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第62章

history of friedrich ii of prussia v 18-第62章

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owing to the dust; make way reverently to the divinity that hedges a King of this sort; mutely escort him to the best room (such the popular account); and for certain make off; they and theirs; towards the Bridge; which lies a little farther east; at the end of the Village。

Weistritz or Schweidnitz Water is a biggish muddy stream in that part; gushing and eddying; not voiceless; vexed by mills and their weirs。 Some firing there was from Croats in the lower houses of the Village; and they had a cannon at the farther bridge…end; but they were glad to get away; and vanish in the night; muddy Weistritz singing hoarse adieu to their cannon and them。 Prussian grenadiers plunged indignant into the houses; made short work of the musketries there。 In few minutes every Croat and Austrian was across; or silenced otherwise too well; Prussian cannon now going in the rear of them; and continuing to go;such had been the order; 〃till the powder you have is done。〃 Fire of musketry and occasional cannon lasts all night; from the Lissa or Prussian side of the River;〃lest they burn this Bridge; or attempt some mischief。〃 A thing far from their thoughts; in present circumstances。

The Prussian host at Saara; hearing these noises; took to its arms again; and marched after the King。 Thick darkness; silence; tramp; tramp:a Prussian grenadier broke out; with solemn tenor voice again; into Church…Music; a known Church…Hymn; of the homely TE…DEUM kind; in which five…and…twenty thousand other voices; and all the regimental bands; soon join:

 〃Nun dunket alle Gott           Mit Herzen; Mund und Handen;           Der grosse Dinge thut           An uns und allen Enden。〃  'Muller; p。 48。'

         〃Now thank God; one and all;           With heart; with voice; with hands…a;           Who wonders great hath done           To us and to all lands…a。〃

And thus they advance; melodious; far…sounding; through the hollow Night; once more in a highly remarkable manner。 A pious people; of right Teutsch stuff; tender though stout; and; except perhaps Oliver Cromwell's handful of Ironsides; probably the most perfect soldiers ever seen hitherto。 Arriving at the end of Lissa; and finding all safe as it should be there; they make their bivouac; their parallelogram of two lines; miles long across the fields; left wing resting on Lissa; right on Guckerwitz; andhaving; I should think; at least tobacco to depend on; with abundant stick… fires; and healthy joyful heartspass the night in a thankful; comfortable manner。

Leuthen was the most complete of all Friedrich's victories; two hours more of daylight; as Friedrich himself says; and it would have been the most decisive of this century。 ' OEuvres de Frederic;  iv。 167。' As it was; the ruin of this big Army; 80;000 against 30;000; '〃89;200 was the Austrian strength before the Battle〃 (deduct the Garrisons of Schweidnitz and Liegnitz): Preuss; ii。 109 (from the STAFF…OFFICERS)。' was as good as total; and a world of Austrian hopes suddenly collapsed; and all their Silesian Apparatus; making sure of Silesia beyond an IF; was tumbled into wreck;by this one stroke it had got; smiting the corner…stone of it as if with unexpected lightning。 On the morrow after Leuthen; Friedrich laid siege to Breslau; Karl had left a garrison of 17;000 in it; and a stout Captain; one Sprecher; determined on defence: such interests hung on Breslau; such immensities of stores were in it; had there been nothing else。 Friedrich; pushing with all his strength; in spite of bad weather and of Sprecher's industrious defence; got it in twelve days。 '7th…19th December: DIARIUM; &c。 of it in  Helden… Geschichte;  iv。 955…961。' Sprecher had posted placards on the gallows and up and down; terrifically proclaiming that any man convicted of mentioning surrender should be instantly hanged: but Friedrich's bombardment was strong; his assaults continual; and the ditches were threatening to freeze。 On the seventh day of the siege; a Laboratorium blew up; on the ninth; a Powder…Magazine; carrying a lump of the rampart away with it。 Sprecher had to capitulate: Prisoners of War; we 17;000; our cannons; ammunitions (most opulent; including what we took from Bevern lately); these; we and Breslau altogether; alas; it is all yours again。 Liegnitz Garrison; seeing no hope; consented to withdraw on leave。 '26th December:  Helden…Geschichte;  iv。 1016。' Schweidnitz cannot be besieged till Spring come: except Schweidnitz; Maria Theresa; the high Kaiserinn; has no foot of ground in Silesia; which she thought to be hers again。 Gone utterly; Patents and all; Schweidnitz alone waiting till spring。 To the lively joy of Silesia in general; to the thrice… lively sorrow and alarm of certain individuals; leading Catholic Ecclesiastics mainly; who had misread the signs of the times in late months! There is one Schaffgotsch; Archbishop or head…man of them; especially; who is now in a bad way。 Never was such royal favor; never such ingratitude; say the Books at wearisome length。 Schaffgotsch was a showy man of quality; nephew of the quondam Austrian Governor; whom Friedrich; across a good deal of Papal and other opposition; got pushed into the Catholic Primacy; and took some pains to make comfortable there;Order of the Black Eagle; guest at Potsdam; and the like;having a kind of fancy for the airy Schaffgotsch; as well as judging him suitable for this Silesian High…Priesthood; with his moderate ideas and quality ways;which I have heard were a little dissolute withal。 To the whole of which Schaffgotsch proved signally traitorous and ingrate; and had plucked off the Black Eagle (say the Books; nearly breathless over such a sacrilege) on some public occasion; prior to Leuthen; and trampled it under his feet; the unworthy fellow。 Schaffgotsch's pathetic Letter to Friedrich; in the new days posterior to Leuthen; and Friedrich's contemptuous inexorable answer; we could give; but do not: why should we? O King; I know your difficulties; and what epoch it is。 But; of a truth; your airy dissolute Schaffgotsch; as a grateful 〃Archbishop and Grand…Vicar;〃 is almost uglier to me than as a Traitor ungrateful for it; and shall go to the Devil in his own way! They would not have him in Austria; he was not well received at Rome; happily died before long。 'Preuss; ii。 113; 114; Kutzen; pp。 12; 155…160; for the real particculars。' Friedrich was not cruel to Schaffgotsch or the others; contemptuously mild rather; but he knew henceforth what to expect of them; and slightly changed this and that in his Silesian methods in consequence。

Of Prince Karl let us add a word。 On the morrow after Leuthen; Captain Prince de Ligne and old Papa D'Ahremberg could find little or no Army; they stept across to Grabschen; a village on the safe side of the Lohe; and there found Karl and Daun: 〃rather silent; both; one of them looking; 'Who would have thought it!' the other; 'Did n't I tell you?'〃and knowing nothing; they either; where the Army was。 Army was; in fact; as yet nowhere。 〃Croat fellows; in this Farmstead of ours;〃 says De Ligne; 〃had fallen to shooting pigeons。〃 The night had been unusually dark; the Austrian Army had squatted into woods; into office…houses; farm…villages; over a wide space of country; and only as the day rose; began to dribble in。 By count; they are still 50;000; but heart…broken; beaten as men seldom were。 〃What sound is that?〃 men asked yesterday at Brieg; forty miles off; and nobody could say; except that it was some huge Battle; fateful of Silesia and the world。 Breslau had it louder; Breslau was still more anxious。 〃What IS all that?〃 asked somebody (might be Deblin the Shoemaker; for anything I know) of an Austrian sentry there: 〃That? That is the Prussians giving us such a beating as we never had。〃 What news for Deblin the Shoemaker; if he is still above ground!

〃Prince Karl; gathering his distracted fragments; put 17;000 into Breslau by way of ample garrison there; and with the rest made off circuitously for Schweidnitz; thence for Landshut; and down the Mountains; home to Konigsgratz;self and Army in the most wrecked condition。 Chased by Ziethen; Ziethen (sticking always to the hocks of them;' as Frie

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