
HISTORY OF FRIEDRICH II OF PRUSSIA, Volume 19 - FREDERICK THE GREAT - by Thomas Carlyle
BOOK XIX.—FRIEDRICH LIKE TO BE OVERWHELMED IN THE SEVEN-YEARS WAR.—1759-1760.
Chapter I.—PRELIMINARIES TO A FOURTH CAMPAIGN.
OF THE SMALL-WAR IN SPRING, 1759. THERE ARE FIVE DISRUPTIONS OF THAT GRAND CORDON (February-April); AND FERDINAND OF BRUNSWICK FIGHTS HIS BATTLE OF BERGEN (April 13th).
Chapter II.—GENERAL DOHNA; DICTATOR WEDELL: BATTLE OF ZULLICHAU.
DICTATOR WEDELL FIGHTS HIS BATTLE (Monday, 23d July, 1759), WITHOUT SUCCESS.
Chapter III.—FRIEDRICH IN PERSON ATTEMPTS THE RUSSIAN PROBLEM; NOT WITH SUCCESS.
Chapter IV.—BATTLE OF KUNERSDORF.
Chapter V.—SAXONY WITHOUT DEFENCE: SCHMETTAU SURRENDERS DRESDEN.
THE "REICHS ARMY" 80 CALLED HAS ENTERED SAXONY, UNDER FINE OMENS; DOES SOME FEATS OF SIEGING (August 7th-23d),—WITH AN EYE ON DRESDEN AS THE CROWNING ONE.
The narrative opens in the bitter winter of 1759, when Frederick the Great watches a sprawling line of five armies settle across the German lands. From Bohemia to the Rhine, Austrian, Prussian, French and assorted German forces huddle in uneasy quarters, each side wary of the others while the war‑torn continent holds its breath for spring. Carlyle paints the scene with vivid detail, showing how the sheer scale of the deployment—some three hundred thousand men—creates a tense, picture‑perfect tableau of anticipation and dread. Amid this military chessboard, Frederick hopes for a single decisive clash that might finally bring peace.
Beyond the battlefield, the book delves into the tangled politics that fuel the conflict. The French court, exhausted by costly battles, wrestles with internal reshuffling as ministers like Bernis and the ambitious Choiseul vie for influence, while Britain’s George II makes his own overtures. Economic strain and diplomatic frustration ripple through the armies, underscoring the fragile balance between war and the longing for a lasting settlement. This first act sets the stage for the dramatic campaigns that will follow, inviting listeners to explore the complex world of 18th‑century Europe.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (501K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by D.R. Thompson and David Widger
Release date
2008-06-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1795–1881
A fierce Scottish essayist and historian, he became one of the most influential voices of the Victorian age through his dramatic writing on revolution, heroism, and the troubles of modern life.
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