登陆注册
25622500000812

第812章

Berlin, of course, is loud on these matters. "The man whom the King delighted to honor, this is he, then!" King Friedrich has quitted Town, some while ago; returned to Potsdam "January 30th."Glad enough, I suppose, to be out of all this unmusical blowing of catcalls and indecent exposure. To Voltaire he has taken no notice;silently leaves Voltaire, in his nook of the Berlin Schloss, till the foul business get done. "VOLTAIRE FILOUTE LES JUIFS (picks Jew pockets)," writes he once to Wilhelmina: "will get out of it by some GAMBADE (summerset)," writes he another time; "but" ["31st December, 1750" (<italic> OEuvres de Frederic, <end italic> xxvii, i. 198); "3d February, 1751" (ib. 201).]-- And takes the matter with boundless contempt, doubtless with some vexation, but with the minimum of noise, as a Royal gentleman might. Jew Hirsch is busy preparing for his new desperate Action; getting together proof that the Jewels have been changed. In proof Jew Hirsch will be weak;but in pleading, in public pamphlets, and keeping a winged Apollo fluttering disastrously in such a mud-bath, Jew Hirsch will be strong. Voltaire, "out of magnanimous pity to him," consents next week to an Agreement. Agreement is signed on Thursday, 26th February, 1751:--Papers all to be returned, Jewels nearly all, except one or two, paid at Hirsch's own price. Whereby, on the whole, as Klein computes, Voltaire lost about 150 pounds;--elsewhere I have seen it computed at 187 pounds: not the least matter which. Old Hirsch has died in the interim ("Of broken heart!" blubbers the Son); day not known.

And, on these terms, Voltaire gets out of the business; glad to close the intolerable rumor, at some cost of money. For all tongues were wagging; and, in defect of a TIMES Newspaper, it appears, there had Pamphlets come out; printed Satires, bound or in broadside;--sapid, exhilarative, for a season, and interesting to the idle mind. Of which, TANTALE EN PROCES may still, for the sake of that PREFACE to it, be considered to have an obscure existence.

And such, reduced to its authenticities, was the Adventure of the Steuer-Notes. A very bad Adventure indeed; unspeakably the worst that Voltaire ever tried, who had such talent in the finance line.

On which poor History is really ashamed to have spent so much time;sorting it into clearness, in the disgust and sorrow of her soul.

But perhaps it needed to be done. Let us hope, at least, it may not now need to be done again. [Besides the KLEIN, the TANTALE ENPROCES and the Voltaire LETTERS cited above, there is (in <italic>

OEuvres de Voltaire, <end italic> lxiv. pp. 61-106, as SUPPLEMENTthere), written off-hand, in the very thick of the Hirsch Affair, a considerable set of NOTES TO D'ARGET, which might have been still more elucidative; but are, in their present dateless topsy-turvied condition; a very wonder of confusion to the studious reader!]

This is the FIRST ACT of Voltaire's Tragic-Farce at the Court of Berlin: readers may conceive to what a bleared frost-bitten condition it has reduced the first Favonian efflorescence there.

He considerably recovered in the SECOND ACT, such the indelible charm of the Voltaire genius to Friedrich. But it is well known, the First Act rules all the others; and here, accordingly, the Third Act failed not to prove tragical. Out of First Act into Second the following EXTRACTS OF CORRESPONDENCE will guide the reader, without commentary of ours.

Voltaire, left languishing at Berlin, has fallen sick, now that all is over;--no doubt, in part really sick, the unfortunate Phoenix-Peafowl, with such a tremor in his bones;--and would fain be near Friedrich and warmth again; fain persuade the outside world that all is sunshine with him. Voltaire's Letters to Friedrich, if he wrote any, in this Jew time, are lost; here are Friedrich's Answers to Two,--one lost, which had been written from Berlin AFTER the Jew affair was out of Court; and to another (not lost) after the Jew affair was done.

1. KING FRIEDRICH TO VOLTAIRE AT BERLIN.

"POTSDAM, 24th February, 1751.

"I was glad to receive you in my house; I esteemed your genius, your talents and acquirements; and I had reason to think that a man of your age, wearied with fencing against Authors, and exposing himself to the storm, came hither to take refuge as in a safe harbor.

"But, on arriving, you exacted of me, in a rather singular manner, Not to take Freron to write me news from Paris; and I had the weakness, or the complaisance, to grant you this, though it is not for you to decide what persons I shall take into my service.

D'Arnaud had faults towards you; a generous man would have pardoned them; a vindictive man hunts down those whom he takes to hating.

In a word, though to me D'Arnaud had done nothing, it was on your account that he had to go. You were with the Russian Minister, speaking of things you had no concern with [Russian Excellency Gross, off home lately, in sudden dudgeon, like an angry sky-rocket, nobody can guess why! [Adelung, vii. 133 (about 1st December, 1750).]--and it was thought I had given you Commission.""You have had the most villanous affair in the world with a Jew.

It has made a frightful scandal all over Town. And that Steuer-Schein business is so well known in Saxony, that they have made grievous complaints of it to me.

"For my own share, I have preserved peace in my house till your arrival: and I warn you, that if you have the passion of intriguing and caballing, you have applied to the wrong hand. I like peaceable composed people; who do not put into their conduct the violent passions of Tragedy. In case you can resolve to live like a Philosopher, I shall be glad to see you; but if you abandon yourself to all the violences of your passions, and get into quarrels with all the world, you will do me no good by coming hither, and you may as well stay in Berlin." [Preuss, xxii. 262(WANTING in the French Editions).]--F.

同类推荐
  • 金谷怀古

    金谷怀古

    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。
  • Heroes of the Telegraph

    Heroes of the Telegraph

    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。
  • 备倭记

    备倭记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说道神足无极变化经

    佛说道神足无极变化经

    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。
  • 驻春园小史

    驻春园小史

    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。
热门推荐
  • 蛋糕的100种做法

    蛋糕的100种做法

    《蛋糕的100种做法》介绍了如何制作巧克力蛋糕、慕斯蛋糕、冻品蛋糕等。
  • 巫霸九天

    巫霸九天

    巫,顶天立地!这是少年得到祖巫精血和巫族传承,从而崛起的故事!
  • 玄斗苍域

    玄斗苍域

    一块金玉自星空飞来,砸出了一个传奇!命运弄人,辍学少年穿越到了异界之中,穿越的地点居然是一家青楼名妓的床上,之后才知道自己成为了一个废材恶少!在这个斗气的世界里,他一世的情债该如何化解?他独特的体质肩负了怎样的使命?而他,将如何在这广袤无垠的苍域之中,畅游天地,终成一代枭雄!【喜欢斗气的朋友可以看看哦,同时求收藏,求票票,各种求!!!】
  • 十六夜膳房

    十六夜膳房

    本书巧妙借用民间耳熟能详的孟婆、忘川等元素,以生死之命题搭建美食于情感之间的桥梁,将现代都市人的诸般情感体悟作为丰富食材,烹制出各类让人或感动、或失落、或悲戚、或愉悦的人间料理。你我的失措、爱恨、遗憾、生死,都蕴于每一道食物之中,杂陈人生百味。它在试图还原一个热气腾腾的真相:只要心怀温柔,每个人都会活过很好的一生。
  • 科贝特给年轻人的忠告

    科贝特给年轻人的忠告

    《科贝特给年轻人的忠告:每句话都足以改变你一生》提出了有关教育、科学、贸易、农业、园艺、法律、管理以及宗教方面的忠告。但人们往往直到老了才会感悟到这些浓缩着人生智慧的忠告,可惜为时已晚。在《科贝特给年轻人的忠告:每句话都足以改变你一生》中,科贝特为年轻人奉上了这些宝贵的人生智慧精髓,助其领悟人生真谛!
  • 无良首席逗佳人

    无良首席逗佳人

    你是无良首席,我是绝世佳人,但当我出现的时候,你这个无良首席要乖乖听我这个绝世佳人的话,而不是逗着我玩!
  • 王者召唤师在学院

    王者召唤师在学院

    主角耀天意外获得召唤水晶,在校园大放光彩,让我们一起来看看吧!
  • 青梅竹马,去哪儿啊

    青梅竹马,去哪儿啊

    在这个世界上,大部分的青梅竹马,最后都绕到他人床前玩耍;大部分的两小无猜,都渐渐无法对彼此坦白。时光掩盖了太多秘密,埋藏了许多感情,直到曾经一起玩耍的他们终于再相聚——郝恬恬发现自己的生活开始乱套,为什么傅子衡的初恋女友叶雨笙会和张翊天在一起?为什么失联多年的吴霏突然出现在北京开始追自己?为什么一直把她当妹妹严厉管教的傅子衡会突然吻了她?青梅竹马的小伙伴,十年后的再度重逢,让当年埋葬的那些秘密开始一个接一个地浮出水面……
  • 兽魂空间之凤凌霄汉

    兽魂空间之凤凌霄汉

    追求刺激的云洛狂在一次意外中魂归天外,没想到却来到一个光怪陆离的世界,光荣的成为了一位傻子少爷的……丫鬟?!一个傻子加废材?!废物主仆二人组?!老天,你确定你不是在玩我?!想我堂堂的云氏企业大小姐,虽然父母双亡,懂好歹还有天价遗产,什么时候沦落到如此地步了。不过,念在你这傻子少爷人还不错的份上,姐就帮你一把。于是……凌虚空间开启……神秘的五面镜子,无所不知的虚幻的小兽,还有那空间封印的无尽兽魂,这一切,究竟是谁的安排……云谲波诡的西大陆,天才百出,宗门林立的东大陆,还有那传说中的上界,这世界到底何处是巅峰!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 顶级农民

    顶级农民

    王鸣,一个离家三年,带着神秘背景的青年,在一个漆黑如墨的夜晚忽然回来了。一时间,江北市因为他而变得不再平静。他凭借自己的聪明才智做生意开工厂建公司,发家致富奔小康,让父母过上衣食无忧的生活……