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History Of Friedrich II of Prussia 【Books I - XIV】
Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 5. Congress Of Soissons, Sixth Crisis In The Spectre-Hunt
Thomas Carlyle
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       _ BOOK VI. DOUBLE-MARRIAGE PROJECT, AND CROWN-PRINCE, GOING ADRIFT UNDER THE STORM-WINDS. 1727-1730
       CHAPTER V. CONGRESS OF SOISSONS, SIXTH CRISIS IN THE SPECTRE-HUNT
       The so-called Spanish War, and dangerous futile Siege of Gibraltar, had not ended at the death of George I.; though measures had already been agreed upon, by the Kaiser and parties interested, to end it,--only the King of Spain (or King's Wife, we should say) made difficulties. Difficulties, she; and kept firing, without effect, at the Fortress for about a year more; after which, her humor or her powder being out, Spanish Majesty signed like the others. Peace again for all and sundry of us: "Preliminaries" of Peace signed at Paris, 31st May, 1727, three weeks before George's death; "Peace" itself finally at the Pardo or at Madrid, the Termagant having spent her powder, 6th March, 1728; [Scholl, ii. 212, 213.] and a "Congress" (bless the mark!) to settle on what terms in every point.
       Congress, say at Aix-la-Chapelle; say at Cambrai again,--for there are difficulties about the place. Or say finally at Soissons; where Fleury wished it to be, that he might get the reins of it better in hand; and where it finally was,--and where the ghost or name of it yet is, an empty enigma in the memories of some men. Congress of Soissons did meet, 14th June, 1728; opened itself, as a Corporeal Entity in this world; sat for above a year;--and did nothing; Fleury quite declining the Pragmatic Sanction, though the anxious Kaiser was ready to make astonishing sacrifices, give up his Ostend COMPANY (Paper Shadow of a Company), or what you will of that kind,--if men would have conformed.
       These Diplomatic gentlemen,--say, are they aught? They seem to understand me, by each at once his choppy finger laying on his skinny lips! Princes of the Powers of the Air, Shall we define them? It is certain the solid Earth or her facts, except being held in perpetual terror by such workings of the Shadow-world, reaped no effect from those Twenty Years of Congressing; Seckendorf himself might as well have lain in bed, as ridden those 25,000 miles, and done such quantities of double-distillations. No effect at all: only some futile gunpowder spent on Gibraltar, and splinters of shot and shells (salable as old iron) found about the rocks there; which is not much of an effect for Twenty Years of such industry.
       The sublime Congress of Soissons met, as we say, at the above date (just while the Polish Majesty was closing his Berlin Visit); but found itself no abler for work than that of Cambrai had been. The Deputies from France I do not mention; nor from Spain, nor from Austria. The Deputies from England were Colonel or now properly Brigadier-General Stanhope, afterwards Lord Harrington; Horace Walpole (who is Robert's Brother, and whose Secretary is Sir Thomas Robinson, "QUOI DONE, CRUSOE?" whom we shall hear of farther); and Stephen Poyntz, a once bright gentleman, now dim and obsolete, whom the readers of Coxe's Walpole have some nominal acquaintance with. Here, for Chronology's sake, is a clipping from the old English newspapers to accompany them: "There is rumor that POLLY PEACHUM is gone to attend the Congress at Soissons; where, it is thought, she will make as good a figure, and do her country as much service, as several others that shall be nameless." [Mist's Weekly Journal, 29th June, 1728.]
       Their task seemed easy to the sanguine mind. The Kaiser has agreed with Spain in the Italian-Apanage matter; with the Sea-Powers in regard to his Ostend Company, which is abolished forever: what then is to prevent a speedy progress, and glad conclusion? The Pragmatic Sanction. "Accept my Pragmatic Sanction," said the Kaiser, "let that be the preliminary of all things."--"Not the preliminary," answered Fleury; "we will see to that as we go on; not the preliminary, by any means!" There was the rub. The sly old Cardinal had his private treaties with Sardinia; views of his own in the Mediterranean, in the Rhine quarter; and answered steadily, "Not the preliminary, by any means!" The Kaiser was equally inflexible. Whereupon immensities of protocolling, arguing, and the Congress "fell into complete languor," say the Histories. [Scholl, ii. 215.] Congress ate its dinner heartily, and wrote immensely, for the space of eighteen months; but advanced no hair's-breadth any-whither; no prospect before it, but that of dinner only, for unlimited periods.
       Kaiser will have his Pragmatic Sanction, or not budge from the place; stands mulelike amid the rain of cudgellings from the by-standers; can be beaten to death, but stir he will not.--Hints, glances of the eye, pass between Elizabeth Farnese and the other by-standers; suddenly, 9th November, 1729, it is found they have all made a "TREATY OF SEVILLE" with Elizabeth Farnese; France, England, Holland, Spain, have all closed,--Italian Apanages to be at once secured, Ostend to be at once suppressed, with what else behooves;--and the Kaiser is left alone; standing upon his Pragmatic Sanction there, nobody bidding him now budge!
       At which the Kaiser is naturally thrice and four times wroth and alarmed;--and Seckendorf in the TABAKS-COLLEGIUM had need to be doubly busy. As we shall find he is (though without effect), when the time comes round:--but we have not yet got to November of this Year 1729; there are still six or eight important months between us and that. Important months; and a Prussian-English "Waterspout," as we have named it, to be seen, with due wonder, in the political sky!--
       Congress of Soissons, now fallen mythical to mankind, and as inane as that of Cambrai, is perhaps still memorable in one or two slight points. First, it has in it, as one of the Austrian Deputies, that Baron von Bentenrieder, tallest of living Diplomatists, who was pressed at one time for a Prussian soldier;--readers recollect it? Walking through the streets of Halberstadt, to stretch his long limbs till his carriage came up, the Prussian sentries laid hold of him, "Excellent Potsdam giant, this one!"--and haled him off to their guard-house; till carriage and lackeys came; then, "Thousand humblest pardons, your Excellenz!" who forgave the fellows. Barely possible some lighter readers might wish to see, for one moment, an Excellenz that has been seized by a Press-gang? Which perhaps never happened to any other Excellenz;--the like of which, I have been told, might merit him a soiree from strong-minded women, in some remoter parts of the world. Not to say that he is the tallest of living Diplomatists; another unique circumstance!--Bentenrieder soon died; and had his place at Soissons filled up by an Excellenz of the ordinary height, who had never been pressed. But nothing can rob the Congress of this fact, that it once had Bentenrieder for member; and, so far, is entitled to the pluperfect distinction in one particular.
       Another point is humanly interesting in this Congress; but cannot fully be investigated for want of dates. Always, we perceive, according to the news of it that reach Berlin,--of England going right for the Kaiser or going wrong for him,--his Prussian Majesty's treatment of his children varies. If England go right for the Kaiser, well, and his Majesty is in good-humor with Queen, with Crown-Prince and Wilhelmina. If England go wrong for the Kaiser, dark clouds gather on the royal brow, in the royal heart; explode in thunder-storms; and at length crockery goes flying through the rooms, blows descend on the poor Prince's back; and her Majesty is in tears, mere Chaos come again. For as a general rule, unless the English Negotiation have some prospering fit, and produce exceptional phenomena, Friedrich Wilhelm, ever loyal in heart, stands steadfast by his Kaiser; ever ready "to strike out (LOS ZU SCHLAGEN," as he calls it) with his best strength in behalf of a cause which, good soul, he thinks is essentially German;--all the readier if at any time it seem now exclusively German, the French, Spanish, English, and other unlovely Foreign world being clean cut loose from it, or even standing ranked against it. "When will it go off, then (WANN GEHT ES LOS)?" asks Friedrich Wilhelm often; diligently drilling his sixty thousand, and snorting contempt on "Ungermanism (UNDEUTSCHHEIT)," be it on the part of friends or of enemies. Good soul, and whether he will ever get Julich and Berg out of it, is distractingly problematical, and the Tobacco-Parliament is busy with him!
       Curious to see, so far as dates go, how Friedrich Wilhelm changes his tune to Wife and Children in exact correspondence to the notes given out at Soissons for a Kaiser and his Pragmatic Sanction. Poor Prussian Household, poor back, and heart, of Crown-Prince; what a concert it is in this world, Smoking Parliament for souffleur! Let the big Diplomatist Bassoon of the Universe go this way, there are caresses for a young Soldier and his behavior in the giant regiment; let the same Bassoon sound that way, bangs and knocks descend on him; the two keep time together,--so busy is the Smoking Parliament with his Majesty of Prussia. The world has seen, with horror and wonder, Friedrich Wilhelm's beating of his grown children: but the pair of MEERKATZEN, or enchanted Demon-Apes, disguised as loyal Councillors, riding along with him the length of a Terrestrial Equator, have not been so familiar to the world. Seckendorf, Grumkow: we had often heard of Devil-Diplomatists; and shuddered over horrible pictures of them in Novels; hoping it was all fancy: but here actually is a pair of them, transcending all Novels;--perhaps the highest cognizable fact to be met with in Devil-Diplomacy. And it may be a kind of comfort to readers, both to know it, and to discern gradually what the just gods make of it withal. Devil-Diplomatists do exist, at least have existed, never doubt it farther; and their astonishingly dexterous mendacities and enchanted spider-webs,--CAN these go any road but one in this Universe?
       That the Congress of Cambrai was not a myth, we convinced ourselves by a letter of Voltaire's, who actually saw it dining there in the Year 1722, as he passed that way. Here, for Soissons, in like manner, are two Letters, by a less celebrated but a still known English hand; which, as utterances in presence of the fact itself, leave no doubt on the subject. These the afflicted reader will perhaps consent to take a glance of. If the Congress of Soissons, for the sake of memorable objects concerned there, is still to be remembered, and believed in, for a little while,--the question arises, How to do it, then?
       The writer of these Letters is a serious, rather long-nosed young English gentleman, not without intelligence, and of a wholesome and honest nature; who became Lord Lyttelton, FIRST of those Lords, called also "the Good Lord," father of "the Bad:" a lineal descendant of that Lyttelton UPON whom Coke sits, or seems to sit, till the end of things: author by and by of a History of Henry the Second and other well-meant books: a man of real worth, who attained to some note in the world. He is now upon the Grand Tour,--which ran, at that time, by Luneville and Lorraine, as would appear; at which point we shall first take him up. He writes to his Father, Sir Thomas, at Hagley among the pleasant Hills of Worcestershire,--date shortly after the assembling of that Congress to rear of him;--and we strive to add a minimum of commentary. The "piece of negligence," the "Mr. D.,"--none of mortals now knows who or what they were:--
       TO SIR THOMAS LYTTELTON, BART., AT HAGLEY.
       "LUNEVILLE 21st July" 1728.
       "DEAR SIR,--I thank you for so kindly forgiving the piece of negligence I acquainted you of in my last. Young fellows are often guilty of voluntary forgetfulness in those affairs; but I assure you mine was quite accidental:"--Never mind it, my Son!
       "Mr. D. tells you true that I am weary of losing money at cards; but it is no less certain that without them I shall soon be weary of Lorraine. The spirit of quadrille [obsolete game at cards] has possessed the land from morning till midnight; there is nothing else in every house in Town.
       "This Court is fond of strangers, but with a proviso that strangers love quadrille. Would you win the hearts of the Maids of Honor, you must lose your money at quadrille; would you be thought a well-bred man, you must play genteelly at quadrille; would you get a reputation of good sense, show judgment at quadrille. However in summer one may pass a day without quadrille; because there are agreeable promenades, and little parties out of doors. But in winter you are reduced to play at it, or sleep, like a fly, till the return of spring.
       "Indeed in the morning the Duke hunts,"--mark that Duke, and two Sons he has. "But my malicious stars have so contrived it, that I am no more a sportsman than a gamester. There are no men of learning in the whole Country; on the contrary, it is a character they despise. A man of quality caught me, the other day, reading a Latin Author; and asked me, with an air of contempt, Whether I was designed for the Church? All this would be tolerable if I was not doomed to converse with a set of English, who are still more ignorant than the French; and from whom, with my utmost endeavors, I cannot be absent six hours in the day. Lord" BLANK--Baltimore, or Heaven-knows-who,--"is the only one among them who has common sense; and he is so scandalously debauched, in his principles as well as practice, that his conversation is equally shocking to my morals and my reason."--Could not one contrive to get away from them; to Soissons, for example, to see business going on; and the Terrestrial Balance settling itself a little?
       "My only improvement here is in the company of the Duke," who is a truly distinguished Duke to his bad Country; "and in the exercise of the Academy,"--of Horsemanship, or what? "I have been absent from the latter near three weeks, by reason of a sprain I got in the sinews of my leg. My duty to my dear Mother; I hope you and she continue well. I am, Sir, your dutiful Son.--G. L." [The Works of Lord George Lyttelton, by Ayscough (London, 1776), iii. 215.]
       These poor Lorrainers are in a bad way; their Country all trampled to pieces by France, in the Louis-Fourteenth and still earlier times. Indeed, ever since the futile Siege of Metz; where we saw the great Kaiser, Karl V., silently weeping because he could not recapture Metz, [Antea, vol. v. p. 211.] the French have been busy with this poor Country;--new sections of it clipt away by them; "military roads through it, ten miles broad," bargained for; its Dukes oftenest in exile, especially the Father of this present Duke: [A famed Soldier in his day;] under Kaiser Leopold, "the little Kaiser in red stockings," one of whose Daughters he had to wife. He was at the Rescue of Vienna (Sobieski's), and in how many far fiercer services; his life was but a battle and a march. Here is his famed Letter to the Kaiser, when death suddenly called, Halt!
       "WELS NEAR LINZ ON THE DONAU, 17th April, 1690.
       "SACRED MAJESTY,--According to your Orders, I set out from Innspruck to come to Vienna; but I am stopped here by a Greater Master. I go to render account to Him of a life which I had wholly consecrated to you. Remember that I leave a Wife with whom you are concerned [QUI ROUS TOUCHE,--who is your lawful Daughter]; Children to whom I can bequeath nothing but my sword; and Subjects who are under Oppression.
       "CHARLES OF LORRAINE."
       (Henault, Abrege Chronologique, Paris, 1775, p. 850).[--Charles "V." the French uniformly call this one; Charles "IV." the Germans, who, I conclude, know better.]--and they are now waiting a good opportunity to swallow it whole, while the people are so busy with quadrille parties. The present Duke, returning from exile, found his Land in desolation, much of it "running fast to wild forest again;" and he has signalized himself by unwearied efforts in every direction to put new life into it, which have been rather successful. Lyttelton, we perceive, finds improvement in his company. The name of this brave Duke is Leopold; age now forty-nine; life and reign not far from done: a man about whom even Voltaire gets into enthusiasm. [Siecle de Louis XIV. (OEuvres, xxvi. 95-97); Hubner, t. 281.]
       The Court and Country of Lorraine, under Duke Leopold, will prove to deserve this brief glance from Lyttelton and us. Two sons Duke Leopold has: the elder, Franz, now about twenty, is at Vienna, with the highest outlooks there: Kaiser Karl is his Father's cousin-german; and Kaiser Karl's young Daughter, high beautiful Maria Theresa,--the sublimest maiden now extant,--yes, this lucky Franz is to have her: what a prize, even without Pragmatic Sanction! With the younger son, Karl of Lorraine, Lyttelton may have made acquaintance, if he cared: a lad of sixteen; by and by an Austrian General, as his father had been; General much noised of,--whom we shall often see beaten, in this world, at the head of men.--But let us now get to Soissons itself, skipping an intermediate Letter or two:--
       TO SIR THOMAS LYTTELTON, BART., AT HAGLEY.
       "SOISSONS, 28th October," 1728.
       "I thank you, my dear Sir, for complying so much with my inclinations as to let me stay some time at Soissons: but as you have not fixed how long, I wait for farther orders.
       "One of my chief reasons for disliking Luneville was the multitude of English there; who, most of them, were such worthless fellows that they were a dishonor to the name and Nation. With these I was obliged to dine and sup, and pass a great part of my time. You may be sure I avoided it as much as possible; but MALGRE MOI I suffered a great deal. To prevent any comfort from other people, they had made a law among themselves, not to admit any foreigner into their company: so that there was nothing but English talked from June to January.--On the contrary, my countrymen at Soissons are men of virtue and good sense; they mix perpetually with the French, and converse for the most part in that language. I will trouble you no more upon this subject: but give me leave to say that, however capricious I may have been on other subjects, my sentiments in this particular are the strongest proofs I ever gave you of my strong and hereditary aversion to vice and folly.
       "Mr. Stanhope," our Minister, the Colonel or Brigadier-General, "is always at Fontainebleau. I went with Mr. Poyntz," Poyntz not yet a dim figure, but a brilliant, who hints about employing me, "to Paris for four days, when the Colonel himself was there, to meet him; he received me with great civility and kindness. We have done expecting Mr. Walpole," fixed he in the Court regions; "who is obliged to keep strict guard over the Cardinal," sly old Fleury, "for fear the German Ministers should take him from us. They pull and haul the poor old gentleman so many ways, that he does not know where to turn, or into whose arms to throw himself." Never fear him!--
       "Ripperda's escape to England,"--grand Diplomatic bulldog that was, who took refuge in Colonel Stanhope's at Madrid to no purpose, and kindled the sputtering at Gibraltar, is now got across to England, and will go to Morocco and farther, to no purpose,--"will very much embroil affairs; which did not seem to want another obstacle to hinder them from coming to an accommodation. If the Devil is not very much wanting to his own interests in this Business, it is impossible that the good work of Peace, should go on much longer. After all, most young fellows are of his party; and wish he may bring matters to a War; for they make but ill Ministers at a Congress, but would make good Soldiers in a Campaign.
       "No news from Madam "BLANK" and her beloved Husband. Their unreasonable fondness for each other can never last: they will soon grow as cold to one another as the Town to The Beggars' Opera. And cannot warm again, you think? Pray Heaven I may prove a false prophet; but Married Love and English Music are too domestic to continue long in favor."...
       NOVEMBER 20th, SOISSONS still. "This is one of the agreeablest Towns in France. The people are infinitely obliging to strangers: we are of all their parties, and perpetually share with them in their pleasures. I have learnt more French since I came hither, than I should have picked up in a twelvemonth in Lorraine....
       "A fool with a majority on his side is the greatest tyrant in the world:--how can I go back to loiter in Lorraine, honored Father, where fools are in such majority? Then the extraordinary civilities I receive from Mr. Poyntz: He has in a manner taken me into his family; will evidently make an Apprentice of me. The first Packet that comes from Fontainebleau, I expect to be employed. Which is no small pleasure to me: and will I hope be of service."...
       DECEMBER 20th. "A sudden order to Mr. Poyntz has broken all my measures. He goes to-morrow to Paris, to stay there in the room of Messrs. Stanhope and Walpole, who are on their return for England." Congress falling into complete languor, if we knew it! But ought not I to accompany this friendly and distinguished Mr. Poyntz, "who has already given me papers to copy;"--in fact I am setting off with him, honored Father!...
       "Prince Frederick's journey,"--first arrival in England of dissolute Fred from Hanover, who had NOT been to Berlin to get married last summer,--"was very secret: Mr. Poyntz did not hear of it till Friday last; at least he had no public notice of it." Why should he? "There will be fine struggling for places" in this Prince's new Household. "I hope my Brother will come in for one." [Ayscough's Lyttelton, iii. 200-231.]--
       But here we pull the string of the curtain upon Lyttelton, and upon his Congress falling into complete languor; Congress destined, after dining for about a year more, to explode, in the Treaty of Seville, and to leave the Kaiser sitting horror-struck, solitary amid the wreck of Political Nature,--which latter, however, pieces itself together again for him and others. Beneficent Treaty of Vienna was at last achieved; Treaty and Treaties there, which brought matters to their old bearing again,--Austria united with the Sea-Powers, Pragmatic Sanction accepted by them, subsidies again to be expected from them; Baby Carlos fitted with his Apanages, in some tolerable manner; and the Problem, with which Creation had groaned for some twenty years past, finally accomplished better or worse.
       Lyttelton himself will get a place in Prince Frederick's Household, and then lose it; place in Majesty's Ministry at last, but not for a long while yet. He will be one of Prince Frederick's men, of the Carterets, Chesterfields, Pitts, who "patronize literature," and are in opposition to dark Walpole; one of the "West-Wickham set;"--and will be of the Opposition party, and have his adventures in the world. Meanwhile let him go to Paris with Mr. Poyntz; and do his wisest there and elsewhere.
       "Who's dat who ride astride de pony, So long, so lean, so lank and bony? Oh, he be de great orator, Little-ton-y." [Caricature of 1741, on Lyttelton's getting into the Ministry, with Carteret, Chesterfield, Argyll, and the rest: see Phillimore's Lyttelton (London, 1845), i. 110; Johnson's Lives of the Poets, ? Lyttelton; &c. &c.]
       For now we are round at Friedrich Wilhelm's Pomeranian Hunting again, in the New-year's time of 1729; and must look again into the magnanimous sick-room which ensued thereon; where a small piece of business is going forward. What a magnanimous patient Friedrich Wilhelm was, in Fassmann's judgment, we know: but, it will be good to show both sides of the tapestry, and let Wilhelmina also speak. The small business is only, a Treaty of Marriage for one of our Princesses: not Wilhelmina, but Louisa the next younger, who has been asked, and will consent, as appears.
       Fassmann makes a very touching scene of it. King is in bed, ill of his gout after that slaughter of the 3,602 wild swine: attendants are sitting round his Majesty, in the way we know; Queen Sophie at his head, "Seckendorf and several others" round the bed. Letters arrive; Princess Frederika Louisa, a very young Lady, has also had a Letter; which, she sees by the seal, will be interesting, but which she must not herself open. She steps in with it; "beautiful as an angel, but rather foolish, and a spoilt child of fifteen," says Wilhelmina: trips softly in with it; hands it to the King. "Give it to thy Mother, let her read it," says the King. Mother reads it, with audible soft voice: Formal demand in marriage from the Serenity of Anspach, as foreseen.
       "Hearken, Louisa (HORE, LUISE), it is still time," said the King: "Tell us, wouldst thou rather go to Anspach, now, or stay with me? If thou choose to stay, thou shalt want, for nothing, either, to the end of thy life. Speak!"--"At such unexpected question," says Fassmann, "there rose a fine blush over the Princess's face, who seemed to be at a loss for her answer. However, she soon collected herself; kissed his Majesty's hand, and said: 'Most gracious Papa, I will to Anspach!' To which the King: 'Very well, then; God give thee all happiness and thousand blessings!--But, hearken, Louisa,' the King's Majesty was pleased at the same time to add, 'We will make a bargain, thou and I. You have excellent, Flour at Anspach (SCHONES MEHL); but in Hams and Smoked Sausages you don't, come up, either in quality or quantity, to us in this Country. Now I, for my part, like good pastries. So, from time to time, thou shalt send me a box of nice flour, and I will keep thee in hams and sausages. Wilt thou, Louisa?' That the Princess answered Yea," says poor Fassmann with the tear in his eye, "may readily be supposed!" Nay all that heard the thing round the royal bed there--simple humanities of that kind from so great, a King--had almost or altogether tears in their eyes. [Fassmann, pp. 393, 394.]
       This surely is a very touching scene. But now listen to Wilhelmina's account of another on the same subject, between the same parties. "At table;" no date indicated, or a wrong one, but evidently after this: in fact, we find it was about the beginning of March, 1729; and had sad consequences for Wilhelmina.
       "At table his Majesty told the Queen that he had Letters from Anspach; the young Margraf to be at Berlin in May for his wedding; that M. Bremer his Tutor was just coming with the ring of betrothal for Louisa. He asked my Sister, If that gave her pleasure? and How she would regulate her housekeeping when married? My Sister had got into the way of telling him whatever she thought, and home-truths sometimes, without his taking it ill. She answered with her customary frankness, That she would have a good table, which should be delicately served; and, added she, 'which shall be better than yours. And if I have children, I will not maltreat them like you, nor force them to eat what they have an aversion to.'--'What do you mean by that?' replied the King: 'what is there wanting at my table?'--'There is this wanting,' she said, 'that one cannot have enough; and the little there is consists of coarse potherbs that nobody can eat.' The King," as was not unnatural, "had begun to get angry at her first answer: this last put him quite in a fury; but all his anger fell on my Brother and me. He first threw a plate at my Brother's head, who ducked out of the way; he then let fly another at me, which I avoided in like manner. A hail-storm of abuse followed these first hostilities. He rose into a passion against the Queen; reproaching her with the bad training she gave her children; and, addressing my Brother: 'You have reason to curse your Mother,' said he, 'for it is she that causes your being an ill-governed fellow (UN MAL GOUVERNE). I had a Preceptor,' continued he, 'who was an honest man. I remember always a story he told me in my youth. There was a man, at Carthage, who had been condemned to die for many crimes he had committed. While they were leading him to execution, he desired he might speak to his Mother. They brought his Mother: he came near, as if to whisper something to her;--and bit away a piece of her ear. I treat you thus, said he, to make you an example to all parents who take no heed to bring up their children in the practice of virtue!--Make the application,' continued he, always addressing my Brother: and getting no answer from him, he again set to abusing us till he could speak no longer. We rose from table. As we had to pass near him in going out, he aimed a great blow at me with his crutch; which, if I had not jerked away from it, would have ended me. He chased me for a while in his wheel-chair, but the people drawing it gave me time to escape into the Queen's chamber." [Wilhelmina, i. 159.]
       Poor Wilhelmina, beaten upon by Papa in this manner, takes to bed in miserable feverish pain, is ordered out by Mamma to evening party, all the same; is evidently falling very ill. "Ill? I will cure you!" says Papa next day, and makes her swallow a great draught of wine. Which completes the thing: "declared small-pox," say all the Doctors now. So that Wilhelmina is absent thenceforth, as Fassmann already told us, from the magnanimous paternal sick-room; and lies balefully eclipsed, till the paternal gout and some other things have run their course. "Small-pox; what will Prince Fred think? A perfect fright, if she do live!" say the English Court-gossips in the interim. But we are now arrived at a very singular Prussian-English phenomenon; and ought to take a new Chapter. _
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Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 1. Proem: Friedrich's History From The Distance We Are At
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 1.1. Friedrich Then, And Friedrich Now
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 1.2. Eighteenth Century
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 1.3. English Prepossessions
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 1.4. Encouragements, Discouragements
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 2. Friedrich's Birth
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 3. Father And Mother: The Hanoverian Connection
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 4. Father's Mother
   Book 1. Frederick The Great--Birth And Parentage--1712 - Chapter 5. King Friedrich I
Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 1. Brannibor: Henry The Fowler
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 2. Preussen: Saint Adalbert
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 3. Markgraves Of Brandenburg
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ End Of The First Shadowy Line
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Second Shadowy Line
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Substantial Markgraves: Glimpse Of The Contemporary Kaisers
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 4. Albert The Bear
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 5. Conrad Of Hohenzollern; And Kaiser Barbarossa
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Conrad Has Become Burggraf Of Nurnberg (A.D. 1170)
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Of The Hohenzollern Burggraves Generally
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 6. The Teutsch Ritters Or Teutonic Order
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Head Of Teutsch Order Moves To Venice
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Teutsch Order Itself Goes To Preussen
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ The Stuff Teutsch Ritters Were Made Of. Conrad Of Thuringen: Saint Elizabeth; Town Of Marburg
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 7. Margraviate Of Culmbach: Baireuth, Anspach
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Burggraf Friedrich 3 And The Anarchy Of Nineteen Years
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Kaiser Rudolf And Burggraf Friedrich III
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 8. Ascanier Markgraves In Brandenburg
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Of Berlin City
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Markgraf Otto IV., Or Otto With The Arrow
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 9. Burggraf Friedrich IV
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __Contested Elections In The Reich: Kaiser Albert I.; After Whom Six Non-Hapsburg Kaisers
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Of Kaiser Henry VII. And The Luxemburg Kaisers
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Henry's Son Johann Is King Of Bohemia; And Ludwig The Bavarian, With A Contested Election, Is Kaiser
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 10. Brandenburg Lapses To The Kaiser
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 11. Bayarian Kurfursts In Brandenburg
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ A Resuscitated Ascanier; The False Waldemar
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Margaret With The Pouch-Mouth
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 12. Brandenburg In Kaiser Karl's Time; End Of The Bavarian Kurfursts
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ End Of Resuscitated Waldemar; Kurfurst Ludwig Sells Out
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Second, And Then Third And Last, Of The Bavarian Kurfursts In Brandenburg
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 13. Luxemburg Kurfursts In Brandenburg
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - Chapter 14. Burggraf Friedrich VI
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Sigismund Is Kurfurst Of Brandenburg, But Is King Of Hungary Also
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Cousin Jobst Has Brandenburg In Pawn
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Brandenburg In The Hands Of The Pawnbrokers; Rupert Of The Pfalz Is Kaiser
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Sigismund, With A Struggle, Becomes Kaiser
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ Brandenburg Is Pawned For The Last Time
   Book 2. Of Brandenburg And The Hohenzollerns. 928-1417 - __ The Seven Intercalary Or Non-Hapsburg Kaisers
Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 1. Kurfurst Friedrich I
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 2. Matinees Du Roi De Prusse
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 3. Kurfurst Friedrich II
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 4. Kurfurst Albert Achilles, And His Successor
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Johann The Cicero Is Fourth Kurfurst, And Leaves Two Notable Sons
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 5. Of The Baireuth-Anspach Branch
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Two Lines In Culmbach Or Baireuth-Anspach: The Gera Bond Of 1598
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ The Elder Line Of Culmbach: Friedrich And His Three Notable Sons There
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Friedrich's Second Son, Margraf George Of Anspach
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 6. Hochmeister Albert, Third Notable Son Of Friedrich
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 7. Albert Alcibiades
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 8. Historical Meaning Of The Reformation
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 9. Kurfurst Joachim I
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Of Joachim's Wife And Brother-In-Law
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 10. Kurfurst Joachim II
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Joachim Gets Co-Infeftment In Preussen
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Joachim Makes "Heritage-Brotherhood" With The Duke Of Liegnitz
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 11. Seventh Kurfurst, Johann George
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 12. Of Albert Friedrich, The Second Duke Of Preussen
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Of Duke Albert Friedrich's Marriage: Who His Wife Was, And What Her Possible Dowry
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Margraf George Friedrich Comes To Preussen To Administer
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 13. Ninth Kurfurst, Johann Sigismund
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ How The Cleve Heritage Dropped, And Many Sprang To Pick It Up
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ The Kaiser's Thoughts About It, And The World's
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 14. Symptoms Of A Great War Coming
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ First Symptom; Donauworth, 1608
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Second Symptom
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Symptom Third: A Dinner-Scene At Dusseldorf, 1613: Spaniards And Dutch Shoulder Arms In Cleve
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Symptom Fourth, And Catastrophe Upon The Heels Of It
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ What Became Of The Cleve-Julich Heritage, And Of The Preussen One
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 15. Tenth Kurfurst, George Wilhelm
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 16. Thirty-Years War
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Second Act, Or Epoch, 1624-1629. A Second Uncle Put To The Ban, And Pommern Snatched Away
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Third Act, And What The Kurfurst Suffered In It
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 17. Duchy Of Jagerndorf
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Duke Of Jagerndorf, Elector's Uncle, Is Put Under Ban
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 18. Friedrich Wilhelm, The Great Kurfurst, Eleventh Of The Series
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Became Of Pommern At The Peace; Final Glance Into Cleve-Julich
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ The Great Kurfurst's Wars: What He Achieved In War And Peace
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 19. King Friedrich I Again
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ How Austria Settled The Silesian Claims
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ His Real Character
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - Chapter 20. Death Of King Friedrich I
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ The Twelve Hohenzollern Electors
   Book 3. The Hohenzollerns In Brandenburg. 1412-1718 - __ Genealogical Diagram: The Two Culmbach Lines
Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 1. Childhood: Double Educational Element
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - __ First Educational Element, The French One
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 2. The German Element
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - __ Of The Dessauer, Not Yet "Old"
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 3. Friedrich Wilhelm Is King
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 4. His Majesty's Ways
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 5. Friedrich Wilhelm's One War
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - __ The Devil In Harness: Creutz The Finance-Minister
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 6. The Little Drummer
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 7. Transit Of Czar Peter
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 8. The Crown-Prince Is Put To His Schooling
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 9. Wusterhausen
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 10. The Heidelberg Protestants
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - __ Of Kur-Pfalz Karl Philip: How He Got A Wife Long Since, And Did Feats In The World
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - __ Karl Philip And His Heidelberg Protestants
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - __ Friedrich Wilhelm's Method;--Proves Remedial In Heidelberg
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - __ Prussian Majesty Has Displeased The Kaiser And The King Of Poland
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 11. On The Crown-Prince's Progress In His Schooling
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - __ The Noltenius-And-Panzendorf Drill-Exercise
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 12. Crown-Prince Falls Into Disfavor With Papa
   Book 4. Friedrich's Apprenticeship, First Stage. 1713-1728 - Chapter 13. Results Of The Crown-Prince's Schooling
Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - Chapter 1. Double-Marriage Is Decided On
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Queen Sophie Dorothee Has Taken Time By The Forelock
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Princess Amelia Comes Into The World
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Friedrich Wilhelm's Ten Children
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - Chapter 2. A Kaiser Hunting Shadows
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Imperial Majesty On The Treaty Of Utrecht
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Imperial Majesty Has Got Happily Wedded
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Imperial Majesty And The Termagant Of Spain
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Imperial Majesty's Pragmatic Sanction
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Third Shadow: Imperial Majesty's Ostend Company
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - Chapter 3. The Seven Crises Or European Travail-Throes
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Congress Of Cambrai
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Congress Of Cambrai Gets The Floor Pulled From Under It
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ France And The Britannic Majesty Trim The Ship Again: How Friedrich Wilhelm Came Into It. Treaty Of Hanover, 1725
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Travail-Throes Of Nature For Baby Carlos's Italian Apanage; Seven In Number
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - Chapter 4. Double-Marriage Treaty Cannot Be Signed
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - Chapter 5. Crown-Prince Goes Into The Potsdam Guards
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Of The Potsdam Giants, As A Fact
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Friedrich Wilhelm's Recruiting Difficulties
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Queen Sophie's Troubles: Grumkow With The Old Dessauer, And Grumkow Without Him
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - Chapter 6. Ordnance-Master Seckendorf Crosses The Palace Esplanade
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - Chapter 7. Tobacco-Parliament
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - __ Of Gundling, And The Literary Men In Tobacco-Parliament
   Book 5. Double-Marriage Project, And What Element It Fell Into. 1723-1726 - Chapter 8. Seckendorf's Retort To Her Majesty
Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 1. Fifth Crisis In The Kaiser's Spectre-Hunt
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Crown-Prince Seen In Dryasdust's Glass, Darkly
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 2. Death Of George I
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ His Prussian Majesty Falls Into One Of His Hypochondriacal Fits
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 3. Visit To Dresden
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ The Physically Strong Pays His Counter-Visit
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Of Princess Whilhelmina's Four Kings And Other Ineffectual Suitors
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 4. Double-Marriage Project Is Not Dead
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Crown-Prince Friedrich Writes Certain Letters
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Double-Marriage Project Re-Emerges In An Official Shape
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ His Majesty Slaughters 3,602 Head Of Wild Swine
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Falls Ill, In Consequence; And The Double-Marriage Cannot Get Forward
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 5. Congress Of Soissons, Sixth Crisis In The Spectre-Hunt
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 6. Imminency Of War Or Duel Between The Britannic And Prussian Majesties
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Cause First: The Hanover Joint-Heritages, Which Are Not In A Liquid State
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Cause Second: The Troubles Of Mecklenburg
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Causes Third And Fourth:--And Cause Fifth, Worth All The Others
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Troubles Of Mecklenburg, For The Last Time
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ One Nussler Settles The Ahlden Heritages; Sends The Money Home In Boxes
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 7. A Marriage: Not The Double-Marriage: Crown-Prince Deep In Trouble
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Crown-Prince's Domesticities Seen In A Flash Of Lightning
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 8. Crown-Prince Getting Beyond His Depth In Trouble
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - Chapter 9. Double-Marriage Shall Be Or Shall Not Be
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Wilhelmina To Be Married Out Of Hand. Crisis First: England Shall Say Yes Or Say No
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Dubourgay Strikes A Light For The English Court
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Wilhelmina To Be Married Out Of Hand. Crisis Second: England Shall Have Said No
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Wilhelmina To Be Married Out Of Hand. Crisis Third: Majesty Himself Will Choose
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ How Friedrich Prince Of Baireuth Came To Be The Man, After All
   Book 6. Double-Marriage Project, And Crown-Prince, Going Adrift Under The Storm-Winds. 1727-1730 - __ Double-Marriage, On The Edge Of Shipwreck, Flies Off A Kind Of Carrier-Pigeon, Or Noah’s-Dove, To England, With Cry For Help
Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 1. England Sends The Excellency Hotham To Berlin
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ Majesty And Crown-Prince With Him Make A Run To Dresden
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ How Villa Was Received In England
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ Excellency Hotham Arrives In Berlin
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 2. Language Of Birds: Excellency Hotham Proves Unavailing
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ A Peep Into The Nosti-Grumkow Correspondence Caught Up In St. Mary Axe
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ The Hotham Despatches
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ His Majesty Gets Sight Of The St.-Mary-Axe Documents; But Nothing Follows From It
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ St. Peter's Church In Berlin Has An Accident
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 3. Camp Of Radewitz
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 4. Excellency Hotham Quits Berlin In Haste
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 5. Journey To The Reich
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 6. Journey Homewards From The Reich; Catastrophe On Journey Homewards
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ Catastrophe On Journey Homewards
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 7. Catastrophe, And Majesty, Arrive In Berlin
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ Scene At Berlin On Majesty's Arrival
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 8. Sequel To Crown-Prince And Friends
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - Chapter 9. Court-Martial On Crown-Prince And Consorts
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ Crown-Prince In Custrin
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ Sentence Of Court-Martial
   Book 7. Fearful Shipwreck Of The Double-Marriage Project - __ Katte's End, 6th November, 1780
Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - Chapter 1. Chaplain Muller Waits On The Crown-Prince
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - Chapter 2. Crown-Prince To Repent And Not Perish
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - __ Crown-Prince Begins A New Course
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - Chapter 3. Wilhelmina Is To Wed The Prince Of Baireuth
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - Chapter 4. Criminal Justice In Preussen And Elsewhere
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - __ Case Of Schlubhut
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - __ Case Of The Criminal-Collegium Itself
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - __ Skipper Jenkins In The Gulf Of Florida
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - __ Baby Carlos Gets His Apanage
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - Chapter 5. Interview Of Majesty And Crown-Prince At Custrin
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - __ Grumkow's "Protokoll" Of The 15th August, 1731; Or Summary Of What Took Place At Custrin That Day
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - __ Schulenburg's Three Letters To Grumkow, On Visits To The Crown-Prince, During The Custrin Time
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - __ His Majesty's Building Operations
   Book 8. Crown-Prince Reprieved: Life At Custrin - Chapter 6. Wilhelmina's Wedding
Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 1. Princess Elizabeth Christina Of Brunswick-Bevern
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Who His Majesty's Choice Is; And What The Crown-Prince Thinks Of It
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Duke Of Lorraine Arrives In Potsdam And In Berlin
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Betrothal Of The Crown-Prince To The Brunswick Charmer, Niece Of Imperial Majesty, Monday Evening, 10th March, 1732
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 2. Small Incidents At Ruppin
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 3. The Salzburgers
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 4. Prussian Majesty Visits The Kaiser
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 5. Ghost Of The Double-Marriage Rises; To No Purpose
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Session Of Tobacco-Parliament, 6th December, 1732
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 6. King August Meditating Great Things For Poland
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 7. Crown-Prince's Marriage
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 8. King August Dies; And Poland Takes Fire
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Poland Has To Find A New King
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Of The Candidates; Of The Conditions. How The Election Went
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Poland On Fire; Dantzig Stands Siege
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 9. Kaiser's Shadow-Hunt Has Caught Fire
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Subsequent Course Of The War, In The Italian Part Of It
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Course Of The War, In The German Part Of It
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 10. Crown-Prince Goes To The Rhine Campaign
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Glimpse Of Lieutenant Chasot, And Of Other Acquisitions
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - __ Crown-Prince's Visit To Baireuth On The Way Home
   Book 9. Last Stage Of Friedrich's Apprenticeship: Life In Ruppin. 1732-1736 - Chapter 11. In Papa's Sick-Room; Prussian Inspections: End Of War
Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - Chapter 1. Mansion Of Reinsberg
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ Of Monsieur Jordan And The Literary Set
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - Chapter 2. Of Voltaire And The Literary Correspondences
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - Chapter 3. Crown-Prince Makes A Morning Call
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - Chapter 4. News Of The Day
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ Of Berg And Julich Again; And Of Luiscius With The One Razor
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - Chapter 5. Visit At Loo
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ Crown-Prince Becomes A Freemason; And Is Harangued By Monsieur De Bielfeld
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ Seckendorf Gets Lodged In Gratz
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ The Ear Of Jenkins Re-Emerges
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - Chapter 6. Last Year Of Reinsberg; Journey To Preussen
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ Pine's Horace; And The Anti-Machiavel
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ Friedrich In Preussen Again; At The Stud Of Trakehnen. A Tragically Great Event Coming On
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - Chapter 7. Last Year Of Reinsberg: Transit Of Baltimore And Other Persons And Things
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ Bielfeld, What He Saw At Reinsberg And Around
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - __ Turk War Ends; Spanish War Begins. A Wedding In Petersburg
   Book 10. At Reinsberg. 1736-1740 - Chapter 8. Death Of Friedrich Wilhelm
Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 1. Phenomena Of Friedrich's Accession
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Friedrich Will Make Men Happy: Corn-Magazines
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Abolition Of Legal Torture
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Will Have Philosophers About Him, And A Real Academy Of Sciences
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ And Every One Shall Get To Heaven In His Own Way
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Free Press, And Newspapers The Best Instructors
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Intends To Be Practical Withal, And Every Inch A King
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Behavior To His Mother; To His Wife
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ No Change In His Father's Methods Or Ministries
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 2. The Homagings
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Friedrich Accepts The Homages, Personally, In Three Places
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 3. Friedrich Makes An Excursion, Not Of Direct Sort Into The Cleve Countries
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Friedrich Strikes Off To The Left, And Has A View Of Strasburg For Two Days
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Friedrich Finds M. De Maupertuis; Not Yet M. De Voltaire
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 4. Voltaire's First Interview With Friedrich
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Particulars Of First Interview, On Severe Scrutiny
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ What Voltaire Thought Of The Interview Twenty Years Afterwards
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ What Voltaire Thought Of The Interview At The Time
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 5. Affair Of Herstal
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ How The Herstallers Had Behaved To Friedrich Wilhelm
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Friedrich Takes The Rod Out Of Pickle
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ What Voltaire Thought Of Herstal
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 6. Returns By Hanover; Does Not Call On His Royal Uncle There
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 7. Withdraws To Reinsberg, Hoping A Peaceable Winter
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Wilhelmina's Return-Visit
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Unexpected News At Reinsberg
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 8. The Kaiser's Death
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - Chapter 9. Resolution Formed At Reinsberg In Consequence
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Mystery In Berlin, For Seven Weeks, While The Preparations Go On; Voltaire Visits Friedrich To Decipher It, But Cannot
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ View Of Friedrich Behind The Veil
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Excellency Botta Has Audience; Then Excellency Dickens, And Others: December 6th, The Mystery Is Out
   Book 11. Friedrich Takes The Reins In Hand. Jun.-Dec., 1740 - __ Masked Ball, At Berlin, 12th-13th December
Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 1. Of Schlesien, Or Silesia
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Historical Epochs Of Schlesien;--After The Quads And Marchmen
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 2. Friedrich Marches On Glogau
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Friedrich At Crossen, And Still In His Own Territory, 14th-16th December;--Steps Into Schlesien
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ What Glogau, And The Government At Breslau, Did Upon It
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ March To Weichau (Saturday, 17th, And Stay Sunday There); To Milkau (monday, 19th); Get To Herrendorf, Within Sight Of Glogau, December 22d
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 3. Problem Of Glogau
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ What Berlin Is Saying; What Friedrich Is Thinking
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Jordan To The King (successively From Berlin,--Somewhat Abridged.)
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Schwerin At Liegnitz; Friedrich Hushes Up The Glogau Problem, And Starts With His Best Speed For Breslau
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 4. Breslau Under Soft Pressure
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ King Enters Breslaw; Stays There, Gracious And Vigilant, Four Days (jan. 2d-6th, 1741)
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 5. Friedrich Pushes Forward Towards Brieg And Neisse
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Friedrich Comes Across To Ottmachau; Sits There, In Survey Of Neisse, Till His Cannon Come
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 6. Neisse Is Bombarded
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Browne Vanishes In A Slight Flash Of Fire
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 7. At Versailles, The Most Christian Majesty Changes His Shirt, And Belleisle Is Seen With Papers
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Of Belleisle And His Plans
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 8. Phenomena In Petersburg
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 9. Friedrich Returns To Silesia
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Skirmish Of Baumgarten, 27th February, 1741
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Aspects Of Breslau
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Austria Is Standing To Arms
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ The Young Dessauer Captures Glogau (March 9th); The Old Dessauer, By His Camp Of Gottin (April 2d), Checkmates Certain Designing Persons
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Friedrich Takes The Field, With Some Pomp; Goes Into The Mountains,--But Comes Fast Back
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 10. Battle Of Mollwitz
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Of Friedrich's Disappearance Into Fairyland, In The Interim; And Of Maupertuis's Similar Adventure
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 11. The Bursting Forth Of Bedlams: Belleisle And The Breakers Of Pragmatic Sanction
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Who Was To Blame For The Austrian-Succession War?
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ How Belleisle Made Visit To Teutschland; And There Was No Fit Henry The Fowler To Welcome Him
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Downbreak Of Pragmatic Sanction; Manner Of The Chief Artists In Handling Their Covenants
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Concerning The Imperial Election (Kaiserwahl) That Is To Be: Candidates For Kaisership
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Teutschland To Be Carved Into Something Of Symmetry, Should The Belleisle Enterprises Succeed
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Belleisle On Visit To Friedrich; Sees Friedrich Besiege Brieg, With Effect
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 12. Sorrows Of His Britannic Majesty
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ No. 1. Snatch Of Parliamentary Eloquence By Mr. Viner (19th April, 1741)
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ No. 2. Constitutional Historian On The Phenomenon Of Walpole In England
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __No. 3. Of The Spanish War, Or The Jenkins's-Ear Question
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - __ Succinct History Of The Spanish War, Which Began In 1739; And Ended--When Did It End?
   Book 12. First Silesian War, Awakening A General European One, Begins. December, 1740-May, 1741 - Chapter 13. Small-War: First Emergence Of Ziethen The Hussar General Into Notice
Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 1. Britannic Majesty As Paladin Of The Pragmatic
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Cunctations, Yet Incessant And Ubiquitous Endeavorings, Of His Britannic Majesty (1741-1743)
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 2. Camp Of Strehlen
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Excellency Hyndford Has His First Audience (Camp Of Mollwitz, May 7th); And Friedrich Makes A Most Important Treaty,--Not With Hyndford
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Excellency Robinson Busy In The Vienna Hofrath Circles, To Produce A Compliance
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Excellency Robinson Has Audience Of Friedrich (Camp Of Strehlen, 7th August, 1741)
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 3. Grand Review At Strehlen: Neipperg Takes Aim At Breslau, But Another Hits It
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 4. Friedrich Takes The Field Again, Intent On Having Neisse
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 5. Klein-Schnellendorf: Friedrich Gets Neisse, In A Fashion
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Excellency Hyndford Brings About A Meeting At Klein-Schnellendorf (9th October, 1741)
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Friedrich Takes Neisse By Sham Siege (Capture Not Sham); Gets Homaged In Breslau; And Returns To Berlin
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 6. New Mayor Of Landshut Makes An Installation Speech
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 7. Friedrich Purposes To Mend The Klein-Schnellendorf Failure: Fortunes Of The Belleisle Armament
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ The French Safe In Prag; Kaiserwahl Just Coming On
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Broglio Has A Bivouac Of Pisek; Khevenhuller Looks In Upon The Donau Conquests
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 8. Friedrich Starts For Moravia, On A New Scheme He Has
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 9. Wilhelmina Goes To See The Gayeties At Frankfurt
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Wilhelmina At The Coronation
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ The Duchess Dowager Of Wurtemberg, Returning From Berlin Favors Us With Another Visit
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 10. Friedrich Does His Moravian Expedition Which Proves A Mere Moravian Foray
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Iglau Is Got, But Not The Magazine At Iglau
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ The Saxons Think Iglau Enough; The French Go Home
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ Friedrich Submerges The Moravian Countries; But Cannot Brunn, Which Is The Indispensable Point
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ The Saxons Have No Cannon For Brunn; High Resolution Taken At Vienn: Friedrich Quits The Moravian Enterprise
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 11. Nussler In Neisse, With The Old Dessauer And Walrave
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - __ How Nussler Happened To Be In Neisse, May, 1742
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 12. Prince Karl Does Come On
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 13. Battle Of Chotusitz
   Book 13. First Silesian War, Leaving The General European One Ablaze All Round, Gets Ended. May, 1741-July, 1742 - Chapter 14. Peace Of Breslau
Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - Chapter 1. Friedrich Resumes His Peaceable Pursuits
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Settles The Silesian Boundaries, The Silesian Arrangements; With Manifest Profit To Silesia And Himself
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Opening Of The Opera-House At Berlin
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Friedrich Takes The Waters At Aachen, Where Voltaire Comes To See Him
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - Chapter 2. Austrian Affairs Are On The Mounting Hand
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __War-phenomena In The Western Parts: King George Tries, A Second Time, To Draw His Sword; Tugs At It Violently, For Seven Months (February-October, 1742)
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ How Duc D'harcourt, Advancing To Reinforce The Oriflamme, Had To Split Himself In Two; And Become An "Army Of Bavaria," To Little Effect
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ How Belleisle, Returning From Dresden Without Co-Operation Found The Attack Had Been Done. Prag Expecting Siege
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Concerning The Italian War Which Simultaneously Went On, All Along
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Scene, Roads Of Cadiz, October, 1741: By What Astonishing Artifice This Italian War Did, At Length, Get Begun
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Other Scene, Bay Of Naples, 19th-20th August, 1742: King Of Two Sicilies (Baby Carlos That Was), Having Been Assisting Mamma, Is Obliged To Become Neutral In The Italian War
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ The Siege Of Prag Contimes. A Grand Sally There
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Maillebois Marches, With An "Army Of Redemption", To Relieve Prag; Joined By The Comte De Saxe; Above 50000 Strong
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Prince Karl And The Grand-Duke, Hearing Of Maillebois, Go To Meet Him (September 14th); And The Siege Of Prag Is Raised
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Maillebois Army Of Redemption Cannot Redeem At All;--Has To Stagger Southward Again; And Becomes An "Army Of Bavaria," Under Broglio
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Voltaire Has Been On Visit At Aachen, In The Interim,--His Third Visit To King Friedrich
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Three Letters Of Voltaire, Dated Brussels, 10th Sept. 1742
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - Chapter 3. Carnival Phenomena In War-Time
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Retreat From Prag; Army Of The Oriflamme, Bohemian Section Bohemian Section Of It, Makes Exit
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ A Glance At Vienna, And Then At Berlin
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Voltaire, At Paris, Is Made Immortal By A Kiss
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - Chapter 4. Austrian Affairs Mount To A Dangerous Height
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Britannic Majesty, With Sword Actually Drawn, Has Marched Meanwhile To The Frankfurt Countries, As "Pragmatic Army;" Ready For Battle And Treaty Alike
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Friedrich Has Objections To Pragmatic Army. Of Friedrich's Many Endeavors To Quench This War, By "Union Of Independent German Princes"
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - Chapter 5. Britannic Majesty Fights His Battle Of Dettingen; And Becomes Supreme Jove Of Germany, In A Manner
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Battle Of Dettingen
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Britannic Majesty Holds His Conferences Of Hanau
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Hungarian Majesty Answers, In The Diet, That French Declaration, "Make Peace, Good People; I Wish To Be Out Of It!"--In An Ominous Manner
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Britannic Majesty Goes Home
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - Chapter 6. Voltaire Visits Friedrich For The Fourth Time
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Friedrich Visits Baireuth: On A Particular Errand;--Voltaire Attending, And Privately Reporting
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - Chapter 7. Friedrich Makes Treaty With France; And Silently Gets Ready
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - Chapter 8. Perfect Peace At Berlin, War All Round
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ The Succession In Russia, And Also In Sweden, Shall Not Be Hostile To Us: Two Royal Marriages, A Russian And A Swedish, Are Accomplished At Berlin, With Such View
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Glance At The Belligerent Powers; Britannic Majesty Narrowly Misses An Invasion That Might Have Been Dangerous
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ The Young Duke Of Wurtemberg Gets A Valedictory Advice; And Pollnitz A Ditto Testimonial (February 6th; April 1st, 1744)
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Two Conquests For Prussia, A Gaseous And A Solid: Conquest First, Barberina The Dancer
   Book 14. The Surrounding European War Does Not End. August, 1742-July, 1744 - __ Conquest Second Is Ost-Friesland, Of A Solid Nature