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1st-7th Aug. 1760.

Friedrich on March, for the Third Time, to rescue Silesia (August 1st-15th).

August 1st, Friedrich crossed the Elbe at Zehren, in the Schieritz vicinity, as near Meissen as he could; but it had to be some six miles farther down, such the liabilities to Austrian disturbance. All are across that morning by 5 o'clock (began at 2); whence we double back eastward, and camp that night at Dallwitz,—are quietly asleep there, while Loudon's bombardment bursts out on Breslau, far away! At Dallwitz we rest next day, wait for our Bakeries and Baggages; and Sunday August 3d, at 2 in the morning, set forth on the forlornest adventure in the world.

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The arrangements of the March, foreseen and settled beforehand to the last item, are of a perfection beyond praise ;as is still visible in the General Order, or summary of directions given out; which, to this day, one reads with a kind of satisfaction like that derivable from the Forty-seventh of Euclid clear to the meanest capacity, not a word wanting in it, not a word superfluous, solid as geometry. 'The Army marches always in Three Columns, left Column foremost: our First • Line of Battle' (in case we have fighting) 'is this foremost • Column; Second Line is the Second Column; Reserve is the • Third. All Generals' chaises, money-wagons, and regimental Surgeons' wagons remain with their respective Battalions; ' as do the Heavy Batteries with the Brigades to which they 'belong. When the march is through woody country, the 'Cavalry regiments go in between the Battalions' (to be ready against Pandour operations and accidents).

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'With the First Column, the Ziethen Hussars and Free'Battalion Courbière have always the vanguard; Möhring • Hussars and Free-Battalion Quintus' (speed to you, learned friend!) 'the rearguard. With the Second Column always the 'Dragoon regiments Normann and Krockow have the vanguard; Regiment Czetteritz' (Dragoons, poor Czetteritz himself, with his lost Manuscript, is captive since February last), 'the rear'guard. With the Third Column always the Dragoon regiment 'Holstein as head, and the ditto Finckenstein to close the 'Column.'-' During every march, however, there are to be of 'the Second Column 2 Battalions joined with Column Third;

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Ist-7th Aug. 1760.

so that the Third Column consist of 10 Battalions, the Second of 6, while on march.

'Ahead of each Column go three Pontoon Wagons; and ' daily are 50 work-people allowed them, who are immediately 'to lay Bridge, where it is necessary. The rearguard of each • Column takes up these Bridges again; brings them on, and ' returns them to the head of the Column, when the Army has got to camp. In the Second Column are to be 500 wagons, ' and also in the Third 500; so shared that each battalion gets 'an equal number. The battalions-5** This may serve

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as specimen.

The March proceeded through the old Country; a little to left of the track in June past: Röder Water, Pulsnitz Water; Kamenz neighbourhood, Bautzen neighbourhood, -Bunzlau on Silesian ground. Daun, at Bischofswerda, had foreseen this March; and, by his Light people, had spoiled the Road all he could; broken all the Bridges, half-felled the Woods (to render them impassable). Daun, the instant he heard of the actual March, rose from Bischofswerda: forward, forward always, to be ahead of it, however rapid; Lacy, hanging on the rear of it, willing to give trouble with his Pandour harpies, but studious above all that it should not whirl round anywhere and get upon his, Lacy's, own throat. One of the strangest marches ever seen. 'An onlooker, who had observed the march of these different Armies,' says Friedrich, 'would have thought that they all belonged to one leader. Feld'marschall Daun's he would have taken for the Vanguard, the King's for 'the main Army, and General Lacy's for the Rearguard." Tempelhof says: 'It is given only to a Friedrich to march on those terms; between 'Two hostile Armies, his equals in strength, and a Third' (Loudon's, in Striegau Country) waiting ahead.'

The March passed without accident of moment; had not, from Lacy or Daun, any accident whatever. On the second day, an Aide-de-Camp of Daun's was picked-up, with Letters from Lacy (back of the cards visible to Friedrich). Once,-it is the third day of the March (August 6th, village of Rothwasser to be quarter for the night),- -on coming toward Neisse River, some careless Officer, trusting to peasants, instead of examining for himself and building a bridge, drove his Artillerywagons into the so-called ford of Neisse; which nearly swallowed the foremost of them in quicksands. Nearly, but not completely; and caused a loss of five or six hours to that Second Column. So that darkness came on Column Second in the woody intricacies; and several hundreds of the deserter kind took the opportunity of disappearing altogether. An unlucky, evidently too languid Officer; though Fried5 In Tempelhof (iv. 125, 126) the entire Piece.

6 Euvres de Frédéric, v. 56

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1st-7th Aug. 1760.

rich did not annihilate the poor fellow, perhaps did not rebuke him at all, but merely marked it in elucidation of his qualities for time coming. 'This miserable village of Rothwasser' (headquarters after the dangerous fording of Neisse), says Mitchell, 'stands in the middle of a wood, ' almost as wild and impenetrable as those in North America. There ' was hardly ground enough cleared about it for the encampment of the troops." Thursday August 7th, Friedrich,-traversing the whole Country, but more direct, by Königsbrück and Kamenz this time,—is at Bunzlau altogether. 'Bunzlau on the Bober;' the Silesian Bunzlau, not the Bohemian or any of the others. It is some 30 miles west of Liegnitz, which again lies some 40 north-west of Schweidnitz and the Strong Places. Friedrich has now done 100 miles of excellent marching; and he has still a good spell more to do,-dragging '2,000 heavy wagons' with him, and across such impediments within and without. Readers that care to study him, especially for the next few days, will find it worth their while.

Tempelhof gives, as usual, a most clear Account, minute to a degree; which, supplemented by Mitchell and a Reimann Map, enables us as it were to accompany, and to witness with our eyes. Hitherto a March toilsome in the extreme, in spite of everything done to help it; starting at 3 or at 2 in the morning; resting to breakfast in some shady place, while the sun is high, frugally cooking under the shady woods,— "Burschen abzukochen here," as the Order pleasantly bears. All encamped now, at Bunzlau in Silesia, on Thursday evening, with a very eminent week's work behind them. 'In the last five days, above 100 'miles of road, and such road; five considerable rivers in it'-Bober, Queiss, Neisse, Spree, Elbe; and with such a wagon-train of 2,000 teams. 8

Proper that we rest a day here; in view of the still swifter marchings and sudden dashings about, which lie ahead. It will be by extremely nimble use of all the limbs we have,-hands as well as feet,— if any good is to come of us now! Friedrich is aware that Daun already holds Striegau "as an outpost" (Loudon thereabouts, unknown to Friedrich), "these several days;" and that Daun personally is at Schmöttseifen, in our own old Camp there, twenty or thirty miles to south of us, and has his Lacy to leftward of him, partly even to rearward rather in advance of us, both of them,-if we were for Landshut;* which we are not. "Be swift enough, may not we cut through to Jauer, and get ahead of Daun?" counts Friedrich: "To Jauer, southeast of us, from Bunzlau here, is 40 miles; and to Jauer it is above 30 east for Daun: possible to be there before Daun! Jauer ours, thence to the Heights of Striegau and Hohenfriedberg Country, within wind of Schweidnitz, of Breslau: magazines, union with Prince Henri, all secure thereby?" So reckons the sanguine Friedrich; unaware that Loudon, with his corps of 35,000, has been summoned hitherward; 7 Mitchell, ii. 190; Tempelhof, iv. 131. 8 Tempelhof, iv. 123-150. *See Map, p. 94 a.

9th-11th Aug. 1760.

which will make important differences! Loudon, Beck with a smaller Satellite Corps, both these, unknown to Friedrich, lie ready on the east of him: Loudon's Army on the east; Daun's, Lacy's on the south and west; three big Armies, with their Satellites, gathering in upon this King: here is a Three-headed Dog, in the Tartarus of a world he now has! On the fourth side of him is Oder, and the Russians, who are also perhaps building Bridges, by way of a supplementary or fourth head.

August 9th (Bunzlau to Goldberg), Friedrich, with his Three Columns and perfect arrangements, makes a long march: from Bunzlau at 3 in the morning; and at 5 afternoon arrives in sight of the Katzbach Valley, with the little Town of Goldberg some miles to right. Katzbach River is here; and Jauer, for tomorrow, still fifteen miles ahead. But on reconnoitering here, all is locked and bolted: Lacy strong on the Hills of Goldberg; Daun visible across the Katzbach; Daun, and behind him Loudon, inexpugnably posted: Jauer an impossibility! We have bread only for eight days; our Magazines are at Schweidnitz and Breslau: what is to be done? Get through, one way or other, we needs must! Friedrich encamps for the night; expecting an attack. If not attacked, he will make for Liegnitz leftward; cross the Katzbach there, or farther down at Parchwitz:-Parchwitz, Neumarkt, Leuthen, we have been in that country before now:Courage!

August 10th-11th (to Liegnitz and back). At 5 A. M., Sunday August 10th, Friedrich, nothing of attack having come, got on march again: down his own left bank of the Katzbach, straight for Liegnitz; unopposed altogether; not even a Pandour having attacked him overnight. But no sooner is he under way, than Daun too rises; Daun, Loudon, close by, on the other side of Katzbach, and keep step with us, on our right; Lacy's light people hovering on our rear:-three truculent fellows in buckram; fancy the feelings of the wayworn solitary fourth, whom they are gloomily dogging in this way! The solitary fourth does his fifteen miles to Liegnitz, unmolested by them; encamps on the Heights which look down on Liegnitz over the south; finds, however, that the Loudon-Daun people have likewise been diligent ; that they now lie stretched-out on their right bank, three or four miles up-stream or to rearward, and what is far worse, seven miles downwards, or ahead: that, in fact, they are a march nearer Parchwitz than he;-and that there is again no possibility. "Perhaps by Jauer, then, still? Out of this, and at lowest, into some vicinity of bread, it does behove us to be!" At 11 that night Friedrich gets on march again; returns the way he came. And,

August 11th, At daybreak, is back to his old ground; nothing now to oppose him but Lacy, who is gone across from Goldberg, to linger as rear of the Daun-Loudon march. Friedrich steps across on Lacy, thirsting to have a stroke at Lacy; who vanishes fast enough, leaving the ground clear. Could but our baggage have come as fast as we!

11th Aug. 1760

But our baggage, Quintus guarding and urging, has to groan on for five hours yet; and without it, there is no stirring. Five mortal hours;— by which time, Daun, Lacy, Loudon are all up again; between us and Jauer, between us and everything helpful;—and Friedrich has to encamp in Seichau,-'a very poor Village in the Mountains' (writes Mitchell, who was painfully present there), 'surrounded on all sides by Heights; on several of which, in the evening, the Austrians took camp, separated from us by a deep ravine only."

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Outlooks are growing very questionable to Mitchell and everybody. 'Only four-days provisions" (in reality six), whisper the Prussian Generals gloomily to Mitchell and to one another: "Shall we have to make for Glogau, then, and leave Breslau to its fate? Or perhaps it will be a second Maxen to his Majesty and us, who was so indignant with poor Finck?" My friends, no; a Maxen like Finck's it will never be: a very different Maxen, if any! But we hope better things.

Friedrich's situation, grasped in the Three-lipped Pincers in this manner, is conceivable to readers. Soltikof, on the other side of Oder, as supplementary or fourth lip, is very impatient with these three. "Why all this dodging, and fidgeting to and fro ? You are above three to one of your enemy. Why don't you close on him at once, if you mean it at all? The end is, He will be across Oder; and it is I that shall have the brunt to bear: Henri and he will enclose me between two fires!" And in fact, Henri, as we know, though Friedrich does not or only half does, has gone across Oder, to watch Soltikof, and guard Breslau from any attempts of his,—which are far from his thoughts at this moment ;- -a Soltikof fuming violently at the thought of such cunctations, and of being made cat's-paw again. Know, however, that I understand you," violently fumes Soltikof, "and that I won't. I fall back into the Trebnitz Bog-Country, on my own right bank here, and look out for my own safety."- Patience, your noble Excellenz," answer they always; oh, patience yet a little! Only yesterday (Sunday 10th, the day after his arrival in this region), we had decided to attack and crush him; Sunday very early:10 but he skipped away to Liegnitz. Oh, be patient yet a day or two: he skips about at such a rate!" Montalembert has to be suasive as the Muses and the Sirens. Soltikof gloomily consents to another day or two. And even, such his anxiety lest this swift King skip over upon him, pushes-out a consider10 Tempelhof, iv. 137, 148-150.

9 Mitchell, ii. 194.

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