Frederick the Great to Voltaire (1766 September 1) - Leaf 2
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Frederick to Voltaire - 1766 September 1
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51.1271647,16.921825
1766 September 1
in Breslau, 1st September 1766
Letter from the king
of Prussia to
Mr de Voltaire
E/
1 You will have read, in my previous letter[1], that
2 peaceful philosophers should expect to be
3 well-received by me. I have neither seen nor spoken to the son
4 of the modern Hippocrates. I do not know what can have
5 happened to the plans of your philosophers; I wash
6 my hands of it. I am here in a province where
7 physics are preferred to metaphysics; people cultivate their fields,
8 they have rebuilt 8,000 houses, and they bring forth thousands of children
9 annually, to replace those which the frenzy of politics
10 and warfare have caused to perish.
11 I do not know whether, all things well considered, it is not
12 more advantageous to labor at population-building than
13 at the creation of bad arguments. The lords and the
14 people, caught up in their own restitution, live in
15 peace; and they are so consumed by their own work that
16 no one pays attention to the belief system of his neighbor.
17 The sparks of religious hatred, which often were revived
18 before the war[2], are extinct; and the spirit
19 of tolerance is gaining ground daily in the
20 ways of thinking of the people. Please believe that
21 idleness gives rise to most disputes.
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22 To extinguish them in France, you need but renew
23 the time of the defeats of Poitiers and Agincourt[3]; your
24 churchmen and your parliaments totally preoccupied
25 by their own affairs, would think only of themselves,
26 and would leave the public and the government alone.
27 This is a proposition to be made to these gentlemen;
28 However, I doubt that they will agree to it.
29 Your works are widespread here, and in the
30 hands of everyone. There is no region,
31 no people that has not heard your name, nor
32 is there any civilized society in which your fame does not shine brightly.
33 Enjoy your glory, and enjoy it for a long
34 time. Whereupon I pray God that he keep you in
35 his holy and august protection . /.
F
[1] The previous letter to which Frederick is referring was written on August 20, 1766 (EE: D13508). In this letter, he assures Voltaire that the philosophers are welcome at his estate: “Il ne dépend que des philosophes de partir & d'établir leur séjour dans le lieu de mes états qui leur conviendra le mieux” (“It is entirely up to the philosophers to leave and establish their residence in the location in my estates which suits them best”).
[2] In the time of the War of Austrian Succession and continuing on in the Seven Years War, the town of Breslau and the greater Silesia region were constantly fought over, making it a highly turbulent environment. For more information see Breslau.
[3] Both the battle of Poitiers (19 September 1356) and the battle of Agincourt (25 October 1415) were devastating defeats for the French against the English during the Hundred Years’ War. Between these two battles alone, almost 9,000 French soldiers were killed. (See: The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide, Helicon, 2010). -
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Frederick to Voltaire - 1766 September 1 - Transcription
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À Breslau 1er 7bre 1766[1].
Lettre du roi
de Prusse à
Mr. de Voltaire.
E/
1. Vous aurez vu par ma Lettre précédente que
2. des Philosophes paisibles doivent s'attendre d'être
3. bien reçus chez moi ; je n'ai ni vu, ni parlé au fils
4. de l'Hypocrate moderne. Je ne sais ce qui peut être
5. transpiré du dessein de vos Philosophes, je m'en lave
6. les mains ; je suis ici dans une province où l'on prèfère
7. la Physique à la Métaphysique; on cultive les champs,
8. on a rebâti 8000 maisons, et l'on fait des milliers d'enfans
9. par an, pour remplacer ceux qu'une fureur politique
10. et guerrière ont fait périr.
11. Je ne sçais si, tout bien considéré, il n'est pas
12. plus avantageux de travailler à la population qu'à
13. faire de mauvais argumens. Les seigneurs et le
14. Peuple occupés de leur rétablissement vivent en
15. paix, et ils sont si plains de leur ouvrage, que
16. personne ne fait attention au culte de son voisin.
17. Les étincelles de haine de religion qui se ranimoient
18. souvent avant la guerre sont éteintes, et l'esprit
19. de tolérance gagne journellement dans la facon
20. de penser générale des habitans. Croyez que le
21. désoeuvrement donne lieu à la plupart des disputes ;
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22. Pour les éteindre en france, il ne faudroit que renouvéler
23. les tems des defaites, desPoitiers et d'Azincour; vos
24. Ecclésiastiques et vos Parlemens fortement occupés
25. de leurs propres affaires ne penseroient qu'à eux
26. et laisseroient le Public et le Gouvernement tranquille ;
27. c'est une proposition à faire à ces Messieurs, Je
28. doute toutefois qu'ils l'approuvent.
29. Vos ouvrages sont répandus ici et entre les
30. mains de tout le monde. Il n'y a point de climat,
31. point de peuple où votre nom ne perce, point
32. de société policée où votre réputation ne brille.
33. Jouissez de votre gloire, et jouissez-en long
34. temps, sur ce je prie Dieu qu'il vous ait en
35. sa sainte et digne garde./.
Fr.
[Shelfmark: Rare fF840 V935 d][1] [1] This manuscript (Hoose) is the second of two manuscripts identified in both EE and OCV (Letter ID: D13530). It is described as a “copy of original document: contemporary transcription.”
In EE’s “Manuscript Instances”, the first manuscript is described as a “Prussian Secret State Archives/ Preussisches Geheimes Staatsarchiv, Berlin, Berlin (State), Germany./ Shelfmark: [No shelfmark recorded] / Foliation: [folio/Feuillet unrecorded] / Description: Original.
For corresponding print instances available in our USC collection, see: Kehl: vol. 65, pp. 345-346.