登陆注册
25622500001083

第1083章

ejaculates Maguire; 'terms irrationally high!' Captain Kollas 'knows nothing of what is IN the Paper; and is charged only to bring a Written Answer from Excellenz.' Excellenz, before writing, 'will have to consult with Durchlaucht;' can, however, as if confidentially and from feelings of friendship, can assure you, Sir, on my honor, That the Garrison will be delivered to the Croats, and every man of it put to the sword. 'The Garrison will expect that (WIRD DAS ERWARTEN),' said Kollas, statue-like;and withdrew, with the proper bow. [Tempelhof, iii. 211.]

Something interesting to us in these Military diplomatic passages, with their square-elbowed fashions, and politeness stiff as iron!

"Not till three of the afternoon does the Written Answer reach Schmettau: 'Such Terms never could be accepted.'--'Good,' answers Schmettau: 'To our last breath no others will be offered.'

And commences cannonading again, not very violently, but with the order, 'Go on, then, night and day!'

"About 10 at night, General Guasco, a truculent kind of man, whom Ihave met with up and down, but not admitted to memory, beats Appeal on the Bridge: 'Inform the Commandant that there will now straightway 13 batteries of cannon, and 5 ditto of howitzers open on him, unless he bethinks himself!' Which dreadful message is taken to Schmettau. 'Wish the gentleman good-evening,' orders Schmettau; 'and say we will answer with 100 guns.' Upon which Guasco vanishes;--but returns in not many minutes, milder in tone;requests 'a sight of that Written Paper of Terms again.' 'There it still is,' answers Schmettau, 'not altered, nor ever shall be.'

And there is Armistice again:--and the Siege, as turns out, has fired its last shot; and is painfully expiring in paroxysms of negotiation, which continue a good many hours. Schmettau strives to understand clearly that his terms (of the King's own suggesting, as Schmettau flatters himself) are accepted: nor does Durchlaucht take upon him to refuse in any point; but he is strangely slow to sign, still hoping to mend matters.

"Much hithering and thithering there was, till 4 next morning (Durchlaucht has important news from Torgau, at that moment);till 11 next day; till 4 in the afternoon and later,--Guasco and others coming with message after message, hasty and conciliatory:

(Durchlaucht at such a distance, his signature not yet come; but be patient; all is right, upon my honor!' Very great hurry evident on the part of Guasco and Company; but, nothing suspected by Schmettau. Till, dusk or darkness threatening now to supervene, Maguire and Schmettau with respective suites have a Conference on the Bridge,--'rain falling very heavy.' Durchlaucht's signature, Maguire is astonished to say, has not yet come; hut Maguire pledges his honor 'that all shall be kept without chicane;' and adds 'what to some of us seemed not superfluous afterwards), 'I am incapable of acting falsely or with chicane.' In fact, till 9 in the evening there was no signature by Durchlaucht; but about 6, on such pledge by Maguire of his hand and his honor, the Siege entirely gave up the ghost; and Dresden belonged to Austria. Tuesday Evening, 4th September, 1759; Sun just setting, could anybody see him for the rain.

"Schmettau had been over-hasty; what need had Schmettau of haste?

The terms had not yet got signature, perfection of settlement on every point; nor were they at all well kept, when they did!

Considerable flurry, temporary blindness, needless hurry, and neglect of symptoms and precautions, must be imputed to poor Schmettau; whose troubles began from this moment, and went on increasing. The Austrians are already besetting Elbe Bridge, rooting up the herring-bone balks; and approaching our Block-house,--sooner than was expected. But that is nothing. On opening the Pirna Gate to share it with the Austrians, Friedrich's Spy (sooner had not been possible to the man) was waiting; who handed Schmettau that Second Letter of Friedrich's, 'Courage; there is relief on the road!' Poor Schmettau!"What Captain Kollas and the Prussian Garrison thought of all this, THEY were perhaps shy of saying, and we at such distance are not informed,--except by one symptom: that, of Colonel Hoffman, Schmettau's Second, whose indignation does become tragically evident. Hoffman, a rugged Prussian veteran, is indignant at the Capitulation itself; doubly and trebly indignant to find the Austrians on Elbe Bridge, busy raising our Balks and Battery:

"How is this Sir?" inquires he of Captain Sydow, who is on guard at the Prussian end; "How dared you make this change, without acquainting the Second in Command? Order out your men, and come along with me to clear the Bridge again!" Sydow hesitates, haggles;indignant Hoffman, growing loud as thunder, pulls out a pistol, fatal-looking to disobedient Sydow; who calls to his men, or whose men spring out uncalled; and shoot Hoffman down,--send two balls through him, so that he died at 8 that night. With noise enough, then and afterwards. Was drunk, said Schmettau's people.

Friedrich answered, on report of it: "I think as Hoffman did. If he was 'drunk,' it is pity the Governor and all the Garrison had not been so, to have come to the same judgment, as he." [P.S. in Autograph of Letter to Schmettau, "Waldau, 11th September, 1759"(Preuss, ii.; <italic> Urkundenbuch, <end italic> p. 45).]

Friedrich's unbearable feelings, of grief and indignation, in regard to all this Dresden matter,--which are not expressed except coldly in business form,--can be fancied by all readers. One of the most tragical bits of ill-luck that ever befell him. A very sore stroke, in his present condition; a signal loss and affront.

And most of all, unbearable to think how narrowly it has missed being a signal triumph;--missed actually by a single hair's-breadth, which is as good as by a mile, or by a thousand miles!

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 钻石豪门:腹黑男配求逆袭

    钻石豪门:腹黑男配求逆袭

    四年前,他设计陷害她与挚爱的男人反目成仇,酿成了一场惊天的车祸;四年后,死去之人华丽归来,他却无意中失手害死她腹中的孩子,逼得她孤立无援的爬上了银河大厦的顶楼。孑然单薄的身影立在大厦顶楼的边缘,风吹起她如丝般的长发,她转过身,眸光冷冽而绝望,“云起,你配说爱我吗?你根本不配……”在苏阡陌的世界里,他永远是个男配角。一场腹黑男配的逆袭之路,他走的有多艰难,只有自己知道。
  • 谢女凰谋

    谢女凰谋

    上辈子,为了后半生的安宁喜乐,谢清瑶挑了个怯懦没主见的夫君,结果却落得个玉石俱焚的下场。这辈子,她吸取了教训,决定挑个聪明能干的。但聪明能干的夫君,带来的麻烦却好像更多了!
  • 青少年最想知道的100个著名人物

    青少年最想知道的100个著名人物

    从佛祖在菩提树下人生的意义,到达尔文用毕生心血造就进化论,区别人猿;从呼唤知识的第一人培根,到现代哲学之父笛卡儿;从边走边唱的盲人诗人荷马,到倾倒东西方的爱国诗人泰戈尔……人类的精英们总是走在探索与追求的奋争前沿,他们是全人类的脊梁,是最顶级的精英人物。
  • 温血记

    温血记

    徐涛是原是一位碌碌无为的练武人,跑去看热闹被阵法练成了金身。为将自己变回普通人,徐涛害得很多人历尽磨难。偶然发现金身是练武人所能达到的至高境界,徐涛初衷未改!夜如纸,光如墨,九霄晴云不过亦是地上寒霜。寒霜有千里万里之巨,尚且可以凌虚扶摇,吾当以真心容身,斯斯游度千秋。此书有文豪诗词、武者仙侠、旷世恋曲、幽默谐句,更有悠悠情愫和深省字句,期待斧正。(温血人群74563248:欢迎加入讨论!)
  • 唯识论(一名破色心论)

    唯识论(一名破色心论)

    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。
  • 乘风潇潇情

    乘风潇潇情

    一段情引导一个惊喜的故事。面对煞费苦心的诱引,柳成风开启了一段不一样的历程。狡诈与真实并存;虚与委蛇与真情共舞。侠之江湖与利之诱惑在激荡中拉开了一片片血雨腥风,可是他心中存留的还是那丝丝涟漪,值与不值,冷暖自知。
  • 倾国妖后:蛇王囚后

    倾国妖后:蛇王囚后

    她,一心寻死,无心穿越,却惹上蛇界权势最高的蛇王。他,一双似笑非笑的桃花眼,慵懒邪魅,却风华绝代。当邪肆的他,杠上清冷的她,将会上演一场怎样的追逐?一心想着逃离的她,却不曾想惹怒了他,从此,他的后宫犹如摆设,蛇王开始囚后!落花成冢,流年飞逝,回首千年,看花开败落,只是泪已成殇!
  • 欢喜为邻:公爵小姐要当家

    欢喜为邻:公爵小姐要当家

    塔利亚身为堂堂一公爵,竟然没有一点领土,一穷二白,而隔壁格劳克斯只是一个伯爵,却拥有万顷土地,三万子民。这不科学!满十六岁那天,塔利亚公爵决定离开岌岌可危的城堡,前往更远的地方,征服新的土地,振兴格里斯家族!可是隔壁那个家伙好想和她有仇,又跟来了......
  • 曾国藩传

    曾国藩传

    曾国藩身为晚清重臣,他顺应时代需求,创办湘军,开创了书生治军的先河;他在清朝官场风风雨雨几十年,始终屹立不倒;他专修朱子理学,成为清朝最后一个理学大师;他提倡立志高远;做人唯诚信二字而不立;他始终认为,凡事要亲身入局;言行要谨慎;在日常的处世中,更要藏匿自己的锋芒,避免过于暴露自己。他的这些观点、做法,让他在宦海沉浮的世界里游刃有余,终得善终。本书虽然是一本传记,却也突出了曾国藩的为官之道和治军思想,从这两大方面辅助那个时代的人和事,揭开曾国藩成为晚清名臣乃至中国封建史上最具影响力之一的政治家的根本原因。
  • 天缔奇缘

    天缔奇缘

    上古伊始,自人类降临世间,大地之上,男耕女织,其乐融融,川流河溪之畔,世间百态美如画卷。历史的卷轴徐徐展开,桃源盛景渐渐消逝,人界变化,本性迷失,值此之际,唯有英雄可以挽救末世的浩劫。英雄,似剑客,仗剑江湖;似游侠,逍遥自若;似酒徒,把酒当歌;似愚者,大隐于市,却有一颗赤诚之心永不褪色。英雄,有洞彻天地之志,有经天纬地之能,不受三界凡俗之约,以真性情点化世间之伦常,天缔奇缘将为您展开一段英雄出世,红颜相随的传奇故事。