登陆注册
4898100000373

第373章

If you roll the King a little fast in his Bath-chair, you hear the water jumble in his body,"--with astonishment! "King gets into passions; has beaten the pages [may we hope, our dark friend among the rest?], so that it was feared apoplexy would take him."This will suffice for the physiological part; let us now hear our poor friend on the Crown-Prince and his arrival:--"OCTOBER 12th. Return of the Prince-Royal to Potsdam; tender reception.--OCTOBER 21st. Things look ill in Potsdam. The other leg is now also begun running; and above a quart (MAAS) of water has come from it. Without a miracle, the King cannot live,"--thinks our dark friend. "The Prince-Royal is truly affected (VERITABLEMENT ATTENDRI) at the King's situation; has his eyes full of water, has wept the eyes out of his head: has schemed in all ways to contrive a commodious bed for the King; wouldn't go away from Potsdam. King forced him away; he is to return Saturday afternoon. The Prince-Royal has been heard to say, 'If the King will let me live in my own way, I would give an arm to lengthen his life for twenty years.' King always calls him Fritzchen.

But Fritzchen," thinks Seckendorf Junior, "knows nothing about business. The King is aware of it; and said in the face of him one day: 'If thou begin at the wrong end with things, and all go topsy-turvy after I am gone, I will laugh at thee out of my grave!'" [Seckendorf (BARON), Journal Secret; cited in Forster, ii. 142.]

So Friedrich Wilhelm; laboring amid the mortal quicksands; looking into the Inevitable, in various moods. But the memorablest speech he made to Fritzchen or to anybody at present, was that covert one about the Kaiser and Seckendorf, and the sudden flash of insight he got, from some word of Seckendorf's, into what they had been meaning with him all along. Riding through the village of Priort, in debate about Vienna politics of a strange nature, Seckendorf said something, which illuminated his Majesty, dark for so many years, and showed him where he was. A ghastly horror of a country, yawning indisputable there; revealed to one as if by momentary lightning, in that manner! This is a speech which all the ambassadors report, and which was already mentioned by us,--in reference to that opprobrious Proposal about the Crown-Prince's Marriage, "Marry with England, after all; never mind breaking your word!" Here is the manner of it, with time and place:--"Sunday last," Sunday, 17th October, 1734, reports Seckendorf, Junior, through the Nigger or some better witness, "the King said to the Prince-Royal: 'My dear Son, I tell thee I got my death at Priort. I entreat thee, above all things in the world, don't trust those people (DENEN LEUTEN), however many promises they make.

That day, it was April 17th, 1733, there was a man said something to me: it was as if you had turned a dagger round in my heart.'"[Seckendorf (BARON), Journal Secret; cited in Forster, ii. 142.]--Figure that, spoken from amid the dark sick whirlpools, the mortal quicksands, in Friedrich Wilhelm's voice, clangorously plaintive;what a wild sincerity, almost pathos, is in it; and whether Fritzchen, with his eyes all bewept even for what Papa had suffered in that matter, felt lively gratitudes to the House of Austria at this moment!--It was four months after, "21st January, 1735," [Fassmann, p. 533.] when the King first got back to Berlin, to enlighten the eyes of the Carnival a little, as his wont had been. The crisis of his Majesty's illness is over, present danger gone; and the Carnival people, not without some real gladness, though probably with less than they pretend, can report him well again. Which is far from being the fact, if they knew it. Friedrich Wilhelm is on his feet again; but he never more was well. Nor has he forgotten that word at Priort, "like the turning of a dagger in one's heart;"--and indeed gets himself continually reminded of it by practical commentaries from the Vienna Quarter.

In April, Prince Lichtenstein arrives on Embassy with three requests or demands from Vienna: "1. That, besides the Ten Thousand due by Treaty, his Majesty would send his Reich's Contingent," NOT comprehended in those Ten Thousand, thinks the Kaiser. "2. That he would have the goodness to dismiss Marquis de la Chetardie the French Ambassador, as a plainly superfluous person at a well-affected German Court in present circumstances;"--person excessively dangerous, should the present Majesty die, Crown-Prince being so fond of that Chetardie. "3. That his Prussian Majesty do give up the false Polish Majesty Stanislaus, and no longer harbor him in East Preussen or elsewhere." The whole of which demands his Prussian Majesty refuses; the latter two especially, as something notably high on the Kaiser's part, or on any mortal's, to a free Sovereign and Gentleman. Prince Lichtenstein is eloquent, conciliatory; but it avails not.

He has to go home empty-handed;--manages to leave with Herr von Suhm, who took care of it for us, that Anecdote of the Crown-Prince's behavior under cannon-shot from Philipsburg last year;and does nothing else recordable, in Berlin.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 我的五等分

    我的五等分

    这是属于我自己的五等分啊。讲的是一个人重生到了五等分世界的故事
  • 酒魂西行

    酒魂西行

    酒魂兄弟原来是两穗给大地站岗的红高粱,在汾阳杏花村被酒祖杏花娘娘超度成酒魂。从此,酒魂兄弟开始了对大千世界的漫游。两位隐形兄弟借酒魂的无踪无迹,飘忽于人世舞台,展现出市井生活的千姿百态。本书以一对酒魂兄弟游历人间的所见所闻为视角,展现出世间生活生活。既有人世间的悲欢离合,又有小人背后的鬼蜮伎俩,曲折情节中透着荒诞,风趣幽默中含着讽刺,是一部精彩的小说。写的虽是上世纪90年代之事,但放在今日仍未过时,仍有着揭露讽刺的意义。
  • 索菲亚的祈愿符

    索菲亚的祈愿符

    我原本想说,这会是一个关于忧伤和解脱的故事。像讲解受难日的由来一样,要用神圣的光芒笼罩苍白的无奈。然而事情的发展并不在我的预料之内,直到后来才发现自己不过是一个站在棋盘上胸有成竹的愚者。其实不必想太多,因为上天自有安排!
  • 奇商幻游记

    奇商幻游记

    作为一名不知道为什么会穿越世界的穿越者,宇琪从不想去寻找他的出身与绅士,他只会去享受这些穿越带来的快感与兴奋,不过伴随着穿越也就会伴随着危险的降临,但是危险什么都无所谓了啊!“喂喂!!唐大哥,你能我传你那个很牛的暗器吗?对就是那个什么唐莲,别啊!!我这快出人命了,我的神啊!!怎么这么快就放大招了啊!!!”
  • 释迦牟尼如来像法灭尽之记

    释迦牟尼如来像法灭尽之记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 荒原狼

    荒原狼

    哈里·哈勒尔是一个性格孤僻、离群索居的中年男子。一次偶然的机会,他读到一本《论荒原狼》的小书,他意识到自己就是一个拥有人性与狼性的荒原狼。为了摆脱痛苦和孤独,他在酒馆买醉,陆续结识了赫尔米娜、帕勃罗和玛利亚。他沉浸在感官游戏之中,似乎忘却了所有烦恼。当哈里处于崩溃边缘,他来到了魔术剧院。在这个梦幻与现实交织的地方,他看到了种种分裂的人格与压抑的自我。通过这番经历,他意识到自己并不该刻意将人性与狼性对立,而该将其看作一个整体。最终,哈里摆脱了绝望,重新回到了现实生活。
  • 印度文学研究的学术历程

    印度文学研究的学术历程

    《印度文学研究的学术历程》是“中国外国文学研究的学术历程”总12卷之第10卷。本书对中国的印度文学研究进行了考察评析,对学科史作了脉络清晰的回顾。从共时性和历时性对中国印度文学研究进行深入评析,既有对总体面貌的展示,也有对文学史和文本研究的分析,对重要的有代表性的作家作品研究的考察。在研究史的大背景下,对学科的代表人物如季羡林、徐梵澄、金克木、刘安武、黄宝生等代表人物和代表性著作进行了详尽的评价。通过回顾,总结了中国印度文学研究的成就与不足,并深入分析了中国印度文学研究的特点,并对中国印度文学研究今后的发展提出了自己的设想。
  • 宁初阳的修仙手札

    宁初阳的修仙手札

    无CP,无穿越,升级流。一句话:古代本土少女修仙记。生逢乱世,一朝家变。平凡少女能否在乱世之中生存?几经生死,绝处逢生。但怎料苍天无眼,变故再生!原以为,孤独等死便是最后的结局。不曾想,这条命,阎王难收!因缘际会踏入仙途,既然老天爷拿不走我的命,从此,我命由我不由天!修大道,求长生,穿梭在茫茫天地间,寻药夺宝,自由又逍遥~想打劫?想报仇?想要我的命?好的,问题不大,放马过来,姐姐教你重新做人!
  • 新妻来袭:莫先生请笑纳

    新妻来袭:莫先生请笑纳

    十三岁前,乔芷是乔家的掌上明珠。十三岁后,乔家败落,人人都幸灾乐祸的等着看她的下场,失去一切的乔芷却突然翻身,成了全城最有名的黄金单身汉,盛世集团总裁宠到心尖上的小公主。。她要什么,他就给她什么,可他却唯独不知道,她想要的一直都是他的心。暗恋七年,一朝表白,乔芷却发现,那个男人根本没有心。总算下定决心,逃离他一手建造的黄金牢笼,她却突然发现,那个冷心冷面的人居然吃醋了。他一把将要和别人结婚的小女人抓回家:“乔芷,你只能是我的,这辈子都逃不开!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 腹黑校草惹上小魔女

    腹黑校草惹上小魔女

    风云变幻之年,混乱交际横生。当无知校草遇上黑暗系少女,是单纯洗涤繁复,还是邪魅染指无辜?他笑说:“她表面是天使,内心如恶魔。相貌似少女,狠毒如巫婆。”她说:“他小心翼翼地保护我易碎的灵魂,褪去好孩子的伪装,只为我一个人温柔。”