登陆注册
4705400000388

第388章

Prussia was again at peace; but the European war lasted till, in the year 1748, it was terminated by the treaty of Aix-la Chapelle. Of all the powers that had taken part in it, the only gainer was Frederic. Not only had he added to his patrimony the fine province of Silesia: he had, by his unprincipled dexterity, succeeded so well in alternately depressing the scale of Austria and that of France, that he was generally regarded as holding the balance of Europe, a high dignity for one who ranked lowest among kings, and whose great-grandfather had been no more than a Margrave. By the public, the King of Prussia was considered as a politician destitute alike of morality and decency, insatiably rapacious, and shamelessly false; nor was the public much in the wrong. He was at the same time, allowed to be a man of parts, a rising general, a shrewd negotiator and administrator. Those qualities wherein he surpassed all mankind, were as yet unknown to others or to himself; for they were qualities which shine out only on a dark ground. His career had hitherto, with little interruption, been prosperous; and it was only in adversity, in adversity which seemed without hope or resource, in adversity which would have overwhelmed even men celebrated for strength of mind, that his real greatness could be shown.

He had, from the commencement of his reign, applied himself to public business after a fashion unknown among kings. Lewis the Fourteenth, indeed, had been his own prime minister, and had exercised a general superintendence over all the departments of the Government; but this was not sufficient for Frederic. He was not content with being his own prime minister: he would be his own sole minister. Under him there was no room, not merely for a Richelieu or a Mazarin, but for a Colbert, a Louvois, or a Torcy.

A love of labour for its own sake, a restless and insatiable longing to dictate, to intermeddle, to make his power felt, a profound scorn and distrust of his fellow-creatures, made him unwilling to ask counsel, to confide important secrets, to delegate ample powers. The highest functionaries under his government were mere clerks, and were not so much trusted by him as valuable clerks are often trusted by the heads of departments.

He was his own treasurer, his own commander-in-chief, his own intendant of public works, his own minister for trade and justice, for home affairs and foreign affairs, his own master of the horse, steward, and chamberlain. Matters of which no chief of an office in any other government would ever hear, were, in this singular monarchy, decided by the King in person. If a traveller wished for a good place to see a review, he had to write to Frederic, and received next day, from a royal messenger, Frederic's answer signed by Frederic's own hand. This was an extravagant, a morbid activity. The public business would assuredly have been better done if each department had been put under a man of talents and integrity, and if the King had contented himself with a general control. In this manner the advantages which belong to unity of design, and the advantages which belong to the division of labour, would have been to a great extent combined. But such a system would not have suited the peculiar temper of Frederic. He could tolerate no will, no reason, in the State, save his own. He wished for no abler assistance than that of penmen who had just understanding enough to translate and transcribe, to make out his scrawls, and to put his concise Yes and No into an official form. Of the higher intellectual faculties, there is as much in a copying machine, or a lithographic press, as he required from a secretary of the cabinet.

His own exertions were such as were hardly to be expected from a human body or a human mind. At Potsdam, his ordinary residence, he rose at three in summer and four in winter. A page soon appeared, with a large basket full of all the letters which had arrived for the King by the last courier, despatches from ambassadors, reports from officers of revenue, plans of buildings, proposals for draining marshes, complaints from persons who thought themselves aggrieved, applications from persons who wanted titles, military commissions, and civil situations. He examined the seals with a keen eye; for he was never for a moment free from the suspicion that some fraud might be practised on him. Then he read the letters, divided them into several packets, and signified his pleasure, generally by a mark, often by two or three words, now and then by some cutting epigram. By eight he had generally finished this part of his task. The adjutant-general was then in attendance, and received instructions for the day as to all the military arrangements of the kingdom. Then the King went to review his guards, not as kings ordinarily review their guards, but with the minute attention and severity of an old drill-sergeant. In the meantime the four cabinet secretaries had been employed in answering the letters on which the King had that morning signified his will.

These unhappy men were forced to work all the year round like negro slaves in the time of the sugar-crop. They never had a holiday. They never knew what it was to dine. It was necessary that, before they stirred, they should finish the whole of their work. The King, always on his guard against treachery, took from the heap a handful of letters at random, and looked into them to see whether his instructions had been exactly followed. This was no bad security against foul play on the part of the secretaries; for if one of them were detected in a trick, he might think himself fortunate if he escaped with five years of imprisonment in a dungeon. Frederic then signed the replies, and all were sent off the same evening.

同类推荐
  • 释迦文尼佛金刚一乘修行仪轨法品

    释迦文尼佛金刚一乘修行仪轨法品

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 因明入正理论疏

    因明入正理论疏

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Paul and Virginia

    Paul and Virginia

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 姜氏秘史

    姜氏秘史

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 祭义

    祭义

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 随机抽奖的奥特曼世界

    随机抽奖的奥特曼世界

    主角睡觉的时候被诺亚塞了个奇怪的东西后穿越到奥特曼世界里的故事。群号:190511099,欢迎大家来提建议和吐槽
  • 销售攻心术:销售就是一场心理战

    销售攻心术:销售就是一场心理战

    销售就是一场心理战!销售就是心与心的较量!所以,在销售工作中要想提升你的销售业绩,就一定要懂得察言、观色、攻心,真正明白心理学对销售工作的重要性,从而成为销售行业中的佼佼者。他们可以做到的,你同样也行!学习和掌握他们的攻心秘笈,在平时多加训练,你一定也能成为下一位金牌销售员!
  • 唐诗宋词元曲大全集(超值金版)

    唐诗宋词元曲大全集(超值金版)

    本书所选篇目以普及性为要,挑选可接受性强、浅近明白之作入书,又广泛借鉴了其他的权威版本。宋词和元曲的选择则是对各个时期、各种题材的作品衡量斟酌,博采众家之长。元曲包括元散曲和元杂剧,元杂剧文学成就也很高,但我们尽量侧重选择活泼灵动、浅俗直白,并能够使欣赏者毫无间隔感的元散曲。
  • 青梅竹马:大少请再说爱我

    青梅竹马:大少请再说爱我

    结婚五年的丈夫,两人相敬如宾,本以为相安无事,细水长流一起走到老。可林皎却发现错了,当她抓着他一手出轨证据之时,不是要挟。而是公诸于众,让他鸡飞狗跳。她不介意他有女人,可若是拿着她的钱在外面包养女人,林皎决不答应。只是人算不如天算,当青梅竹马的恋人回国两年,对她处心积虑的诱惑,算尽心机给她布了一张网后。她却一步一步弃械投降,坠入那无言的温柔中。等她坠入后,才发现,温柔里面包裹着刺。爱情或许真如初见时美好。老公拿钱包养大明星,青梅竹马的爱情别有心机,林皎觉得,上辈子她到底是干了什么刨祖坟的事,如今这全世界最极品渣男都能够让她遇见,真是印证一句话,谁年轻时候没爱过几个人渣?
  • 神医娘子锦鲤运

    神医娘子锦鲤运

    前世,她隐藏卓越的医道天分,成就了妹妹的第一医女之名,却最终惨死在亲妹妹手里。重生归来,她再也不做任人摆布的傀儡。她的医术出神入化,活死人肉白骨。天下只有她不想救的人,没有她救不了的人!“女子无才便是德!”好!先把我教会你女儿的医术废了!“姐姐,让姐夫入赘吧!”不行!我的男人顶天立地,要活得恣意潇洒!暗杀、投毒、诬告,都留不住神医苏寒月与农家子明昊过男耕女织的小日子的脚步。本想做一个普普通通的农妇,身份却一变再变:世子妃!王妃!皇后!女皇!后面,还有一个更高的身份等着她!
  • 我的超能妹妹

    我的超能妹妹

    当超能妹妹突然出现在杨帆的生活中,杨帆终于成为了妹控。“我凭本事单的身,这是我的骄傲!”“高冷的男人最有魅力,女主什么的不存在的,我只要一个超能妹妹,一妹在手,天下我有!”超能妹妹的正确打开方式:卖萌是常态,坑人是模式,好不容易认真起来的时候,那就是她的悲伤与孤独。注:前方高能,请勿模仿,珍爱生命,远离小美!
  • 百变妖娆妃:笑若红颜

    百变妖娆妃:笑若红颜

    【原创作者社团『未央』出品】百变妖娆妃:笑若红颜简介:◆不是吧?她只不过在地摊上买了个1块钱的玉戒指,戴着玩玩而已,竟然就…穿越了时空?◆居然还成了丞相府的三小姐?还是庶出…哼!小女子报仇,一天都不能晚!等我闹个鸡飞狗跳吧...◆很不小心地打了一头色狼,却发现那色狼手中的戒指,正她在地摊上买的耶!是不是把那戒指骗回来,就可以回“家”啦?嘿嘿…她开始奸笑…却不知道就是这样一枚戒指,引来了她深埋的身世…
  • 世界的咸鱼观察者

    世界的咸鱼观察者

    我,心云帝国观察者当年神明上司告诉过我——无论是异域生物,智能机械,基因病毒,寄生文明,破灭世界还是混沌的暗影主宰,你们都归我管!一个被忽悠进组织的少年,终于成为了随时都能摸鱼的老油条
  • 圣光并不会保佑你

    圣光并不会保佑你

    从艾泽拉斯到外域,从德拉诺到阿古斯。一个充满了谎言的真实降临在这里。。。好吧,说点真实感想。说好的军团炸天呢?莫名其妙的就被换了家,搞得基尔加丹都死了还要每天定时定点上班,整天给大领主的小号们送福利。对了,还有伊利丹大人的洗白之路,也不看看每周找他讨薪的恶魔猎手都排了多长的队了。那么和尚做得,道爷自然也做得。萨格拉斯!吃我光暗交织邪能附体奥术加持死灵生命对冲拳啦!
  • 暗杀1905(第2部)

    暗杀1905(第2部)

    1905年,中国近代史上最惨烈的“暗杀时代”的序幕缓缓拉开:孙中山成立同盟会暗杀部;蔡元培组织光复会从事暗杀活动;陈独秀出任暗杀团幕后策划;甚至文人鲁迅也加入了暗杀团。无论他们信仰什么主义,怀揣什么目的,都企图用这种最古老的暴力方式掌控整个国家的未来。在那些被遮掩的历史中,一名真正决定他人生死的刺客也被时代洪流卷入多起政治暗杀中,成为各方势力制衡的关键:他孤身闯入紫禁城刺杀慈禧,也在东京出任过孙中山的保镖,还曾潜入大牢营救汪精卫,更与吴樾等反清志士结下深厚情谊。那个风雨飘摇的乱世中,他在无数个黑夜,用一次次暗杀行动改变了自己和这个国家未来的命运。