登陆注册
6246000000271

第271章

It is but eighty miles to Strasburg, through the Kniebiss Pass, where the Murg, the Kinzig, and the intricate winding mountain streams and valleys start Rhine-ward: a labyrinthic rock-and-forest country, where pursuit or tracking were impossible. Near by Strasburg is Count Rothenburg's Chateau;good Rothenburg, long Minister in Berlin,--who saw those PROFOSSEN, or Scavenger-Executioners in French Costume long since, and was always good to me:--might not that be a method? Lieutenant Keith indeed is in Wesel, waiting only a signal. Suppose he went to the Hague, and took soundings there what welcome we should have? No, not till we have actually run; beware of ****** noise!--The poor Prince is in unutterable perplexity; can only answer Katte by that Messenger of his, to the effect (date and Letter burnt like the former): "Doubt is on every hand; doubt,--and yet CERTAINTY. Will write again before undertaking anything."And there is no question he did write again; more than once:

letters by the post, which his faithful Lieutenant Katte in Berlin received; one of which, however, stuck on the road; and this one, --by some industry of postmasters spirited into vigilance, as is likeliest, though others say by mere misaddressing, by "want of BERLIN on the address,"--fell into the hands of vigilant RITTMEISTER Katte at Erlangen. Who grew pale in reading it, and had to resolve on a painful thing! This was, I suppose, among the last Letters of the series; and must have been dated, as I guess, about the 29th of July, 1730; but they are now all burnt, huddled rapidly into annihilation, and one cannot say!--Certain it is that the Royal Travelling-Party left Anspach in a few days, to go, southward still, "by the OEttingen Country towards Augsburg." [Fassmann, p. 410.] Feuchtwang (WET Wang, not Durrwang or DRY Wang) is the first stage; here lives the Dowager Margravine of Anspach: here the Prince does some inconceivably small fault "lets a knife, which he is handing to or from the Serene Lady, fall," [Ranke, i. 304 ("from a Letter the Prince had written to Katte").] who, as she is weak, may suffer by the jingle; for which Friedrich Wilhelm bursts out on him like the Irish Rebellion,--to the silent despair of the poor Prince.

The poor Prince meditates desperate resolutions, but has to keep them strictly to himself.

Doubtless the Buddenbrock Trio, good old military gentlemen, would endeavor to speak comfort to him, when they were on the road again. Here is Nordlingen, your Highness, where Bernhard of Weimar, for his over-haste, got so beaten in the Thirty-Years War;would not wait till the Swedes were rightly gathered:

what general, if he have reinforcement at hand, would not wait for it? The waters now, you observe, run all into the Wornitz, into the Donau: it is a famed war-country this; known to me well in my young Eugene-Marlborough days!--"Hm, Ha, yes!" For the Prince is preoccupied with black cares; and thinks Blenheim and the Schellenberg businesses befell long since, and were perhaps ****** to what he has now on hand. That Feuchtwang scene, it would appear, has brought him to a resolution. There is a young page Keith of the party, Lieutenant Keith of Wesel's Brother; of this page Keith, who is often busy about horses, he cautiously makes question, What help may be in him? A willing mind traceable in this poor lad, but his terrors great.

To Donauworth from Anspach, through Feuchtwang and Nordlingen, is some seventy or eighty miles. At Donauworth one surely ought to lodge, and see the Schellenberg on the morrow; nay drive to the Field of Hochstadt (Blenheim, BLINDHEIM), which is but a few miles farther up the River? Buddenbrock was there, and Anhalt-Dessau:

for their very sake, were there nothing farther, one surely ought to go? Such was the probability, a visit to Blenheim field in passing. And surely, somewhere in those heart-rending masses of Historical Rubbish, I did at last find express evanescent mention of the fact,--but cannot now say where;--the exact record, or conceivable image of which, would have been a perceptible pleasure to us. Alas, in those dim dreary Books, all whirling dismal round one's soul, like vortices of dim Brandenburg sand, how should anything human be searched out and mentioned to us; and a thousand, things not-human be searched out, and eternally suppressed from us, for the sake of that? I please myself figuring young Friedrich looking at the vestiges of Marlborough, even in a preoccupied uncertain manner. Your Majesty too, this is the very "Schellenberg (or JINGLE-HILL)," this Hill we are now skirting, on highways, on swift wheels; which overhangs Donauworth, our resting-place this hot July evening. Yes, your Majesty, here was a feat of storming done,--pang, pang!--such a noise as never jingled on that Hill before: like Doomsday come; and a hero-head to rule the Doomsday, and turn it to heroic marching music. A very pretty feat of war, your Majesty! His Majesty well knows it; feat of his Marlborough's doing, famed everywhere for the twenty-six years last past; and will go to see the Schellenberg and its Lines.

The great Duke is dead four years; sank sadly, eclipsed under tears of dotage of his own, and under human stupidity of other men's! But Buddenbrock is still living, Anhalt-Dessau and others of us are still alive a little while!

Hochstadt itself--Blenheim, as the English call it, meaning BLINDHEIM, the other village on the Field--is but a short way up the River; well worth such a detour. By what way they drove to the field of honor and back from it, I do not know. But there, northward, towards the heights, is the little wood where Anhalt-Dessau stood at bay like a Molossian dog, of consummate military knowledge; and saved the fight in Eugene's quarter of it.

同类推荐
  • 天枢院都司须知行遣式

    天枢院都司须知行遣式

    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。
  • 瘫痿门

    瘫痿门

    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。
  • 近代名人轶事录

    近代名人轶事录

    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。
  • 东西均

    东西均

    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。
  • 琴赋

    琴赋

    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
  • 依米花开一朝夕

    依米花开一朝夕

    或许是上天不喜欢她,无父无母;或许上天也是可怜她的,赋予她天使的容貌与真挚的友情。郑峒忻,她的一生,要靠自己掌控。世事万千,她要凭借自己的方式闯出属于她的天空。但峒忻始终只是一个女孩,即使她不需要登上枝头变凤凰,但她也需要疼爱,在人海茫茫中,在变幻无常的这个世界,她到底能不能够找到那个“他”?“我不想让自己失望……”
  • 系统绑定,宿主太可怕

    系统绑定,宿主太可怕

    系统:宿主,为什么你总是说我傻?纪笙:你猜系统:宿主,为什么我感觉自己的存在不重要?纪笙:这很正常系统:宿主大大,你为什么那么凶残?纪笙:你再多说一句试试?系统:宿主大大,你为什么.......纪笙:闭嘴!再说话把你拆了!系统:........嘤嘤嘤,人家要去找主神,宿主竟然凶人家……某宿主:呵,真没用系统:当场去世
  • 九黎神功

    九黎神功

    流寇荼毒,异族侵吞,大明江山,分崩离析。姜旭,山西大同总兵姜瓖之子,恒山掌门入室弟子,一个叱咤风云的绝代武者,令南明众多豪杰高山仰止,令大清众多王公勋贵闻风丧胆。苍茫武道,任我纵横,大好山河,任我驰聘,天地星辰,任我傲笑,热血时空,任我逍遥。非种马、非后宫、非同人、非架空。热血、奇情。
  • 破天凌霜决

    破天凌霜决

    焦破天,小小杂役,一个偶然的机会,遇到了后山一个奇怪的人,情商不高智商也不高的他,有一种众人鲜有的毅力,他相信只要坚持,就能够成功。也正是因为这一点,让他获得怪人的欣赏,从此他的人生发生了变化……
  • 学校行政与工会的规范化管理

    学校行政与工会的规范化管理

    学校的规范化管理,是为了实现素质教育的培养目标,把学校管理活动中最基本的、相对稳定的管理内容,通过制定切实可行的制度和规范,采取强制执行、严格训练和有效的思想教育,使之成为学校师生员工自觉遵守的习惯,内化为师生员工的素质,进而形成学校的传统,以达到管理非管理,似有似无的境界,并形成一定的常规。
  • 格斗狂人

    格斗狂人

    四年之后,他从沙漠中的特训之中归来,曾经的格斗黑马,又踏上了他熟悉的土地。看着眼前的格斗赛场,还有那些狂热的女粉丝们,他毫不犹豫,又走上格斗的赛场之上。
  • 佛说宝藏神大明曼拏罗仪轨经

    佛说宝藏神大明曼拏罗仪轨经

    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。
  • 慕少的娇嫩爱妻

    慕少的娇嫩爱妻

    他对她一见钟情,她却被人所害,失忆,他痛苦,她却什么都不知道,一次机会,让她回复记忆,只是,她还能记起他吗?——
  • 开局一个小法师

    开局一个小法师

    开局一个小法师,升级全靠Q,一个W就是一个大窟窿~简介无力~
  • 青春依然,东走西顾

    青春依然,东走西顾

    茕茕白兔,东走西顾,衣不如新,人不如故。很多个温暖的小故事组成,一个故事,温暖一段青春。一段青春,温暖一段旅程。