Voltaire to Frederick - 1742 May 15
[EE Letter ID: D2605[1]]
To the King of Prussia When you had a father[3], and a master in that father,
You were a philosopher, and lived by your laws.
Today ranked among kings
And more worthy of this rank than any of them,
You nevertheless serve twenty masters at the same time
These masters are tyrants; the first is glory,
A tyrant whose chains you love,
and who places at the end of our verses,
As in your great achievements, Brilliant Victory[4].
Politics by its side,
Less dazzling, just as strong,
contemplating, writing or breaking a Treaty,
Measures your steps, led on by this glory.
Interest, Loyalty,
sometimes together, and too often at odds;
Dangerous friends, secret opponents,
every day plans and new dangers;
To listen at all times, to see everything, and to do the right thing,
Paying some with hope,
Others with reasons, a few with good words,
To have one’s laws cherished and one’s power feared:
What troubles! What burdens!
To reign is not a destiny as sweet as one may think:
What a price a hero must pay!
It costs you nothing, sire, this is all natural to you. You are accomplishing great, wise actions with the same ease that you write music and poetry and that you write such letters that would give a fine mind in France a distinguished place among the fine minds all jealous of him.
I hold out some hope that Your Majesty will strengthen Europe just as you have weakened it, and my fellow men of wit will bless you after having admired you.
My hope is not only based on the project that the abbot of Saint-Pierre[5] has sent to your majesty. I presume that you see the things that the misunderstood peacemaker wants to make out, and that the philosopher king knows perfectly well what the philosopher who is not king tries in vain to guess.
[1] Editorial Note: Only the first two pages are present in this manuscript (see EE “Textual Note a”).The rest of this letter is reproduced in EE (D2605) from the 1745 edition of Voltaire’s works: Œuvres de M. de Voltaire. Amsterdam & Leipzig: Arckstée et Merkus, 1745; vol. 6, p. 384–387. Print.
[2] See Note on Paris
[4] This is probably a term of flattery used by Voltaire to refer to Frederick’s victory in battle. The Battle of Mollwitz, fought by Prussia and Austria on 10 April 1741, was Frederick’s first battle, as new king of Prussia. This battle was part of the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748).
[5] Saint-Pierre, Charles-Irénée Castel, abbé de, (February 1658 – April 29, 1743). French author whose novel ideas inspired Rousseau and Kant. In a letter dated 12 April 1742 (D2602), Frederick told Voltaire that the Abbé de Saint-Pierre had sent him a work concerned with establishing peace in Europe forever. It is likely that Frederick was talking about the Abbé de Saint-Pierre’s Projet pour rendre la paix perpétuelle en Europe (Project for Perpetual Peace in Europe, 1713), and that this is the work to which Voltaire here alludes as well. See Note.
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