Part 23 (1/2)

”And you believe you can obtain all that here in Prussia?”

”I hope so,” said Gentz, hesitatingly.

”You have addressed a memorial to the young king; you have urged him to give to his subjects prosperity, happiness, honor, and freedom of the press. How long is it since you sent that memorial to him?”

”Four weeks to-day.”

”Four weeks, and they have not yet rewarded you for your glorious memorial, although the whole Prussian nation hailed it with the most rapturous applause? They have not yet thought of appointing you to a position worthy of your talents? You have not yet been invited to court?”

”Yes, I was invited to court. The queen wished to become acquainted with me. Gualtieri presented me to her, and her majesty said very many kind and flattering things to me.” [Footnote: Varnhagen, ”Gallerie von Bildnissen,” etc., vol. ii.]

”Words, empty words, my friend! Their actions are more eloquent. The king has not sent for you, the king has not thanked you. The king does not want your advice, and as if to show to yourself, and to all those who have received your letter so enthusiastically, that he intends to pursue his own path and not to listen to such advice, the king, within the last few days, has addressed a decree to the criminal court, peremptorily ordering the prosecuting attorneys to proceed rigorously against the publishers of writings not submitted to or rejected by the censors.” [Footnote: F. Foerster, ”Modern History of Prussia,” vol. i., p. 498.]

”That cannot be true--that is impossible!” exclaimed Gentz, starting up.

”I pardon your impetuosity in consideration of your just indignation,”

said Marianne, smiling. ”That I told you the truth, however, you will see in to-morrow's Gazette, which will contain the royal decree I alluded to. Oh, you know very well the Austrian amba.s.sador has good friends everywhere, who furnish him the latest news, and keep him informed of all such things. You need not hope, therefore, that the young king will make any use of your talents or grant you any favors.

Your splendid memorial has offended him instead of winning him; he thought it was altogether too bold. Frederick William the Third is not partial to bold, eccentric acts; he instinctively shrinks back from all violent reforms. The present King of Prussia will not meddle with the great affairs of the world; the King of Prussia wishes to remain neutral amidst the struggle of contending parties. Instead of thinking of war and politics, he devotes his princ.i.p.al attention to the church service and examination of the applicants for holy orders, and yet he is not even courageous enough formally to abolish Wollner's bigoted edict, and thus to make at least one decisive step forward. Believe me, lukewarmness and timidity will characterize every act of his administration. So you had better go to Austria.”

”And what shall I do in Austria?” asked Gentz, thoughtfully.

”What shall you do there?” exclaimed Marianne, pa.s.sionately. ”You shall serve the fatherland--you shall serve Germany, for Germany is in Austria just as well as in Prussia. Oh, believe me, my friend, only in Austria will you find men strong and bold enough to brave the intolerable despotism of the French. And the leading men there will welcome you most cordially; an appropriate sphere will be allotted to your genius, and the position to which you will be appointed will amply satisfy the aspirations of your ambition. I am officially authorized to make this offer to you, for Austria is well aware that, in the future, she stands in need of men of first-cla.s.s ability, and she therefore desires to secure your services, which she will reward in a princely manner.

Come, my friend, I shall set out to-day with the prince on a journey to Austria. Accompany us--become one of ours!”

”Ours! Are you, then, no longer a daughter of Prussia?”

”I have become a thorough and enthusiastic Austrian, for I wors.h.i.+p energy and determination, and these qualities I find only in Austria, in the distinguished man who is holding the helm of her s.h.i.+p of state, Baron Thugut. Come with us; Thugut is anxious to have you about his person; accompany us to him.”

”And what are you going to do in Vienna?” asked Gentz, evasively. ”Is it a mere pleasure-trip?”

”If another man should put that question to me, I should reply in the affirmative, but to you I am going to prove by my entire sincerity that I really believe you to be a devoted friend of mine. No, it is no pleasure-trip. I accompany the prince to Vienna because he wants to get there instructions from Baron Thugut and learn what is to be done at Rastadt.”

”Ah, at Rastadt--at the peace congress,” exclaimed Gentz. ”The emperor has requested the states of the empire to send plenipotentiaries to Rastadt to negotiate there with France a just and equitable peace.

Prussia has already sent there her plenipotentiaries, Count Goertz and Baron Dohm. Oh, I should have liked to accompany them and partic.i.p.ate in performing the glorious task to be accomplished there. That congress at Rastadt is the last hope of Germany; if it should fail, all prospects of a regeneration of the empire are gone. That congress will at last give to the nation all it needs: an efficient organization of the empire, a well-regulated administration of justice, protection of German manufactures against British arrogance, and last, but not least, freedom of the press, for which the Germans have been yearning for so many years.”

Marianne burst into a loud fit of laughter. ”Oh, you enthusiastic visionary!” she said, ”but let us speak softly, for even the walls must not hear what I am now going to tell you.”

She bent over the table, drawing nearer to Gentz, and fixing her large, flaming eyes upon him, she asked in a whisper, ”I suppose you love Germany? You would not like to see her devoured by France as Italy was devoured by her? You would not like either to see her go to decay and crumble to pieces from inherent weakness?”

”Oh, I love Germany!” said Gentz, enthusiastically. ”All my wishes, all my hopes belong to her. Would to G.o.d I could say some day, all my talents, my energy, my perseverance are devoted to my fatherland--to Germany!”

”Well, if you really desire to be useful to Germany,” whispered Marianne, ”hasten to Rastadt. If Germany is to be saved at all, it must be done at once. You know the stipulations of the treaty of Campo Formio, I suppose?”

”I only know what every one knows about them.”

”But you do not know the secret article. I will tell you all about it. Listen to me. The secret article accepted by the emperor reads as follows: 'The emperor pledges himself to withdraw his troops from Mentz, Ehrenbreitstein, Mannheim, Konigstein, and from the German empire in general, twenty days after the ratification of the peace, which has to take place in the course of two months.'” [Footnote: Schlosser's ”History of the Eighteenth Century,” vol. v., p. 43.]

”But he thereby delivers the empire to the tender mercies of the enemy,”