In these years, Friedrich goes on
victoriously with his Law - Reform; Herculean Cocceji
with Assistants, backed by Friedrich, beneficently
conquering Province after Province to him; - Kur - Mark,
Neu - Mark, Cleve (all easy, in comparison, after Pommern),
and finally Preussen itself; - to the joy and profit of the same.
Coccejis method, so far as the Foreign on - looker can discern across much
haze, seems to be three - fold: -
1. Extirpation (painless, were
it possible) of the Petti - fogger Species; indeed,
of the Attorney Species altogether: “Seek
other employments; disappear, all of you, from these
precincts, under penalty!” The Advocate himself
takes charge of the suit, from first birth of it; and
sees it ended, - he knows within what limit
of time.
2. Sifting out of all incompetent
Advocates, “Follow that Attorney - Company, you;
away!” - sifting out all these, and
retaining in each Court, with fees accurately settled,
with character stamped sound, or at least soundest,
the number actually needed. In a milder way, but
still more strictly, Judges stupid or otherwise incompetent
are riddled out; able Judges appointed, and their
salaries raised.
3. What seems to be Friedrich’s
own invention, what in outcome he thinks will be the
summary of all good Law - Procedure: A final Sentence
(three “instances” you can have, but the
third ends it for you) within the Year. Good,
surely. A justice that intends to be exact must
front the complicacies in a resolute piercing manner,
and will not be tedious. Nay a justice that is
not moderately swift, - human hearts waiting
for it, the while, in a cancerous state, instead of
hopefully following their work, - what, comparatively, is the use of its being
never so exact! -
Simple enough methods; rough and ready.
Needing, in the execution, clear human eyesight, clear
human honesty, - which happen to be present
here, and without which no “method” whatever
can be executed that will really profit.
In the course of 1748, Friedrich,
judging by Pommern and the other symptoms that his
enterprise was safe, struck a victorious Medal upon
it: “Fridericus BORUSSORUM Rex,”
pressing with his sceptre the oblique Balance to a
level posture; with Epigraph, “Emendato
Jure.” [Letter to Cocceji, accompanying
Copy of the Medal in Gold, “24th June, 1748”
(Seyfarth, i n.).] And by New - year’s day,
1750, the matter was in effect completed; and “justice
cheap, expeditious, certain,” a fact in all
Prussian Lands.
Nay, in 1749 - 1751, to complete the
matter, Cocceji’s “Project of a general
Law - Code,” Projekt des corporis
Juris FRIDERICIANI, came forth in print:
[Halle, 2 vols. folio (Preuss, ; see
i n., as to the law - procedure,
$c. now settled by Cocceji).] to the admiration of
mankind, at home and abroad; “the First Code
attempted since Justinian’s time,” say
they. Project translated into all languages,
and read in all countries. A poor mildewed copy
of this codex FRIDERICIANUS - done at
Edinburgh, 1761, not said by whom; evidently bought
at least twice, and mostly never yet read (nor
like being read) - is known to me, for years
past, in a ghastly manner! Without the least profit
to this present, or to any other Enterprise; - though
persons of name in Jurisprudence call it meritorious
in their Science; the first real attempt at a Code
in Modern times. But the truth is, this Cocceji
codex remained a project merely, never enacted
anywhere. It was not till 1773, that Friedrich
made actual attempt to build a Law - Code and did build
one (the foundation - story of one, for his share, completed
since), in which this of Cocceji had little part.
In 1773, the thing must again be mentioned; the “Second
Law - Reform,” as they call it. What we practically
know from this time is, That Prussian Lawsuits, through
Friedrich’s Reign, do all terminate, or push
at their utmost for terminating, within one year from
birth; and that Friedrich’s fame, as a beneficent
Justinian, rose high in all Countries (strange, in
Countries that had thought him a War - scourge and Conquering
Hero); strange, but undeniable; and that his
own People, if more silently, yet in practice very
gladly indeed, welcomed his Law - Reform; and, from
day to day, enjoyed the same, - no doubt with
occasional remembrance who the Donor was.
Of Friedrich’s Literary works,
nobody, not even Friedrich himself, will think it
necessary that we say much. But the fact is, he
is doing a great many things that way: in Prose,
the memoirs of Brandenburg, coming
out as Papers in the Academy from time to time; [From
1746 and onward: first published complete (after
slight revision by Voltaire), Berlin, 1751.] in Verse,
very secret as yet, the PALLADION ("exquisite Burlesque,”
think some), the art of war (reckoned
truly his best Piece in verse): - and wishes
sometimes he had Voltaire here to perfect him a little.
This too would be one of the practical charms of Voltaire.
[Friedrich’s Letter to Algarotti ( - OEuvres, - xvii, “12th September, 1749.”] For though
King Friedrich knows and remembers always, that these
things, especially the Verse part, are mere amusements
in comparison, he has the creditable wish to do these
well; one would not fantasy ill even on the Flute,
if one could help it. “Why does n’t
Voltaire come; as Quantz of the Flute has done?”
Friedrich, now that Voltaire has fallen widower, renews
his pressings, “Why don’t you come?”
Patience, your Majesty; Voltaire will come.
Nobody can wish details in this Department:
but there is one thing necessary to be mentioned,
That Friedrich in these years, 1749 - 1752, has Printers
out at Potsdam, and is Printing, “in beautiful
quarto form, with copperplates,” to the extent
of twelve copies, the oeuvres (Poetical, that
is) du philosophe de sans - souci.
Only twelve copies, I have heard; gift of a single
copy indicating that you are among the choicest of
the chosen. Copies have now fallen extremely rare
(and are not in request at all, with my readers or
me); but there was one Copy which, or the Mis - title
of which, as oeuvre de “POESHIE”
Du roi mon maitre, became miraculously
famous in a year or two; - and is still memorable
to us all! On Voltaire’s arrival, we shall
hear more of these things. Enough to say at present
that the oeuvres du philosophe de
sans - souci: Au donjon du
chateau: Avec privilege D’APOLLON, - “three
thinnish quarto volumes, all the Poetry then on hand,” - was
finished early in 1750, before Voltaire came.
That, when Voltaire came, a revisal was undertaken,
a new Edition, with Voltaire’s corrections and
other changes (total suppression of the PALLADION,
for one creditable change): that this Edition
was to have been in Two Volumes; that One, accordingly,
rather thicker than the former sort, was got finished
in 1752 (same title, only the new Date, and “no
donjon du chateau this time"), One
Volume in 1752; after which, owing to the explosions
that ensued, no Second came, nor ever will; - and
that the actual contents of that far - famed oeuvre
de “POESHIE” (number of volumes even)
are points of mystery to me, at this day. [Herr Preuss - in
the chronological list of Friedrich’s
Writings (a useful accurate Piece otherwise), and in
two other places where he tries - is very
indistinct on this of donjon du chateau;
and it is all but impossible to ascertain from him
what, in an indisputable manner, the oeuvre
de “POESHIE” may have been. Here
are the places for groping, if another should be induced
to try: - OEuvres de Frederic, - x.
(Preface, p. ix); ib. xi. (Preface, p. ix); ib. - Table
Chhronologique - (in what Volume this is,
you cannot yet say; seems preliminary to a general
Index, which is infinitely wanted, but has not
yet appeared to this Editor’s aid), .]
Friedrich’s other employments
are multifarious as those of a Land’s Husband
(not inferior to his Father in that respect); and,
like the benefits of the diurnal Sun, are to be considered
incessant, innumerable and, in result to us - ward,
silent also, impossible to speak of in this place.
From the highest pitch of State - craft (Russian Czarina
now fallen plainly hostile, and needing lynx - eyed
diplomacy ever and anon), down to that of Dredging
and Fascine - work (as at Stettin and elsewhere), of
Oder - canals, of Soap - boiler Companies, and Mulberry - and - Silk
Companies; nay of ordaining Where, and where not,
the Crows are to be shot, and (owing to cattle - murrain)
No Veal to be killed: [Seyfarth, i,
83, 81; Preuss, - Buch fur Jedermann, - - 109; &c.] daily comes the tide of great and of
small, and daily the punctual Friedrich keeps abreast
of it, - and Dryasdust has noted the details,
and stuffed them into blind sacks, - for
forty years.
The Review seasons, I notice, go somewhat
as follows. For Berlin and neighborhood, May,
or perhaps end of April (weather now bright, and ground
firm); sometimes with considerable pomp ("both Queens
out,” and beautiful Female Nobilities, in “twenty - four
green tents"), and often with great complicacy of
manoeuvre. In June, to Magdeburg, round by Cleve;
and home again for some days. July is Pommern:
Onward thence to Schlesien, oftenest in August; Schlesien
the last place, and generally not done with till well
on in September. But we will speak of these things,
more specially, another time. Such “Reviews,”
for strictness of inspection civil and military, as
probably were not seen in the world since, - or
before, except in the case of this King’s Father
only.