted Prussian infantry were but 150 
paces from the enemy's last battery, when they were 
opposed by the fresh force of the Austrians, whose guns 
opened upon them with tremendous effect* They were 
dispersed. All further attacks proved equally fruitless. 
They were disheartened, and fled in a confusion not to 
be described before the enemy's cavalry. That of the 
Prussians could not accomplish any thing. Seydlitz 
himself was severely wounded. The king was in the 
hottest of the fire ; his officers were falling around ; he 
had two horses wounded under him, and was therefore 
obliged to accept that of captain Golz, one of his aides- 
de-camp. At the same moment a musket-ball crushed 
the gold etui in his waistcoat-pocket. Colonel Kruse- 
mark and the rest of his retinue then besought the king 
to leave so dangerous a spot. Frederick replied — " We 
must make every exertion now to gain the battle, and I 
must do my duty here as well as any other man." But 
exertions were to no purpose. The enemy dashed on 
afresh ; and the Prussians fled from the field in wild 
confusion, to hide themselves in the neighbouring woods 
from the fury of their adversaries. The defeat was so 
decisive that the king would have fallen into the hands 
of the Russian light-horse, had not captain Prittwitz of 
Zieten's regiment, with about two hundred of his best 
hussars, almost forced him from the field, and escorted 
him in the retreat through a hollow way. Nothing 
could equal his despair at this result. " What !" he 



\ 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 241 

exclaimed, on finding himself deserted by his troops, 
" Is there no cursed ball that will finish me !" and to 
Prittwitz, after retiring from the field, he several times 
said, " I am undone !" It is related to have been on the 
back of this faithful companion that he wrote with pen- 
cil the following words, addressed to Finkenstein, the 
minister — " All is lost. Save the royal family. Adieu 
for ever !'* To Prittwitz indisputably belongs the ho- 
nour of having, in this critical moment, saved not only 
the king's life, but the state itself : for, had Frederick 
been taken prisoner, it is certain that he would not have 
survived the disgrace, and the name of Prussia would 
have been erased from the list of independent nations. 

Eyewitnesses declare that they never saw the Prussian 
army in such a deplorable state as after this battle. 
Such was the consternation that, at the mere sound of 
approaching Cossacks, the infantry fled to the distance 
of a thousand paces before it could be made to halt. 
The fugitives collected near Bischofssee, and marched 
the same night across the bridge of boats near Reitwein, 
and encamped on the neighbouring heights. 

The loss of the Prussians amounted to 18,500 men, 
including 634 oflScers ; 172 pieces of cannon, 26 pair of 
colours, and two standards, fell into the hands of the 
enemy. The Russians and Austrians had sufiered almost 
as severely : 670 oflScers and 15,606 privates were killed 
or wounded. Hence Soltikof, in writing to the empress, 
observed : " The king of Prussia is accustomed to sell 
his defeats at a dear rate, so that, if I gain another such 
victory, I shall have to bring the news of it by myself, 
with my truncheon in my hand." 

Preuss, to whose general accuracy I bear willing tes» 

VOL. III. R 



242 COURT AND TIMES OF 

timony, relates that the king passed the night in the 
most dreadful agony of mind, upon straw, in a peasant's 
cottage which had been stripped by the enemy, and that 
he went next morning to the chateau of Reitwein, about 
five miles from Ciistrin, on the Frankfurt road. Of his 
state of mind on this fatal night some idea may be 
formed from the letter which he wrote at Oetscher to 
Finkenstein : " At 1 1 this morning I attacked the enemy. 
We drove them to the Jews' burial-ground,* near Frank- 
furt ; all my troops performed prodigies of valour, but 
that burial-ground caused us to lose a prodigious number 
of men ; our troops got into confusion ; I rallied them 
three times ; at last I was nearly taken myself, and I have 
been obliged to give up the field of battle. My coat is 
riddled with balls ; I had two horses killed ; my misfor- 
tune is that I am still living. Our loss is very conside- 
rable. Out of an army of 48,000 men, I have not 
3000 at the moment I am writing : all have fled, and I 
am no longer master of my soldiers. You will do well 
in Berlin to think of your safety. 'Tis a cruel reverse ; 
I shall not survive it : the consequences of the battle 
will be worse than the battle itself. I have no resource 
left ; and, to tell the truth, I consider all as lost. I 
shall not survive the ruin of my country. Farewell for 
ever !" 

Though I am disposed to credit the statement of 
Preuss, still I cannot forbear quoting the account given 
by another Grerman writer, for the sake of an anec- 
dote respecting the king with which it is accompanied. 

• The king here, as in his '^ CEuvres posthuines," confounds the Jews' 
burial-ground with the Jews* Hill. At the burial-ground, situated on the 
western slope of the hill, there was no fighting whatever. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 243 

He says that Frederick passed the night at the dam- 
house on the left hank of the Oder, between Goritz and 
Oetscher; but that he at first intended to take np his 
quarters in a house in the latter place. On entering it, 
however, he there found two lieutenants of Grabow's 
regiment of infantry, named Heilsberg and StubenfoU, 
who were most dangerously wounded. The former had 
received a whole charge of canister-shot in his face and 
body ; while the latter had more than half of one arm 
carried away by a cannon-ball. Both were conveyed 
half-dead to the nearest house, where they somewhat re* 
vived ; but not a surgeon would undertake the treatment 
of their desperate cases. When the king entered, both 
lay there, bathed in blood. "My children," he ex- 
claimed, "you are grievously wounded, indeed!*'— 
" Yes, your majesty," replied one of the suflferers ; " but 
that would be of little consequence, if we but knew that 
you had conquered ! We had stormed two redoubts, 
and were at the third when we met with our misfor- 
tunes." — "You have proved that you are brave men; 
all the rest is accident. Keep up your spirits : things, 
and you too, will mend. Have your wounds been 
dressed ? Have you been bled ?" — " Not a creature of 
them all will touch us." The king sent immediately for 
a surgeon. When he came, he loaded him with angry 
reproaches, on account of the neglect shown to the 
wounded, and commanded him to pay all possible atten- 
tion to the two yoiing officers. The doctor shrugged 
his shoulders, and intimated that in their cases assist- 
ance could not be of any avail. The king took hold of 
the hands of the sufferers. "Only look!" said he; "the 
lads have no fever : with such young blood and stout 

R 2 



244 COURT AND TIMES OF 

hearts Nature generally does wonders." He ordered them 
to be bled ; their wounds were dressed ; they were sup- 
plied with refreshments. He afterwards ordered them 
to be conveyed with the utmost care to the principal 
hospital. While they were removing, " Children," said 
the king, " go, in God's name. Whatever turn things 
take with you, I shall be sure to hear of it ; and, if you 
are disabled for service, you shall want for nothing. I 
will not forget you ; I will provide for you." Both re- 
covered, thanks to Frederick's interference alone, and 
continued to serve till the peace, when, by the express 
command of the king, they were invalided and amply 
provided for. 

For two days the king shut himself up at Reitwein, 
and would see scarcely a creature besides general Finck 
and the servants of the house. I find mention made also 
of an old colonel of artillery, named MoUer, who strove 
to cheer the spirits of the king in the hours of deep de- 
spondency consequent on the defeat. Frederick listened 
willingly to his consolatory arguments. He asked him 
how it happened that his troops were no longer able to 
perform such prodigies as they had formerly done. The 
colonel, a sincerely pious man, modestly remarked that 
it was perhaps owing to the sinfulness of the army, in 
which public prayers had long fallen into disuse. From 
that day divine service was ordered to be held in the 
regiments as formerly. 

It was at Reitwein that, on the morning after the 
battle, the king drew up and wrote with his own hand 
the following remarkable document, which Pruess first 
laid before the public, and which is of course quite new 
to the English reader. 



frederick the great. 245 

Instruction for General Finck. 

General Finck is charged with a difficult commission. 
The unfortunate army which I give up to him is no lon- 
ger in a condition to fight the Russians. Haddik will 
hasten to Berlin, perhaps Loudon also. If general Finck 
goes after these two, the Russians will come upon him 
in rear. If he continues stationary upon the Oder, he 
will haye Haddik on this side. I think, however, 
that if Loudon should march upon Berlin, he might 
attack him by the way, and beat him. Success in 
this case would check the disaster and delay matters. 
To gain time is a great deal in these desperate circum- 
stances. The newspapers from Torgau and Dresden my 
secretary, Koper, will give him. He must report every 
thing to my brother, whom I have declared general- 
issimo of the army. To repair this misfortune com- 
pletely is impossible ; nevertheless, whatever my brother 
shall order must be done. The army must swear to my 
nephew. 

" This is the only advice that I am capable of giving 
in these unfortunate circumstances. If I had any re- 
sources left, I would have remained with it." 

A second paper, written by Frederick himself at the 
same time and on the same subject, is as follows : " As 
a severe illness has befallen me, I relinquish the com- 
mand of my army during my illness, till my recovery, 
to general Finck, and, in case of need, he may also dis- 
pose of general Kleist's corps as circumstances may 
require, likewise of the magazines in Stettin, Berlin, 
Ciistrin, and Magdeburg." 

In Berlin it was reported, in the first consternation, 
that nobody knew what had become of the king. But 



246 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the victors never thought of giving the coup-de-grace to 
the beaten army, and putting an end to the war. They 
consulted in a peasant's cottage whether they should 
pursue the Prussians. At the same time, they began to 
drink freely, till they utterly forgot the king, around 
whom about 18,000 of his dispersed troops soon col- 
lected, and gave a different aspect to the disaster. On 
the third day, Frederick, throwing off his gloomy de- 
spondency, again made his appearance at Beitwein, and 
the moyements of the army recommenced with the same 
order and the same energy as ever. Shortly before the 
battle, an aide-de-camp of duke Ferdinand's had brought 
the king intelligence of the victory of Minden. Frede- 
rick begged the messenger to stay till the battle was over, 
that he might have the like compliment to carry back 
in return to the duke. He now dismissed him, saying : 
" I am heartily sorry that I have not a better answer to 
send to such a message. If, however, you meet with no 
obstruction as you return, if you do not find Daun in 
Berlin, or Gontades in Magdeburg, you may assure the 
duke from me that no great deal is lost." The Prussian 
army, however, had lost many distinguished leaders on 
that disastrous day; lieutenant-generals Wedel and 
Itzenblitz, and major-generals Spaen, Knoblauch, Stut- 
terheim, Itzenblitz [2], Platen and Klitzing had fallen ; 
and the German Muse had to deplore the loss of one of 
her favourite sons, majorEwald Christian Kleist, who was 
mortally wounded in this engagement. 

Born in 1715, at Zeblin, in Pomerania, Kleist studied 
the law at Konigsberg. Having gone to Denmark, to visit 
relations of his in that country, and applied in vain for a 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 247 

civil appointment, he entered into the Danish army, and 
assiduously studied every thing connected with military 
science. It was not long before he left Denmark and 
went to Berlin, where he was presented to Frederick 
soon after his accession, and by him appointed lieutenant 
in prince Henry's regiment. In reality he seems never 
to have felt much fondness for the military profession, 
and to have been reconciled to it only by the idea of 
duty and admiration of his great king. This discord- 
ance between his destiny and the wishes of his heart, 
which pointed to quiet and repose, together with a dis- 
appointed passion, which commenced so early as 1 738, 
in all probability made him a poet, or at least imparted 
to his compositions their chief characteristic — ^a tender 
melancholy, which pervades his elegies in particular. 
Scarcely any German poem, and that too by an unknown 
writer, LLs. of si ripid .ad «tra.La,y popu- 
larity as was acquired by his " Spring," which was first 
printed in 1749, merely for distribution among the au- 
thor's friends, and which was reproduced in numerous 
editions. 

Kleist was on intimate terms with most of the as- 
pirants to literary fame in Germany in the middle of 
last century ; and he contributed, by industriously cir- 
culating the Tyrtsean strains of Gleim in the army, to 
kindle in the soldiers the warmest feelings of loyalty 
and patriotism. In 1757 he attained the rank of major, 
and in the following year successfully executed the com- 
mission with which he was charged, to seize the notorious 
intriguer, the marquis de Fraygne, who, in the ducal 
palace at Zerbst, plotted all sorts of enterprises against 



^ 



248 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Frederick, and even an attempt upon Magdeburg, and 
to convey him to that fortress. 

In the battle of Kunersdorf, Kleist received twelve 
contusions in storming a third battery, and the fingers 
of his right hand were so wounded that he was obliged 
to hold the sword in the left. He, nevertheless, pro-^ 
ceeded to assist in the attack of a fourth battery. Lieu- 
tenant-colonel von Breitenbach was shot dead, on which 
Kleist rode before the front of the battalion, and gal- 
lantly led it against the enemy's cannon. A musket^ball 
struck his left arm ; and now he could only grasp his 
sword with two fingers of his right hand. He had ad^ 
vanced about thirty paces further, when a canister-shot 
shattered his right leg. He fell from his horse, and 
three soldiers carried him behind the front. The sur-< 
geon who came to dress his wounds was shot, and Kleist 
himself was stripped absolutely naked by the Cossacks, 
and thrown into a swamp. In the night he was found 
by some Russian hussars, who lifted him upon dry 
ground, and laid him upon straw near a watch-fire, 
covered him with a cloak, put a hat upon his head, and 
gave him such refreshment as they had — bread and 
water. A second time he was plundered by the Cos- 
sacks, and left naked upon the field. In this state he 
was found about noon the next day by the Russian 
captain von Stackelberg, who had him conveyed to 
Frankfurt on the Oder. Eleven days after the battle, 
the shattered bones separated and tore asunder an 
artery, and he died of the hemorrhage occasioned by 
this accident. He was buried with due respect by the 
principal Russian ofiicers there, and colonel Biilow, who 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 249 

commanded a regiment of Russian light dragoons, took 
his own sword from his side to adorn the coffin, " that 
so worthy an officer might not be consigned to the 
grave without that mark of honour." His friend Uz 
dedicated to his memory a Dirge worthy of the bard of 
" Spring," and Nicolai, in the Memoirs of him which 
he wrote, furnished an excellent model for German 
biography. 

When the king recovered from his stupor, he found 
18,000 of his dispersed troops reassembled at Reitwein. 
With that superior genius which was never so con- 
spicuous as under the greatest difficulties, he made 
dispositions for defending himself. He sent to Berlin, 
Stettin, and Ciistrin, for artillery, called to him general 
Kleist, who, with 5000 men belonging to Dohna's corps, 
had been left to oppose the Swedes, despatched the corps 
of general Wunsch to Fiirstenwalde to stop Haddik ; 
and, when the latter had joined Solitkof and Loudon, he 
advanced to meet their united force, and encamped 
between Beeskow and Bornow. Meanwhile, his enemies 
remained together, irresolute and inactive in their camp 
at Miihlrose, plundering and ravaging the country in 
their usual way, till, on the 5th of September, Haddik 
marched off for Saxony, to hasten the surrender of 
Dresden, already hard pressed by the army of the Em- 
pire, which had taken advantage of the absence of the 
Prussian troops to overrun Saxony. 

Frederick, in his first fit of despondency after the late 
battle, had despatched orders to the commandants of 
Torgau, Wittenberg, and Dresden, to capitulate in case 
they were attacked, on the most favourable terms, and 
merely to save the military chests and the troops. In 



^ 



250 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Wittenberg and Leipzig it was impossible for the Pras'* 
sians to make any stand, chiefly because the greater 
part of the troops there consisted of Saxon regiments, 
deserters, and prisoners: the commandants therefore 
capitnlated, and marched off unmolested with their 
troops to Magdeburg and Torgau. 

Torgau, which could scarcely be considered as a forti- 
fied place, had been closely pressed ever since the lS5th 
of August by prince Stolberg, with about 12,000 men. 
It was garrisoned by five battalions under the brave 
colonel Wolffersdorf. To no purpose did the enemy 
threaten ** to bum Halle, Quedlinburg, and Halberstadt," 
unless he capitulated. It was not till he had repulsed 
the most serious attacks for seven successive days and 
expended all his ammunition that he agreed to surrender 
the place, on condition that the garrison should be al- 
lowed to march out with the artillery, and that the 
enemy should not receive deserters till the town was 
completely evacuated. When the Prussians were leaving 
the place, prince Stolberg had posted himself not far 
from it with his retinue. Some of his aides-de-camp 
strove to induce the garrison to desert. " Let every 
loyal Saxon, let every man who has belonged to the 
army of the Empire, step out : his highness will protect 
him" — said they. "And I will shoot the first that 
stirs," cried the resolute Wolffersdorf, and instantly ex- 
tended on the ground a soldier who had quitted the 
ranks. Then giving the word of command : " Battalion, 
halt ! front ! make ready ! " and, turning to the prince, 
he said : " Your highness has broken the capitulation ; 
I will therefore make prisoners of you and all your 
attendants. Ride this instant into the town, or I will 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 251 

give orders to fire." Much as it went against the grain^ 
Stolberg was obliged to comply, and Wolffersdorf led 
his troops, by order of the king, to Potsdam. 

After the surrender of Torgau, the Imperialists set 
more seriously about the reduction of Dresden. Count 
Schmettau was still commandant of that city. At first 
he was resolved to defend himself to the utmost, though 
the allies, reinforced by the Austrian generals Wohla, 
Brentano, and Maguire, now amounted to 28,000 men. 
Threats and promises were resorted to, but neither had 
the least effect on Schmettau, though his garrison was 
weak, and he could place little confidence in it; on 
I which account he confined himself to the defence of the 

Old Town only, for which he possessed abundant means. 
In this situation he received the king's letter of the 14th 
of August from Beitwein, and he thought that he should 
be doing his sovereign an essential service if, in sur- 
rendering Dresden, he could save the garrison, the 
military chest containing 6,600,000 dollars, the pro- 
vision-traiu, and equipments for 88,000 men. The 
duke of Deuxponts, who commanded the troops of the 
Empire, gladly acceded to these terms. At this moment, 
general Wunsch, who had retaken Wittenberg and Tor- 
gau, was advancing to his succour. The capitulation 
was concluded on the 4th of September, and on the 
5th Schmettau received a letter from the king, who, 
having recovered from his helpless situation with a 
rapidity which it was impossible to anticipate, intimated 
that he would render him the most important service if 
he could preserve Dresden in the present emergency. 
This letter, conveyed by a spy to Schmettau, did not 
reach him till after the gates of the city were already 



"1 



252 COURT AND TIMES OP 

occupied by the enemy. On the same day, Wunsch 
arrived before it, but retired, as he received no support 
from Schmettau. On the 6th, the Austrians occupied 
the Elbe bridge, without the knowledge of colonel Hoff- 
mann, the vice-commandant, who resolved to dislodge 
the enemy's post. Captain Sydow, with the Prussian 
palace-guard, defended the capitulation, and refused to 
follow him : Hoffman was indignant ; an altercation en- 
sued ; and he was shot dead by Sydow's men. It was 
alleged that he was intoxicated, but the king wrote with 
his own hand to Schmettau : ^' I think like Hoffmann ; if 
he was drunk, I wish the governor and the whole gar- 
rison had been drunk too, that they might have thought 
as he did." The loss of Dresden was a stroke that 
deeply mortified the king, removed Schmettau from his 
service, and for ever deprived him of his favour. 

With the fall of the capital, Frederick's game seemed 
to be lost in Saxony. Still the activity, intelligence, 
and resolution of general Wunsch, who with 4,000 men 
retook Wittenberg and Torgau, saved him a part of the 
electorate. Being joined by general Finck, whom the 
king, on resuming the command of his army, had de- 
spatched to the relief of Dresden, Leipzig was retaken 
by tfiem on the 1 3th of September ; and such was their 
success, that Dresden was soon the only place of im- 
portance in Saxony remaining in the possession of the 
enemy. 

The inactivity of Soltikof after his victory is to be 
attributed solely to the jealousies subsisting between 
the courts of Petersburg and Vienna, and also between 
the commanders of their armies. Earnestly as both 
might desire to crush Frederick, yet each would fain 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. §53 

have left to the other the toils and perils of the war. 
Early in the year, the Russian army had chosen to ad- 
vance upon Silesia instead of Pomerania, lest it should 
play into the hands of the Swedes ; and now that the 
Russians had sacrificed so many thousand men in two 
battles, Soltikof thought that he had a right to require 
similar successes of the Austrians, before he again un- 
dertook any thing serious. In vain Daun besought him 
not to stop half way. Valuable time was lost, and the 
obstinate Soltikof would not stir an inch. Meanwhile, 
Frederick collected the remnants of his army, and was 
soon in a condition to cover Berlin and the Marks. 
Daun alleged that it was requisite for him to keep 
prince Henry, who was still encamped a! Schmottseifen 
in check, in order that the army of the empire might 
reduce Dresden without molestation. 

Soltikof pursued his own course, regardless alike of 
glory, which held out to him the alluring prospect of 
conquering Frederick, and of the urgent exhortations of 
Loudon and of Montalembert, the French agent with 
the Russian army ; but, in a personal conference with 
Daun, he required that the Austrian army should be 
doubled as the Russian had been, and that Daun should 
undertake to supply his troops with necessaries. In 
this case he would agree to remain on the left bank of 
the Oder, where every thing was consumed, till Dresden 
should be taken, and then they might commence joint 
operations against Silesia and its fortresses. 

Daun, instead of forming a junction with the Rus- 
sians, as he might have done without obstruction, in 
order to annihilate Frederick completely, represented 
the conquest of Saxony as the most important object of 



I 



254 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the allies ; because that would throw the political pre* 
ponderance into the scale, not of Russia, but of Austria. 
It soon became manifest, moreover, that Daun was not 
in earnest about the supply of the Russians : instead of 
provisions, he offered Soltikof pecuniary subsidies, but 
the Russian commander angrily replied that his men 
could not eat money. Being now obliged to direct his 
force against prince Henry, Daun separated himself 
entirely from the Russian army; on which Soltikof 
roundly declared that he would have nothing more to 
do with the Austrians and retire with* his troops. Mont- 
alembert had great diflSculty to pacify him, and to per- 
suade him to operate upon Glogau. 

This plan, wliich he began to execute on the 1 9th of 
September, Frederick defeated by vigilance and celerity. 
Hastening with his army to Sagan, he prevented the 
Russians from laying siege to Glogau ; and, crossing to 
the right bank of the Oder, contrived to fix them on the 
other side of the Bartsch, till hunger compelled them to 
retire to the Vistula for the winter. 

It was from his brother Henry that Frederick first 
received assistance after his defeat. No sooner did the 
tidings of his disaster reach the camp at Schmottseifen, 
than the prince prepared to succour his brother, and 
either to form a junction with him, or at least to take 
the Austrians off his hands. Calling Fouque from 
Landeshut to the camp, and leaving him to cover Silesia, 
Henry marched along the . right bank of the Bober to 
Sagan. This movement caused Daun to turn back im- 
mediately from Priebus, where he arrived on the 1 Sth 
of August, across the Neisse to Sorau. By this opera- 
tion, he, indeed, prevented Henry from joining the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 255 

king ; but, having withdrawn the troops from Lusatia, 
and left only general de Ville there to cover the maga- 
zines at Zittau, Gorlitz, and Bautzen, Hienry resolved to 
destroy these magazines, and to make such threatening 
demonstrations in the rear of the enemy, that Daun 
would relinquish the king. It was at this juncture that 
the Austrian commander received intelligence of the 
march of general Finck to relieve Dresden ; and he be- 
came in consequence so wavering in his operations, that 
at one time he turned against the prince, and at another 
gtrove to approach the Saxon capital. De Ville retired 
before Henry, and part of the Austrian magazines fell 
into the hands of the latter. In this manner the prince 
contrived to occupy the Austrians till the king, having 
outstripped the Russian army, could hasten to the pro- 
tection of Glogau. He now resolved to throw himself 
into Saxony, and, if possible, to draw Daun's whole 
amy after him. 

The prince was posted near Gorlitz and Daun near 
Bautzen. The latter resolved to fall upon the Prus- 
sians and drive them back into Silesia. On the S4th 
of September he purposed to attack them ; but when he 
looked about him in the morning they were gone, and 
for two days he was uncertain what had become of them. 
Henry had meanwhile turned Daun's left wing, marched 
upon Rothenburg and Hoyerswerda, dispersed there the 
corps of general Wehla, and taken part of it prisoners. 
For two days his soldiers, inured to fatigue, had to dis- 
pense with every convenience ; and he marched with the 
whole train nearly forty miles, through a desolated and 
deserted country. He attempted to cross the Elbe be- 
tween Strehla and Meissen, but was obliged by the want 



1 



256 COUET AND TIMES OF 

of pontoons to go down the river to Torgau, At length," 
Daun was informed hy an officer belonging to the troops 
dispersed at Hoyerswerda that the prince had tricked 
him, and was marching for Saxony. Trembling for the 
fate of Dresden, when the prince should be joined by 
Finck and Wunsch, and conceiving that in Saxony lay 
the decision of the campaign for the interest of his 
court, he hastened by forced marches to Dresden, to 
join the army of the Empire, and to protect that city 
from any attempt of the Prussians. Thus Henry's plan 
for enticing Daun from Silesia was completely successful. 
Being joined at Strehla by Finck's corps, he was now at 
the head of 40,000 men, with whom he took a position 
between Klauschwitz and the Elbe, whence Daun, avoid- 
ing a battle, drew him to Torgau. 

During the whole month of October, Frederick was 
laid up with the gout. It was so severe, that he could 
not bear the motion either of a horse or a carriage. He 
was therefore carried on the 27th by the soldiers of the 
regiment of Neuwied to the little town of Koben, on 
the Oder, where, on learning the retreat of the Russians, 
he sent for his generals. They found him in bed in a 
mean apartment, extremely pale, with a handkerchief 
bound round his head, and a sable pelisse thrown over 
him. In spite of the racking pain of his complaint, he 
addressed them with great cheerfulness. " I have sum- 
moned you hither, gentlemen," said he, " to communi- 
cate to you my dispositions, and at the same time to 
convince you that the violence of my disorder does not 
permit me to show myself personally to the army. As- 
sure my brave soldiers, then, that it is not a sham ill- 
ness ; tell them that, though I have met with many 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 257 

misfortunes during this campaign, I will not rest till I 
have retrieved them all ; that I rely upon their bravery ; 
and that nothing but death shall part me from my 
army," With admirable composure he then acquainted 
them with his ^arrangements. One part of the army 
was destined to cover Silesia ; the other, under general 
Hiilsen, was sent to Saxony, to support prince Henry. 

While Henry remained at Torgau waiting for Hiilsen, 
Daun manoeuvred in the expectation of gaining some 
advantage over him ; but the prince sent generals 
Wunsch and Bebentisch against a detached corps under 
the duke of Aremberg, which the Prussians attacked on 
the 29th near Pretsch with such vigour that it was al- 
most annihilated. One general, 26 other officers^ and 
1400 men were taken. 

On the 13 th of November, Daun retreated to Wils- 
druf, and on the same day Frederick joined the army at 
Hirschstein, in Saxony. The prince rode to meet his 
brother, who had recovered from his illness. " Henry," 
said the king, ^^ is the only general who has not com- 
mitted any fault in this war." While they were con- 
versing, intelligence arrived of the further retreat of 
the grand imperial army. "Aha!" cried Frederick, 
" they smell me already ; but now the devil shall fetch 
Daun too." Leading the corps encamped at Hirschstein 
against the" enemy, he overtook the rear-guard near the 
village of Krogis. An action ensued, in which the 
Austrians suffered considerably. 

Not satisfied with this advantage, the king resolved 
to recover Dresden, and to turn Daun, who guarded it 
in a strong position, in order to cut him off from the 
direct route to Bohemia, and to drive him into the most 

VOL. III. s 



258 COURT AND TIMES OF 

impracticable roads, where, in that severe season, his 
utter destruction appeared inevitable. Prince Henry 
would gladly have suffered Daun to retire quietly. 
General Finck, too, was adverse to the bold and hazard- 
ous project of the king, in which he was^destined to play 
the principal part. In the middle of November, while 
colonel Kleist made an incursion into Bohemia to bum 
the Austrian magazines, and to revenge the atrocities 
committed in Brandenburg, where, " agreeably to the 
command of the highest powers, the inhabitants were 
to have nothing left them but the air and earth," gene- 
ral Finck was obliged, in spite of all remonstrances, to 
proceed by a circuitous route through Freiberg to Dip- 
poldiswalde, to push forward to Maxen, to take a posi- 
tion behind Daun's camp, and to bar the road to Bohe- 
mia against him. 

The imperial marshal led his army from Wilsdruf to 
a strong position behind the low ground of Plauen, 
opposing to Finck baron Sincere on the road to Dippol- 
diswalde, general Brentano on the Pirna road, and the 
army of the Empire near Cotta, on the road to Bohemia. 
Frederick occupied the camp at Wilsdruf, and pushed 
Zieten forward to Kesselsdor£ 

The situation of Finck, without support, was so pre* 
carious as to induce Daun to make a bold attempt. 
With one line he kept the king in check, and marched 
with the other to Beichardsgrimma, turned the flank of 
the Prussians on the heights of Maxen, and made him- 
self master of that post, while Brentano attacked the 
centre of the camp, and the army of the Empire occupied 
all the passes across the Bed Water, from Dohna to 
Burkertswalde. Finck's fate was decided. The uncon- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 259 

ditional surrender of the whole corps, including the 
cavalry under general Wunsch, which had already given 
Brentano the slip, was the result. It took place at 
Maxen, on the 21st of November. Never had such dis- 
grace befallen the Prussians as for 12,000 men, with 
nine generals, all their artillery (71 pieces of cannon), 
colours and standards, to be made prisoners of war in 
the open field. 

Finck's case was hard in every respect. He had risen 
at forty, through personal merit and through the favour 
of his sovereign, to be lieutenant-general; he had re- 
cently been almost the sole witness of the anguish and 
despair of the king, who, on account of his meritorious 
efforts after the disaster at Kunersdorf, declared that 
he would be a second Turenne. ** It is a circumstance," 
he thus wrote to him, ^^ unheard of to this day, that a 
Prussian corps should lay down its arms : an event of 
which no one could hitherto conceive an idea." On his 
return from captivity after the peace, he was brought 
to a court-martial, dismissed the service, and confined 
for a year at Spandau. On recovering his liberty, Finck 
entered into the Danish army, with the rank of lieu* 
tenant-general, but died, as it is believed, of a broken 
heart, in 1766. Frederick was not unaffected when he 
heard of his decease ; he appointed his brother, who had 
a company in the regiment of duke Ferdinand, at Magde- 
burg, to be major out of his turn, and removed him to 
Berlin, where he died in 1769. Neither did Frederick 
ever forgive any of the other generals made prisoners 
at Maxen, excepting Wunsch, who seems indeed to have 
been undeservedly implicated in the disaster. To gene- 
ral von der Mosel, who solicited a canonry, he replied : 

S 2 



260 COURT AND TIMES OF 

"You lost the canonry at Maxen;" to another he 
wrote : " I will not make any man a general who is de- 
ficient in firmness, otherwise I shall be served as I was 
at Breslau and Maxen;" and when in 1769, more than 
ten years afterwards, general Bredow was dismissed, his 
petition for a pension called forth this significant direc- 
tion : " Let a pension be assigned upon Maxen." To- 
tally destitute, the general made an attempt on his life ; 
but the ball grazed the scull without doing material in- 
jury. At the intercession of Seydlitz, the king granted 
him a pension of a thousand dollars. 

It is admitted, however, that Finck's conduct was by 
no means blameless. The king says in his works: 
" Marshal Daun detached Brentano to Dippoldiswalda ; 
this should have been the signal for Finck to retire. 
His orders were to attack all the weak corps that he 
should meet with, but to fall back on the approach of 
such as were stronger than his own.*' Montazet, the 
French agent with the Austrian army, who does not 
wholly absolve the king from blame, bears, as an impar* 
-tial eye-witness^ the following testimony : ** It must be 
confessed, however, that in the execution of the king's 
orders Finck committed unpardonable faults. His dis- 
positions were bad ; and he fought with little spirit, 
though the number of his troops and the ground would 
have allowed him to make a good defence." So much 
is certain, that the Prussian general, far from entering 
cordially into the views of the king, went, as he alleged 
himself in his official defence, " with great repugnance," 
to execute the hazardous commission. 

After this successful enterprise, Daun returned to his 
camp near Dresden, and detached general Beck to the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 261 

right bank of the Elbe, against the corps of general 
Dierecke. To avoid the fate of Finck, the latter quitted 
his advantageous position on the Fiirstenberg, not far 
from Meissen, and resolved to cross in the night to the 
other side of the riven The great quantity of floating 
ice obstructed the attempt; part of the troops only 
escaped, while the rest, 1,500 in number, were made 
prisoners of war. 

Frederick's force in Saxony was now reduced to 
24,000 men ; he, nevertheless, maintained his position 
from Wilsdruf to Freiberg against Daun, to the asto- 
nishment of the world. With the exception of Dresden 
and an inconsiderable portion of the circle of Meissen, he 
kept possession of the whole electorate of Saxony, to 
secure which he drew 12,000 men, under the hereditary 
prince of Brunswick, from the army of duke Ferdinand, 
and detained them till the end of January, when he had 
recruited his army. Thus both parties rested upon 
their arms, in the close vicinity of each other, during 
the winter, which was unusually severe, and carried off 
a great number of men» Four battalions of the army 
in daily succession occupied the camp, where the tents 
were frozen as hard as boards. Here the soldiers lay 
huddled close together, for their mutual protection 
against the intense cold. The rest of the army was 
cantoned in the surrounding villages, where the oflScers 
sought accommodation in the houses ; and the men built 
huts, and lay night and day about the fires which they 
kept up in them. Daun, who durst not stir a step 
in advance, was obliged to expose his troops to the like 
inconveniences. At length, on the 1 0th of January, 1 760, 
the Prussians went into winter-quarters. 



262 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Frederick, whose position was not rendered much 
worse by so many reyerses, resided at Freiberg from the 
beginning of December till the end of March, occupied 
with public business and his usual recreations. He never 
represented his melancholy circumstances in a too fa-* 
Tourable light, or encouraged the over-sanguine notions 
of his friends. His grand aim was to stand his ground 
and to terminate the struggle with honour. Under his 
arduous efforts to accomplish this object, both body and 
mind suffered. On the 28th of May, he wrote to 
d'Argens : " I see clearly, my dear marquis, that you 
are as much dazzled as the public. At a distance my 
situation may be surrounded with a certain splendour : 
but, if you were to come nearer, you would find only an 
impenetrable mist. I scarcely know whether there is 
yet a Sans Souci in the world ; but, be the place where 
it will, the name is no longer suitable for me. In short, 
I am old, gloomy, and peevish ; if some flashes of my 
former good-humour burst forth, they quickly expire, 
because there is nothing to keep them up. I deal frankly 
with you. If you were to see me again, you would 
scarcely know me to be the same person, but take me 
for an old man, who is already grown gray, has lost 
half his teeth, and whose cheerfulness, animation, and 
fancy are gone. All these are effects not so much of 
years as of cares, and the first melancholy forerunners 
of that decay which the autumn of life infallibly brings 
with it. These considerations place me precisely in the 
state in which a man ought to be who has to fight for 
life and death. With this indifference to life, one fights 
with more courage and quits the world with less regret." 
Again, on the 1 6th of August, immediately after the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 268 

battle of Kimersdorf : " I will throw myself in the way 
of the enemy, and be cut in pieces or save the capital. 
This, I should think, cannot be considered as any want 
of firmness. If I had more than one life, I would sacri- 
fice it for my country. If this attempt fails, I think 
the country will not have a right to require more of me. 
Every thing has its measure. I endure my misfortune 
without losing courage. But I am firmly resolved, im- 
mediately after this effort, if it miscarries, to seek a way 
to escape, that I may no lodger be the sport of chance." 

ft 

Again, on the 22d of August : " No, the tortures of 
Tantalus, the pains of Prometheus, the punishment of 
Sisyphus, are nothing in comparison with what I have 
suffered for these two days — ^to such a life death is 
sweet." In October he writes : " I have lost the use of 
all my limbs, except my right hand, which I employ to 
request you to come to Glogau. The gout has knocked 
me up ; grief is consuming me ; and I am without so- 
ciety ;" and again : ^^ I am crippled in the left arm, both 
legs, and the right knee. When you consider the many 
disasters, disappomtments, and illnesses, the frequent 
loss of friends, and my inability to move, you will easily 
conceive that I cannot be very cheerful." 

At Wilsdruf on the 22d of November he complains : 
" The misfortune which has befallen general Finck has 
so stupified me that I have not yet recovered from the 
shock. It deranges all my plans and pierces me to the 
heart. Adversity, which persecutes my age, has accom- 
panied me ever since my march into Silesia ; but I will 
combat it while I am able. I write to you in the first 
moment of sorrow ; mortification; grief, rage, are gnaw- 
ing all at once at my soul. Pity my condition, but say 



^^ 



264 COURT AND TIMES OP 

nothing about it ; for bad news spreads fast enough of 
itself. When will my torments end !" Six days later 
he says : ^^ In the course of this year I have exhausted 
all my philosophy. Not a day passes in which I am not 
obliged to have recourse to Zeno's insensibility. In the 
long run, this becomes difficult, I must confess. For these 
four years I haye been in purgatory. If there is a future 
life, the Almighty must certainly give me credit for 
what I have endured in this world." On the 22d of 
December he vnrites : ^^ I have lost all confidence in my 
good luck. The future holds out to me the most gloomy 
prospects. Never was I so weary of life as at this mo- 
ment. Call this hypochondria, or what you please — I 
see every thing black ; but my sorrows belong to myself 
alone; I must bear them." On the 16th of January, 
1760, he is still in the same strain : ^^ My mind is too 
much afflicted, agitated, and depressed, to be able to 
produce any thing tolerable. A tinge of melancholy 
pervades all I write and all I do. And though I grapple 
firmly with reverses, still I can neither bring back For- 
tune nor diminish the number of my enemies. In- 
deed life becomes quite unendurable : when one is 
for ever beset with mortal cares and afflictions, it 
ceases to be a boon of Heaven, becomes an object of 
abhorrence, and is like the most cruel revenge that 
tyrants can wreak upon their miserable victims." 

I have already had occasion to notice the duplicity 
and diabolical spirit of Voltaire towards his royal cor- 
respondent. This spirit was more especially manifested 
at the time of Frederick's severest trials, though he had 
not the courage or the frankness to express his enmity 
to-the king himself. On the 17th of August, 1759, he 



FREDERICK THE GREAT, 265 

writes to d'Argental. " I do not like Luc ; I shall never 
forgive his unworthy treatment of my niece, nor his im- 
pudence in writing to me twice a month the most flatter- 
ing things, without ever making amends for his injustice. 
I long exceedingly for his deep humiliation, for the 
chastisement of the sinner — nay, I am not sure that I 
do not wish for his eternal damnation." On the 22d of 
December, after expressing his desire for peace, he says 
to the same person : " Still I should be glad to see Luc 
punished before this happy peace. If the route through 
Lusatia to Berlin should be opened through the recent 
advantage of general Beck, some Haddik or other might 
pay a visit to Berlin. You see that in tragedy I am 
always for punishing guilt." 

Sir Andrew Mitchell, writing to the earl of Holdernesse 
in July, 1760, observes : " I believe the court of France 
makes use of the artful pen of Voltaire to draw secrets 
from the king of Prussia ; and when that prince writes as 
a wit and to a wit, he is capable of great indiscretions. 
But what surprises me still more is that, whenever Vol- 
taire's name is mentioned, his Prussian majesty never 
fails to give him the epithets he may deserve, which 
are the worst heart and the greatest rascal now living ; 
yet with all this, he corresponds with him ! Such, in 
this prince, is the lust of praise from a great and elegant 
writer, in which however he will at last be the dupe ; 
for, by what I hear from good authority of Voltaire's 
character, he may dissemble, but never can nor never 
will forgive the king of Prussia for what has passed be- 
tween them." 

All the private letters written by Voltaire about this 
time prove how correct was our countryman's estimate 



266 COURT AND TIMES OF 

of the character of the vindictive poet. In the very 
same month in which the above remarks were penned, 
Voltaire, writing toChoiseul, the French minister, strives 
to place the policy of Brandenburg towards France in 
the most odious light, and expresses his joy at the pro- 
spect of Frederick's just destruction. " Now," he adds, 
" if any one would choose to bet, he ought, according 
to the rule of probabilities, to lay three to one that Luc 
will be ruined with his verses and his pleasantries, and 
his abuse and his politics, all these being equally bad." 

While the double-faced Voltaire was thus conoimuni- 
cating his real sentiments to his own countrymen, the 
king was transmitting to him his beautiful Ode to the 
Germans, the epistle to d'Alembert, an Epistle on the 
Opening of the Campaign of 1760, and a Story. " All 
these things," he says, in the letter which accompanied 
them, ^^ served to amuse me, but I again repeat, they are 
good for nothing else." 

Another production of the winter leisure of Frederick, 
while the world threatened his destruction, was his 
'* Reflexions on the Character and Military Talents of 
Charles XII. of Sweden" — 3l short but instructive and 
interesting performance, suggested by his encampment 
on the spot over which Schulenburg fled before that 
king. 

As a piracy of the Works of the Philosopher of Sans 
Souci, with all the satirical sallies against Russian, 
French, and other high personages, which he had not 
intended for the public eye, but communicated to inti- 
mate friends alone, was published about this time in 
France, Frederick was under the necessity of preparing 
in March and April, 1 760, while his army was recruit- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 267 

ing its losses and completing its equipments, a new 
edition of his poems for sale under the title of "Poesies 
Diverses. " There is but too good reason to believe that 
the French publication was got up by Voltaire, for the 
purpose of increasing the animosities of the king's ene- 
mies and gratifying the spirit of revenge which he har- 
boured against Frederick ; for which purpose he had in- 
troduced into it all the satirical passages against French, 
Russian, and other great personages, which the royal 
author himself thought fit to exclude from the edition 
destined for general circulation. 



268 COURT AND TIMES OF 



CHAPTER XXXIV. 

Frederick endeavours to raise enemies against Austria in Italy — He com. 
municates his desire for Peace to the bostile Powers — His Resources for 
prosecuting the War — Plans of the Allies for the Campaign of 1760— 
Loudon foiled in an Attack on a Prussian Detachment— He attacks and 
destroys Fouque*s Corps near Landeshut — Pillage of that Town by the 
Austrians — ^Loudon surprises Glatz — Hard case of Father Faulhaber— 
Loudon bombards Breslau, which is relieved by Prince Henry — The 
King marches for Silesia ; but turns off to Dresden and bombards it— 
On hearing of the Disasters in Silesia, he again sets out for that Pro- 
vince — Severity of the King to the Regiment of Anhalt-Bernburg^ 
His critical situation — Despondency of Prince Henry — Battle of Lieg- 
nitz — ^The Regiment of Bernburg retrieves its character — The King's 
Account of his Difficulties — He marches to Join Prince Henry. 

On the 10th of August, 1759, Ferdinand of Spain 
died a lunatic, leaving no issue. His half-brother Charles, 
king of Naples, succeeded to his throne, placing upon 
that which he had quitted his third son, Ferdinand, then 
only eight years old. The crown of Naples ought by 
right to have devolved to the duke of Parma, and, agree- 
ably to the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, Parma, Piacenza, 
and Guastalla, should have reverted to Austria. Maria 
Theresa was too intent on the recovery of Silesia to 
prosecute these just claims in Italy. Sardinia too 
waved its rights without remonstrance. The king of 
Prussia hoped on this occasion to raise new enemies 
against the empress. He sent lord Marischal from Neuf- 
chatel to Spain, to interest the court, of Madrid in his 
favour. At the same time, a person in the character of 
a Saxon merchant introduced himself to Mr. Macken- 
zie, the English ambassador at Turin, with a letter from 
Sir Andrew Mitchell, intimating that " the bearer, baron 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 269 

Cocceji, aide-de-camp to the king, was instructed to 
propose to the king of Sardinia to march troops into 
the countries which had devolved to him by* virtue of 
the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, to take possession of the 
Milanese, the Mantuan, and the Bolognese, and to pro- 
claim himself king of Lombardy." Naples was urged 
to do the same in regard to Tuscany and the States of 
the Church, while Prussia, on her part, would find Aus- 
tria and France so much employment in Oermany and 
Flanders, that it should not be possible for them to 
oppose Sardinia and Naples in these enterprises. 

Both sovereigns declined the proposal. The king of 
Sardinia confessed that since the alliance between France 
and Austria his head was, as it were, in a vice, which 
threatened every moment to close and crush it. Be- 
sides, Mackenzie, a brother of lord Bute's, was adverse 
to the object of the Prussian envoy, the English govern- 
ment being apprehensive lest the balance of power 
might be disturbed by Frederick's negotiations. At 
Madrid, lord Marischal discovered the grand family com- 
pact of Aranjuez, which was then in progress, and was 
intended to bind the Bourbons at Versailles, at the 
Escurial, in Parma, and in Naples, for ever in an offen- 
sive and defensive alliance : of course nothing was to be 
effected in that quarter. It was for the communication 
of this discovery to the English government, as I have 
mentioned in the brief account of lord Marischal in 
the second volume of this work, that his lordship re- 
ceived a pardon for his former active efforts in the 
eause of the Stuarts. This drew from Horace Wal- 
pole, in one of his letters, the following remark : " I 
forgot to tell you that the king has granted my lord 



270 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Marischal's pardon at the request of M. de Knyphausen 
[the Prussian ambassador.] I believe the Pretender 
himself could get his attainder reversed if he would 
apply to the king of Prussia." 

Frederick now had recourse to other means. He 
joined England in communicating to all the powers^ 
through their ambassadors at the Hague, the desire of 
both for peace. The Bailly de Troulay, ambassador of 
Malta to the court of France, called upon the duke de 
Choiseul and shewed him a letter which he had just re- 
ceived from the king of Prussia. In this letter the 
king recommended to him an accomplished young gen- 
tleman, named Edelsheim, of Hanau, and requested that 
he would introduce him to the French minister, adding 
that he was commissioned to make overtures for peace 
to France. Choiseul was base enough to order Edels- 
heim to be apprehended, in expectation of making im- 
portant discoveries among his papers, but he was com- 
pletely disappointed. 

While the king was thus making known his pacific 
sentiments, his adversaries breathed nothing but war. 
They even refused, on account of Prussia, to exchange 
the prisoners; and on the 21st of March, 1760, the 
courts of Petersburg and Vienna renewed the treaty, 
concluded in 1746, for twenty years longer. They 
agreed to persevere in their efforts for confining the 
king within such narrow limits that he should no longer 
have it in his power to endanger the peace of his neigh- 
bours and of Europe. It was stipulated that Austria 
should have all Silesia and Glatz, while Russia was to 
retain East Prussia. * Frederick had therefore no alter- 
native : he was obliged to prepare for a new campaign. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 271 

The king excelled his adyersaries in the art of raising 
pecuniary resources. In this respect, Saxony suffered 
most severely. For the year 1 760, the circle of Leip- 
zig alone was obliged to pay two million dollars; 
Thuringia nearly fourteen tons of gold, or 1,400,000 
dollars ; and the other provinces in proportion. The 
electorate was likewise obliged to furnish thousands of 
horses, and a prodigious quantity of com and fat caMle. 
The best woods were cut down, and the timber was sold 
to wealthy capitalists. The farmers of the domains 
were required to pay their rent a year before hand. 
The reduction of the coin was still continued, so that 
a ducat was worth more than eight dollars. 

In a letter of the 30th of March to Algarotti, Fre- 
derick himself feelingly deplores the state of Saxony at 
this period. " The wandering Jew," he says, "if he ever 
existed, did not lead such a vagrant life as mine. We 
shall be at last like the strolling players who have nei-* 
ther house nor home : we run about the world to perform 
our bloody tragedies wherever our enemies permit us to 
set up our stage .... The last campaign has brought 
Saxony to the brink of ruin. I spared that fine 
country as long as Fortune allowed me — now the 
devastation is general. And to say nothing of the 
moral evils which will attend this war, the physical 
evils will not be inferior, and we may congratulate our- 
selves if they do not bring the plague in their train. 
We silly creatures, that have but a moment to live, we 
make this moment as grievous for ourselves as we can ; 
we delight in destroying the finest works that time and 
industry have produced, and leaving nothing behind ua 



272 COURT AND TIMES OF 

bat the hateful remembrance of our devastations and of 
the misery which they have caused." 

His remarkable "Ode to the Germans," likewise 
written in the month of March, breathes precisely the 
same spirit. In emphatic terms he there reproves the 
various tribes of Germany, " children of one common 
mother," for their insanity in mangling one another, in 
bringing foreigners into their homes, and in thus open- 
ing for them a way to the heart of their native coun- 
try. He then points out the course in which they may 
acquire glory, and concludes with exhorting his Prus- 
sians to unflinching perseverance. 

Return we now to Frederick's military preparations. 
Recruits were raised chiefly in Saxony, Mecklenburg, 
and Pomerania. Thus the circle of Leipzig had to 
furnish 10,000. Prisoners of war were forced to ex- 
change their uniform for the Prussian, and recruiting 
officers traversed the empire in all directions. By these 
means the disposable force was again augmented in the 
course of the spring to 90,000 men, but, as the king 
himself admits, these were not serviceable troops, but 
only fit for show, and led by officers who were accepted 
for want of better. The corps of his brother Henry 
was superior in this respect to the rest of the army. 
There still lived the spirit of Frederick's troops, as 
manifested at the commencement of the war; there 
were still to be found those old and tried warriors 
who had chained victory to their colours, and who 
soon communicated the sentiments by which they were 
animated to the sturdy young recruits from Pomerania 
and the Marks. ' 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 273 

It was the object of the Russians to reduce Silesia^ 
while Daun was to detain the king in Saxony, and Lou* 
don .0 keep prince Henr, tj Joining h^ brother. 
Frederick, on his part, was desirous of preventing the 
junction of the Austrians and Russians ; and he deter* 
mined, while Henry collected 35,000 men at Frankfurt 
against the Russians, and Fouque defended Silesia with 
14,000, to make head himself with 40,000 against the 
main Austrian army in Saxony. The rest of his force— 
6000 men — under the command of Jung-Stutterheim, 
was to oppose the Swedes. 

Loudon, who had passed the winter in Morayia and 
Upper Silesia, had concluded a truce till the 1 4th of 
March with the Prussian generals opposed to him. As 
soon as it had expired, he opened the campaign in Upper 
Silesia. A small detachment under general von der Golz 
was obliged to fall back at his approach. The Pome- 
ranian infantry regiment of Manteuifel and a squadron 
of Bayreuth dragoons had been left behind at Neustadt 
to protect a convoy. Loudon by a forced march got 
before the Prussians, and was waiting for them beyond 
Neustadt. He had with him four regiments of cavalry ; 
and, no sooner had Golz left the town and commenced 
his march en pelotons for the protection of more than 
a hundred waggons, than the Lowenstein dragoons, one 
of the bravest regiments in the Austrian service, at- 
tacked the advanced guard, while the Palffy cuirassiers 
fell upon the rear, and two regiments of hussars upon 
the flanks. Their efforts were unavailing. Loudon sent 
an officer to summon the Prussians to surrender, in 
which case they should be alloweci to keep all their 
baggage, but threatening that if they made any further 

VOL. III. T 




874 COURT AND TIMES OF 

resistance they: should be all eut in piecea. Golz led the 
imperial officer b^ore the front and acquainted them 

with Loudon's message. " We'll upon him," una- 

nimously cried the brave Pomeranians in the vulgar 
dialect of their province. The 5000 Austrians now, 
rushed upon this single regiment and were repulsed* 
Golz continued his march, and though Loudon repeated 
his attacks with increased fury, he was at length obliged 
to desist with the loss of more than 300 killed and 500 
wounded : that of the Prussians amounted to 140* Golz 
took up his quarters in the vicinity of Neisse. 

To Fouque, with scarcely 14,000 men, was assigned 
the task of covering Silesia against Loudon's army 
amounting to 50,000, while prince Henry was to pre^ 
vent the junction of the latter with the Russians. 
Fouque was still in cantonmisnts near Landeshut,. when, 
in the beginning of May, Loudon concentrated himself 
at Skalitz, and, pushing forward light troops towards 
the fortress of Glatz, seemed to threaten Sbhweidnitz 
^nd Breslau. Fouque considered the rescue, of those 
places as the most important point ; but, while he was 
directing his attention to tiiiat, his artful adversary 
marched upon Glatz and summoned the commandant. 
Fouqu^, alarmed for the safety of SchweidnitZy fr^m 
which he derived supplies, and which was' threatened 
by Beck's corps, retired under the guns of that for-* 
tress. The king, irritated, by the representations of 
Schlabemdorf, the minister, who tolicited protection for 
the weavers and monntaineerB against the enirany's ma- 
rauders, wrote to his old friend, the grand-master of the 
order of Bayard : " I am devilishly obliged to you for 
abandoning my mountains. Get me my mountains again, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. S76 

cost what it will." Fouqne^ devoting himself to almost 
certain destructioxi^ returned to Landeshut, drove out 
an Austrian force which had occupied the place, and 
regained possession of the mountains. 

Loudon, on receiving this mtelUgence, advanced with 
the greatest part of his corps, 38,000 men, from Glatz, 
and, at two in the morning of the S3d of June, at« 
tacked Fouque's entrenched position on the heights near 
Landeshut. The Prussian corps amounted to no more 
than 10,400, hut was defended hy 68 pieces of cannon. 
The unequal conflict, lasted the whole day : the Prus- 
sians, though they fought with an intrepidity worthy of 
their leader and their name, were driven from position 
to position. Part of the cavalry, forcing their way 
through the enemy, escaped to Neumark. At nine in 
the evenings when Fouque had but few men left capable 
of defending his last redoubt, it was found that these 
had expended all their ammunition. He then resolved 
to retreat with half his , remaining force beyond the 
Bober, reached the height on the left bank, formed a 
square, and attempted to fight his way through the ene- 
my's cavalry, when he was attacked by it on all sides. 
Fouque's horse was shot ; he sank to the ground, and 
the Austrians^ inflamed with fury, fell upon him and his 
brave fellows, and slaughtered them without mercy. 
The general himself i^ceived two sabre-wounds on the 
head and one on the shoulder, and must have experi- 
enced the same fate but for the unparalleled attachment 
manifested by Trautschke, his groom, whom the king 
called the "wonder of Silesia." Covering his master 
with his own body, he received thirteen wounds from 
the sabres of the Lowenstein dragoons, while he cried 

T 2 



276 COURT AND TIMES OF 

out to them in vain : ** Do you mean to murder the 
commanding general?'* At length he was heard by 
colonel Voit, who drove back the infuriated soldiers, 
raised the general, covered with blood and dust, from 
the ground, ordered his spare horse to be brought, and 
offered it to Fouque. The latter delivered his sword to 
the colonel, but declmed mounting the horse, " because 
the handsome saddle-cloth would be spoiled by his 
blood." " My saddle-cloth," replied Voit, "will be in- 
finitely more valuable when it is decorated with the 
blood of a hero." He insisted on his mounting, and 
conducted him to Loudon. 

Meanwhile, general Schenkendorf, who had been left 
behind with the other portion of the Prussian troops, 
experienced the like fate. They were surrounded, partly 
slaughtered, and partly taken. Colonel Below, with the 
first battalion of Braun's fiisileers, forming a square, suc- 
ceeded, like Fouque, in crossing the Bober, but was also 
surrounded and overpowered. The Austrians, exaspe* 
rated at such resistance, gave no quarter. Very few, 
among whom was Below himself, recovered from their 
severe wounds. The faithful Trautschke also recovered, 
after being trepanned, and survived his master ; he was 
at his death an excise-ofiicer at Brandenburg. 
' From six to seven thousand Prussians were killed or 
wounded in this desperate fight; the rest were taken 
prisoners : 68 pieces of cannon, 34 pair of colours, and 
S standards fell into the hands of the Austrians, whose 
victory cost them 5000 men. 

The open, industrious town of Landeshut was cruelly 
treated by the Imperialists. The soldiers were drunk, 
so that Loudon himself, when he attempted to stop the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 277 

pillage, could scarcely control their fury. Twelve 
persmis lost their lives, 43 were severely wounded, and 
upwards of 300 were dreadfully maltreated. The loss 
sustained by the inhabitants was estimated at 635,000 
dollars ; and the king made compensation for it to the 
amount of half a million. On the first tidings of Fouque's 
fate, he said to his generals : ** Fouque is taken ; but he 
has defended himself like a hero;*' and in his works he 
compares his defence with that of Leonidas. 

As prince Henry had gone to the New Mark to observe 
the Russians, and there were no Prussian troops in Silesia, 
excepting the weak garrisons in the fortresses, Loudon, 
after his victory at Landeshut, ordered general Harsch 
to lay siege to the fortress of Glatz. 

Glatz is composed of the old and the new fortress, 
separated by the river Neisse. It was defended by lieu- 
tenant-colonel d'O, vice«commahdant, who had only five 
weak battalions, composed of men not at all to be de- 
pended on. Harsch opened the trenches before the old 
fortress on the 20th of July, and the batteries were com- 
pleted, when Loudon himself arrived on the S5th. At 
^ve on the following morning, the besiegers opened their 
fire, which was returned with spirit. The attack on the 
outworks by 400 picked Croats and grenadiers took 
place at seven. It was kept up with the utmost intre- 
pidity on the. one part, and met by obstinate resistance 
on the other, till eleven o'clock ; about which time the 
Austrians scaled the principal works, rushed into the 
fortress along with the men whom they had driven out of 
them, and forced the garrison, thus taken by surprise, 
to surrender at discretion. The new fortress imme- 
diately submitted. 



278 COURT AND TIMES OF 

The king, who viefwed tbk evesit in too UBfaTOiirable 
a light, Bays that it was bnHigbt ^tbout through the me- 
dium of Jesuits, monks, and Catholic priests^ aiid that 
through them Loudon had succeeded in bnbing some of 
the officers and manj of the soldiers of the garrison. It 
is possible that d'O may* hare be^' inad^tate td the 
important post entrusted to hiin, but he was not a traitor; 
he was esteemed by Fouque. Neither had priests any 
hand in producing die dii^uster ; and, as for Jesuits, there 
was not one in Glatz. Frederick dishiered all the offi- 
cers of the garrison : the commandant, on his return after 
l^e peace, was tried and condemned to die ; but at the 
place of execution he received a commutation of his sen* 
tence to confinement in a fortress. 

The hard fate of father Faulhaber, a Franciscan at 
Glatz, tended to embitter the Catholic clergy and popu- 
lation of the town against the Prussians. Some time 
before the blockade^ a soldier belonging to the Prussian 
garrison acquainted this Franciscan at confession with 
his intention to desert, and asked for absolution on ac- 
count of the perjury which he should commit in doing 
so. Faulhaber strove to dissuade him from his purpose, 
but without effect, on which he refused him the desired 
absolution. According to the doctrines of his chureb, 
bie did not consider himself authoriiSed to do more and to 
inform the authorities of the circumstance. The soldier 
deserted, was caught, and in his examination he made 
mention of that confession. Faulhaber was apprehended, 
and, agreeably to the tenor of the articles of war, hanged 
by command of general Fouque. In the eyes of the 
people, he died a martyr : they deemed it a miracle that 
his body showed no signs of putrefaction, and this tefided 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 279 

to inflame their revenge against his mnrderers. It was 
probably on this circumstance that the king founded his 
notion that Catholic priests had contributed to the loss 
of the fortress. 

Loudon now hastened to Breslau^ where he hoped to 
be equally succesispfiil. Tauentzien, the commandant of 
that capital, was a man of firamess and resolution. On 
being summoned by Loudon, who threatened that ^^ eyen 
the child unborn should not be ^ared/' he replied : ^^ I 
am not with child^ neither are my soldiers," and swore, 
with the officers of the guard stationed at Breslau of 
which he was commander, rather to perish to the last 
man than surrender the city. Lessing, who was then 
secretary to this high-spirited general, was accustomed 
to say of him : ^^ If the king were to be so unfortunate 
as to be able to assemble his army under one tree, Tau- 
entzien would certainly be there." On the evening of 
the 1st of August, Loudon commenced the bombardment 
of the place ; but prince Henry came from the New Mark 
to its relief, and the imperial general raised the siege on 
the morning of the 4th. 

Before Frederick received tidings of Fouque's disaster, 
he had determined to hasten to his assistance, to &11 upon 
Lascy, who was keeping watch on the right bank of the 
Elbe, even to fight Daun himself, who he hoped would 
follow him. He therefore left HuUen to oppose the army 
of the Empire, crossed the Elbe on the 1 4th of June at 
Zadel, and waited in expectation that Daun would follow 
him. He hoped, but in vain, to bring the campaign to 
a close at once ; for Daun continued in his strong posi- 
tion near Beichenberg, merely sending Lascy to bar the 
route to Silesia against the king. But, when Frederick 



280 COURT AND TIMES OP 

seemed to show a serious inttotion of marching to Silesia, 
Daun hastened to anticipate him, and, on the 6th of 
Jolj, had reached Beichenbach, while the Prussians, 
wearied out with fatigue, were obliged to halt. The 
Austrians had marched along thd cord, the Prussians 
along the arc of the bow. So oppressive was the heat 
in these marches that, on the 5th, more than a hundred 
Prussians dropped down dead. When the unfortunate 
soldiers came to a stream, a spring, a pond, or a pool, 
they rushed to the water, and took it up with their hats, 
regardless of blows and of the word of command till thej 
had quenched their burning thirst. 

While the Prussians were resting, Daun hurried for- 
ward on the 7th to Gorlitz, on the 8th to Naumburg, 
and here, behind the Queis, prepared to encounter an 
enemy where there was none. Frederick suddenly 
changed his plan, and threw himself upon Lascy, hoping 
to annihilate him. In a cavalry action near Godau, on 
the 7th of July, in which Frederick led the attack in 
person, his life was in inuninent danger. Retzow relates 
that two imperial Hulans, who had pushed on very far, 
were preparing to cut him down, when his page, gallop- 
ing up, cried in Polish, " Where the devil are you driv- 
ing to ?'* Disconcerted at the question, conceiving that 
the page, who did not wear the Prussian uniform, was 
an Austrian oflScer, they excused themselves by saying 
that their horses had run away with them, and rode back. 
Lascy pursued the most prudent course ; he fled towards 
Dresden, and joined the army of the Empire beyond that 
city, while Frederick, now master of the right bank of 
the Elbe, advanced unmolested upon the Saxon capital. 

So rapid and so unexpected was this movement, that 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 281 

the troops of the Empire, when they found themselves 
abandoned by Dann, and Lascy sought refuge with them 
near Plauen, fell back in alarm to Dohna. Macguire 
occupied Dresden with 14,000 men. The prince of Hol- 
stein was posted before the New Town, and the king him- 
self before the Old Town. But he had not much time 
to spare, for he had reason to apprehend that Daun would 
return : hence the horrors of war were renewed in this 
quarter, and the greater part of Dresden was converted 
into a heap of rubbish by an unsparing bombardment 
from the 14th to the 27th of July. The picture of the 
sufferings and distresses of the Saxons on this occasion 
furnishes a companion to that of the bombardment of 
Custrin ; but the mischief done to Dresden far surpassed 
the other, as well in magnitude as in the inhuman tyranny 
of the Austrian garrison. Splendid palaces, whole streets, 
and the church of the Holy Cross to begin with, were 
destroyed by the flamies. The Prussians directed their 
guns chiefly against the lofty edifices, churches, and 
steeples. On the 19th of July, upwards of 1400 bombs 
were thrown into the city ; many of the inhabitants were 
killed by them in the streets, and others buried by the 
falling houses. Add to these disasters the pillage of the 
Austrians, whom Macguire was continually hanging by 
dozens, without rendering the property of the unfortu- 
nate inhabitants the more secure. 

Daun was now returning. Macguire, who had re-* 
established his communication with him on the 20 th, on 
which day the Prussians were obliged to quit the right 
bank of the Elbe, obstinately defended himself, made 
sorties, and was incessantly annoying the besiegers. 
Paun, nevertheless, made scarcely any preparations for 



282 COURT AND TIMES OF 

crossing the Elbe till the 27th ; and the armj of the Em- 
pire» united with Lascy's corps, continued nearly inactive. 
But when part of the siege artillery brought from Mag* 
deburg was intercepted by the Austrians, and the king 
at the same time received intelligence that Glatz was 
lost, and that a hostile corps had marched by Freiberg 
to Nossen, he fell back to Meissen, and crossed the Elbe 
on the 1st of August below that town, to make a second 
attempt to reach Silesia, and to form a junction with 
prince Henry, 

It was during the siege of Dresden that the king ex^ 
hibited an instance of extraordinary severity towards the 
regiment of Anhalt-Bemburg. ISiis was nearly the oldest 
regiment in the army of Brandeiiburg : by its military 
reputation under the old Dessauer, who commanded it 
from 1693 to 17479 it had first gained a name for the 
Prussilm soldiers, and ever since that time there was 
scarcely a battle in which the brave grenadiers had not 
spilt their blood. In a sally, in the night of the 22nd 
of July, their piquets had been sm'prised by the enemy, 
whose attack was thereby facilitated. They defended 
themselves, it is true, with great intrepidity in the breach-t 
ing battery and in the trenches ; captain Kaufberg even 
took 200 prisoners, with general Nugent : but the in-t 
creasing force of the Austrisms compelled the little band 
of Prussians to leave their cannon behind them, and to 
fall back. Though the battalions hastening to their suc- 
cour recovered the batteries, repulsed the enemy, and 
wiped away the stain arising from the negligence of a 
few, still the king punished the regiment with excessive 
rigour, by disgracing it before the whole army. The 
nature of this punishment was as remarkable as it was new. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 283 

Extraordinaiy'importanoe was at that time attached 
to certain distinctions in the uniform, and no regiment 
WW more conspicuous in this respect than that of the 
did Dessauer« Frederick deprived the officers of the 
gold lace upon their hats, and the men of their dde* 
arms, while the drummers were forbidden to beat the 
Grenadiers' March — a disgrace the more mortifying be- 
cause unmerited. The brave fellows swore to seize the 
first opportunity of regaining the honour of which they 
were thus deprived, and well did they redeem the vow, 
as we shall presently see. It is right, however, to add 
&at Frederick's rewards were as well calculated to ope* 
rate upon the common men as the punishmente which he 
adjudged. Thus he offered a premium of 100 ducats for 
evei^ piece of cannon, 50 for every pair of colours, and 
40 for every standard that should be taken -~ sums su& 
fident to stimulate soldiers eager after booty to the 
most daring efforts, and which weie punctually paid; 

Frederick's situation was at this time peculiarly criti<- 
eal. His march to Silesia was rendered not less ardu- 
ous by the devastations of the Austrians than dangerous 
by tbe proximity of Daun and Lascy ; the former, having 
quitted Dresden, was pr^eding him on the road to Bres- 
lau, while the latter was following at his heels. But for 
the aetiom that daily took place, all three armies might 
have been supposed to belong to one and the same mas* 
ter* The progress c^ the Prusskns was considerably 
impeded also by a thousand waggons which were required 
to convey provisions for the troops. The king, never- 
theless, reached the Eatzbach in six days, but his situa- 
tion was by no means improved. To his 30,000 men 
were opposed 90,000 Austrians, for Loudon had formed 



284 COURT AND TIMES OF 

a junction with Daun. Frederick had supplies for a few 
days only ; he was therefore obliged to direct his course 
to Breslau or Glogau, as the route to Schweidnitz was 
barred against him. The direction upon Breslau was to 
be preferred, as he might then form a junction with prince 
Henry, otherwise the latter would be exposed not only 
to the attack of the Austrians, but also to that of the 
Russians, who were nearly as numerous. 

Not only had the king at this critical moment to con- 
tend with the vast superiority of his enemies in the field, 
but also with the discouragement and despondency of 
his friends, and even of his own brother. Henry,^ whose 
courage and military talents had been displayed on num- 
berless occasions, found the whole posture of affairs so 
unpropitious, that he gave way to the most gloomy ideas, 
and, on the 5th of August, wrote to the king from his 
head-quarters at Lissa, begging that he would allow hint 
to resign a command to which he felt himself inadequate* 
Frederick's answer, on the 9th, from the camp near Ho- 
hendorf, on the Katzbach, was as follows : ^^ It is not 
difficult, my dear brother, to find people to serve the 
state when it is flourishing and prosperous. Those are 
good citizens who serve it in times of peril and disaster. 
Solid glory is acquired by the perfonnance of arduous 
tasks ; the more arduous the more honourable. I can* 
not, therefore, think that you are in earnest in what you 
have written. It is certain that neither you nor I can 
be answerable for what may happen in our present situa- 
tion ; but our consciences and the public will acquit us 
if we do all that lies in our power. As for the present 
state of my affiiirs, they will, according to all appear- 
ance be decided in a few days. We shall fight for ho- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. S85 

nour and for our country, and every one will do the im- 
possible to conquer. Superior numbers do not frighten 
me — still I cannot answer for the result." After re- 
ceiying this letter, the prince relinquished his intention 
of retiring from the army. 

Nothing but Frederick's vigilance and his military 
genius preserved him during these days from a repetition 
of the surprise which he had experienced at Hochkirch« 
More than once he was forced to take the most danger- 
ous positions, but the celerity with which he changed 
them always baffled the plans of the dilatory Daun* The 
king himself calls his mode of proceeding in this predi- 
cament that of a partisan who is obliged to risk every 
thing to get at the enemy ; but all his attempts either 
to turn Daunts flank or to force his enemies to fight him 
singly proved abortive, and, on the 13th of August, he 
was again on the left bank of the Katzbach between 
Liegnitz and Schimmelwit^. Daun was posted opposite 
to him, Loudon and Beck on his flanks, and Lascy in the 
rear. 

The Austrians now conceived that the lion was in 
their toils, and that the moment had arrived for striking 
a decisive blow; but, not deeming themselves strong 
enough with their own treble number to crush their for- 
midable foe, they applied to the sulky Soltikof for a re- 
inforcement. " The sack is opened for the Prussians,'* 
said they ; " let us drive them into it, and tie it up." 
Frederick was informed of this expression, and observed 
at table : ^^ They are not far wrong ; but I think to make 
a hole in their sack, which they shall have some trouble 
to mend." Soltikof was actually induced by Daun's re- 
presentations to send Czemitschef with 24,000 men across 



286 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the Oder on the 13th of August. From this eircum- 
stance, as well as from the appearance of Daun and his 
generals, on the 14th upon the hills, whence they x^are- 
folly reconnoitred the position of the Prussians, the 
king concluded that they contemplated a surprise. He 
therefore made immediate dispositions for crossing the 
Schwarzwasser, and occupying the heights of Pfafien-^ 
dorf. He purposed to break up in the night, and, that 
the enemy might not be aware of his d^[®rture, he in- 
fended to haye the wateh'-fires kept up in the deserted 
camp, and to employ peasants to repeat to one auQt^er 
the usual call of the patroles. 

The accuracy of Frederick's conjectures was more 
than sufficiently confirmed during the day. At four in 
the afternoon, an Austrian officer^ named Wiese, was 
brought in quite dfunk, iwd crying incessantly that he 
had a great secret to tell. C<^d water and emetics were 
employed to sober him the sooner ; he was then taken to 
the king, and informed him that the Pru^ian army was 
to be attacked next day by Daun in the right flank, and 
by Lascy in the rear. As for Loudon, he knew notliing 
about him. Frederick once more reconnoitred the 
country in company with the deserter, but sawne reason 
to change his dispositions. At t^ at night he set hi^ 
army in motion, and, wh9e one division marched through 
Liegnitz, the other crossed the.Bchwarzwass.er near that 
town. The left wing occupied the Wojfijberg, and the 
right wing the Glasberg ; and here the king purposed 
io wait tiU morning, when he intended to proceed to 
Morschwitz, and there pitch his camp* 

Accurately as the dispositions for the march were 
carried into effect^ still the troops had in the night be- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 287 

come intermixed, and, while they were getting into order 
again, the king halted them on the heights between 
Hiimeln, Pfaffendorf, and Panten. The men meanwhile 
seated themselves on the ground with their firelocks on 
their arms, and chatted together in an nnder-tone, as 
singing was forbidden. It was a starlight snmmer 
night. From the Wolfsberg the Prassians overlooked 
the enemy's camp, with its blazing watch-fires ; and the 
hoary warriors told their younger comrades about the 
hard battles which they had fought with that same foe, 
about the exploits of their ^^ Fritz," and about Schwerin, 
Keith, Maurice, Seydlitz, and other commanders, whom 
they had so often followed to certain victory. 

Frederick himself was on the right wing of his army, 
and sat down by a fire which Zieten's hussars had 
lighted, and which Bathenow's grenadiers kept, up when 
the hussars had gone forward. He had wrapped him* 
self in his cloak, and seemed to be dozing ; and those 
who were next to him kept off others, lest they should 
disturb the king. Day began to dawn, when major 
Hundt of Zieten's hussars, who had been sent out to- 
wards Pohlschildem to reconnoitre, suddenly came gal- 
loping up. " Where is the king ? where is the king ? '* 
cried he, hurriedly, dashing among the grenadiers, who 
started upon their feet. *^ What is it ? " rejoined the 
king himself. " Your majesty,*' replied Hundt, " the 
enemy is here : he has already driven in all my vedettes, 
and is not 400 paces off." The king would not at first 
believe the report, and nothing but Hundt's most em- 
phatic assurances could induce him to make dispositions 
against this unexpected attack. At length the answers 
to his further inquiries led him to conjecture that Loudon 



288 COURT AND TIMES OF , 

might be coming in that direction, and his resolution 
was soon formed. ^^ Stop the enemy as long as possi- 
ble," said he to Hundt ; and, collecting the two nearest 
battalions, he led them on in person, leaving orders for 
the other battalions of the left wing to follow, so that a 
strong front might be presented to the enemy. , But no 
sooner had these commenced their movement, than the 
flank patroles fell in with the enemy, and the engage- 
ment began. 

Before I enter upon the details of this battle, it may 
not; be amiss to advert to the circumstances under which 
Loudon, for he was the assailant, involved himself in it. 
The Prussian camp between Liegnitz and Schimmelwitz, 
which Daun minutely reconnoitred on the 14th, offered 
to the Austrians an occasion too alluring for attacking 
the king. When, in compliance with Loudon's personal 
solicitation, Soltikof had sent 24,000 Russians to cross 
the Oder at Auras, Daun had projected the following 
plan. The Russians were to cut off Frederick's retreat 
upon Breslau; Loudon, with 35,000 men, was to cross 
the Katzbach, about five miles below Liegnitz, to bar in 
like manner the route to Glogau ; Lascy was to fall upon 
the rear of the Prussians, and Daun himself intended to 
cross the Katzbach with his whole army near Eroitsch 
and Hohendorf, and, while Beck and Ried detained the 
king near Liegnitz, to advance through Wiltsch and 
Rothkirch^ and take him in his right flank. This plan 
was duly carried into effect in the night of the 15th; 
but Daun marched upon the camp which Frederick had 
just quitted, while Loudon unexpectedly found himself 
upon the left wing of the Prussians, and involved in a 
decisive engagement. 




FREDERICK THE GREAT. 289 

The Austrians had purposely marched without ad- 
vanced guard, that they might make themselves masters 
of the baggage of the Prussians, and now came suddenly, 
with the bulk of their corps, upon the battalions led by 
Frederick in person. Both parties hastened to form 
their troops for the attack. The Austrians lay under a^ 
great disadvantage, owing as well to the circumscribed 
extent of the ground, as to the tardiness of their mo- 
tions. Loudon, nevertheless, hesitated not a moment ; 
ordered a few cannon-shot to be discharged at random, 
and drew up his troops in four lines. 

Meanwhile the heavy field-pieces usually attached to 
the Prussian infantry brigades had been formed into a 
battery on the Wolfsberg, and opened their fire upon 
the close ranks of the Austrians, at the same moment 
that the battalions, headed by the king, commenced 
their fire of small arms. This brought the enemy to a 
dead stand, and facilitated the advance of the Prussian 
troops. Frederick is related to have himself directed 
the formation of the above-mentioned battery. 

An eyewitness, who had occasion to observe the king 
in these moments, records the following particulars. 
After riding along general Schenkendorf's brigade, his 
majesty immediately turned back to its left wing, and, 
stooping from his horse, pointed to a small eminence, 
the outline of which was defined against the twilight 
sky. This height Schenkendorf was to take with his 
battery. " How will it go, my dear Schenkendorf ?" 
said the king. — " I will just ask my lads," replied the 
general. — " Well, grenadiers, what say you ? Will you 
fight like brave fellows ?" — " O, yes, if you lead us, 
we'll send them to the devil !" was the unanimous ex- 

VOL. III. u 



290 COURT AND TIMES OF 

clamation. At that moment commenced the enemy's 
fire of small anns, and the balls began to strike the caps 
of the grenadiers. *' Now, Schenkendorf, it is time to 
march," said the king, — "Shall I order the general 
march to be beat ?" — " In God's name," answered Fre- 
derick, and the whole left wing wheeled to make' front 
against Loudon. 

In fact, the king found himself obliged to make head 
against the enemy on two sides. Without hesitating a 
moment how to act, he resolved to adyance with the 
troops first formed upon the nearest foe, while Zieten, 
with the right wing of his little army, was to face the 
Katzbach and the Schwarzwasser, and to defend the 
passage against Daun. 

It was three in the morning when the battle com- 
menced. By the brisk fire of canister from the Wolfs- 
berg, on which Loudon meant to form, he found himself 
suddenly thrown back upon the columns that were fol- 
lowing him, and was some time in arranging his army : 
he then attacked the Prussians with equal skill and in- 
trepidity. His cavalry on the extreme right wing was 
first ready, and rushed in far superior force upon the 
Prussian regiment of Krokow's dragoons, which had ad- 
vanced for the purpose of facilitating the drawing up of 
the Prussian infantry in order of Jiattle. The dragoons 
were repulsed, and margrave Frederick's cuirassiers, who 
came to their succour, were hard pressed. General Biilow, 
who had already arranged five battalions at this point, 
went with them to meet the Austrian cavalry. Among 
these was the Anhalt regiment, which had been dis- 
graced at Dresden, and was bent on regaining its ho- 
nour« The Prussians rushed with such irresistible im- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 291 

petuosity upon the enemy's horse, that they were forced 
to wheel abont, and, as at this moment the 1 5 squadrons 
of the Prussian left wing passed Billow's battalions, in 
pursuit of the fugitive Austrian cavalry, they totally 
dispersed and drove it into the morasses of Schonbom. 
Biilow then fell back, and stationed himself near the 
great battery, while the king was engaged in arranging 
the right wing of his division of the army for the fight. 

As Loudon sought to gain ground on the right, so did 
the Prussians on the left ; but the rapidity and valour 
of the latter gave them the advantage, and Loudon was 
not able even to deploy his troops. The whole line of 
the Prussians advanced victoriously. The fresh troops 
brought into the fight by Loudon were beaten the mo- 
ment they appeared, and, when the decimated Austrians 
betook themselves to flight, the Prussian cavalry dashed 
in among them, making the greater part of them pri- 
soners. Such was the invariable result of four succes- 
sive attempts, as the Austrian cavalry never ventured 
upon the ground. 

By these repeated efforts, however, the ranks of the 
Prussians were considerably thinned, and Frederick had 
only four battalions of reserve. These were now marched 
forward into the line of battle, and, to strengthen it 
still more, four battalions and five squadrons were 
fetched from Zieten's division. Loudon, on the other 
hand, had relieved his weary troops, and brought up 
fresh forces, and for the fifth time the columns renewed 
the sanguinary fray. 

The Austrian cavalry now seized a favourable moment 
for supporting their infantry, and falling upon that of 
the Prussians. For a moment success seemed to crown 

u 2 



292 COURT AND TIMES OF 

this attack : the Austrian horse broke into the ranks, 
making prisoners, and taking colours and cannon. But 
the brave grenadiers of Anhalt-Bemburg turned the 
tide. Stimulated by the idea of wiping away the dis- 
grace of Dresden, they charged the cavalry with fixed 
bayonets, killed many, and drove back several regi- 
ments in the utmost confusion upon the rest of the 
enemy's troops. The Prussian cavalry now advanced 
just at the seasonable moment. They not only recovered 
the prisoners and the booty taken by the Austrians, but 
annihilated their cavalry a second time, and thus de- 
cided the fortune of the day. After a battle of three 
hours, Loudon retreated across the Katzbach. Frede- 
rick had brought into the field only 14,000 men against 
his adversary's 32,000. Pursuit was out of the ques- 
tion, as Daun's army of 60,000 men was already in 
sight and threatening the Prussian right wing, while 
their left was driving the enemy from the field. The 
trophies of the conquerors, however, were not inconside- 
rable. Two generals, 86 other officers, 5,000 men, 82 
pieces of cannon, and 28 pair of colours, fell into the 
hands of the Prussians. The enemy left, moreover, 
2,500 dead and wounded on the field, while the loss of 
the victors is said to have amounted to no more than 
1186. The king himself had been struck by a ball in 
the loins, but not wounded. 

Daun had marched with the intention of falling at 
daybreak upon the left flank of the king, whom he sup- 
posed to be still in his former camp, with his left wing 
upon Liegnitz ; but at two in the morning he received 
intelligence that the camp was deserted. He then pur- 
posed to cross the Katzbach, and to pursue the enemy. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 293 

About five o'clock Zieten first perceived the heads of the 
columns of Daun's advanced guard, and prevented any 
serious attempt to cross the Schwarzwasser. 

Lascy also had at nightfall broken up from Siechau, 
crossed the Katzbach, and advanced upon Waldau, with 
the intention of falling upon the rear of the king ; but 
he could not cross the Schwarzwasser, owing to the 
swampy nature of its banks. 

The army was ordered to form a line on the field of 
battle ; and the king, riding along it from left to right, 
stopped before the regiment of Bernburg, which was at 
the head of the right wing. " My lads," said he, in the 
kindest tone, " I thank you. You have behaved bravely, 
very bravely. You shall have every thing again — every 
thing." The flugelman of the life company, a hoary 
veteran, named Fauser, stepping of his own accord out 
of the ranks, went up to the king: "I thank your 
majesty," said he, " in the name of my comrades, for 
having done us justice. Is not your majesty again our 
gracious king ?" Frederick, pleased with the manliness 
and warmth of this address, patted the brave spokesman 
on the shoulder, and replied : " All is forgotten and for- 
given, but your services this day I shall never forget.'* 
He then dismounted, and said to the commander of the 
regiment : " Let this old man be made sergeant." By 
this time several of the privates, having collected round 
the king, began to exculpate themselves for their beha- 
viour at Dresden : the king replied, and the men argued 
and demonstrated with such familiarity and strength of 
lungs that the commander, fearful lest the king might 
be angry, would have driven them back. " No, no, let 
them alone," said he with a good-natured smile, and put 



294 COURT AND TIMES OF 

an end to the dispute by repeating that they were brave 
fellows, and had that day nobly upheld the glory of 
Prussia. Fauser was living in 1789 as messenger to 
the deputation of the Chamber of Halle, where the regi- 
ment of Old Anhalt was in garrison. 

Zieten, who had on this day displayed great military 
talent, was promoted on the field to general of cavalry. 
One of Frederick's first inquiries was after the brave 
Schenkendorf, and he learned that the general's lower 
jaw had been shattered by a canister-shot. 

The impression made by this victory in England may 
be estimated from a letter of Mr. Pitt's to Mitchell, in 
which he writes : " I cannot let a messenger go away 
without conveying some expressions at least of all my 
heart feels on the glorious and stupendous successes with 
which Providence has at last crowned the heroic con- 
stancy of spirit and unexampled activity of mind of that 
truly great king you are so fortunate to contemplate 
nearly. Never was joy more sincere and universal than 
that which Mr. Cocceji's arrival confirmed to us ; and, 
amidst a whole nation's joy, none can surpass, if any 
can equal, mine." Cocceji was the bearer of the in- 
telligence of the victory at Liegnitz. 

The victory at Liegnitz gave a different complexion 
to the cause of the king, but no positive security or con- 
fidence. "Formerly," he writes to d'Argens, "the 
affair of the 15th would have decided much ; now that 
battle is a mere bagatelle. It requires a great victory 
to decide our fate. In all probability, such a one will 
soon take place ; and then we will rejoice if the issue is 
favourable to us. I thank you, nevertheless, for the in- 
terest that you take in this event. No little skill was 




FREDERICK THE GREAT. 295 

required to bring matters to this point. Say nothing 
about danger : the last battle has cost me only a coat 
and a horse; that is purchasing victory at a cheap 
rate. I have not received the letter to which you allude. 
Our correspondence is blockaded, as it were ; for the 
Russians are on one side of the Oder, the Austrians on 
the other, A petty action had to be fought in order to 
clear the way for Cocceji. I hope he has delivered my 
letter to you. Never in my life have I been in so cri- 
tical a position as in this campaign. Be assured that a 
sort of miracle is requisite to surmount all the diffi- 
culties I foresee. I will not fail to do my duty ; but 
bear in mind, my dear marquis, that I cannot control 
Fortune, and that I am obliged in my plans to reckon a 
good deal upon chance, as my means are too scanty for 
me to trust entirely to myself. They are herculean 
labours which I have to finish, and that too at an age 
when my powers are forsaking me, when the infirmity 
of my body is increasing, and when, to confess the 
truth, even hope, the only consolation of the unfortunate, 
begins to fail. You are not sufficiently acquainted with 
matters to have a clear conception of all the dangers that 
threaten the State. — ^I know and keep them to myself. If 
the stroke that I am meditating succeeds, then, my dear 
marquis, it will be time to give ourselves up to joy. I 
lead here the life of a military Carthusian. My affairs 
occupy my mind not a little. The rest of my time I 
devote to the liberal sciences, which are a comfort to 
me, as they were to that great consul, the father of his 
country and of eloquence. I know not whether I shall 
survive this war : if I should, I am firmly resolved to 
pass the rest of my days aloof from troubles, in the bo- 



996 COURT AND TIMES OF 

som of philosophy and friendship. I know not yet where 
we shall have our winter-quarters. My house in Breslau 
was burnt to ashes in the last bombardment. Our enemies 
grudge us the very daylight and the air we breathe ; 
still they must leave us some spot or other, and, so it is 
but a safe one, I shall be glad to see you there." 

Frederick had now no time to lose if he would profit 
by the advantage which he had gained. His object was 
to form a junction with his brother Henry. By nine 
o'clock in the morning of the 1 6th he set out, with part 
of the left wing of his army, for Parchwitz, whither he was 
followed by the rest of it under the margrave Charles, 
after these troops had celebrated the victory by firing 
their guns on the field of battle. Zieten, who still oc- 
cupied the heights of Pfaffendorf with the right wing, 
attended to the wounded, buried the dead, collected the 
trophies, and made the necessary preparations for re- 
joining the other division. The horses were taken from 
the empty provision waggons and harnessed to the cap- 
tured cannon; the superfluous waggons, chests, and 
boxes, were broken in pieces ; the wounded were placed, 
some in carriages, others on horseback ; all the vehicles 
of luxury and even the king's equipages were pressed 
into the service ; and thus the Prussians cleared the 
field the same day, not leaving a single wounded man or 
any of the trophies of their victory behind them. 

The king contrived by a military stratagem to open 
the route to Breslau. He wrote to his brother Henry 
that he had beaten Loudon, and was now preparing to 
join him and to march against the Russians. This letter 
he sent by a peasant, that it might fall into the hands 
of the Russians ; and no sooner had Czemitschef read 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 297 

it than he hastily quitted the left bank of the Oder, and 
the same day rejoined Soltikof. Frederick thereupon 
rested for two days in a camp near Neumarkt, and there 
drew to him tlie greater part of the Silesian army. 

Daun had meanwhile taken the road to Schweidnitz, 
and Frederick was obliged to follow him, lest he should 
be cut off from that fortress. He took a position near 
Dittmansdorf, where the two hostile camps nearly 
touched, and daily skirmishes took place. To be fixed 
here while his presence was urgently required in other 
places was intolerable to the king. His situation was 
daily getting worse. " I am slowly wasting away," he 
wrote on the 1 8th of September to d' Argens ; " I am 
like a body, from which some of its limbs are daily 
lopped. Heaven send us help ! we need it exceedingly. 
You are continually reminding me of my own person. 
You must know that it is not necessary for me to live, but 
that it is absolutely necessary for me to do my duty, to 
fight for my country, and to save it if possible. You can 
form no conception of the dreadful hardships we endure. 
This campaign is worse than any of the preceding. Some- 
times I know not which way to turn. My gaiety is 
buried with the dear and worthy persons to whom my 
heart was so firmly attached. The conclusion of my 
life is painful and melancholy. Forget not your old 
friend, my dear marquis." 



298 COURT AND TIMES OF 



CHAPTER XXXV. 

Campaign of 1760 continued — Expedition of the Russians and Austrians 
against Berlin — The City capitulates to the Russian General Count Tott- 
leben — Disinterested Conduct of Bachmann^ the Russian Commandant — 
Patriotic Services of Gotzkowski — Unpleasant situation of the Berlin 
Newspaper-editors — Frederick hastens to the Relief of his Capital — Re« 
treat of the Enemy — The Russians retire for the Winter beyond the Vis- 
tula — Frederick's Operations for recovering possession of Saxony — His 
determination to conquer or perish — Reflections on the King's resolution 
to put an end to his Life rather than submit to disgrace — Battle of Tor- 
gau — Imminent personal Danger of the King— The Spent Ball — Blucher 
— De THomme Courbiere— Death of George II. — Frederick passes the 
Winter at Leipzig — His Occupations and Amusements — Extracts from 
Letters to the Countess de Camas — ^The King and his Dogs. 

While Frederick was detained near Schweidnitz, and 
part of his army was obserying the Russians, Saxony 
was completely abandoned to the troops of the Empire. 
Leipzig was taken without difficulty, and the little corps 
of general Hiilsen had been forced to quit Torgau and 
Wittenberg. Duke Charles of Wirtemberg was laying 
waste and levying contributions in the country of Mag- 
deburg. At length Daun, who was as ill at ease in the 
camp at Dittmannsdorf as Frederick himself, after great 
solicitation prevailed upon count Fermor, who had as- 
sumed the chief command of the Russian army on ac- 
count of the illness of Soltikof, to send 20,000 Russians, 
supported by 15,000 Austrians, to Berlin. While ge- 
neral Golz was detained near Glogau by Fermor, a 
Russian corps of 6000 men, under general Tottleben, 
hastened by way of Guben, Beeskow, and Wusterhausen, 
to the capital, and took post before the Cottbus-gate. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 299 

The division of general Czernitschef followed, and en- 
camped near Furstenwalde ; while the main body of the 
Russians approached by way of Frankfurt. The Austrian 
corps under Lascy arrived before Berlin on the 8th of 
October. 

Berlin was at this time surrounded partly by a weak 
wall, and partly by palisades only. The military force 
in the city, amounting to 16000 men, consisted of two 
battalions of an invalid regiment and provincial militia, 
and was commanded chiefly by wounded officers; so 
that any efficient defence was out of the question. The 
members of the royal family had removed in the pre- 
ceding year for safety to Magdeburg, and were still 
residing there. Of the proceedings consequent on the 
arrival of the enemy, d'Argens gives the following report 
to the king, dated the 1 9th of October. 

" General Tottleben summoned Berlin, but, as he had 
only irregular troops, it was resolved to defend it. From 
five in the evening of the 3d of October till three next 
morning he threw balls and bombs into the city, and at- 
tacked several of the gates, but was everywhere repulsed 
with loss by our garrison battalions. I must do generals 
Seydlitz and Knobloch that justice which the citizens of 
Berlin owe them. These officers, both wounded [the 
former in the battle of Kunersdorf ], passed the night at 
the batteries of the gates that were attacked, and saved 
your capital ; old marshal Lehwald also did every thing 
that his advanced age permitted. On the day after the 
bombardment, the prince of Wirtemberg came with his 
corps from Pasewalk; but he was so fatigued that 
the Russians could not be attacked till the next day. 
Having learned, however, that the enemy had been re- 



300 COURT AND TIMES OF 

inforced by the corps of Lascy and Czernitschef, he 
thought it best to retire and to leave the city to capitu- 
late, otherwise it would have been infallibly attacked 
and plundered by the Austrians, while our army was 
fighting the Russians. The corps of the prince of Wir- 
temberg and that of general Hiilsen, who advanced from 
Koswig, after Lascy had reached Potsdam and Charlot- 
tenburg, passed through the city in the night, on their 
way to Spandau." At four in the morning of the 8th 
of October, general Rochow brought the capitulation to 
bear with count Tottleben exclusively. The most im- 
portant of its conditions were these : — The garrison, as 
well as all the military persons in the city, are prisoners 
of war ; all military stores, and all the property of the 
state, are placed at the disposal of the conqueror ; se- 
curity of persons and property is assured to the inhabi- 
tants ; the contribution and all other supplies shall be 
fixed by a special convention with the municipal autho- 
rities. 

At eight the same morning, count Tottleben, at the 
head of two regiments of grenadiers and one of dra- 
goons, made his entry into Berlin. The troops bivouacked 
before the palace and in the neighbouring streets. Bri- 
gadier Bachmann was appointed commandant. From 
the city the sum of four million dollars was at first de- 
manded ; but it was at length agreed that it should pay 
a contribution of 1,500,000 and 200,000 for douceur- 
money, the latter and one-third of the contribution in 
specie, and the other two-thirds in bills at two months. 
On the other hand, this convention again guaranteed 
safety of persons and property ; the free exercise of 
public worship, trades, and manufactures; the unmo- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 301 

lested operation of the police and the posting depart- 
ment ; while all the royal as well as municipal officers 
were to retain their functions, and to be left in full en- 
joyment of their salaries. 

Count Tottleben, a native of Thuringia, maintained 
the most laudable discipline. He was particularly at- 
tached to the Prussians, among whom he had himself 
served ; and his son, educated in Berlin, belonged at this 
time to the regiment of Dohna. Bachmann behaved 
very nobly. He refused a present of 12,000 dollars, 
saying — " If the city thinks that its situation is more 
tolerable through our discipline than it might have been, 
it has to thank the express orders of our empress for 
this. I, for my part, am sufficiently rewarded by the 
honour of having been for three days commandant of 
Berlin." He did at last accept a gold snuff-box, that he 
might bequeath it to his family as a token of the satis- 
faction of the city of Berlin with his conduct. 

The Austrian general, prince Esterhazy, likewise dis- 
played great humanity in Potsdam, and spared Sans- 
Souci, as well as the royal palace and the treasures of 
art which it contained, out of respect and admiration for 
the royal owner : he took only a single picture — a por- 
trait of the king, considered an excellent likeness — from 
the palace of Potsdam, as a memorial. But at Charlot- 
tenburg, Schonhausen, and Friedrichsfelde, the Impe- 
rialists under Lascy, a native of Ireland, Daun's friend 
and adviser, committed the most wanton excesses, espe- 
cially in the palace, the chapel, and the Polignac collec- 
tion of antiques at Charlottenburg. Among other out- 
rages, these troops, many of whom were Saxons who had 
been made prisoners at Pima, stripped the keeper of 



302 COURT AND TIMES OF 

the palace and his wife naked, beat them with rods, and 
pinched them with heated pincers to make them confess 
where treasures which had no existence were concealed. 
In Berlin, also, where the foundry, the mint, the powder- 
mills, and the manufactures of articles for the supply of 
the army were destroyed, Lascy's troops conducted them- 
selyes so infamously that Tottleben was obliged to send 
for reinforcements to reduce them to order. 

It was not long before the tidings of the king's ap- 
proach scared the enemy from his capital : nay, it is a 
fact that even on the 8th, before they entered Berlin, 
they had resolved in a council of war to retreat, but were 
diverted from this determination by the marquis de Mon- 
talembert, the French military commissioner with the 
Russians, who prevailed on Czemitschef and Lascy to 
seek the supplies they needed not in their rear but be- 
fore them. Still they had no notion of gaining a firm 
footing in the country, and of turning the capture of 
Berlin to that account which they might have done. It 
was a mere incursion for levying contributions, and led 
to no results. 

Justice requires the mention here of a citizen of Ber- 
lin, to whose patriotic exertions during its occupation 
by the enemy that capital was deeply indebted. This 
was John Ernest Gotzkowski, whose name has been al- 
ready mentioned in the course of this work. Bom in 
1710, at Konitz, he was placed when very young in 
Berlin, and brought up to trade. He became acquainted 
with Frederick, when prince-royal, at Bheinsberg ; and, 
after his accession, was employed by him to draw artists, 
manufacturers, and useful artisans of all sorts into the 
country. He himself founded in Berlin, by desire of the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 303 

king, considerable manufactories ; established in 1 745, 
with 30,000 dollars, the first velvet manufactory in the 
kingdom, and, as foreign velvets were prohibited, he 
soon had 120 looms at work. In 1753 he undertook a 
silk manufactory with the assistance of the king, em- 
ployed in both these establishments 250 looms, and ex- 
ported goods to the amount of 100,000 dollars per an- 
num. In 1755 he went to Italy, Holland, and France, 
and bought a number of valuable pictures, which were 
to form the new gallery of Sans-Souci. Thus Gotz- 
kowski was already distinguished by his services, when 
the invasion of the country placed him in a new position, 
in which he risked property and life. He had paid hu- 
mane attentions to the Russian generals who had been 
taken prisoners, and especially to general Sievers, who 
recommended him to Bachmann, the commandant ; 
through the latter he became acquainted with captain 
Brink, aide-de-camp to Tottleben. Brink lodged in the 
house of Gotzkowski, who acquired such influence that 
he prevailed upon Tottleben to reduce the demand of 
four million dollars, old money, to one and a half, and 
to be content with the current, that is to say, light coin. 
He saved several public and private establishments from 
destruction, and effected the relief of the Jews from a 
special contribution demanded from them. It is impos- 
sible to state all that he did for private individuals, as 
he was ever ready to render service and to show kind- 
ness. Thus, too, the editors of the Berlin newspapers 
were not a little indebted to his interposition. 

Ever since the commencement of hostilities, a paper- 
war had been waged with not less acrimony than that 
which was sacrificing so many victims in the field. We 



1 



304 COURT AND TIMES OF 

have seen how the editor of the Erlangen gazette was 
treated in the preceding year by a Prussian officer ; it 
was now the turn of those Prussian writers whose zeal 
had outrun their discretion to suffer the like punish- 
ment. Tottleben ordered all the pamphlets in which 
he was mentioned to be taken from the booksellers, 
likewise the works of professor Justi against a defender 
of the cause of the house of Austria, the Life of count 
Briihl, and every thing that had been printed during 
the war against the two imperial courts, and publicly 
burned in the New Market by the hand of the execu- 
tioner. The editors of the two Berlin newspapers, who 
had indulged in personalities against the Russian com- 
mander, were led forth at eight in the morning of the 
12th of October to the New Market, where one hundred 
Russian soldiers were drawn up and provided with 
switches, as when an offender is about to run the gaunt- 
let. Krause, the editor of Haude and Spener's paper, 
then 68 years old, was stripped, but, when he fell upon 
his knees and begged pardon, at the same time taking 
off his wig and showing his gray head, he was forgiven. 
Kretschmer, editor of Voss's paper, escaped with the 
fright and a few slight stripes. 

Gotzkowski's philanthropic services were gratefully 
acknowledged by the magistrates of Berlin. On the 
4th of March they thus wrote to him : " It is an un- 
exampled instance of a man having undertaken and 
performed for his fellow-creatures what you have done, 
without any self-interest whatever." In like manner, 
Leipzig was indebted to his mediation with his own 
sovereign in the winter of 1760 and 1761, for an essen- 
tial alleviation of the burdens imposed upon it* 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 305 

In 1761 Gotzkowski established in Berlin by desire 
of the king a porcelain manufactory, which, in the fol-» 
lowing year, employed 150 persons, and which Frederick 
took into his own hands, on payment of 225,000 dol- 
lars. It produced better porcelain than the famous 
manufactory at Meissen, and is still carried on upon the 
king's account. In 1766 Gotzkowski had the misfortune, 
through no fault of his own, it is said, to become in- 
solvent. Two years afterwards he published his Life by 
the title of " History of a patriotic Tradesman," the 
first edition of which was prohibited. When I find it 
recorded that such a man was suffered to die in poverty 
in 1775, that circumstance, unexplained as it is, seems 
to me to involve a most severe reflexion, not only upon 
the sovereign, but also upon that city which he had so 
essentially benefited. 

The marquis d'Argens, who bestowed such high en- 
comiums on the generals in Berlin, expressed himself in 
his letters to the king with not less warmth concerning 
the patriotic virtues of the citizens. In one of them 
he says, " I saw here, after the battle near Frankfurt, 
twenty, nay, I dare say a hundred citizens, far surpassing 
those citizens of Rome, whose resolution and patriotism 
Livy has immortalized." This the king bore in mind, 
says Preuss, and secretly paid the heavy contribution, 
nobody rightly knew when, having first by a cabinet 
order directed that the bills given on account of it 
should not be honoured. 

Frederick had received intelligence of the march of 
the enemy upon Berlin, but imagined that the affair was 
not so serious as it turned out. When he heard of the 
result, he reinforced the garrisons of Schweidnitz and 

VOL. III. X 



806 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Brealau^ left his camp, and haatened with the dispoaable 
troopfi to Guhen, hopbg there to out off the hostile 
corps which had penetrated to the capital and to anni*- 
hilate them. For four days his ^iiemies had ooeupied 
Berlin, when the cry : " Frederick is coming!" chased 
them away on the 12th of October. Iheir march was 
like a flight. Tottleben and Czemitschef retired to 
Frankfurt with such precipitation that they proceeded 
upwards ol 52 miles in two days ; while Loudon marched 
straight forward, without resting, to Torgau. Both 
Russians and Austrians rayaged the country most bar** 
barously, but the latter plundered the rery dead in their 
grayes. The king was at Guben when he heard of their 
retreat: he waa too late to execute his design, and 
turned off to Lubben. Here he wrote on the 1 6th of 
October to the Chamber of the Eleotoorate, desiring a 
report of all the mischief done by the enemy, and on 
the 18th promised, as soon as the military operations 
would permit, ^^ to do, as an honest and faithful father 
of his country, eyery thing in the world that could be 
done for the relief and comfort of his loyal subjects who 
had suffered by the inyasion." 

As soon as the two Russian corps ftom Berlin had 
reached Fermor's camp near Lossow, not far from 
Frankfurt on the Oder, the whole army broke up on 
the 14th of Octoll^er, with the intention of taking can- 
tonments in Pomerania and the New Mark ; but marshal 
Buturlin, the new commander-iuHdtief, who joined it on 
the 6th of Noyember at Regenwalde, found those pro- 
yinces so deyastated, that he was under the necessity of 
retiring towards the Vistula. 

From Liibben the kmg marched to Dessau, where be 



FKITDERICK THE GREAT. S07 

eould draw supplies: from Magdeburg^. He could not 
guffi^r tbe year to close without reconquering Sdxony. 
Datm followed him throagb Lnsatia to Torgan, to maish 
tain possession of that country. Loudon remained at 
Lowenberg, suid general Golz was left to watch him. 
Frederick arrired on the S2d at Jessen, drove the duke 
of Deuxponts out of Wittenberg, scared the troops of 
the Empire across the Pleisse and the Elster to* Zeiz^ out 
of communieatioQ with Daun, wha had already drawn 
to Mm Lasey's corps near Torgau, and again took pos- 
session of Leipzig, which had to suffer severely for its 
attachment to tbe enemies of the king. 

Daun, with an army of 65,000 men, occupied the 
bights of Siiptitz, near Torgau. Frederick'^ object was 
ta wrest Saxony from him. The heights of Siiptitz, 
the naost considerable in that part of the country, form, 
to the north of tbe Tillage from which they are named, 
a continuous ridge, the north-western extremity of 
which is most elevated, and bordered by the two sheep- 
ponds^ that are supplied by swampy springs in the 
neighbourhood. The king had the ground examined by 
some officers, and concluded from their report that an 
attack upon the Austrian position from the south would 
be too difficult : he therefore purposed to turn the enemy 
by crossing the heath of Dommitsch, and, advancing 
from Neiden, to attack him in the rear. 

Daun's position was so strong, and so abundantly 
provided with means of defence, a numerous army and 
a powerful artillery, that there was reason to dread 
a repetition of the scene at Kunersdorf. Frederick, 
however, had evidently made up his mind to accomplish 
his object, that is, to recover Saxony by a decisive stroke, 

x2 



308 COURT AND TIMES OF 

or to perish. On the 28th of October, he wrote to 
d'Argens : " Judge as you please of my way of thinking, 
my dear marquis. I perceive that we shall never agree 
in our ideas, that we set out with different principles. 
You are fond of life as a Sybarite ; I consider death as a 
stoic. Never will I see the moment that shall compel 
me to conclude a dishonourable peace; no eloquence 
shall seduce me to subscribe my disgrace. I will either 
bury myself beneath the ruins of my country, or, if 
this consolation shall appear too sweet for that Fate 
which persecutes me, I will put an end to my misery 
when I can endure it no longer. I have ever acted ac- 
cording to an inward feeling and the principles of 
honour ; and my last steps shall be consistent with those 
principles. After sacrificing my youth to my father, 
and the years of manhood to my country, I think that 
I have a right to dispose of my old age as I please. 
Once more — never shall my hand sign a humiliating 
peace. I mean to close this campaign with a bold 
stroke, and either to conquer or to find a glorious death. 
There are people who are content to follow Fortune : I 
am not one of them. If I have lived for others, I am 
resolved to die for myself. What may be said on this 
subject is indifferent to me ; nay, I can assure you that 
it will never reach my ears. Brandenburg existed be- 
fore me, and will exist after me. States subsist by the 
propagation of the human species, and, so long as this is 
the case, the multitude will be led by ministers or by 
sovereigns. This comes to the same thing, and a little 
more folly or wisdom forms so slight a gradation as not 
to be perceived by the great mass. Do not imagine 
then that prejudices of self-love or vanity can change 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 309 

my sentiments. To put an end to disastrous days is not 
an act of weakness ; a very just policy tells us that thai 
condition is to be preferred in which none can injure us, 
none disturb our repose. Indeed, if you were in my 
situation, you would be less disposed to condemn my 
resolution. I have lost my friends and my dearest 
relatives ; I am unfortunate, let me consider myself on 
what side I will; I have nothing to hope for. My 
enemies treat me with scorn, and their pride would like 
to trample me under foot. No, my dear marquis — 

*' ' When all is lost, and Hope itself forsakes us. 
Life is dishonour, and to die a duty.* *' • 

Here the king expresses without reserve his determi- 
nation to put an end to his life if he cannot keep it with- 
out honour. It is an established fact that during the 
whole of the seven years' war he carried poison about 
him, to be used in case he should fall into the hands of 
his enemies : and, after the disastrous days of KoUin, 
Kunersdorf, and Hochkirch, it is well known that his 
mind was much occupied with thoughts of death. For- 
tunately for his country, the necessity for exerting all 
his energies in repairing his misfortunes diverted him 
from the gloomy contemplation of suicide, and gleams 
of better fortune soon restored his wonted serenity and 
self-assurance. 

Let me not be taken for an advocate of suicide if I 
venture to confess that the right royal sentiments ex- 
pressed by Frederick in the letter just quoted convince 
me that a monarch like him is not to be measured upon 

• A quotation from Voltaire's Merope : 

** Quand on a tout perdu, quaud on n'a plus d'espoir. 
La vie est un opprobre, et la mort est un devoir.*' 



310 COURT AND TIMES OF 

this point by the same standard as ordinary men in 
humbler stations, and that self-murder may be in some 
rare cases not only an excusable but eren a commendable 
act, nay, an act of the highest public rirtue* Had the 
fortune of war thrown the hero, who was infinitely more 
concerned for the wel&re and glory of his country than 
for his own person, into the hands of his implacable ene- 
mies, it is erident that, if he had consented to live, he 
could never hare rega^ined his liberty without either re- 
nouncing his throne altogether^ or at least submitting to 
such a sacrifice of territory as would have reduced him 
to plain margrave of Brandenburg. If, after considering 
this his positi<m, any man of high, generous, and patriotic 
feeling, can declare that the noble-minded king is to be 
condemned for having resolved to escape either of these 
humiliating alternatives, let him cast the first stone — ^! 
cannot. 

In a conversation with a Prussian in X809, Napoleon 
put this question: "But what would Frederick have 
done, had he been surrounded, and escape impossible ? 
Would he, as we are told, have poisoned himself?'* The 
Prussian replied in the affirmative, and quoted Frede- 
rick's well known lines : Pour moi menape du naufrage^ 
&o, "He was right," rejoined Napoleon, "he was 
right. When a man has once stood on the pinnacle of 
glory, it would be contemptible to live like a beggar." 
It is admitted that, after bis first abdication, Napoleon 
himself actually took poison, but that the sickness which 
it induced counteracted the effect. 

The Russians were at Landsberg on the Warthe, in- 
tending, if the Austrians were successful against Frede- 
rick, or Daun was able to maintain his grouud near Tor- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 311 

gau, to penetrate further into electoral Brandenburg^ 
and to take^ up their quarters along the Elbe. In this 
case the king would have been cut off from Silesia, from 
Pomerania, and from Berlin. To draw Daun from Tor- 
gau was impossible; Frederick resolved therefore to 
fight him. Marching on the 2d of November fronj 
Eilenburg, he encamped the same day with 44,000 men 
near Schilda, which lay in front of the right wing, 
as did Probsthain in the rear of the curving centre^ 
and Wildschiitz, on the left wing. Ten battalions of 
grenadiers and 26 squadrons were pushed forward with 
the king's head-quarters beyond Langen-Reichenbach. 

On the 2d of November, when the generals repaired 
to the head-quarters to receive his orders, the king ad- 
dressed them, saying that he did not want the opinion of 
any one of them ; he had only to tell them that Daun 
would be attacked on the morrow ; that he was certainly 
in an excellent position ; but, if he should be beaten, his 
army must, according to the dispositions formed, either 
be driven into the Elbe, or taken ; and thus the war, of 
which every body was heartily tired, would be terminated 
at once. He thereupon gave verbal instructions to the 
generals who were to lead the left wing under himself; 
and afterwards communicated to Zieten alone his orders 
relative to the right wing. These were to advance upon 
Torgau by the Eilenburg road, and, if the battle turned 
out favourably, to fall upon the rear of the Austrians, 
and to cut off their retreat. The king placed 21 bat- 
talions and 54 squadrons under Zieten's command: be 
intended to attack the enemy himself with 41 batta- 
lions and 48 squadrons ; if the enemy were driven from 
the heights, the heavy battery was to be immediately 



312 COURT AND TIMES OF 

moved to that point, and the battalions were to form 
again ; if cavalry should be required, no more were to 
come forward than the ground would admit of. 

At seven in the morning of the 3d of November, the 
army, in four columns, quitted its camp at Langen-Rei- 
chenbach. The enemy's advanced guard fell back, and 
Daun changed his position, so that his left wing was 
posted on the heights of Siiptitz, the right, chiefly ca- 
valry, in the environs of Zinna ; while the reserve con- 
tinued to occupy the heights near Groswig. The king 
too made an alteration in his plan, as, on reconnoitring 
the ground about Zinna, he found it too much inter- 
sected, and resolved to attack his adversary's left wing. 
While the first two columns were marching up, a can- 
nonade was heard from the vicinity of Siiptitz. Zieten, 
in the way to his position, had met with the light troops 
of general Brentano, and been obliged to bring up heavy 
cannon to drive them away. He then quietly continued 
his march, and formed opposite to Lascy's corps, with his 
right wing upon the great pond. Both kept up a brisk 
cannonade, but at too great a distance to do much in- 
jury. The king, however, conceiving that Zieten had 
involved himself in a regular engagement, ordered about 
two o'clock ten grenadier battalions to march up expe- 
ditiously, and to advance at first towards the right, un- 
der a most tremendous fire from the enemy's artillery. 
Xhe brave grenadiers suffered very severely, and were 
obliged to fall back about three o'clock. The pursuing 
Austrians were attacked by Ramin's and Gablenz's bri- 
gades, which ieven pushed on to the height of Siiptitz. 
Against these fresh Prussian troops, Daun put himself 
at the head of fresh Austrian : the combat was warm 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 313 

without being decisive, till the imperial cavalry fell 
upon the front and left flank of the thinned Prussian in- 
fantry, drove it from the heights, and took many pri- 
soners. 

The infantry of the second column, consisting of 
eleven battalions, now advanced to the third attack. 
Both parties fought bravely till half-past four, when the 
Austrian cavalry again pushed forward before the foot, 
broke the Prussians, and made them prisoners. At 
length, the duke of Holstein came up with the Prussian 
cavalry from the heath of Dommitsch ; and colonel Dal- 
wig, at the head of Span's regiment, signalized himself 
by charging the Austrians with such success as to make 
prisoners of the greater part of two regiments. Dra- 
goons and other horse followed him ; by repeated at- 
tacks the Austrian cavalry was thrown into confusion, 
and the four first regiments of the right wing were al- 
most entirely taken: but Daun's regimental artillery 
played so briskly upon the Prussian horse, that they fell 
back upon Neiden. 

Night came on, Hiilsen rallied the infantry, which was 
in great confusion, and drew it up afresh. To the order 
for this Frederick added : " The enemy has likewise sus- 
tained very great loss, and, as general Zieten is still in 
his rear, he will not venture to remain in his position, 
but retreat in the night across the Elbe ; in this case we 
shall have gained the battle." At six o'clock the king, 
who was slightly wounded, left the command of the left 
wing to Hiilsen, and retired for the night to Elsnig, and 
took up his quarters in the little church of that village. 
Seated on the lowest step of the altar, he was there oc- 
cupied in writing despatches for his couriers. It was 



3 1 4 COURT AND TIMES OF 

an anxious night, and often did the king send out to see 
if there were any signs of daybreak. 

Zieten had retained his position near the Great Pond 
till towards evening, in hopes that the king would dis- 
lodge the enemy ; but when the firing gradually became 
more distant, he followed the advice of his generals, 
Wied, Platen, Saldem, and colonel Mbllendorf, and or- 
dered four battalions out of the first line of his left wing 
to advance under general Tettenbom and attack Siiptitz ; 
while his own corps marched to the left upon the sheep- 
ponds. Tettenbom took the village, which the retreat- 
ing enemy set on fire. It was impossible to push on 
further ; but the flames threw a light upon the move- 
ments of the Austrians on the heights ; and Saldem per- 
ceived that the enemy had concentrated- himself in the 
centre of his main position, and abandoned the entrench- 
ments towards the sheep-ponds. Marching with his 
brigade over a dyke between the ponds, he gained the 
heights in the flank of the enemy, and attacked him, 
while major Lestwitz, with the reserve of the left wing, 
followed by the same route. The fight and firing were 
brisk, the enemy having drawn up instantaneously to meet 
Saldem's attack. About half-past eight, Hulsen, hear- 
ing the fire, hastened to the spot with four fresh batta- 
lions. Coming unobserved upon the flank of the new 
Austrian line, he attacked it with spirit. The affair was 
soon decided ; by nine o'clock, the Prussians were mas- 
ters of the field of battle. 

In the second attack, Daun was wounded in the leg by 
a musket-ball, and, when the king's last attack was foiled, 
he retired to Torgau. There he was informed that the 
Prussians had gained possession of the height of Siiptitz, 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 315 

on which he relinqaished the chief command of the army 
and the dispogdtions for the retreat to general O'Donnel. 
This was the last time that Dann met Frederick in the 
field ; and O'Donnel and LaBcy had to bear the blame 
of throwing away the victory which the Anstrians had 
already won. 

In this battle the king exposed himself to the greatest 
personal danger. He had two horses killed under him. 
He saw his grenadiers, the flower of his army, falling fast 
around hun ; and, on being informed of the death of 
lieutenant-colonel count Anhalt, for whom he had a great 
regard, he turned to count Frederick Anhalt, his flugel 
aide-de-camp, and said : " All goes wrong to-day ; my 
friends are leaving me : I have just been told of the death 
of your brother." 

In the attack of the Austrian position, he was riding 
in the hottest of the fire, attended by the same count 
Frederick Anhalt and captain Berenhorst, who besought 
him to be more careful of his valuable life. Regardless 
of their representations, he was advancing at the head 
of a fresh battalion, when a ball struck him on the breast, 
pierced through cloak, coat, and waistcoat, but there 
became so spent as not to do him the least harm. The 
king was falling, with the exclamation, " I am a dead 
man !" when Berenhorst caught him^ m his arms and 
stopped his horse. Presently, Frederick raised himself 
in the saddle, angrily pushed his attendants from him, 
turned his horse about, and rode towards the enemy's 
batteries, which he coolly reconnoitred, and directed the 
advancing battalions to the point of attack. We are 
assured that from this time both the above-mentioned 
ofiicers were in disgrace with the king ; for Frederick, 



816 COURT AND TIMES OF 

through one of those foibles from which even the strongest 
minds have no exemption, was accustomed to conceive 
a decided dislike of those who chanced to witness any 
exhibition of weakness on his part. 

Kiister, in his work on the preservations of the king, 
relates that he had on this day another narrow escape 
from destruction, from the fall of a large limb of an oak 
tree, which killed two men and an officer of Stutterheim's 
regiment, who were just before him. " Had the king 
been but a step in advance," says Kiister, " he must have 
been killed or severely wounded." 

The fire of the artillery in this battle was so tremen- 
dous, that the king said to general Syburg : " Did you 
ever hear so violent a cannonade ? At least, I never did ;" 
and, many years after the peace, when adverting to the 
same subject at table, he observed, smiling, " It was a 
platoon fire of cannon ; why, they fairly shot the words 
away from my lips." 

We have seen that the battle with Zieten's division 
of the Prussian army was not over till near nine o'clock 
at night. Owing to the darkness, whole Austrian batta- 
lions, having lost their way in the retreat, were taken 
prisoners, and the Prussians even fired upon one another. 
At length, as no distinction could be made between friend 
and foe, both parties encamped together upon the heath 
of Dommitsch, and there passed the night in good fellow- 
ship, as though belonging to one and the same army. 

The king was planning at Elsnig the renewal of the 
conflict on the following day, when tidings were brought 
of the retreat of the Austrians. By daybreak he quitted 
the village, and at a distance perceived horsemen in white 
cloaks. It was Zieten, who, in the tone of an officer 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 317 

making his report, greeted him with the words : "Your 
majesty, the enemy is beaten and retreating." At the 
same moment, both dismounted. Frederick threw him- 
self into the arms of Zieten, who, overpowered by his 
feelings, wept aloud, without being able to utter a word. 
Then, turning back to his men, he cried : " My lads, our 
king has won the victory ; the enemy is beaten ; long 
live our great king !" The cry was cheerfully re-echoed, 
but they added : " And father Zieten, our hussar-king, 
too !" 

Frederick rode from the left wing along the right. 
On coming to the regiment of the guard, he dismounted, 
and stopped before a blazing watch-fire, around which 
several grenadiers were sitting. He spoke affably to them, 
and they approached nearer and nearer to the king, and 
began to talk about the battle. At last, one of them, 
named Rebiak, to whom he had often given money, had 
the boldness to ask him where he had been during the 
fight, adding that he used always to be at their head and 
to lead them into the fire, but this time they had seen 
nothing of him. With the utmost feondescension, Fre- 
derick told the grenadier that he had been with the left 
wing, and ^erefore could not head his regiment. Amidst 
this conversation, he unbuttoned his coat, as if too warm, 
and the grenadiers observed a ball drop to the ground^ 
while the holes in his cloak and uniform attested the 
danger to which he had been exposed. Rebiak eagerly 
picked up the ball, which passed from hand to hand, 
exciting the warmest admiration and enthusiasm. " In- 
deed, thou art still our old Fritz !" cried the grenadiers, as 
with one accord. " Thou sharest every danger with us. 
Cheerfully will we die for thee ! Long live the king !" 



318 COURT AND TIMES OF 

In speaking of this ball in later years, the king would 
jocosely observe : " It durst not come any nearer." It 
is still preserred in the Museum in Berlin. 

While O'Donnel retreated with the Austrian army 
along the right bank of the Elbe, and Lascy, with his 
corps, proceeded along the left bank towards Dresden, 
general Hiilsen, the day after the battle^ took possession 
of Torgau without striking a blow. Frederick hastened 
to anticipate the fleeing enemy, but they reached the 
advantageous position in the plain of Plauen before him, 
and there the forces of the two Austrian genends again 
united. The duke of Deuxponts, who commanded the 
troops of the Empire, In^tened to cover Dresden, while 
the Russians continued their retreat across the Vistula. 

The prince of Wirtemberg marched fr(mi Saxony with 
Werner and Belling to clear Pomerania of the Swedes, 
whose service Blucher, at a much later period the pride 
of the Prussian army, quitted in September, 1760, to 
become a cornet in Boiling's hussars. He had entered 
in the preceding year among the Swedish hussars, and 
been made prisoner near Spantikow in Pbmerania by 
Landeck, a private in Belling's regiment, who took him 
before him upon his horse, and carried him to his colonel. 
The latter obtained his release from the Swedish service, 
and placed him in his own regiment. 

Another of the heroes of the Prussian army at a later 
period,^ baron.de THomme Courbi^re, was already acquir- 
ing distinction in the same quarter. The son of a Dutch 
major, and bom at Groningen in 1 733, he entered at the 
age of fourteen into the Prussian service, displayed much 
ability as captain of engineers at the siege of Schweid- 
nitz in 1758, and in 1759 commanded as major a partisan 



FBEDERICR THE GREAT. 819 

battalion, with whieh he was so aetiye and successful in 
Farther Pomerania and before Dresden^ that the king 
conferred on him the order of Merit. After the peace, 
he was in garrison in East Friesland. In 1 780, he was 
promoted to be major-general, and afterwards general of 
infantry. So late as 1807, in that war so disastrous to 
the Prussian anns» the veteran general proved himself a 
worthy pupil of the great Frederick's. When the French 
marshal Victor summoned him to surrender Graudenz, 
. adding that the Bussians^ were driven back beyond the 
Nieoaen^ and that the king and queen had fled to Memel, 
Courbiere replied : " And if my king has lost his whole 
dominions^ I will try how long I can remain king of 
Crraudenz." Alter his death, in 1 8 1 1 , his majesty caused 
a monum^sit to be erected for him on the glacis of the 
fortress. 

The reiguijDg duke of Wirt^nberg, who was termed in 
derision king of Swabia, was so offended with the impe- 
rial generals for suffering themiselves to be beaten at 
Torgau, that he withdrew from the ranks of Frederick's 
active enemies, and went hoima with his troops. For the 
same reason, the duke of Deuxponts reliuquished the 
command of the army of the Empire, which was trans- 
ferred to count Stolberg. 

In the course of this year^ nothing of consequence oc- 
curred between the allied army and the French ; but, just 
before theaction^ which the hereditary prince of Brunswick 
conmieuced with the marquis de Castries near Campen, 
between. Guelders, Wesel, and Meurs, a French sergeant 
of the regiment of Auvergae, named Dubois, distinguished 
himself by a rare instance of devotedness to his duty. 
Being surrounded by himiself in a wood, he chose rather 



320 COURT AND TIMES OF 

to expire under the bayonets of his enemies than not 
rouse his comrades sleeping under arms. He fell, 
therefore, shouting, " Help, Auvergne ! here is the 
enemy !" 

On the 25th of October, Frederick lost his most effi- 
cient ally, George H. He had lived to see the whole of 
Canada conquered by the capture of Quebec, which had 
cost the generals on both sides, the gallant Wolf and 
Moncalm, their lives. The king had expended so much 
of his private property in defraying the expenses of the 
war, and alleviating the distresses consequent upon it, 
that he died comparatively poor. Mr. Wright, under- 
secretary of state, writes in November to Mitchell : " The 
king's will is so variously reported, that I do not pretend 
to vouch for any one of them. That of the most autho- 
rity I have is that he left only c£35,Q00, to be equally 
divided between the duke [of Cumberland], princess 
Amelia, and the landgravine of Hesse. A small parcel 
of bank-notes, about £6000, were found in his drawer, 
with a desire of their being sent to the countess [of 
Kendal], which, with two thousand guineas the king 
[George HI.] found loose, were sent immediately, and I 
hear was all he left : that the great distresses in Germany 
since this war began had run away with all that he might 
otherwise have left." His grandson and successor, George 
ni., had no voice for Frederick, as he was entirely 
influenced by his mother and Lord Bute, who were 
long extremely unpopular on that account. Once more, 
however, the treaty with Prussia was renewed on the 12th 
of December, 1 760, on the same footing as before ; for 
Pitt, the enthusiastic admirer of Frederick, was still in 
office, and the nation, even after the court deserted his 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 321 

canse, manifested the same warm sympathy as ever for 
the " Protestant hero." 

The king took up his winter-quarters in Leipzig. In 
order to provide for the ensuing campaign, it was neces- 
sary to have recourse to violent measures. Saxony was 
completely drained ; the timber in the forests was sold ; 
the farmers of the electoral domains were obliged to 
pay their rent a year beforehand* To complete thd 
regiments, neither mere boys nor the scum of society 
were refused. Men were pressed in Saxony, Mecklen- 
burg, the Anhalt principalities, and Swedish Pomera- 
nia; and even Austrian prisoners were put into the 
Prussian uniform, because the court of Vienna would 
not exchange any prisoners of war after the affairs of 
Maxen and Meissen. The partisan corps had many of 
them behaved extremely well : new ones were therefore 
raised. The few cadets, children in years, heroes in 
sentiments, were inadequate to supply the deficiency of 
officers ; but the king hoped even with such an army to 
tire out the united forces of all his enemies and to do 
his duty. 

As for himself personally, Frederick was at all times 
alike — the same in calamity oppressed by the weight of 
care as in the most prosperous circumstances ; the philo** 
sopher in the camp, as he had been in his Potsdam 
hermitage. Leipzig was during this winter his Sans- 
Souci, for, while forging arms and thunderbolts against 
his foes, he filled up his leisure with music, poetry, cor- 
respondence, and sought the acquaintance of some of 
the most eminent writers and professors of the univer- 
sity of that city. In Gottsched, Emesti, and Winkler 
he found too much of the stiffness and pedantry of Ger- 

VOL. III. y 



822 COURT AND TIMES OF 

man scholars, but conceived a very high opinion of the 
modest Gellert from a conversation of two honrs to 
which he invited him. In this interview, the professor 
recited from memory one of his beautiful fables, " The 
Painter of Athens," and at parting the king begged him 
to come again soon, to come often, and to bring his 
Fables along with him, Gellert, however, followed, as 
he wrote to Rabener, the advice of the son of Sirach ; 
" Have no fellowship with one that is mightier than thy- 
self," and went no more. After he was gone, Frederick 
observed : " That is a totally different man from Gott- 
sched ;" and next day at dinner he said, " Gellert is the 
most rational of all the German scholars." To Garve 
at Breslau, the king afterwards remarked that Gellert 
was the only German of his day who would descend to 
posterity, because, though he had confined himself to 
one small department of literature, he had laboured in 
it most successfully. He encouraged Pauli, the book- 
seller of Berlin, to print Gellert's Fables as a school 
book, and granted him an exclusive privilege for the 
sale of it in his dominions. While at Leipzig, the king 
is reported to have said jocosely in conversation with 
professor Emesti : ** But Cicero's cook must have spoken 
better Latin than you." — " Yes," replied the professor, 
** just as a French marquis speaks French more elegantly 
than your majesty, but is incapable of writing a line 
equal in beauty to your majesty's compositions." 

Among the members of the Berlin orchestra who 
were summoned to Leipzig was Fasch. He found his 
master much altered by the fatigues, cares, and sorrows 
of the last five years, with a tincture of melancholy and 
gloomy reserve, which formed a striking contrast with 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. SS3 

liis fonner disposition, and was not natural to his years. 
The king had mnsic daily, hut it was a trouble to him 
to play himself. 

laL letter, written »bo.t thU tfae to the counted 
Camas, the king giyes some particulars concerning his 
person and habits* On the 11th of November, he says : 
** For th^e four years, I have given up suppers, because 
they will not agree with the trade that I am obliged to 
follow ; and in marches my dinner consists of a cup of 
chocolate* Immediately after our victory [at Torgau] 
we ran like madmen, to try if we could drive the Aus- 
trians out of Dresden ; but they laughed at us from the 
tops of their hills. I turned back directly, and went 
like a boy to hide my vexation in one of the cursed 
Saxon villages. I assure you, I lead a real dog's life, such 
a one as nobody but Don Quixote ever did. This irregu- 
larity has made me so old that you would scarcely know 
me. On the right side of my head my hair has turned 
,mte graj, my teeth bre.k\«d d«^ out ; my fcoe J. 
wrinkled like the furbelow of a woman's govni, and my 
back arched like that of a monk of La Trappe. My 
heart alone remains unchanged, and while I breathe will 
cherish the sentiments of esteem and the tenderest 
friendship for you, my dear mamma," 

Again, on the 27th of November, he writes : " We 
are getting our winter*quarters into order. I purpose 
taking a little journey, and then I shall go to Leipzig to 
rest myself, if rest is to be found there : for me indeed 
that is only a metaphysical word, vnthout reality." 

The following, dated the 3d of December, though on 
a very different subject, will, I trust, not be uninterest- 
ing. ** I congratulate you, my dear mamma, upon your 

Y 2 



324 COURT AND TIMES OF 

skill in regard to dropsy* The circumstance is one of 
daily occurrence : there is not a court, nay, a conyent, 
where such things do not happen. I,* who am very in- 
dulgent towards the foihles of our species, shall not 
stone the ladies of the court for having children. They 
propagate their kind, while those gloomy politicians de- 
stroy by their mischievous wars. I must confess that 
I like these too tender temperaments better than those 
dragons of chastity who fall unmercifully upon their 
frail sisters, or quarrelsome women who are really 
malicious and wicked. Take care to let the child be 
brought up well and not disgrace the family. Let the 
poor girl be removed without noise from the court, and 
her good name be spared as much as possible." 

Lastly, from Meissen, the seat of the celebrated por- 
celain manufacture, he writes in December. "Here- 
with I send you, my good mamma, a trifle to put you 
in mind of me. You may use this box either for paint, 
or patches, or snuff, or bonbons, or pills ; but, to what- 
ever use you put it, believe at least when you look at 
this dog, the emblem of fidelity, that he who sends it 
surpasses in fidelity to you all the dogs in the whole 
world; and that his attachment to your person has 
nothing in common with the brittle material which is 
manufactured at this place. I have ordered porcelain 
here for every body ; for Schonhausen, [that is for the 
queen] for my sisters-in-law — in short, I am now rich in 
this frail material. I hope those to whom it will be sent 
will accept it instead of hard cash. Fox we are poor 
devils, dear mamma : we have nothing left but honour, 
our swords, and porcelain." 

To the marquis d'Argens, who took the warmest in- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 325 

terest in the events of the war, and sometimes employed 
his pen anonymously against the king's enemies, for in- 
stance, in the " Letters of a Protestant Clergyman," 
Frederick wrote : " Go to Sans Souci, my dear friend ; 
you know that my house and whatever fortune 
has left me are entirely at your service. Instead of 
rent, I only ask you to write me word in what state 
you have found the gallery. Farewell, my dear mar- 
quis ; drink mineral waters, take your walks, write in 
behalf of the good cause ; and, above all, don't forget 
your old friends, upon whom God has no doubt laid 
a curse, because they are forced to wage incessant war." 
The marquis went in December to see the king at 
Leipzig. Here he found the monarch for whose destruc- 
tion half Europe was banded, and who appeared to have 
been long engaged in a hopeless struggle for existence, 
quietly seated on the bare floor, having before him a 
dish containing a fricassee, out of which he was serving 
his dogs with their supper. In his hand he had a little 
stick, with which he kept them in order, and picked 
out the best bits for the favourite. The marquis started 
back, clasped his hands in amazement, and exclaimed : 
^* How it would puzzle the five great powers of Europe 
who are leagued against the marquis de Brand enbourg to 
guess what he is doing at this moment ! They would, 
no doubt, suppose that he is forming some plan for 
beating them in the next campaign, that he is collect- 
ing funds to defray the expences of it, or providing 
magazines for man and horse, or meditating negociations 
for separating his enemies and gaining new allies. No- 
thing of the sort ! There he is, sitting quietly in his 
room, and feeding his dogs !" 



326 COURT AND TIMES OF 



CHAPTER XXXVI. 

Campaign of 1761 — ^Noble Spirit of General Saldem —Plunder of the 
Palace of Hubertsburg, by command of Frederick — Quintus Icilius — 
Operations in Western Germany — State of tbe Hostile Armies in Silesia 
— Prussian Camp at Bunzelmtz — Inactivity of the Russians and Aus- 
trian»— Loudon surprises Schweidnitis — ^Treacherous plot of Baron War- 
kotscby for delivering Frederick into the hands of the Austrians — Em- 
bassy to the King from the Khan of Crim Tartary — His Negociations 
with the Porte — Reduction of Colberg by tbe Russians — Change in 
the English Administration ; Bute^ as Prime Minister, declines re- 
newing the Subsidiary Treaty with Prussia — Gloomy Prospects of 
Frederick — Aneedote illustrative of the Enthusiasm of his Subjects in 
his Cause. 

During the inactivity of the winter, Frederick in- 
flicted on one of his foes a chastisement which some 
would consider as an act of just retaliation, while 
stricter moralists may, perhaps, condemn it as a piece 
of revenge unworthy of his noble and exalted mind. I 
shall state the fact, and leave the reader to adopt which 
of these opinions he pleases. Great allowance should 
undoubtedly be made for the provocations which he had 
received, in the wanton devastations committed by the 
Saxons at Charlottenburg, in the cruelties practised by 
his enemies at that time, when the highest officers were 
doomed to expiate the misfortune of captivity in the 
jails of criminals, while defenceless citizens were seized 
because they were Prussians, and consigned for years to 
damp, noisome dungeons,^ and when all means were 

* Plesmann^ privy councillor of legation^ who was supposed to have 
given Frederick information of the great coalition formed against him, was 
suddenly seized by Austrian soldiers, in 1767# at Huff in Voigtlaud^ 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. , 827 

approved so they but tended to the one grand object — 
the humiliation and overthrow of the Prussian monarch. 

Frederick knew that the excesses of the Saxons at 
Charlottenburg were approved by their sovereign and his 
minister, and resolved to repay his foe in the like coin, 
by stripping Hubertsburg, the favourite hunting-seat of 
iking Augustus. On the 17th of February, 1761, he 
therefore sent for major-general Saldem, and said: 
" You will go to-morrow, as quietly as possible, with a 
detachment of infantry and cavalry, to Hubertsburg, 
take possession of the palace, make an inventory of all 
the moveables that will sell for any price, and pack 
them up. The money which they produce is to be 
applied to the use of the military hospital, and I will 
not forget you." 

" Begging your majesty's pardon," replied the gene- 
ral, " that is contrary to my honour and my oath." 

" You would be quite right," calmly rejoined the 
king, " if I did not mean to make this desperate mea- 
sure subservient to a good purpose. But, hark you, 
the heads of sovereigns feel nothing when the hair 
of their subjects is torn up by the roots ; one must 

where he served as the channel of communication between the king and 
the margravine of Bayreutfa^ carried to Vienna, and thrown into a dungeon. 
The king demanded his release, but was assured that no such person was 
there. At length, Plesmann's family at Magdeburg ascertained that he 
had been languishing for three years in the prison called the Stockhaus, 
in Vienna, in a cell exposed to a noisome stench and infested with 
vermin.. Frederick immediately ordered two Austrian officers, prisoners 
of war, and favourites of the emperor Francis, to be put under arrest, 
and threatened to confine them in a place of the same sort, if Plesmann^ 
his councillor of legation, was not immediately set at liberty. The unfor- 
tunate victim of political animosity was accordingly released; but it was 
not long before he died in consequence of the sufferings which he had 
undergone. A faithful servant had voluntarily shared his imprisonment, 
in order to alleviate the lot of his unfortunate master. 



328 , COURT AND TIMES OF 

touch them where they will themselves be pained. For 
this reason I expect you to execute my orders." 

** Your majesty," answered the high-spirited and in- 
flexible warrior, *f may send me this instant to attack 
the enemy and his most formidable batteries : I will 
obey without hesitation and without flinching. But I 
cannot, dare not, act contrary to honour, oath, and 
duty." 

" Well, well, but what / command cannot dishonour 
you. Go and execute my commission." 

•* Your majesty will easily find some other officer for 
this commission ; my honour, oath, and duty, I repeat, 
forbid me to undertake it." 

" Saldem," exclaimed the king, turning from him 
with a look of displeasure, " you don't want to be 
rich !" 

In this dilemma, the king selected Quintus Icilius for 
the expedition. More complaisant and less scrupulous 
than Saldem, he proceeded with his partisan battalion 
to Hubertsburg and executed the commission. The 
greater part of the booty went into the pockets of the 
plunderers, who were required to pay only 100,000 
dollars to the military hospitals. But neither the com- 
mander nor his corps could ever rid themselves of the 
stain which this act attached to their character — nay, 
Frederick very often rallied his favourite companion, 
Quintus, most unmercifully on the subject. When, after 
the war was over, he applied in 1764 to his majesty to 
reimburse his officers for recruiting expences which they 
had paid out of their own pockets, the king's pithy re- 
ply, written with his own hand, was : " Your officers 
have thieved like ravens. They shall get nothing." 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 829 

Years afterwards he said to their commander : " When- 
ever I speak to you, my dear Quintus Icilius, I cannot 
help recollecting Hubertshtirg and mechanically clap- 
ping my hands to my pockets." I must confess that to 
me it seems rather ungenerous to reproach an officer, 
whose duty, according to the military code, was implicit 
obedience, for the execution of a peremptory order issued 
by himself. 

Sulzer, in the " Letters of the Swiss," has thus ex-» 
plained the motives of Frederick for an act which one 
of his own generals refused to commit as dishonourable. 
" As for the affair of Hubertsburg, I certainly wish that 
it had not happened ; still it may be easily justified. 
You know that the troops not only gutted completely 
the royal palace of Charlottenburg, but polluted it be- 
sides with filth that needs no describing. The king 
made a formal complaint on this subject, and waited 
nearly three months to see whether the king of Poland 
would .offer a word of excuse through the English mi- 
nister at Warsaw. A pretty strong threat was thrown 
out about Hubertsburg ; but not a syllable was tendered 
in excuse, according to the usage on such occasions. 
After this long delay, the king, seeing how uncour- 
teously he was treated, determined to execute his threat. 
Such was the explanation given by Frederick himself 
to the marquis d'Argens." 

In France, where prince and people were alike the 
slaves of Fashion, the league with the house of Habs- 
burg had long lost the charm of novelty ; the enthu- 
siasm in behalf of Catholic enterprises had subsided ; 
the nation groaned under the burdens of a war in favour 
of its hereditary foe ; and in March, 1761, the court of 



330 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Versailles proposed to the kings of England and Prussia a 
congress for a general peace to be held in the city of 
Augsburg. The ministers were already appointed, but 
difficulties and disagreements arose; and the family 
compact of the Bourbon sovereigns for the mutual 
guarantee of all their possessions, concluded in August, 
1761, had the effect of spreading the flames of war 
wider than ever. The inmiediate consequence was a 
stroke for Prussia. Pitt, the great champion of Fre- 
derick, resigned his office, because England hesitated to 
declare war against Spain. The hostilities which soon 
followed between those powers, and in which Portugal 
was involved, are foreign to my present purpose. 

The new campaign against Prussia presents a re- 
markable spectacle. Bent on annihilating the king, his 
leagued foes strained all their powers, so that, as Fre- 
derick himself observes, " with fewer of his own people 
and allies, Alexander overturned the Persian monarchy." 
He too was prepared, but no battle was fought. The 
awfully superior hosts of his foes were afraid to attack 
the hero whose prudence and perseverance were in- 
vincible. Napoleon justly remarked : " It was not the 
Prussian army that for seven years defended Prussia 
against the three mightiest powers of Europe, but Fre- 
derick the Great.** 

Let us first take a rapid glance at the operations of 
the allies against the French in western Germany. The 
army of the latter, though under as incompetent com- 
manders, was very different from that which had been 
beaten at Bossbach. Marshal Broglio was in Hesse, and 
pushed forward from Gottingen a corps of Saxons under 
count Solms, and of French under count Stainville, into 



PKEDERICK THE GREAT. 331 

Thnrmgia. The king encouraged duke Ferdinand to 
enter Hesse, promising to send general Sydow with 
7000 Prussians to join him. These fell in, on the 15th 
of February, with the enemy at Langensalza, put the 
French cavalry to flight on the right bank of the Salza, 
and thereby obliged the Saxon infantry to retreat to 
the other bank : 3000 prisoners, 6 pair of colours, and 
4 pieces of cannon, were the trophies of the day. Fer- 
dinand himself, whose private letters express great 
weariness of the war, spent all March in besieging Cassel, 
but without success. At Stangerode, Broglio's superior 
force triumphed on the 21st over the hereditary prince; 
but in an action with the French at Yellinghausen on 
the 16th of July the duke had the advantage. Nothing 
of greater consequence occurred in this quarter. 

Turn we now to Silesia, the principal theatre of the 
war. Here Frederick himself commanded against the 
Austrians and Russians, while his brother Henry op- 
posed Daun in Saxony. Loudon headed this year a 
separate army of 60,000 men in Silesia, which was in- 
tended to unite with the Russians in order to make sure 
of victory. The force of the latter under Buturlin 
amounted to 70,000. Against both Frederick could 
not muster more than 50,000 ; and, with all his efforts 
to keep back the Russians from the Oder, he could not 
prevent Buturlin from crossing that river on the 12th 
of August at Leubus, and forming a junction five days 
afterwards with his allies at Striegau. 

The king was now impelled to adopt a new system of 
defence — to occupy a camp where he could protect both 
himself and the fortress of Schweidnitz. With this 
view he chose the position of Bunzelwitz, not far from 



332 COURT AND TIMES OF 

that town, and with unexampled despatch surrounded 
himself, before the enemy was aware, with fortifications 
which could not easily be attacked. This camp has 
excited the universal admiration of military men as a 
master-piece of art, exhibiting a happy combination of 
the principles of tactics with those of field-fortification. 
It resembled a fortress, of which the hill of Wtirben 
might be considered as the citadel. From this height 
to the village of Bunzelwitz the camp was covered by a 
morass. The outlets of the villages of Bunzelwitz and 
Jauernick were fortified, and great batteries constructed. 
By the cross-fire of these, the front, on which Loudon 
might have attacked the king, was so defended, that 
the Austrians must have taken both villages before they 
could come at the army. Between the villages, and a 
little further back, was the front of the army, covered 
by entrenchments, provided with a numerous artillery ; 
and from one to the other were passages to afibrd the 
cavalry scope to act in case of necessity. Beyond 
Jauernick were four entrenched hills, which commanded 
the whole ground; before these was a muddy ditch, 
which might have been defended with small arms, if the 
enemy had thrown bridges across. Further to the right, 
the wood called the Nonn^nbusch was obstructed by an 
abattis, defended by jagers and partisan corps. At the 
extreme right commenced the flank, which, running 
parallel to the Striegauwater, terminated in a wood, 
covered by a ravine coming from Peterwitz. In this 
wood was a disguised battery, connected behind an 
abattis with a second battery, at the extremity of the 
same wood, towards Neuendorf, covering an entrench- 
ment connected with the works on the height of Wiirben. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 333 

The entrenchments were all 1 6 feet across ; the ditches 
1 6 feet wide and 1 2 deep : the front was enclosed with 
strong palisades, and all the salient parts of the works 
were undermined. Before the mines were trous de loup, 
and before them chevaux de frise. This camp was de- 
fended by 480 pieces of cannon, and 182 mines were 
ready for exploding. The king, Zieten, and Ramin each 
undertook the defence of one of the points of attack 
which the camp presented ; and, to guard against sur- 
prise, the soldiers slept in the day-time, and were under 
arms at night. 

Cooped up in this position for five weeks, without any 
tidings from the other divisions of his army, so active a 
mind as the king's could not help indulging the most 
gloomy forebodings. At the same time he shared all 
hardships with the common soldiers, staying in the outer- 
most trencbes, and sometimes sleeping on the bare 
ground. " Take a truss of straw with you," said he one 
day to his attendants, " that I may not have to lie on 
the ground again, as I did last night." At another 
time he was sleeping under a small tent, when a violent 
thunder-storm took place in the night. " I never yet 
had such convenient quarters," said he next morning to 
Zieten. " How so ?" replied the general. " I should 
have thought otherwise." — " Why the water ran in a 
stream under my camp-bed. I had it at first hand, both 
for drinking and washing." 

Zieten, whose simple way of thinking pleased the king, 
was frequently his comforter during this period of com- 
pulsory inactivity. One moonlight night, impelled by 
uneasiness, Frederick went to the hut of the general. 
^* This will not do ! it cannot do !" exclaimed the king, 



SS4 COURT AND TIMES OF 

several times. ** And yet all will end well/' replied bis 
old comrade. Frederick looked at him incrednlonsly, 
and asked, in a somewhat sarcastic tone^ if he had gained 
some new ally. " Not exactly/' answered Zieten. " I 
rely upon Him above : He will not forsake ns." — " But 
He has ceased to perform miracles/' sighed the king. 
" Nor do we need any ; still He fights for us, and will 
not let us sink." The event justified Zieten's confi- 
dence. 

The enemy's commanders, though at the head of 
1 30,000 men, were afraid to attack the lion in his lair, 
either separately or jointly. Buturlin was unwilling to 
risk his reputation in so hazardous an enterprise ; Lou- 
don strove to conquer his scruples, and over the bottle 
the Russian marshal promised to assist him in storming 
the Prussian camp on the 1st of September. On cooler 
consideration, however, he changed his mind. For seve- 
ral days longer he remained inactive, and then broke up 
on the 1 0th of September, and retired towards Jauer, 
because the Austrians could not supply him with provi- 
sions. Loudon, now considering himself unsafe, fell 
back also into the mountains, and re-occupied his old 
camp near Kunzendorf. Thus was Frederick's army 
released from a position in which, from the 20th of 
August to the 25th of September, it had endured fitmine 
and inexpressible hardships. 

Frederick, conceiving that it might be Buturlin's in- 
tention to proceed to Pomerania or Brandenburg, with 
a view to divert him from such a purpose, ordered gene- 
ral Platen, who had gone with 7000 men to cover Bres^ 
lau, to march to Posen, and to destroy the Russian 
magazines there. This rather hazardous expedition 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 335 

was ably executed. At Gostyn, beyond Polish Lissa, 
Platen fell in, on the 1 1th of September, with a convoy 
of 6000 waggons, which he took, as well as half the 
escort of 4000 men, and destroyed three of the largest 
Russian magazines. This brought Buturlin back across 
the Oder on the 1 3th. 

Loudon, meanwhile, remained quietly in his strong 
camp. To draw him, if possible, out of Silesia, Fre* 
derick quitted his camp at Bunzelwitz, and marched 
into the country of Miinsterberg, as though he purposed 
to penetrate into the county of Glatz or Moravia. When 
the Prussian army was two days* march from Schweid- 
nitz, Loudon resolved to take advantage of its absence, 
and to surprise that fortress. Circumstances favoured 
his design. Czernitschef, who, with a corps of 20,000 
men, still continued with him, was ready to lend his 
assistance ; many of the Austrian officers were acquainted 
with the localities of the fortress ; Loudon learned from 
deserters that Zastrow, the commandant, was accus- 
tomed to pass the night at balls and other diversions ; 
and lastly an Italian, named Bocca, who was a prisoner 
of war there, and had contrived to insinuate himself 
into the confidence of the commandant, is said to have 
gained the imperial general an opportunity for the attack. 
In the night of the 1st of October, Loudon suddenly 
appeared before Schweidnitz, and attacked all the out- 
works at one and the same time. All were carried after 
more or less resistance. The Russian grenadiers then 
scaled the wall of the town and opened the gates to the 
Austrians. Zastrow surrendered at discretion. 

For this success, achieved with the loss of 68 officers 
and 1280 men, Loudon had well nigh earned punishment 



3S6 COURT AND TIMES OF 

instead of thanks, because he had not consulted the 
Aulic Council in Vienna ; and the empress was vexed 
at receiving the first news of the event from her consort, 
whom she excluded from all participation in public 
affairs. Some patrons of Loudon's, however, had suffi- 
cient influence to pacify Maria Theresa so far, that she 
did at least thank her general, and ordered a gratuity 
of 1 3 florins to be paid to each of his soldiers* Loudon 
himself was never forgiven for the exploit. In the fol- 
lowing year, a less important command was allotted to 
him ; and he was in such disgrace at court that, for 
seventeen years, that is to say, while the empress lived, 
he obtained no promotion. 

Zastrow, the Prussian commandant, on his return from 
captivity after the peace, was tried by a court-martial, 
sentenced to imprisonment in a fortress, and deprived of 
his regiment. He then entered into the service of the 
elector of Hesse, in which he held the rank of lieutenant- 
general at his death. 

By this unexpected disaster, Fredenck lost the key of 
Silesia, and with it half of that important province. His 
object now was to cover the capital and the other for- 
tresses, to prevent the further progress of the enemy, 
and to succour prince Eugene of Wirtemburg, who 
could scarcely maintain his ground near Colberg. He 
would fain have drawn Loudon into a pitched battle ; 
bnt he remained quietly in his camp at Freiberg, which 
kept Mm in conununication with Saxony, Bohemia, and 
Moravia. The king, therefore, put his troops into can- 
tonments in the villages about Strehlen, while he him- 
self had his head-quarters at Waiselwitz, whence he de- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 337 

spatched general Schenkendorf with 4000 men to 
Pomerania. 

Frederick had need of rest after the fatigues of 
Bunzelwitz. Le Cat, writing to Algarotti on the 3d of 
October, from Strehlen, says : " You predicted that 
this campaign would be very harassing. His majesty, 
incessantly engaged in business, parsed every night from 
the 26th of August to the 10th of September, at a 
redoubt/' In cantonments, therefore, both the king 
and his troops were the more inclined to indulge in 
repose. His quarters, about 150 paces distant from 
Strehlen on the Ohlau, were guarded only by a single 
company of grenadiers ; and this circumstance suggested 
a design of the blackest treachery. For six years the 
mightiest powers of Europe had been leagued for the 
overthrow of a single man, and, what they had not been 
able to accomplish with their united efforts, a protestant, 
a gentleman, a subject of Frederick's, plotted to effect 
by surprise. 

Henry Gottlob baron Warkotsch, proprietor of the 
estates of Schonbrunn and Upper and Lower Rosen, 
nine or ten miles from Strehlen, had served till 1756 as 
captain in the Austrian army. He then succeeded to 
the above-mentioned estates of his deceased brother, 
and took the oath of allegiance to the king of Prussia, 
whose favour he enjoyed, as well as the regard of some 
of the high functionaries of state. He was married, 
and of the Lutheran confession. This man nevertheless 
entered into a plot with a catholic priest, named Schmidt, 
who lived at Siebenhuben, and colonel Wallis, com- 
mander of the Austrian regiment of Loudon, for be- 
traying Frederick into the hands of the Imperialists. 

VOL. III. z 



358 COURT AND TIMES OF 

The motive for this base treason has never been satis- 
factorily explained. It was not religious fanaticism, 
neither was it the love of lucre by which the traitor was 
stimulated, though some historians have stated without 
any foundation whatever that he was to have had a re- 
ward of 100,000 ducats. His gamekeeper or hunts- 
man, Matthias Kappel, who, as we shall see, was ex- 
pected to perform other services besides those connected 
with that situation, and to whom Frederick owed his 
preservation from the near-impending danger, alleges 
that Warkotsch was dissatisfied with the strict super- 
intendence of the Prussian administrative authorities, 
and conceived that the Austrians, if they should regain 
possession of Silesia, would wink at his tyrannical treat- 
ment of his dependents. 

Whatever may have been his motive, the baron ap- 
pears to have harboured his base design for some time. 
It is related that, so early as the 15th of August, the 
anniversary of the battle of Liegnitz, when the king 
gave a ball to a regiment which chanced to lie at Schon- 
brunn, one of the baron's estates, he resolved to avail 
himself of the tumult occasioned by the festivity, and 
he had the more reason to anticipate a successful result, 
as on such days the king generally withdrew from the 
noisy hilarity of the scene into solitude. Warkotsch 
was intimately acquainted with the locality. Disguised 
Austrians were to surprise the king in his apartment, 
and to carry him off alive or to kill him. The Austrians 
were already waiting in ambush, in a neighbouring stone- 
quarry, for the signal, when Zieten, who was stationed 
in this quarter, shifted his position that very night, and 
advanced with his hussar-regiment to the environs of 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 339 

the Village. This circumstance saved the king for that 
time. It is remarkable that Zieten himself was not 
aware of any particular reason for changing his quarters 
precisely that night. The execution of the plot was 
deferred till a more suitable opportunity. 

In the month of November, a favourable occasion 
seemed to present itself. The Prussian army lay in the 
vicinity of Strehlen, and the king had taken up his 
quarters in the open village of Waiselwitz, at the house 
of M. Briickampf, inspector of buildings, situated near 
the Ohlau, a stream only ten paces broad, and across 
which there was moreover a bridge. It might be easily 
approached through gardens, and a surprise by night 
seemed to promise the more certain success, as the 
guard-house was distant, and the many comers and 
goers to and from the head-quarters would render it an 
easy task to secure the two grenadiers on duty before 
the door. The frequent visits of the baron to the head- 
quarters, and the confidence which he gained by the 
exhibition of affected loyalty to his sovereign, enabled 
him to learn the strength of the post, any changes that 
were made in it, and what orders were given in case of 
an attack ; while his knowledge of the country made 
him acquainted with the most private routes. A brisk 
correspondence carried on through Schmidt with colonel 
Wallis had settled all the details of the plan, and a last 
letter was to fix the time for its execution. I shall now 
proceed in the words of Kappel, as reported in the 
work of Kiister, to which I have already adverted. 

" About this time I had to ride every other day with 
the baron to head-quarters, and he was frequently per- 
mitted to pay his respects to the king. The latter had 

z 2 



340 COURT AND TIMES OF 

taken np his abode in a small house at the extremity of 
the village towards the hills, and was guarded by only 
thirteen men of his guard. There were no other soldiers 
in the outskirts of the place, because there are very few 
houses there. 

" Now I had to carry a letter every week to Schmidt, 
the catholic minister or curate of Siebenhuben, and this 
letter, sealed by my master, but without direction, I 
had to deliver into Schmidt's own hands. Though I 
knew not what this blind correspondence was about, 
yet, having to go on the same errand every week, I be- 
gan to be suspicious. At last I was ordered to carry 
the letters to general Wallis, between Miinsterberg and 
Kloster Hennrigau, upon pretext that they were about 
some Hungarian wine, which my master wished general 
Wallis to get for him. But I never had a written 
answer given me by the latter, but always the verbal 
message that he would attend to the matter. Schmidt 
was entrusted with all the answers for my master, and 
when we were not at home, he waited till we returned. 

" At length, on the 29th of November, I was with 
my master at the head-quarters in Strehlen, where we 
stayed till twelve o'clock at night, and my master visited 
several gentlemen of the army. Last of all he called 
to see Eichel, the privy cabinet councillor, and stopped 
two hours with him. All this time I was obliged to 
wait for him before Eichel's quarters, till I could no 
longer bear the cold, with the horses ; especially as I 
durst not make any noise with them, because the house 
was close to that in which the king lodged. 

" At length my master came and ordered me to bring 
the horses. We hastened away at the back of the king's 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 341 

quarters, over the bridge near the fulling-mill, past the 
footpath to Treppendorf, where some of Zastrow's dra- 
goons were posted. My master asked me if I had not 
observed that the king of Prussia was very much ex- 
posed in his quarters, having no other protection but 
about thirteen men of his guard ; that no Austrian gene- 
ral was so ill protected as the king, and if the Austrians 
knew this, they might come and carry him off with the 
greatest ease. * Who is to tell the Austrians that ? * 
said I. He asked me if I did not suppose that they 
had spies. I answered : * Even though they may have 
spies, yet, if God does not permit, they will not get hold 
of the king.' The baron desired me in reply not to be 
so silly as to imagine that God cared about the king : 
on the contrary, he left great personages like him to 
take care of themselves. I earnestly begged him not 
to talk so loud: somebody near, patroles, sentinels, 
might overhear us, and then we might get into trouble. 
He then ordered me to come and ride by his side, that 
he might not have occasion to talk so loud, and I com- 
plied. Thereupon my master said to me : * I will con- 
vince you. How often have we rode from the head- 
quarters at night, without having ever seen a patrole or 
even a sentinel on the hill ! ' adding that it was very 
cold, and they were all in their quarters, without feeling 
any apprehension that the Austrians would come to 
attack them. 

" About two o'clock in the morning we arrived at 
Schonbrunn : my master ordered me to go to bed, as I 
must have been long enough in the cold. When I en- 
tered my room, my wife told me that before I went to 
bed I must deliver to the baron a letter left by curate 



342 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Schmidt, with a particular charge that it shoald be given 
to my master when he came home, let it be ever so late. 
It was another letter without address, which my wife 
handed to me, asking at the same time what was the 
meaning of it that the letter had no direction; be- 
sides, Schmidt had been half the day till late in the 
evening with the baroness, and might therefore have 
given the letter to her. The curate had said that, if we 
should come home late, my wife need only give me the 
letter, and I should know what to do with it ; and that 
it was about a matter of great importance. 

" I took the letter to my master in his bed-chamber, 
without knowing that the baroness was still up; but 
I found her sitting there, and delivered the letter to the 
baron with the curate Schmidt's compliments. The 
baroness was very angry that Schmidt should have been 
with her half the day and not have given her the letter. 
The baron ordered her to go to her chamber, as it was 
high time to be in bed, adding that she had nothing to 
do with his letters. He then desired me to go to bed. 
In half an hour the baron came to my door, called me, 
and ordered me to come to him. He had a candle and a 
letter in his hand : he gave me the letter, with directions 
to take it at four o'clock that same morning to the place 
of its destination. I immediately asked whether I was to 
wait for an answer ; he replied that I had no need to wait. 
I then begged permission to go to Schmidt's church as I 
came back, because it was the day on which the Catholics 
celebrate the feast of St. Andrew, and he gave m'e leave." 

Respecting the motive of his further proceedings 
Kappel leaves us in utter uncertainty. Whether it was, 
as some assert, personal revenge against his master for 
having «ent him off aprain almost without rest, after a 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 343 

day of severe fatigue ; or whether his suspicion, excited 
by the conversation during the ride home, was converted 
into certainty by the letter left by Schmidt, and his 
moral feeling was suflSciently awakened to guide him 
amid conflicting duties into the right path — he tells us 
that, after tarrying two hours, when he thought that his 
master was asleep, he broke open the envelope, in which 
he found a letter, superscribed " A Monsieur Monsieur le 
Baron de Wallis." This letter, disclosing the nature of 
the plot, was as follows : 

" Nothing new has occurred. The coach still stands 
at the door : it was, probably, removed at the time to 
which you allude on account of the frequent rain. There 
is not a piquet any where, no main guard, no sutler. 
The head-quarters are not so pompous as with you. I 
have been there to-day. In the day-time I saw a sentry 
in the street, but at night I could not perceive any, so 
that there are at most a couple of sentinels posted at 
the door of the room, which is very small, and one at the 
house-door. You need not be afraid. Your success 
will be most brilliant ; but if, contrary to all probability, 
you should fail, the worst that can befall you is to be 
made prisoner. Let me tell you for your information, 
that there are now twenty or thirty foot jagers at Po- 
gart, to prevent desertion. Now, as you have guides, 
it is not at all necessary that you should go through 
Pogart, but you may leave it on your left. To-morrow 
the military chest is going off, and to-day the artillery. 
Monday night would, therefore, be the best ; as I cannot 
answer for it that the bird will not have flown by Tues- 
day night. Adieu !" 

" When I had read this letter," proceeds Kappel, " I 



344 COURT AND TIMES OF 

was seized with a yiolent shudder, and had great diffi- 
culty to decide what to do, as I durst not trust the 
secret to any body, not even to my wife.* At length, 
by a guidance which must have come from a higher 
hand, I bethought me that there was in the village a 
Protestant minister named Gerlach, with whom I durst 
not hold intercourse, because my master was his declared 
enemy. To him I went and begged him to do me a fa- 
vour : I had a secret to communicate to him, which con- 
cerned the king of Prussia, and to ask if he would make 
me a copy of this letter. He was ready to do so, but 
made me tell him what I intended to do with it. I told 
the truth, that I meant to carry the baron's letter to the 
king, and to send the copy to general Wallis. The mi- 
nister complied with my request, with many wishes that 
I might succeed in my errand. 

" I sent off my apprentice with the copy to general 
Wallis, having previously sealed it with the baron's seal, 
and charged my apprentice, in case the baron should ask 
him on his return home where he had been, not to say a 
word that might betray me, as I ought to have delivered 
the letter myself. This I did that the baron might not 
conceive any sort of suspicion. So at eight in the 
morning of the 30th of November I carried the original 
myself to Strehlen to the king. 

• From tbe judicial proceedings against Warkotsch, which were par- 
tially published, it appears that there are some inaccuracies in this narra- 
tive of Kappel's, which was not committed to writing till 179l> and then of 
course from meihory. Thus, for instance, it was at the instigation of his 
wife that he opened the letter, the contents of which were communicated 
to her. It was she too who seems to have persuaded him to apply, in this 
most important matter, to Gerlach, the Protestant minister of tbe place. 
The letter quoted above is not given in Kappel's Narrative, but is extracted 
from Preuss. Though that narrative is highly interesting, its tone is evi- 
dently palliative. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 345 

" On my arrival — ^I had borrowed a horse by the way 
to get there the sooner — I found the king's carriage be- 
fore the door, fastened my horse to the carriage, and 
went straight to the king's quarters, and would have 
gone into the room where he was. But I was stopped 
by his guard, who told me that it was not the way for 
people to run right in to the king. I said to the guard 
that I must speak with the king immediately; that 
I had things of importance to deliver to him. I received 
for answer, that the oflScer on duty was in the next 
room, that I must speak to him, and perhaps he would 
take my message to the king. By him I was told that 
he was, to be sure, the officer on duty, but not there to 
take messages to the king from people who looked so 
wild as I did ; adding that I must go right across the 
road, where I should find adjutant-general Krusemark, 
whose duty it was to acquaint the king with my busi- 
ness. I said that I had an open letter which the king 
must have immediately, and, if he would not believe me, 
he might read it. He replied that he durst not read any 
letters which the king ought to have. So I was obliged 
to be gone to general Krusemark, and the officer sent a 
soldier after me to see what became of me. 

" The general ordered me to be admitted forthwith. 
I handed him the letter, and related the whole affair, 
just as it had happened. Upon this the general dressed 
himself in haste, and locked me in his room, charging 
me not to go to the window, as I was well known 
in Strehlen, till either he or somebody else came to 
fetch me. 

" In a quarter of an hour there came an officer, who 
unlocked the door, and said that I was to go immedi- 



346 COURT AND TIMES OF 

ately to the king. He brought with him a blue roque- 
laure and a hat with feathers : these he made me put 
on, and I left my laced hat in the general's room. There 
was not a person with the king besides general Kruse- 
mark The king came up close to me, and asked if I 
knew what had made my master so bitter an enemy to 
him. I said I knew nothing more than that he had 
often expressed to me how dissatisfied he was with the 
government of the king of Prussia, because he could not 
do as he pleased with the peasants on his estates. The 
king questioned me concerning all the circumstances 
that I was acquainted with. I told him every thing ; 
how long the correspondence had been going on, and 
what was to have happened the very next night. The 
king listened to me without saying a word till I had 
finished. He then asked how long I had been in the 
service of the baron ; I said eight years. The king then 
said I must not stay with him any longer, and asked 
from what country I was. I said, from Bohemia. * From 
what part V * From Mitrowitz, near Collin.' The king 
answered ; ^ I am acquainted with that part.' He then 
came quite close to me, and said : — * And so you 
are a Catholic ?' — I answered, * Yes, your majesty.' — 
* And your master a Lutheran V — * Yes, your majesty.' 
— * Look you, gamekeeper,' said he, ^ there are honest 
men and scoundrels in all religions. In this matter you 
are not acting from your own impulse. You are not to 
blame. You are decidedly an instrument for my safety 
in the hand of a higher power.' " 

The king presently ordered captain Rabenau, of 
Zastrow's dragoons, to take ten men and seize the two 
traitors, Warkotsch and Schmidt. Unacquainted with 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 347 

the occasion for this order, Rabenau gave implicit credit 
to the story of the artful Warkotsch, who represented 
his arrest as the consequence of some complaint made by 
Schlaberndorf, the minister, on account of forage which he 
had neglected to supply ; he allowed the baron to go to 
his bedroom to dress, and thence he contrived to escape 
by a secret door ; so that before his flight was discovered 
he was with the Austrians in the mountains. The oflS- 
cer returned with a long face, and made his report, 
" Rabenau," said the king, " you are a stupid fellow !" 
And this was the only reprimand that he received, 
Schmidt was taken in the house of a gentleman, on whose 
guarantee he was suffered to go for a few moments out 
of sight of the soldiers, and found means to escape also 
through the sewer from the privies. 

The regency of Breslau, after a due investigation of 
the case, passed the following sentence on the 22d of 
March, 1762 — that the property of both culprits, move- 
able and immoveable, should be confiscated, excepting 
that portion of the baron's to which his wife had a claim ; 
that Warkotsch should be quartered alive ; that Schmidt 
should be first beheaded, and then quartered ; and that, 
till their persons were secured, this part of the sentence 
should be executed upon them in effigy. Frederick, who 
was averse to capital punishments in general, and for 
high treason in particular, and was glad that the two 
criminals had escaped, had no hesitation to confirm this 
sentence. " That may be done," said he, as he signed 
it, " for the portraits are probably no better than the 
originals." 

The estates of Warkotsch were sold, and, after the 
payment of all just claims upon them, the surplus was 



348 COURT AND TIMES OP 

applied to the benefit of the schools of Glogau and 
Breslau. He himself lived afterwards upon a pension 
assigned to him by the Austrian government, and died 
at Baab in Hungary. It was never known what became 
of Schmidt. Wallis, their accomplice, who a year before 
haa been made prisoner of war at Neisse and exchanged, 
and who had materially contributed to the capture of 
Schweidnitz, dishonoured himself even in the eyes of his 
own countrymen by his participation in this plot. The 
family of the counts Wallis even publicly declared that 
the colonel (whose real name was Wallisch) was no rela- 
tion of theirs. 

The king was not unmindful of those to whom he owed 
his preservation. He gave Gerlach a good living near 
Brieg ; and Kappel was appointed inspector of woods at 
Quaden-Germendorf, near Oranienburg, where he lived 
very comfortably upwards of thirty years, and received, 
as his son-in-law, professor Zelter, director of the Sing- 
ing Academy in Berlin used to relate, many substantial 
favours from the king. Frederick had purposely " tied 
him to the manger," where he could help himself ; and, 
in 1781, he gave him 4000 dollars to rebuild his house, 
which had been burned down. Bohmelt, KappePs ap- 
prentice, had an appointment given to him at Bromberg. 
The house at Waiselwitz, where the king was to have been 
surprised, was preserved with great care, till it was acci- 
dentally burned in 1834. 

The camp near Strehlen was remarkable for a circum- 
stance of a difiFerent kind. Here, in the month of Octo- 
ber, when Frederick was reduced to the greatest straits, 
he was visited by an ambassador from the khan of Grim 
Tartary. Mustapha Aga, .who brought assurances of 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 349 

friendship and an offer to furnish troops for a pecuniary 
consideration, was very graciously received. Baron Golz 
went hack with him to lead 16,000 Tartars through 
Poland, along the Carpathian mountains to Kosel, where 
they were to arrive in the following March. The khan 
was at the same time to make an incursion into Russia. 
Grolz and the ambassador set out from Breslau on the 3d 
of December, and arrived on the 27th of January, 1762, 
at Baktschiserai. The khan professed warm friendship 
for the king, and begged that he would send him a phy- 
sician to cure him of an hemorrhoidal complaint. Golz 
communicated this wish by a courier, and Dr, Frese, who 
was sent in consequence to the Crimea, soon effected a 
cure. As the change of sovereign in Russia at the com- 
mencement of the following year altered the whole poli- 
tical system, Frederick had no further need of the assist- 
ance of the Tartars, which might otherwise have been 
very serviceable to him ; for Kerim Gherai was a high- 
spirited, energetic, and enlightened prince, and disposed 
to all that was great and good. France subsequently 
sought his alliance through the celebrated baron Tott. 
The khan set out in January, 1769, to the assistance of 
Poland, but he died by the way at the age of about sixty. 
With the Porte Frederick had endeavoured to esta- 
blish amicable relations very soon after his accession, but 
to no purpose, notwithstanding the mediation of France 
and Sweden. After the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, similar 
overtures were made, but with no better success. On 
the death of Mahmoud I., towards the end of 1754, the 
king sent a Latin letter of congratulation to his succes- 
sor, Othman III. The bearer, whose original name was 
Haude, after being in the employ of M. Hiibsch, merchant 



850 COURT AND TIMES OF 

of Constantinople, belonged for some time to the Aus- 
trian embassy there, then entered into the military service 
as comet, and returned in 1754 to his native country, 
Silesia. He became known to the king, who took him 
into his retinue, gave him the name and arms of the ex- 
tinct family of Rexin, and, regarding him as a fit person 
to be employed in his negociations with the Porte, he 
sent him, in 1 755, with the title of commercial councillor, 
to Constantinople, to present the above-mentioned letter 
of congratulation to the sultan. The mufti was favour- 
able, but the reis effendi adverse to the overtures of 
Prussia. Rexin was therefore dismissed with a reply 
from the sultan to the king ; but an intimation was given 
in a note to the Swedish ambassador, who had warmly 
interested himself in Frederick's behalf, that, in order to 
consolidate the good understanding with the king of 
Prussia, another happy year must be awaited, if so it 
pleased Almighty God. 

On the death of Othman III,, in 1757, Rexin was 
again sent with congratulations to Mustapha III., who 
had used Frederick's Anti-Machiavel for his own instruc- 
tion and that of his son. Raghib, who, when grand visir, 
had been hostile to Prussia, was now well-disposed to- 
wards the negociator, who, with captain Varenne, the 
king's aide-de-camp, remained at Smyrna, till they were 
permitted to come with great secrecy to Constantinople. 
The French and Austrian ambassadors, however, scented 
them out, and frustrated the purpose of their coming. 
Thus it was not till March, 1761, that the first treaty 
of amity was concluded between Prussia and the Porte, 
upon which Rexin appeared in the character of ambas- 
sador extraordinary at Constantinople. He had spared 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 351 

no pains, and spent 80,000 piastres to accomplish his 
object; and the Russian and Austrian envoys would 
gladly have given 100,000 ducats to get the treaty an- 
nulled ; for the sultan collected a large army near 
Belgrade ; and, had death spared the Russian empress 
Elisabeth, it is possible enough that Frederick's Turkish 
and Tartar allies might have made such a diversion as 
would have given a decidedly favourable turn to his 
affairs. 

Before the conclusion of the year, Frederick was 
doomed to experience another mortification in the re- 
duction of Colberg by the Russians, who besieged that 
fortress for three successive years. The first siege was 
in 1759, after the battle of Zorudorf. The place was 
garrisoned by only 700 provincial militia, but, with the 
assistance of the townspeople, the commandant, colonel 
von der Heyde, made so gallant a defence for 29 days 
that the enemy raised the siege and evacuated all Po- 
merania. In August and September, 1760, the Russians 
laid siege to Colberg a second time, while a combined 
Russian and Swedish fleet of 30 sail of the line and 
frigates, besides smaller vessels of war and 40 transports, 
attacked the place by sea. In the space of four days 
the-enemy threw into the town upwards of 700 bombs, 
besides red-hot balls. Heyde, however, regardless of the 
bombardment, which devastated the town, defended it 
with not less intrepidity than on the former occasion. 
The citizens beheld their houses burnt to ashes without 
a murmur ; courageously awaiting the arrival of general 
Werner, who was hastening from Silesia to their relief. 
With four battalions and nine squadrons he threw him- 
self into the fortress, after a forced march of 230 miles. 



352 COURT AND TIMES OF 

on which the enemy fled partly by land, partly on board 
the ships which stood oat to sea, leaving behind 1 5 pieces 
of cannon, 7 mortars, provisions of all kinds, and 600 
prisoners. " Indeed,*' said the king, " it was reserved 
for general Werner to put to flight a fleet with a few 
squadrons of hussars,'' and he ordered a medal to be 
struck in honour of the defender and the deliverer of Col- 
berg. In August, 1761, the Russians invested the for- 
tress, for the third time, both by sea and land. Roman- 
zof, who conmianded the enemy, remained inactive on 
the Gollenberg, eastward of Koslin, till the combined 
Russian and Swedish fleet appeared off the fortress* 
He then reduced the prince of Wirtemberg, who, with 
6000 Prussians, occupied an entrenched camp under the 
guns of the fortress, to such straits that the king was 
obliged to send generals Schenkendorf and Anhalt to his 
succour ; but too late to save the place. The rations of 
the garrison and the armed burghers were diminished, 
but they resolved to hold out to the last extremity. 
Winter came on, and the cold was intense. The Rus- 
sians nevertheless persevered. Heyde defended the place 
with his wonted intrepidity. He ordered water to be 
poured down the walls, which the frost rendered as slip- 
pery as glass, and repulsed all the assaults of the be- 
siegers. At length, when every morsel of bread was 
consumed, and the fortress had been summoned for the 
tenth time, the gallant Pru^ian commandant capitu- 
lated on the 16th of December, after a siege of four 
months. The 300 men composing the garrison were 
paraded in triumph, as a curiosity, through Petersburg; 
and the Russians now ventured to winter for the first 
time in Pomerania and the New Mark. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 353 

Paul Werner, bom in 1707 at Raab in Hungary, was 
in the Austrian service from 1723 to 1750, and had 
made twentj-six campaigns (eight against Spain, eight 
against France, six against the Turks, and four against 
the Prussians) without attaining a higher rank than that 
of captain. He entered therefore into the Prussian ser- 
vice as sub-lieutenant, and, on the breaking out of the 
seven years' war, his regiment belonged to the corps 
under the command of marshal Schwerin, in which he 
so distinguished himself that in 1758 he was promoted 
to be major-general, and obtained the order of Merit. 
Entrusted, as we have seen, with the command of a 
separate corps, destined for the relief of Colberg, after 
he had accomplished that object, he drove the Swedes 
out of New Hither Pomerania, and was in 1761 pro- 
moted to be lieutenant-general out of his turn. On the 
reduction of Colberg by the Russians, he was made pri- 
soner and carried to Konigsberg, where he remained till 
the death of the empress Elisabeth. Peter IH. endea- 
voured to gain him for the Russian service, but he de- 
clined his offers, assumed the command of a Prussian 
corps in 1763, penetrated into Moravia, and won, before 
the face of the king, the brilliant victory of Reichenbach. 
After the peace, he retired to his estate at Pitschen, 
where he died in 1786. 

The brave governor of Colberg, von der Heyde, was a 
native of Lower Lusatia, but entered into the Prussian 
service, and while major was appointed commandant 
of the castle of Friedrichsburg, near Konigsberg, and 
was afterwards sent in the same quality to the fortress 
which he so gallantly defended, and where he died in 
1765, at the age of 62. 

VOL. III. A A 



354 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Against the Swedes, under general Ehrensward, the 
war was this year carried on by colonel Belling, at the 
head of 1500 hussars and four infantry battalions, with 
such success that before the enemy had time to attempt 
any thing they were obliged to seek refuge under the 
guns of Stralsund. Hence the king says of that ofBcer, 
that a description of the deeds of this man appears very 
like a narrative of the adventures of Amadis. 

If we consider the situation of Frederick at this pe- 
riod, when Dresden, Schweidnitz, Colberg, were in the 
hands of his enemies, and when the ground upon which 
he could move with freedom became more and more 
contracted, we feel justly apprehensive that it will not 
be possible for him to escape destruction* A fresh 
stroke nevertheless awaits him — the change of the 
English ministry on the 5th of October, 1761. " The 
welfare of England," as some of the lords alleged in 
their protest, " was committed to persons whose abili- 
ties there was reason to doubt." This shaft was aimed 
chiefly at the earl of Bute, who, in 1746, gained the in- 
timate confidence of the prince of Wales, and, at his 
death, in 1 751, was appointed by his widow, a princess of 
Saxe-Gotha, preceptor of her son, afterwards George III. 
On his accession to the throne, Bute acquired very great 
influence. The young king, in his first speech to parlia- 
ment, solemnly promised indeed to fulfil the treaty with 
the king of Prussia, and the Commons in their address 
declared that they could not suflSciently admire the un- 
conquerable firmness of Frederick, and the inexhaustible 
resources of his genius, and that they most cheerfully 
granted the subsidies for his support. Bute nevertheless 
prevailed upon his master not to renew the subsidiary 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 355 

treaty between England and Prussia ; and the narrow* 
minded party of the favoured minister urged the expe- 
diency of a separate peace, regardless of obligations 
contracted in the face of the whole world. 

At the conclusion of 1761, Frederick's prospects were 
indeed most gloomy. Deeply depressed by the ruin of 
his country, he spoke yery little and took his meals 
alone. The reader need only turn to the poems which 
he wrote at this period, especially the Epistle to d' Argens, 
of the 8th of November ; the Epistle on the Wickedness 
of Men, of the 11th ; the Stoic, of the 15th ; the Empe- 
ror Otho to his Friends, after the loss of the battle of 
Bedriacum, of the 1st of December; Cato of Utica to 
his Son and his Friends, before he commits Suicide, of 
the 8th of December ; and lastly. The Violin, a tale, of 
the 26th. It makes one shudder to find the king's Muse 
singing such subjects only as have a tendency to confirm 
his desponding heart in the idea that it is impossible for 
him to escape the fate which Vitellius brought upon 
Otho, and Caesar's victory at Thapsus upon Cato. Fre- 
derick, however, persevered and — triumphed. But the 
poison which he carried about him at this time was 
found, still unpacked, after his death. It consisted of 
five or six pills, in a narrow glass tube. 

While his great qualitiea awakened profound admira- 
tion and enthusiasm in the countries of his enemies, it is 
no wonder that the sympathies of his own subjects should 
have been still more strongly excited. In his armies we 
meet with Amazons. " I am the more certain," he writes 
to Voltaire, " to surmount all my difficulties, since there 
is in my camp a virgin heroine who is even braver than 
Joan of Arc. This divine damsel was born in the heart 

A A 3 




866 COURT AND TIMES OF 

of Westphalia, in the country of Hildesheim." Her 
name was Anne Sophie Detloff. She was bom at Trep- 
tow, on the Rega ; first served six months in the garri- 
son of Colberg, then two years as cuirassier in prince 
Henry^s regiment, fought at Kay and Kunersdorf, and 
received several wounds as grenadier, at Strehla in Sax* 
ony, on the 20th of August, 1 760, and at Torgau. As 
a soldier, this valiant female went by the name of Charles 
Henry Buschmann. After serving four years she ob- 
tained her dismission, and married in 1761 a comrade 
of RobePs regiment of foot, to which she had last be- 
longed for three months. 

A shepherd of the country of Halberstadt, seventy 
years old, prided himself on having six sons in the king's 
service. When, in the last years of the war, the seventh, 
the last prop of his age, was demanded, he said to the 
oflScer : " Tell me frankly, captain, if the king is in very 
great distress. If he is, take my son and me too : but if 
he is not, pray leave me my son." 

A youth, of very promising talents for painting, on 
reading in Plutarch that Themistocles, who was of low 
birth, could not sleep all night when he heard of the 
victory of Miltiades, was so excited that he could not 
close his eyes, and for a week was profoundly thoughtful 
and reserved. At length his tutor found a letter which 
his pupil had addressed to him. "I feel," said he, 
** that, like Themistocles, I can form the resolution to 
die for my country. I am going to be a soldier." 

At Briinen, near Wesel, a monument erected in 1791 
by general Schlieffen records the patriotic spirit of the 
people of that place, who, when some of their sons had, 
during this war, deserted their colours and returned 



r 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 357 

home, rose, men and women, and drove the runaways 
out of the village. Very similar was the conduct of the 
people of the county of Ravensberg. When that, with 
the other Prussian territories in Westphalia, was de- 
clared a conquered country, and the French arms were 
set up instead of the Prussian, about fifty of the natives 
serving in the king's armies, considering themselves re- 
leased from their obligations, deserted their regiments 
and went bacl^ to their families. These, however, re- 
fused to harbour them ; the inhabitants of the country 
forswore all intercourse with them, and the church de- 
nied them confession and the sacraments. They were 
thus compelled to return to their colours ; and the very 
enemy could not help admiring the noble spirit of the 
people. 



358 COURT AND TIMES OF 



CHAPTER XXXVII. 

State of the Prussian Army at the close of 1761 — Change produced in the 
King's disposition by external circumstances — Death of the Empress 
Elisabeth of Russia, and Accession of Peter III. — Favourable change in 
Frederick's affairs — Peace between Russia and Prussia — Treacherous 
Policy of Lord Bute — The Emperor Peter ; his enthusiastic admiration 
of the King — The Empress Catherine — Peace between Prussia and Swe- 
den — Tardiness of the Austrians to recommence hostilities — Literary 
Occupations of the King — He is joined by Czernitschef with a Russian 
Corps — ^Dethronement of Peter TIL — Czernitschef receives orders to leave 
the King, and return to Poland — Battle of Burkersdorf — Friendly dispo- 
sition of the Empress Catherine — The King besieges and recovers 
Schweidnitz — Operations in Saxony and in western Germany — England 
concludes a separate Peace with France — Duke Ferdinand resigns the 
command of the allied Army — Expedition of General Kleist — Prepara- 
tions for a new Campaign — Peace between Prussia and Austria — Return 
of the King to Berlin — Losses of the belligerent Powers. 

Never were Frederick's resources so completely ex- 
hausted, never were his prospects so discouraging, dur- 
ing the whole of this eventful struggle for life or death, 
as at the close of 1761. He acknowledges himself that, 
at the conclusion of the campaign, the army which he 
commanded in person amounted to only 30,000 men, 
and that of prince Henry to no more ; while the force 
opposed to the Russians in Pomerania was annihilated. 
Most of his provinces were laid waste, and occupied by 
the enemy. England refused further subsidies, and the 
king knew not where to procure men and horses to com- 
plete his regiments, where to find provisions, or how to 
effect the safe conveyance of supplies to the army. Not 
only from the diminution of its numerical force, but also 
from the nature of its composition, was the Prussian army 
at this time in a truly deplorable state. In the many hard- 



r 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. S59 

fought battles in which it had been engaged, the veteran 
troops had been almost entirely swept away, and their 
places were supplied by deserters, vagabonds, and the 
scum of all nations. Orders were even issued that the 
sons of country gentlemen, who were at all qualified for 
oflicers, should be levied along with the recruits. Of 
course, the spirit which pervaded these troops and their 
intrinsic value had sunk proportionably ; and the strictest 
discipline was required to keep them in any kind of order. 
No wonder that many instances of great demoralization 
should have occurred, especially among the rabble com- 
posing the partisan corps, which were augmented in pre- 
ference, by way of counterpoise to the light troops of 
the Austrians. The mistrust of the bravery and fidelity 
of such troops in general was fully justified, as mutiny 
and desertion en masse were not rare occurrences, accord- 
ing to the History of the Seven Years' War, published 
by the oflScers of the staff. " Thus," we are told in that 
work, " during an engagement, the battalion of Labadie, 
after murdering several of their oflScers, went over with 
their arms to the enemy ; an officer and upwards of 90 
men of Wunsch's battalion quitted the ranks, likewise, 
during a battle ; and it was thought necessary to shoot 
several subalterns and soldiers belonging to another 
battalion, in order to suppress the spirit of mutiny — to 
say nothing of minor occurrences. Of military discipline 
and regularity they had but very lax notions ; and, as a 
trait of their rude licentiousness, it may be mentioned 
that a partisan battalion of no more than some SOO took 
along with it no fewer than 50 waggons, containing sut- 
lers, women, and drunken men." 

The difficulty of raising the resources requisite for the 



360 COURT AND TIMES OF 

continaation of the struggle, as well as the debased cha* 
racter of the soldiery with which it was to be carried on, 
produced in Frederick such a despondency, that the state 
of his mind at this time, as expressed in his letters, 
excites the deepest sympathy. But, in spite of his 
doubts of ultimate success, we find him still breathing 
noble defiance, and a determinatioi^ to resist to the 
utmost, and displaying an activity indefatigably exerted 
alike for the general interest of the state, and in the 
minutest details for the equipment of a company or the 
drilling of a recruit. 

To many of his faithful followers, however, the cause 
of their country appeared so desperate, that they gave 
it up for lost. " It is not possible," writes MoUendorf, 
on the 12th of December, I76I, at Breslau, "that the 
war can last another year. Our resources are at an end, 
and I fear the worst — not on account of the numbers of 
our enemies — no, my friend, but on account of the 
wretched composition of our army. Had our foes only 
mercenaries in their service, such phenomena would not 
surprise me ; but, under prevailing circumstances, I 
cannot help being astonished, and it seems to me that 
many act like blind people either from interest or stu- 
pidity. One is a rogue as well as another. my friend, 
how dreadful it is to be compelled to plunge into a cala- 
mity that one foresees, and that might have been pre- 
vented had one not been counteracted ! It is horrible, 
most horrible ! Honour, justice, disinterestedness — 
these sublime virtues of our forefathers are no longer 
known among us. The term * public weal' is an empty 
sound : among us private interest alone is studied. Peo- 
ple have ceased to blush at dishonour, they reconcile 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 361 

themselves to it by giving it another name. Formerly 
the least of such acts would have merited the gallows : 
now the perpetrator of such infamies holds his head erect, 
and defies the public gaze." 

I shall quote another passage from the correspondence 
of the same officer : " Private interests and their colli- 
sions are plunging us into ruin ; still I am less afraid of 
the superiority of our enemies than of our own internal 
disorganization. The soldier cannot live ; he is in want 
of the first necessaries; he begins to steal; he degrades 
himself into a thief without honour or conscience, and 
this want of honour stamps him a coward. This natu- 
rally relaxes the bands of discipline, the true and almost 
the only tie that binds armies together. The officer is 
in the same predicament, and has almost sunk to so low 
a point as to forget honour and character. He plunders 
the country, and ends with cheating the king : even the 
honourable man cannot prevent this system, because he 
is aware that it is impossible to subsist by any other 
means. The captain is obliged to pay for the clothing 
of the soldier twice as much as the king allows him for 
it. Whence is he to get the difference ? Of course, by 
illicit means, to which it is not possible to set any bounds. 
This, unfortunately, is a daily increasing evil, and there 
appears to be no way of stopping it. Such is, in a few 
words, the crater on which we stand !" 

A melancholy picture this of a melancholy time ! — but 
it seems more than probable, from the close intimacy 
subsisting between the patriotic writer and the noble- 
minded general Saldem, that the colours are overcharged. 
The latter had, in spite of his brilliant services at the 
battle of Torgau, fallen into disgrace with the king, and, 



362 COURT AND TIMES OF 

mentally depressed by the state of things, was sickening 
in what might almost be called inactivity, so that his 
friends, and among them MoUendorf, were apprehensive 
that he would be obliged to leave the anny entirely. 
The hearts of such men were wrung by the disgrace which 
the corps of officers and the army in general began to 
bring upon themselves, and they regarded this mode of 
acting as a sign of a general dissolution which nothing 
could prevent. 

Amidst all his embarrassments, the king betrayed no 
signs of despondency to his troops ; nay, he did not dis- 
close all his ffriefs even to his friends. Hence he writes 
to d'Argens : " You are not sufficiently acquainted with 
circumstances to form a correct idea of the dangers which 
threaten the State. I am aware of and must conceal 
them : I keep all that is alarming to myself, and com- 
municate to the public only hopes and the little good 
news that I am able to give it." 

Care and anxiety, nevertheless, preyed upon the spirits 
of the hero ; and he who could once control his feelings 
to such a degree, that not the slightest indication of the 
storms of passion was perceptible in his countenance, 
withdrew from the sight of his most devoted friends into 
solitude, now that the symptoms of premature age mani- 
fested themselves more decidedly, renounced all those 
pleasures and pursuits in which his mind had once de- 
lighted, nay, even despaired of every thing, and was ready, 
like Cato, to put an end to the tragedy. What wonder 
that, after such bitter experience, we should discover in 
Frederick a totally altered character ! — no faith, no love, 
no hope ! Reason, law, duty, now became the prime 
movers of his actions ; and, in sacrificing himself and his 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 363 

feelings to these, he perfonned most worthily the task 
of a monarch, and actually ascended to that height to 
which the love and enthusiasm of the admiring multitude 
had long since raised him. 

From the period when he was deserted by his English 
ally dates his antipathy to this country and its institu- 
tions ; and, in spite of the occasional influences of the 
political magnet, no sympathetic power ever drew the 
needle again towards this island ; while, for a long time, 
it pointed invariably to that quarter whence relief came 
so unexpectedly in the moment of his deepest distress. 
To this cause is to be traced the rude shock given some 
years afterwards to the European balance of power ; for 
Poland would not have been partitioned, had not Bute 
loosed Frederick's hand, and attempted to trample him 
in the dust into the bargain. 

The opening of 1762, clouded by the most gloomy 
prospects, nevertheless brought with it an event which 
totally changed the aspect of Frederick's ajffairs, and 
furnishes a most striking lesson that, in all the concerns 
of life, nothing but fortitude and perseverance can ena- 
ble men to surmount difficulties and dangers. On the 
5th of January, death removed the king's mortal enemy, 
the empress Elisabeth, from the throne of Russia. Her 
successor, Peter III., son of her elder sister Anne, was 
born duke of Schleswig Holstein in 1728; and, while 
grand-duke, such was his respect for the king of Prussia, 
that he would never attend the council of state when 
any measures against him were to be discussed. 

Frederick lost no time in despatching his aide-de- 
camp, baron Goltz, from Breslau to Petersburg, to con- 
gratulate the new sovereign of Russia on His accession, to 



364 COURT AND TIMES OF 

assure him of his entire regard and friendship, and to 
intimate that all the Russian prisoners of war should be 
released. Accordingly, the king immediately . sent for 
brigadier Lewel, who had been taken in the course of 
the preceding year by Zieten near Glogau, returned him 
his sword, and set at liberty all the other prisoners, 
giving them permission to repair to the Russian army at 
Posen. Lewel, with several Prussian officers, dined the 
same day with the king, who also addressed to colonel 
count Haerd, then a prisoner of war in Petersburg, let- 
ters which were to be shown to the emperor, and were 
calculated to awaken sentiments favourable to Fre- 
derick. 

Peter felt highly flattered by these attentions, and 
collected the Prussian prisoners, most of whom were 
languishing in Siberia, for the purpose of sending them 
back to their own country. Meanwhile, he despatched 
an aide-de-camp to Breslau, to compliment the king; 
and an armistice between Prussia and Russia was con- 
cluded at Stargard by duke Augustus William of Bevem 
and prince Michael Wolkonsky, as a preliminary to 
peace. That, however, lord Bute would fain have pre- 
vented. He strove not only to dissuade the czar from 
any treaty with Prussia, but even proposed that he 
should select any part of the Prussian dominions he 
pleased, provided that he would allow his troops to con- 
tinue to act in conjunction with the Austrians. Peter 
was so indignant at this proposal that he immediately 
communicated the despatch of his ambassador to the 
king. Sir Andrew Mitchell hereupon wrote from Bres- 
lau on the 3rd of May, 1762, to lord Bute himself, that 
he had learned with concern that the king was accurately 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 365 

informed respecting an interview which the prime mi- 
nister (Bute) had had, after the death of the empress, 
with prince Galitzin on this subject, and that the sub- 
stance of their conversation had been communicated to 
him (Mitchell) by count Finkenstein, in the name of the 
king, " who," he adds, " on first receiving the intelli- 
gence, was almost furious, and to this moment cannot 
talk with temper on the subject." 

There is no doubt that the British nation in general, 
though as heartj as ever in the cause of the king of 
Prussia, was becoming weary of the war. Bute's ob- 
ject was to put an end to it ; and, in his ignorance of 
all the bearings of foreign politics, he conceived that the 
most eifectual method of accomplishing it would be not 
only to withhold the usual supplies from England, but to 
stimulate Frederick's enemies to renewed efforts for 
crushing the ally of his own sovereign. This odious 
treachery was thwarted by the straightforward conduct 
of the czar, and on the 6th of May peace was signed at 
Petersburg, though Elisabeth on her deathbed had ex- 
torted from the senate a promise not to treat with 
Prussia, unless in concert vnth her allies. 

To prove to the world that his actions were not go- 
verned by interest, and that the present pacification ori- 
ginated in the pure love of peace, Peter promised within 
two months to restore to the king all the conquests 
made by his troops during the war. The province of 
Prussia was accordingly released on the 8th of July from 
its oath of allegiance to Russia, and evacuated ; nay, the 
two powers must have been from the first united by a 
closer bond than was publicly acknowledged ; for count 
Czernitschef returned at the head of 15,000 men from 



866 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Poland to Silesia, and arrived at Lissa on the 30th of 
Jane. 

Frederick reviewed these auxiliaries on the day of 
their arrival, and, to enable them to distinguish the 
more readily the Prussian cavalry from the Austrian, he 
ordered the former to wear plumes of feathers, which 
have ever since been retained. To this review and to 
these troops the king adverted in conversation with the 
marquis de Bouille, during his visit to Prussia in 1784. 
He praised the Russians, their hardiness, their tempe- 
rance, and their firmness. " When I reviewed the Cos- 
sacks," said he, " as they rode past me, they clapped 
their hands to their long beards. I took this at first for 
a sort of salutation after their fashion, and returned it : 
but no such thing. Peter III. had issued orders that 
they should be obliged to take off their beards, and their 
gesture was merely intended to draw my attention to 
that ornament, and to express their petition that they 
might be allowed to retain it. I granted it most cheer- 
fully, and they loaded me with good wishes and bene- 
dictions." 

The Russian soldiers were indeed fond of the king, 
and even when opposed to him in the field they talked 
with admiration of Feodor Feodorwitz, as they called 
Frederick. " God grant him health !" said they. " He 
is a great soldier. What should not we do, if he com- 
manded us!" Thus their sentiments coincided with 
those of their sovereign. 

Peter never spoke of the king but in terms of the 
highest respect. He carried a portrait of him in the 
ring on his finger, and laid aside the order of St. An- 
drew to wear that of the Black Eagle. He was ac- 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 367 

quainted with the minutest particulars of the king's 
campaigns, with all the Prussian military regulations, 
and with the uniform and strength of all Frederick's 
regiments. His enthusiasm went so far that he publicly 
declared that he would put all his troops on the same 
footing, and so he really did soon afterwards. All the old 
uniforms were changed, and the emperor was the first to 
throw off his own. At his request, the king gave him 
the infantry regiment of Itzenblitz, at the head of which 
the duke of Bevem fought gloriously at Lowositz, which 
prince Henry had led on foot into the fire at Prague, 
and which had displayed great gallantry throughout the 
whole war. This regiment, when first raised by colonel 
the marquis de Varennes in 1687, was composed entirely 
of French refugees : it had ever since been in garrison 
in Berlin, had its recruiting canton in the Middle and 
Uker Mark, and henceforward was called " the Empe- 
ror's regiment." 

Frederick, who, in return, was appointed colonel of 
the 2d Moskowsky regiment of infantry, was thoroughly 
sensible of the value of Peter's attachment. " The em- 
peror of Russia," he wrote to d'Argens, " is a divine 
man, to whom I must erect altars." Neither was he 
behindhand in demonstrations of the sincerest friendship, 
and he proved that he took a deep interest in the wel- 
fare of his new ally. He warned him to be upon his 
guard, because the people were adverse to the arma- 
ments against Denmark, because the clergy were alarmed 
for their property, the nobles for their consequence, and 
the Russian household troops complained of too great 
severity and of the preference given to natives of Hol- 
stein. The king, in his solicitude for the czar, went 



368 COURT AND TIMES OF 

still farther : he spoke in behalf of his imperial consort, 
who felt herself aggrieved in various ways. 

Sophia Angosta Frederica, afterwards the famous Ca* 
therine II., was bom in 1729 at Stettin, where her 
father, prince Christian Augustus of Anhalt-Zerbst- 
Domburg, resided as a general in the Prussian seryice, 
and govemon On the death of his cousin in 174S, he 
succeeded him in the principality. Frederick had double 
reason to espouse the cause of this princess, as it was 
through his recommendation that she had been united 
to Peter while grand-duke ; but in this instance his con- 
ciliatory efforts proved unavailing. On the one hand, 
the emperor had no consideration for the feelings of his 
consort, and on the other she did not possess sufficient 
command over herself to conceal her discontent and 
mortification. The breach between the imperial pair 
seems to have become irreparable on the emperor's birth* 
day, the 21st of February, 1762, which was celebrated 
with great splendour at Sarskoje-Selo, and on which the 
empress was obliged to confer the order of St. Cathe* 
rine on countess Elisabeth Woronzow, who had the title 
of lady of honour, and was Peter's mistress. From that 
moment the empress, whose favour even then Soltikof, 
count Poniatowski, and Gregory Orlof, are said to have 
successively enjoyed, shut herself up in her apartments 
during the remainder of the festivities, which lasted 
eight days. 

As soon as the peace of Petersburg was concluded, 
Sweden too desired repose. The queen, Frederick's 
sister, introduced the negociations : an armistice for 
three months was agreed upon, and peace was signed at 
Hamburg on the 22d of May. The treaty of Stockholm 



fredi:rick the great. S69 

in 1 720 was renewed ; the state of things before the wwr 
was re-established 9 and no indemnities were demandt^ 
on either side. 

Frederick joyfully availed himself of the b<^neftts 
which Providence dispensed. " This is the first glfHun 
of sunshine that bursts upon us/' he writes on the 31st 
of January to count Finkenstein — " God be praised ! It 
is to be hoped that fair days will succeed the storms*— 
God grant it !'' — When the countess Camas expressed 
her joy at the two treaties of peace, he answered her 
from his camp at Betlem near Breslau, on the 8th and 
27th of June — " I am convinced that you take the 
warmest interest in the fortunate events which have 
lately happened. Accoifding to all appearance, you 
may soon be again quiet inhabitants of Berlin. Every 
thing has an end, and so it is to be hoped this odious 
war will have too. Since death tucked up a certain 
northern strumpet, our situation has been far more 
tolerable than before. It is to be hoped that other cir* 
cumstances of the like fortunate kind may occur, of 
which we may profit to obtain a good peace. You talk 
of Berlin, but I do not wish you to sit there like the 
birds on the boughs, but that you may live in becoming 
ease ; and I anxiously await the moment when I can 
see this secnrity rest on a solid foundation, that I may 
be able to let you know that you may return." 

Maria Theresa contributed to lighten Frederick's cares. 
In reliance upon Russia, she discharged 20,000 of her 
troops in December, 1761. During this winter, her 
army was moreover attacked by an epidemic disease, 
and, what those brave soldiers regarded as a great mis- 
fortune, Loudon, finding himself exposed to various 

VOL. III. B B 



370 COURT AND TIMES OF 

mortifications, relinquished his command as soon as 
Daun had recovered. 

Excellent generals, Manteuffel, Werner, Knobloch, 
and great nnmbers of Prussian soldiers, began to return 
from captivity ; and the province of Prussia, which had 
not sent a man to Frederick's colours since 1768, was 
now able to furnish a considerable number of recruits. 

The consequences of the change in Frederick's pro- 
spects in the early part of 1762 were manifested in the 
tardiness of his enemies to resume military operations. 
He continued to reside at Breslau, and took advantage 
of this long period of repose for various purposes, and 
among the rest for conversing with German literati. 
The works with which he was chiefly occupied were De 
Thou's admirable History, Fleury's Ecclesiastical His- 
tory, and Lucretius. He seems to have been of opinion 
that Lucretius had in his third canto exhausted every 
thing that could be said concerning the soul ; and in a 
letter to d'Alembert, many years afterwards, he ob- 
serves — " When I am depressed, I read the third book 
of Lucretius, and that eases me : it is only a palliative, 
but against diseases of the soul we have no other reme- 
dies." The new literary works which his friends trans- 
mitted to him till the spring he reserved for the next 
winter, as he did not pretend to read during the cam- 
paign. 

He sent this year, as he had done in the preceding, 
for the prince of Prussia. The court was still residing 
at Magdeburg, whither Sack, the court-chaplain, had 
followed it by special command, to continue the reli- 
gious instruction of the heir to the throne and his bro- 
thers and sisters. In January, 1 762, that worthy divine 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 371 

confirmed the prince in the queen's cabinet. Frederick 
wished now to initiate his nephew into the military pro- 
fession, and therefore kept the prince about him from 
this time till the conclusion of peace. 

The king proposed to himself two grand objects in 
the ensuing campaign — the recovery of Dresden and 
that of Schweidnitz. Prince Henry continued to act 
the same part in Saxony which he had throughout the 
whole of the preceding year performed with such extra- 
ordinary success against the great Austrian army under 
Daun and the army of the Empire. In Silesia, Frederick 
himself prepared to increase his military renown. His 
force amounted to 66,000 men. Daun, who arrived on 
the 12th of May at his strong position near Kunzendorf, 
had 80,000, including 10,000 in garrison at Schweid- 
nitz ; and 8000 Austrians guarded the passes of Silber- 
berg and Wartha. Both parties were still in canton- 
ments, when, on the 20th of May, count Schwerin 
reached Breslau with the treaty of peace and alliance 
between Prussia and Russia. The peace was solemnly 
proclaimed. Hostilities were deferred till Czernitschef, 
who had parted from Loudon and retired to Poland, 
should have joined the king. 

Schweidnitz had been most amply supplied by the 
Imperialists. It could not be besieged with any pro- 
spect of success while Daun continued in communica- 
tion with the fortress and watched every motion of the 
Prussians. The Austrian cunctator stood like a wall on 
the entrenched heights of Burkersdorf, Ludwigsdorf, and 
Leutmannsdorf. Even diversions towards the mountains 
of Silesia and towards Bohemia, which were designed to 
alarm the enemy on account of his magazines, proved 

B B 2 



372 COURT AND TIMES OF 

unayailing. Frederick was therefore obliged to come to 
the determination to attack Daun upon his hills : but^ 
before he could carry it into execution, news arrived 
that Peter III. had been dethroned by the empress on 
the 9th of July, at the moment when he was about to 
lead his army against the Danes ; for which purpose the 
king had engaged by treaty to furnish an auxiliary coips 
of 6000 men. 

These tidings were a thunderbolt to Frederick, when 
brought to him on the 19th of July by Czernitschef, 
who added, that the senate had ordered him to cause 
the army to swear allegiance to the new sovereign, and 
to return to Poland. At the same time, intelligence was 
received from Prussia and Poraerania that the Russian 
troops there were preparing to renew hostilities, and 
that the public coffers in the former province had been 
seized by the Russian commissaries. Frederick, how- 
ever, judged that any hostile demonstrations of Cathe- 
rine's were intended only to afford a security that he 
should not compel Czernitschef to declare himself in 
favour of the captive emperor. The king made no op- 
position whatever to the return of the Russians, but he 
requested their commander, as an especial favour, to 
defer his departure for three days. Czernitschef, over- 
come by the charm of Frederick's eloquence, complied 
with a good grace. 

These three days were precious. Frederick availed 
himself of them, in his singular situation, for a daring 
enterprise. He resolved to attack the Austrians ; the 
Russians were drawn up merely for parade to daunt the 
enemy, ignorant of the occurrences at Petersburg, while 
an attack on the hills of Burkersdorf and Leutmannsdorf 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 373 

wais made by general Neuwied, to whom the king had 
sent his aide-de-camp major William Anhalt, " to exe- 
cute implicitly the highest orders." When the king was 
informed, and indeed could himself see, that general 
MoUendorf had stormed the entrenchments at Burkers- 
dorf, and that his troops had penetrated to the enemy's 
positions on the hills near Leutmannsdorf, he sent for 
Anhalt, promoted him to lieutenant-colonel, and sent 
him eight orders of Merit, to be distributed as he thought 
proper. The Russian generals had during these attacks 
remained with their troops in their former position on 
the top of the hills, and had witnessed this heroic and 
admirably executed enterprise. When the victory was 
completely won, he sent to request Czernitschef to come 
down to him in the valley of Burkersdorf, which the 
general immediately did, and was received by the king 
with a cordial embrace. This action was fought on the 
21st of July. Daun retreated to Tannhausen in the 
mountains, leaving behind a great number of prisoners 
and 17 pieces of cannon. On the 22d, Czernitschef re- 
luctantly quitted his ally, whom he equally loved and 
admired, and who, at his departure, sent him a gold 
sword richly set with brilliants, worth 27,000 dollars, 
by the hands of count Schwerin, who was expressly 
charged to beg him " to accept it as a keepsake, which 
might serve to remind him of his ever-grateful royal 
friend." The Russian general presented the king with 
two Cossack horses and two dromedaries. 

The dethroned emperor Peter III. had been conveyed 
to a small country-seat belonging to the Hetman Rasur 
mowsky, and there murdered by Teplof, Alexis Orlof, 
brother of Gregory, Catherine's favourite,, and prince 



374 COURT AND TIMES OF 

Baratinsky. The news of this event filled Frederick 
with the deepest sorrow. To a letter on business to 
prince George of Holstein-Gottorp, he added, with his 
own hand, " What doings there have been in Petersburg ! 
I say nothing, but I mourn before all the world for the 
honest and dear emperor/* To le Cat he wrote — " My 
dear Peter dethroned and dead ! Is there any fate that 
is like mine !" — " This prince," he wrote to d'Argens, 
" had all the qualities of the heart that can be wished 
for, but not quite so much prudence ; and a great deal 
of this is required to govern that nation. To-day I am 
told that he died of the colic." In a letter to one of his 
ministers on this occasion, he thus expresses himself — 
" The poor emperor of Russia, you see, is dethroned by 
his wife : no more than was expected. The empress has 
great abilities, no religion, and the inclinations of the 
late one, but cloaked at the same time by devotion. It 
is the second volume of the history of Zeno the Greek 
emperor and his wife Ariadne, and of Catherine de Me- 
dicis. The former chancellor Bestuchef was the great 
favourite of this princess; and, as he was wholly at- 
tached to guineas, I flatter myself that the present en- 
gagements will subsist. The poor emperor thought to 
imitate Peter I., but he had not genius for it. It is said 
that he was murdered." 

So strong was the feeling of gratitude entertained by 
T'rederick for the emperor, that, in 1779, when count 
Gortz was going as ambassador to Petersburg, the king 
said to him with tearful eyes — "I shall ever lament 
Peter the third ; he was my only friend, my deliverer— 
but for him I must have been crushed." 

In Russia, a notion had been too hastily conceived 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 375 

that the unfortunate emperor had been instigated by 
Frederick to all his innovations. The empress Catherine 
was the more astonished to find among Peter's papers 
letters from the king, not only proving the very reverse, 
but also the warm interest which he had invariably 
manifested for herself. All hostile proceedings were, of 
course, stopped ; and, on the 6th of August, marshal 
Lehwald arrived at Konigsberg, preceded by a great num- 
ber of postillions blowing horns, to take formal possession 
of the kingdom as Prussian governor. The new empress, 
indeed, had never been at heart inimically disposed to- 
wards her native country ; nay, when the magistrates of 
her birthplace, Stettin, congratulated her on her acces- 
sion to the throne, she received their letter most gra- 
ciously, and sent them, in April, 1763, through the high 
chancellor Woronzow, the gold and silver coronation 
medal, together with a present of one thousand ducats 
for the shooting association, and a promise that the ma- 
gistrates should in future be furnished with a specimen 
of all the commemorative medals struck in the Russian 
empire. 

Meanwhile, the king had made all possible preparations 
for the siege of Schweidnitz. The place had been most 
abundantly provisioned and supplied. The garrison, com- 
posed of 11,000 men, was commanded by count Guasco, 
while the defence of the fortress was conducted by gene- 
ral Gribauval. The king entrusted the chief command 
of the besieging army to general Tauentzien, under whom 
major Lefebvre, a friend and countryman of Gribauval's, 
acted as engineer. These two officers, though pursuing 
different systems, had both proved themselves to be mas- 
ters in their line, as well by their writings as by their 



376 COURT AND TIMES OP 

actions ; so that the siege promised to furnish a most 
instructive school for the assault and defence of fortifi- 
cations. 

On the 4th of August, Tauentzien invested the town ; 
the trenches were opened on the 7th. Two armies covered 
the important enterprise ; the one^ under the king^ in the 
camp of Peterswalde ; the other, under the duke of Be- 
vern, on the heights of Mittelpeile, towards Gnadenfrey. 
Daun purposed to fall upon Bevem with a greatly supe* 
nor force, to surround and take him, and thereby to raise 
the siege of Schweidnitz. But the duke was on his guard : 
he took the most judicious precautions; and, though 
assailed on all sides by four hostile corps at once, on the 
16th of August, at Riechenbach, he defended himself 
with extraordinary skill and intrepidity. The king lost 
not a moment in sending succour, and hastened in person 
with Werner's hussars to the duke's assistance, while 
Zieten assumed the command at Peterswalde ; and Daun, 
finding himself foiled, retired by Wartha and Glatz to 
Scharfeneck, where he remained, " without exhibiting 
any sign of life," says the king, till the conclusion of the 
campaign. 

Schweidnitz had now nothing to hope for. Guasco 
opened negociations ; but, as free egress for the numerous 
garrison was out of the question, the siege was vigorously 
prosecuted. Le Febvre had made but little impression, 
when, on the 20th of September, after the siege had lasted 
forty-five days, Frederick hastened to the assistance of 
his desponding engineer. At length, a howitzer grenade 
set fire to a powder-magazine in the fortress, and a whole 
bastion of fort Jauemick was blown up, together with 
two Austrian grenadier companies. The Prussians now 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 377 

threatened to storm the place ; and, on the 9th of Octo- 
ber, Guasco determined to capitulate. He accordingly 
sent an oflScer, who produced a great number of articles, 
detailing at great length the terms on which he proposed 
to surrender. The king cut the matter very short. Turn- 
ing to Dieskau, commander of the artillery, who happened 
to be with him, he said, " Hark ye, my dear Dieskau, you 
can settle every thing with this gentleman, but no discus- 
sion ! They are all prisoners of war — that is the only 
condition to be made. In this case you must follow the 
precept of the Bible : * Let your communication be Yea, 
yea, Nay, nay ; for whatsoever is more than, these cometh 
of evil.' " The garrison, of course, became prisoners of war. 

The populace of Vienna did not fail to express their 
opinion of the conduct of the Austrian general on the 
loss of this important fortress. The state carriage of his 
lady was several times assailed with a volley of nightcaps. 
Among the caricatures of which Daun was the subject 
there was one representing the siege of Schweidnitz. 
General Guasco was standing on the ramparts calling for 
help. At a great distance was seen Daun's army dra^Ti 
up in parade as spectators of the siege. The marshal 
was seated before the front in an arm-chair, with a large 
nightcap on his head, holding up with both hands the 
consecrated sword given him by the pope, as if impart- 
ing his blessing to the troops. The sword was in the 
sheath, upon which were the words : " Thou shalt not 
kill." On the left stood Loudon, with downcast eyes, 
and his hands tied behind him ; on the right Lascy, with 
a roll of parchment in his hand, inscribed : " Plan of the 
campaign of 1 763." 

Silesia being now entirely cleared of the enemy, the king 



378 COURT AND TIMES OF 

returned to his own head-quarters at Peterswalde, and 
thence proceeded in a few days for Saxony. The prince of 
Prussia was left behind at Schweidnitz till the Austrian 
prisoners had marched past him and laid down their arms. 

While the king was recovering Schweidnitz, the for- 
tress of Ciistrin was in imminent danger from the captive 
Croats, who expected Austrian succours from Cottbus, 
and would certainly have made themselves masters of the 
place but for the gallantry of lieutenant Thiele, of the 
provincial battalion, and the presence of mind of the 
chaplain to the garrison. 

In Saxony, general Serbelloni was commander-in-chief 
of the Imperialists. His object was to form a junction 
with the troops of the Empire, and to beat prince Henry. 
The latter, however, detached Seydlitz and other gene- 
rals to make diversions in Bohemia, which they did with 
such success, that the empress became dissatisfied with 
her general, who had suffered a defeat on the 1 2th of 
May, near Dobeln. He was superseded by Haddik, who, 
thinking to display more energy, and to gain himself a 
reputation, effected a junction with the troops of the 
Empire. On the 30th, Henry took up a camp near 
Freiberg. The enemy, being superior in force, began to 
carry his designs into execution. General Belling was 
driven from his position, and the Prussian army was 
placed in no little jeopardy. Frederick, well aware 
of the wholly disproportionate strength of his brother to 
that of the two united armies, sent general Wied to his 
succour. Daun observing this, despatched assistance 
to Haddik ; but both reinforcements arrived too late. 
Henry had already quitted his camp, and, on the 29th 
of October, attacked the troops of the Empire and the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 379 

Austrians, under count Solms, in their entrenchments 
near Freiberg, and beaten them. Seydlitz had there 
another opportunity of distinguishing himself with the 
cayalry . General Kleist pursued the enemy to the gates 
of Prague. The king received intelligence of this vic- 
tory while on his march from Silesia to Saxony, where 
he put his army into winter-quarters. 

The Austrians, too, were desirous of repose. Out of 
all their conquests, they retained only the county of 
Glatz and a small district round Dresden, where general 
Neuwied had an action with them on the 7th of Novem- 
ber, near Spechtshausen : this was the last fought during 
the seven years' war. A truce was concluded between 
Prussia and Austria, on the 24th of November, at Wils- 
druf, but only for the electorate of Saxony and Silesia. 
The king placed his army in quarters, so as to form a 
chain from Thuringia through Saxony and Lusatia to 
Silesia, and, after staying himself for some time at 
Meissen, he went to Leipzig for the winter. 

In western Germany, the French had formed great 
plans for the opening of this campaign. Broglio was no 
longer at the head of their armies. Soubise and d'Estrees 
commanded on the Upper, and the prince of Conde on 
the Lower, Rhine. Though Lord Bute failed to send 
the promised reinforcements, the aUies were generally 
successful. In the action at Wilhelmsthal, on the 24th 
of June, duke Ferdinand triumphed over Soubise and 
d'Estrees, and, on the 23d of July, in that at Lutter- 
berg, over prince Xavier. Thus the war was carried on 
during the summer with variable fortune, and new enter- 
prises were planned after the duke de Nivemois had gone 
in September to London and the duke of Bedford to Paris 



380 COURT AND TIMES OF 

to treat for peace. Prince Frederick of Brunswick, bro- 
ther of the hereditary prince, commenced the siege of 
Cassel. The trenches were opened on the 16 th of Octo- 
ber, and, on the Ist of November, general Diesbach was 
obliged to capitulate. Two days afterwards, the preli- 
minaries of peace were signed at Fontainebleau, and, by 
the 1 3th article, neither party was to afford further aid 
to its former allies. This intelligence was communicated 
by the French commanders to duke Ferdinand, who was 
in camp at Kirchhain : they acquainted him also that, 
according to their instructions, the French were to keep 
possession of Cassel and Ziegenhain ; but, to the article 
respecting Cassel, d'Estrees had annexed this remark : 
" The fortune of arms decides this article ;" and, as no 
news had yet arrived from London, the siege of Ziegen- 
hain was continued. A meeting of the generals and 
principal officers on both sides was appointed for the 8th 
of November, at the head-quarters of the French, who 
desired a suspension of hostilities. Ferdinand readily 
assented, but required the surrender of Ziegenhain. Be- 
fore this point could be settled, he received intelligence 
from London of the signature of the preliminaries, which 
put an end to hostilities on the following day. 

On the 23d, the duke congratulated his Britannic ma- 
jesty on the peace, and solicited permission to resign the 
chief command. Having received, on the 3d of Decem- 
ber, a reply signifying the king's assent to his wish, he 
took leave of the allied army on the 23d, and resigned 
to general Sporcken a command in which he had won the 
attachment of the leaders of the different troops com- 
posing his army, by doing justice to the merits of each, 
and disinterestedly studying the general welfare. After 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 381 

gaining a battle, it was no uncommon thing with him to 
reward the officers out of his private resources. Like 
Frederick, he bound all by the ties of honour, and like 
him, too, he contrived to secure the esteem of his pri- 
soners. When, a few days after the action at Wilhelms- 
thal, he invited to dinner the French officers taken on that 
occasion, who had lost the whole of their baggage, he 
opened a box, brought by way of dessert, and invited 
each of his guests to help himself. To their astonish- 
ment, they found that it contained a great quantity of 
gold watches, snuff-boxes, rings, and other articles of 
jewelry. 

The peace between England and France could not fail 
to excite universal indignation. Through the genius of 
Pitt, Great Britain had gained a decided naval superi- 
ority over France and Spain : she had raised herself to 
the first maritime power in Europe, £(,pd was in a condi- 
tion to prescribe terms to her exhausted and vanquished 
adversary. Voltaire says that, by her connexion with 
Austria, France was more drained of men and money in 
six years than she had been by all her wars with that 
house in the course of two centuries. The sacrifices de- 
manded by the conqueror were, nevertheless, extremely 
moderate. France was merely required to cede Canada, 
and the British minister agreed to give up all the other 
conquests made during the seven years' war, at an ex- 
pense of 75 millions sterling, the amount added by it to 
the funded debt of Great Britain. The allies of England 
were abandoned to the mercy of the enemy ; Hesse, which 
had suffered so inexpressibly, obtained no compensation ; 
and the French were allowed to retain possession of the 
Westphalian provinces of the king of Prussia. Frede- 



382 COURT AND TIMES OF 

rick's ambassador in London protested against this peace, 
so faithless in regard to his court ; for, according to the 
8d article of the treaty of the 11th of April, 1768, Eng- 
land engaged to conclude in concert only peace, truce, 
neutrality, or any other convention. The British nation, 
therefore, cried out against the peace as inconsistent with 
the national honour, and even talked of treason : nay, 
Dr. Musgrave, an English physician, practising in Paris 
in 1763, asserted that the dowager princess of Wales and 
lord Bute had received money from France for this peace ; 
and he made the same declaration in 1 770 at the bar of 
the House of Commons. In Junius's Letters, the whole 
alFair is lashed most severely ; and the yet unknown au- 
thor of those celebrated pieces plumply charges the duke 
of Bedford with having sold and betrayed his country. 

We must revert once more to lord Bute. This mi- 
nister had made the same kind of proposals for peace to 
the cabinet of Vienna that he had done to Peter III., and 
offered to guarantee to the empress any Prussian province 
she pleased. Kaunitz indignantly rejected this overture, 
which he attributed to a wish on the part of England to 
separate the imperial court from that of Versailles, and 
intimated that the empress-queen was suflSciently pow- 
erful to enforce her own pretensions. M. de Bussi was 
accordingly sent to London, and Mr. Hans Stanley to 
Paris, to open those negociations which Nivemois and 
Bedford brought to a conclusion. 

Frederick, who had so long maintained the conflict 
with honour, would not purchase peace at the price of 
a single village. This he had repeatedly declared to the 
French cabinet ; for, knowing that Voltaire had always 
shewn an itch for dabbling in politics, he availed himself 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 883 

of his letters to that writer to get his sentiments con- 
veyed to the proper quarter. Hence Voltaire writes to 
count d'Argental, on the 11th of January, 1760: "As 
for Luc, I have merely transmitted to the duke de Choi- 
seul the letters which he wrote to me for the purpose of 
being shewn ; so that I have been a mere bureau d'ad- 
dresse.^^ Hence, too, it is that the king thus writes in 
April, 1760, to Voltaire: "The conditions of peace which 
you mention appear to me so absurd, that I shall send 
them to the madhouse, for there they can be properly 
answered. Your ministers may depend upon it that I 
will defend myself with desperation, and not subscribe 
any peace but upon conditions consistent with the honour 
of my nation. What logic ! You say I ought to cede 
Cleves, because its inhabitants are a stupid race. What 
would your ministers say, if any one were to demand 
Champagne from you, because it is a common saying 
that 99 sheep and 1 Champagner make 100 head of 
cattle ! Away with all such ridiculous projects !" 

But the king felt the necessity of devising new and 
bold strokes, in order to produce a more general and 
sincere outcry for peace by means of new alarms. He 
increased the corps of general Kleist to 6000 men, and 
ordered him to march into Franconia, to penetrate into 
the empire, and to levy all the military contributions 
that he was able. On the 1 3th of November, Kleist set 
out with 6000 men from Oederau in the Erzgebirge on 
his remarkable expedition, laid Bamberg, Wiirzburg, 
Windsheim, and other towns, under contribution, and 
appeared before Niirnberg, which gave him 12 new pieces 
of cannon and a million and a half of dollars. His troops 
scoured the country to the gates of Batisbon, so that 



384 COURT AND TIMES OF 

terror pervaded the banks of the Danube, and the Diet 
solicited protection from baron Plotho. The princes of 
the empire, spiritual and temporal, now cried out for 
peace, to the great satisfaction of the king. In Decem- 
ber, Mecklenburg made its peace with Prussia, and bor- 
rowed of Denmark 1S0,000 dollars, to pay up the arrears 
of its contribution. The Palatinate and Bavaria recalled 
their contingents; and, on the 19th of January, 1763, 
the emperor declined the further aid of the army of the 
Empire, which was dissolved on the 11th of February. 

General Kleist, who was instrumental in producing 
these important results, was a native of Stavenow, in 
Pomerania. In 1758, he was, as we have seen, a colonel 
and commander of the regiment of green hussars ; but, in 
1 760, his patriotism impelled him to raise five squadrons 
of partisan dragoons, and a battalion of green Croats, 
as they were called. His noble conduct towards those 
under his command, as well as the fame of his achievements, 
soon filled the ranks of these troops ; and, with this cer-» 
tainly select corps, he executed the most brilliant enter- 
prises, so that he soon became a terror to his enemies, and 
acquired the character of one of the first partisans — ^nay, 
even of a rival to the great Seydlitz. Kleist died in 
1767, at tlie early age of 42, at Zeschkendorf, in Silesia, 
of the small-pox, which he caught from the horror he felt 
at the sight of the corpse of a person who had died of 
that disease. 

Frederick availed himself of the period of repose to 
muster all his strength for a new campaign, which should 
bring the conflict to an issue. As he had now Austria 
only to contend with, he could henceforth concentrate all 
his force at one point. He purposed, by enlisting troops 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 886 

disbanded by other powers, to augment his army to 
200,000 men ; and, to enable him to accomplish this 
object, Saxony was required to sacrifice her last resources. 
An extraordinaiy war-contribution of 400,000 ducats 
was demanded of the city of Leipzig ; but the interces- 
sion of Gotzkowski induced the king to be content 
with a smaller sum. The other cities and circles of the 
electorate were obliged to pay similar contributions ; and 
it was therefore no wonder that the Saxon court should 
be desirous of peace before the country was completely 
drained. The king wished for it with equal sincerity ; 
but he was too good a politician not to perceive that the 
first overtures ought not to proceed from him. 

Maria Theresa, forsaken by her allies, had little reason 
to expect that Fortune would prove more favourable to 
her unaided exertions against her heroic adversary. She 
was burdened with debt; her ministers and generals 
were at variance, and the Empire was anxious for peace. 
An army of 100,000 Turks was, moreover, assembled on 
the Hungarian frontiers. In this untoward state of 
affairs, her proud heart yielded to necessity, and she took 
the first step towards conciliation. The agent whom 
she employed for this purpose was Frederick Christian 
Leopold, electoral prince of Saxony. 

During the king's stay at Meissen, baron Fritsch, a 
privy councillor, brought him a letter from this prince, 
in which, apparently of his own accord, he inquired on 
what terms Frederick would be disposed to treat. The 
king was at first shy ; but, on learning that this corre- 
spondence was opened at the instigation of the cabinet 
of Vienna, he thanked the prince for the trouble which 
he had taken to reconcile the belligerent powers, and 

VOL. III. c c 



886 COURT AND TIMES OF 

afisared him that, for his part, he was ready to do every 
thing consistent with his dignity for the restoration of 
* peace* A few days afterwards, the king left Meissen to 
inspect his cordon on the frontiers of Bohemia and the 
Empire ; and then he established himself in Leipzig for 
the winter. Here baron Fritsch soon arrived with an 
answer fromi Vienna relative to the bases of the negoci- 
ations for peace. 

The king now sent for Hertzberg, privy councillor of 
legation, and directed him to proceed to Hubertsburg 
and negociate with the imperial plenipotentiary, aulic 
councillor Collenbach, and baron Fritsch, the Saxon am- 
bassador. For this important business, Hertzberg re- 
ceived very short verbal instructions; but a day was 
fixed by which the negociations should terminate. The 
conferences commenced on the 31st of December, and 
peace was actually concluded by the specified time, the 
1 5th of February. 

Frederick insisted, as the fundamental condition of 
peace, on the statics quo ante beUum^ and promised on 
his part to restore the electorate of Saxony to the king 
of Poland. In vain did the court of Vienna seek to en- 
force its ancient prerogatives in regard to the princes of 
the Empire, and insist on retaining the county of Glatz ; 
Frederick, who was not to be conquered in the field, 
would not be foiled upon paper. His demand was at 
length assented to without qualification ; nay, t^e im- 
perial plenipotentiary even promised not to destroy the 
new fortifications erected by the Austrians at Glatz, but 
to give them up with the place. Frederick engaged to 
vote for the archduke Joseph at the approaching elec- 
tion of king of the Romans. With Saxony things were 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 887 

replaced on the same footing as by the peace of Dres- 
den ; and the 9th article ensured to the elector a free 
passage through Silesia to Poland. 

The king was perfectly satisfied with his plenipoten- 
tiary. When he went to Hubertsburg, he called upon 
Hertzberg, and said : " You have made a good peace, 
much in the same way as I made war — one against 
three," He had previously appointed him second mi- 
nister of state, in the place of count Finkenstein, on 
his promotion to the post of first minister, vacant by 
the death of count Podewils. 

No separate peace was concluded between France and 
Prussia, because, after the treaty of Hubertsburg, there 
was nothing to settle between the two powers. I must 
not omit mentioning, however, that the king had to re- 
sort to a military threat before he could carry his point 
with the court of Versailles. When the Anglo-German 
army was broken up, the British legion, 3000 strong, 
was disbanded. Frederick immediately took it into his 
service, and reinforced it by 800 dragoons, imder colonel 
Bawr, and as many volunteers from Brunswick. This 
corps of between five and six thousand men proceeded 
straight to the frontiers of Cleves, with orders to take 
Wesel. France, apprehensive of a renewal of the war, 
made overtures for an amicable adjustment of the affair, 
when the treaty of Hubertsburg put an end to its alarm. 
The restoration of the fortresses in the country of Cleves, 
previously occupied by the French, was effected by 
means of a convention, concluded on the 11th of 
March, 1763, in Wesel, between the marquis de Lan- 
geron, the commandant, and colonel Bawr, upon which 

c c 2 



888 COURT AND TIM£S OF 

that officer and Meyen, director of the chamber of 
Cleyes, took possession of the duchy in the name of the 
king. 

France and Spain had concluded their peace with 
England and Portugal in Paris five days before that of 
Hubertsburg was signed. Great Britain was the only 
power that gained an increase of territory. Louis XV. 
dedined congratulations on the peace, as his celebrated 
predecessor had suffered that of Utrecht to pass without 
rejoicings* 

What were Frederick's feelings on the ardently de- 
sired return of peace may be inferred from his let- 
ters to old and intimate friends from Dahlen, in which 
village he resided during the negociations at Huberts- 
burg. On the 6th of March, he says to the countess 
Camas : ^^ I shall at last see you again, my dear mamma, 
and I hope at the end of this or the beginning of next 
month. You will find me grown old, almost in my 
dotage, gray as^ an ass — a man who is losing a tooth 
almost every day, and is half a cripple with the gout. 
There is our good margrave of Bayreuth gone, and that 
grieves me much. We lose our friends ; but our ene- 
mies seem as if they would live for ever." To d'Argens 
he writes : " Here is peace at last, in good earnest, my 
dear marquis ; this time you will be sure to have pos- 
tillions and the whole train that accompanies than. And 
so, God be praised, this will be the end of my military 
doings! You ask what I am about here at Dahlen. 
Cicero is daily delivering orations before me: that 
against Verres I finished some time since, and now I am 
at that for Muraena. I have besides been reading the 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 389 

whole of Batteux.* So you see that I am not idle. 
And what are you about, my friend ? You must not be 
impatient : the river is already navigable, and you will 
have plenty of time to get your things to Potsdam be- 
fore I arrive there. Till the 1 3th, I shall be either here 
or at Torgau. My journey to Silesia will take from 15 
to 17 days, so that I cannot be in Berlin before the 31st 
of this month or the second of April. I will not come 
to you on the 1st, or the wags would not fail to play off 
their jokes about me. I am quietly engaged here upon 
the internal arrangements for the provinces : the prin- 
cipal of those relating to the army are already fixed. I 
long for mental repose and for a little relief from busi- 
ness, to enjoy myself, now that my passions are calm, to 
reflect upon myself, to shut myself up in the recesses of 
my soul, and to keep myself aloof from all pomp, which, 
I must confess, is growing daily more and more intole- 
rable to me." 

Such was the disposition in which the king arrived at 
eight in the evening of the 30th of March, quite unob- 
served, after dark, in Berlin, declining the triumph 
which the citizens, headed by the marquis d'Argens, 
had prepared for him, after so many trials and tribula- 
tions, at the Frankfurt gate. Duke Ferdinand of Bruns- 
wick and general Lentulus were in the carriage with 
him. As it was known that the king would arrive on 
that day, the streets were thronged, and, for two miles 

• Charles Batteux, a French writer, whose opinions on art were long 
held in high estimation, was born in 1713 at Allond'hui, a village in the 
diocese of Rheiras, became a member of the French Academy of Sciences 
in 1761, and died in 1780. His inquiries were directed chiefly to poetry. 
His principal works were : '* Les beaux Arts reduit k un meme principe," 
and " Cours de Belles Lettres, ou Principes de la Litterature." It was 
probably to the first of these that the king refers. 



890 COURT AND TIMES OF 

and a half beyond the city wall to the palace, the 
burghers in their best clothes had lined the way by 
which he was to come. At nightfall most of them pro- 
vided themselves with torches, and, when the sound of 
distant carriages at length announced the approach of 
the sovereign, he was hailed with prodigious shouts of 
" Long live the king !" 

The queen had returned to the capital on the 1 6th of 
February, amidst great rejoicing, and the first troops, 
the brave regiment of Forcade, made their entry on the 
24th, when the provincial battalion was broken up. On 
the 5th of March peace was proclaimed in the capital 
by Schirrmeister, secretary of state, as herald ; and the 
same ceremony was performed at Breslau by Lessing, 
the celebrated writer. On the 4th of April, the impor- 
tant event was celebrated with great rejoicings and illu- 
minations throughout the whole kingdom. The state 
was saved. Frederick had shed fresh glory on the 
country ; the lowest of his subjects, to whom the war 
had left absolutely nothing, prided himself on being a 
Prussian; and the father of his country, with affectionate 
solicitude, set about healing the wounds which had dimi- 
nished its population by half a million. 

" Perhaps," emphatically remarked Mr. Pitt, after his 
resignation of ofiice, in reference to Frederick — " per- 
haps that wonderful man would have extricated himself 
from his difficulties without our assistance : he possesses 
talents which, so far as the powers of man extend, do 
honour to the human mind." Whatever may be thought 
of the first of these propositions of the illustrious states- 
man, it is impossible that there can be any difference of 
opinion on the second. 



FREDERICK THE GREAT. 891 

The king calculates that the war cost him 180,000 
soldiers and upwards of 1500 officers ; 31 generals and 
161 staff-officers had either fallen in battle or died of 
their wounds. In the whole, the Prussian army lost 
during the war about 4000 officers, for accidents and 
disease carried off about the same number as the sword. 

The Russians; who had fought four great battles, 
reckoned their total loss at 120,000 men. That power 
had not gained any extension of territory, but it had 
acquired a military reputation in the West, and, what 
'was still more, it had established its authority in Poland. 
Many of its officers who distinguished themselves at a 
later period were initiated into the military career during 
the war against Frederick ; Romanzof, the Turk-tamer, 
and his able quarter-master-general Bawr, who received 
his training under duke Ferdinand against the French 
and under Frederick himself, and likewise Suworof- 
Rymnikski, who joined the army shortly before the 
battle of Kunersdorf, and distinguished himself against 
the advanced-guard of general Platen, under Courbi^re. 

The Austrians, who had been engaged in ten battles, 
had sustained a total loss of 140,000 men, including 
the garrisons of Breslau and Schweidnitz. The French, 
by their own calculation, had lost S00,000 ; the allied 
English and Germans, 160,000; the S\7edes, 25,000; 
the princes of the empire, 28,000. Thus, Frederick com- 
puted the loss of the belligerent powers at 853,000 dead. 

The finances of the several countries had likewise suf- 
fered severely, but those of Russia the least. The em- 
press Elisabeth, notwithstanding her great profusion, left 
no debts, but 40 pood or 1 320 Hamburg pounds' weight 
of gold in her treasury. Great Britain, which contracted 



392 COURT AND TIMES OF 

no public debts till her commerce began to flonrish, had, 
in 1 755, a funded debt somewhat exceeding 7S millions 
sterling, which was doubled by the war, independently 
of the considerable sums advanced out of his private 
property by George II. France had a debt of 2000 
million livres. So early as 1769, the king's revenues 
for the following year, amounting at that time to S36 
million livres, were levied beforehand. Silhouette, the 
finance-minister, nevertheless contrived, in spite of a de- 
ficit of 217 million, to restore credit and to raise money 
for the prosecution of the war ; and, as anticipations 
were no longer practicable, he proposed various taxes, 
which affected the wealthy classes only, for augmenting 
the revenue ; for instance, an increased stamp-duty on 
silver-plate and jewelry ; a tax on servants, carriages, 
saddle-horses, &c. : but by these means he accelerated 
his fall. Austria had a debt of 500 million florins, and 
Sweden was on the verge of bankruptcy. 

Unfortunate Saxony calculated her loss at 90,000 
men and 70 million dollars in contributions and sup-* 
plies, besides contracting a debt of 29 million in bills of 
the Steuer, 9 million more in debts of the chamber and 
court, and 2^ million still payable to Prussia as contri- 
bution. In 1807, upwards of 15 million dollars of the 
state debt <5ontracted during the war, and 12 million in 
debts of the chamber, remained unpaid. 

Frederick, in his History of the Seven Years' War, 
declares that in the first year of peace he satisfied all 
the creditors of the state, and that the expenses of the 
war were paid to the last farthing. Thus, Prussia had 
not contracted any debt, but the specie of the country 
was quite exhausted ; the silver plate in the palace of 



)