cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
Every time I am amazed and enchanted that this is still going on! Truly DW is the Earthly Paradise!

All the good stuff continues to be archived at [community profile] rheinsberg :)

Re: Volz

Date: 2020-02-29 12:54 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
*dies laughing*

Heinrich is a plotter from an early age! I love the throwback to Ferdinand's bad aim. And poor doggy!

Ferdinand: *not up for this, has trembling lips and teary eyes

Chronology note for [personal profile] cahn: he's just about to have his sixth birthday in a a couple weeks. Yeah, I bet his handmade arrow was non-lethal.

Heinrich *definitely up for this*: No, that's you!

Heinrich will always be up for this! In fact, he'll miss it twelve years after it's gone, much to his own surprise.

Fredersdorf: To be continued!

Lol, is this yet another excerpt from his very secret diary? That's awesome.

Re: Volz

Date: 2020-02-29 11:31 am (UTC)
selenak: (Hyperion by son_of)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Heinrich is a plotter from an early age!

Well, given his lack of brother-toppling conspiracies, his reputation as a schemer has to come from somewhere!

(When I looked up Paul and saw the manner of his death, which, yikes, even for royal assassinatons, that was extra, with son Alexander nearby, and considering Cousin Philppe voted for Louis XVI. beheading in the National Assembly, I was reminded again this really was a century where relations taking that step to actual conspiracy and murder was not confined to the realm of fiction.

Chronology note for [personal profile] cahn: he's just about to have his sixth birthday in a a couple weeks. Yeah, I bet his handmade arrow was non-lethal.

Ferdinand's age during that Mantteufel by way of Seckendorf Jr. conversation is why I was stumped for a while to come up with an explanation causing Fritz to predict he'll be the vilest spawn FW ever sired once he's grown up. But him inadvertently hitting a dog would totally do it!

If I ever discover the semblance of a plot thread to hang this up on, I might make something of this crack fic and call it "Adventures in Babysitting", Rokoko style.

Also, reading Lucchesini and Pangels in short order was a neat illustration of the following double standard:

Fritz, years after Voltaire's death:

Person: So, Voltaire...
Fritz: The worst! The absolute worst! I'm not budging from this. Hand me my Voltaire volume, Lucchesini.

Posteriy: Aw. Poor Fritz. How terribly disillusioned must he have been. Or, as Richter of Fredersdorf letters fame puts it, when summing up Fritz/Voltaire: "Laßt uns den König eine Weile auf seinem Leidensweg begleiten." ("Let us join the king for a while on his path of suffering.")

(Also Fritz: trashtalks Pompadour decades after she's died, complete with revisionings of how she wanted money and titles from him in order to stop the war which he refused to give. Posterity: Well, she did greatly contribute to France not budging from the new Austrian alliance, and also, Fritz just tells it like it is, a maitresse en titre is a whore regardless of glamour.)

Heinrich, yeas after Fritz' death:

Person: So, your brother, der einzige, the genius, the best, right?
Heinrich: The worst. The absolute worst. I'm not budging from this. Now excuse me while I move some of my stuff to Wusterhausen and pretend the last twelve Fritzless years haven't happened.

Person and posterity: OMG. How low can you go, hating on the poor man even after death! Such hatred! How twisted, how warped! That obelisk is "the revolting portrait of a twisted personality" (tm early 20th century US biographer).

Mind you, this is not true for the more recent stuff, but as Pangels, published in the 70s ilustrates, "more recent" really is the last 20 years or so. (Ziebura's Heinrich biography was published in 1999. BTW, think that was the first one to use the Marwitz letters. At least I haven't found any earlier examples so far. It may just be no one before Ziebura bothered to check out the unplublished by Preuss Fritz-Heinrich correspondance in the state archive, but even so, Lehndorff's diaries were published from 1907 onwards, and they already contain the tale.

Re: Volz

Date: 2020-02-29 01:58 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Ferdinand's age during that Mantteufel by way of Seckendorf Jr. conversation is why I was stumped for a while to come up with an explanation causing Fritz to predict he'll be the vilest spawn FW ever sired once he's grown up. But him inadvertently hitting a dog would totally do it!

Hee! Babysitting five-year-olds is not for the faint of heart!

If I ever discover the semblance of a plot thread to hang this up on, I might make something of this crack fic and call it "Adventures in Babysitting", Rokoko style.

Yes! Who needs a plot, anyway? Also, I totally want to see him babysit Ulrike and Amalie and conclude that Amalie is the nice one (because she shares his passion for music) and music-hating Ulrike is a troublemaker you don't want as your queen, because she broke the cembalo so Amalie couldn't bang on it any more. :P

Fritz: The worst! The absolute worst! I'm not budging from this. Hand me my Voltaire volume, Lucchesini.

Heinrich: The worst. The absolute worst. I'm not budging from this. Now excuse me while I move some of my stuff to Wusterhausen and pretend the last twelve Fritzless years haven't happened.


Lol, and don't forget being inspired to reread the Fritzian correspondence in the throes of the dysfunctional nostalgia inspired by Wilhelmine's memoirs!

I love the other-self parallels here. THESE TWO.

Person and posterity: OMG. How low can you go, hating on the poor man even after death! Such hatred! How twisted, how warped! That obelisk is "the revolting portrait of a twisted personality"

There is a lot of Fritzian double standards. I enjoyed the "temerity" of asking Fritz to pay off your debts. FRITZ! Master collector of sugar daddies for the last twelve or so years! Debts sky high!

as Pangels, published in the 70s ilustrates, "more recent" really is the last 20 years or so.

MacDonogh, following Pangels closely: 1999!

It may just be no one before Ziebura bothered to check out the unplublished by Preuss Fritz-Heinrich correspondance in the state archive, but even so, Lehndorff's diaries were published from 1907 onwards, and they already contain the tale.

Selective reading has definitely been a thing. I am deeply grateful to have had you to share the latest German-language research with us. Who knows what I would still be believing if not for you!

Re: Volz

Date: 2020-03-01 06:05 am (UTC)
selenak: (Émilie du Chatelet)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Also, I totally want to see him babysit Ulrike and Amalie and conclude that Amalie is the nice one (because she shares his passion for music) and music-hating Ulrike is a troublemaker you don't want as your queen, because she broke the cembalo so Amalie couldn't bang on it any more. :P

This is perfect. Btw, when I went through the original Italian Lucchesini I thought I spotted Fritz telling Lu that he should have married Ulrike to Peter (III) and Catherine to the Swedes, but when I checked the relevant German passage, alas that's not what he was saying, he just says that Peter wanted to marry Urike. (Which isn't even true, as the footnote diligently tells us; what this is based on was that the Holsteins were offering for Amalie for a while, but Fritz: "I don't want to throw my sisters at people." (Unless I get something out of it.) Apparantly at this point little Peter didn't rate a daughter of the House of Brandenburg and Anhalt Sophie was good enough for him.

Volz "Gespräche mit Friedrich dem Großen" does include the description of the teenage Catherine and Fritz encounter by Catherine herself. It says it's from her memoirs. But the memoirs that are up at Gutenberg start with her arrival in Russia. Now I know Catherine, like Wilhelmine, never finished her memoirs, and also son Paul got the manuscript into his hands after her death so who knows what he censored, but it looks like she's another case of Thiébault and Trenck where some editor cuts out passages of later editions. If so: why the Fritz encounter`?! That's a great story!

Meanwhile, in Volz, one of the later French visitors talks with Fritz about Catherine, in a conversation that starts with Voltaire.

Fritz: Miraculously does not say "The worst!", but instead opens with: Total genius of the ages, Voltaire.

French visitor: Gotta admit, am glad to hear you say that. He'd have deserved to lose your favour, of course, but he's my intellectual hero and our national treasure even after his death, so I'm glad you're still keen on him.

Fritz: Always will be. I'm a calm and generous mind and totally forgave him for the many wrongs he did me. Even when he started to cheat on me with CATHERINE, whom he never said a single mean thing about just because she always kept praising him.

French visitor: Speaking of Catherine: that woman does have some genius, what with ruling a nation of cuththroats with her throat uncut and her on top of things for decades now after starting out as a foreign import loathed by her husband. Something of a problematic start, though, what with the, err, uncertain causes of death of the husband.

Fritz: That guy was a let down, he let himself be dethroned like a child. As for Catherine, she doesn't deserve either blame or credit for getting into power. She was a helpless uncertain woman totally dominated by the Orlovs at that point who had no idea what was going on. They were the ones orchestrating the coup and killing Peter. She didn't realise until after the fact, and then she had no choice but to promote the Orlovs if she didn't want to be killed as well.

French Visitor: Phew. Now I can admire her without rooting for a husband murderess.

Fritz: I don't think you've gotten my point, which is that I'm cooler than Catherine. Who is such a flighty woman that ONE VISIT by Joseph was enough for her to ally with him as well. Prussia/Russia was supposed to be exclusive, dammit! Maybe I should have sent Heinrich a third time.

Re: Volz

Date: 2020-03-01 02:32 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Fritz: Always will be. I'm a calm and generous mind

Oh, Fritz. Never stop making me laugh.

it looks like she's another case of Thiébault and Trenck where some editor cuts out passages of later editions. If so: why the Fritz encounter`?! That's a great story!

Good news: I can get a 2-volume German translation that has the encounter into the library, I'll just need our royal patron's help.

French Visitor: Phew. Now I can admire her without rooting for a husband murderess.

Fritz: I don't think you've gotten my point, which is that I'm cooler than Catherine.


Hahahaha. *pats Fritz on the head*

Prussia/Russia was supposed to be exclusive, dammit!

I guess she didn't get the "Der einzige" memo. :P

This is such a great encounter. Who's the French visitor and what's Volz's source?

Re: Volz

Date: 2020-03-01 05:36 pm (UTC)
selenak: (Arvin Sloane by Perfectday)
From: [personal profile] selenak
The visitor was the Comte Louis Philippe de Ségur, and the excerpt originally hails from "Memoires ou 8ouvenirs et Anecdotes", Vol. 2. S. 126 ff. (Paris 1827).(Volz is good with his footnotes.) Ségur was a French diplomat and writer, on his way to become the French envoy at Catherine's court and making a stop in Berlin to meet Europe's most famous fan of French literature.

Re: Volz

Date: 2020-03-01 05:39 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Oh, Ségur's memoirs! I feel like I see them get cited a lot, possibly for Catherine material.

Volz is good with his footnotes.

Go Volz! Volz was a good find.

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