USC Digital Voltaire

Frederick the Great to Voltaire - 1742 April 12


In Tribau[1], this 12th April 1742

To M. de Voltaire                                                                                                                          
     E/
1.                                    It is here that we see all the saints in their wall niches,
2.                                    Perched in the woods, on bridges, on roads,
3.                                                      And their procession, mylords the beggars,
4.                                                      Languish on the snow;
5.                                                      While, blades of Croesus,
6.                                                      The powerful Counts of Bohemia ,
7.                                                      Unsparing of their income,
8.                                    Ruin their subjects, and devour each other,
9.                                                      To maintain their horses;
10.                                                   While our lords the bigots,
11.                                                   Much better informed of their machinations
12.                                                   Than of the poor and their miseries,
13.                                                   Manipulate their doctrine
14.                                                   For the elected and their equals,
15.                                                   And show off to fools.
16.                                 It is here that we see all your fickle French
17.                                                   Who languish in  inaction;
18.                                                   Until this moment they have only seen
19.                                                   The ridiculous homage
20.                                                   That Linz and Prague have made ​​,
21.                                                   And the abduction of their equipage[2].
22.               Your Frenchmen, who are really bored in Bohemia, are not
23.               the less amiable and smart. It is perhaps the only nation that
24.               can find, when facing misfortune, a source of jokes

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25.               and merriment. It is because of M. de Broglie’s[3] cries for help
26.               that I rushed to his aid and that Moravia will remain
27.               fallow until fall.
28.                                 You ask me for how much my gentlemen
29.               brothers have agreed to ruin the earth. To this
30.               I answer that I do not know, but it is now
31.               fashionable to make war , and one presumes
32.               that it will last a long time.
33.                                 The abbot of Saint-Pierre[4], who takes enough notice of me
34.               to honor me with his correspondence, has sent me a beautiful
35.               work on the means of restoring peace to Europe
36.               and retaining it forever. The thing is most practical ;
37.               all that it lacks for its success is Europe’s consent,
38.               and a few other similar trifles.
39.                                 How much am I indebted to you, my dear Voltaire,
40.               for the very great pleasure you promise me by allowing me
41.               to hope that I shall soon receive the History of Louis XIV![5]
42.                                 Accustomed as I am to communicate with you,
43.                                 I am jealous of your works;
44.                                 Dear Voltaire, give them to us.
45.                                 I want to learn them by rote;
46.                                 There is no salvation without you.
47.               You think perhaps that I have not enough worries
48.               here and that I must in addition be alarmed about your health. 
49.               You should take more care to preserve your health;

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50.               I entreat you to remember how interested I am in its preservation,
51.               and how much you should be attached to this world,
52.               of which you are the delight.
53.                         All parts of the netherworld
54.                         In Ovid appear beautiful,
55.                         I think that Elysium abounds
56.                         In all that is good without any deficiencies.
57.                         But think at least that quite quickly
58.                         One can board Charon’s black skiff,
59.                         That when once one takes up residence
60.                         In this undescribable place
61.                         One is there forever captive,
62.                         Therefore go there with lagging steps.
63.               Rest assured that the life I am leading has changed
64.               neither my character nor my way of thinking. 
65.               I love Remusberg[6] and its quiet days; but we must
66.               adapt ourselves to our station in life and make our duties
67.               a pleasure.
68.                         First may peace be made,
69.                         May I find in my solitude
70.                         Laughter, Pleasure and the Arts,
71.                         Our beautiful ladies with touching glances,
72.                         Maupertuis[7] with telescopes[8],
73.                         Hardworking Algarotti[9],
74.                         Our scholars with their readers:
75.                         But to what end will these festivities serve,

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76.                         Dear Voltaire, if you are not part of them?
77.               Being on the point of continuing my march,
78.               I have no time to say more. Adieu dear Voltaire;
79.               don’t forget the poor Ixion[10] who is bound like
80.               a miserable wretch to the great wheel of history
81.               and whose admiration of you is equal to his affection.
82.                                    Signed federic.


[Shelfmark: rare fF840 V 935 d]
 
 
[1] “Tribau” refers to the town of Moravská Třebová (East Bohemia, Czech Republic). It was the largest German linguistic enclave within Bohemia and Moravia. Until 1918 the town was part of the Austrian monarchy. See: Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names: ID: 1027394
 
[2] In the 18th century, the word “equipage” was used in English and is defined by Samuel Johnson as follows: “Equipage. [equipage, Fr.] 1. Furniture for a horseman. 2. Carriage of state; vehicle (…).” (Samuel Johnson.  Dictionary of the English Language. Dublin: Thomas Ewing, 1768, 3rd edition, vol. 2.) 
 
[3] Here, Frederick refers to Victor François de Broglie, 2nd duc de Broglie (19 October 1718 – 30 March 1804) who was a French aristocrat and Marshal of France. In the War of the Austrian Succession he took part in the storming of Prague in 1742, and was made a brigadier.  
 
[4] See Charles-Irénée Castel, abbé de Saint-Pierre (1648-1743).
 
[5] Frederick refers here to an early version of Le Siècle de Louis XIV.  For more information on this book, see Le Siècle de Louis XIV.
 
[6] By “Remusberg” (better known as Rheinsberg) Frederick refers here to his Rheinsberg Palace. For information about this palace, see Rheinsberg Palace.
 
[7] Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis (28 September 1698 – 27 July 1759) was a mathematician, biologist, and astronomer, born (in Saint Malo, France) in a family of provincial French nobility.  For more information see Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis.
 
[8] “Telescope. s.m. Nom générique de tous les instruments d’Astronomie (…) Et l’on nomme Lunette d’approche, ou simplement Lunette, tout télescope à tuyau qui n’est composé que de verre.” (Telescope The generic name of all instruments of astronomy (...) One uses the words Lunette d’approche, or simply Lunette for any tubular telescope which is composed only of glass. " Dictionnaire de l’Académie Françoise, Nismes: Gaudes, 1777, vol. 2, p. 584.  
 
[9] Francesco Algarotti (11 December 1712 - 3 May 1764) was a well-traveled Venician author and courtier, and one of the most widely published Italians.  For more information see Francesco Algarotti.
 
[10] In Greek mythology, Ixion, a Thessalian king and the ruler of the Lapiths (the most ancient tribe of Thessaly, in central Greece), was the first mortal to shed a kinsman's blood. For more information see Ixion.

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