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of it be burnt。
Keith and the baggage once safe in Leutomischl (July 8th); all goes in deliberate long column; Friedrich ahead to open the passages。 July 14th; after five more marches; Friedrioh bursts up Konigsgratz; scattering any opposition there is; and sits down there; in a position considered; he knows well how inexpugnable; to live on the Country; and survey events。 The 4;000 baggage…wagons came in about entire。 Fouquet had the first division of them; and a secondary charge of the whole; an extremely strict; almost pedantic man; and of very fiery temper: 〃HE; D'OU VENEZ…VOUS?〃 asked he sharply of Retzow senior; who had broken through his order; one day; to avert great mischief: 〃How come you here; MON GENERAL?〃 〃By the Highway; your Excellency!〃 answered Retzow in a grave stiff tone。 'Retzow; i。 302。'
Keith himself takes the rear…guard; the most ticklish post of all; and manages it well; and with success; as his wont is。 Under sickness at the time; but with his usual vigilance; prudence; energy; qualities apt to be successful in War。 Some brushes of Croat fighting he had from Loudon; but they did not amount to anything。 It was at Holitz; within a march of Konigsgratz; that Loudon made his chief attempt; a vehement; well…intended thing; which looked well at one time。 But Keith heard the cannonading ahead; hurried up with new cavalry; new sagacity and fire of energy; dashed out horse…charges; seized hill…tops; of a vital nature; and quickly ended the affair。 A man fiery enough; and prompt with his stroke when wanted; though commonly so quiet。 〃Tell Monsieur;〃some General who seemed too stupid or too languid on this occasion;〃Tell Monsieur from me;〃 said Keith to his Aide… de…camp; 〃he may be a very pretty thing; but he is not a man (QU'IL PEUT ETRE UNE BONNE CHOSE; MAIS QU'IL N'EST PAS UN HOMME)!〃 'Varnhagen; Leben des &c。 Jakob von Keith; p。 227。' The excellent vernacular Keith;still a fine breadth of accent in him; one perceives! He is now past sixty; troubled with asthma; and I doubt not may be; occasionally; thinking it near time to end his campaigns。 And in fact; he is about ending them; sooner than he or anybody had expected。
Daun; picking his steps and positions; latterly with threefold precaution; got into Konigsgratz neighborhood; a week after Friedrich; and looked down with enigmatic wonder upon Friedrich's new settlement there。 Forage abundant all round; and the corn… harvest growing white;here; strange to say; has Friedrich got planted in the inside of those innumerable Daun redoubts; and 〃woods of abatis;〃 and might make a very pretty 〃Bohemian Campaign〃 of it; after all; were Daun the only adversary he had! Judges are of opinion; that Daun; with all his superiority of number; could not have disrooted Friedrich this season。 'Tempelhof; ii。 170…176; 185;who; unluckily; in soldier fashion; here as too often elsewhere; does not give us the Arithmetical Numbers of each; but counts by 〃Battalions〃 and 〃 Squadrons;〃 which; except in time of Peace; are a totally uncertain quantity:guess vaguely; 75;000 against 30;000。' Daun did try him by the Pandour methods; 〃1;000 Croats stealing in upon Konigsgratz at one in the morning;〃 and the like; but these availed nothing。 By the one effectual method; that of beating him in battle; Daun never would have tried。 What did disroot Friedrich; then?Take the following dates; and small hints of phenomena in other parts of the big Theatre of War。 〃Konitz〃 is a little Polish Town; midway between Dantzig and Friedrich's Dominions:
〃KONITZ; 16th JUNE; 1758。 This day Feldmarschall Fermor arrives in his principal Camp here。 For many weeks past he has been dribbling across the Weichsel hitherward; into various small camps; with Cossack Parties flying about; under check of General Platen。 But now; being all across; and reunited; Fermor shoots out Cossack Parties of quite other weight and atrocity; and is ready to begin business;still a little uncertain how。 His Cossacks; under their Demikows; Romanzows; capable of no good fighting; but of endless incendiary mischief in the neighborhood;shoot far ahead into Prussian territory: Platen; Hordt with his Free…Corps; are beautifully sharp upon them; but many beatings avail little。 'They burn the town of Driesen 'Hordt having been hard upon them there'; town of Ratzebuhr; and nineteen villages around;'burn poor old women and men; one poor old clergyman especially; wind him well in straw…roping; then set fire; and leave him;and are worse than fiends or hyenas。 Not to be checked by Platen's best diligence; not; in the end; by Platen and Dohna together。 Dohna (18th June) has risen from Stralsund in check of them;leaving the unfortunate Swedes to come out 'shrunk to about 7;000; so unsalutary their stockfish diet there';these hyena…Cossacks being the far more pressing thing。 Dohna is diligent; gives them many slaps and checks; Dohna cannot cut the tap…root of them in two; that is to say; fight Fermor and beat him: other effectual check there can be none。 ' Helden…Geschichte; v。 149 et seq。; Tempelhof; ii。 135 &c。'
〃TSCHOPAU (in Saxony); 21st JUNE。 Prince Henri has quitted Bamberg Country; and is home again; carefully posted; at Tschopau and up and down; on the southern side of Saxony; with his eye well on the Passes of the Metal Mountains;where now; in the turn things at Olmutz have taken; his clear fate is to be invaded; NOT to invade。 The Reichs Army; fairly afoot in the Circle of Saatz; counts itself 35;000; add 15;000 Austrians of a solid quality; there is a Reichs Army of 50;000 in all; this Year。 And will certainly invade Saxony;though it is in no hurry; does not stir till August come; and will find Prince Henri elaborately on his guard; and little to be made of him; though he is as one to two。
〃CREFELD (Rhine Country); 23d JUNE。 Duke Ferdinand; after skilful shoving and advancing; some forty or fifty miles; on his new or French side of the Rhine; finds the French drawn up at Crefeld (June 23d); 47;000 of them VERSUS 33;000: in altogether intricate ground; canal…ditches; osier…thickets; farm…villages; peat…bogs。 Ground defensible against the world; had the 47;000 had a Captain; but reasonably safe to attack; with nothing but a Clermont acting that character。 Ferdinand; I can perceive; knew his Clermont; and took liberties with him。 Divided himself into three attacks: one in front; one on Clermont's right flank; both of which cannonaded; as if in earnest; but did not prevent Clermont going to dinner。 One attack on front; one on right flank; then there was a third; seemingly on left flank; but which winded itself round (perilously imprudent; had there been a Captain; instead of a Clermont deepish in wine by this time); and burst in upon Clermont's rear; jingling his wine…glasses and decanters; think at what a rate;scattering his 47;000 and him to the road again; with a loss of men; which was counted to 4;000 (4;000 against 1;700); and of honorwhatever was still to lose!〃 'Mauvillon; i。 297…309; Westphalen; i。 588…604; Tempelhof; &c。 &c。'
Ferdinand; it was hoped; would now be able to maintain himself; and push forward; on this French side of the Rhine: and had Wesel been his (as some of