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the life and adventures of baron trenck-2-第29章

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fit:  a certain passage from agitation to peace; from motion to rest。  As for my children; they; jocund in youth; delight in present existence。  When I have fulfilled the duties of a father; to live or die will then be as I shall please。

Thou; O God! my righteous Judge; didst ordain that I should be an example of suffering to the world; Thou madest me what I am; gavest me these strong passions; these quick nerves; this thrilling of the blood; when I behold injustice。  Strong was my mind; that deeply it might meditate on deep subjects; strong my memory; that these meditations I might retain; strong my body; that proudly it might support all it has pleased Thee to inflict。

Should I continue to exist; should identity go with me; and should I know what I was then; when I was called Trenck; when that combination of particles which Nature commanded should compose this body shall be decomposed; scattered; or in other bodies united; when I have no muscles to act; no brain to think; no retina on which pictures can mechanically be painted; my eyes wasted; and no tongue remaining to pronounce the Creator's name; should I still behold a Creatorthen; oh then; will my spirit mount; and indubitably associate with spirits of the just who expectant wait for their golden harps and glorious crowns from the Most High God。  For human weaknesses; human failings; arising from our nature; springing from our temperament; which the Creator has ordained; shall be even thus; and not otherwise; for these have I suffered enough on earth。

Such is my confession of faith; in this have I lived; in this will I die。  The duties of a man and of a Christian I have fulfilled; nay; often have exceeded; often have been too benevolent; too generous; perhaps also too proud; too vain。  I could not bend; although liable to be broken。

That I have not served the world; in acts and employments where best I might; is perhaps my own fault:  the fault of my manner; which is now too radical to be corrected in this; my sixtieth year。  Yes; I acknowledge my failing; acknowledge it unblushingly; nay; glory in the pride of a noble nature。

For myself; I ask nothing of those who have read my history; to them do I commit my wife and children。  My eldest son is a lieutenant in the Tuscan regiment of cavalry; under General Lasey; and does honour to his father's principles。  The second serves his present Prussian Majesty; as ensign in the Posadowsky dragoons; with equal promise。 The third is still a child。  My daughters will make worthy men happy; for they have imbibed virtue and gentleness with their mother's milk。  Monarchs may hereafter remember what I have suffered; what I have lost; and what is due to my ashes。

Here do I declareI will seek no other revenge against my enemies than that of despising their evil deeds。  It is my wish; and shall be my endeavour; to forget the past; and having committed no offence; neither will I solicit monarchs for posts of honour; as I have ever lived a free man; a free man will I die。

I conclude this part of my history on the evening preceding my journey to Berlin。  God grant I may encounter no new afflictions; to be inserted in the remainder of this history。

This journey I prepared to undertake; but my ever…envious fate threw me on the bed of sickness; insomuch that small hope remained that I ever should again behold the country of my forefathers。  I seemed following the Great Frederic to the mansions of the dead; then should I never have concluded the history of my life; or obtained the victory by which I am now crowned。

A variety of obstacles being overcome; I found it necessary to make a journey into Hungary; which was one of the most pleasant of my whole life。

I have no words to express my ardent wishes for the welfare of a nation where I met with so many proofs of friendship。  Wherever I appeared I was welcomed with that love and enthusiasm which only await the fathers of their country。  The valour of my cousin Trenck; who died ingloriously in the Spielberg; the loss of my great Hungarian estates; the fame of my writings; and the cruelty of my sufferings; had gone before me。  The officers of the army; the nobles of the land; alike testified the warmth of their esteem。

Such is the reward of the upright; such too are the proofs that this nation knows the just value of fortitude and virtue。  Have I not reason to publish my gratitude; and to recommend my children to those who; when I am no more; shall dare uprightly to determine concerning the rights which have unjustly been snatched from me in Hungary?

Not a man in Hungary but will proclaim I have been unjustly dealt by; yet I have good reason to suspect I never shall find redress。 Sentence had been already given; judges; more honest; cannot; without difficulty; reverse old decrees; and the present possessors of my estates are too powerful; too intimate with the governors of the earth; for me to hope I shall hereafter be more happy。  God knows my heart; I wish the present possessors may render services to the state equal to those rendered by the family of the Trencks。

There is little probability I shall ever behold my noble friends in Hungary more。  Here I bid them adieu; promising them to pass the remainder of any life so as still to merit the approbation of a people with whose ashes I would most willingly have mingled my own。 May the God of heaven preserve every Hungarian from a fate similar to mine!

The Croats have ever been reckoned uncultivated; yet; among this uncultivated people I found more subscribers to my writings than among all the learned men of Vienna; and in Hungary; more than in all the Austrian dominions。

The Hungarians; the unlettered Croats; seek information。  The people of Vienna ask their confessors' permission to read instructive books。  Various subscribers; having read the first volume of my work; brought it back; and re…demanded their money; because some monk had told them it was a book dangerous to be read。  The judges of their courts have re…sold them to the booksellers for a few pence or given them to those who had the care of their consciences to burn。

In Vienna alone was my life described as a romance; in Hungary I found the compassion of men; their friendship; and effectual aid。 Had my book been the production of an Englishman; good wishes would not have been his only reward。

We German writers have interested critics to encounter if we would unmask injustice; and if a book finds a rapid sale; dishonest printers issue spurious editions; defrauding the author of his labours。

The encouragement of the learned produces able teachers; and from their seminaries men of genius occasionally come forth。  The world is inundated with books and pamphlets; the undiscerning reader knows not which to select; the more intelligent are disgusted; or do not read at all; and thus a work of merit becomes as little profitable to the author as to the state。

I left Vienna on the 5th of January; and came to Prague。  Here I found nearly the same reception as in Hungary; my writings were read。  Citizens; noblemen; and ladies treated me with like favour。 May the monarch know how to value men of generous feelings and enlarged understandings!

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